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Indian comedian Vir Das says Donald Trump is making nuanced voices counterculture

Vir Das is confident that comedy is going to get more interesting because of the current state of polarized politics, and the daily, are-you-kidding-me moments we’re faced with. Read More 

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Das says the years since that video went viral have been strange but also good. He’s a true multi-hyphenate who has two TV shows in development with U.S. studios and is putting the final post-touches on the feature film Happy Patel, shot in India, which he co-directed, wrote and starred in. He’s also finishing up working on his fifth Netflix special, which doesn’t have a premiere date yet.

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“I am surprised by everything and not surprised by it,” said Das about the world today. “I guess that’s probably the state that most people are in, where you’re just overwhelmed … But also, all of it can turn into standup, that is the bright side to it, at least for my profession.”

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If ever there was a global artist, it’s Das.

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He was born in India, raised in Nigeria and went to college in Illinois. That, combined with an extensive world tour that has seen him visit every continent except Antarctica in the last 20 months, gives him a perspective not many of us have.

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“I definitely have had a strangely, uniquely global upbringing, which I would mention not a lot of all these audience members have had. But it’s taken awhile to get to the point where I just kind of recognize, ‘OK, this is who I am, and my best bet is to do me,’ ” said Das.

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As for those audiences, Das says they’re usually made up of around 60 per cent Indians.

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“I think a lot, a lot of people are coming in for two reasons. Maybe the Indians are coming in because they want to get caught up with home, because they miss home. And I’m kind of bringing home to them,” said Das, adding he also feels a responsibility to represent a modern India to his crowds. “A large part of the audience, their parents are from where I’m from, but it’s not the place that I’m actually from.

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“What I find is a lot of Indians they kind of grew up with this time capsule version of India that parents left behind. So, if your mom and dad came over to Canada in 1975, that’s what you grew up believing India was. You know, and you’re 21 years old, and it’s my job to come in and be like, ‘No, I’m from Mumbai. This is what we do and everything your parents told you was a lie. This is modern India, and we’re hopefully a little more fun and a little more audacious than you thought.’ ”

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As for the non-Indian audience members, Das says a lot of local people are coming to the show “because they want something new and to see what they look like to an outsider.”

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Das explained as an outsider he comes in with fresh perspectives, and the freedom to apply those to all sorts of topics.

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“In North America, or at least in the West, most comedy right now is either ideology or identity- based,” said Das. “And sometimes to have an outsider come in and say, ‘This is my only agenda, I’m only passing through, and I don’t belong to either one of these camps that you guys are so divided into.’ And you know, it’s kind of how I see it broadly on all ends. Sometimes that’s a little more freeing, and you’re able to talk about things that … a local comic may not be able to.”

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At the end of the day, Das just wants people to see the humour in things. And hopefully, in doing so, they’ll be able to avoid less reactive stress and take a beat when life comes in hot.

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“What I like about my profession is that we can fundamentally disagree about s–t, but agree that it’s funny as hell, it’s absurd as hell,” said Das. “It’s kind of like changing the map in your mind. Yeah, some s–it is horrible, but if I can attach something silly to it, then the next time you’re faced with it, you think of the silly thing.”

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Dgee@postmedia.com 

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