For the uninitiated, Newman has built a cult following online with his absurdist comedy sketches and sharp observational humor — the kind of stuff that makes you snort-laugh on BART and then pretend you were coughing. Droid9, the events outfit that's been quietly carving out a niche in SF's live entertainment scene, is hosting the show.
Details beyond that are thin, but here's why this matters for the city: San Francisco's comedy and live entertainment ecosystem has been clawing its way back for years now, and it's smaller, scrappier promoters like Droid9 — not city-funded "cultural initiatives" that burn through grant money — that are actually doing the work. No seven-figure public subsidies required. Just people putting on shows that other people want to see. Imagine that.
It's a small but meaningful reminder that the private sector does culture better than bureaucracies. Every time a promoter books a venue, sells tickets, and puts on a show without a dime of taxpayer money, it's a quiet rebuke to the idea that San Francisco needs more government spending to be a vibrant city. We don't need a task force. We need more people taking risks, filling rooms, and letting the market decide what's worth showing up for.
So if you're a fan of Newman's work or just looking for a night out that doesn't involve a $22 cocktail and an existential crisis, keep your eyes on Droid9's channels for ticket info. Support the people who are actually making this city fun again — with their own money on the line.
