REVIEW

Scamming the Viewers: Con on Comedy Central

Written by DrPat
Published May 15, 2005

It's an interesting concept: find a con artist and follow him around, laughing uproariously at the poor schmucks he swindles. And provided you can suspend disbelief (and moral sensibility), Skyler Stone and company pull it off fairly well in Comedy Central's Con.

I hadn't seen the program before this because it's on at an awkward time for me. I've seen the ads for it; Skyler Stone driving with a black bar over his eyes, jumping on a comped hotel bed and pigging out in the guise of a Senator. It seemed humorous enough in the ads, but not enough to tempt me out of my sleep schedule. After viewing this week's episode, I'm glad it's on so late, if only to reduce the potential number of copy-cat con amateurs.

This week Stone set out to get his posse a free ski weekend. But first, he pulls a gratuitous penny-ante scam, as he scrounges in the local Mickey D's garbage, looking for a cheeseburger receipt. He finds one that specifies "no pickles, no onions," and parlays the crumpled receipt into a "free" burger. There's no ground for argument here—he stole a cheeseburger. (And I wonder how many identical thefts will occur next week, as unscrupulous viewers imitate Stone?)

As for the ski weekend scam, it starts with Skyler promoting a "boy band" (Stone himself fronting, with fellow con artists Dave Keyes and Joey Morgs singing backup and Zach Johnson as manager) purportedly doing a Public Service Announcement video for California Tourism. "Governor Schwarzenegger wants people to think of California as a place to ski," Stone tells the publicist at Mt. Baldy Ski Resort. "We've got this boy band, Ice Train, really hot in Norway and just about to break in the States..."

Once the hook is set, Stone then approaches a couple of friends for help to put the "band" on a credible footing. A bedroom sound-studio artist massages the boys' miniscule singing abilities, creating a CD to which they will lip-sync. An artist friend slaps together an enormous plywood triptych mural for the group to "perform" in front of for the cameras. A secondary scam nets the boys some personalized choreography.

I have to admit, the choreography scam was pretty funny. The dance studio they conned agreed to help the guys as "poster boys" for the dreaded disease Acid Reflux Level 4. A couple of references to "ARL4" and a near-faint by Stone and Joe Morganella solidified their performance. Even so, I was left a little queasy at the thought of how easily they took advantage of the choreographers' cluelessness.

I know the show sets up and restages incidents, and pays for "some" products they acquire initially by scamming. I realize it's likely the real victims of the con are the viewers, since that blanket disclaimer could cover behind-the scenes payment for every item or service they "steal" on-camera. Even so, the program is a troubling concept for any audience: "Watch us steal, cheat and lie, and (apparently) get away scot-free!"

What's next? A live-action drama that seems to show actual cannibalism? A comedy about the travails of a child pornographer? A show that popularizes unprotected sexual activity and needle-swapping?

This is a good show to miss—I heartily recommend changing the channel.


By the way, Skyler Stone is not the other actor from Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure. Anyone seen Alex Winter lately?

DrPat Beard 1996 DrPat is the blog signature used by an old coot who hoards books, dances Argentine Tango, cooks a mean venison chili, and is happy to be along for the sag while my spouse does a marathon bicycle ride. All that is in my spare time — and my work life is classified...
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Scamming the Viewers: Con on Comedy Central
Published: May 15, 2005
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Crime, Review, Culture: Society, Video: Reality TV
Writer: DrPat
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Comments

#1 — May 15, 2005 @ 16:24PM — Dave Nalle [URL]

But the key is that no one is actually scammed here. Everyone gets paid scale after the fact, plus they get free publicity for their business or their budding career as a stripper.

Dave

#2 — May 15, 2005 @ 16:41PM — DrPat [URL]

Does McDonalds (whose name and logos are not shown) get any benefit from providing not just one cheeseburger from an LA drive-through, but however many hundreds of similarly-scammed meals from restaurants across the US?

How about Burger King, Wendy's, Der Wienersnitzel, Jack in the Box, and so on, whose drive-throughs are equally vulnerable?

I admit, I thought it was a cute concept at first. But I can't shake the thought that there is a real scam going on here, and it ain't the folks on camera being victimized...

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