In this episode of The Bardo Podcast, I’m joined by Mark Simmons, award-winning one-liner comedian, for a focused conversation about stand-up comedy, confidence, failure, and the philosophy of laughter.
We explore what really happens when a joke lands or fails, how audiences perceive confidence on stage, and what “dying on stage” actually means. The conversation covers joke writing, wordplay, timing, audience trust, taboo, and why the same material can succeed in one room and fail in another.
Rather than offering formulas for being funny, this episode looks at comedy as a practice shaped by surprise, tension, perspective shifts, and shared meaning, and what humour can teach us about confidence, creativity, and relating to others with more lightness.
In this episode we explore:
- Dying on stage and losing the fear of failure
- Confidence, belief, and audience perception
- Fun as a skill in stand-up comedy
- Joke writing, wordplay, timing, and structure
- Audience trust, taboo, and tension
- The philosophy of laughter
Guest
Mark Simmons is an award-winning one-liner comedian known for his sharp jokes and meticulous approach to joke writing. He has toured internationally, appeared on television and radio, and hosts the podcast Jokes with Mark Simmons.
Mark’s is on tour now here's his website:
https://marksimmons.co.uk/
Mark’s stand-up special on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRn6iEuZvPU
Reading List
Emily Herring - Herald of a Restless World: How Henri Bergson Brought Philosophy to the People
Sigmund Freud - Jokes and Their Relation to the Unconscious
Zoe Brownstone's new Stand-Up Special (Go check this out now!)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJkF4QSNPmE
Support the show
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👉 https://www.patreon.com/cw/TheBardoPodcast
The Bardo Podcast explores Buddhism, philosophy, comedy, and alternative ways of thinking through fun philosophy conversations with comedians, philosophers, and Buddhist thinkers. The show brings together exploring Buddhism with playful, thoughtful discussions about creativity, meaning, inner and outer change, and what happens in the space between.
Hosted by comedian Marc Salmon, the show features conversations not about certainty or expertise, but about questioning assumptions and sitting with ambiguity together.
Find updates and more information at:
https://www.marcsalmoncomedy.com/
Music by Marc Salmon and Robert Fuller
Artwork by Zoe Brownstone