What Standup Comedy Can Teach You About Writing Radio Ads
At first glance, standup comedy and radio advertising don't have much in common. One is art, the other
is commerce. One aims to make you laugh, the other aims to make you buy.
But spend time around both, and a pattern emerges. The best radio copywriters and the best standup
comedians are solving exactly the same problem — and solving it in exactly the same way.
The Setup and the Payoff
Every joke has a structure: the setup creates an expectation, and the punchline subverts it. The laugh
comes from the gap between what you expected and what you got.
Every great radio ad has the same structure. The opening creates a situation — a context, a character,
a problem. The payoff delivers something unexpected, something true, or something that reframes
everything that came before.
The RBT ad discussed elsewhere on this blog is a perfect example. The setup is a drink driving
checkpoint. The expectation is that the person talking sounds guilty. The payoff subverts everything you
assumed. That's a joke structure — applied to advertising.
The Economy of Words
Standup comedians are ruthless about words. Every word in a bit that isn't necessary is a word that
slows the audience down before the punchline. The best comedians work their material for months,
stripping out syllables, replacing threeword phrases with one, tightening until there's nothing left to cut.
Radio copywriters work to exactly the same discipline. Thirty seconds means roughly 75 words. Every
one of them matters. A line that makes the script run long doesn't just waste time — it buries the payoff.
Both forms reward the same instinct: less is more, and the craft is in the cutting.
Timing Is Everything
Ask any comedian what separates a good joke from a great one and they'll say timing. The same pause
before the punchline. The same beat after a laugh to let it land before moving on.
Radio ads live and die on timing too. The beat before the key message. The slight pause before the call
to action. The pacing that feels natural rather than rushed.
Good audio production is as much about what isn't there — the space, the silence — as it is about what
is.
Know Your Audience
Comedians who work the same material in different rooms quickly learn that a joke killing it in one city
can die in another. The material hasn't changed. The audience has. The best comedians adjust —
finding the angle, the reference, the framing that works for the specific room they're in.
Radio advertising works the same way. An ad that resonates with regional Queensland homeowners
won't necessarily land with innercity professionals. The insight, the tone, the cultural references all
need to match the audience you're talking to.
The Risk of Playing It Safe
Here's something comedians know that most business owners don't: safe material doesn't work. A joke
that doesn't take any risks, that doesn't say anything unexpected, that plays entirely within what the
audience already thinks — gets polite laughs at best. It doesn't stick.
The same is true in radio. An ad that says nothing surprising, that confirms rather than challenges, that
takes no creative risks — is quickly forgotten.
The best advertising, like the best comedy, is willing to go somewhere the audience didn't expect to be
taken.
Get in touch and let's write something that takes a few risks — the good kind.