Baroness Von Sketch co-creator snatches comedy moments from her Toronto 'hood - Action News
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Toronto

Baroness Von Sketch co-creator snatches comedy moments from her Toronto 'hood

Baroness Von Sketch co-creator Jennifer Whalen's comedy inspiration comes from catching slices of life in her west-end Toronto neighbourhood.

Jennifer Whalen tells Matt Galloway how she mines the awkward, absurd for comedy inspiration

Matt Galloway speaks with Jennifer Whalen, co-creator of Baroness Von Sketch

8 years ago
Duration 2:35
Co-creator of CBC's hit comedy show Baroness Von Sketch Jennifer Whalen tells Metro Morning host Matt Galloway why writers and traffic just don't mix.

Jennifer Whalen really doesn't want to get hit by a car.

The writer, performer and co-creator of CBC's hit comedy show Baroness Von Sketch remembers hearing about a study that found a surprising number of writers get hit by cars, likely because they're wandering into traffic while dreaming up the next great novel.

Sowhen writer's block strikes, she sticks to wandering her favourite pedestrian paths in her west-end neighbourhood insteadjust to be safe.

"I might get clipped by a rollerblader, but that's about the biggest danger," she joked as she spokeCBC Metro Morning hostMatt Gallowayat one of her top Toronto haunts SunnysidePavilion, which isoff Lake Shore Boulevardsouth ofHigh Park.

Whalenis one of the four women behind the sketch show that roots out the absurd, sometimes uncomfortable, moments ofmodern life and turns them into comedy gold. CBC announced Tuesdayproduction will start on a second season in the fall.

Show's creators all west enders

The show's creators all live in the west end and the show is mostly shot there. Trinity Bellwoods park, Sunnyside pool and the Gladstone Hotel have all served as backdrops for sketches.

Whalen says sticking to the neighbourhoods they know lends authenticity to the show.

"We all live here and we love Toronto, and this is what we knew how to talk about,"she told Galloway. "I know the kind of conversations that happen in a specific park."

Jennifer Whalen, writer, performer and co-creator of CBC comedy show Baroness Von Sketch, loves Toronto's Sunnyside Beach for comedy inspiration. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

It's those conversations, moments and trends that Whalen mines for comedic inspiration on her walks through the neighbourhood.

"Sometimes you overhear a snippet somebody said that you think is amazing. I overheard this lady saying to her friend the other day, 'You're just mad because I wouldn't accept your fake apology!'"

"I thought, 'What just happened? What are these ladies talking about?'"

High Park, Roncesvallesand the beach along Sunnyside Park are favourite haunts.

"I love the people watching. Everybody comes from all over the city to hang out here, and I love seeing all of the different shapes, sizes, varieties of people."

A walk through High Park led to a sketch about people who put their dogs in strollers. Another bit of eavesdropping sparked an idea about new moms competing to out-weird each other with unusualbaby names.

After Whalen noticed waiters always seem to ask about the first bite of your meal, but neglect to enquire about the rest, she wrote "First Few Bites."

In comedy, the specific is universal

"In comedy there's that thing that when you hit the specific, it ends up being universal. So talking about the weird things that happen atSunnysideBeach, everyone around the world'sgonnabe like, 'Oh, we've got our own version ofSunnysideBeach.'"

Carolyn Taylor, Jennifer Whalen and Aurora Brown in the sketch "First Few Bites," from CBC comedy show Baroness Von Sketch. (CBC)

Though the comedy is universal, the show's point of view is distinctly female.

In a sketch set in a locker room where almost everyone is nude (save for some strategic blurring) post-40 women revel in the freedom of no longer caring how they look naked.

In another sketch a pharmacist chastises a woman's personal hygiene habits when she needs some over-the-counter vaginal cream.

"I think that all of us are sort of drawn to uncomfortable moments and awkwardness. We all have so muchangst all the time ... we just heighten that and make it public."

Watch Baroness Von Sketch onlineathttp://www.cbc.ca/baroness