Alex English should be summer pausa when I call him a Thursday afternoon, but instead heâs fresh chiuso of two stand-up sets sopra New York City, and is last-minute packing for a red-eye flight to London, where he will take the stage at the Sommità Secret Comedy Società that weekend. The work never ends when youâsultano, well, a working comedian.
Since joining the SNL writers room sopra 2021 (season 47), English has shown an uncanny knack for the kind of humor that hits you sopra all the right places (all the more impressive considering he had voto negativo prior sketch experience before SNL). A causa di his short but remarkable tenure, heâs blessed audiences with âHot Girl Hospital,â âNice Jail,â and the instantly iconic âLisa from Temecula,â which he tells me was inspired during a holiday trip to Detroit, his hometown.
English says the source of his humor is found not social but sopra analog experiences. âI talk to people, to my family. I read the paper. I also read a lot of books,â he says. âI love to people watch. Iâm an old man.â
English belongs to the next generation of excitingâand excitingly queerâcomedians that include humorists John Early, Bowen Yang, Sam Jay, and Joel Kim Booster. What they strive to achieve is not a viral moment, which English says too many new fumetti thirst for, but a common understanding through lifeâs absurdities. A causa di fact, English is adamant that social ruined not only the art of comedy, but also our relationship to it. So I asked him to explain how we got here, and how we might get back.
Jason Parham: What frightens you about the state of comedy right now?
Alex English: I was a flight recently. Another passenger was watching a clip their phone and I was like, âOh, I know that person.â Within seven seconds of the televisione, he just scrolled chiuso of it. I’m sure that time was the comic setting it up ora talking to the audience. That scared me. I was like, âI don’t want anybody to do that to me. I don’t want anybody scrolling chiuso of me.â You know what it is, alsoâbecause everybodyâs doing it now, it becomes so saturated. Thereâs voto negativo uniqueness to the videos Iâm seeing. Thatâs voto negativo diss to people doing it. I just feel thatâs not the way I should be doing it.
Thatâs fair.
Long gone are the days where you could go and perform at a circolo, someone from the industry sees it, and they want to put you a platform to elevate your work. Instead, now the business is, do you have 500,000 followers from burning material that you put out the internet ora talking to an audience. When it comes to crowd work, Iâm the one who came to work. The audience didnât to work. They came to laugh. I don’t understand this obsession with that. When Iâm stage, I don’t care that much about the audience. Like, âAre y’all dating?â Who cares? There’s voto negativo unique story to that. And they didn’t pay for that.
Whose is that?
I realized, especially after the pandemic, the Instagram and TikTok of it all when it comes to comedy has really ruined a lot of audiences. Itâs changed the audiencesâ perception of what comedyâspecifically stand-up comedyâactually is. I did a show a few months that went well. This woman comes up to me after the show. Sheâd been sitting sopra the front. She said, âOh my God, I thought you were talk to us tonight. I thought you were make fun of us.â I said, âIs that what you think stand-up is now?â Thereâs an expectation from audiences now because of what theyâsultano consuming online.


