Pulp Comedy Presents: Cal Wilson and Friends

Cal Wilson · 2001 · TV3 (New Zealand)

🎤

Early character work and acoustic comedy from the New Zealand stand-up scene.

January 01, 2001 TV Special

Rate this special

Be the first to rate this one

Before she became an Australian panel show fixture and before Flight of the Conchords conquered American television, Cal Wilson anchored this odd, endearing showcase of early-2000s New Zealand comedy. The structure operates as a solo character show disguised as a traditional stand-up set. Wilson plays both herself and a roster of fictional guest comedians.

The best of these alter egos is Adele, an earnest feminist poet in a neckbrace who explains her craft by noting, “it doesn’t have to rhyme to be a poem, just like it doesn’t have to be good to be a poem”. Another character, a bridesmaid named Katie, delivers a disastrous, passive-aggressive wedding toast.

Between Wilson’s character work, a young Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement drop in to test out their deadpan musical act. Their set includes a polite, self-censored attempt at gangster rap and a song that stretches office supplies into an absurd metaphor for romance. Produced as a special installment of the local series Pulp Comedy in 2001, the episode captures a specific era of the Kiwi scene just as its biggest talents were preparing to export themselves.