The War on the Joke Itself
Before Nanette became a global phenomenon in 2018, most stand-up comedy operated on a simple contract: a comedian builds tension, then releases it with a punchline. Gadsby didn’t just break that contract; she tore it up on stage. The central conflict
of Nanette was with the very form of comedy. She argued that the setup-punchline structure was insufficient to tell her story of trauma, rooted in the homophobia she experienced growing up in Tasmania and a brutal assault. Using self-deprecation to make her story palatable was, she concluded, a form of self-harm. Instead, she built tension around her most painful memories and then refused to release it with a laugh. “This tension is yours,” she told the audience. “I am not helping you with it anymore.” The conflict wasn't a backstage spat; it was a fundamental battle with the tools of her trade, reframing them to serve the story, not just the laugh.
Turning Audience Expectations Into Art
The massive success of Nanette created its own conflict: what do you do for an encore after you’ve publicly quit comedy? Gadsby’s answer was Douglas, a special that cleverly weaponized the audience's and critics' expectations. Knowing everyone was waiting for another trauma-fueled lecture, she opened the 2020 special by laying out the entire show's structure in advance. She told the audience exactly what jokes were coming, what themes she would cover, and where the show would end. This meta-commentary turned the post-Nanette pressure into the show's engine. The “backstage” chatter about her work—was it a lecture, was it still comedy?—became the script. By deconstructing her own process live on stage, she disarmed her detractors and gave her fans a masterclass in comedic construction.
From Diagnosis to Dialogue
Another form of conflict Gadsby mines is the internal, personal struggle. In Douglas, she reveals her autism diagnosis, framing it not as a confession but as a crucial piece of information for understanding her. The conflict here is her lifelong difficulty navigating a neurotypical world. Instead of just telling jokes about it, she structures a portion of the show as a literal art history lecture, complete with a slide clicker, demonstrating how her mind organizes information. She’s not just talking about her autism; she’s making the audience experience her way of thinking. This transforms an internal, often isolating conflict into a bridge for connection and a source of deeply original humor. The struggle to be understood becomes the very method of being understood.
Taking on the Hand That Feeds
Gadsby has also proven unafraid of direct, professional conflict. When controversy erupted over Dave Chappelle’s specials and Netflix’s defense of them, Gadsby, a marquee star for the streamer, didn’t stay silent. She publicly criticized Netflix's leadership for invoking her name in their defense of platforming transphobic content. Later, she took that real-world industry conflict and folded it into her work, signing a multi-special deal to platform more gender-diverse comedians. This move demonstrated her core thesis in action: conflict isn't just something to be talked about; it's a force to be harnessed for constructive change. Even her 2023 special, Something Special, which she billed as a feel-good show about her marriage, plays with the conflict between her past work and her present happiness, proving that even joy can be a source of compelling tension.













