Fresh Air - Richard Gadd is looking at the ‘dangers of repression’
Episode Date: April 30, 2026‘Baby Reindeer’ was an unexpected hit on Netflix in 2024. Now its creator and star is back with ‘Half Man,’ an HBO series about two boys who become brothers after their mothers fall in love in... 1980s Scotland. Gadd spoke with Tonya Mosley about exploring toxic masculinity, becoming famous overnight, and bombing stand-up sets. Also, book critic Maureen Corrigan recommends three playful novels: ‘Yesteryear,’ ‘American Fantasy,’ and ‘Enormous Wings.’See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley. My guest today, Emmy Award-winning actor, writer, and comedian Richard Gadd
writes complex stories about the parts of being human, most of us hide. His Netflix series Baby Rain Deer
became an instant phenomenon in 2024. It's an unsettling story of a struggling comedian who is being
stalked by a woman while grappling with the sexual abuse he endured from an older man early in his career.
The series became one of the most watch Netflix shows ever, winning six Emmys and made Gadd almost overnight, one of the most scrutinized writers in television.
Well, now he's back with Halfman, a six-part HBO limited series set in 1980s, Scotland.
It's about two boys who become brothers after their mothers fall in love.
One is volatile, just out of juvenile detention.
The other is quiet, sensitive, and afraid.
Over 30 years, the show traces what happens to them and to each other.
Critics have already been calling Halfman, a show about toxic masculinity.
And Gad has pushed back on that.
He says it's more about repression and what happens to boys who learn early that the parts of themselves they need most
are the parts they often feel forced to bury.
Richard Gad, welcome to fresh air.
Thank you. That was a lovely introduction. I appreciate that.
Well, you know, I am sure that people are going to want to slot this series next to kind of this
Manosphere conversation. And you have pushed back on that pretty firmly. And I just want to know
more about that. What about really the themes that you're trying to explore?
Well, it's interesting because the Manosphere kind of was a word that I came across about three
months ago. And I actually wrote the script back in 2019. I wrote a kind of pilot's
kind of exploring, I guess, men, male violence.
But I didn't really set out with any social political aim.
I never really do in my work.
I always just try and capture something that I believe to be hopefully interesting and
human all at once.
And so it's about expression.
It's about vulnerability.
It's about the difficulty of male relationships and the dangers of repression.
Yeah.
You know, the two characters, Nile and Rubin, to me, I felt like they both kind of represent
two sides of how to be a man.
They're like on two sides of the spectrum.
Is that how you saw them?
And what did you need to imagine
into existence to write them?
Well, I thought the most interesting thing
is you do take two archetypes of,
I don't like these words
because these words are subjective.
But if you take an alpha male
and a beta male,
even though I think everyone's idea
of an alpha and a beta
is very different, you know, person to person,
if you take the stereotypical alpha and beta
and you put them in a two-sharpal,
opposite each other. You know, one's kind of musly and, you know, terrifying looking and the other's
kind of well-dressed up and timid. And you start to kind of deconstruct that from there.
I thought that was an interesting starting point. But I like to think as the show progresses,
the boxes in which we meet them in become a bit more blurred and a bit more complicated.
I actually want to play a clip that gives us a deeper lens into the two of them. So in this scene
that I'm going to play young Nile, who was played by Mitchell Robertson, and young Rubin, who
is played by Stuart Campbell, they are together in the room that they share together. And by this
point, they have earned each other's trust. Rubin has beat up Niles as bully. Nile has helped
Rubin pass an exam he needs to stay in school. And he's also, Rubin has also brought a girl over
to help Nile lose his virginity. And in this scene, there are, you know,
lying on the bedroom floor, talking about their mothers who are a couple.
And then Ruben hands Nile a present, a boxing glove.
Let's listen.
Can I ask you something?
Do you know?
Around moms, you know?
Yeah.
I'm afraid so.
Does it bother you or something?
No.
Well, I'm not really.
As long as they're happy, I guess.
I don't seem all that happy.
There's a lot you don't know about.
Yeah.
Got you something.
I'm not going to train you.
Just in case something happens to me,
I need to know you'll look after yourself.
Why do you care?
We're family, not.
It's the most important thing.
My brother, I'm another lover.
Richard, that gift, a single boxing glove.
Rubin is genuinely trying to give Nile something he thinks will help him,
but what he is offering is kind of the only language he has,
which is violence, a boxing glove.
Tell me about that scene.
What were you trying to?
trying to do in that moment.
Well, I think you've hit the nail on the head there with this kind of offering.
I think Rubin reacts to the world in violence.
It's all he understands is his safety net against the kind of terrors of life.
And I think he knows fine well due to his nature that there might be a world where he's
not always there.
And so he wants to tough and nile up and, you know, make sure he's there.
I mean, family means everything to Rubin, you know, as the story unfolds,
we'll understand why.
But family means everything to him.
So, you know, they're in this kind of very hybrid household,
this kind of weirdly dysfunctional kind of way of coming together.
And he wants Nile to not only learn to fend for himself
because I think at this point he's genuinely really fond of Nile
and loves him and sees him his family,
but he also wants there to be a masculine presence
within the family household when he goes.
And so I think in a weird way it is,
it is Rubin's love language, giving him a pair of boxing gloves.
Can you describe the characters of Niles and Rubin
and how their relationship progresses?
Nile and Rubin, they form a kind of really close bond,
like a really, you know, layered and complicated bond.
They just can't shake.
And no matter what happens in their life,
no matter all the good and bad experiences they go through,
they seem unable to shake having each other in their lives.
I think as they move through lives and as they change
and the characters go through all kinds of different changes
throughout the series,
one thing that they cannot escape is that feeling they had for each other
when they were in their youth,
which is this very confusing, very complicated love
that they seem incapable of expressing.
And the series kind of mutates through that
and takes you through that feeling of cant live
with someone can't live without them
that forms the very basis of their relationship.
The intimacy between,
between Nile and Rubin is so charged, it almost reads to me as sexual. And I've been wondering,
is that on me? Are we just so not used to seeing real intimacy between men that we automatically
coded that way? You know what I'm saying? And I was wondering if you were thinking about that
as you wrote them and how men can't show affection. I certainly, I always get worried about
spelling things out too clearly because I think I like all of my work to be open for interpretation. But
I certainly wanted there to be a charged, almost unexplainable energy between them.
Like, I think there's feelings that they have for one another that they cannot express or even pin down in size of themselves.
And I think that there is a, they certainly work away on subliminals that even they aren't aware of.
And I think that only grows during the course of the season.
They are inextricably bound.
And I think they have complicated feelings that are almost impossible.
to grapple down. You see it in a lot of men, you know, like they're, like, sometimes, like,
close male relationships can be so close. They, they sort of teacher in a boundaryless place.
You know, even between alpha males, they're kind of, they're boundaryless, but there's, like,
a physical closeness that they need to have with one another.
You wrote this, and you also star in it, and you, you put on something like 50 pounds of muscle
to play the adult, Rubin, is that right?
I think it might have been more than 50 pounds.
I work on the old kilograms.
We're on the different system, aren't we?
But yeah, I was so skinny, baby range.
And I lost a lot of weight to be Donnie Dunn and be thin and be frail in my body
and feel that vulnerability was such a commitment.
And then, you know, this was like the opposite way,
just like ballooning up and ballooning up.
And yeah, I just really wanted it's believable.
I knew that people who had seen baby reindeer, you know,
they had to go on a journey and buying that the guy in the comedy suit was the guy on the
motorcycle in the leather jacket and the tank top and I felt the only way people were going to see me
as a strut an example of bravado and masculinity would be to change kind of everything about myself
or who they understood me to be and so I knew I needed to physically transform it was almost vital
to the show you know you you have me also thinking about maybe what's been intoxicating about the
performance of masculinity for you well I guess I never really performed it's because
before I did Ruben, if that makes sense.
But it was interesting just going around life
kind of as a big person
and just how people sort of treat you differently
and all that kind of stuff.
Well, you just, they feel like people are kind of nervous.
I think it was like I gave off an intimidating vibe,
even though I was just an actor with a beard
and a mad haircut and a big sort of body.
I always remember going down, I think at my biggest,
I was on a flight.
And I walked down like the Middle Isle
and there were like seats on the right and left.
And I just remember people kind of just putting the heads down as I passed.
I think people are attuned to think, oh, that's danger.
You know, that guy looks a bit mad and he's massive.
And so I'm not going to provoke him.
But I guess that was the visuals that I wanted from Rubin.
So I guess in that respect, it worked.
You being recognized, it's a fairly new experience for you since baby reindeer.
I mean, it was really almost like, especially here in the States for you,
an overnight thing.
Yeah, it was crazy.
I mean, it's calmed down a lot.
Either that or I've got used to it.
But I remember in the height of baby reindeer,
it was really quite something.
I couldn't adjust to it.
And even if nothing happened,
you would wonder around kind of like what's coming next
and, you know, who's going to come up to me?
And invariably, you always hear, you know,
people talking and whispering,
and that would always make me worried.
I'm so used to this now.
It doesn't bother me.
But, you know, baby reindeer,
It was crazy. It came out on a Thursday, April 11th, I think it was, two years ago. And I think by
Sunday, it just felt like everyone in the world was stopping me, coming on to me, speaking to me.
Because there was hysteria around Beavering, it was the zeitgeist. It was the hottest thing on the
planet. It was crazy.
Okay, Richard, I want to go back to 10 years ago on a stage in Scotland, your one-man show
called Monkey See, Monkey Do. And in the show, you talk can't.
about a very devastating thing that happened to you, that you were raped.
And in this clip, I'm going to play, you describe one of the three mistakes you made after
this thing happened to you.
And I just want to note that it's kind of a bit of comedy and a bit of seriousness all in one.
Let's listen.
Mistake number one, wearing shorts and a t-shirt.
I mean, I was practically asking for it.
Am I right, lady?
I'm joking.
Mistake number one.
Mistake number one.
Tying me incident into this idea that I was no longer a man anymore.
This idea that I'd been feminized.
It's funny.
I've all the things that bothered me and trust me.
There was a lot that bothered me.
There was a lot that bothered me.
The one thing that bothered me most, and it seems ridiculous in retrospect,
the one thing that bothered me the most,
the one thing that bothered my monkey the most.
the most, this idea that I was no longer a man, this idea that I'd been feminized.
And six years on, what is masculinity? What does that really mean? It's just a word. It's just a box
for people to put things in. It doesn't exist. And I let it bother me for six years. And if
masculinity does exist, then masculinity is the problem with everything. It's the problem
my side in terms of not speaking out, but it's a problem on the other side as well in terms of
doing something like this in the first place. A lack of power in a man's head driving him towards
primal, sexual monkey dominance. Masculinity creates wars. Femininity doesn't create wars. What women
do we know who created wars invaded other countries? Well, Thatcher and Argentina.
Richard, first off, I watched that clip with my brother and my cousins, and they were all
really moved about it and it just started a conversation. And what I wanted to talk with you about
is this idea of being a victim of sexual violence somehow disqualifying you from manhood.
I think it's a common experience. I think it's a common experience to feel shame and to
repress and not want to tell. And so I think it's pretty remarkable that not only did you
speak about it, you spoke about it on stage. You wrote a one-man show wrapped around it.
I want to know that moment of you saying, the only way out of this for me is to talk about it.
Because so many men and people in general will go to their grave with it because they don't want that on them.
They don't want to be associated with maybe the worst thing that has happened to them.
Yeah, it was a case of kind of do or die almost.
I know that sounds extreme, but it's the truth.
I couldn't keep it in anymore.
I was done thinking about it.
I think I believed maybe naively that I could think my way out of it,
that I could sort of land on a thought or a sense of clarity on my own.
But I would just be synaptically firing the kind of doubts and thoughts
around my head to the point where they actually got greater and greater and greater.
And it just got to a point where I just felt like I was done.
And I think I told my mom first.
maybe one of my friends and
it was like always painful
I always remember like the adrenaline
was kind of unbelievable
but then you'd always feel
like a weight had been lifted
you know
and then I suppose
meanwhile I was I was going up to the Edinburgh Fringe
and all of this stuff and I was
putting on wigs and
wearing daft teeth
and doing anti jokes
and doing these kind of really
mad cap jokes
there were wacky humor
but meanwhile I was sort of dying inside
and it was just this juxtaposition
you almost can't write it
you're what baby rain is all about
the kind of side clam thing
but it was like that to the extreme
it was I was sort of
you know
I was going through all that
trying to come to terms with all that
while simultaneously going on stage
and trying to make people laugh
in the most kind of wacky way
yeah I mean I'm really sitting with this
because in your case
you okay here you are
performing this pain night after night.
And then you put it on screen for millions to see in baby reindeer.
Has it really been healing to talk about this really bad thing that happened to you?
Not just once, but like over and over and over.
Well, I think it's time to leave it behind now, you know.
Baby reindeer was kind of like, well, there's nothing, I mean, it's, what's,
say, eight two countries in the world that was number one in or something like that.
I think over, you know, 250 million people have watched this.
I mean, talk about catharsis and coming to terms of something.
I mean, it's so odd to look back at me, you know, all those years ago, over a decade ago
and sort of think, no one can know, no one can know, and now it's almost like, you know, 250 million people know.
And it does lead to a sort of sense of acceptance.
I watch baby reindeer three times.
I really, really, I was really moved by it.
And there's something very specific I was moved by.
And I want to play a clip to kind of get to it.
So in this clip, it's from the first episode of Baby Rainier.
And this is the very first time, Donnie, which is a fictionalized version of yourself, played by you, meets Martha, the woman who will go on to stalk you for years.
And she walks into the pub where you work.
She's overweight.
She looks upset.
And your character tries to be kind to her.
You give her a cup of tea on the house.
Let's listen.
I felt sorry for her.
That's the first feeling I felt.
It's a patronising, arrogant feeling,
feeling sorry for someone you've only just laid eyes on,
but I did.
I felt sorry for her.
If I ever, please, Matt.
Okay, right, thank you.
Max.
Can I get you something?
No, thanks.
Are you sure?
A cup of tea?
No, thanks.
You have to buy something.
Can't afford something.
Right, not even a cup of tea?
No.
All right, well, how about I give you a cup of tea on the house?
So what do you do?
I'm a lawyer.
How'd you get into that then?
Trained in criminal law.
Moved to England, retrained, opened up my own practice, won several awards.
Now I'll lead an advisor to the government.
You won't a law for...
Amongst other things.
A flat in Pemmlico, overlooking a private garden.
One in Bexie Heath, two in Bell-sized Park.
God doesn't like a bragger, but when you're the go-to for the biggest political minds in the game,
You've earned a brag or two.
No, no. I'm not going to say who, so don't even go there.
Fine. David Cameron, Nick Clegg, Alex Hammond,
but you didn't hear that from me.
Wow. You must have amazing dinner parties.
She had this incredible laugh, this giddy, slightly disconcerting laugh.
Her name was...
Martha.
But all I could think was, if all of this is true,
then why can't you afford a cup of tea?
That's a clip from the first episode of the Netflix series,
Baby Rainier created by my guest today, Richard Gadd.
We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Tanya Mosley, and this is fresh air.
You know, Richard, one of the things that makes baby reindeer different from almost any other
story about stalking that I have ever seen is that you don't let yourself off the hook
as the victim of being stalked.
So you write Donnie as someone who on some level was kind of flattered by this lady, by being
seen even by someone you knew was unwell. And I felt like that seems to be a very uncomfortable thing
to admit publicly. So why was it important to you that you show that, that you hold both things
at once, that you were a victim and that you were also someone who liked being wanted?
Well, I just thought there was like a fundamental human truth to it. Like I always try and
dig into the complicated stuff.
Like I think in a lot of times, like on TV, it's,
it's too obvious who the good guy and the bad person is, you know.
And it's just, like life is not like that, I think.
And I think that we're all made up of good qualities and bad qualities and mistakes
and successes and all these kinds of things.
And I just dug into it.
And it kind of goes all the way back to the stage show.
Because I remember, you know, when I was, I wrote the stage show, which later became the TV show,
I would trial it and the story went, you know, I offered this person a cup of tea and look at what
happened. My one act of kindness, my God. And I remember just feeling like it wasn't coming to the
fore, like it wasn't working. And I think it wasn't working because I was avoiding the truth.
The truth is that, you know, I egged it on and I indulged in it. And I indulged in it because I was, I was, you know,
going through a lot and I would take any attention wherever I got it just because anything
that would take me out of the mire of what I was feeling and experiencing.
And that to me was the heart of baby reindeer and that was what I was avoiding when I was
trying to workshop the live show into something that was worth watching.
Because I realized that I wasn't really writing the truth of what happened in truth.
It's the fundamental key to writing something, you know, authentic and interesting.
but baby reindeer you know
it was tough because it was like you know
not many people would do that especially in this day and age
of kind of moral enlightenment and oh hey look at all the mistakes I made
like it felt very daring and
and it felt very like vulnerable and exposing
but really in a lot of ways I think
there in light lay the success of baby reindeer
because I think I think people recognize something in that
and in the flawed idea of human
inconsistency. Like, I think a lot of people struggle. One of Donnie's, like, big struggles was his
inability to put up boundaries, like, his inability to say no or inability to hurt someone's feelings.
I think a lot of people relate to. I think a lot of people struggle to be honest. It's not that
they're good liars. It's that they struggle to not circumvent the pain of having honest
conversations. And I think that's what Donnie, why I think the Donnie character resonated so
much. And I think people could just appreciate that honesty, you know, like it was
a radically honest show and I think because of that it uh it was a success okay richard I want to go back
to your childhood in Scotland you have said one of your earliest memories is writing a book when you
were about five years old it's called Felix the Fur Ball tell me about Felix I can't remember
if that's like the earliest memory like I have I actually have an early memory of running up at my uncle
an aunt's wedding running up the aisle. I was at Pageboy. And my mum be like, no, come back, come
back. And I just bolted up the aisle because that's probably my earliest memory. I don't know how old
that was then. But I remember very early memory of me kind of button bashing like mad at a computer.
And yeah, writing Felix the Furbel. I mean, it was about a fluff that got a piece of fluff that got
blown out of the house and had to find its way back into the house. And that was genuinely every
chapter was kind of the same. And I just kind of wrote it obsessively. I almost think my writing
styles never changed. It's kind of like just like smash, mash, smash, mash. Like, you know,
get it out, like a stream of consciousness. Your dad is a microbiologist, a professor.
Yeah. Your mom worked in schools. It sounds like you had a very stable household, supportive parents,
but the town you grew up in was really, really small. Tell me about being a kid in Wormit, Scotland.
What did boys like you do all day? Well, you even know the name. It's funny because people, people even in
Scotland haven't heard of Wormit.
Oh, really? Okay.
It's bad small.
I remember going to Glasgow.
Yeah.
Going to Glasgow and university and they're like, oh, where are you from?
I said, Wormit, they're like, where?
And then I'm like, oh, well, it's next to a place called Newport and they're like, where?
And I'm like, well, it's next to a place called Tayport and they're like, where?
And I'm like, over the water from Dundee.
And then that's when they go, ah, right.
It's funny because even in LA, if you say, I'm over the water from Dundee, they, they're still like where?
Yeah, right.
So it's funny to hear Wormit with the way.
the US accent. It's funny.
I, um, but, but yeah, it was this tiny, tiny place.
It was very picturesque, you know, overlooked the Rivete.
Um, yeah, the rail bridge. I could see the rail bridge up my window, my bedroom window.
But, you know, there wasn't much to do. Like, I grew up and it was, it was just the corner
shop. Like, that was all there was in the whole town.
Loads of fields at the back, you know. Um, and there was no, like, bus links, really.
Like, there was a bus that would kind of take you to Dundee every now and again.
But there was nothing like the other way. Like, it was one of those,
kinds of places. So me and my friends just hunkered down. I had great friends. I hung out in a
four with a guy Dave, Craig, and Eamon, and we're still real tight to this day. And we just made
the most of it, made each other laugh, you know. We would kick a football about a street.
You know, a car would pass every like three hours. It was just, it was beautiful, but it was,
it was really quaint. And I don't think I realized how small it was until I kind of left. I mean,
I remember going to Glasgow.
Yeah.
I left for university.
It must be 18, I think.
And I remember Glasgow felt so big to me, like so big.
And now it's funny because I've lived in London and been to L.A.,
been all around the world.
And I went back to Glasgow to film Halfman.
And it suddenly felt so small to me compared to everything.
But I remember when I moved to Glasgow, I couldn't get over the size of it.
It made me anxious because I was so used to such a sort of small town existence, I suppose.
Yeah.
Did you watch television when you were growing up?
Me and my friends would watch it.
obsessively, you know, listen to music obsessively.
But, but I mean, you know, television was my ultimate outlet.
And, you know, we would do all the sitcom.
Oh, all the sitcoms was everything, you know, everything.
It was the golden age of DVD was when I grew up, you know, where the way of consuming things
was DVD. And it was just, you know, for Christmas, you get a DVD and it was so beautiful.
But, you know, everything from the UK office to peep show, black books.
You know, I go back, I watch.
watch 40 Towers, Blackadder, I go back and, you know, everything was consumed and that's
where I developed my love for comedy and everything like that. And everything, we arrested
development, I remember, you know, on the U.S. side, we watched the wire, sopranos, you know,
all that kind of stuff. And I just consumed television, like, from an early age, just loved it,
adored it. Let's take a short break. If you're just joining us, my guest is Emmy Winning.
actor, writer, and comedian Richard Gadd, his new HBO series Halfman, which he wrote and stars in
is the story of two boys who become brothers when their mothers fall in love and follows their bond
in 1980s Glasgow, Scotland, into the present day. Gad is also the creator of the 2024 Netflix
phenomenon Baby Raneer. We'll be right back after a short break. This is Fresh Air.
When did you decide, I think I want to do this thing? I think I want to give it. I think I want to
get on stage and try comedy.
I must have been about 20, I think.
And I went to my student union comedy night that was on.
And I remember just being in the crowd and kind of being full of admiration, I guess.
A feeling of sort of wanting to feel what that must be like to make people laugh on
that's like that.
I just remember thinking, well, that must be a thrill.
Like it must be a frill.
And it is when it goes well.
I think that comedy night, I look back because if I remember correctly,
it might have been a fresh week or something like that.
So I think, I think like there was probably quite a lot of,
like people were really kind of off for it,
which isn't the same as a lot of comedy nights and people,
there was a lot of drunk and vivaciousness.
And I think every comedian that was on that night
absolutely smashed the roof off the place.
And I think it gave me a slight false impression that that is the way all gigs run,
that it's kind of like it's almost like a bulletproof thing
once the atmosphere is set up.
and I remember I
but I was like I gotta give this a shot
and I went to the promoter
and I said look do you take students
because they were all professional comedians coming to do a
comedy night and I said you take
students like and he
said he'd give me five minutes like in a
couple of weeks time
and I said okay I'll take it
and then I was just nervous nervous nervous for like
three weeks but I just worked up some sort of
five minutes set if I remember correctly
I packed my mates in the place a bit
and I remember my first gig went really well
And it gave me an idea of, oh, it is like this, it is like this.
And I think it was my second to a thousandth gig that went badly when I was figuring out how to do it without my friends in the room.
Yeah, but that's how I got into it.
When you first started performing, people did not really get you.
I mean, it's kind of off the wall.
It was a little bit, you know, and you couldn't figure out why.
Like, give us an example of something that you were performing out there.
when you first got started, that people were like, what?
I mean, I can tell you on the whole journey.
It's kind of interesting.
I like talking about it in a way because when I first started stand-up,
I tried to do the man microphone thing, you know, where you were like,
hey, let me tell you a story.
And I found an old video of me doing it the other day.
And I was talking about a dog.
Now, I've never had a dog, but I was talking about owning a dog
because I must have thought, well, this is just some material about owning a dog.
You didn't even own a dog, right?
No, no, which shows the kind of why it was probably never worked
because I never came from a place of authenticity,
but I did a routine about a dog.
And I was just like, what am I talking about?
I think the dog was called Keith.
And I think that was the whole joke that the dog was called Keith.
But I looked at it and I was like,
oh, you can tell that I'm not honoring my voice or what I find funny in a lot of ways.
But I remember having a kind of watershed moment when I'd be, you know,
because when you're doing comedy and you're going around,
you often see comics at the back of a comedy club
and they kind of stand and they watch the acts
and that was what I used to always do.
I'd always watch and just try and study all the acts
and figure out where I was going wrong
and what they were doing right.
But I often found that I would laugh
at the stuff between the jokes and the stuff that didn't land.
Like I would always find it quite funny.
If a comedian made it, it sounds mean-spirited,
but it wasn't that,
but if a comedian made a joke and didn't get it together laugh,
and they went, okay,
moving on, I would
I would just burst out laughing
and I realized that I would, what I found funny
was stuff that kind of didn't land
and our humor
that kind of wasn't funny
in a way. And I realized, well,
why don't I do that? Like, why don't I
just do jokes that kind of aren't funny and then
do a really awkward, be a really awkward comedian
that does bad
jokes and has kind of almost
a bit of a breakdown on stage and kind of
is really nervous and anxious and
make that humor sweet spot my act and I did it and there is a large portion of society that
really really go for that alternative stuff and so there would be gigs that I go to and they would be
great but there would be like some crowds I remember Friday and Saturdays were really tough where you
would hear a pin drop I mean I've had some deaths that people comedians still talk to me about to this
day like that they've never seen people die as bad as me I remember I was in Edinburgh stand
and I remember there's this thing where like you're you know you're like you're not you're
you fill your time. It's like comedy law. If you're booked for 20 minutes,
no matter how good the gig's going, you play 20 minutes. And I remember going out.
And I think I remember, wow, that didn't land, that didn't land, that didn't land, that didn't land.
And I was racing through and I looked at my watch and I was almost done with my set
because I was clearly not landing. I was just racing through it. And I had about 17 minutes ago.
And you could have heard a pin drop. And I just remember like once a crowd sucks up an
atmosphere of tension and oh my god this is awkward and uncomfortable no matter what you do sometimes
you cannot get it out it sounds like okay i mean in a way when it goes bad it's almost like a
humiliation ritual but you continue to do it like you continue to put yourself up there and out there
and expose yourself so that intoxicating feeling of having a control of the room must be really
intoxicating can you describe it well i mean humiliating
ritual's funny i've never heard it put like that before but it can feel like that it can feel very self-daming you know
when it's not going well you know the the amount of long drives i've i've had uh home is is crazy uh you know
just being like wow my god like like the feeling of a bad gig i said it to people like there's
nothing like the feeling of a bad gig it's like its own specific feeling it's hard describe it's like
it's like accumulation tins with sort of existential doubt it's it feels like you know you
you know, we've all experienced, like, embarrassment or whatever in our life,
but it's a very specific feeling a bad gig.
You know, like the adrenaline of holding an audience in your hands.
And sometimes I could, you know, we all work on subliminals and all that kind of stuff.
And sometimes that comedy can be kind of transcendental in a way.
Like, sometimes you feel like you just plug in in a weird way,
like a jigsaw piece and the audience plug back into you.
And you sometimes feel like almost like moving your eyebrow makes them laugh.
And you just suddenly go into this almost like suspended place where you're almost completely in the moment.
and you just feel like you're completely in tune with the audience.
And there's times when I've gone off stage and I've cried, you know,
like because the adrenaline and the euphoria was so great to experience that,
that my body was just like, oh my God, like shaking to the point of crying.
It's kind of incredible.
It sounds like those experiences for you were worth all of the bad gigs.
Is that what kept you going?
Yeah, I'm super proud of comedy.
Comedy's given me so much.
like comedies
it's a great training for life
like it really is
you know you have to think in the moment
as a comedian so much
because you have to be able to adapt
all the time to what people want
and sometimes you give them something
and they're like well we don't want this
and you're like well I got 20 minutes to go
I better adapt
I remember the other day I was at Cannes
wonderful festival can series
and um you know
in front of 2,500 people
yeah I got asked the question about
what advice I'd give
to people artists out there
and I just
spoke from the heart,
launched into something
that I think the audience
took away as hope
and powerful, I hope.
But I remember thinking,
thank God for comedy
because in a live space like that,
it allows you to think in the moment,
to almost have a way of tapping into
a sort of psychological space
where you can sort of think very clearly
and react in a moment.
And I think it's,
it gives you,
what it gives you most of all
as an ability to think quickly on your feet.
And I think that's such a life skill in a way.
Well, Richard Gad, it has been a pleasure to talk with you, and thank you so much.
No, thank you. I really enjoyed that. I really appreciate the great questions. Thank you.
Emmy-winning actor, writer, and comedian Richard Gad. His new HBO limited series is called Halfman.
Coming up, book critic Marine Corrigan recommends three ideal spring reads. This is fresh air.
Our book critic Marine Corrigan recommends what she calls three ideal spring reads.
reads, novels that are light, breezy, and funny with an undercurrent of chilly reality.
Sometimes girls just want to have fun, right? I've been in a springtime mood of wanting to dive
into a cartoon-colored ball pit of comic novels with spunky heroines, and I found some good ones.
But what I also found is that much like the classic screwball comedies of Yore, escapism in these
playful novels links arms with edgy social commentary.
Yesterday, an intricately plotted debut novel by Carol Claire Burke has been getting lots of attention,
and deservedly so.
The main character here is an online trad wife named Natalie Heller Mills.
On camera, Natalie revels in activities like, spending four hours making a loaf of sourdough bread,
and then adorning it with a nativity scene made out of herbal stick figures from her own garden naturally.
A little of this goes a long way for those of us who share the attitude of the late Joan Rivers.
Rivers famously quipped, I hate housework, you make the beds, you do the dishes,
and six months later you have to start all over again. Amen.
So imagine my glee when Natalie, who only plays at being a pioneer woman, wakes up one morning to the realization that she's been transported back to the year 1855.
Welcome to the real pioneer life, where if you want milk for your morning gruel, you'd better hustle out to the barn and find a cow.
If Burke had only stuck to this plot line, yesterday would be.
a fun, one-note snark at retro lifestyle influencers. But instead, it tells a more ambitious,
suspenseful, and yes, ultimately melancholy story of its heroine's aspirations and capitulations
to ideas of how women should live their lives. I thought Gary Steingart's brilliant
2024 essay in the Atlantic about his agonizing seven nights aboard the icon of the seas, the largest
cruise ship in the world, had ruined me for all other tales of enforced frivolity on the ocean.
But I was wrong. Emma Straub's latest novel, American Fantasy, starts off sharing
Steingardt's cynicism and ends up affirming the right of women.
especially middle-aged women, to party without self-consciousness or apology.
Our main character here is a 50-year-old divorced woman named Annie,
who's been persuaded by her younger sister to join her on a four-day themed cruise.
The theme is on board, namely a gone soft round-the-middle boy band of the 90s named Boy Talk,
that both Annie and her sister loved.
Almost every other passenger aboard is a woman of a certain age,
otherwise diverse in race, politics, ability, income bracket,
and even sexual orientation.
All were rabid boy talk fans.
The cruise production manager, a gay woman named Sarah,
reflects that these were the guys who had launched a million
sexual awakenings, and even if they had awakened something other than heterosexuality,
they had still been present, like distant guardian angels of puberty.
Straub tells the story of the cruise through the eyes of Sarah, Annie, and one of the band members,
a thoughtful guy named Keith, who, like Annie, is at a crossroads.
This is a novel that makes the radical move of honoring rather than ridiculing female fandom.
Here's Straub's description of Annie's epiphany about her own fandom as she's standing in a packed crowd during a boy talk performance.
The music was a direct vein to her own childhood, the least complicated part of her life.
All around Annie, women were dancing and singing,
And for a second she closed her eyes and thought,
No one else will ever understand this,
except, of course, everyone standing beside her,
who all understood it perfectly.
I've shared the premise of Laurie Frankel's forthcoming novel
Enormous Wings with a few friends.
Based on how instantly they entered the book's title into their cell phones,
the premise is all you need to know about this wild,
but all too timely story about female autonomy or lack thereof. So here goes.
Frankl's heroin, Pepper Mills, is 77 and a reluctant new resident of the Vista View
retirement community in Austin, Texas. Surprisingly, she meets a nice man there and has sex.
And then, through a medical fluke that Frankl almost makes plausible,
Pepper finds herself pregnant. Her doctors expect the pregnancy to end in miscarriage. When it doesn't, Pepper seeks an abortion. But she lives in Texas, and she's now such a media sensation that it's almost impossible for her to leave the state. Complicated, gutsy, and entertaining. Enormous wings pokes fun at life's unpredictability and stokes anger at situation.
that aren't at all funny.
Maureen Corrigan is a professor of literature at Georgetown University.
She reviewed yesteryear, American fantasy, and enormous wings.
Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
With help today from Connor Anderson at WD.E.
in Detroit. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shorak,
Anne-Marie Baldinado, Lauren Crenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Susan Yacundi, Anna Bauman, and
Nico Gonzalez Whistler. Our digital media producer is Molly C.V. Nesper. Thaya Challoner directed
today's show. With Terry Gross, I'm Tanya Moosley.
