Probably shouldn’t have given it all away in the title. Like most people I’ve been trying to figure out how the worst dickheads have taken over everything with their insane bullshit. So I’ve read three books (mostly) (one was a graphic novel) and listened to five audio books (AT NORMAL SPEED) to try and figure out WHAT THE F**K IS GOING ON?
Guy Williams has always walked a strange tightrope in New Zealand comedy. On one side, he is one of the country’s most recognisable political comics, someone who studied political science and built a career on satirical commentary. On the other side, he is a self‑described brash idiot who thrives on chaos, provocation, and the kind of loud, unfiltered energy that feels like it should not work but somehow does. His new show, with a title that is practically a thesis in itself, leans fully into that contradiction. It is messy, furious, juvenile, thoughtful, and completely unhinged. It is also, somehow, one of his most coherent pieces of social commentary.
The show opens with Guy already at a sprint. There is no gentle warm‑up, no easing the audience into the tone. He launches straight into a rant about the state of the world, the rise of right‑wing rhetoric, and the way wealthy people manipulate public anger by redirecting it toward marginalised groups. It is loud, abrasive, and delivered with the kind of conviction that makes the audience sit up immediately. Guy’s political anger is not subtle. It is a full‑body experience.
But what makes the show interesting is the way he pairs that political fury with his trademark idiocy. He will yell “we love our trans brothers and sisters” with genuine passion, then immediately pivot into a long, chaotic argument about why he wants to bring back the word “retard” because, in his view, the decline in its usage correlates with the rise of right‑wing idiots. It is deliberately provocative, deliberately uncomfortable, and deliberately framed as satire. Guy is not trying to be polite. He is trying to make a point by being the loudest, most chaotic version of himself. It's the only way to win in a world where politicians get voted in by blaming everyone else.
Throughout the show, he skewers politicians, billionaires, organised religion, and anyone else he sees as contributing to the current social and economic mess, calling Christopher Luxon a “human buttplug of a man”. He rants about Trump, Elon Musk, supermarket duopolies, and the general entitlement of people who believe they deserve everything at the expense of everyone else. It is a hate letter disguised as a comedy show, and the audience is more than happy to go along for the ride.
What makes the show work is that Guy is fully aware of how ridiculous he is. He knows he is a tall, loud, white man yelling about injustice while also spending a significant portion of the show talking about his collection of rugby and football boots. He knows that his persona is inherently contradictory. And he leans into that contradiction with gusto. He spends almost as much time discussing the devaluation of his beloved Predator boots due to Trump and the Epstein files as he does discussing political corruption. The joke is not just the content. The joke is that he cannot help himself.
Guy’s stage presence is confident and chaotic in equal measure. He is comfortable with crowd work, improvisation, and the unpredictable energy of a live audience. He knows how to push a moment, how to escalate a bit, and how to ride the wave of laughter even when the material is teetering on the edge of too much. There are moments where he simply yells into the void instead of delivering a punchline, and while that would sink another comedian, it somehow fits perfectly within the world of this show. The chaos is part of the appeal.
The political commentary is sharp, even when wrapped in juvenile humour. Guy argues that the left needs more “f*ked cnts,” meaning people who are willing to be loud, unapologetic, and unafraid to push back against the right’s dominance of public discourse. He frames his own loudness as a kind of counter‑weapon, a way of showing that caring about people does not mean being quiet or polite. It is an interesting angle, and one that resonates with the audience, many of whom seem to be laughing as much out of catharsis as humour.
But the show is not all politics. Guy’s comedic instincts pull him constantly toward the silly, the low‑brow, and the downright stupid. He spends a surprising amount of time talking about rugby boots, Adidas Predators, and the tragedy of a once‑cool word losing its meaning. He dives into paedophile jokes with a level of commitment that would make most comedians nervous. He rants about Ed Sheeran. He rants about religion. He rants about anything that crosses his mind. The show is wild and unfocused, but that is also what makes it feel so authentically Guy Williams.
The audience reaction is intense. There are people in hysterics for long stretches of the show, and at times I genuinely wondered how some of them were managing to breathe. Guy’s ability to push a joke past the point of comfort and into the realm of uncontrollable laughter is one of his greatest strengths. He knows how to build tension, how to escalate, and how to weaponise his own ridiculousness.
The show ends with a moment that perfectly encapsulates the Guy Williams experience. He challenges an audience member to a one‑on‑one basketball game on stage and absolutely dominates them. It is silly, unnecessary, and completely on brand. It is also a reminder that Guy is not trying to be a polished political commentator. He is trying to be Guy Williams, and that is more than enough.
What makes this show stand out is the way it blends political fury with comedic stupidity. Guy is angry, but he is also self-aware. He is loud, but he is also thoughtful. He is juvenile, but he is also making a point. The contradictions are the point. The chaos is the point. The show is a reflection of a world that feels increasingly unhinged, and Guy meets that world with equal unhinged energy.
Rich people are stealing from you and blaming brown people and trans people and some people believe them aaahhhhhh! is not a tidy show. It is not a balanced show. It is not a show that will appeal to everyone. But it is a show that captures the current political climate with a level of honesty, frustration, and comedic force that few comedians in New Zealand are willing to attempt.
It is loud. It is abrasive. It is cathartic. And it might be Guy Williams at his most Guy Williams.
The show is part of the NZ International Comedy Festival. Find tickets to a show near you here
Review written by Alex Moulton








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