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MICHELLE WOLF DOESN’T WANT TO BE YOUR FOLK HERO

The comedian returns with her Netflix stand-up special ‘Joke Show’

- By Dave Itzkoff

It seems like every comic has a routine that deals with outrage culture. But when Michelle Wolf addresses it, you can be sure she is speaking from experience.

She opens her new Netflix stand-up special, Joke Show, with an observatio­n. “Over the past couple of years,” she says, “we’ve developed this amazing ability to get mad at anyone for any reason.”

This is Wolf’s way of setting up a joke that leads her into the unpredicta­ble minefield of comments on her Instagram feed. But as she said in a recent interview, her lesson about a culture that has become quick to anger is also a sly acknowledg­ement of all the tumult that’s recently transpired in her comedy career.

It was April 2018 when Wolf, an audacious if not yet widely known performer from Late Night With Seth Meyers and The Daily Show With Trevor Noah, delivered a now-famous routine at the White House Correspond­ents’ Dinner.

Treating the event like a comedy roast, as past performers have, Wolf said Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary at the time, “burns facts, and then she uses that ash to create a perfect smoky eye,” and said of CNN, “You guys love breaking news, and you did it, you broke it.”

Some viewers found it a hilarious exercise in speaking truth to power, but there was also swift and vocal condemnati­on of the routine from other constituen­cies. Wolf was disparaged by journalist­s, former White House officials and President

Donald Trump himself, who wrote in a tweet that she was “filthy” and that she had “totally bombed.” And the White House Correspond­ents’ Associatio­n said in a statement, “Unfortunat­ely, the entertaine­r’s monologue was not in the spirit of that evening.”

The next month, Netflix introduced Wolf’s weekly topical comedy series, The Break — only to cancel the show that summer, providing more ammunition to the comedian’s

detractors.

A year and a half later, Wolf is hardly chastened by these events. Joke Show is not a direct response to her recent brush with notoriety but it is brimming with the same fierce candour that inspired it.

In this hourlong set, which only briefly addresses the correspond­ents’ dinner, Wolf dives headlong into topics that she expects will inflame some viewers, including her story about having an abortion.

With her newfound visibility, Wolf wants to show people who she really is as a stand-up: not a political comedian, but one who doesn’t mind being provocativ­e to prove that she can find the humour in almost any subject.

“I say this all the time: Don’t bring your baggage into my joke,” Wolf told me. “A comic’s job isn’t to be right or wrong. They’re just supposed to be funny.”

On an afternoon in early November, Wolf, 34, was in Manhattan’s West Village, enjoying a breather from a barrage of standup dates that have lately taken her from Rochester,

New York, to Sacramento, California.

She has only worked as a comedian for about a decade after leaving a career in finance. As in her act, the authentic Wolf has a wryness to her, but she also allows herself to take genuine pleasure in things. She said she enjoyed travelling widely and challengin­g the preconcept­ions of her audiences, whatever their political persuasion­s.

“It’s been making comedy really fun to do that,” she said with no evident sarcasm. “People have such strong beliefs, and you’re like, ‘All right, but...’ That tension is perfect for comedy.”

If her scorched-earth approach to the correspond­ents’ dinner irritated so many of its attendees, Wolf wondered why she had been asked to address them in the first place.

“What did they think I was going to do?” she said. “I genuinely think they were like, ‘We’ll hire a woman, there’s no way this can go terribly — she’ll be soft.’ And I’m like, ‘Oh, you hired the wrong woman.’”

Looking back on that set, Wolf said she had only one regret — “I would maybe go harder” — and felt that the firestorm of reaction had given her a new boldness. “It’s made me a lot less scared of opinions,” she said. “A lot of people hate me, and I’m alive. It’s fine.”

“A comic’s job isn’t to be right or wrong. They’re just supposed to be funny.” MICHELLE WOLF | Comedian

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Photos by New York Times

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