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Under growing pressure, Russian stand-ups vow to joke on

The growing popularity of Russian standup sketches has attracted the watchful eye of the authorities, resulting in the arrest and deportation of a comedian this summer over a joke.

Ola Cichowlas (AFP)
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Moscow, Russia
Mon, October 25, 2021 Published on Oct. 25, 2021 Published on 2021-10-25T14:12:29+07:00

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Russian standup comedian Pavel Dedishchev performs on stage in the loft of a Moscow bar on October 10, 2021. Russian standup comedian Pavel Dedishchev performs on stage in the loft of a Moscow bar on October 10, 2021. (AFP/Dimitar Dilkoff)

In the loft of a trendy Moscow bar, stand-up comedian Pavel Dedishchev walks up to a microphone under a spotlight.

"I have seven coronavirus antibodies, they all know each other, it's like a family living inside me," he tells the audience of around 50 mostly young people.

"Of course, I know they are from the government. Vladimir Vladimirovich (Putin) gave us all seven antibodies before the election, right? Twelve to the security services!" he says to roaring laughter.

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Dedishchev was making a sly reference to cash handouts that President Putin gave out before last month's parliamentary elections -- and that the security services often get special treatment in Russia.

During his 40-minute performance, the bearded 30-year-old joked about corruption, the powerful Russian Orthodox Church and the National Guard, a security force that has been at the forefront of suppressing protests.

Stand-up comedy is booming across Moscow and videos of sketches often get more than a million views on YouTube, with many Russians hungry for humour that is not tightly controlled, unlike the comedy that is shown on television.

After a year that saw Putin's main opponent Alexei Navalny jailed and a severe crackdown on independent media, comedians say they, too, are feeling the pressure.

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