LYCOS RETRIEVER
Steve Harvey: Life
built 501 days ago
Steve Harvey successfully transfers his comical anecdotes to the recording world. Harvey weaves hilarious tales based on life experiences and vividly illustrates the differences between the sexes when he gives pointers on how to get the sparks back into a relationship, as well as advising men and women on how to better understand one another.
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Harvey's not the first comedian to admit he draws on his personal pain. He ... believes people with a keen sense of humor are born, not made. "Those of us who are funny have three eyeballs," says Harvey. "With that third one you see what you're thinking and it tells your mind to say it. It's what everyone is thinking—about your job, about your family, your life—but we've got the nerve to actually say it."
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Though the show received mixed reviews in its first two seasons, Harvey again earned near unanimous praise for his role in the series. Ken Tucker, in an Entertainment Weekly article, offered his opinion of Me and the Boys and The Steve Harvey Show: "Two years ago, the enormously likable Harvey was wasted in the bland ABC sitcom Me and the Boys; this one--in which he plays a high school music teacher--is merely a tad better. But Harvey is terrific in conveying the life of a man raised on '60s soul who's trying to retain his dignity in the hip-hop '90s."
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"Energy, excitement—this was the key to performing," says Harvey. "Audience is critical, too. For college crowds, don't talk at all about things like debt or divorce, because they don't know anything about that real-life crap. Better to stay with beer and MTV and jokes about parties. But for comedy clubs, you talk about family life, money, kids."
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The series concludes with Regina accepting a great job opportunity in California and asks Steve to leave his life in Chicago, and move with her. Steve has to decide whether or not to let the love of his life walk out of his life forever, or take a chance on love in a far away place.
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