AARON WOODALL
AARON WOODALL
Aaron Woodall is as charming and delightful on stage as he is honest and vulnerable. Once a nice young man adored by mothers and bishops everywhere, Aaron now sadly finds joy in sick, depraved delights such as marijuana and R-rated movies (both good, it turns out). But even after growing up to learn that God is dead, love isn't real, and beer doesn't even taste very good, his ability to effervescently share all of life's sad disillusions with a sense of wide-eyed excitement got him named one of Conan O’Brien’s Comics To Watch at the New York City Comedy Festival.
You can find his "hilarious and heartwarming" 2024 special Cry For Me Daddy streaming on YouTube. He also has two specials on streaming now on Dry Bar Comedy and Comedy Dynamics, and his aptly-named 2020 album WOODALLALONE is available for purchase on Bandcamp. He has a viral TikTok but he doesn't like to talk about it.
In 2018 he co-started and co-hosted the incredibly personal and somehow popular Mormon and the Meth-Head podcast, which resonated with mentally-ill listeners around the world. He was invited later that year to the New York City Comedy Festival, being named to the Comics To Watch showcase, and getting to open for Bert Kreischer at the historic Town Hall theater. He has participated in numerous festivals and competitions, never winning any of them. His jokes have been seen on FOX, Hulu, Dry Bar Comedy, Epix, and the Boise, Idaho Army Navy Surplus Store's website (this is true, apparently).
Aaron Woodall is as charming and delightful on stage as he is honest and vulnerable. Once a nice young man adored by mothers and bishops everywhere, Aaron now sadly finds joy in sick, depraved delights such as marijuana and R-rated movies (both good, it turns out). But even after growing up to learn that God is dead, love isn't real, and beer doesn't even taste very good, his ability to effervescently share all of life's sad disillusions with a sense of wide-eyed excitement got him named one of Conan O’Brien’s Comics To Watch at the New York City Comedy Festival.
You can find his "hilarious and heartwarming" 2024 special Cry For Me Daddy streaming on YouTube. He also has two specials on streaming now on Dry Bar Comedy and Comedy Dynamics, and his aptly-named 2020 album WOODALLALONE is available for purchase on Bandcamp. He has a viral TikTok but he doesn't like to talk about it.
In 2018 he co-started and co-hosted the incredibly personal and somehow popular Mormon and the Meth-Head podcast, which resonated with mentally-ill listeners around the world. He was invited later that year to the New York City Comedy Festival, being named to the Comics To Watch showcase, and getting to open for Bert Kreischer at the historic Town Hall theater. He has participated in numerous festivals and competitions, never winning any of them. His jokes have been seen on FOX, Hulu, Dry Bar Comedy, Epix, and the Boise, Idaho Army Navy Surplus Store's website (this is true, apparently).
No refunds or exchanges.
Fee applies if transferring confirmed ticket purchase to another guest.
Ages 18+
Aaron Woodall is as charming and delightful on stage as he is honest and vulnerable. Once a nice young man adored by mothers and bishops everywhere, Aaron now sadly finds joy in sick, depraved delights such as marijuana and R-rated movies (both good, it turns out). But even after growing up to learn that God is dead, love isn't real, and beer doesn't even taste very good, his ability to effervescently share all of life's sad disillusions with a sense of wide-eyed excitement got him named one of Conan O’Brien’s Comics To Watch at the New York City Comedy Festival.
You can find his "hilarious and heartwarming" 2024 special Cry For Me Daddy streaming on YouTube. He also has two specials on streaming now on Dry Bar Comedy and Comedy Dynamics, and his aptly-named 2020 album WOODALLALONE is available for purchase on Bandcamp. He has a viral TikTok but he doesn't like to talk about it.
In 2018 he co-started and co-hosted the incredibly personal and somehow popular Mormon and the Meth-Head podcast, which resonated with mentally-ill listeners around the world. He was invited later that year to the New York City Comedy Festival, being named to the Comics To Watch showcase, and getting to open for Bert Kreischer at the historic Town Hall theater. He has participated in numerous festivals and competitions, never winning any of them. His jokes have been seen on FOX, Hulu, Dry Bar Comedy, Epix, and the Boise, Idaho Army Navy Surplus Store's website (this is true, apparently).