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Hari Kondabolu

Hari Kondabolu

watch free funny videos from stand-up comedian hari kondabolu on comedy centrals jokes.com
  • Featured in "Live at Gotham" and "John Oliver's NY Stand-Up Show"
  • His short film "MANOJ" has screened in festivals around the world
  • Hari's half-hour "Comedy Central Presents" special premieres this season

Hari Kondabolu Biography

According to the Seattle Times, Hari Kondabolu is "a young man reaching for the hand-scalding torch of confrontational comics like Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor." Like his comedic heroes, he wants to speak truth to power with confrontational and personal material. Unlike them, he does not want to die of a morphine overdose or set himself on fire.

Hari has performed on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," Comedy Central's "Live at Gotham" and "John Oliver's New York Stand-Up Show" and the 2007 HBO U.S. Comedy Arts Festival. He recently filmed his "Comedy Central Presents" half-hour television special, which will air on the network in early 2011.

Hari also co-hosts the mostly improvised talk show "The Untitled Kondabolu Brothers Project" with his younger brother Ashok ("Dap" from hip hop group Das Racist). The show is performed regularly in New York City.

Additionally, his short film "MANOJ," which he wrote, co-produced and starred in, has screened in festivals throughout the world including the Just for Laughs Festival in Montreal and Chicago.

Hari was born and raised in Queens, NY and graduated with a B.A. in Comparative Politics from Bowdoin College in 2004. A former immigrant rights organizer in Seattle, Hari also earned a Masters in Human Rights from the London School of Economics in 2008, writing a merit-earning dissertation entitled "Mexican Returnees as Internally Displaced People: An Argument for the Protection of Economic Migrants Under the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement." This is, by far, the least funny thing he's ever written.

Hari Kondabolu Jokes See all 16 Hari Kondabolu Jokes »

The cocoa butter had been moved to the 'ethnic needs' section of my supermarket. And at first I was happy. I'm like, 'Ethnic needs: end of police brutality, more access to health care, more educational opportunities. Finally.' No, no -- just hair rel...
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