{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/6911ec37a17ebcde8849cc2e/697b85d2ebb1ff695ffa6ce4?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Scott Bennett: How to Become a Full-Time Comedian (at 38 years old)","description":"<p><a href=\"https://www.instagram.com/scottbcomedyuk/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Scott Bennett</a> didn’t “accidentally” become a professional comedian. He built it the same way you build anything that lasts: years of reps, ruthless attention to craft, and a willingness to bet on himself when the “safe option” stopped feeling safe.</p><p><br></p><p>In this episode of <em>What’s The Trick?</em>, <a href=\"http://benhanlin.com/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">Ben Hanlin</a> sits down with Scott to talk about what Scott has actually <em>made</em>: a sustainable stand-up career, a writing practice that runs like a job, and a set of repeatable methods for turning everyday life into material that lands in rooms full of strangers.</p><p><br></p><p>It’s a conversation about creative risk when you’ve got a mortgage and kids, and about what happens when you treat creativity like a system, not a mood. You’ll hear how Scott writes (and rewrites), how he engineers punchlines without killing the life in them, and how he handles the psychological weight of being judged in real time.</p><p><br></p><p>If you’re trying to build any craft-based career, comedy, content, design, music, writing, performance, this is an honest look at the unglamorous part: the work that makes the work possible.</p><p><br></p><h2>What You’ll Learn</h2><ul><li>How to know when the “what if” feeling is the real signal, and when it’s just noise</li><li>Why doing two lives at once (job + craft) can make you average at both, and what changes when you commit</li><li>A practical rule for timing your leap: why quitting too early creates pressure that dilutes the dream</li><li>How to write faster by removing unnecessary “scene setting” and getting to the point sooner</li><li>A simple method for building routines: context first, then punchline, and how to test if the setup is doing its job</li><li>Why putting <em>yourself</em> at the centre of the story makes material more relatable (and usually funnier)</li><li>How audience expectations “tether” your voice, and what happens when you shift gears too hard</li><li>Scott’s approach to crowd work as a <em>writing tool</em>, not a random gamble</li><li>What to do when a room feels quiet: the mindset shift that stops you from unraveling mid-set</li><li>The one “trick” Scott credits for longevity: treating comedy like work, not inspiration</li></ul><p><br></p><h2>Why This Conversation Matters</h2><p>Most people love the idea of making something - a show, a set, a body of work, a creative life - but get stuck on the parts that don’t look romantic from the outside: repetition, uncertainty, slow progress, and the reality that the room doesn’t owe you anything.</p><p><br></p><p>Scott’s value here isn’t motivation. It’s clarity. He breaks down the mechanics of getting good - how ideas become routines, how the right sentence replaces ten weaker ones, how you earn confidence by building evidence. And he’s honest about the trade: you can build a life doing what you love, but you don’t get to skip the psychological load that comes with it.</p><p>This episode is a reminder that “creative success” often looks like structure, consistency, and decision-making - not lightning bolts.</p><p><br></p><h2>Who This Episode Is For</h2><ul><li>You’re building a creative career alongside a job and want a realistic framework for when (and how) to leap</li><li>You perform, speak, teach, pitch, or present — and you want to handle rooms more confidently</li><li>You’re writing anything (stand-up, scripts, content, talks) and want tighter setups and cleaner structure</li><li>You’ve got momentum but struggle to balance drive with the feeling that you’re never “there yet”</li><li>You’re allergic to hype and want the unglamorous truth about craft, pressure, and progress</li></ul><p><br></p>","author_name":"Ben Hanlin"}