Representative Albums: "Meet Mark Gross", "Sexual Odometer
Biography
Comedian Mark Gross hits the stage in a button-up shirt with tie, close-cropped hair, and a downtrodden demeanor. His outward look doesn't prepare audiences for his foul-mouthed sense of humor that often fits his surname perfectly. Coming up through the world of improvisation as a member of the Amore Brothers and hitting the comedy club circuit after that, Gross got his first big break in 1996 opening for Howie Mandel on a nationwide tour. A year later he got a job writing for the nationally syndicated radio show The Bob & Tom Show along with the occasional on-air appearance. Writing for Bill Maher's Politically Incorrect introduced Gross to the world of television while 1997's Sexual Odometer became his recorded debut. A 2002-2003 tour with Dave Chappelle put Gross in even bigger venues, but it was his 2003-2004 tour with Rodney Carrington that became his career-defining moment. Carrington became Gross' biggest supporter and hired him as a writer when Carrington landed his own show in 2004 named Rodney. Carrington also introduced Gross to the people at Capitol Nashville. The label released gross sophomore effort, Meet Mark Gross, in August of 2005. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide
A gross is equal to a dozen dozen, i.e. 12 × 12 = 144..
It can be used in duodecimal counting. The use of gross likely originated from the fact that 144 can be counted on the fingers using the fingertips and first two joints of each finger when marked by the thumb of one hand. The other hand is then used to count multiples of 12. Therefore, 12 countings of 12 equals 144. It is a simple counting system that can be practiced without paper or other marks.
The term is often used in commercial contexts implying a quantity of 144 items. A count of 1728 or a dozen gross equals a great gross. Though a gross is often said to mean simply "144", it is subject to the usage rules for a unit, as opposed to those for numbers:
when the preceding word is a number, it often implies multiplication rather than combining that number of separate counts, e.g. "two gross" can refer equally to a single container into which 288 items were counted, or to a pair of containers into each of which 144 were counted
normally (i.e., save for in situations justifying extreme brevity), specifying the kind of objects being counted may not be done by positioning the kind directly following "gross", but requires that the word "of" intervene, e.g. "288 apples", but "two gross of apples"
Its common abbreviations are either "gr" or "gro".