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Russell Brand’s latest addiction His quest for intimacy will never be satisfied

A symptom of our alienation (Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images)

A symptom of our alienation (Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images)


May 30, 2022   7 mins

The Opera House, the Winter Gardens, Blackpool: here, in this magnificent theatre, a metaphor as good as any for decline, Russell Brand meditates on the stage, which I think is another metaphor for decline: not of buildings, but of a political system. Brand is on his knees, sideways to the stage by a single candle, eyes closed, hands on his knees, as if in prayer.

Blackpool is odd: a suicide on morphine. Shops sell fake breasts and dildos made of sugar, or mobility scooters and junk food side by side. The pavements are smeared with filth. And yet, when you think all the ugliness in the world has gathered, you will find a ballroom dancer in black tie stealing down a street in patent shoes. Brand, too, was made for Blackpool. Destruction, and renewal.

Brand’s tour, which ends today at the Brixton Academy, is a display, and the meditation is the most important part: the part that is most meaningful to him. It’s the reveal of a show he calls “33” because he thought that was the age at which he would die. What is public meditation for a man as noisy and self-destructive as Brand: health signalling? Performative recovery? WELLNESS in lights? Brand is myriad — actor, polemicist, activist, comic — his most dominant self is former heroin addict. Though he is almost 20 years sober, addiction can chase a man his whole life, and terrify him with a glimpse of what he was. And yet, the man thinks, if he can meditate in front of a thousand strangers in Blackpool, he must be safe. It’s a truism that a comic needs an audience more than an audience needs a comic, but it’s truer of Brand than of anyone. He needs us. He says so. “How much attention does one man need?” he asks. “We don’t yet know. We haven’t found the upper threshold”.

I am not here for Brand: not really. I have read his memoirs, and I feel I know everything he is prepared to tell us, and himself. I couldn’t get through his polemic Revolution, which he wrote at his wealthy girlfriend’s country house. His childhood was broken. He thought his mother’s recurring cancer was his fault, and his father, on holiday, ordered prostitutes for them both in a room they shared. He almost killed himself, and then didn’t. He is candid about everything except his anger: the kind of addict who is so ashamed he tells you everything. He is a very typical comedian in some ways: a man seeking his father’s affirmation from the stage. He very obviously finds it agonising when hecklers interrupt him. He must be heard. He is a very typical addict too: softness and savagery twinned.

What interests me most about Brand is not him, though he is charismatic. It is his reach, the people who come to see him, and what they can tell us about political alienation. If he was a movie star in 2010 — he is an under-rated actor, not least by himself, but he’s less afraid of his rage on screen — he is now a YouTube demagogue flirting with conspiracism and posting to 5.65 million followers. Typical posts are: “So…Trump was RIGHT About Clinton & Russia Collusion!!”; “You’ve Been LIED To About Why Ukraine War Began”; “Can We REALLY Trust Vaccine Fact-Checkers??!”

The doors open at 5pm. I watch them gather. I would call his constituency either fragile and seeking, or angry and untrusting. The first group, many of whom have risen from a sickbed, admire his personal transformation — his recovery from heroin addiction and the book he then wrote, ripped off from AA’s 12 Steps: Freedom from our Addictions. You aren’t supposed to monetise AA, but he has a very personal definition of humility. “You feel he really does care about people,” says one woman. “He’s been through so many things himself and he’s still keeping going. He still comes out for people.”

The second group admire his YouTube channel which segues from mistrust of the Establishment to disinformation and alienation. They ask me who I write for because they do not trust the press. “He knows exactly what’s going on,” says one woman. “He just makes people aware [of corruption]. I wouldn’t vote for anyone. There’s no one worth voting for.”

I meet a superfan videoing herself by the stage door. Social media is important: as if by broadcasting, you will be listened to. It’s one of his contradictions: Brand says that if we were forced to carry iPhones we would smash them up ourselves. Yet he depends on them. “Much as he is an intellectual,” she says, “he teaches you in a nice way and actually I’d like to rip his pants off.” Her friend likes “his videos about conspiracy things. Well, they aren’t conspiracies. They are conspiracies for six months and then they are facts.”

For another man, it’s a modern political — or apolitical — encounter: he and Russell found each other through algorithm. “He’s saying the right thing,” he says. “A lot of the information that Russell finds is what I’ve found. Covid is an excuse for where they want to take us. It’s all through fear.” He fears tyranny, this man, but another contradiction is that Brand, who despises conventional political practises, will take him closer to it. “All political parties are the same”, he says. “He [Brand] manages to channel anger or discontent in a positive direction.”

I sit in the gods, which are like a velvet cliff edge, next to a serene sex therapist and her Italian husband. She is disappointed that Jeremy Corbyn is no longer leader of the Labour Party. She has no plan to vote in a general election: she thinks there is no point. I look up her constituency, which is a Tory/Labour marginal. Her vote does matter. But Brand, despite his personal message of empowerment, would have his followers more disempowered. It’s the one thing I can’t bear about him: his anti-voting message. It’s fine for a rich man to shrug off politics. He doesn’t need them. He can invent his own, and he does. He is not so very different from the men he despises. They lay false trails.

The show is in four parts. The first is pandemic-themed stand-up, and it is good stand-up. It’s self-aware, and therefore bearable. He mocks the audience and himself. During the clap for carers, he tells us, he was a medical worker so the applause would be directed at him. He collects testimony of pandemic-themed shame from the audience — he’s very interested in shame — and tells a story about a man who wiped his bum on a face mask, and a woman who drunk wine in a Zoom work meeting, and pretended it was tea. When he gets to the audience member who masturbated to something under every letter in the Pornhub alphabet, he invites us to shout the words: tea-bagging; wanking; zebra.

The second part speaks to his YouTube audience, and it’s a lie: that you can be more politically engaged by placing your faith not in your democratically elected politicians but in him. Love is not a mandate — if it is even love, rather than the narcotic of attention and praise — but the root of this is clear enough: he didn’t trust his father. “I don’t like being told what to do,” he says. “I start there”. This sounds like his most authentic self. “I start at ‘fuck off’.”

“The system wants you hypnotised and stupefied,” he says, as if government is only a meeting of Spectre. “We are told that we are participants in our democracy. That we are adults. That we matter. That our voice will be heard. That we would be able to organise society through the ballot box because you are adults and your voice matters. That is one of the myths of our time.”

Brand is weirdly Manichean. He appears to divide the world into two parts, and they are solid, and immutable. The evil are evil, and will remain so. The good are here, as if buying a ticket to “33” is a kind of protective spell. Sometimes he tends to Luddism and talks as if he would like to live in some kind of idealised village, or circle, and why wouldn’t he? He’s strong, and a man.

The third part is the hug part, and it’s the weirdest part. Having divested us of the desire for representative democracy he becomes a healer. It begins in the interval. He jumps down from the stage, and waits there, and people fill the aisles to hug him. It looks intensely silly, but they are moved by him. I wonder if this is the replacement — and true destination — for his sex addiction: intimacy, which other people have paid for. (I return, in my mind, to his father and the prostitutes.) I wonder if this is the real point of the exercise. They come, one after the after, for hugs of all kinds — swift, flirty, soulful — and photographs, and a combination of the two: the soulful hug selfie.

At the end of the show, he puts on a blue pointed party hat, like a wizard, and leaves the auditorium through the main exits, to hug people in the street outside. I notice he has a personal photographer and videographer: a slender man in black with a professional expression who follows him and who records every interaction. Does Brand archive them, and look back on them: on every piece of love? People cry in his arms. He whispers to them. He takes a picture of himself with us all behind him, like an army. It’s so obviously his new addiction there is barely anything left to say: a delusion into which he carries others, by the sheer force of his charisma, and his silly pointy hat. And he won’t know where to stop. He never does. And then he goes back inside for a mass meditation. The audience at Lancashire’s biggest theatre close their eyes and pray.

At the end, when he has hugged everyone who waited, I listen to them praise him. “You can’t have control over what’s going on in the world, but you can have control over yourself,” says one. It’s a doctrine of renewal, but so atomised as to be meaningless. “He’s got that attention to the working class,” says another. “He is like us,” says the third, “a free thinker [who] cares about everyone in the world, not ground down by politicians and big corporate companies. He cares about individual people.”

But does he? I think he is using them, and, worse, they let him. Brand is another symptom of our alienation: of the fracturing of the institutions that we need. We will see more, and different Brands in future, as the centre falls away. They will blow in on the wind. His doctrine of disengagement will change nothing for them. Will they notice? Will they care? I wonder if, in the end, they have confused politics with love. Or, rather, magic.


Tanya Gold is a freelance journalist.

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Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago

This article is trying so desperately hard and fails. It is simply a gratuitously nasty piece.
Brand’s dominant self is not ex drug addict, although that is part of him. It is a man on a spiritual journey who has turned himself into a super successful podcaster by providing intelligent alternative views and voices to the biased, corrupt and controlling sludge that is corporate media, big tech, big money, big business and large organisations.
Maybe Tanya has been asleep at the wheel for the last few years when so much came to light.

Jeffrey Butcher
Jeffrey Butcher
2 years ago

I didn’t read it like this – I saw it more as a critique of someone who monetises AA style recovery – Tanya Gold has written stuff before about her membership of the fellowship.
Also if you watch the videos there is something I think a bit nauseating and even a touch messianic about all this opening up to complete strangers and group hugging, with him of course at the centre of it all like some latter day Brian.
I also think Gold is bang on about his political disengagement. Which isn’t to say the article doesn’t read at times like a hatchet job.
Just saying though.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago

In total I found it a hit piece and I responded to that…

Jeffrey Butcher
Jeffrey Butcher
2 years ago

Fair enough

harry storm
harry storm
2 years ago

Intelligent views? Surely you jest.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago
Reply to  harry storm

Nope, I was never a fan for no particular reason except a bigoted opinion. I was pleasantly surprised. He is super smart.

Peter Dunn
Peter Dunn
2 years ago

Hes turning into a kind of maharishi..candy-wrapped spirituality(lovehearts?) for a price.

Jay Hopkinson
Jay Hopkinson
2 years ago

Quite a nasty article, so dedicated to criticizing Brand and his show, nay, his entire existence really, so dedicated to telling us where he’s wrong – using the vague, cowardly gaslighting technique of quoting people that we are clearly meant to infer are stupid – that it completely forgets to tell us all either HOW he’s actually wrong OR what is right.
It’s assassination by insinuation but is ultimately weightless. Not advocating for your censorship but, Tanya, do better!

Matt M
Matt M
2 years ago

When the current Leader of the Opposition, the Speaker of Parliament, senior civil servants and the Tory Remainers conspired to ignore and then reverse the result of Britain’s largest vote, they didn’t understand what they were doing.
When the remnants of the Clinton campaign, the FBI and CIA leadership, CNN and the Never-Trumpers manufactured the Russia-gate impeachment ruse, they were unleashing forces they couldn’t control.
If you subvert public institutions for political ends, you cannot be surprised if people lose trust in them. Once you sow mistrust in the system, don’t complain that people look elsewhere for explanations.

Martin Smith
Martin Smith
2 years ago

Brand’s not my cup of tea and I would never attend one of his shows, yet there is more evidence for Clinton inventing Russiagate than for Russiagate itself; we have definitely been given a one-sided account of the origins of the Ukraine war; and vaccine fact checkers routinely underplay negative aspects of the covid vaccine project. Odd that Gold should suggest these things are somehow obviously false, but then she is part, or would like to be part, of the official media which fears the likes of Brand because he is so much more popular than they are. Yet he is only filling the void left where journalism retreated from seeking truth to ‘sending a message’; oh and he’s funny and, by many accounts, sexy, so personal as well as professional jealousy is also a factor. A nasty ‘hit’ piece.

Last edited 2 years ago by Martin Smith
Ian Steadman
Ian Steadman
2 years ago

Tanya has likely not listened to a single full podcast or video by RB if she can still spew such BS. The giveaway is her description of him as a “YouTube demagogue flirting with conspiracism and posting to 5.65 million followers” while offering 3 examples of his purported conspiracies. Well guess what, Tanya Gold: not one of those is any longer a conspiracy theory. Stay in touch, darlin’, if you’re going to comment: the difference between a conspiracy theory and the truth is about six months, and Russell Brand is on top of these things on a daily basis. Jeez, how I wish journalists would do some research before diving in. 

Last edited 2 years ago by Ian Steadman
Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago
Reply to  Ian Steadman

Excellent.

Martin Smith
Martin Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Ian Steadman

You don’t need to do research when you already know everything and have the correct opinions.

Fran Martinez
Fran Martinez
2 years ago

What an odd piece. Tanya tries to attack Brand with everything she has and the only thing she comes up with is: ‘Though he is almost 20 years sober, addiction can chase a man all his life’. Or not…

Just personal attacks. Very un-Unherd I must say…

Paul 0
Paul 0
2 years ago

She has no plan to vote in a general election: she thinks there is no point. I look up her constituency, which is a Tory/Labour marginal. Her vote does matter. But Brand, despite his personal message of empowerment, would have his followers more disempowered. It’s the one thing I can’t bear about him: his anti-voting message. It’s fine for a rich man to shrug off politics. He doesn’t need them. He can invent his own, and he does. He is not so very different from the men he despises. They lay false trails.

This whole article reads like a false trail to me, as Tanya Gold’s pieces so often do. A kind of wandering cruelty, smirking at those who raise their heads above the parapet, but offering nothing but platitudes instead. This quote is a good example. Does Gold actually think that voting ‘in a Tory/Labour marginal’ in the current year will make any difference to anything at all that matters, especially on the level that Brand is addressing? Say what you like about the doubtless flawed man, but he responds to the crisis of the times and people respond to him in turn. All the author can offer is a kind of complancet, sneery reassurance that party politics will somehow shore up the culture as it collapses, and that any other offering is ‘conspiracy theory.’ This, presumably, is why his tours are sold out.

Last edited 2 years ago by Paul 0
Martin Smith
Martin Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Paul 0

Yes, Johnson or Starmer, Hunt or Rayner, Sunak or Burnham, Truss or Milliband… does it really make much difference?

Chris Williams
Chris Williams
2 years ago

Tanya Gold’s article is, I think, but a sad commentary on herself – driven, perhaps, by envy or jealousy of Brand’s success at reaching “5.65 million followers”.
Frankly, I had disdain for Brand during his earlier ‘comedian’ career phase, particularly when teamed up with Jonathan Ross. For the most part it was habitually nasty.
However, in recent years he appears to have undergone a ‘road to Damascus’ awakening. Better than many, he has succeeded in shining a light on the arrogant corruption that is pervasive in Politics, big business, especially ‘Pharma’, and governments and their supporting bureaucracies – notably the health regulatory agencies.

Walcot Eggs
Walcot Eggs
2 years ago

I find him intriguing. It doesn’t matter if I agree with him or not, he has a mesmerising quality about him for sure. And that is entertainment – somebody who can keep your attention. At points in his career he has not appealed to me at all – but I do find his YouTube channel fascinating. Wouldn’t pay to see him though!

It’s clear Tanya pretty much despises him, but then she’s from the media so she would I guess.

Mark Chadwick
Mark Chadwick
2 years ago

This sounds like a hitpiece to me. Now let’s look at this all rationally. Two years ago if I’d said that we’d be stopped from doing our jobs if we didn’t take a shot which might kill us, locked in our homes like prisoners in a gulag, told injections which do not vaccinate are “vaccines” and ordered to believe it, constantly lied to by “politicians”, health experts, the MSM and corporate pharma, arrested, assaulted and incarcerated by the police for breaking no law while those cabbages in Parliament $h@gged, partied and troughed our money with no restrictions whatsoever (“don’t kill Granny” they said while they had booze-ups and laughed their @r$e$ off at how stupid and easy the sheeple are to control) and threw away half a billion quid on “Nightingale hospitals”, some of which closed without treating a single patient, allegations of “overwhelmed” hospitals and outright lies about people “dying in ambulances waiting” when all evidence categorically proved it was just a lie, forced to wear a face-cover to go shopping FOR FOOD, ostracised from society for refusing to be stabbed with a chemical cocktail concocted for profit and population control instead of health, to have “leaders” installed by the apparently non-existent NWO (Australia, New Zealand, Venezuela, Canada, the USA and now France) in rigged “elections” where the “winner” had been decided before the polls even opened, food rationing, fuel prices up by 50p a litre in a few weeks with the fake excuse of a Ukranian conflict to engage in racketeering, and let’s not forget being lied to, shafted, robbed blind and left in debt for 100yrs over a non-existent and completely fabricated “pandemic”, I would have been called a nutter, a liar and a tinfoil hat wearing conspiracy theorist (and was by quite a few people).
Well, here we are now– a cross between Nazi Germany and Communist Russia being created, but as long as the unwashed masses get their Just Eat, Facebook and Netflix they don’t know and couldn’t care less. In less than a century we’ve gone from the greatest generation to the worst.

Chris Williams
Chris Williams
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Chadwick

Mark – for me you were OK up to your final paragraph. From what I see, the adult members of the vast majority of younger families spend all their time earning enough to keep the family on an even keel – their one ‘shortcoming’ if you will is to have trusted in government and its ‘experts’.
You could equally argue that “the boomers” generation (which includes me and, perhaps, you?) haven’t done nearly enough to expose and resist what is now occurring.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago
Reply to  Chris Williams

There is something to be said for the dangers of increasing authoritarianism and the disturbing leaning towards socialism. Not to mention the dangers of fast food and the huge increase in obesity. Then social media is hardly healthy, is it?

Arnold Grutt
Arnold Grutt
2 years ago

I’d prefer ‘compulsive rights legislation’ to ‘authoritarianism’ since to use the latter obscures the fact that all political settlements are to some degree authoritarian (e.g. the perfectly noble and acceptable ‘rule of law’). What matters is how this authority is established and received, and whether, unlike say in the old DDR or China today, one can escape it by emigration, if one needs or prefers to.
Socialists always criticise ‘authoritarianism’ implying that law-based societies that eschew ‘rights’ are ‘oppressive’, yet in practice their own tendency to elite compulsion and force is practically routine, and what’s much worse, it thinks itself to be ‘moral’.

Mark McKee
Mark McKee
2 years ago

People are so jealous of his 5 million+ YouTube followers that they feel obliged to demean him as a demagogue and write him off as a conspiracy theorist. I’m off with a friend to see his show in Brixton tonight and I’ll keep an open mind. He isn’t a cult leader, I’m just interested in hearing a guy who is smart, funny and can take the mickey out of anyone he likes given he is not in anyone’s pocket.

David Stacey
David Stacey
2 years ago

In their editorial last week, The Spectator, for whom Tanya also writes, concluded that lockdowns made little or no difference to the spread of coronavirus which was one of Brand’s “conspiracy theories”.

Victoria Cooper
Victoria Cooper
2 years ago

It’s hard to know what Tanya is trying to achieve here. This is a botch job and I suspect she is out of her element. I wouldn’t go to one his shows. But I find his videos illuminating. We need him, society needs him, the world needs the likes of him. He may not always be right but he is right to get us to question and think independently. Tanya Gold sounds superior and supercilious. Tanya, what have you given the world apart from the low down on expensive restaurants ?

Don Butler
Don Butler
2 years ago

It is so hard for me to judge fairly what Tanya Gold writes about because of the way she writes about it. However, she may have created a new form: short declarative stream of consciousness. Her observations are like a drunk snapping photos.

Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
2 years ago

“I am not here for Brand: not really. … What interests me most about Brand is not him…”

No? If he’s as repellent, damaged and uninteresting as you make him out to be, why bother reading his memoirs? The thoroughness of the attention you pay him, and the strained subtlety of the critique, make this reader wonder what’s at the root of your odd fascination with Brand, and who’s the real addict here. If ‘misinformation’ and ‘decline’ are truly your main concerns, this article is a peculiarly elliptical way of manifesting them.
   
“So…Trump was RIGHT About Clinton & Russia Collusion!!”

Well, wasn’t he?

“Can We REALLY Trust Vaccine Fact-Checkers??!”

Don’t you wonder about this? I do, and my skepticism owes less to ‘conspiracism’ than to legitimate concern, as a retired reference librarian, about the reliability of information sources.

“They ask me who I write for because they do not trust the press.”

Do you? The decay of journalistic standards isn’t part of the ‘decline’ that’s caught your attention? I’ve always voted left, but I’m no more anxious to consume propaganda that purports to speak for my views than against them.
  
“I watch them gather. I would call his constituency either fragile and seeking, or angry and untrusting.”

Your powers of observation must be exceptional to permit such mass diagnosis of individuals at distance. Mere psychologists are forced to rely on personal acquaintance and logical inference.

““Much as he is an intellectual,” she says, “he teaches you in a nice way and actually I’d like to rip his pants off.””

 (?) Jealous, perhaps?

 “Her friend likes “his videos about conspiracy things. Well, they aren’t conspiracies. They are conspiracies for six months and then they are facts.””

You have the air of a nineteenth-century anthropologist reporting the quaint beliefs of credulous, superstitious ‘primitives,’ with every expectation that we will join in the mockery. But isn’t the friend essentially right? You unwittingly convey the impression that it’s the unworthiness of these “super-fans” that really bothers you. Shouldn’t Russell ideally be directing his appeals to women more discriminating and deserving–someone like you, for example?
 
“It’s the one thing I can’t bear about him: his anti-voting message.”

Your list of grievances is longer than this, and masquerading them as a concern for whether or not someone casts a ballot is dishonest. The real question this article invites us to consider is the extent to which you yourself are a target and willing consumer of the attempted deceit.
 
“Brand is weirdly Manichean. … The evil are evil, and will remain so.”

Projection at its most flagrant, coming from someone who’s clearly fully ideologically committed (*sigh!*).

“Sometimes he tends to Luddism and talks as if he would like to live in some kind of idealised village, or circle, and why wouldn’t he? He’s strong, and a man.”

How such embarrassing cliche managed to emerge from a sensibility so (supposedly) acute and non-credulous is deeply mysterious. Even taking into account that self-knowledge is the hardest kind to come by, this one’s a clinker.
   
“…and people fill the aisles to hug him. It looks intensely silly…”

[Translation:] ‘It should have been me!’

With all due respect to this love-hate thing you evidently have going on with Russell, I think he’d be well-advised to stay away from you: he’s not the only one who isn’t being “candid” about his/her “anger.” If your taste runs to cliche, how about, “The log in thine own eye,” Ms. Critic (Scoffer? Public Scold?); and, “Know thyself” (who was it who said, “Love and hate are horns on the same goat?”). Can you possibly suggest what we should call someone who apparently sees decline, delusion, disinformation, polemicism and audience-seeking posturing in filth-smeared Blackpool… on the internet… in the craniums of narrative skeptics… indeed, everywhere but when she looks in a mirror?

Last edited 2 years ago by Mark Kennedy
Derrick Hand
Derrick Hand
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Kennedy

I was going to be briefer but thank you and spot on!

Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
2 years ago
Reply to  Derrick Hand

Thanks, Derrick. Brevity has never been a virtue I could claim. Maybe that’s why I find reading fellow travelers like Knausgaard and Husserl a congenial experience.

Elena Lange
Elena Lange
2 years ago

One will never read a piece on Brand in the mainstream media without the “YouTube demagogue flirting with conspiracism”-smear. Or in UnHerd.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
2 years ago

From the Sonnets, Mostly Bristolian, by Richard Craven
……….
Sonnet 78
Where to begin dissecting Russell Brand?
The matted rug’s quite Da’esh Caliphate.
Ditto the beard. The overactive glans
in God knows what kind of infectious state.
Creeping towards belated middle age,
the weeping winkie of this Peter Pan
has petered out, beset by phallophage.
May God have mercy on this ghastly man,
who can’t afford to put sleeves on his shirts.
Lo! On his mattress stuffed with last year’s pranks
this yahoo reeking worse than his own dirt
unglues his Bookywook and limply ouancks.
He says he wants a revolution. Well,
he’ll need a lot of antiseptic gel.

Last edited 2 years ago by Richard Craven
Ian McKinney
Ian McKinney
2 years ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Hahaha very good!

Martin Smith
Martin Smith
2 years ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Very droll. I’d like to think that even Brand might find it amusing.

Victoria Cooper
Victoria Cooper
2 years ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Biased. But clever.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
2 years ago

There just is something about his manner which I find exceedingly irksome.

Last edited 2 years ago by Richard Craven
Andrew Stuart
Andrew Stuart
2 years ago

My once-was-enough painful watch of Brand material was first time he and Jordan Peterson first talked. I don’t know what brought them together. Jordan tries to listen very carefully to understand what a person says but this exhausted him. Brand was stitching together five dollar word salads, tossing up and discarding ideas at Mach 5, muddying the puddle to make the water seem deep.

Last edited 2 years ago by Andrew Stuart
Juffin Hully
Juffin Hully
2 years ago

I cannot believe this, but I have just wasted 10 minutes of my life on reading about Russell Brand

Michael F
Michael F
2 years ago

I thought I’d have a look at a Russell Brand YouTube video, just to see him in action for myself. After ten minutes, I had him pegged as just another demagogue who would tell you “remember, this is a fact” when he was actually just giving us his opinion based on a distortion of the facts.
I was very impressed at how quickly he was imploring the viewer to buy tickets for his show and join his “community” though.

Paul King
Paul King
2 years ago

The hugging is poundshop Morrissey. I find him exhausting personally. Now he’s a poundshop Paul Joseph Watson circa 2010, when Paul Joseph Watson was a conspiracy idiot.

Last edited 2 years ago by Paul King
Jason Highley
Jason Highley
2 years ago

How unhappy do you have to be in life to write this much about something so normally harmless?

Adrian Maxwell
Adrian Maxwell
2 years ago

Tanya, you found the hugging a little cringeworthy. Apart from that what have you got against RB? Did you not like that he wrote a book whilst at the country home of a wealthy girlfriend, or did you think it important we were told that? He has millions of followers, writes well on football (or he did) and doesnt take himself too seriously. Whats not to love?

Joanna Muller
Joanna Muller
1 year ago

great article, enjoyable read. tanya gold, ignore all the boomers in the comments coping & seething because they feel called out for liking this charlatan 🙂

Joanna Muller
Joanna Muller
1 year ago

great article, enjoyable read. tanya gold, ignore all the boomers in the comments coping & seething because they feel called out for liking this charlatan 🙂

Hendrik Mentz
Hendrik Mentz
2 years ago

Russell Brand pushes the envelope.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
2 years ago
Reply to  Hendrik Mentz

Don’t know about the down votes!

M. Gatt
M. Gatt
2 years ago

Dripping with nastiness and jealousy. Sad

Chris 0
Chris 0
2 years ago

The messianic thing I think he copied from this
https://thenewchurchofnoomaaboo.wordpress.com
It was a Joke
I described him as a sort of New Age Charles Manson in an obscure film review, and that might have set something off.
Brand’s book on Addiction is the worst cobbled together thing on the topic I have ever read in my life. I have enjoyed his oeuvre quite a lot in other contexts, and he is a very good actor.
Diabola and I are insanely jealous of him, of course
For more please see @diabolabalsa and same tag on YouTube. Keep the faith. I think it is a good idea to vote and he is very irresponsible in urging people not to. Diabola Balsa would never do that

Andrew D
Andrew D
2 years ago

This sounds very little different from accounts of Billy Graham’s rallies

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
2 years ago
Reply to  Andrew D

The Rev. Billy Graham spoke at my small New England church several times. You have no idea what you’re talking about.

Andrew D
Andrew D
2 years ago

I’m talking about accounts I’ve seen of BG’s rallies

Allison Barrows
Allison Barrows
2 years ago
Reply to  Andrew D

And I’m talking about a truly godly man speaking to a small congregation, not a flamboyant entertainer experimenting with new forms of indulgent adulation.

Connor Flewitt
Connor Flewitt
2 years ago

.

Last edited 2 years ago by Connor Flewitt
David
David
2 years ago

Brand is a mediocrity, hence why he flopped in America but is fast becoming a “national treasure” in Britain.

Ian McKinney
Ian McKinney
2 years ago

Excellent assessment of what is a very dangerous man.