By VenderGreentag
The sun had barely risen over the skyline when Andrew realized, once again, that he had nothing left to watch. He stared at the dim glow of his paused streaming screen—the final episode of a niche Icelandic crime dramedy he'd reluctantly committed to, just to feel something. He leaned back in his faux-leather gaming chair, the kind that had more crumbs in it than a budget motel's vending machine.
So here is the thing.
Andrew had watched everything. Shows, movies, stand-up, TED Talks, documentaries about religious cults, documentaries about documentaries—he'd even rewatched Fist of Fun just to catch obscure references he'd missed the first time. But the more he watched, the more he saw the same loop repeating: people trying to make sense of things that made no sense.
“I strongly believe that religion... it's brainwashing people’s minds,” he often said, like it was his catchphrase at parties he never went to. “It’s just crowd control with incense.”
When he did go out, it was usually to watch stand-up or debate, his two favorite spectator sports. And improv? “Improv is okay,” he’d concede, “but too much is hutt, hutt, huss huss—fuck it.” Nonsense wrapped in pretense, he thought. At least scripted stuff had the decency to pretend it had structure.
He wasn't lonely, just deeply committed to solitude. “Binging stuff is good. It's healthy. Avoiding people is another way to stay safe.” He'd say that to himself between sips of instant coffee and bites of cold pizza. While others meditated, Andrew streamed six seasons of Criminal Minds to feel emotionally regulated.
He didn’t need to do things—he liked to observe and watch. People, shows, social patterns, intellectual fads—he was a passive anthropologist in the age of content. A digital monk in pajama pants.
One Thursday morning, as he scrolled through an endless feed of nothing, he muttered, “Maybe this is hell... A loop of infinite content but no meaning.”
Just then, his phone buzzed.
“Wanna come to a live debate tonight? It’s at a pub. Topic: 'Is the concept of truth even useful anymore?'” — Max
Max was Andrew’s only friend, an insufferably optimistic philosophy student who believed every conversation was an audition for TEDx.
Against all odds—and mostly because the pub served excellent fried pickles—Andrew went.
The debate was predictably pretentious. A guy in a beanie compared “truth” to jazz. Another quoted Foucault four times in under five minutes. Andrew rolled his eyes so hard, his forehead cramped.
When it was his turn to speak, Andrew stood up, hoodie-draped, a monument to disillusionment.
“I’ve seen every perspective humanity’s filmed and uploaded. I’ve watched preachers, scientists, hacks, prophets, true crime narrators, TikTok philosophers, and even conspiracy theorists with tinfoil hats. You know what I’ve learned? Nobody knows anything. And the only honest people... are stand-up comics.”
The crowd laughed. Not at him—with him.
Afterward, someone approached him and said, “You should do stand-up. Seriously. That was better than half the set I opened with last week.”
Andrew shrugged. “I’m just lazy. Comedy takes effort.”
“Exactly why you’d be good. You’re already halfway to observational.”
A week later, Andrew was on stage at Open Mic Night. He had no act, no plan—just years of accumulated cynicism, sharp wit, and a backlog of punchlines no algorithm had predicted.
And the crowd? They loved it.
By the end of the night, someone in the back yelled, “What’s your name?”
Andrew grinned and gripped the mic like a reluctant messiah.
“Andrew. I’ve watched everything. And now, I guess... I’ve got something to say.”