Brad Stine | |
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Born | 1960 Bremen, Indiana, U.S. |
Medium | stand-up, observational comedy |
Nationality | American |
Years active | 1980s-present |
Genres | Observational comedy |
Subject(s) | Everyday life, politics, Christianity, situational |
Influences | Denis Leary, George Carlin, Alan Keyes, Bill Cosby, Sam Kinison, Robin Williams, Bill Hicks, Steve Martin |
Influenced | Daren Streblow |
Spouse | Desiree Stine |
Notable works and roles | Put a Helmet On! (2003) and Wussification (2007) |
Website | Bradstine.com |
Brad Stine (born 1960[1]) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, and author. Relatively unknown until 2003, Stine first gained exposure when he "came out" as a conservative[2] Christian on his debut album, Put a Helmet On!
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Stine was born and raised in Pittsburgh PA by Jerry and Nancy Stine.[1] His father was an auto-body repairman and front man for a local musical combo called the Regents, and his mother was a housewife. He is the second of four children.
Stine's parents divorced when he was eight, but they later remarried and moved to California, only to divorce again. He stayed with his father, who briefly left the auto-body business to travel with his brother to carnivals in the Midwest. His father later remarried and returned to his previous work.
Stine started practicing magic tricks at age 13, which later led to his performing magic in Southern California bars and restaurants. Stine also learned to perform sideshow stunts and began honing his comedy skills.
In the late 1980s, Stine was hired by a manager and toured colleges across the country with comedians Craig Anton and Emery Emery. His first television appearance was on Showtime’s "Comedy Club Network."
Stine continued to work in comedy clubs and on TV, and eventually dropped his magic tricks and stunts. He started taking acting lessons and auditioned for movies and television shows. On the advice of a fellow comic, he eventually made his Christian faith and conservatism the focus of his act.
Stine lives in Brentwood, Tennessee, with his wife Desiree, and their two children.[3]
Stine's style has been described by Newsweek as "aggressive" with a "rat-a-tat delivery"[4] and by The New Yorker as "frantic, aggressive, and caustic, with echoes of Robin Williams, Sam Kinison, George Carlin, and Alan Keyes."[1] However, unlike these and a lot of other comedians, Stine does not use profanity or sexual humor because of his Christian faith.[5] He has been described as "a clean Denis Leary" and his material targets "liberals, humanists, political correctness and judgmental Christians."[6] Stine has claimed that his conservatism has sometimes resulted in the loss of appearances.[7]
Stine has appeared on several stand-up comedy shows, such as A&E’s "Evening at the Improv" and MTV's "Half Hour Comedy Hour," and has appeared on news programs such as Fox News' "Hannity & Colmes,[8]" CNN's "Paula Zahn NOW[9]" and "Glenn Beck,[10]" and the NBC Nightly News. Stine has also been interviewed on National Public Radio[5][11] and has been featured on FOXNews.com[2] and in Newsweek,[12] the New Yorker,[1] USA Today, and several other newspapers nationwide. He was a featured performer for Promise Keepers in 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2007. Also in 2004, he performed for "R: the Party," a party hosted by Jenna and Barbara Bush during the Republican National Convention in New York City.[11] Stine has also appeared with Go Fish (Christian band) for the song Christmas with a Capital "C", which convicts the politically correct term "happy holidays" and supports the use of the traditional term "Merry Christmas." In July 2011 he was a featured performer for the Western Conservative Summit. [13]
Inspired by author David Murrow,[14] Stine founded GodMen, a proposed alternative to Promise Keepers that emphasizes "spiritual masculinity".[4] GodMen's inaugural event was held on October 28, 2006, in Nashville, Tennessee, and drew 200 men.[15] Their second event was held on March 10, 2007,[16] in rented space at a Franklin, Tennessee, mall[17] and drew about 300 men.[18] Many more events were scheduled for 2007 and 2008.[19]
Stine has appeared in minor roles in a handful of big and small screen movies,[20] including the films Welcome to Paradise, Sarah's Choice, Homeless for the Holidays and Christmas with a Capital C.
Brad Stine currently has two books and five performance videos/recordings available. A VHS was also available for purchase on a nationwide church tour. In September 2008 Brad was featured in the multi-comedian DVD The Apostles of Comedy, which also features comedian/actors Ron Pearson with Chicago natives Jeff Allen and Anthony Griffith. The four comedians have been touring the country as The Apostles of Comedy since 2008 and are scheduled through May 2009.[21][22]