• Home
  • Contact
Entertainment Now
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
Home Comedy

Why Is There So Much Misery in Fringe Comedy?

Kate Copstick by Kate Copstick
August 18, 2024
in Comedy, Edinburgh Festivals
21 0
0
Why Is There So Much Misery in Fringe Comedy?

A street performer at Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Maybe it was those pesky reviewers to blame all along.

Maybe we just ran out of words to describe funny and clutched at narrative as a way to keep ourselves feeling smart and relevant.

Related articles

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

Maybe it makes us look more impressive if we can see the ‘meta’ and the ‘pain’ and the ‘bravery’ and the ‘coming to terms’ in a show.

Maybe if PRs and Editors and Promoters weren’t so keen on an easy hook to sell a show or garner readers through a catchy headline.

And maybe if Big Business Boys did not insist that the Comedy section of the brochure is the only place to be because the Comedy Section sells, shows could settle where they fit.

Maybe if we hadn’t littered the review pages of every publication at The Fringe with ecstatic reviews for tragic shows, while dismissing others as “just funny”, then poor comics in search of affirmation would not feel obliged to open a vein onstage and bad comics would not get the opportunity to mask their shortcomings with emotional blackmail.

But we, the reviewers, created that environment.

Maybe if we hadn’t made such a fuss about narrative line and breadth of vision and 40 minute lulls we would not be dealing with all of this desperate self obsession in the Comedy section now.  

Maybe if we hadn’t had such a thirst for the ‘personal’.

Maybe a month in Edinburgh, laughing all the time, is too much for us and we crave a nicely describable weep.

Maybe if The Scotsman  hadn’t started the bloody star system in 1996 it would all be a lot easier because everyone would not be star chasing, and never, ever happy with what they get.

I am constantly being told by comics and PRs that I am “giving them nothing to work with” with a three star review. The younger and newer reviewers give more stars,  I am told,  leading to “star inflation” and so I must take that into account and increase my stars too.

No one reads reviews, I am told. They just look at the number of stars. Wherever they come from.

Maybe we should follow the lead of the much loved Machyllneth Comedy Festival who, I am told, allow no reviewers.

Whatever we do, it cannot go on like this

And maybe the whole imposition of the hour long show is another huge mistake by people who are not themselves the comedians. The venues and some of the big prizes push one hour slots on the comics and time and time again the quality fades after forty minutes. Maybe someone could have considered that the ‘forty minute lull’ is just a sign that this should be the finish.

There is no good reason for pushing performers to fill an hour when that is not how they work. Put Usain Bolt in a marathon and he would start to look average around the three quarter way mark.

I don’t know what the solution is.

But we should not go on like this.

Maybe.

Tags: featured
Kate Copstick

Kate Copstick

Copstick is an actress, television presenter, writer, critic, director and producer. She has been on the panel of the Perrier Comedy and Malcolm Hardee Awards and when she isn't making or breaking someones career with one review she is working with her charity, Mama Biashara.

Related Posts

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

Brighton Fringe Review: Cabaret Impedimenta

by Victoria Nangle
May 23, 2026
0

A stalwart of the Weekend of Weird sub-Fringe season at The SpiegelGardens, Cabaret Impedimentia packs an enjoyably disruptive punch. The premise is simple: five professional cabaret...

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

Cally Beaton’s Namaste Motherfckers* Returns in Paperback as UK Tour Extends Following Huge Demand

by Helen Hurdman
May 22, 2026
0

Best-selling author, comedian and broadcaster Cally Beaton is continuing a remarkable second act as her Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller Namaste Motherfckers: A Modern Manifesto For Keeping Cool When...

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon Team Up for Nine Date UK Tour

by Siobhan Rowe
May 22, 2026
0

Penn Jillette and Piff The Magic Dragon are heading out on their first ever UK tour together later this year with brand-new live show Piff & Pop’s...

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

Brighton Fringe Review: Ben Hur

by Victoria Nangle
May 22, 2026
0

How? How is it possible for a cast of four (plus two incredible backstage dressers) to put on the epic tale of ‘Ben Hur’ as a...

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

Brighton Fringe Review: Nocturne Musical

by Victoria Nangle
May 17, 2026
0

Where Alice In Wonderland meets the Moomin trolls – but in Norway – that’s where ‘Nocturne Musical’ exists. When 12 year old nature-lover Solveig goes into...

RECOMMENDED

Music: The Night Comes Alive with ‘Champagne’
Music

Music: The Night Comes Alive with ‘Champagne’

October 28, 2024
Yuriko Kotani: We couldn’t do this during lockdown
Comedy

Yuriko Kotani: We couldn’t do this during lockdown

August 23, 2023
Entertainment Now

Your daily fix for what is trending in entertainment.

© 2026 Entertainment Now.

  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Music
  • Movies
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Food and Drink
  • Edinburgh Festivals
    • Cabaret
    • Dance, Physical Theatre & Circus
    • Family
    • Musicals
    • Spoken Word
    • Theatre
  • Comedy
  • Books
  • Theatre
  • TV

© 2026 Entertainment Now.