This Week in Comedy is a weekly podcast dedicated to tracking, celebrating and lightly skewering the Australian comedy scene as it unfolds in real time. Hosted by Lily Geddes and Morry Morgan, the show sits at the intersection of comedy culture, industry insight and sharp-witted conversation. It’s designed for comedians, comedy writers and producers, promoters, fans and anyone curious about how jokes, festivals and funny people actually function behind the scenes.
At its core, This Week in Comedy works as a pulse-check on what’s happening right now. Each episode reflects the immediacy of the comedy world, including new shows launching, festivals taking shape, odd stories bubbling up from clubs, and broader cultural moments that comedians are reacting to in real time. Rather than polished interviews or heavily produced segments, the podcast embraces a conversational format that mirrors how comedians actually talk when they’re offstage: candid, playful, opinionated and occasionally absurd.
The show regularly acknowledges the importance of regional scenes, grassroots venues and emerging performers, highlighting how comedy survives and evolves outside the biggest stages. This perspective gives listeners a more complete picture of the industry - one that recognises comedy as a living network of rooms, producers, promoters, festivals and communities rather than a top-down hierarchy.
The tone balances humour with genuine insight. While jokes, riffs and tangents are ever-present, the hosts frequently engage with bigger questions: how technology is influencing comedy, how audiences are changing, how comedians adapt to shifting cultural expectations, and what the future of live performance might look like. These discussions are never academic or preachy; they’re grounded in lived experience and filtered through the hosts’ comedic sensibilities.
This Week in Comedy also thrives on curiosity. Strange news stories, unexpected comedy crossovers and offbeat cultural moments are treated as opportunities to explore why certain things are funny, or why they aren’t. This reflective approach gives the podcast depth without sacrificing accessibility. Listeners don’t need insider knowledge to enjoy it, but those within the comedy world will recognise familiar challenges, in-jokes and realities.
Ultimately, This Week in Comedy is less about delivering punchlines and more about understanding the world that creates them. It’s a weekly snapshot of comedy that's messy, funny and thoughtful.
Hard Knock Knocks Comedy School
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This Week in Comedy is a weekly podcast dedicated to tracking, celebrating and lightly skewering the Australian comedy scene as it unfolds in real time. Hosted by Lily Geddes and Morry Morgan, the show sits at the intersection of comedy culture, industry insight and sharp-witted conversation. It’s designed for comedians, comedy writers and producers, promoters, fans and anyone curious about how jokes, festivals and funny people actually function behind the scenes.
At its core, This Week in Comedy works as a pulse-check on what’s happening right now. Each episode reflects the immediacy of the comedy world, including new shows launching, festivals taking shape, odd stories bubbling up from clubs, and broader cultural moments that comedians are reacting to in real time. Rather than polished interviews or heavily produced segments, the podcast embraces a conversational format that mirrors how comedians actually talk when they’re offstage: candid, playful, opinionated and occasionally absurd.
The show regularly acknowledges the importance of regional scenes, grassroots venues and emerging performers, highlighting how comedy survives and evolves outside the biggest stages. This perspective gives listeners a more complete picture of the industry - one that recognises comedy as a living network of rooms, producers, promoters, festivals and communities rather than a top-down hierarchy.
The tone balances humour with genuine insight. While jokes, riffs and tangents are ever-present, the hosts frequently engage with bigger questions: how technology is influencing comedy, how audiences are changing, how comedians adapt to shifting cultural expectations, and what the future of live performance might look like. These discussions are never academic or preachy; they’re grounded in lived experience and filtered through the hosts’ comedic sensibilities.
This Week in Comedy also thrives on curiosity. Strange news stories, unexpected comedy crossovers and offbeat cultural moments are treated as opportunities to explore why certain things are funny, or why they aren’t. This reflective approach gives the podcast depth without sacrificing accessibility. Listeners don’t need insider knowledge to enjoy it, but those within the comedy world will recognise familiar challenges, in-jokes and realities.
Ultimately, This Week in Comedy is less about delivering punchlines and more about understanding the world that creates them. It’s a weekly snapshot of comedy that's messy, funny and thoughtful.
Hard Knock Knocks Comedy School
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Lily Geddes and Morry Morgan are back with a slightly end-of-year, pre-Christmas edition of This Week in Comedy. the weekly hang for comedy lovers who like their industry chat served with dumb jokes, local context, and a mild sense of impending doom.
This episode kicks off with festive season realities (fewer gigs, everyone half-checked-out) before looking ahead to 2026 and the Melbourne International Comedy Festival season. The pair unpack what’s coming up, including the emerging “Business of Comedy” conference within the festival timeline—an event that’s either about to become an annual institution or vanish like Schrödinger’s cat (don’t open the door).
In Comedy News, they celebrate Dick Van Dyke hitting 100 and spiral into robots, hecklers, and whether the future of stand-up involves fear-laughter and chest-kicking androids. In Comedy History, they revisit milestone moments like Candice Bergen becoming the first woman to host SNL, and The Simpsons’ first full-length episode.
Things get unexpectedly real with a discussion on comedian lifespans, dopamine crashes, and why the job can hit hard after the punchlines. They wrap with podcast recs, festival chatter, and a sneak peek at upcoming comedy courses—plus an open invitation for beer sponsors who can handle honest copy.
Marcel Blanch-de Wilt's interview with MICF Director Susan Provan: https://shows.acast.com/the-comedy-writers-group/episodes/micf-director-with-susan-provan
Hard Knock Knocks Comedy Courses in 2026: https://hardknockknocks.com
Learn more about This Week in Comedy by visiting www.thisweekincomedy.com.au
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome back to This Week in Comedy, the podcast that bravely asks the big questions: Can robots be funny? Should governments fund comedians? And what exactly is happening in Geelong? Episode 4 is a wide-ranging, mildly unhinged tour through comedy news, history, technology, beer, festivals, and the creeping sense that the machines are absolutely coming for us.
We kick things off in a “quiet week” for comedy news, which somehow still includes half a million dollars of government funding being handed to robot comedians. Yes, actual robots. Non-humanoid ones. Ranging from 40 centimetres to two metres tall. Performing non-verbal slapstick. In Melbourne. The duo grapples with what this means for the future of comedy, audience fear responses, accessibility ramps, and whether this is yet another example of governments funding literally anything except working comedians.
From there, things take a sharp, but refreshing turn into sponsorship territory, with a tasting of Oishi Rice Lager - described as “almost too dry” and tasting suspiciously like something a Starfleet food replicator would produce. It’s beer. It’s on trend. It’s reviewed with all the rigour you’d expect from a comedy podcast drinking on mic.
The heart of the episode is a deep dive into the Geelong Comedy Festival, via a long chat with festival director Blaise White. We cover the festival’s growth, its surprisingly rich comedy scene, venues ranging from cosy bars to an actual jail under the gallows, and why regional festivals might just be the future of Australian comedy touring. If you’ve ever wondered whether Geelong secretly rules, this segment will aggressively suggest that it does.
Elsewhere, we unpack the invention of canned laughter (and whether it was the first step in comedy’s robotic takeover), revisit the legacy of Arrested Development, tip our hats to Billy Connolly’s longevity, talk Raw Comedy, preview the Business of Comedy Conference, and somehow end up discussing under-16s being banned from social media and parents radicalising children on Roblox.
Geelong Comedy Festival: Click here
Oishi Rice Lager: Click here
Raw Comedy registration: Click here
Learn more about This Week in Comedy by visiting www.thisweekincomedy.com.au
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's episode 3 of This Week in Comedy and hosts Lily Geddes and Morry Morgan aren't in the Rubber Chicken studios. But that doesn't stop them riffing on crime, public transport lines, shopping centres, and the increasingly common appearance of machetes in local news.
The conversation moves into Australian comedy news with the announcement of the Brisbane Comedy Festival for 2026. With strong attendance figures from the previous year, the festival is framed as a major stop on the national comedy circuit, landing immediately after the Melbourne Comedy Festival. It turns out that while the lineup, which includes Denise Scott, Melanie Bracewell, Ray O’Leary, and Tom Cashman, is of top comedians, it might also be a little Kiwi-heavy for Lily's mum.
Up and coming comedian Elouise Eftos and her show Australia’s First Attractive Comedian show then takes centre stage. Lily highlights the satire, and the irony that a few female comedians couldn't take the joke. Were they the usual suspects? Probably. You'll have to listen.
The episode’s history segment looks back to 1963, when British theatre critic Kenneth Tynan intentionally dropped the first F-bomb on live television, causing public outrage and political fallout that now feels almost quaint. This leads into a trivia discussion about Fawlty Towers, revealing that Basil Fawlty was based on a real hotel owner, Donald Sinclair, whose rudeness toward guests and Monty Python cast members directly inspired the character.
And in the 'whip-around' segment Morry chats with Sydney comedian and producer Seizure Kaiser, who offers insight into Sydney’s comedy scene, paid rooms, touring acts, and his Comedy on Edge venues. The episode closes with a call to embrace being “funny in the moment,” finding small opportunities for humour in everyday life as a way to push back against an increasingly bleak world.
Brisbane Comedy Festival: Click here
Sydney Laugh Inn comedy tickets: Click here
Comedy on Edge: Click here
Learn more about This Week in Comedy by visiting www.thisweekincomedy.com.au
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This Week in Comedy takes a sharp, funny, and occasionally unhinged look at what’s happening in comedy around Australia. Hosts Morry Morgan and Lily Geddes blend comedy history, industry insight, festival intelligence, and off-the-rails conversation, delivered with the loose energy of a green room chat and confidence of a drunk uncle.
In Episode 2 the duo spotlight the Hobart Comedy Festival, celebrating Tasmania’s growing comedy presence and reminding listeners that great comedy doesn’t only happen on the mainland. Morry does a whip-around to Adelaide, with an interview with Adelaidian comedian Big Al. Al is one of the city’s most connected comedy voices and in their chat Al highlights local rooms, paid gigs, and what’s worth checking out in the lead-up to Adelaide Fringe.
Beyond Australia, This Week in Comedy explores how humour operates on a global stage. Morry points to New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani and how he used comedy, satire, and short-form humour to help him win mayoral race. And again, this episode is sponsored (ie. self funded) by a beer. This time around it's the pickle-flavoured 'It's a Big Dill' beer, by Sailors Grave Brewing of Tasmania.
And if you'd like to recommend a comedy room, comedian, beer, or share some comedy gossip, reach out to us here.
'It's a Big Dill' Beer by Sailors Grave Brewing: Click here
Raw Comedy competition entry: Click here
Learn more about This Week in Comedy by visiting www.thisweekincomedy.com.au
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This Week in Comedy is your weekly whip around of what’s funny, frantic, and fermenting in the Australian comedy scene. This podcast is served with a cold beer and absolutely no guarantee of bladder control. You'll have a laugh and might just learn something.
In Episode 1, co-hosts Morry and Lily officially crack the seal on the podcast. You'll be introduced to a show that blends comedy history, industry gossip, live gig intel, and barely controlled chaos. Think part comedy news desk, part green room banter, part pub conversation that’s gone on five minutes too long, in the best way.
Each episode dives into 'This Week in History', revisiting key moments that shaped comedy and entertainment. It then moves into 'Import / Export', tracking which big names are coming into town, who’s leaving, and where you might spot a surprise set during festival season (hint: It's Jimmy Carr). There’s also 'New Room, Who Dis?', spotlighting comedy rooms around Australia, from Melbourne favourites to emerging stages worth the trip. This episode highlights a new paid comedy room in Melbourne, Moon Dog Wild West.
This episode checks in on Perth’s comedy scene, with an interview with the Comedy Lounge's John McAllister and his Australian Comedian of the Year competition, unpacking what it takes to win, why it matters, and how it can launch a career. The show also makes space for 'Funny in the Moment'. But as you'll hear, "you had to be there."
Rounding things out is Tight Five, a short, sharp chat with comedy veteran Bradford Oakes about gigs, wigs, and his other podcasts. Plus they highlight the “sponsored” beer (self funded, for now), as Tasmania's Albert Pilsner.
Perth's Comedy Lounge 'Australian Comedian of the Year Competition': Click here
Raw Comedy entry: Click here
Jimmy Carr's schedule: Click here
The Albert Brewery, Albert Pilsner: Click here
Learn more about This Week in Comedy by visiting www.thisweekincomedy.com.au
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.