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Female comics rock! And are outperforming the men.

 By Sarah Henley, NextUp Comedy

Who still says Women aren’t funny?   Many are out there performing on the comedy circuit and outperforming the men!

An increasing number of female comics

Between 1995 and 2014, the number of women appearing at the Edinburgh Fringe has increased by a whopping 650% – from just 28 to over 180. Of the nine comedians up for the prestigious Edinburgh Comedy Award last year a record four were women. The award was jointly-won by the brilliant Hannah Gadsby and John Robins.  This year the award has been won by Rose Matafeo and 5 out of 6 of the nominees for best newcomers were women.

We now have data that shows how popular women comedians are. Looking at the stats we found that on Nextup – a video on-demand service specialising in stand-up comedy – 6 of the top 10 performing shows are from female comics. That’s despite just a quarter of the shows being performed by women.

The gender issue

The industry is still undeniably dominated by men, and in order to address this issue, we need to talk about it. After a recent survey of the books of all major agents in the UK, we discovered that, in total, only 25% of acts were female. That’s roughly the gender split on platforms like NextUp, which makes it even more impressive that women are dominating the top 10!

Why are there fewer female comics?

Representation

I think one of the reasons that fewer women get into comedy is simply because they notice (consciously or otherwise) the gender bias in terms of opportunity.

We cheer at the huge increase of women at the Edinburgh Fringe, yet they still only represent around 20% of the total number of comedians at the festival.

Gatekeepers

At the open mic level, there are a fair few women giving comedy a go, but as soon as they get up to the level of paid slots, there’s a sharp drop off. It needs more investigation, but clearly something is happening at this level to put women off continuing.

Attitude

Arguably, whilst attitudes are changing, some people still feel uncomfortable hearing jokes from women unless it is self-deprecating or exudes sex appeal. Instead, women are still valued for their looks over their talent.

Fern Brady, breakout Glasgow comedian (and ex-stripper) quips: “When you walk on stage at a strip club, everyone thinks ‘this is how it should be, this makes sense’.” Whereas if you’re a woman and walk on stage in a comedy club, lots of people can’t contain their disappointment.”

The Future

Hopefully, this data showing that women are outperforming men, might help start to eliminate the bias towards male comics.

One way of inspiring more women to enter the profession is to increase representation. For example, NextUp are committing to increasing the share of female comics on our platform to 30% by the end of the year and to achieve an equal split in two years’ time.

Ultimately, the aim is to reflect the change we want to see – creating more demand for female comics by showing off their incredible talent. Ideally, in five years’ time, we’ll go back to the agents’ books and see a lot more comics who happen to be female.

We need more women in comedy; it’s not about quota filling or positive discrimination, it’s about fostering greater understanding around the issues people face, telling more truths from different perspectives and catering to a more diverse audience who want to see women on stage.  We all both need and want to laugh.  The greater the variety of comics who can tickle our funny-bones – the better.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

SARAH HENLEY is co-founder of NextUp, a worldwide subscription video-on-demand platform specialising in stand-up specials. NextUp, described as is ‘The Netflix of UK Stand-Up’ (engadget), showcases the full spectrum of the live comedy circuit from sketch, character and storytellers, to gag merchants, observationalists and surrealists. As well as familiar household names, there are also acclaimed rising stars and circuit legends for you to discover.

NextUp members have access to recording tickets and exclusive discounts whilst comedians are supported through a 50/50 revenue share model. If you’re a comedian interested in being on NextUp, please get in touch.

Web: https://nextupcomedy.com/

Seedrs: https://www.seedrs.com/nextupcomedy

Facebook: https://www.seedrs.com/nextupcomedy

Twitter: https://twitter.com/nextupcomedy/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nextupcomedy/

About NextUp

NextUp is dubbed ‘The Netflix of UK stand-up comedy’ and is available on web, iOS, Android, Apple TV, web, Amazon Channels and Amazon Fire Stick, and features over 90 full length comedy specials. Female comedians on the platform include Rachel Parris, Bec Hill, Danielle Ward, Eleanor Morton, Fern Brady, Kiri Pritchard McLean, Morgan Murphy, Ria Lina, Lou Sanders, Gina Yashere, Tiff Stevenson, Anne Edmonds, Alice Fraser, Grainne Maguire, Annie McGrath and Njambi McGrath, with Kat Bond, Laura Lexx, Jess Fostekew,  Holly Burn, Lauren Pattison soon to be released. Male comedians include: Ed Byrne, Richard Herring, Simon Munnery, Tony Law, Jordan Brookes and Andrew Maxwell.

The NextUp App has been featured as Apple’s ‘App of the Day’ and has a five star rating in both app stores. A NextUp subscription is just £3.50 a month with a 30 day free trial and NextUp also supports comedians in numerous ways including a Spotify-style revenue share and supporting community projects including the Care Home Tour.



This post first appeared on Book Review: And What Do You Do? By Barrie Hopson, please read the originial post: here

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Female comics rock! And are outperforming the men.

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