Culture | Laughter in the dark

In exile from Egypt, Bassem Youssef is still making people laugh

A pioneer of political satire in Arabic has become an English-speaking stand-up comic

Bassem Youssef
Laughter in the darkImage: Courtesy of Bassem Youssef

AS BASSEM YOUSSEF, an Egyptian comedian, sauntered onto the stage at the Royal Festival Hall in London on March 9th, members of the audience filmed his entrance. No matter that they had been told repeatedly to put their phones away. “You guys just don’t listen to instructions,” chastised Mr Youssef. “It’s because of people like you we don’t get visas here.”

Explore more

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Too funny by half”

America v China

From the April 1st 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Culture

Why many French have come to like “Emily in Paris”

Even if they may not want to admit it

“The Perfect Couple” and the new map of Moneyland

Depictions of the super-rich on screen reflect the times


What should “inclusion” include at the Paralympics?

The games make a virtue of their diversity. But there’s still room to grow


The information wars are about to get worse, Yuval Noah Harari argues

The author of “Sapiens” is back with a timely new book about AI, fact and fiction

Arnold Schoenberg was one of classical music’s most important rebels

But, 150 years after his birth, he is underappreciated

Despots and oligarchs have many means to meddle in American politics

The extent of the foreign-influence industry may surprise you