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.
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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.