Cum Town

Last updated

Cum Town
Cum Town logo.png
Genre
LanguageEnglish
Cast and voices
Hosted by
Production
ProductionNick Mullen
Length60–90 minutes
Publication
No. of episodes317 (+ 278 premium)
Original releaseMay 11, 2016 
June 23, 2022 [a]
UpdatesTwice weekly
Related
Related shows The Adam Friedland Show
Website patreon.com/CumtownArchive

Cum Town is a comedy podcast hosted by New York City based comedians Nick Mullen, Stavros Halkias, and Adam Friedland, and produced between 2016 and 2022 (with a single finale episode in 2025). During its run, it was consistently one of the most popular podcasts on Patreon and at its 2022 conclusion was one of the top 25 comedy podcasts on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. In July 2022, it was succeeded by Mullen and Friedland's spin-off podcast and interview show The Adam Friedland Show . [2] [3] [4]

Contents

History

Nick Mullen (cropped).jpg
Stavros Halkias, circa October 2024 (further cropped).jpg
Adam Friedland.jpg
Cum Town hosts (left to right) Nick Mullen, Stavros Halkias, and Adam Friedland

In 2016, Cum Town was created by Nick Mullen, the primary host and producer of the show. [5] Stavros Halkias was the first co-host; Adam Friedland became a second co-host, starting as a frequent guest and first appearing in the show's second episode.

The podcast concluded in June 2022 after months of the hosts suggesting its end as well as their renewed interest in stand-up comedy, particularly Halkias, who released his debut comedy special that month. On June 25, 2022, Halkias announced that he was no longer part of Cum Town. [6] Subsequently, Mullen and Friedland revealed their plan for a spin-off podcast, The Adam Friedland Show , to be hosted by Friedland and produced by Mullen. [7]

On March 3, 2025, an episode titled Cum Town Farewell was uploaded to the podcast's Patreon account, with its description having described the release as "...the final episode of Cum Town," accompanying a larger expression of gratitude for fans of the podcast. [8]

Content

Cum Town episodes are generally 60 minutes long and consisted of improvised comedy blended with casual unscripted conversation. Featured guests include Tim Dillon, David Cross, [9] Bam Margera, Dan Soder, Bonnie McFarlane, Jim Norton, Kurt Metzger, Brandon Wardell, and Dasha Nekrasova. [10]

Many of the show's riffs come from crude puns and rhymes—for example, "Louis SeemsGay" [11] for Louis C.K.—and involved sexually explicit scenarios or ethnic and racial stereotypes. [2] [3] Conversations generally centered on the hosts' personal lives, the news, the worlds of stand-up comedy and social media, and pop culture history. [1] Friedland often served as the butt of Mullen's and Halkias's jokes and insults.

Mullen does many celebrity impressions, including Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Tucker Carlson, Michael Douglas, Dennis Hopper, E. Jean Carroll, Dwayne Johnson, Joe Biden, Andrew Cuomo, Patrick Warburton, Rip Torn, Gene Hackman, Jon Hamm, Norm MacDonald, Joe List, Mark Normand, Jason Statham, Ice-T, Dave Portnoy, [12] James Gandolfini, Sean Connery, Regis Philbin and Homer Simpson, [13] with some episodes of the show featuring him trying to perfect a new impression on-air.

Availability and listenership

Weekly free episodes of the show were available via Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Audible, among other services. [14] [15] [16] Subscribers who contributed at least $5 per month via Patreon gain access to additional weekly premium bonus episodes. [17] During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the show was conducted via Zoom; episodes were broadcast live via YouTube.

As of June 2022, Cum Town was the 10th-most popular podcast on Patreon and the 12th-most popular creator on the platform overall; with more than 20,000 paying members, it had around $100,000 in monthly earnings. [18] It was the number one podcast on the platform for most of 2017 and 2018. [18] On Apple Podcasts, it was the 17th-most popular comedy podcast in the U.S. and 126th overall. [19]

Reception

Dirtbag left association

Cum Town was often associated with the dirtbag left, though it is not expressly political. [20] [21] [22] A February 2020 New York Times article described Cum Town (by allusion, citing its "unprintable name") as "bards of the new American left", alongside podcasts Chapo Trap House and Red Scare. [23] Several Chapo hosts, including Amber A'Lee Frost, Will Menaker, and Felix Biederman have appeared on Cum Town; Mullen, Halkias, and Friedland have made multiple appearances on Chapo.

Though the hosts occasionally discuss their responses to current events and politics—with all three expressing support for 2020 presidential candidate Bernie Sanders—they deny any specific political agenda. Mullen attributed people's tendency to associate the podcast with the movement to the Cum Town hosts being part of the same Brooklyn social circle as the hosts of Chapo Trap House. [24] In May 2017, Friedland tweeted, "Cum town is not a socialist podcast it's not a fascist podcast it's a podcast about being gay with your dad." [25]

In July 2021, the hosts disagreed with Andrew Marantz's characterization of the podcast as a "flagship product of the dirtbag left" in a New Yorker article. [26] [27] Halkias instead suggested that its motivating force was not political but financial. The hosts initially believed the podcast would be unsuccessful, "and people are stupid enough to give us money, and we are trapped doing [the podcast]". [26]

Criticism

In association with their dirtbag left peers, the podcast and its hosts have been criticized for their use of ironic offensiveness. [2] [3] [20] One blogger argued that the hosts' use of slurs and edgy jokes, particularly Mullen's, perpetuates harassment and continually crosses the line into actual hatred and contempt. [28] Others have countered that offensiveness is subjective. [29] In 2018, the co-hosts jokingly compared the treatment of their podcast to Milo Yiannopoulos and Carl Benjamin, who both got their Patreon accounts suspended for similar jokes. Mullen jokingly noted, "we're the good guys...we're on the right side of history." [30]

Some online commentators have made a distinction between the podcast and their listeners, critiquing the show's fan base as opposed to the hosts, or critiquing both in tandem. [22] In 2020, the podcast's subreddit (which was not moderated or endorsed by the hosts) was removed from Reddit due to the platform's new policies on hate speech. [31]

Notes

  1. Farewell episode released on March 3, 2025

References

  1. 1 2 "Cum Town Live". YEG Live. Retrieved July 14, 2021.
  2. 1 2 3 Chery, Samantha (May 25, 2023). "The Matty Healy, Ice Spice (and Taylor Swift) drama, explained". The Washington Post . Retrieved May 29, 2023. While a guest on "The Adam Friedland Show" in February, Healy laughed as the two podcast hosts, Friedland and Nick Mullen, made fun of Ice Spice
  3. 1 2 3 Graye, Megan (February 10, 2023). "Matty Healy sparks backlash over interview that mocks Japanese, Hawaiian and Scottish people". The Independent . Retrieved May 29, 2023. The 1975 frontman appeared in the latest episode of The Adam Friedland Show with comedians and podcast hosts Friedland and Nick Mullen.
  4. Lindsay, Kate (May 27, 2023). "My Boyfriend and I Are Closer Than Ever, Thanks to the Taylor Swift-Matty Healy Drama". GQ . Retrieved May 31, 2023. The niche comedians behind that podcast are now indirectly responsible for the soft cancellation of one of the music industry's biggest artists. The Adam Friedland Show, known in an earlier iteration as Cum Town, featured Matty Healy as a guest on February 9.
  5. "Nick Mullen". The Stand Restaurant & Comedy Club. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  6. Halkias, Stavros [@stavvybaby] (June 25, 2022). "We had a good run 🤍🤍" (Tweet). Retrieved June 25, 2022 via Twitter.
  7. Bernstein, Joseph (July 20, 2025). "Who Is Watching All These Podcasts?" . The New York Times . Adam Friedland, a comedian who started his video interview show in 2022, first came to prominence on an irreverent and lewd audio-only hangout podcast with two fellow comedians.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. "Cum Town Farewell | Cum Town Archive". Patreon. Retrieved March 3, 2025.
  9. Halkias, Stavros, with Adam Friedland, Nick Mullen. Episode 11: Interview with David Cross. Cum Town (podcast).
  10. McNamara, Sylvie (October 29, 2018). "Red Scare's Real Offense Is Nihilism". Podcast Review.
  11. "Ep. 118 – Louis SeemsGay from Cum Town". stitcher.com. Retrieved June 16, 2020.[ permanent dead link ]
  12. "Ep 246 - Indiana Loans" . Retrieved August 26, 2022.
  13. "Cumtown Nick's Impression Compilation". YouTube. September 23, 2021. Retrieved August 24, 2022.
  14. "Cum Town". Spotify. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  15. "Cum Town on Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  16. "Cum Town: Nick Mullen". Amazon. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  17. "The Cum Boys is creating Cum Town Podcast". Patreon. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  18. 1 2 "The Cum Boys: Patreon Earnings + Statistics + Graphs + Rank". Graphtreon. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  19. "Cum Town Podcast – Listen, Reviews, Charts". chartable.com. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  20. 1 2 Tolentino, Jia (May 29, 2023). "Who Is Matty Healy? For the front man of the 1975, fame is its own kind of performance". The New Yorker . Retrieved May 31, 2023. A month later, Healy went on a podcast called "The Adam Friedland Show." Friedland, whom Healy had befriended in the past couple of years, used to host the podcast "Cum Town," a title that reflects the "Borat"-esque level of seriousness that he and his co-hosts generally brought to the table. Friedland is part of a downtown New York scene referred to as Dimes Square, which, during the pandemic, became widely known for an ostensibly transgressive rejection of liberal pieties and a reactionary brand of post-left politics particularly associated with another podcast, "Red Scare."
  21. North, Anna (October 24, 2017). "Listen to what socialist women are saying about misogyny on the left". Vox. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  22. 1 2 Spies, Michelle (September 25, 2019). "I Made the Internet Vote to Determine the Worst Fan Base. Here's What I Learned". Vulture. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  23. Bowles, Nellie (February 29, 2020). "The Pied Pipers of the Dirtbag Left Want to Lead Everyone to Bernie Sanders". The New York Times . Archived from the original on March 8, 2022. Retrieved June 16, 2020. The fivesome of "Chapo Trap House" are not the only bards of the new American left — there is "Red Scare" and another whose name cannot be printed — but they have led the way for a movement that together generates millions of dollars a year.
  24. "Chatting with Nick Mullen Talking with Marianne Williamson". YouTube. January 19, 2025. Retrieved January 19, 2025.
  25. Friedland, Adam [@AdamFriedland] (May 5, 2017). "Cum town is not a socialist podcast it's not a fascist podcast it's a podcast about being gay with your dad" (Tweet). Archived from the original on June 23, 2020. Retrieved June 23, 2020 via Twitter.
  26. 1 2 Cum Town. "Episode 270 – semone biles". Apple Podcasts – Cum Town. Event occurs at 36:07. Retrieved July 29, 2021.
  27. Marantz, Andrew. "The Post-Dirtbag Left". The New Yorker. Retrieved July 29, 2021.
  28. Ross, Alexander Reid (March 8, 2021). "These 'Dirtbag Left' Stars Are Flirting With the Far Right". The Daily Beast. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  29. "We're giving comedy too much credit". The Stony Brook Press. November 4, 2019. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  30. "Sargon My Dick". Patreon. December 20, 2018. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  31. Newton, Casey (June 29, 2020). "Reddit bans r/The_Donald and r/ChapoTrapHouse as part of a major expansion of its rules". The Verge. Retrieved July 13, 2021.