Geoff Norcott - The Unwritten WOKE Rules Every BBC Comedian Knows episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 25, 2026 · 5 MIN

Geoff Norcott - The Unwritten WOKE Rules Every BBC Comedian Knows

from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered conversations you won’t see on mainstream media. In this honest and quietly unsettling clip, Geoff Norcott lifts the curtain on what he calls the “unwritten rules” that now shape British comedy — especially inside and around the BBC. These aren’t formal policies, written guidelines, or official censorship rules. They’re cultural signals. Career incentives. Social pressures. The things everyone in the industry knows… but no one talks about out loud. https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Norcott explains how comedians don’t need to be told what not to say anymore — they learn it by watching what happens to others. Which jokes get punished. Which opinions trigger backlash. Which topics quietly close doors. Over time, this creates a creative environment where risk is discouraged, conformity is rewarded, and self-censorship becomes the default survival strategy. What makes this clip powerful is that Norcott doesn’t position himself as a victim or a rebel. He admits he adapted too. He admits he hesitated. He admits he stayed silent when he probably shouldn’t have. And that honesty reveals something bigger than any single controversy — a system that trains people to anticipate punishment before it arrives. The curiosity gap is sharp: if comedy is meant to test boundaries, why does it now feel so bounded? If jokes are just jokes, why do they carry professional consequences? And if institutions claim to value diversity, why do they produce such narrow ideological culture? Norcott argues that the problem isn’t just political correctness — it’s predictability. Comedy becomes safe, cautious, and strangely boring. Not because comedians lost their talent, but because the ecosystem stopped rewarding courage. This isn’t a story about villains. It’s a story about incentives. About how creative industries drift toward orthodoxy without anyone consciously choosing it. About how fear doesn’t arrive with sirens — it arrives quietly, through examples, reputations, and cautionary tales. And by the time people notice something has changed, the change has already settled. This clip isn’t about defending any particular figure or side. It’s about understanding how a creative culture can lose its edge without losing its funding. How comedy can survive structurally while dying artistically. And how a generation of performers learned that the biggest risk isn’t bombing on stage… …it’s saying the wrong thing off it. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFhZc2YeXRM&t=2s #GeoffNorcott #BritishComedy #BBC #CancelCulture #CultureWar #FreeSpeech #ComedyScene #HereticsClips #AndrewGold #UKCulture Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered conversations you won’t see on mainstream media. In this honest and quietly unsettling clip, Geoff Norcott lifts the curtain on what he calls the “unwritten rules” that now shape British comedy — especially inside and around the BBC. These aren’t formal policies, written guidelines, or official censorship rules. They’re cultural signals. Career incentives. Social pressures. The things everyone in the industry knows… but no one talks about out loud. https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Norcott explains how comedians don’t need to be told what not to say anymore — they learn it by watching what happens to others. Which jokes get punished. Which opinions trigger backlash. Which topics quietly close doors. Over time, this creates a creative environment where risk is discouraged, conformity is rewarded, and self-censorship becomes the default survival strategy. What makes this clip powerful is that Norcott doesn’t position himself as a victim or a rebel. He admits he adapted too. He admits he hesitated. He admits he stayed silent when he probably shouldn’t have. And that honesty reveals something bigger than any single controversy — a system that trains people to anticipate punishment before it arrives. The curiosity gap is sharp: if comedy is meant to test boundaries, why does it now feel so bounded? If jokes are just jokes, why do they carry professional consequences? And if institutions claim to value diversity, why do they produce such narrow ideological culture? Norcott argues that the problem isn’t just political correctness — it’s predictability. Comedy becomes safe, cautious, and strangely boring. Not because comedians lost their talent, but because the ecosystem stopped rewarding courage. This isn’t a story about villains. It’s a story about incentives. About how creative industries drift toward orthodoxy without anyone consciously choosing it. About how fear doesn’t arrive with sirens — it arrives quietly, through examples, reputations, and cautionary tales. And by the time people notice something has changed, the change has already settled. This clip isn’t about defending any particular figure or side. It’s about understanding how a creative culture can lose its edge without losing its funding. How comedy can survive structurally while dying artistically. And how a generation of performers learned that the biggest risk isn’t bombing on stage… …it’s saying the wrong thing off it. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFhZc2YeXRM&t=2s #GeoffNorcott #BritishComedy #BBC #CancelCulture #CultureWar #FreeSpeech #ComedyScene #HereticsClips #AndrewGold #UKCulture Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Geoff Norcott - The Unwritten WOKE Rules Every BBC Comedian Knows

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👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered conversations you won’t see on mainstream media. In this honest and quietly unsettling clip, Geoff Norcott lifts the curtain on what he calls the “unwritten rules” that now shape British comedy —...

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