Breadcrumb
While we’re regularly told necessity is the mother of invention, we seldom hear such invention , or laughable instances of bigotry. Luckily for Jenan Younis and her comedy night,, laughs turned out to be her bread and butter.
It is somewhat fitting then that, for the surgeon-turned-comic, the journey to start Weapons of Mass Hilarityarose from a playful experiment. You can take the girl out of the scientific method, but can you take the scientific method out of the girl?
"What had initially started as a cheeky experiment has quickly become an oasis of creativity, away from the prising eyes of UK comedy’s gatekeepers. At last, there’s no need to pay lip-service, no need to confine in a pre-prescribed blueprint for success"
Lazy expressions aside, Jenan quickly became less than amused at herlack of bookings after winning the prestigious BBC New Voices award in 2019.
Using this as an opportunity to test her assumptions about the UK’s comedy industry, Jenan decided to apply for gigs and bookings by submitting two applications: one with her name – with its dastardly connotations – and a more palatable anglicised one. The same CV, the same act. Having scoured the field, the results were telling.
“I received 80 percentmore offers for my anglicised name than my real one," Jenan tells . "It seemed my act – – wasn’t the issue. All that mattered was who was telling the jokes, not why. The political features of myact didn’t seem to matter, whether it was someone of that ethnicity or not.”
For many, such findings aren’t overly surprising. , they found that individuals with “Muslim-sounding names were three times less likely to receive job offers” than those that don’t. Jenan, who isn’t Muslim, is yet another by-product of a society that continues to view thosefrom the Middle East and beyond . Such institutional discrimination has knock-on effects for “ethnic” professionals in all fields, with the status-quo largely untouched. The creative industry is no exception.
“If you go to a comedy night in the UK right now, the vast majority of acts . We haven’t nearly begun to address the gender imbalance nor the diversity of line-ups. The line-ups are the same, the acts are the same,each designed to pander to a certain demographic which dominate the audience. In any instance, they’re catering to the majority,” Jenan continueswhen asked about the UK comedy circuit’s make-up.
And so spawned the need for a comedy night to accommodatethose left behind by the UK’s comedy industry’s subconscious bias, onewhich, as Jenan explained, varies from subtle micro-aggressions .
In reference to the latter, Jenan explainedthat, on one occasion, rumours went around a prominent panel-show'sproduction team that shewas Syrian (she is Assyrian). Predictably, they jumped on the opportunity to kill two proverbial birds with one comedian, with the panel show ending uplike an interrogation instead of a routine.
Weapons of Mass Hilarity's local, quality-laden shows continue to be the prime spacefor talent emanating from the British Arab and Middle Eastern comedic community, with its aim to shatter stereotypes and promote a multi-ethnic and multi-religious coexistence already some way to be being achieved"
“They were asking me about whether it was safe for me to perform, whether I had comments , and whether I often travel back to Syria, to which point it became ridiculous. Let's just say I don't often get booked again. Nonetheless, it revealed to me that the industry is predicated upon a ‘one-size-fits-all' approach, which itself is seriously problematic.”
Luckily, for Jenan and those performing in the latest edition of Weapons of Mass Hilarity, they aren’t straightjacketed in such fashion. Taking place on January 30 at , the acts on show are a refreshing departure from the stale curation of most comedy nights in the capital, with no tokenism or quota-filling in sight.
“We have an excellent line-up this month, the multi-award-winning duo are without the best Palestinian-Surinamese sketch act on the circuit,” Jenan joked.
“We’re also joined by Anglo-Iranian who is fresh off a sell-out run at the Edinburgh Festival last year. If you like Omid Djalili, you’ll definitely like Darius. Also joining us on the night is online comic Sophie Galustian havemade her a prominent comic voice amongst the British-Armenian community and have since led toSophie beingcommissioned by the BBC fora PeckEds comedy series.
"Last but not least, we’ve got . Perhaps better known as an actor, Laila is forging a formidable mark in the comedy circuit, with her act a must-see on the night. The night will be MC’d by the unmistakable David Lewis – ."
Weapons of Mass Hilarity's local, quality-laden showstherefore continue its trajectory as ٳspace for comedictalent , with its aim to shatter stereotypes and promote a multi-ethnic and multi-religious coexistence already some way to being achieved. With nine sell-out shows in its back locker, it seems that the only way is up.
“When we started, the crowds were largely comprised of people from our communities, there were only a couple of white faces in the crowd. Of course, this has its benefit as comedians wereable to test out more nuanced and culturally-specific material. Nonetheless, due to the night’s success, we’re now in a position where we’ve got a completely mixed line-up, with the night now testament to London's willingness ,” Jenan told .
With a three-day festival already planned for the June bank-holiday, what had initially started as a cheeky experiment has quickly become an oasis of creativity away from the prising eyes UK comedy’s gatekeepers.
At last, there’s no need to pay lip service andno need to confine in a pre-prescribed blueprint for success, withJenan and Weapons of Mass Hilaritylargely to thank.
Benjamin Ashraf isa visiting research fellow at the University of Jordan'sCenter for Strategic Studies. He is also part of 's Editorial Team.
Follow him on Instagram: