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Home » Transcript: A Revolution is Coming! – Jimmy Carr on TRIGGERnometry Podcast

Transcript: A Revolution is Coming! – Jimmy Carr on TRIGGERnometry Podcast

Here is the full transcript of British-Irish comedian Jimmy Carr’s interview: ‘The Peaceful Revolution, Collapsing Institutions, and Why Comedy Matters More Than Ever’ on TRIGGERnometry Podcast with hosts Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster, December 11, 2025.

Brief Notes: British comedian Jimmy Carr joins Konstantin Kisin and Francis Foster to argue that we are at the very beginning of a peaceful revolution, driven by collapsing institutions, a crisis of elites, and a generation addicted to attention but starving for meaning and connection. He breaks down how social media, loneliness, and a broken university and jobs pipeline are fuelling a mental health emergency for young people, and why politics has abandoned them while obsessing over culture wars and tax tweaks. Carr also shares big, unconventional ideas—from zero income tax for under-30s to sovereign wealth funds and serious experiments with new policies—and explains why comedy, conversation and real-world community are essential antidotes in an AI-disrupted, screen-saturated world.

Introduction

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Jimmy Carr, welcome back to TRIGGERnometry.

JIMMY CARR: Thank you very much indeed for having me. You’re back from your big American voyage.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: As are you.

JIMMY CARR: Yeah, well, congratulations. Amazing, amazing interviews. I thought when you were out there.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: And most of them aren’t even out yet, so.

The Art of Deliberation Over Debate

JIMMY CARR: Well, I mean, even the early ones, like the Dave Smith one I thought was a—I don’t know, I think you could learn a lot from that, from the, not only the content, but how it was played. That was a wonderful conversation between people that don’t agree about a lot of things, but it wasn’t debate.

I think there’s a lot of conflation of the term debate and deliberation. Debate is about owning someone else and it’s about winning, and deliberation is about getting somewhere.

I’m very positive about the world. I think 90% of people agree about 90% of things and then you have 5% on the extreme right and left that think the other one is the problem. And then you get people that come together and want to have a conversation, want to get somewhere and build something. And it felt really positive. I loved it.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Well, we felt the same. And two things I would say—there is one of them, there’s a lot of credit for that goes to Dave.

JIMMY CARR: Yeah.

KONSTANTIN KISIN: Because you can only dance like that with a dance partner who wants to dance like that. But the second thing as well is someone came up to us the other day and said, “You know what I love about you guys is what you do is you do sense making.”

And I was kind of wanky tone, what does that mean? And I said to them, what is the difference between sense making and expressing an opinion? And what we came out of it is sense making is when you actually explain how you got to your opinion. You explain the sequence by which you got to the views that you have.

And then when you have someone like David comes along and there’s two different opinions, they then both get tested and challenged and prodded in different ways. And then you can make sense of the issue by having listened to the different arguments.

Expanding the Overton Window

JIMMY CARR: Yeah, I think it’s the analogy of the Overton Window gets talked about a lot in politics and the idea of what’s the most left wing and what’s the most right wing thing you can say in polite society. And I think it’s expanded in both directions politically the last 10 years. It’s gone to the right and it’s gone to the left.

You could now be—there’s neo fascists out there and there’s people advocating for communism out there openly in the public space. Now, whether that’s a healthy thing or not, I think maybe it is. I think there’s a huge opportunity in the center for someone to take that, to take the liberalism in the kind—liberalism sounds very wishy washy, but it is a robust fight against authoritarianism which can come from either side, left or right.

People seem to associate it more with the right, but it’s the left as well. It’s Michael Malice and the white pill and all the terrible things that can happen on the left, which is the forgotten lesson. We’ve only got one lesson from the last hundred years, that fascism is abhorrent. But the idea that communism is a terrible idea doesn’t seem to reflect in the same way.

And I view conversation in the same way. I think you can apply the Overton Window to things like comedy, but why go to a comedy show? Why come and see me in a big arena other than, you know, please do. But that thing of why come and see a comedy show. Well, partly it’s for the experience, and you laugh, and people release dopamine and serotonin, and it’s a variable reward system. And it’s very fun to see a comedy show.

But the other thing is the conversation you have afterwards changes. The conversation between you and your partner afterwards is like, okay, we had a conversation like that. And then the conversation is like this. It broadens the conversation. It widens the Overton window of what you can and can’t talk about.

I think comedians coming out and talking about relationships and difficulties and sexual dysfunction or depression, it makes the conversation much more palatable. I think if you want to have a serious conversation, the sugaring the pill a little bit with some laughter is a very healthy thing.

I end up talking about quite serious things on stage, on occasion. And it’s okay because the atmosphere is comedic. The lens we’re looking through, and comedy gives you a little bit of perspective. It naturally gives you perspective on something. Peter McGraw talks about this brilliantly.