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The Hopeful Hun's avatar

👏🏼 such a well-written piece. I recently did one re: working class creative voices, which was actually influenced by The Guardian article you reference in the first line. The older I get the more I’m conscious of it, and the more I want to push the industry to make a change.

Also having previously worked within property, 10% of architecture coming from privately educated backgrounds feels low, based on the people I met 🫨

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Bumble's avatar

There’s a delusion that improv is a community. It’s not. It’s a cult-like clique. Community are inclusive, clique are exclusive.

The only way to participate is if you have money and if you don’t, you are a “yes-person”, by that I mean don’t ever tell the truth or don’t ever fall out of line, if you do you’re kicked out/ excluded.

Improv is very much divided amongst class lines, more so than any of the “boxes”, because those who make it through have the means to.

The indie stages, started by people with financial means , the players you mentioned, are like a cartel, gatekeepers of who gets stage time, giving space to people who can give them stage time.

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