Mike Bocchetti, My Dream Gig With the Artie Lange Show, and How I Lost It

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It took me 20 years to get on The Artie Lange Show. Being a comic or an actor is much different from other jobs. In some jobs, you might start out in a mail room at a company, and one day be the CEO of that company. Comedy has been nothing like that. You could have gone to Juilliard and still end up never doing more than bad dinner theater.

Like most comics I was a nomad for 20 years doing spots at New York clubs. That means traveling for hours, performing for drunks, then going to AA meetings in small dingy back rooms. Not exactly A-list actor stuff.

Then I met the great Nick DiPaolo, and Artie Lange– like the cavalry General Custer could have used at Little Big Horn. They took me from obscurity to become someone who was on national TV every night. I felt like I had the world by the nuts. Hot chicks would be tearing my clothes off. Adam Sandler would be my new barbecue buddy. These are the things that ran through my head for two years, but I alway kept in the back of my head– ‘when is this gravy train going to end?’

Well it did. After being the announcer on The Artie Lange show on Direct TV for 2 years it was cancelled on Monday, April 28 2014, a day I will never forget.

It started when I met Nick and Artie after one of their friends, Sal Governale (Sal the Stockbroker from the Howard Stern Show) had seen me on Last Comic Standing. It was Sal who introduced me to stuttering John Melendez in 2004. And then later I met Artie and Nick while I was touring with John and Sal.

When Nick and Artie asked me to be their announcer it was unbelievable. This was the first national steady gig I ever had.

We hit it off, because in a way, I was like them. I came from a very humble blue collar back ground. At first, I was a little star stuck by both of them, but i never asked them for gigs, or favors. I just liked them as people, and it seemed like they truly appreciated that, because most people were always looking for some kind of favor from them. The first gig we all did together  was with John Melendez, Artie, me,  Nick, the late great Otto Petersen (and George) and Sal the Stock Broker.   It was Dec 5, 2003 during a major snow storm.  It took us 5 hours to get to Philly the storm was so bad.  After that, they eventually started to love me as a person.  Nick even put me in a pilot for Comedy Central in 2004.

When Nick and Artie asked me to be their announcer on their new show, it was unbelievable. For 20 years I had auditioned, done off-off-broadway sketch shows,  tons of  hell gigs, and created my own projects, but this was the first national steady gig I ever had.  From the first day, September 7, 2012, I was nervous. I thought it was so so mind blowing, but  I was always worrying about how long this would last.

As amazing as it all was, for months I spent every minute thinking, “this could be it, it’s over.”

My life changed pretty fast.  I started getting tons of  emails, Facebook messages, Tweets.  I would get phone calls from people in recovery telling me how much I helped them, and how Artie changed their lives.  One guy named Mick who was a 911 responder that had brain cancer said I brought him joy every night.  Of course my life changed financially too. And with women– I had  woman hitting on me via Twitter,  Facebook even text messages.  I would get  naked pictures from  fans sent to me all the time.  And gifts too.  One fan even brought me a watch.  I’m not kidding when I say it felt like I hit the lotto.  But as amazing as it all was, for months I spent every minute thinking, “this could be it, it’s over.”  It was like I was in witness protection or something. I finally stated to chill out after the first year.  Then I started thinking we were invincible.

For 2 years, during the show’s run, I was just super blessed and super lucky to be where I was. There were a lot of good moments. Like when Andrew Dice Clay– who I have been a fan of since 1988 — came on the show and said he watched the show every night and was a huge fan of mine. I felt like I won an Emmy. Another great memory was when AJ from the Sopranos (Robert Iler) told me he was a huge fan.   This was crazy because I loved The Sopranos.

But of course, it eventually came to an end on April 28, 2014.

Dan, our producer had texted me early that afternoon to come in by 9. He said Artie wanted to have a meeting with us.

Dan, our producer had texted me early that afternoon to come in by 9. He said Artie wanted to have a meeting with us. In the 2 years I worked there, we had very few meetings with Artie, so I was worried. I called James Flippen, my friend who was a board op on the show, and we kept goofing about what the meeting was for. Maybe it was a vacation, maybe we were getting more money. But the truth was, I had a bad vibe and premonition about the meeting when Dan texted me, and I was totally right. I get vibes and premonitions of things, good and bad, and this one was real bad. At the meeting, Artie told us that he had gotten a call on Friday, finding out that we were cancelled. I was in shock, but I’ve totally stayed true to the game, and super loyal to the audience and fans. When we went on that night, I made sure to give them the best show I had ever given, since it was going to be the last night.

The next day I immediately started emailing, and calling agents and sending head shots, because I knew that the gravy train was done, and I moved on to the next thing with no regrets. After going to a place from Monday to Friday, every week for 2 years, it was weird. It didn’t sink in at first, then I started having intense dreams about the show that were really sad. I’m a lot better now and I am super positive that more great things are on the way.

I started a podcast called the Mike Bocchetti Show with John Restaino who was a fan from upstate.  The first show we did, ranked in the top 30 in comedy on iTunes. I’ve been appearing on the Opie and Anthony radio show,   I also shot an episode of Teachers Lounge, the web series from national headliner Ted Alexandro, with Dave Attell.  l am going into production on a webseries that I created with comedian Dave Hill and I’ve been cast on a new web series for Comedy Central that is created by comedian Pete Davidson.  Other than that, I’m working on trying to get back on tv.

Thanks to Artie Lange for a great 2 years of a better life and to Nick DiPaolo and Direct TV and most of all the fans I’ve met throughout this great time in my life.

 


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Comedian Mike Bocchetti started performing comedy in 1992. In 2012 he became the announcer for the Nick and Artie Show on DirectTV, and stayed on as the announcer for The Artie Lange Show until April 2014. He’s also made appearances on the Howard Stern Show, the Jim Breuer Show and The Opie and Anthony Show on SiriusXM. He appeared on 2 seasons of NBC’sLast Comic Standing and acted with Robert DeNiro in the feature film “The Family”. Follow Mike on twitter @MikeBocchetti and visit his website mikebocchetti.com.
Mike Bocchetti
Mike Bocchetti
Comedian Mike Bocchetti started performing comedy in 1992. In 2012 he became the announcer for the Nick and Artie Show on DirectTV, and stayed on as the announcer for The Artie Lange Show until April 2014. He’s also made appearances on the Howard Stern Show, the Jim Breuer Show and The Opie and Anthony Show on SiriusXM. He appeared on 2 seasons of NBC’sLast Comic Standing and acted with Robert DeNiro in the feature film “The Family”. Follow Mike on twitter @MikeBocchetti and visit his website mikebocchetti.com.