Review: In Baby J, John Mulaney Contends With His Post-Rehab Image
What happens when a "wife guy" divorces his wife?

Comedian John Mulaney shot to fame as a clean-cut "wife guy." His extremely online teenaged fans in particular had an almost ravenous fixation on the comedian. When Mulaney went to rehab, divorced his wife, and announced he was expecting a son with actress Olivia Munn, internet controversy raged for weeks.
In Baby J, Mulaney's first stand-up special since 2018, he attempts to contend with this radically new image, weaving farcical stories about his drug problem and his lifelong, clawing desire for attention. The whole routine is delivered with his trademark auctioneer-like pace (which he slyly implies might have arisen from cocaine abuse). It's not always clear how much we can believe.
"As you process and digest just how obnoxious, wasteful, and unlikeable that story is," Mulaney says at one point, "just remember, that's one I'm willing to tell you." This new ambiguous atmosphere around the formerly sweet and relatable comedian is a big part of what makes Baby J work. Mulaney must now hold his audience at arm's length—and for the first time, we're in on the joke.
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I was all 'WHO?!!" then I read this:
Comedian John Mulaney shot to fame as a clean-cut "wife guy." His extremely online teenaged fans in particular had an almost ravenous fixation on the comedian.
That's why WHO
It's dear Emma, the progressive voice of Teen Reason bringing us the fresh perspective of the too young to buy a beer crowd.
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I remember him being zzzzzz with a NickatNite show or something ... the Olivia Munn thing is probably the most interesting part
I think the part where a comedian having a drug and/or life partner problem (Surprise!) caused controversy to rage for weeks was the most hilarious part.
There is a factual inaccuracy in that show. John Mulanney said that the first question in the GQ interview is "what are you doing today." When it is really "See any ghosts today." Sounds out there. But it isn't. John talked about jokes in his "Kid Gorgeous" special. Also, you could have addressed the controversy of having Dave Chapelle open for him and do his transphobic routine. That made his terminally online transgender fans mad. But anyway, you completely missed the most important part: Is it funny? Will people who read Reason magazine find it funny?
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