Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

155 Room La Bahia Hotel & Spa Opens in Santa Cruz, California

Apple is giving iPhone 14 and 15 users another free year of satellite features Canada reviews

Everything You Need to Know About the 2025 Emmy® Awards, Best TV Shows to Binge Watch

Official Borderlands 4 beer is an IPA, surprising absolutely no one

One of Ontario’s prettiest towns is home to the oldest operating brewery in the province

The iPhone Air’s battery pack is slim, but not as slim as the iPhone Air Canada reviews

Bruce Willis’ Daughters Praise His Wife Emma Amid His Dementia Battle

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Dropout does Brennan Lee Mulligan dirty (for fun)
Lifestyle

Dropout does Brennan Lee Mulligan dirty (for fun)

9 September 20254 Mins Read

Dropout TV premiered its new comedy show Crowd Control on Monday, and it’s exactly as promised: a series-length extension of the season 7 Game Changer episode of the same name, where stand-up comics are asked to improvise routines about the members of a small audience whose T-shirt prompts about themselves suggest worthwhile topics. In the premiere episode of the series, Bob the Drag Queen, Leah Rudick, and Dimension 20 DM Brennan Lee Mulligan face a room full of people whose shirts say things like “Whoredrobe” (a woman with an entire wardrobe full of kink gear), “DM” (“dungeon monitor,” a safety coordinator for a kink space), and “Big Baby.” (Surprisingly, not a kink thing.)

The big twist for the series-length expansion of the show, though, is a segment that host and Dropout writer-performer Jacquis Neal calls “Torture the Comic,” where he sets limitations on the contestants, specifically designed to target and hamstring their individual styles. In the premiere episode, Bob is ordered to perform as if he/she/they were in a library: only speaking in whispers, and without using their hands. Rudick, whose whole persona is “naïve, innocent, and wholesome,” is instructed to do her routine “as if you were just publicly canceled.”

But Mulligan drew the worst limitation: an order to perform without using “a single big word whatsoever,” which turned out to mean not just polysyllabic words, but basically any word that couldn’t be grunted. He was also forbidden from making historical or literary references. Over the course of the bit, Neal and the audience called Mulligan out for using the words “what’s” (instead of “what is”), “strange,” and “sick” — both of the latter were deemed too complicated even as single-word responses to information from audience members!

Mulligan was game during the mercifully short bit, adopting a guttural, caveman-ish voice and speaking in blunt, broken English: “Me no like!” he said in response to being told “strange” was “too big” as a word. Problem is, the entire gag wound up feeling like a lost opportunity. Unable to say much of anything to the audience, Mulligan was reduced to one-word responses to people who seemed to have been expressly selected for him to interact with, like the guy who apparently built an entire medieval tavern in his basement as a setting for his D&D games. (Mulligan: “Tight! Cool guy.”)

Photo: Kate Elliott/Dropout

I get that the entire point of the bit was to let the audience laugh at Mulligan’s discomfort and his struggles to produce comedy without any of his tools for comedy. And limiting his vocabulary and references certainly was an appropriate challenge for the man who, earlier in this same episode, responded to an audience member’s comment about learning Elvish with “Oooh! Quenya or Sindarin?” and corrected Bob on a hat-maker being called a milliner, not a haberdasher.

But at the same time, the whole point of Crowd Control is theoretically to mine humor out of audience members’ unique stories and situations. Bob the Drag Queen did fine with that while whispering, in spite of completely breaking at one point. Rudick, if anything, got bonus material out of the “act like you’ve been canceled” instruction, peppering her questions and comments with a belligerent bro voice and aggrieved side comments like “Am I not allowed to say that?”

Mulligan, on the other hand, was basically cut off from asking meaningful questions or from giving meaningful responses, which made the sequence repetitive and stilted. I really just want to see him sit down with Basement Tavern guy for a makeup session where he gets to fully verbally unload, the way he does with scene descriptions in Dimension 20 and Worlds Without Number, or with elaborate speeches like his conspiracy rant in the Game Changer episode “Yes or No.” At the very least, here’s hoping that future episodes of Crowd Control make the torture challenges more additive, like Rudick’s prompt, and less subtractive, to the point where it undermines the entire point of the show.

That said, the Crowd Control concept still produces a lively, enjoyable show, just as it did on Game Changer. The audience participants are diverse, with a lot of intriguing hooks for comedy. And the overall vibe of a shared party, where all the viewers and all the comedians are rooting for each other, makes for a winning atmosphere. It’s just going to be hard for future episodes to beat the premiere’s exploration of an audience member who self-identified as “Xandiloquence Bizarre,” and who was wearing a homemade hat constructed from pressed, dried cucumbers. Imagine trying to interrogate that in single-syllable grunts.


New episodes of Crowd Control air on Dropout TV on Mondays.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Official Borderlands 4 beer is an IPA, surprising absolutely no one

Lifestyle 9 September 2025

Bruce Willis’ Daughters Praise His Wife Emma Amid His Dementia Battle

Lifestyle 9 September 2025

9 things you never knew about your Canadian passport, from hidden holograms to secret symbols

Lifestyle 9 September 2025

Oslo has something to say about the future of fashion | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 9 September 2025

The Gathering is set to ban the most powerful Final Fantasy card

Lifestyle 9 September 2025

Deborah Norville Reveals Honest Thoughts on Eva Pilgrim Replacing Her on 'Inside Edition' (Exclusive)

Lifestyle 9 September 2025
Top Articles

These Ontario employers were just ranked among best in Canada

17 July 2025268 Views

The ocean’s ‘sparkly glow’: Here’s where to witness bioluminescence in B.C. 

14 August 2025251 Views

Getting a taste of Maori culture in New Zealand’s overlooked Auckland | Canada Voices

12 July 2025136 Views

Full List of World’s Safest Countries in 2025 Revealed, Canada Reviews

12 June 2025100 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Reviews 9 September 2025

The iPhone Air’s battery pack is slim, but not as slim as the iPhone Air Canada reviews

I took a first look at the battery pack this afternoon, and it has a…

Bruce Willis’ Daughters Praise His Wife Emma Amid His Dementia Battle

The iPhone 17 Pro’s orange is good — and well-timed Canada reviews

Mixed-Use Development in Overland Park, KS, Featuring AC Hotel and Retail Center Breaks Ground

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

155 Room La Bahia Hotel & Spa Opens in Santa Cruz, California

Apple is giving iPhone 14 and 15 users another free year of satellite features Canada reviews

Everything You Need to Know About the 2025 Emmy® Awards, Best TV Shows to Binge Watch

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202424 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024345 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202449 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.