The Guide #198: Such Brave Girls shows that grown-up gross-out comedy is thriving

A picture


The best binge-watches should make you feel a little bit sick while you gorge on them, and Kat Sadler’s sitcom Such Brave Girls, which just returned for a second season on BBC Three and iPlayer, certainly fits that description,I found myself burning through episodes, the enjoyment of them tempered with the slightest top note of nausea,That isn’t a criticism of the series, which follows the chaotically bleak existence of adult sisters Josie (Sadler) and Billie (Lizzie Davidson), still living at home with their wild-eyed mother, Deb (Louise Brealey),In fact it’s the intended reaction,From its logo (the title of the show made out in strands of wet hair slithering across bathroom tiles) onwards, Such Brave Girls is built to shock, unsettle and gross out, but above all be laughed at.

“Feral, filthy awfulness”, is how the New York Times describes it, which, again, was intended as a compliment.Season two somehow manages to find an even higher pitch of horribleness than the show’s Bafta-winning first season.Jokes about abortion, suicide, coercive control and the deepest corners of depression abound.The sisters and their mum routinely go at each other with the viciousness of honey badgers.Blood and other body fluids fly.

A recurring theme is Josie’s attempts to get sectioned.(“How many pills did you take?” asks the nurse assessing Josie’s dubious claim that she has overdosed.“A lady never tells,” Josie replies while forcing a cup of activated charcoal down her throat.)The farcical nastiness of Julia Davis is a clear touchstone, but the show’s bracing comedy is entirely of the moment.Such Brave Girls has a healthy disdain for trends, fads and buzzwords (“wet for trauma” is how Josie describes the family).

Above all, the show seems to be on a mission to elicit the kind of deep-snort laugh that only comes when hearing something breathtakingly off-colour.Such Brave Girls’s second outing comes at a curious time for comedy.After a period that, depending on your broader outlook, either felt overly censorious or like a necessary course correction, the past few years have witnessed something of a backlash.On both sides of the Atlantic, a consensus calcified around the idea that the twin evils of wokeness and cancel culture were killing comedy, stifling the form by inserting red lines around things that could not be joked about.The veracity of this claim was immaterial, really: the mere perception of censorship was enough to usher in a counter-movement, focused on comedic free speech at all costs.

That movement reached its apex last October when Tony Hinchcliffe, the dominant roast comic of the anti-woke era, performed a set at Donald Trump’s Madison Square Garden rally in New York where, among other smirking provocations, he declared Puerto Rico to be a “floating island of garbage”.Despite widespread outrage about the joke, predictions that Hinchcliffe’s set would doom Trump’s presidential campaign turned out to be just a shade off the mark.Instead, Hinchcliffe cemented his position as one of the manosphere’s main players, and was rewarded by Netflix with a three-show deal for his roast battle series Kill Tony.Meanwhile, his movement’s outlook seems to have spread far beyond comedy.A piece this week suggests that the Trump administration used wilfully offensive memes and jokes as trials for its most extreme policies – a style of “irony poisoning” that seems to be seeping into discourse on this side of the Atlantic too, as George Monbiot and others have pointed out.

Knowingly or unknowingly, Such Brave Girls is taking back the “offence humour” territory ceded to the rightwing mob.While the show can go toe-to-toe with anyone from the manosphere for shock comedy, the offence always has a deeper point, rather than simply serving as nihilistic punching down.Many of its darkest storylines are drawn from tough, real-world experiences – Sadler herself had been sectioned after trying to end her life.And it often feels as if the show’s entirely unexpurgated take on issues most would tiptoe around is intended as a form of cathartic unburdening: better out than in.Such Brave Girls isn’t alone in this by any stretch.

In UK standup, there seems to be a rising set of comics who are electrified and fascinated by the transgressions of shock comedy while being entirely uninterested in the rightwing politicking that seems to have blighted the subgenre,There are the likes of Fin Taylor, and Mike Rice and Vittorio Angelone of the very funny podcast Mike and Vittorio’s Guide to Parenting, which is not a guide to parenting at all, but two childless Irish, London-based comedians shooting the shit in the most unfiltered way possible,Sign up to The GuideGet our weekly pop culture email, free in your inbox every Fridayafter newsletter promotionAnd, of course, in the US there is the grandaddy of all shock comedies: It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (pictured above), which is still gleefully ploughing new furrows of offence, 20 years after it first started airing,(Season 17 is now airing in the US and should hopefully be on Netflix in the UK soon,) Always Sunny is an interesting test case: its early episodes, in retrospect, feel a little too nihilistic in their eagerness to show how noxious its characters were (the N-word made an outing in the show’s first season).

But as the show has progressed, there has been a recognition of the limits of saying the unsayable and a subtle recalibration, without dulling its intensity.Two decades on, Always Sunny still has the capacity to wind you with the force of an off-colour joke, a power it shares with Such Brave Girls.That’s why we keep gorging on these episodes, even though we feel a bit queasy doing so.If you want to read the complete version of this newsletter please subscribe to receive The Guide in your inbox every Friday
recentSee all
A picture

World must be more wary than ever of China’s growing economic power

China is pulling every lever at its disposal to counter Donald Trump’s economic blockade, and it’s working.Trade is recovering after the massive hit from Washington’s wide-ranging tariffs on Beijing’s exports.According to data provider Macrobond and Beijing-based consultancy Gavekal Dragonomics, exports to the US were down by about $15bn (£11bn) in May, but up by half that figure to other countries that trade with the US. Exports to African countries have also risen sharply.Meanwhile, Chinese officials are poised to strike deals to deepen economic cooperation with countries ranging from Brazil and South Africa to Australia and the UK

A picture

‘The Co-op won’t defeat me’: Brighton shop owners fight against eviction

For Louise Oliver, it is the work of Charles Dickens that best describes her current predicament. “It’s a tale of a woman who has her lovely old shop taken over by a nasty piece of work,” she said, evoking Dickens’s The Old Curiosity Shop.In this instance, the identity of this “nasty piece of work” may come as a surprise. In 1844, three years after Dickens published the tragic tale of Little Nell, the world’s first successful cooperative shop opened in Rochdale. It put power into the hands of the community, who were sick of being fleeced by the powers above

A picture

Louis Vuitton says UK customer data stolen in cyber-attack

Louis Vuitton has said the data of some UK customers has been stolen, as it became the latest retailer targeted by cyber hackers.The retailer, the leading brand of the French luxury group LVMH, said an unauthorised third party had accessed its UK operation’s systems and obtained information such as names, contact details and purchase history.The brand, which last week said its Korean operation had suffered a similar cyber-attack, told customers that no financial data such as bank details had been compromised.“While we have no evidence that your data has been misused to date, phishing attempts, fraud attempts, or unauthorised use of your information may occur,” the email said.The company said it had notified the relevant authorities, including the Information Commissioner’s Office

A picture

The CEO who never was: how Linda Yaccarino was set up to fail at Elon Musk’s X

In May 2023, when Linda Yaccarino, an NBC advertising executive, joined what was then still known as Twitter, she was given a tall order: repair the company’s relationship with advertisers after a chaotic year of being owned by Elon Musk. But just weeks after she became CEO, Musk posted an antisemitic tweet that drove away major brands such as Disney, Paramount, NBCUniversal, Comcast, Lionsgate and Warner Bros Discovery to pause their advertising on the platform. Musk delivered an apology for the tweet later at a conference – which he called the worst post he’s ever done – but it came with a message to advertisers, specifically the Disney CEO Bob Iger: “Go fuck yourselves.” Yaccarino was in the audience of the conference.“I don’t want them to advertise,” he said

A picture

Iga Swiatek hopes critics will ‘just leave her alone now’ after Wimbledon glory

Iga Swiatek said she delivered an emphatic answer to her critics by capturing her maiden Wimbledon title, with the Pole saying she hoped they would “just leave me alone now” after her dominant 6-0, 6-0 victory over Amanda Anisimova in just 57 minutes. The American said her slam final debut was undone by nerves and a “mediocre serve” that had dogged her fortnight.The title will propel Swiatek to No 3 in the WTA rankings and signals a major breakthrough in her 2025 season. At the French Open, Swiatek – nicknamed the Queen of Clay – fell in the semi-finals to Aryna Sabalenka, marking the first time she failed to reach the final at Roland Garros since 2021.“We as athletes can’t really react to everything,” said Swiatek after winning her first title since last year’s French Open

A picture

Shubman Gill boils over at Zak Crawley but ‘it’s just part of the game’ for KL Rahul

Three days of cricket that often failed to match the red-hot temperatures it has been played in ended on Saturday with six minutes of rancour, Shubman Gill exhorting Zak Crawley to “grow some fucking balls”, and both sides accusing the other of time-wasting. The sudden outbreak of tension came in the day’s extraordinary conclusion, in which England’s openers used every tactic in their armoury to prevent India squeezing a second over into their brief spell in the field before stumps.India’s first innings ended – for 387, precisely the same score England got in theirs – 14 minutes before the day was due to conclude, and when Crawley and Ben Duckett emerged to start their second knock there were only six minutes remaining. The action that followed was punctuated by discussions between the batters, while Crawley on one occasion pulled away as Jasprit Bumrah neared the end of his run-up after spotting movement behind the bowler’s arm, and on another shook his hand in apparent agony and called for the physio after the ball bounced into his glove. “He’ll be assessed overnight and hopefully he’ll be all right to carry on tomorrow,” deadpanned Tim Southee, England’s coaching consultant