improv online

5 Things To Love About Online Improv

sereja-ris-g3B53PbBfwU-unsplash.jpg

Having taught Improv for Anxiety classes in person for so many years, I’ll admit I was a little sceptical about moving them online. Scared, even. I hated the idea. It was going to suck for sure.

But, like I’ve told my students hundreds of times, “Yes!” Be open to the idea, accept that improv is going online, and move forward. So I did. And you know what? It didn’t suck as much as I thought it would. In fact, I’ve seen some real benefits.

1) Commute time

Honestly, it’s just so much easier and quicker to get to class now. Oh, I have class in one minute? Guess I should change out of my pyjamas.

We had a student mention last class that sometimes they had to work late, and the travel time would make them late so they wouldn’t go. Now it’s pretty much switching Zoom meetings.

Also, getting to that first improv class is the scariest part for a lot of people. Now you can put off going to class till literally the last minute.

(Also works at the end of class, where any potential for awkward chit chat is thwarted by a simple “Leave Meeting.”)

2) No hygiene requirements

Listen, I’ll be honest here, I’m not showering as much as I was when things were opened up. On top of that, I’ve really been going heavy on the garlic dishes. Could be for medicinal purposes, or maybe I’ve been eating so much of it that it takes more for me to taste it. The point is, I smell. And you know, you won’t know that. Unless I use some sort of “stink lines” filter, which I still haven’t figured out how to use.

Just rolled out of bed? Welcome to class.
Just stress sweated your way through a marathon of meetings? Welcome to class.
Just got sprayed by a skunk while tarring your roof and changing your baby’s diaper? Be careful, and welcome to class.

3) Comfortable environment

Things that are new can feel scary. If you sign up for a class, you’re trying something new, with new people, but now it’s not also at a new place. You’re doing it from the comfort of your own home.

Which also means bathroom access. Don't know about you, but when I get nervous, I feel like I need to pee. And knowing the toilet is close by, and available, actually helps me need to pee less.

4) It’s international!

Not only is there no commute time, there’s no commute distance. An improv class in Toronto used to have mostly people from Toronto. Or the occasional person who drove in from Oakville. Not anymore. Our last drop-in had people from all over the States, England, Mexico, and even a couple from Australia (which is further than Oakville).

5) The laughs

My fear was that online improv would be a lesser version of in-class improv. I was focused on what would suck about it, instead of what’s great. Which is that it exists. It can happen anywhere, anytime. In a time when we could all use a laugh or two, online improv provides that.

It’s great to laugh. How could I have ever questioned that?

And now if you’ll excuse me, I could probably use a shower.