In today’s comedy scene, getting 'cancelled' can mean two completely different things depending on who you are. For some, controversy becomes branding. For most others, it can mean venue shutdowns, bans, or even arrests. Interestingly, which category a comedian falls into often depends on who they have offended, and how much influence they already possess.
Film marketing teams understood this decades ago - both good publicity and bad publicity are still publicity. What matters is staying part of the conversation. In the algorithm-driven era, that logic has become even more powerful. Whether audiences are praising or condemning you is almost secondary to one thing - are people still talking about you?
Take the backlash surrounding comedian Samay Raina’s show India's Got Latent. Every controversy around the show, offensive jokes, political outrage, legal scrutiny, FIR chatter etc., only pushed it deeper into public conversation. Similarly, comedian Vir Das faced intense backlash after his 'Two Indias' monologue in Washington DC triggered police complaints and political outrage. Yet the controversy elevated his international profile further.
Munawar Faruqui’s arrest in 2021 was seen as an attack on artistic freedom, but his shows since then have consistently sold out.
In these cases, backlash became part of the brand. For creators and stand-up comedians who already command massive digital reach, controversy often amplifies popularity rather than diminishes it.
At the other end of the spectrum, stand-up shows across cities such as Bengaluru, Mumbai, Delhi and Hyderabad disappear before audiences even know they exist. Lesser-known comedians often speak of venues withdrawing support after pressure from political groups or police concerns over law and order. Open mics are monitored. Organisers ask comics to avoid religion, caste, elections, or local politics altogether.
When these shows are cancelled, there are no trending hashtags demanding justice. No primetime debates. No OTT platform waiting to sponsor a 'comeback'. Some comedians lose all their gigs overnight because venues fear vandalism. Others stop performing politically sensitive material altogether because they lack the financial backing to survive prolonged legal battles.
Yet, the conversation continues to be dominated by celebrity creators who claim they are under attack even as their reach, revenue, and influence continue to grow. The 'cancelled' persona itself has become commercially valuable. It signals authenticity, deepens audience loyalty, and converts outrage into ticket sales and online engagement.
In the process, genuine satire - the kind that does not immediately turn into viral clips - risks taking a backseat. However, if every controversy eventually leads to sold-out shows, stronger branding, and greater visibility, it is worth asking if being cancelled is still about censorship and suppression, or has outrage now become the most effective marketing strategy in modern entertainment.