Paul âPKâ Kim â98, Eddie Gorton â01, and David Murphy â02 trace their comic odysseys from talent shows and laundromats to Thorne Hall and the Laugh Factory
âWhen I was in high school, I had the biggest crush on Margaret Cho,ââDavid Murphy â02 recalls. âI would have dreams where I was on a talk show with her.â For Murphy and fellow stand-up comics Paul âPKâ Kim â98 and Eddie Gorton â01, Sept. 6, 2024, was a dream come trueâthe chance not only to perform at their alma mater in an iconic space (Thorne Hall) but to open for a pair of comedy veterans: Saturday Night Live alumna Melissa Villaseñor and Cho herself.

âFor an hour or so before the show, we were back in the green room just chopping it up,ââGorton says. (Of the trio, only Kim had met Cho before, having interviewed her several years ago for a Laugh Factory podcast.) âThe three of us were starstruck with both of themâMelissa being on SNL and Cho just being an absolute legend in the game. Iâve known about her since I was a kid. I was sitting there thinking to myself, âDonât say anything stupid.ââ
At the encouragement of Choâs assistant, Murphy shared his adolescent dream with the Asian American comic pioneer. âShe was very receptive,â he says. âShe has all these tattoos and I have tattoos. Hopefully, Iâll run into her again one day at a comedy club.â
As for the show itselfâLaugh Your Class Off!âwhich was supported by the First-Year Engagement Program Fund through a gift from Oxy trustee Larry Solomon â84âVillaseñorâs vocally dexterous set, including pitch-perfect impressions of Jennifer Lopez, Owen Wilson, and Natalie Portman, brought much of the crowd to its feet, including President Tom Stritikus. And if anyone was fretting that the notoriously profane Cho would tone down her act in the august surroundings of Thorne Hall, worry not; her ribald barbs would have made Charles Thorne blush. âThe students went crazy,â Murphy says. âThe energy in there was powerful.â
In terms of stand-up seniority, Kim did his first open mic at the Laugh Factory a quarter-century ago. Murphy first took the stage in January 2014, and Gorton went on in March 2019, just shy of his 40th birthday.
Perhaps youâre wondering:âHow did a philosophy major, a psych major, and a econ major get to this place? âWhen PK, David, and I realized weâre the only three alumni doing stand-up in L.A. that we knew of, I began pushing this idea of getting on stage together,â Gorton says. The trio performed for the first time collectively on Nov. 15, 2023, at an Oxy L.A. alumni mixer at the Laugh Factory Hollywood.
The event was such a success that they did a second show at Oxy in April 2024, part of an evening of comedy in the Cooler assembled by Steve Eulenberg, Occidentalâs assistant director of student involvement and concert production. Other comics on that bill included Fahim Anwar, Andrew Adolfo, and BT Kingsley, with Carlos Aguilar â98 (Kimâs longtime friend and Oxy roommate) emceeing the show. âThe Cooler was mostly full, but not packed,â Kim says. âThorne was on another level. That was an epic night.
âThere are probably other Oxy alumni who have done stand-up, but weâre trying to keep that dream alive,â he adds. âI hope one of us three can make it big, because weâll all help each other.â
±Ê°âKŸ±łŸ: âI always wanted my son to be a leader in America. I wanted to name him Martin Luther Kimâthe leader of Asian American people. My wife always said, âThatâs so much pressure. Do you want to do that to him?â So, our second choice was Abraham Lynn Kim.â

âMany first-generation immigrants only use biblical names,â Kim proclaims. âGrowing up, I knew five other Paul Kims, so everybody called me. âPK.ââ He was, indeed, a preacherâs kid, and his father pastored a big church in El Sereno with a congregation of more than 3,000.
Growing up in a strict religious household, âI wasnât allowed to listen to music on the radioâit was all the devilâs musicâand I wasnât allowed to watch anything vulgar,â Kim says. âWhen my friend gave me a tape of Eddie Murphy Delirious, I was blown away. [Gorton likewise cites the classic 1983 stand-up special as an early influence.] After my parents went to sleep, I would stay up and watch Johnny Carsonâs opening monologue every night. And the fact that The Tonight Show was in Burbank made it feel real to meâthat people did this for a living.â
Having endured his share of verbal taunts as a teenager, Kim turned to comedy in self-defense. âI would recite these stand-ups that I was watching, and that gave me an âinâ toward different groups of friends where I would be self-deprecating,â he says. âSocially, comedy helped me a lot.â
Academically, he admits, âI did not do well at Oxy. My mind was all over the place, and I got my ass kicked in philosophy. But my professors rocked my world. Occidental opened my eyesâit was like ripping a Band-Aid off for a kid who grew up in a boxed-in church life.â
At age 23, Kim launched an Asian talent show called Kollaboration as a showcase for what he calls a âvery fragmentedâ community of Asian American performers. âI was trying to show people, âHey, weâre not just math and science geeksâwe actually have singers, dancers, poets, and comedians.â Kim poured $5,000 of his own money into the show, renting a 1,200-seat theater. The first event sold only 200 tickets, he says, âbut the kids in the show emailed me messages like, âThis really made a difference in my life.ââ
Eventually, Kim turned Kollaboration into a nonprofit, spending 10 years as executive director while training youth for leadership roles, building a network of Asian American performers, and expanding the program into 13 cities nationwide as well as Toronto. âIt got really big,â he says. âFor our ninth show at Shrine Auditorium, 6,300 people came out.â
Around the time that Kim launched Kollaboration, he started doing stand-up at the Laugh Factory, a Sunset Strip mainstay since 1979. On Tuesdays he would see a line outside the venue for Open Mic Night, where owner Jamie Masada would take the first 10 comics in line for a guaranteed two-minute set (with an additional 10 chosen in a random drawing). âPeople waited in line for six hours, maybe longer,ââKim says. âSome guys wore diapers if they couldnât leave the line.â
Kim did the line (but not the diapers) for about a year, starting his day selling ads for the L.A. Timesâ Food section at 6 a.m. every Tuesday so he could leave early. Then one day, Masada asked him if he wanted to host a weekly Asian Night. âI thought that was my break right there,â he says. âI worked so hard promoting that show, bringing so many people to the Laugh Factory, and hosted that show for almost 20 years.â
Kim has performed at the Laugh Factory hundreds of times over the last 25 yearsânot only at the Hollywood mother ship, but also Las Vegas, San Diego, and Long Beach. Perhaps his most popular video is a 2013 clip titled which has 2.4 million views on the Laugh Factoryâs YouTube channel.
As a father of three, a hotel event director, and running a wedding event company (Prokreation Entertainment) on weekends, comedy is fourth on Kimâs call sheet most days. âI have all the excuses, but I need to find a dedicated time to write,â he says. âStand-up used to be all about material, but now all the clips that are going viral are crowd work. Iâm really trying to strengthen that muscle.â
David Murphy: âIâve been dating this woman whoâs a little bit older than me. I didnât realize she was older until she gave me her email and it was Sarah[at]hotmail.com. And I said, âYou were the first Sarah to sign up for Hotmailâno underscores, no numbers?â God created the universe, and his email is Jesusdad1225[at]hotmail.com.â

âWhen I started doing comedy, I would see PK at the Laugh Factory,â Murphy says. âHeâs the sweetest, most encouraging human there is.â The two connected over Oxy, and Kim put him in a show he was producing.
âI did really well and after I got offstage, PK said, âOh, man, Iâm so glad youâre funny. All I knew about you was that you went to Oxy.ââ Murphy chuckles. âHe was so relieved.â
A graduate of Daniel Murphy (no relation) High School, Murphy played basketball for three years under Coach Brian Newhall â83 and majored in economics at Occidental. He thought that he would pursue a career in business like his dad, but the class that had the biggest impact on him was an elective he picked up to impress a âcuteâ theater major.
âI took an acting class from Professor John Bouchard,â he says, âand everyone did a scene at the end of the semester. After class, Professor Bouchard pulled me off to the side and told me, âYou have something.â As I turned around to walk off, he said, âIâm serious, David. I wouldnât say itâs developed or anything, but thereâs something about you on stage, thatâs all.ââ
His first job after graduating was in sales for a national insurance company, complete with an Amex corporate card and traveling for work around the country. Even so, âI wasnât happy being in the office,â Murphy says. âI realized I didnât have the money-at-all-cost gene that some people have. Life was too short to do something that I wasnât passionate about, and I definitely did not have a passion for insurance.â
Consequently, Murphy started traveling abroad on his own, a passion that continues to this day. âI went to a couple places and that changed me. I saw people being happy in different parts of the world who didnât have as many material things.â
Over the years, Murphy has visited about 26 countries. âIâve traveled to Bali four times now,â he says. âThereâs no status there. Everybodyâs on scooters and wearing beach clothesâtank tops and board shorts. Everything is chill and the cost of living is really cheap.â
Making the leap into stand-up âtook me a while,â Murphy admits. Though he would land the occasional acting gig, memorizing lines âwas never really my thing,â and he grew frustrated with the industryâs red tape: âToo many people had to say yes.â
On Jan. 13, 2014, Murphy went to his first open mic at a place called Amsterdam Cafe in North Hollywood. âIt was scary,â he recalls. âA comedian friend of mine said, âCome to the open mic.â I think there were five people there. Maybe a minute and a half into my set, I was thinking, âMan, these three minutes are moving slow.â But I fell in love with it. When I told my dad, âThis is what I want to do,â he told me, âI donât care what you do. It could be whatever you want. So many people spend their lives on the platform. Donât wait to get on a trainâjust pick a train.â
âA lot of comedy is what happens offstageâyour ability to engage, network, and be friendly with all kinds of people,â he says. âEverybody always tells me, âMurph, youâre so good at talking to people,â and Iâm like, âYeah, because I went to Oxy. There were so many different types of people there, and Iâve always been fascinated by people.â
After the Thorne Hall show last semester (âa bucket-list momentâ), Murphy felt the same warmth about the current generation of students that he knew a quarter-century ago. âOxy still has the same friendly culture on campus where you can talk to anybody,â he says. âI went to the Cooler after the show and when I tried to pay for something, these kids were like, âNo, Iâll get the pizza. I have so much money on my card.â I remember doing the same thing as a student when visitors would come to campus.
âComedy has a lot of ups and downs,â he adds. âYouâre driving three hours down to San Diego just to do six minutes without getting paid and turning around. Iâve done shows in laundromats and on sidewalks. Everybody thinks of comedy as just clubs. The truth is, you do a lot of grunt work, but you love it.â
Whether itâs telling his own jokes and stories or writing material for others, comedy is Murphyâs full-time pursuit. In recent years, heâs gone out on the road opening for headliners Theo Von, Eric Griffin, Amir K, and Damon Wayans Jr., among others.
For much of his career, commercials have been his bread-and-butter. Murphy has appeared in about 50 national for brands such as McDonaldâs, Apple, and Tide. For a national commercial like the one he did for AT&T last year, he says, âYou might make $40,000 from that one day.â
Murphy recently wrapped production on the second season of the BET comedy series Churchy, on which he is co-head writer. Last year, he and his writing partner wrote a feature film script for Churchy creator and star Kevin âKevOnStageâ Fredericks as well. Heâs done some punch-up jobs on writing jobs with the Farrelly Brothersâtwo seasons of the streaming series Loudermilk as well as The Now, a 2021 show for the Roku Channel.
âMy dream is to write for a network TV show for ABC or NBC or something,â he says. âI feel like itâs in the universe. I went on a walk yesterday with a buddy who just sold a show to Amazon. Iâm around it. Iâm seeing that itâs doable.â (Fun fact: Murphyâs high school basketball coach was Kenya Barris, creator of Black-ish and a host of other series.)
âIf I can go through life and not have to wake up and go to something I donât want to, thatâs a super win for me. I donât need to be rich. I like traveling. I spent two months in Bali last year. And if I want to go to lunch with my dad, I can go to lunch with my dad. But that comes with keeping a low overhead. I just hope to be doing this for a long time.â
Murphyâs dad has been to two or three of his shows, âbut not because he wonât come,â Murphy says. I just tell him not to come. I still get nervous. I only recently had my first show where I was OK with bombing. It took me 10 years to realize heâs still gonna love me even if I donât do well.â His mom has never come to a show, but for a different reason: âShe thinks I talk about her too much.â
Eddie Gorton: âIâm the only one of my friend group from high school that made it out and went to college. Itâs a lot of pressure when youâre the only one. Clap it up if youâre the smart person in your friend groupâeven if you came here with your dumb friends. They wonât know.â

Last May, Eddie Gorton taped a game show hosted by Travis Kelce titled Are You Smarter Than a Celebrity? We wonât spoil the episode (which premiered on Amazon Prime Video in December) but Gorton misspelled a word for $15,000, he says: âThe kids at school have been reminding me how to spell that word ever since.â
When he was applying to colleges in 1997, Gorton was looking to enroll at San Jose State and play football as a walk-on when he got a phone call from Marcus Garrett â93, an assistant football coach for the Tigers. âOxyâs football team was looking for some speed and I ran track as well at that time,ââsays Gorton, who grew up in San Mateo. âOnce I got to Oxy, I played football and ran track for a couple of years.â
Later on, as a psychology major, he gave up sports (âI wasnât going to the NFLâ) and started focusing on student life, helping to revive Kappa Alpha Psi fraternityâs Lambda Rho chapter and reinvent campus radio station KOXY. âGoing to Occidental was the best decision I ever made,â he says.
When he graduated from Oxy, âI didnât have a plan,â Gorton admits.âI didnât have a car, an apartment, or a job. But within a week, I got hired by Enterprise Rent-A-Car, found an apartment in Pasadena with some friends from Oxy, and got a used car. Once I got micro-established as far as survival goes, I decided I wanted to be a teacher.â
Even as a first-grader, Gorton says, âI remember thinking, âI can do this better than my teacher, Mrs. Trailor.â She was so boring, and I would be funnier than her doing this. I was like 6 or 7, right? I always had that in the back of my head.â
Fast-forward 16 years: As luck would have it, one of his customers at Enterprise was a principal, and he put Gorton in touch with a colleague who needed to replace a teacher in a combined fourth grade/fifth grade class with four months remaining in the school year.
âI think of teaching as an art, not a science,â he says, âand I always had that ability to talk to kids and work with students.â Pointing to Malcolm Gladwellâs maxim, he says, âIf you do the math, it takes about 9œ years to get to 10,000 hours in front of the kids. I was maybe in my ninth year when I thought, âIâm really good at this.â â
After 12 years, he left the classroom to become a Title III English Language Instructional Coach. He did that for two years, followed by nearly 18 months as a restorative justice coordinator for about 25 schools in the district, and three years as an assistant principal at Strathern Street, Sylvan Park, and Carpenter elementary schools.
In September 2020, Gorton accepted a job as principal of Colfax Charter Elementary School. âAdministrators were clamoring for a new voice,â he says, âand I think they reached out to me because they wanted to bring a little more jazz to the situation.â
In 2022, Colfax was one of two LAUSD elementary schools to be named a National Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education. âComing out of COVID, we were just really smashing these state tests,â Gorton says. âMy teaching staff is by far the best that Iâve ever worked with. I ended up in a great spot.â (That same year, Gorton received the Alumni Seal Award for service to the community from Occidental.)
Gorton got the nickname âPrincipal of Comedyâ before he got the Colfax job. âAfter I started stand-up, the host of a show I was doing knew I was an assistant principal,â he recalls. âWhen he introduced me, he said, âHereâs the Principal of Comedy.â I took that name and branded the heck out of it.â
For years, Gorton had been channeling his inner stand-up in the classroom and at school assemblies. In the summer of 2018, with his 40th birthday on the horizon, he was at a dinner party where guests went around the table talking about a work of art that inspired them. âI mentioned this HBO documentary about Robin Williams [Robin Williams: Come Inside My Mind] and said, âIâve been thinking about doing stand-up for the first time.â This guy across the table gets up and says, âYou should do it. And if you donât do it by the next time I see you, f*ck you.â He kind of playfully cussed me out, but I was thinking, âNow Iâve got to do it.ââ
The very first joke he told on stage was based on a true story. âI lost my Social Security card when I was about 25 and had to go down to the office and get a new one. In the government system, my ethnicity was listed as Caucasian, because my mom is whiteâwhen I was born in the hospital, the nurse checked the box next to Caucasian. I was legally white for 25 years. And when the lady across the table asked me if I wanted to change it, I replied something like, âYeah, letâs get this party started!ââ
The story builds to a climax that really happened: On his way home from the Social Security office, Gorton was pulled over by a patrol car. âThe cop comes up to my window and asks me, âDo you know why I pulled you over?â And I said, âIâve been Black for 12 minutes. Yâall donât mess around.â We both laughed, and he didnât give me a ticket.â
Comedy isnât Gortonâs primary job, of courseâhe was judging a spelling bee at Colfax on the day of this interviewâbut he tries to maintain a routine for his side hustle. âOnce a week Iâm writing,â he says, âand twice a month my goal is to get up at a legit venue and tell some jokes. The buckets that I usually play with are things that happen at school, things that happen with my wife and kids, and things that have happened to me personally that involve race.
âGrowing up, my immediate family at home was all white people. My mom, dad, and sister were all Irish. Along with your general childhood experiences, I was surrounded by alcoholism and quite the blended family. So, you pull from all that and make it funny.â
In his second year as a stand-up, Gorton got the chance to open for comic Dan Mintz (best known as the voice of Tina on Bobâs Burgers). âOur kids were in kindergarten together, and we became friends,ââhe says.
A typical weekend of stand-up goes like this: âYou do five shows in three daysâa Thursday show and two shows each on Friday and Saturday,â Gorton notes. âI flew all the way to Tampa for my first time ever going out with Dan. And on the way there, he told me, âIf you bomb on Thursday, you will be hosting on Friday.â
âI never looked back,â he declares. âI was funny on Thursday.â And heâs been funny every Thursday ever since.