Background
Slagle was born in Detroit, Michigan, and adopted by a middle-class family, living in the blue collar area of South Suburban Detroit known as Downriver.
Slagle was born in Detroit, Michigan, and adopted by a middle-class family, living in the blue collar area of South Suburban Detroit known as Downriver.
He briefly attended the University of Michigan, and eventually dropped out without a degree in 1979 to become a fringe part of the Detroit Punk scene in the band Boris Savage and the Primates.
His material leans towards political satire. He is known for his regular contributions to Liberty Magazine. He currently lives in the Chicago metropolitan area.
He was raised in Trenton, Michigan, graduating from Trenton High School in 1976.
His career was extremely short since he is completely tone deaf, and was much more adept at breaking instruments than playing them. In 1979 he started performing at the open mic nights at Mark Ridleys Comedy Castle in north suburban Detroit.
As stand-up comedy clubs exploded around the country during the comedy boom of the 1980s, there were plenty of venues looking for comics, and by 1983, Slagle was traveling the country as a professional comic. After three years of living on the road, he settled in Chicago, where he became a regular in the Zanies chain of comedy clubs.
Slagle"s style of comedy is observational and often ironic.
He often illustrates the contradictions inherent in politics and the duality of political correctness. He gets incredulous at some of the obvious double standards that seem to exist without comment. In 1989, Slagle first appeared nationally on the Showtime Comedy Club Network, and again in 1991 on the Music Television Half Hour Comedy Hour.
In 1996, he appeared on-stage in a small theater in Chicago, with comedian Tom Naughton in the Slagle Naughton Report.
In 2000 he also produced and starred in a brief run on local Minneapolis television show: The Mudslingers Ball, with Lewis Black, Will Durst, Jeffrey Jena, and host Mike Lukas. lieutenant aired on KSTP channel 5, an American Broadcasting Company affiliate.
Records. The Civil Defense is notable as a best of from Slagle"s career and also features a cover by noted illustrator Jack Davis.
Slagle describes himself as right-wing, although the Libertarian Party claims him as their own. CDs
Records
VHS Tapes
Awake (1993)
Nation of Criminals (1998)
Live (2000).
He likes to point out that political correctness is never applied across the board, and that politicians seem to bend science in order to fit their policies. He was interviewed and appeared briefly in the documentary Michael Moore Hates America (2004)
His politics seem right in line with the Libertarian platform, and although he occasionally appears at Republican political functions, he has never disowned his affiliation with the Libertarians.
In late 2006, Slagle released his first Civil Defense, entitled Europa on Stand Up! Europa (2006) Stand Up!.