Soon, he was playing the comedy circuit -- which for him, as a clean comic, includes
churches and religious festivals as a way for him to stand out from other comedians.
Hampton says for him, comedy happens organically.
"My biggest problem is I don't write like I talk," he says. "It's difficult for me
to sit for an hour and write material. I have to pay attention to how I'm talking."
If he and his best friend, former The View co-host Sherri Shepherd, are talking, he'll stop what he's saying and write it on
a notepad.
Hampton says his degree in emergency administration and disaster planning has helped
him as he repeats the mantra he learned from his studies.
"Every time I'm ready to do a show -- are you prepared, are you ready?" he says.
Not all emergencies require the same response.
During one show at a church, a kid was heckling him.
"I felt the Holy Spirit tap me and say, 'Move on.' What? 'Man, move on. Move on!'
So I moved on."
Afterward, the pastor told him he won the audience by not responding to the boy --
who had suffered brain damage from an accident.
"You learn to move on from situations because every situation is different," Hampton
says.
His biggest highlights? His appearance on America's Got Talent in 2018.
"America's Got Talent is NBC primetime at night. For two minutes it was just me entertaining America,"
he says. "If you're watching the show, you're paying attention to me."
Then there was his appearance on The View with Whoopi Goldberg.
"Does it really get better than The Color Purple and Ghost?" he says.
He found himself disagreeing with her about a piece of celebrity gossip -- and she
was signaling him to continue arguing.
"She's giving me the thumbs up to do it more," he says. "It's hard to outdo that moment."