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Drew Lynch

American stand-up comedian (born 1991) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Drew Lynch (born August 10, 1991),[3][4] a.k.a. the Stuttering Comedian,[5][6] is an American stand-up comedian. He is known for his 2015 performances on America's Got Talent (AGT), where he finished in second place in the 10th season finale, and for his long-running YouTube series Dog Vlog.

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Early life and education

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Lynch was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, to parents Tim and Chris Lynch. The eldest of three children, he attended Robey Elementary School in Wayne Township until age 9, when his family moved to Las Vegas. Drew was determined to be an actor, so his parents enrolled him in the Las Vegas Academy of the Arts (LVA). He read plays constantly, whether they were homework assignments or not. At a 2022 TED talk, he recalled that he rode the city bus to school at 11 years old by himself. "Every day on those commutes I read all of Neil Simon, Tennessee Williams, Shakespeare, and all of my hard work was paying off, because the very first play I got cast in, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, I landed the lead role of Oompa-Loompa."[7]

In 2008, he played Joseph Merrick in the Bernard Pomerance play The Elephant Man at the LVA's Lowden Theater. A theater critic wrote, "Drew Lynch is a high school junior with what some might call wholesome, all-American good looks. But he seems to lose his attractiveness in the Las Vegas Academy of International Studies, Performing and Visual Arts production of The Elephant Man. With no obvious makeup, he plays a disfigured man. Under the direction of Terry McGonigle, he gets us to believe not only that he's physically challenged, but that he's spiritually dying. He seems to have an intuitive understanding of the role, and you can't help but wonder how a boy so young can know so much about human behavior."[8]

After graduating high school, at 19 he moved to Los Angeles.[9][10] Lynch planned to become a movie actor,[11] and he aspired to dramatic and leading man roles.[12]

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The softball accident

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In 2011, when he was 20, Lynch was working as a ticket taker in a Burbank comedy club[12] and auditioning for TV and film roles.[2] He knew he had made his way into Hollywood when he received callbacks for second auditions for How I Met Your Mother and Mad Men, and he had a tryout for a Disney show lined up that week.[9][12]

However, the day before the audition for How I Met Your Mother, an accident during a rec league softball game with a team from work changed his life.[12] His position was shortstop, he told an interviewer. "I was playing softball and a hard-hit ball took a bad hop and struck me in the throat. I fell and smacked my head on the ground."[13] Feeling dazed, he went home, and instead of showing up for work that night, he slept. Lynch told The Indianapolis Star, "I woke up talking much slower."[12] He felt bad enough to go to the hospital. With paralyzed vocal cords, a traumatic brain injury, and a concussion, he was diagnosed with a resulting neurogenic stutter. Doctors thought the stutter was temporary, but Lynch missed the audition for How I Met Your Mother.[12] His agent and manager weren't willing to wait. "I called my agent reps to tell them what happened. They dropped me." While in the hospital, he began writing his angry thoughts on napkins, and then turning some of them into punchlines. Lynch told an interviewer for The Spokesman-Review, "I got the cold shoulder and I realized that I wanted control while I rehabbed, and that's when I discovered stand-up."[13]

"I remember feeling just devastated," he told the Tucson Weekly in 2022. "I had meetings with casting directors. I felt like I was on the cusp of booking some nice stuff. I struggled with it, and I struggled with it immensely before realizing that I was going to have to do something to get out of it. I had to feel I could get that control back again. I like to be in control all the time. But before that, it was heavy, heavy stages of grief and anger."[9]

Drew found an emotional support dog, a Vizsla named Stella, to live with him.

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Career

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He already knew Samuel J. Comroe, who has Tourette syndrome and who was starting a career in stand-up comedy at the club where Lynch worked. They became friends, encouraged each other, and in the early 2010s began touring the comedy club and college circuit together, with material poking fun at their disabilities. The latter half of their sets frequently featured Question and Answer comedy sessions, followed by a meet-and-greet.[11]

In 2014, Lynch appeared in The Makings of a Stand-Up Comedian, a documentary film about thirteen comedians all at different stages in their career.[14]

America's Got Talent

Among thousands of other competitors, Lynch auditioned for season 10 of America's Got Talent on May 26, 2015.[2] He described how he had decided, after developing his stutter, to pursue a career in stand-up "as a way of coping with it." "I believe you can turn anything into a positive," he said, "that's why I'm here."[15] His jokes drew standing ovations, and the audience chanted "Send him through!", signalling that they wanted unanimous approval from the judges. When the judges (Howard Stern, Heidi Klum, Mel B, and Howie Mandel) gave their reactions, Mandel hit the Golden Buzzer, sending Lynch straight to the quarterfinal live shows at Radio City Music Hall. Lynch competed in the quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals.

His quarterfinals appearance, on August 11, consisted of joking about his service dog Stella, with the punchline a joke about having a cat with Tourette's, an in-joke for his friend Comroe.[16] His semifinals and finals competitions, held September 1 and 15, were again about his stuttering. Lynch consistently drew standing ovations and was among the top five performers. In the end, he finished in second place behind ventriloquist Paul Zerdin.[17]

In 2019, he appeared on America's Got Talent: The Champions.

After his AGT success, Lynch moved back to Las Vegas, where he performed live shows. Later, he returned to Los Angeles to work on new projects.

YouTube

Lynch has a YouTube channel at which he posts content, mostly in the style of self-deprecating and observational comedy, with over 2.5 million subscribers (as of June, 2025).

Stella and Dog Vlog

For several years he streamed a series titled Dog Vlog,[18] starring his service dog Stella, whose wry and snarky responses to his conversations with her appeared in speech balloons.[19] Lynch told an interviewer that she excelled as an emotional support dog, because he could lie down and say "comfort" and Stella would come close for as long as he needed.[6] Stella had first become famous with Lynch's America's Got Talent quarterfinals appearance, in which he joked, "People are crazy, because they'll come up and ask questions to my dog. I'm the one that can talk... kinda."[16] Fans saw in his videos that, talking to Stella, he didn't stutter nearly as much.[6] Lynch created an Instagram page for her, Stella Lynch, Queen of the Internet (@morefamousthanmydad).

Beginning in December 2017, Lynch starred in a flash animation series named Therapy Dog, created with animator Tony Celano. The series was about a character called Andy (Lynch) recounting his daily struggles with his dog acting as his therapist.[10]

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Albums

Lynch released his first album, Concussed, on Spotify in November 2021.[20]

Personal life

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Lynch first crossed paths with athlete Melanie Sergiev in the early 2010s. Sergiev, who was born in Bulgaria in 1996,[21] grew up in Craftsbury, Vermont, where she attended Craftsbury Academy.[22] At Northern Vermont University she was a member of the Badgers women's soccer team,[23] and graduated with a degree in Outdoor Education.[24] She taught elementary-level physical education with orienteering skills[25] and became a professional competitive participant in ski orienteering.[13] She and Lynch began dating in 2017, and were wedded in a mountaintop ceremony in Vermont on June 18, 2022.[26][27][28]

Drew and Melanie Lynch live in Los Angeles. Melanie's athleticism and ADHD provide material for Drew's stand-up shows and YouTube channel posts, and she sometimes joins him onstage at his tour gigs.

On January 20, 2022, Lynch's dog Stella died at age 8 from a neurological degenerative disease.[6]

During the years after his America's Got Talent appearances, Lynch's stutter had improved to the point that his YouTube fans commented they barely noticed it. In 2024, he posted a video titled "My Stutter Came Back...", in which he discussed recent stress and bodily spasms with a therapist and included footage of onstage appearances with before-and-after examples within a single week. In September 2024, he haltingly told a comedy club audience, "It's been a good week in that my stutter has been a fucking asshole. I don't really necessarily get to control it all the time, but right now it's ... exorcism-style." The audience shouted, "We love you!" and gave him a standing ovation.[5]

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Filmography

Film

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Television

2015 America's Got Talent Himself TV series, 7 episodes (audition; quarterfinals; semifinals; finals; Grande Finale)
2015 The Dr. Oz Show Himself TV series, 1 episode
2015 Dogs & Me Billy TV series, 1 episode ("Sorry Laura")
2016 Maron Adam TV series, recurring role, 4 episodes
2017 Cassandra French's Finishing School Doug TV series, recurring role, 6 episodes
2017 Totally Megan Bill TV series, 1 episode ("Bah HumBug")
2017 Conan Himself TV series, 1 episode
2018 We're Not Friends Cameron TV series, 1 episode ("Can't Live with 'Em, Can't Live Without 'Em")
2018 The 2018 Media Access Awards Himself TV special
2019 Home & Family Himself American daytime talk show
2019 America's Got Talent: The Champions Himself - Contestant Spin-off of America's Got Talent (episode S1.E4 "The Champions Four")
2019 The Comedy Store Tonight Himself TV series, 1 episode
2020 The Stand-Up Show with Jon Dore Himself TV series, 1 episode

Stand-up specials

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References

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