Caveat: Loop and Delay: A Song About People And Sasquatches

I've never been that much into the "beatboxing" phenomenon, but this guy, Reggie Watts, takes it to a whole new level. I'm blown away.

He's a comedian too, with a remarkably wide repertoire. Here he is doing TED, with a mix of his "loop and delay" beatboxing bits and some really bizarre, essentially dadaist comedy – it includes, for example, "a song about people and sasquatches and french science stuff." He does these weird mashup riffs of made-up languages, too. I see him as half hip-hop beatboxer working at a high-tech startup company, half Borges on psilocybin.

From another one of his routines, he says, "At one point, innovation didn't exist." His point: someone had to come up with it. How did that work?

On thinking outside of the box: "As children know, sometimes boxes are very hard to get out of."

What I'm listening to right now.

Reggie Watts, "NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert." Note that his first improv in this bit is a tribute to NPR – at least the acronym and coffee sippers.

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