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Comedian, firebrand, sometime DJ and all-time vibe magnet.
One half of The Elis James and John Robins Show on Radio X & 5 Live. As heard on The News Quiz (Radio 4) As seen on Russell Howard’s Stand-Up Central (Comedy Central), Alan Davies: As Yet untitled (Dave) and Drunk Histories (Dave).
Double Chortle Award-winning comedian John Robins – one of the most exciting and distinctive voices in comedy – returns reflecting on love, loss and lamenting the fact he can’t break up with himself.
The stand-up, vibe magnet and London’s saddest DJ ™ would love to promise The Darkness of Robins won’t be an hour-long yell of a show, but he can’t. He’ll shout, snarl and sneer in his attempts to grapple with life’s fall-outs in what promises to be a pivotal moment in his being. Powerful, angst-ridden comedy at its finest, this is a must-see from one of the UK’s brightest talents.
John has firmly established himself on the comedy circuit since his debut in 2005, and with fellow comedian Elis James has enjoyed a meteoric success with The Elis James and John Robins show on Radio X, which, like Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant and Adam & Joe before them, has spawned one of the UK’s most popular podcasts. The pair recently completed an acclaimed UK tour, selling out Shepherd’s Bush Empire within minutes.
He will headline the upcoming series of Live from the BBC (BBC2) and is a regular face on TV, with recent appearances including Mock The Week (BBC2), Alan Davies: As Yet Untitled (Dave) and Russell Howard’s Good News (BBC3). He also has a host of radio credits under his belt including BBC Radio 4’s The Now Show, The News Quiz and Dilemma.
‘Humane, interesting and consistently funny’
**** The Independent
‘Hugely entertaining’
***** The Mirror
'Comedy in its rawest form: one man, one microphone, one fantastically funny show'
***** Threeweeks
'Perfectly crafted, intelligently put, cynically hilarious…a sublimely entertaining show'
***** Broadway Baby
‘Funny, joyous and charmingly self-depricating… An exemplary slice of comic rage’
**** Chortle