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Jest for Laughs

By Baisakhi Roy Email By Baisakhi Roy
February 2025
Jest for Laughs

From the spotlight of sold-out arenas to the intimacy of comedy clubs, South Asians are bringing a fresh, diverse voice to comedy in North America.

With a growing number of stand-up comedians like Hasan Minhaj, Vir Das, Russell Peters, Zarna Garg, and Sugar Sammy leading the way, the comedyworld is being reshaped as these talented performers highlight the immigrant and diasporic experience with humor that connects across cultures. Their success isn’t just a triumph of wit; it’s a cultural movement that offers new narratives beyond stereotypes, paving the way for future generations. The stage is no longer reserved for just the mainstream—it's now a platform for the bold, the diverse, and the irreverent.

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Aseem, a marine engineer, ventured into an open mic event at a comedy club on a lonely winter evening… and then went on to become a standup performer himself.

Mining the immigrant life for laughs

The immigrant experience is fertile ground for comedic material, and South Asian comedians like Hasan Minhaj and Zarna Garg are masters at turning cultural challenges into laugh-out-loud moments. Newer and lesser-known comedians are gleefully taking the torch forward.

CoverStory_03_02_25.jpgCoverStory_04_02_25.jpg "I didn’t have a single 'eureka' moment where I decided stand-up was my calling. It was more of a gradual evolution, starting with improv classes for funand slowly becoming more serious about writing and performing,” says Pratima Mani.

Canadian stand-up comic Aseem Halbe, who goes by just his first name, was pleasantly shocked when one of his clips went viral on social media in 2024. “The Canadian healthcare system teaches how resilient the human body is... that most of your medical problems can be solved with Tylenol,” quips Aseem, and the room explodes with laughter. The joke clearly resonates with the Canadian audience. “I try to figure out which experiences people can relate to, which ones have universal appeal, and how to make them personal. Comedy is about taking those everyday moments and making them funny,” he says.

A marine engineer by training, Aseem performs regularly at various venues across Montreal, where he is based. But comedy was never on the agenda. A lonely winter evening in 2019 had Aseem venture out to an open mic at a local comedy club. Watching the performers electrified him. “They were having so much fun! I saw a first-time performer get such a great response, and I was like: you know what, I am going to try this,” he says.

He wrote to the Comedy Nest, Montreal’s only English-speaking comedy club, and was asked to prepare five minutes of material. He did well and was encouraged by several colleagues and friends who came out to support him. Stoked by his success, he decided to give it a serious shot even while keeping his day job. Sharp observations characterize his comedy and, as he says, an “understated style of delivery.” "Comedy needs to be precise. The smaller the joke and the bigger the punchline, the more it hits. My healthcare joke about how the Canadian system teaches you resilience is simple—no flowery language, just to the point. That’s what works. It’s relatable and doesn’t need any extra fluff,” he says.

New York-based comedy writer and stand-up Pratima Mani’s routines are also informed by the frustrations and absurdities of navigating her dual identities as a South Asian American. One of her most popular clips on social media is about getting her green card after living in America for 17 years and finally being able to tell her boyfriend that she “doesn’t need him anymore.”

Recently, she wrote and starred in a short film, Stitched, which explores immigrant identity through an absurdist lens. Currently doing the rounds of various film festivals, the film is garnering much praise from audiences and critics alike. It’s about a diasporic woman who is tired of dating and decides to “Frankenstein”—mentally put together her perfect man with body parts of different people she encounters. "As an immigrant, much of my comedy stems from experiences like navigating the legal system—the endless paperwork and the constant restrictions on what you can and can’t do. It provides for rich material, but it can also be incredibly draining. Finding humor in the process is my way of making sense of it all,” she says.

Mani, a writer on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, came to comedy gradually, starting with improve and sketch classes after college. "I didn’t have a single 'eureka' moment where I decided stand-up was my calling. It was more of a gradual evolution, starting with improv classes for fun and slowly becoming more serious about writing and performing. The more I explored my immigrant identity through comedy, the more I realized there was an audience eager for those perspectives,” she says. The comedian says she finds inspiration in observing everyday interactions and personal interests like fantasy literature, fan theory videos, and her love for British absurdist comedy that she grew up on.

The personal and the political

Lawrence Jesurajan was always considered funny. He lit up the room at social events and routinely wrote plays and poems to keep himself creatively nourished. Strangers came up to him each time he emceed a local show, wanting to take a photo with him. “A lady took a picture with me and said that she expected to see me on Comedy Central soon, so she would have this photo to show her friends that she knew me when I was just getting started. That, coming from a stranger, really boosted my confidence,” he says.

CoverStory_05_02_25.jpgCoverStory_06_02_25.jpgWhen Jesurajan first came to Cumming, Georgia, from Chennai, India, stand-up comics like George Carlin and Ricky Gervais inspired him. “Their comedy is socially conscious. They don't just crack jokes. They have a message, and I have always liked that kind of stuff,” he says. It was his wife who pushed him to take his comedy seriously.

 

Lawrence Jesurajan, who was always considered funny by those who knew him, started Chillax, his own comedy club in the metro Atlanta area.

Jesurajan’s first routine in downtown Atlanta was a big hit. “I had a four-minute set, and they loved it so much. It's about the misconceptions we have, like: I didn't know the difference between a shower and a bath. What did a bath mean? What do you do? Soak in a tub for an hour, right? These little things [about immigrants] always play out well with an American audience,” he says with a laugh.

The pandemic put a halt to his plans for a while, but he bounced right back and started his own comedy club, Chillax, to provide a platform for himself and other comics. He launched the club officially in May 2022, and the first show was a big success with 100-150 attendees, mostly catering to the local Tamil diaspora.

“I kind of cater to the Indian diaspora. So, I have done private events like wedding anniversaries, milestone birthdays, and graduations, where I have to cater to Indians and also Americans from all walks of life. I try to be very balanced that way because I don't want to box myself into just being a Tamil comic,” he says.

Recently, Jesurajan opened for well-known comics, including Anubhav Singh Bassi and Sindhu Vee, connecting with largely Hindi and English-speaking audiences. At Bassi’s show, he earned a 30-second applause for merely asking if there were any “North Indians in the room” and then acknowledged the applause, saying that they didn’t have to clap so hard for Bassi as he wasn’t “their Prime Minister.” Jesurajan is now working hard to make his comedy accessible to a non-Tamil audience using tools like Google Translate to work on material in languages he's not fully fluent in, like Hindi and Telugu.

Jesurajan’s comedy draws from his life experiences, especially his 19 years as a married man. His wife often makes an appearance in voiceover form in some of his online clips. Lawrence, who works full-time as an associate director at a telecommunications company, points out, "I do have a very responsible job, so I take it seriously.” Despite comedy being a side hustle, he admits, “it takes up the primary part of my brain because it’s creative work.”

Like Jesurajan, New York-based stand-up comedian Abby Govindan too loves the creative freedom that comedy gives her. For her, it’s not just about making people laugh—it’s also a chance to share fresh ideas and new perspectives, which makes the work all the more fulfilling. "The goal for me was never to be famous. I just happen to enjoy getting on stage, speaking to people, making them laugh, and telling them about things they didn't know,” she says.

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“In 2018, I went viral online, which made me realize I wanted to pursue comedy professionally and monetize the art of making people laugh,” says Abby Govindan.

Govindan may not have pursued fame, but it sought her out early in her career. She had her first brush with stardom when her tweet about PTSD went viral. The sudden gush of followers and notoriety was exciting for the young comedian. “In 2018, I went viral online, which made me realize I wanted to pursue comedy professionally and monetize the art of making people laugh,” she says. Govindan started taking comedy classes at the iconic stand-up venue, Carolines on Broadway. “I took my first few comedy classes there. I had gone through a really terrible breakup. It was in my junior year of college, and I was crying every day. So my parents were like, ‘Okay, we'll help you pay for stand-up comedy classes,’” she says.

As a child of immigrants, always trying to make her family members laugh, a pivotal moment for Abby was when she was nine years old and watched a Russell Peters comedy special at a temple camp. “I remember it being life-changing! I was like: is that an Indian guy?” It was the first time she realized an Indian person could be a successful stand-up comedian, she says.

In her hour-long solo show that she’s currently touring within the U.S., How To Embarrass Your Immigrant Parents, Govindan hilariously unpacks the tightrope walk between living up to your parent’s expectations and chasing your own dreams—all while dishing out cheeky tips for getting them on board with your wild ambitions. Her tips include: Dislike the way coconut tastes! Her explanation in her show is as cheeky: “I know, I know! It’s an Indian culinary staple. Imagine how humiliated my parents feel every time they have to explain at a dinner party that their daughter does not like the thing (fruit? vegetable?) that flavors a good 70% of dishes in an entire subcontinent.”

She mentions several American and international comedians as inspiring her to find her own voice in the clutter of online comedy. Among them are: Aparna Nancherla who, for her, "paved the way" for being able to talk about topics like anxiety and depression as an Indian woman on stage; Nish Kumar; Samantha Bee, who she interned for in college; Minhaj (who is presenting her solo show); John Oliver; Jon Stewart; and Trevor Noah who she credits for shaping her own political views and aspirations to have a similar informational desk show.

Govindan’s ultimate career goal, she says, has always been to have a late-night show or informational desk show "where I can share information to people that they would not have otherwise known. Very John Oliver style.” She is in the process of launching a podcast called "Actually That's Not True with Abby Govindan"—a fact-checking podcast where each week she breaks down a topic with a guest.

What the future holds

The growing success of South Asian comedians signals a shift toward more inclusive and diverse storytelling in mainstream media. Comedy festivals, like the Desi Comedy Fest, have also played a pivotal role in elevating South Asian voices by providing platforms for emerging talent. These events, alongside local comedy clubs like Montreal’s Comedy Nest, offer budding comedians the space to hone their craft and share their stories. Govindan recently performed at the Desi Comedy Festival’s 10th anniversary celebrations that were held in various cities in the Bay area in California. Comedians included Tom Thakkar (Comedy Central); Ibhan Kulkarni (Just For Laughs) from New York; and Bay Area local favorites Numaan Shaikh, Deeptanshu Jha, and Tirumari Jothi alongside co-founders, comedians Abhay Nadkarni and Samson Koletkar.

CoverStory_09_02_25.jpgDesi Comedy Fest is North America’s largest and longest-running South Asian comedy festival. In the early years, the festival featured a core group of around 9-11 South Asian comedians from the Bay Area. Over time, they expanded to include acts from across the West Coast and eventually brought in international talent as well. “In the period between 2016 to 2018, the festival ran for 11 consecutive nights across multiple cities, featuring over 50 comedians,” says Koletkar.

Abhay Nadkarni and Samson Koletkar, co-founders of Desi Comedy Fest, North America’s the largest and longest-running South Asian comedy festival.

Koletkar and Nadkarni first met in 2010 when Nadkarni was a guest performer on Koletkar’s "Mahatma Moses Comedy Tour." A few years later, they reconnected in San Francisco and began collaborating on comedy shows. The idea for Desi Comedy Fest emerged after the 2008 Mumbai attacks when Samson felt compelled to use comedy as a way to bring people together across cultural and religious divides. Since then, the festival has transformed from a grassroots effort into a national movement, providing a platform for emerging comedic talent across the US.

A key focus for Nadkarni and Koletkar was ensuring the comedy remained high-quality, smart, and family-friendly rather than relying on stereotypes or crude humor. They carefully curated the lineup, sometimes deferring promising comedians for a year or two until they were ready for the Desi Fest stage. “We can't drop the quality of the shows because people are paying as much as $50 for tickets and you can't put up absolute amateurs who don't have the chops for it yet,” says Koletkar.

The duo has also witnessed the evolution of South Asian comedy audiences over the years and are thrilled to see that audiences are now hungry for more diverse and provocative material. "Audiences today are more open to comedians pushing boundaries," says Koletkar. "But they also appreciate when comedians know where to draw the line."

CoverStory_10_02_25.jpgLooking to the future, Koletkar envisions taking Desi Comedy Fest global, bringing the celebration of South Asian comedy to Desi communities around the world. He believes the future is bright for South Asian comics, as the comedy scene becomes more mainstream and accessible. "I think it's only going to get bigger and better. Looking at where we were when I started and where it is now. There are so many South Asian comics dominating across every language possible. Comedy itself has become mainstream. Initially, it used to be bars and clubs and dicey rooms. Now it's major theaters and arenas, and there's comedy for every taste, just like there are movies made in all possible genres,” he says.

The many faces of a growing tribe—at the Desi Comedy Fest.

With so much explosive talent going viral on a regular basis, comics are aware that there is always pressure to stand out and get the algorithm working in their favor. "The algorithm used to be very creator-friendly in 2018-19. But now it's not. For example, one thing that the algorithm changed is that if you followed a creator, you saw more of their content. But now if you follow a creator, you see less of their content and the algorithm pushes other new creators for you to follow."

Govindan feels this change in the algorithm has made it much harder for newbie creators to build a dedicated following, as their content is less likely to be seen by their existing followers. “It’s a disservice to smaller creators.” But she is equally upbeat about the future, especially in the company of her compatriots from the South Asian community.

“I'm so grateful that there are like hundreds and hundreds of young Indian stand-up comedians now that it didn't have when I first went viral. I'm not a jealous or competitive person. I really am of the belief that everyone's journey is their own journey. And I'm really grateful to have a lot more Indian friends in comedy than I did when I first started six and a half years ago."

Others also concur that platforming diverse voices bodes well for the future of comedy and South Asian comedians. "In the current comedy landscape, I think the explosion of diverse voices is a net positive, even if there's a lot of 'noise' out there. It's providing platforms for people like me who might not have had those opportunities before. As long as you stay true to your own interests and experiences, the audience will find you,” says Mani.


Baisakhi Roy is a culture writer and journalist based in Ontario, Canada. Her work has appeared in The Globe and Mail, Huffington Post Canada, Chatelaine, Broadview and CBC.

 

 
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The Unstoppable Zarna Gang

 

By LAVINA MELWANI

Who would have thought that after 16 years of being a stay-at-home mother of three, one could become a nationally recognized stand-up comedian in just a few short years? Thanks to her biting wit and irrepressible funny bone, this trailblazer, who started her standup career in 2019, now has her own Amazon Prime show, has appeared on the Tonight Show, and has over two million followers on social media platforms.

2025 may well be the Year of Zarna! This middle- aged immigrant from India, clad in a baggy kurta, a dotbuster of a red bindi on her forehead, and an unabashed Indian accent, has stormed the world of standup comedy. Here are just a few of her claims to fame:

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Born to be funny: Zarna in action at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City. 

The serial failure who is also very relatable

Success, however, did not come easily for Garg. She says she failed at least 18 businesses—including matchmaking and selling vegan chili—before hitting the bull’s-eye. She is the perfect example of defying age (she was 44) and multiple failures to not give up on the immigrant dream.

When life gets tough, take a nice, big gulp of Zarna’s elixir. Famously known by just her first name or as Aunty Zarna, her humor is the antidote to many of life’s hassles that everyday people undergo. She is every woman who is saddled with kids and a husband and is a little allergic to her mother-in-law.

You and I might stress and agonize about many things, but Zarna just gets on the stage and lets out all her feelings, all her steam. They are also our feelings, our steam which we, the Indian American immigrants, have been stewing in and baking ourselves in for so long, all the things that we would love to say but can’t or won’t! Zarna says them with a straight face and gets a million laughs. Most women have a love-hate relationship with their mother-in-law but Zarna has not only amplified it and broadcast it, but also monetized it!

Zarna has millions of followers on social media but she is not your average influencer—slim, Instagram- pretty, and sporting the most fabulous wardrobe. She is more like the average woman—she is us—a little dumpy, a little frumpy, and in need of a makeover. She is indeed every woman who is smart but is never
given much credit because people don’t have any expectations of her.

Having started stand-up comedy in small local entertainment events, Zarna has even performed outside a New York subway station and at Central Park, doing impromptu comedy shows to test her wings.

Zarna’s success lies in the fact that she not only recognized that she had a unique product to sell—herself— but also boldly acted upon that recognition. Turns out America was full of immigrants who needed to sort out their lives and have a laugh while doing it. She turned all their biases, complexes, and concerns into matters of pride.

CoverStory_15_02_25.jpgFor her, everything becomes comedy— whether cooking Indian food, rearing Indian kids, or dealing with an Indian mother-in-law. In her addictive reels on Instagram, she turns things around on their head. Her son Brij’s prom night becomes a date night for three as the suspicious mom becomes the “kebab mein haddi” and insists on going along with her son and his prom date, arm-inarm, for the prom! Her thousands of fans lap up the ridiculousness of it all.

Zarna has successfully created her own persona and brand based on unapologetic self-acceptance. She is totally individual when unique voices are in demand because they tell you to value yourself and be free to be you. She wears what she likes and has proudly kept her weight, kurtas, bindis, and everything intact. They are all part of her personality. She doesn’t need to change anything. Her husband Shalabh is the coolest, downto- earth, sporting fellow who is happy to be the fall guy in her comedy act. Her kids—Zoya, Brij, and Veer—each fill a role in her podcast.

As someone who fully embraces and owns being Indian in America, her fame has crossed over to India too, where she has had successful performances.

With Jimmy Kimmel (Photo: Facebook/@ZarnaGarg)

 

Q and A with Zarna Garg

In your upcoming memoir This American Woman, you say you were a homeless teenager in Mumbai. Can you clarify?

When my mom passed away suddenly due to jaundice, I was just under 15 years old and the youngest of four siblings, and my dad decided that he was done parenting. So, he was like, “You need to get married, and if you don’t want to get married, you can’t live here anymore.” I think he thought he would scare me, but I thought I would live with my friends. You know, when you’re a teenager, you don’t think anything through. So, I kind of just left in a huff, but that marked the end of my time at my house. Unfortunately, it was never resolved, and I went from one friend to another friend to a third friend. I came to America to live with my older sister because she was the only one who was very supportive and completely understood, and she took me in for years.​

CoverStory_11_02_25.jpgWhen was the first time you felt confident enough to pursue comedy as a performer?

Seeing the audience’s reaction to my first open mic, I knew right away that this was something special. Even then, when I was doing it for free, I immediately started developing it like a business. I was making an investment in my art and craft.

It seems the timing was perfect for your kind of comedy.

The timing was optimal, for sure, and not just for Indian audiences. You’ll see a very mixed crowd at my shows. It doesn’t matter what culture you’re from; if you have kids, you live a life with certain restrictions and complications. We are also at a moment when people understand the sacrifices mothers make. So many of them have to quit their jobs as soon as they become mothers. This is the experience of women everywhere. So, I think that’s a note I touched that helped my comedy grow exponentially. It became a universal story but with an Indian dress around it.

Why does your comedy resonate so well with Indians in particular?

Because it is honest. I’m saying things that they’re all thinking and feeling but might not want to say. I started writing these jokes about how rich people in India have become, how everyone living in America looks at them and thinks, “Did we miss the boat? Why are we here? Why are we so stressed out?” I believe the Indian American community appreciates that authenticity. I speak of and from my real life. My kids, my husband—none of it is made up. So, I think that when something is that real, it resonates.

CoverStory_16_02_25.jpgYou have succeeded so well in making it a family act. Your followers see your family in your podcasts and the video reels, and they too have become mini-influencers and have their own fan following. How did this whole idea of involving your family arise?

I don’t think it was my idea to involve my family. My family has been involved since day one. I’m just now highlighting it. I like to say that our brand is family, and I’m the face of the business, but we’re all in it together. Since day one, they’ve been coming to my shows. They’ve been helping with selling tickets. Right now, during the holidays, I’m doing 10 shows in the next two weeks; my kids and my husband will be out there selling for pre-orders after the show. For all 10 shows, they will be there with me. We are a family that likes to work hard. Some families like to take vacations. Some families like to eat out. We like to work hard with our family, and we love it. During Christmas and New Year, we work every day until January, and we are so happy.

But this is really funny that you found so much raw material in your own home, and that audiences are drawn to watch an atypical family like yours.

The streaming world is full of glamorous families that seem to do nothing and yet make it big. And that’s a skill, by the way, so I’m not throwing shade at it. I think my family and I represent a very old-school idea of hard-working, busy bees. Each of us went to school and took it seriously. Everybody is trying to go to a good college. Has a job. My husband has an entire career after IIT Engineering—he has his own hedge fund now, which he runs every single day. My daughter is a computer science graduate at Stanford. My son is at Cornell doing a tech degree. My younger son just won a spelling bee competition in Manhattan. So, we just represent that old-school Indian ethos of putting our heads down and working hard, and in our case, having fun doing it and encouraging others to have fun while working hard.

CoverStory_17_02_25.jpgYou almost seem to be laughing, tongue-in-cheek, at super-achieving Indians, but you yourself are one. I mean, you might not be acing it as a doctor or a scientist, but you are over the top as a comedian.

It’s the same work ethic involved. In America, they will say, work hard, play hard, and the two are separate; and once you finish, then you take a vacation. We turn our work into our vacations. We work and play hard at the same time because we have to. My family will be there till the end of every show. They will meet 1000s of people, you know. We will have our own fun, and that’s okay. That’s how a lot of people in India grew up. They grew up watching their parents working all the time.

So you have really brought that Indian cultural ethos over here. I know family traditions get transformed in America – one hardly gets to eat dinner together. So, you’re showing a different way that it can be done.

 I believe also that the children have to support their mom. This is something I’m very vocal about. In America, you raise your kids, and then they raise their kids. They seem to have no obligations towards their parents. But you know, as Indians, we don’t believe that. We don’t live like that. So, I’m very vocal about teaching my kids a very Indian way of being responsible. My kids help me every day in my business, and I don’t see anything wrong with it. People know that there’s a life bigger than themselves and their own needs at all times.

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I mean, if you have benefited from your mom who watches out for every one of your needs and moves and every one of your ups and downs, then, while it’s not like one-for-one, you do have to be there for her. I’ve had any number of American people tell me that our family is so inspiring to them and that they are trying to do their own version of what we’re doing.

 

 This American Woman: A One-in-a-Billion Memoir by Zarna Garg hits the nation’s bookstores on April 29, 2025.

How do you think things have changed for South Asian stand-up comics in recent years? I think people are more encouraged to tell their stories and to take a chance.

I think it’s a good change. The scene is exploding, and then comedy as a business is exploding, and Indians are getting to be a part of it. If somebody comes to my show and enjoys it, the next thing they think is who else is out there that we can watch, right?

What is your advice to those who are inspired by you?

Own who you are. You cannot try to please everyone. Your biggest success is living an authentic and full life for yourself. And if you ever want to do something new, it’s never too late. In our community, many people will think they cannot do so many things because we all grew up with only three jobs—doctor, lawyer, and engineer. Even I did. But I learned that I could discover something new that would be so fulfilling and so successful. And part of why I discovered it is because I wasn’t focused on whether it was too late for me. You just have to go out and take a chance, no matter how old you are.

And I think everybody can. I’m not special. The message should be: if I can do it, anybody can do it. I just kept taking the chances. So, you have to keep trying till you get it.

CoverStory_19_02_25.jpgThe popular Zarna Garg Family Podcast and reels on Instagram are amassing thousands of views.

Finally, what’s left on your bucket list?

I’ve been very blessed, but my ambition is huge. We have a long way to go. I am not going to stop until I drag every person out to my shows, until I make everybody laugh at my jokes, until I remind everybody that they can first come to my show and then do their SAT Prep. I want to build a huge South Asian comedy business. I want to build a huge business that is inspiring to others. I’m just getting started. I mean, far from having done everything, I’m literally just getting started. I have a sitcom coming. I have a book coming. I have a movie coming—the story is actually the story of a family that loves each other and is trying to be supportive. And it’s so funny and it’s so heart- felt that every person who watches it will fall in love. It’s got 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. After so many reviews, nobody has come out watching that movie and not been touched.


Lavina Melwani is a journalist for several international publications. She blogs at Lassi with Lavina. Zarna Garg will be performing live at the at Helium Comedy Club in Atlanta on March 27 to 29, 2025.


 


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