Jason Dudey

Stand-up specials

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Polite outrage from a guy who expects nothing to work.

🎤 1 Specials

Jason Dudey operates at the frequency of a guy trying to politely end a conversation with a customer service representative. He stands on stage with a broad, welcoming smile, recounting minor grievances as if they are targeted personal attacks. When a bit involves his family or an airline, his voice ticks up a half-octave into a polite but thoroughly fed-up cadence. He rarely yells. He just sounds deeply disappointed in how things are being managed.

He works as a road comic who bridges the gap between mainstream clubs and queer-specific shows. As the creator of the touring show Come Out Laughing, he plays rooms that might otherwise resist an LGBTQ-focused lineup, leaning on an approachable energy that disarms traditional crowds. He has spent years putting in the reps in bowling alleys and theaters, figuring out how to translate his life for whoever happens to be sitting in the dark.

His bits often slam a heavy personal reveal into a mundane complaint. He will drop a detail about getting divorced or surviving cancer, then immediately pivot to analyzing a toll booth or a Neti pot. The punchline is rarely the life-altering event itself. Instead, the joke is that the world keeps forcing him to participate in mundane errands while everything else is falling apart. He talks about his upbringing constantly, placing his own messy trajectory next to a sister who never did anything wrong and parents who have been together since Sunday school.

Raised in Baltimore, Dudey roots his stories in deep suburban frustration. He plays the family black sheep, but a black sheep who still expects the self-serve salad bar to be fully stocked.