Rob Newman is a British stand-up comedian,
author and political activist. He was the first comedian
to sell out the 12,000-seat Wembley Arena in London
with his then comedy partner David Baddiel.
Newman's first speaking appearance was with Third
World First (now known as People and Planet), the student
political organisation. He shot to fame in the early
1990s when he appeared alongside Baddiel, Hugh Dennis
and Steve Punt in the BBC radio and TV programme: The
Mary Whitehouse Experience. The title was a jibe at
the campaigner for "moral decency" on television,
Mary Whitehouse.
Newman and Baddiel followed this up with their own
series, Newman and Baddiel In Pieces. Newman was often
considered a bit of a hearthrob and could well have
been partly responsible, albeit inadvertently, for
the notion that comedy was becoming the new rock 'n'
roll in the early '90s.
Newman's later solo work is marked by a clear social
conscience, and antiestablishment view. He covered
the antiglobalisation Seattle protests of 1999 for
BBC television's Newsnight programme. He has been politically
active with Reclaim The Streets, the Liverpool dockers,
Indymedia and People's Global Action.
He wrote the book "The Fountain at the centre
of the Universe", a satire on globalisation, set
in Mexico. The process of writing the book was the
subject of a BBC 2 television documentary. His later
work has a very clear political element, and parallels
the work of contempories such as Mark Thomas.
He is the author of three novels: Dependence Day,
Manners and The Fountain At The Center Of The World. |