Richard Herring
Date Of Birth: 12/07/1967
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Glasgow Comedy Festival 2013 Launch Show

The traditions of Burns Night are well-established: haggis, poetry, enough single-malt to float a battleship, and then, O what a glorious sight, the London launch of the Glasgow Comedy Festival.
Vying with Leicester for the title of Europe’s biggest event of its type, the packed programme boasts more than 400 shows – and this taster is designed to woo tourists north of the border this March... although there’s a notable reluctance to commit to that trip from the audience tonight.
Still, this line-up – hosted by self-confessed ‘needy poof’ Bruce Devlin – offers a perfectly succulent taster. Devlin’s fast-talking patter blends smut, catty audience insults and honest if unedifying personal titbits that, in a full set, might become draining. But in the compere’s role he shovels the night along, getting himself – and by extension the rest of the room – energised by his near-the-knuckle banter with the front rows.
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The festival is proud to be a natural product of Glasgow, rather than simply being located there, but it took two outsiders to offer the best take on Scottishness, going beyond the stereotypes of battering both food and people. The first came courtesy of Henning Wehn, who found little appetite for Scottish independence in the room (though a later comic suggesting England be submersed got a big cheer).
The football-loving German cheekily suggested that sectarian chanting was the only thing that made the Scottish game worth following; though proceeded to dissect the lyrics of one Loyalist anthem with the usual ruthless Teutonic efficiency. (What was that I was saying about stereotypes?) Wehn sometimes needs a little time to set out his theories, but there are plenty of wry lines and astute insight in his set.
Tiffany Stevenson appears to have ambitions to be a Middlesex Sarah Silverman with her bad-taste one-liners... although she doesn’t quite commit to the nastiness, de-clawing each punchline with a deliberate smile to let the audience know it’s only a joke. Some of these lines pack a punch, but when she moves on to topics of middle age, middle class ‘yummy mummies’ and what she considers the real seven signs of aging, the sneer is a little safer.
Richard Herring delivered the opening few minutes of his ‘male answer to the Vagina Monologues’, Talking Cock, which can’t really fail. The legion of Profanisaurus-type euphemisms for the ‘Kojak piggy-bank’ might not be sophisticated, but they are funny - especially when Herring revels so much in their childishness. The responses to his survey about where men put their ‘porridge guns’ for pleasure is as eye-watering as it is eye-opening, and proves that embarrassing comedy about penises is timeless indeed.
A change of style for Jen Brister, who returned to the theme of entering middle age (she’s a youthful 38) yet still wanting the lifestyle of a twentysomething – from Top Shop chic to pill-popping nights out. The subject is bread-and-butter for stand-up, but Brister makes it her own through expertly-performed set pieces: hilariously evocative character sketches that display a flair for cartoonish exaggeration and a mastery of both physical comedy and timing. She’s long-overdue a more high-profile vehicle for these talents.
Mitch Benn’s place in the comedy universe is more well-established, with his quick-turnaround topical-inspired songs, accurately capturing a musical genre. After a fair bit of set-up to evoke the Olympics, his feelgood bounce-along number inspired by the opening ceremony’s inflatable Stonehenge is properly catchy. And the cod rock opera, inspired by children’s literature is nicely done. I could do without the hack Yoda and wookie impressions, though, however good he is at them.
The second half of the showcase rounded up some London-based Scottish comics as a reminder of the festival’s origins. First among them was Dougie Dunlop, a no-frills stand-up who lets his material as a downtrodden everyman speak for itself. It’s something of a mixed bag, with a few pedestrian moments mixed with some great lines and unexpected switcheroos... but there’s a warmth to his dour observations, and an efficiency of delivery that keeps the punchlines coming.
Robert Mugabe-obsessed Matt Winning is a man who forever looks as if he’s just that moment regretted opening his mouth. Whether it’s his tortured puns about the Zimbabwean dictator, or tortured puns about something else, it’s his embarrassment in his own ‘dad gags’ that carries the set. To be fair, some of the wordplay is quite inspired. But some is ‘fucking awful’, to use his own words. Either way, with his odd fixations and deliberate phrasing in his delivery, this Scot is certainly memorable.
A quick transatlantic trip, next, for sassy Yank David Mills, whose sharp comments likening devolution to divorce really hit the spot – and made him the second outsider to successfully nail the Scottish psyche.
Mills is arch and mean, which can be refreshing but sometimes seems misplaced: I don’t think you have to be a super-leftie liberal to think his attacks on the homeless are aimlessly cruel more than ironic, while he sometimes seems to enjoy the sound of his own voice a bit too much, and talks fuzzily around the subject. That said, he cuts a distinctive and stylish figure, with an enjoyably elevated persona and some tart, acerbic putdowns.
Wendy Wason also can’t help but get caught up in digressions ‘I was going to tell you something, but I’m chatting here...’ she chirpily confesses at one point – and it’s futile to hope that this engaging gossip will fully focus. For the first half of her set you wonder if she’s going to get anywhere, but eventually reveals some delightfully catty comments aimed at her own offspring – she’s an ultra-competitive mum in that respect – while her story about saying the wrong thing to a friend heading out to Thailand is a brilliant anecdote.
A real treat of a headliner came in the form of Mark Thomas who, inspired by his bilious contempt for the romantic novel One Day, revealed his new favourite pastime: heckling books. You’ll all be doing it soon.
You might think that a rather trivial topic for a political comedian, but his whole ethos is to encourage direct acts of rebellion – executed with a disarming wit that always makes his targets look silly. He’s currently reviving his Manifesto show, which encourages audiences to make suggestions for policies that would make Britain better – and it’s testament to the humour, imagination and sense of justice among his fans that he’s collected such a hilarious set of pronouncements, every one of which should probably be enacted straight away.
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Richard Herring Dates
Sat 29 Jun 2013
Wed 3 Jul 2013
- Udderbelly South Bank
- 21:00
- £14 to £20.50
- Richard Herring
Thu 4 Jul 2013
- The Tommyfield
- 20:00
- £6 (£5 in advance)
- Pat Cahill, Richard Herring
Sat 6 Jul 2013
- Monkey Business Chalk Farm
- 20:00
- Call for prices
- Lucy Porter, Richard Herring
Mon 15 Jul 2013
- Bristol Tobacco Factory
- 20:00
- £10
- Alan Francis, Richard Herring
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Wed 17 Jul 2013
Book Now- Comedy Bar Islington
- 20:30
- £8 (£6 in advance)
- Richard Herring, Zoe Lyons, Chris Mayo (MC)
Mon 22 Jul 2013
Book Now- Brighton Caroline of Brunswick
- 19:30~22:45
- £10
- Alex Love, Pam Ford, Richard Herring
Fri 26 Jul 2013
Book Now- Bluewater Glow
- 19:30
- £22.50 to £33.50
- Boy With Tape On His Face, Hal Cruttenden, Imran Yusuf, Lucy Porter, Patrick Monahan, Phil Nichol, Richard Herring
Fri 26 Jul 2013
Wed 31 Jul 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Wed 31 Jul 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
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Thu 1 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
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Fri 2 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Fri 2 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sat 3 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sat 3 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sun 4 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sun 4 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Mon 5 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Mon 5 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Tue 6 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Tue 6 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Wed 7 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Wed 7 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Thu 8 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Thu 8 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Fri 9 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Fri 9 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sat 10 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sat 10 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sun 11 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sun 11 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Mon 12 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
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Tue 13 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
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- Call for prices
Tue 13 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Wed 14 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Wed 14 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Thu 15 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Thu 15 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Fri 16 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Fri 16 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sat 17 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sat 17 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sun 18 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sun 18 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Mon 19 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Mon 19 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Tue 20 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Tue 20 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Wed 21 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Wed 21 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Thu 22 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Thu 22 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Fri 23 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Fri 23 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sat 24 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Sat 24 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sun 25 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Sun 25 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die!
- Pleasance Courtyard
- 20:00~21:00
- Call for prices
Mon 26 Aug 2013
- Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
- Stand 1
- 13:55~14:55
- £8 to £10
Wed 16 Oct 2013
- Manchester Frog And Bucket
- Call for prices
Fri 15 Nov 2013
Thu 13 Feb 2014
- Leicester Little Theatre
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Fri 21 Feb 2014
- Cambridge Junction
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Sat 22 Feb 2014
- Colchester Arts Centre
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Fri 28 Feb 2014
- Aldershot West End Centre
- Call for prices
Sat 15 Mar 2014
- Norwich Playhouse
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Fri 21 Mar 2014
- Didcot Cornerstone
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Sat 22 Mar 2014
- Hull Truck Theatre
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Fri 28 Mar 2014
- Salford Lowry
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Past Shows
Andrew Collins And Richard Herring: Collings and Herrin Podcast Live!
Richard Herring: Hitler Moustache Collins And Herring Podcast Live
Richard Herring: As It Occurs To Me
Richard Herring: Christ on a Bike – The Second Coming Richard Herring: What Is Love Anyway?
Richard Herring’s Edinburgh Fringe Podcast Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2012
Richard Herring: Talking Cock: The Second Coming Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast 2013
Richard Herring: We’re All Going to Die! Ha Ha Hammersmith II
Malcolm Hardee Charity Cabaret 2007
Pimm's Summerfest
Tedstock Britcom 2007


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Older Comments
Geoff F - 14/04/2011
I must admit to being a serious and long term fan of Richard Herring (so I might be biased), but in my view Christ on a Bike – The Second Coming, as performed on Wednesday 13 April in Nottingham, was the fastest, funniest and cleverest show I had seen for a very long time. With a surgical precision Richard takes his scalpel and lays bare the bones of Christianity, and then proceeds to deconstruct some of its basic tenets to devastating effect. Intellectually challenging and stimulating throughout, this is a dazzling display of wit which never falters for a moment. Whilst as Richard admits, he is tackling a personage no less important than Hitler, this is a tour de force from beginning to end, and without the occasional over-earnest passages of Hitler’s Moustache.rnrnIt will be hard to cap this one.
Roberto - 08/04/2011
Almost all the funny lines from Ricky Gervais' 'Inside the Actors' Studio' guest spot - Herring's Christ On A Bike, The way Gervais talks to Pilkington - Herring's comic persona in the 90s with Stu Lee and then Andrew Collins in his podcast. Gervais' standup - a few near-misses of plagiarism from Herring... Herring's The Modern Review a fake fly on the wall doc years before The Office.
Ted - 16/01/2011
Bumming!
Jo Phelan - 28/08/2008
I relegated Mr Herring to the back of my 'must see' list after seeing him do a very disappointing 15 minute stint at a BBC Best of the Fest night at Edinburgh a couple of years ago. However, my friend bought us tickets for his show this year, & I was completely taken by surprise by how much I loved it. We also saw him at Pimms Summerfest last night, and giggled throughout his set, even though we'd seen some of the material such a short time ago. Which proves that its quality stuff. I am now a convert, and thoroughly appreciate the bloke with the child-sized hands. Bravo!
Ben Heal - 09/09/2006
I see far too many stand-ups. I am a comic tart. In my view in the last two years Herring has strode to the front of the pack in the UK stand ups for innovation. In his comic persona he is polite middle classiness on a stick. He collects for charity at every show, always provides a full free programme for longer sets, and keeps an exhaustive blog for his fans. But and it s a big but, he is no longer an Oxbridge silly chappy he is now replete with a midlife crisis - childish and childless - as he puts it - and a cruel streak. His new Edinburgh show is pushing at what stand up can be. Which in truth is worse he asks - Maxime Carr or Steve Martin's poor comic acting? Steve Martin in Herring's World. The new show has left behind the big themes such as Catholicism but keep an abiding interest with the illogic of blaming the victim. He is not one to work an audience beyond what is expected of a stand up preferring to rely on hammering out wonderful turns of phrases. His is for the most part not our own situation but he is Everyman and more importantly funny enough to interest us. This is not a master at work more importantly he is someone with the guts to take stand up in new and for me funnier direction. Something is rotten in the state of Herring and it s to our advantage. Go and see him you missed Hicks, didn t you he is moving into that league.
Tom - 27/07/2006
Richard is one of the best comics of our generation. I am so pleased he still enjoys doing his shows and stays in touch with his audience, instead of disappearing into the safe world of writing. He does do script writing for a lot of major British comedies but doesn't shy away from the intensity of the stage. Well worth going to see him live if you get a chance.
Colin Smethers - 08/07/2006
Saw Richard Herring in Edinburgh last August. Was expecting something good, but he was actually harrowingly piss-poor. I laughed once, and that was at a heckle. If it wasn't for his association with Stewart Lee, he'd be little more than a part-time comic dragging his arse from one students' union bar to another. When I saw Herring he deconstructed some of his material for comedic effect (and probably to show off his intelligence and self-awareness); unfortunately, this is something Daniel Kitson does much, much better. Sorry to be negative, but this man woefully disappointed me.
Matthew - 16/06/2006
Not funny at all, quite embarrassing in fact. The two sixth formers behind me laughed their socks off, but no one else did, which pretty much sums it up
Mandy Moore - 08/05/2006
My favourite living British comedian. Saw Someone Likes Yoghurt in October last year and it is without question the funniest stand-up show I've ever seen live. A work of art.
Ed Shepherd - 04/02/2006
Saw Rich last night at Pizza on the Park. Hadn't encountered him since listening to Fist of Fun on the radio as a little chap, which I loved. He's got alot more bitter since then. A passive-aggressive style of delivery with some great jokes. Made a switch to being openly aggressive when dealing with a particularly cuntish heckler. The way be completely crushed this idiot was painfully hilarious. Good stuff.
Ben Heal - 07/12/2005
Herring seems to me to have made a quantum leap in his comedy this year - yet few have noticed. His stage comic persona is darker and more extreme and having a serious stab at redefining what is comedically acceptable. He has taken remnants of his misplaced arrogant but likeable Somerset student and sensibly as he prepares for his 40's regrouped to try to develop both his and our humour. Examples? Constant remarks on the acceptability of his new humour. Stretching a single theme so far its both dizzying and comedically revealing as he examines minute internal logic. Callbacks within callbacks. His old trick of misplacing responsibility (e.g. magpies held accountable for the unfairness of the magpie nursery rhyme) is renewed with ideas on how trout sized sperm would encourage a more responsible attitude in their owners. When someone can have you in tucks and educate you about the dangers of Catholocism for an Aids riddled Africa and social justice at the same time you are an encouragingly long distance from Lee Evans and Billy Connolly. How many comedians do you know that can convincingly twin tragedy and fun in the same moment? Herring is I suspect on the form of his life. If you want to get away from the endless stream of cloned observational gagsters, and see an exciting new direction, Herring is smoking at the moment.
Kevin Jackson - 30/11/2005
I can't say I was particularly impressed. He thinks he is more intelligent than he is and was trying to imitate Ricky Gervais in my opinion. Not UNfunny. Just not very funny.
Mike - 27/11/2005
Saw Rich at Headliners comedy last night. Played an excellent set.. Very very funny. Highly recommended
Derek - 12/10/2005
Can't believe he's still plugging away in stand-up obscurity - thought he would've called it a day by now. He was always the Baddiel to Stewart Lee's Rob Newman. It's all very well being an annoying snidey ironic smartarse when you're just a 20 year old student, but to still be the same when you're in your late 30's is just sad.
Laura - 05/10/2005
He is not funny. Go back to your yoghurt and stop trying to be amusing.
Jon Warwick - 16/09/2005
Oh for God's sake would someone burst the bubble? He was the less clever one from Lee and Herring and is now attempting to emulate his glory days in the syle of his former partner (who, by the way, has had the foresight and talent to move on). Washed up? I think so
Steveo - 16/05/2005
Not many people can get away with using 30 words for the male genitilia and manage to make you chuckle at each one. He has the talent of not making his sketches sound crude just cheeky and amusingly childish. I saw him perform for Comic Relief and he was the star of the show.
James - 09/05/2005
Saw him for the first time performing 'Somebody Likes Yoghurt' and to be honest, despite loving lots of the TV and radio stuff he's done in the past, his act just seemed laboured and puerile. Some people really enjoyed the fact that he stretched one short story into 40 minutes of material, but I just found it boring after a while. He knows full well that it's too long and he makes jokes about it, but frankly if he knows that then why not just be funny instead of wasting our time? Maybe it's all a big power trip...
John Stevens - 11/04/2005
Saw him on Saturday and in the face of a cr*p audience he delivered an assured set, mostly about the subject of yoghurt. Never disappoints.
Cate - 29/03/2005
I have seen Rich three times and he's always hilarious. Most recently he was supporting Ian Cognito, and completely outsshone him, despite being heckled for being repetitive (that's half the point, surely) Lee & Herring were superb, but Rich is fantastic on his own.
Christina Martin - 18/02/2005
His one man show "The Twelve Tasks of Hercules Terrace" is great. A very affable and funny man.
Pete - 19/02/2004
Talking Cock was outstanding - Rich has the charisma, authority and charm to carry off an honest, blunt and hilarious show.