Which one do you hate more? Dian Cathal on being trans, American, and unbothered in Britain
Dian Cathal is an award-winning trans comedian, writer, and performer who has spent the last decade doing what most people wouldn't dare: turning the politics of his own existence into a night out. Born in New York, living in London by medical necessity rather than choice (corn syrup, of all things, is the villain), he has built a body of work that uses sharp, personal comedy to pull apart identity, migration, and what it actually means to belong somewhere.
His current touring show Trans*Atlantic asks one beautifully blunt question: if you are a trans man and a US expat living in Britain right now, which identity makes you the bigger villain? The show has already picked up a five-star review from Reviews Hub, which recommended it be watched by Starmer's cabinet, JK Rowling, and assorted Guardian columnists.
In this episode of Political by Design, Dian joins Leslie Clarke for an hour of comedy, politics, and some genuinely unexpected tangents, including what the Irish changeling myth has to do with transphobic parenting, why Northern Ireland is functionally a trans country, Labour's revealing response to being asked whether they hate Americans, and what Dian was thinking when he heard Luigi Mangione had been shot.
They also get into the Supreme Court ruling on gender recognition, the difference between free speech and freedom of expression, why art can change government policy when it is good enough to be undeniable, and what Dian makes of queer people who stand against the trans community.
It is one of those conversations that keeps turning corners.
What's in this episode
âąÂ      Why Dian had to leave the US and what corn syrup has to do with it
âąÂ      Trans*Atlantic: the show, the question, and the five-star coalition of intended viewers
âąÂ      Deadnamed, Irish mythology, and why nobody is actually dead
âąÂ      The attention economy, hate comments, and getting paid either way
âąÂ      TERF Island as seen from the outside, and why Britain's trans debate looks different to the US
âąÂ      The Supreme Court ruling: sitting in a theatre doing final edits when it landed
âąÂ      Free speech versus freedom of expression, and why Brits have confused the two
âąÂ      Why Is That So Funny? by John Wright, the book Dian recommends on how and why comedy works
âąÂ      Art as a force for political change, from 1980s East Germany to queer comedy nights
âąÂ      Labour's accidental admission, and what Dian's planning to do with it
âąÂ      Time Bomb: his next show, about cancer, family history, and healthcare
Trans*Atlantic tour dates
âąÂ      Brighton: 2 May, Komedia Studio (Brighton Fringe)
âąÂ      London: 18 May, Queer Comedy Club
âąÂ      Cambridge: 29 May, Blue Moon
âąÂ      Dublin: 4 to 9 May, Wild Stages Festival (Deadnamed)
Find Dian Cathal
âąÂ      diancathal.com
âąÂ      Instagram: @diancathal
About Political by Design
Political by Design is the podcast from Scene Magazine that looks at politics through an LGBTQ+ lens. Hosted by Leslie Clarke, publisher and editor of Scene. New episodes wherever you listen to podcasts.
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