Stand-up comic Mark Normand sat down with Fox News Digital to discuss writing comedy in a changing cultural landscape ahead of the release of his new Netflix special, "None Too Pleased."

Stand-up comedian Mark Normand talks the way he performs: fast, loose and irreverent, with a punchline lurking around every corner. 

With a baby at home and a new Netflix special on the way, Normand sat down with Fox News Digital to discuss writing comedy in an increasingly tribal culture, where jokes are often judged less by whether they land than by the politics of the person telling them — and where late-night TV has lost its edge to polished predictability.

The New Orleans-born comic's newest Netflix special, "None Too Pleased," which premieres March 17, is a rapid-fire, "joke-every-30-seconds" type of show, Normand said. In it, he pokes fun at the partisanship and lack of nuance he sees in public discourse.

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Stand-up comedian Mark Normand sits down with Fox News Digital ahead of the release of his Netflix special, "None Too Pleased." (Laura Carrione/Fox News Digital)

Normand said what bothers him about comedy today more than a particular political slant is the presence of any finger-wagging in the first place. The monologue-based, one-way communication of stand-up comedy makes the medium uniquely suited to be hijacked and turned into a lecture.

"Imagine if a musician just came up, put his guitar down and was like, 'Let me tell you about Iran and Israel.' And you're like, 'Well, what about the music?' [Stand-up comedy] is the only art form that's so subjective that you can kind of slip away from the comedy part because you're holding a microphone and have a stool with a beer on it," he said.

Normand said comedy has become "weirdly morality-based," and the craft that once rewarded nerve is now more frequently filtered through a lens of sensitivity.

"When I was a kid, you watched Blazing Saddles or Eddie Murphy or whatever, and it was just like, the worst things are what you should lean in on."

However, he clarified that shock for its own sake is no closer to comedy. Normand insisted that the issue is not whether subjects are sensitive, but whether comics have done the work to transform them into jokes rather than slogans or cheap shots.

"I think some people do that horribly, and they just say a word without having a joke. I think as long as it's always a joke, you can talk about anything. Everything is on the table, and I think making horrible things funny is part of the job. So I say lean in, but it's gotta be funny. That's the key. It's got to be a laugh."

"And that's the art form," he said, "making it funny and getting away with it."

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Mark Normand said he likes to keep audiences "in the dark" about his political preferences. (Netflix)

Too often, audiences are more focused on trying to discern a speaker's political position than on listening for the punchline, Normand said, arguing that people only want to listen to those on "their side."

This social media algorithm-fueled partisanship is "ruining everything" and preventing the exchange of ideas, he continued.

"People are seeing two completely different realities. So I can tell people are sitting in the audience like, 'What is he? What is he? Is he right? Is he left? What's going on here? I can't laugh because I don't know where he's at,' and I think that's horrible for comedy."

"When I was a teenager, they would go, 'Straight or gay?' But now it's, 'Right or left?' and I like to keep them both in the dark."

Stand-ups face an additional hurdle. By the nature of the craft, they have to work out their material in front of an audience, unlike other artists or athletes who can practice outside the arena. This means it might take a few rounds of workshopping before a joke really lands, which is especially perilous for one's reputation when fine-tuning a potentially offensive joke.

To reassure his audience that he's on their side, Normand issues a disclaimer between bits at the start of his special: "I should warn you guys, I will say some horrific s--- up here, but it's all jokes, just fun."

"We've kind of got this Pavlovian response now to certain topics, like race or gay or men, whatever it is," Normand told Fox News Digital, saying people can get triggered by the very mention of a subject before it's even clear where a joke is headed.

"So I wish people would just listen. And so I have to give this disclaimer, like, 'I'm gonna talk about these triggering things, but it's all above board. It's all silly. It's always humor.'"

Audiences want creators to choose a side, Normand said. He pointed out the absurd contradictions that hyper-partisanship can produce, like when different commenters accuse a comic of being "woke" and "alt-right" on the same video.

"I hate that everything's political ... and it used to not be. Political talk used to be boring and for nerds. You know, there's some guy like, 'Can you believe what's going on in Kosovo?' And you're like, 'Shut up, you dork. We're trying to have a drink.' But now it's front and center. It's such a big part of the culture."

"So I just want to be a comedian. You know, I don't wanna be a pundit, but I do feel like if you pick a side, your career goes better," Normand continued, asserting that what makes someone your favorite comedian should be their humor, not their politics.

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Stand-up comedian Mark Normand delivers jokes onstage in his new Netflix comedy special, "None Too Pleased." (Netflix)

When it comes to comedy, nowhere are the effects of tribalism more visible than on late-night television, which Normand argues has become flattened and rote.

"The Late Nights aren't what they used to be — no offense," he began. Normand has appeared over a dozen times on late night shows like "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon," "Conan," and "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert."

He said the scene has left ideological diversity behind.

"We're done with that, which is so hypocritical. We have a Black guy, a White guy, and a Jew, and an Asian, and a lady, but they all think the same. So what's the point?"

It's not the content of the jokes that Normand finds irksome, but rather their predictability.

"I think what bothers me from a comedian standpoint is they're all telling the same joke ... It's like the same Trump jokes over and over. I don't care if you bash Trump, but ... be original."

Compared to comedy clubs, late night shows are more tense and less casual, which Normand surmised might be another reason for talk shows' decline.

"You got that tension of cameras on, and this is your shot. It's TV, baby! But at the clubs you can just go, 'Hey, look at this queef. What's up with that guy? What are you, gay? Alright, nice shirt, d-----. You know, it is more of a conversation."

He suggested people gravitate toward the perceived authenticity of looser formats like club comedy, crowd work and podcasts.

"So I think the late night, maybe another reason it's dying — no offense — is because people want that authentic experience ... I think now a crowd work clip, you know, just calling a guy fat does way more views than a Fallon clip, sadly — the world has flipped on that. One-eighty, completely."

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Host Seth Meyers during the monologue on Nov. 10, 2025. Jon Stewart talks with David Remnick during The 2025 New Yorker Festival at Webster Hall on Oct. 26, 2025, in New York City.  Jimmy Kimmel during "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" on November 5, 2025. Stephen Colbert attends the WSJ. Magazine 2025 Innovator Awards on Oct. 29, 2025, in New York City. (Getty Images)

Normand co-hosts two comedy-focused podcasts with other comedians. He said his own podcasts are "just entertainment," as opposed to a soapbox.

"I don't want to be saving the world. I don't want to be an activist. I don't want to give tips on comedy, or a comedy lecture. It's just full of jokes, what's on the news, what is going on in the world, and just silliness and levity. Keep it light," he said.

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At the end of the day, ordinary people want comedy to be comedy, not the news, he argued — pointing to Twitter, where so-called comedians build timelines full of political takes without an attempt at humor.

"Everybody's got an opinion. Everybody's got a take. We don't need your take. Be funny."

Max Bacall is an Associate Editor for the Flash/Media/Culture team at Fox News Digital.

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