Matt Smith
- Bio: Matt Smith is The Pun's resident podcaster, creating the PunCast out on the streets of the festival.
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
The Pun, The Pun 2010, The Pun 2010 Reviews »
No one can fault Adam Vincent for his dedication – from the moment the audience enters to the start of the show, he sits in the corner of the stage with a sleeping mask over his eyes… in an airline seat, no less.
Occasionally throughout his hour of stand-up he makes references to an experience on a flight that required his newly acquired medical knowledge, even going to the point of having prerecorded messages from flight attendants. Eventually reaching his story, Vincent is both simplistic in his concepts and hilarious in …
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
PunCast 2010, The Pun, The Pun 2010 »
The Pun, The Pun 2010, The Pun 2010 Reviews »
Let me just state something that I found painfully obvious – I was not the intended target audience of Nazeem Hussain and Aemer Rahman’s stand-up comedy in their show Fear of a Brown Planet Returns.
It’s quite obvious why they could be popular – Australia has a large multicultural community, and very little of the existing comedy festival caters directly to that audience. Some of their jokes are brilliant in that aspect, as it plays on the cultural differences while still being accessible; jokes about growing up, about family members, about …
The Pun, The Pun 2010, The Pun 2010 Reviews »
Everyone’s well aware that The Axis of Awesome is a rock comedy group, right? Well, they certainly manage to do what it says on the package, excelling at it along the way.
Bandmembers Jordan, Lee and Benny have great chemistry, and while their musical abilites are reasonable (it’s clear why they’re a comedy band), their finely-honed sense of theatrical timing really make up for it. While you’ll get a kick out of parodies of songs you know and love (or in the case of Kings of Leon, know and tolerate), it’s …




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