Running from 26th September 17th October, our fair city will play host to live podcasts, workshops and headliner shows with some very cool acts across multiple venues.
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!!!
We are thrilled to announce the return of the @DublinPodFest running throughout Dublin from 26th September – 17th October. Check out your favourite podcasts or discover some brand new favourites – and not a pair of headphones in sight! #DPF18pic.twitter.com/DsfjTYje08
— Dublin Podcast Fest (@DublinPodFest) July 12, 2018
The incredible line-up features international and homegrown podcasters, discussing everything from food to music to literature to football, film, comedy and much more.
One of the unmissable shows is The Guilty Feminist.
Deborah Frances-White and co-host for the night Alison Spittle will be live at Vicar Street, 1st October, talking about the noble goals of 21st century feminists and the insecurities which undermine them.
Another one not to miss out on is the Blindboy Podcast in Vicar Street on 7th October.
The Podcast does not only indoctrinate mental health issues but reaches further into a wide spectrum of current topics, may it be gun laws, feminism, racism or a bit of history. BlindBoy has it covered!
I think we're all aware about the phenomenal rise of the podcast as a form of both entertainment and education.
This will be the second year of teh festival and it looks set to just keep on growing, celebrating the podcasting world and connecting fans with the people who make them.
It’s certainly hard to get a word in edgewise when surrounded by three queens of Irish comedy. Joanne McNally, Alison Spittle and Enya Martin (Giz a Laugh) interrupt each other, slag each other off ann make everyone there break out in laughter. Except for the fact that I'm here to chat to them about their involvement in Vodafone Comedy Festival, the whole experience is rather like have a coffee with your mad secondary school friends.
We chat gigging, feminism and the sesh with three of Ireland's fastest rising comedy stars (serious girl power up in here).
SHEmazing: So tell us why you're excited to be part of the Vodafone Comedy festival this year?
Joanne: “It’s really international this year, more than it’s ever been. There's lots of Netflix people. Loads of podcast people, loads of shows I’ll be going to see.
“When you gig with American comedians at the Iveagh gardens they want to know if cultural references work, which is fair enough. ‘Like do you guys know what a mortgage is?’ I was like ‘no’ we don’t know what a mortgage is your set is f**ked.
“It's my third year doing it and it definitely gets easier each year. The first year was terrifying cause festivals are a strain, it’s not like you’re in a comedy club. There’s this whole line-up of people, especially when you’re new and people don’t know who you are. It's a much tougher gig but you get to do big rooms and feel like a super star."
Alison: “Everyone in Dublin comedy aims to be at the Vodafone Comedy Festival. I remember the first time I got it, I emailed with organiser with the headline ‘generic begging email’. Like 'I’m not even that good but please’. The day I got the email that I got it was one of the happiest career days of my life.
Enya: “It’s a really good environment it’s really fun. You have good time it’s not really serious."
SHEmazing: Do all the comedians hang out together after the shows?
Joanne: “It’s the only time of year comedians get together really. We have a drinking tent."
Alison: “Some drink suits some comedians better than others. Doing comedy is like being in a mad family. Like they’d break up your wedding but you still love them."
Joanne: "Yeah, a lot of comics aren't exactly the most stable of people."
Alison: "They’re a bit like taxi drivers. You can be crazy and be a taxi driver and be crazy and be a taxi driver. You could not wash for days and be a taxi driver and the same with comedians."
Joanne: "It depends on what type of comedian you are. Some comics are spilling their souls onstage."
Alison: "And backstage, and in the car on the way there."
Enya: "Sometimes your best jokes can come from minutes before you come on. Something that happens and it extends into ten minutes of material.”
Have you noticed a change in comedy in wake of the Me Too Movement, Repeal campaign etc?
Joanne: “People are very quick to be offended now. People err on the side of offended straight away. At the same time, I don’t think comedy is supposed to be a safe space. So what if you get offended? Sit and be offended for a bit, it’s not going to kill ya. I think comedies supposed to push things and if you’re muted than what’s the point.
“I don’t have it in me to be politically correct. It’s not supposed to be politically correct, that’s not funny. There’s a lot of virtue signalling in comedy with people getting up on stage saying I don’t see gender or race. It’s like are you blind? If you’re not racist, you’re blind.
“No one wants to be preached to, I don’t want to go to gig and be told how to live my life. That’s not real."
Enya: “The only time I talked about Repeal in my gigs was about my name. I was named after the singer Enya and her famous song was Sail Away. I’m a twin and you don’t plan twins, so it’s only when you’re listening to the song sail away you’re like that’s where the name came from.
“That’s the only time I really talk about it cause if you keep on dropping the ‘oh f**k’ bomb then people are less accepting than if you occasionally drop it in there."
Alison: “Abortion is a part of everyday life, as is suicide. Like it happens everywhere why are we ignoring it? As a comedian you should be allowed to reflect the world."
Enya: “It really depends on the approach.”
Joanne: “If it’s done humanely and in a tasteful way. Sometimes you don’t know whether to know ignore everything that’s going on in the world and just do pure daft escapism stuff or do you talk about what’s happening.”
A post shared by Enya Martin (@gizalaugh_enyamartin) on
SHEmazing: How do you think Youtube, Facebook etc is changing the comedy landscape?
Enya: "Growing up I always got really good reactions from friends and family with one-liners I didn't even mean to be funny. I just always had a way with words. It was only when I started doing the Facebook videos did I actually think that I was on to something. I never even thought of doing comedy but it’s a whole new platform. I did it the untraditional way, backwards from the screen to the stage."
Joanne: "Online works well if you have characters, I don’t do characters."
Enya: "The characters are all things that people can relate to, things that people are talking about. You kinda develop something off that and it’s all about people tagging in the comment section. Like ‘omg this is our friend or our mam’."
Joanne: "I think characters can get away with murder. You can say anything in character."
Enya: "That’s why I started doing characters because I was too shy to be myself so I hid behind the characters. I’m much better now, before I couldn't even watch myself on camera but now I’m grand. I still mute it when I’m editing though because I hate the sound of my own voice."
SHEmazing: It's Father's Day on Sunday, got any good Dad jokes?
Alison: "My dad has a joke: child maintenance."
Enya: "I learnt a song in primary school ‘clap hands, clap hands till Daddy comes home.’ So I sang it for my mam and she said ‘don’t sing that you’ll have no hands left.’"
SHEmazing: What advice would you give for young women who want to go into comedy?
Joanne: "Gig your face off."
Enya: "The market’s wide open, there’s not that much competition."
Joanne: [jokingly] "Thanks, Enya."
Enya: "Women-wise, there’s not enough women in stand-up comedy. There's a massive advantage to that."
Alison: "When I first started out I was like that too. I would do a gig and people would come up to me like you’re the funniest woman onstage tonight, I’m like the only woman onstage tonight. There’s more great women doing it lately. Comedy has gotten better as a medium and as a lifestyle choice."
SHEmazing: So are there certain advantages to being a girl in comedy right now?
Joanne: “A lot of male comics have had to reign it in. Female comics can say stuff now that men can’t say. We definitely have more freedom."
Alison: “As women we’re always empathising and we’re always doing emotional labour anyway. So when you’re doing stand up it kind of bleeds into that.
“I wish we could talk about wanking, though.”
Enya: “Sure look at the three of us here now. It’s nice to have three women be the faces of this comedy festival. I think it’s definitely women are more powerful than anything this year, through all the movements.”
Vodafone Comedy Festival will take place between the 26th to the 29th July and tickets will go on sale this Friday, 15th Juneat 9am. For more ticketing and line-up information see here.
Those of us who have worked in office environments know that there's always someone on the team from time to time who doesn't take the job too seriously.
Whether they like to do their makeup in the elevator mirror before work to hide the hangover or come down with far too many 'colds' in order to mask their late night-induced croaky voices, stumbling upon a session moth in the workplace can be a correspondingly frustrating and amusing feat.
In 2015, Kevin broke box office records when tickets for his A Whole Different Story tour proved to be the fastest selling tickets of the year.
The tour saw him sell over 500,000 tickets across 145 dates, including an incredible 16 nights at The Hydro in Glasgow.
Loved by fans and critics alike, Kevin Bridges' stand-up has been described by The Herald as a “comedy masterclass”, while the Mail on Sunday say he has “an edge that is seldom found in mainstream comics”.
Tickets from €34.50 including booking and facility fees via Ticketmaster on Wednesday, January 24.
Electric Picnic organisers have announced that next year's festival will kick off with an all-female comedy line-up.
Taking place on Thursday night, some of Ireland's best-loved female comics will take to The Hazel Wood stage where they will perform to a crowd of 5,000 early entry ticket holders.
The idea came about following a chance meeting between festival director, Melvin Benn and Emily O'Callaghan.
Electric Picnic to host all-female comedy lineup as a result of a chance meeting between Melvin Bragg and Emily O’Callaghan, a sometime stand-up who bemoaned the lack of women on the lineups at festival. pic.twitter.com/mSszSu3qsY
Emily, who sometimes dabbles in the world of stand-up, noticed a distinct lack of female talent at last year's festival – a thought echoed by Melvin.
The stellar line-up will see performances from the likes of Joanne Mc Nally MC, Aoife Dooley , Lisa Casey, Sharon Mannion, Aine Gallagher, Harriet Braine , Ashlee Bentley and many, many more.
Peter Kay has added three extra dates Irish dates due to phenomenal demand.
In addition to the shows scheduled for February 1 and 2, 2018, the much-loved British comedian will to the stage at Dublin's 3Arena on Sunday February 3, Wednesday February 6 and Thursday February 7.
The announcement comes after comedy fans across the nation rushed to secure tickets after they went on sale this morning.
His last tour in 2010 remains in the Guinness Book of World Records as the biggest selling comedy tour of all time, with over 1.2 million people securing tickets.
An appearance on Friday's Late Late Show saw the Irish public rediscover their love for the legendary comic after he performed a number of big band hymns in front of a packed studio audience.
"I've just healed her. She couldn't walk!" Peter Kay giving Make Me A Channel of Your Peace the big band treatment with some help! #latelatepic.twitter.com/22jPMr1fbp
One of Britain's best loved comedians is returning to the stage for the first time in eight years.
Having spent the best part of a decade working on other projects, Peter Kay has just confirmed his long-awaited return to live stand-up, with a massive UK and Ireland arena tour.
The comic will take to the stage at Dublin's 3Arena on Friday, February 1, and Saturday, February 2, 2018.
His last tour in 2010 remains in the Guinness Book of World Records as the biggest selling comedy tour of all time, with over 1.2 million people securing tickets.
Speaking about his comedy come-back, Peter said: “I really miss it. I know how lucky I am to be making television series and have really loved these past few years working on Car Share but I miss doing stand-up. As terrifying as it is, when it works there's nothing more fun and exciting.”
“Plus, a lot has happened in the last eight years, with Trump, Twitter and my Nan getting her front bush trimmed at the age of 96. I can't wait to get back up on stage.” he added.
His new stand up tour starts April 2018 in Birmingham and visits all major UK and Ireland arenas right through to 2019.
Tickets from €45.05 go on sale Sunday, November 19, at 10am and are available from www.ticketmaster.ie.
Jimmy Carr has just announced a massive Irish comedy tour for 2017/2018, including three nights at Dublin's Olympia Theatre.
The TV personality and all-round funny man will bring his live stand-up show to 10 venues across the country.
Kicking off in Dublin, The Best Of, Ultimate, Gold, Greatest Hits Tour, will then travel across the length and breath of the Ireland, with shows scheduled for Cork, Athlone, Wexford, Kilkenny, Carrick On Shannon, Sligo, Letterkenny and Galway, befopre finishing off in Killarney on July 1.
From their engagement announcement skit to their take on the pre-holiday chaos which ensues in every Irish household, Foil, Arms and Hog are easily one of the most popular comedy acts on the Irish circuit.
Deftly tapping into the quirks and idiosyncrasies of Irish society, the trio, who formed in 2008, have had audiences eating out of the palm of their hands for almost a decade.
And nowhere is this more evident than in their hilarious examination of Dublish – English spoken by Dubliners, natch.
Focussing on verb formation, oral cadence and most commonly-used expressions, Foil, Arms and Hog tap absolutely nail it.
And while health experts and doctors are sceptical about the legitimacy of the concept of the 'most depressing day of the year,' a cold, dark, flat-out broke month is certainly enough to make us consider hibernation until February 1.
So if you are looking for something to lift your spirits – and one that doesn't involve spending any money (see above) – having a larf with the help of Netflix is a decent place to start.
Classic Comedy Series
Only Fools & Horses
London schemer Derek, his brother Rodney and their daft grandfather try anything and everything to leave their working class life behind.
The Big Bang Theory
Quarks fly when two geeky physicists discover that they have a new neighbour : a sexy actress who inspires them to try a relationship with a real woman.
Fawlty Towers
Haughty Basil Fawlty and his bossy wife try to raise the profile of their Fawlty Towers Hotel, but endless mix ups arise, leading to farcical lunacy.
The Fresh Prince of Bellair
The affluent Banks family finds their lives turned upside down when Street smart Will, a Philadelphia relative moves into their California mansion.
Gavin & Stacey
After a long distance courtship, Gavin and Stacey finally meet in person – only to be confronted with the strong opinions of friends and family.
That 70s Show
Feel groovy in 1970s suburbia, where a teen and his pals hang in the basement, listening to rock and indulging other hazy benefits of ‘70s culture.
Stand Up Comedy
Micheael McIntyre Comedy Roadshow
Michael McIntyre visits some of the UKs most iconic standup comedy venues, unearthing a portfolio of comedy’s brightest new talent.
Chelsea Handler – Uganda Be Kidding Me Live
In her first Netflix comedy special, Chelsea Handler recounts her African adventures (and provides hilarious photographic evidence)
Louis CK – Live at the Comedy Store
The comic puts his trademark hilarious / though provoking spin on finding a bat in his kitchen, seeing rats having sex, Boston accents and dead pets.
Jimmy Carr – Funny Business
British comedian Jimmy Carr unleashes his deadpan delivery and wickedly funny one-liners to a sold-out audience at the UK’s Hammersmith Apollo.
Aziz Anzari – Buried Alive
‘Parks and Recreation’ star Aziz Ansari takes the stage to share his unfiltered views on adulthood, babies, marriage, love and more in the modern ear.
Comedy Films
Sing Street
In 1980’s Dublin, a teen whose family is falling apart transfers to a touch school, where he forms a rock band to fit in and win a girls attention
Bewitched
Isabel Bigalow seems to be the perfect Samantha to star in a remake of the 1960s sitcom “Bewitched” but no one knows she really is a witch! Stars Nicole Kidman, Will Ferrell and Shirley MacLane
Eddie The Eagle
This inspirational film tells the true story of Eddie “The Eagle” Edwards who became England’s unlikely ski-jump hero in the 88 Olympics.
My Best Friend’s Wedding
When she learns her platonic pal is getting married, food critic Julianne Potter realises her true feelings for him and tries to sabotage the weddings.
What Happens In Vegas
After a night of heavy partying in Vegas, two strangers wake up to realise, much to their displeasure, that they’ve gotten married.
Wee Nialler from One Direction is a fan (we can’t blame him), and he’s recently appeared on the likes of the Late Late.
Then there’s his recent UK TV debut – made earlier this year on BBC’s Live At The Apollo.
Yes, serious hat-tip to funnyman Al Porter, aka the youngest lad to ever headline his own show in Vicar Street.
That and his latest offering is completely hilarious.
He’s back in the Dublin city centre venue later this evening and tomorrow – before moving on to the likes of Drogheda, Wexford, and Kerry.
But it was a warm-up gig in Bray, Co Wicklow last night that has us dyin’. And in particular, we are flat-out delira to discover that Al does a killer Twink impression.
Delightfully calling the former panto queen a “mad bitch,” he goes on to describe how she had once lamented a break-in at her home.
“Remember when her gaff was robbed? Fucking Kim Kardashian eat your fucking heart out!” he utters to riotous laughter from the crowd at the Mermaid Centre.
“Twink came over to me and she said the best sentence I’ve ever heard – and this isn’t a joke – she said to me; ‘I’m just so upset, it’s an awful thing to happen – absolutely awful, dreadful, dreadful.
“‘I’m not materialistic but… my fucking diamonds!’
“What a sentence – ‘I’m not materialistic but my fucking diamonds'.
“Mad bitch.”
However, it was his follow-up tale of Twink at the panto that really has SHEmazing! HQ in stitches.
“I did the Olympia panto and I saw her in the audience and I said ‘big hello to Adele King, aka Twink, fair play to you,’” he begins.
“And she stands up uninvited and goes ‘Can I just say…’ and everyone’s like, ‘Mammy I’m scared.’
‘Can I just say,’ – and she’s doing the fucking claw… ‘Can I just say: Al Porter is a star and there hasn’t been a panto this good – and she’s addressing the audience like 2,000 people, no mic – ‘there hasn’t been a panto this good since I did panto in the Olympia'.
“Fucking love the balls of her. You know what I mean?”
Not only is Al now up for a Rising Star Ifta award tonight, but the 24-year-old Tallaght-native has also just filmed a comedy segment for the BBC alongside Jack Whitehall and Ricky Gervais.