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Rising Stars: Meet Dustin David

Today we’d like to introduce you to Dustin David.

Hi Dustin, thanks for sharing your story with us. To start, maybe you can tell our readers some of your backstory.
I was born and grew up in Maine. I always wanted to be a stand-up comedian and after High School, I started performing professionally when I was 19 in 2003. After a few years I eventually moved to Los Angeles. I had some issues with depression and alcoholism that had progressively got worse after moving to Los Angeles.

I thought they were just keeping from succeeding but in reality, it was keeping me from enjoying life at all. I got sober in 2013 and also started going to therapy a few years after that. Things were going well until the Pandemic when I had to stop performing for safety. Time away from the stand-up scene allowed me some space to really look at the stand-up culture as a whole, the people I worked with and how I was operating from a place of privilege. If I even wanted to continue doing comedy, I would have to reevaluate the kinds of shows and people I wanted to work with. Life got pretty dark when I was in isolation. I continued to stay vigilant about my sobriety and mental health. I went to therapy every week online and stayed connected to my sober community. Things really began to shift for me when I was watching some art documentaries and got inspired to start creating again. I took a bunch of online classes for graphic design, figure drawing and photography. I had identified as a comic for a long time but I really began to see myself as an artist and comedy could be a part of that but it doesn’t need to be the whole thing. Today I am really enjoying photography / art as a medium of expression but I have also been feeling drawn back to stand-up.

I’m sure you wouldn’t say it’s been obstacle free, but so far would you say the journey have been a fairly smooth road?
Growing up I struggled with feeling different and fitting in. Which is just the whitest of privileges. I thought it was just that I knew I wanted to be a comedian and that made me different but when I got older I thought it might be something else. After some years of sobriety and the patience of my therapist, I had the realization that I am bisexual. I think I might have known for a while but couldn’t accept it to be true. I feel like that was a contributing factor to my drinking and also serious suicide attempt right after High School. I think my solution at the time was “Maybe if I kill myself I won’t have to tell anyone.” I have come to accept and even cherish this part of myself. I think a much funnier answer would be “Yes, the road has been completely smooth. No struggles!”

Thanks for sharing that. So, maybe next you can tell us a bit more about your work?
I do art, photography and comedy. I would say that I am most known for comedy and hope to someday be seen as an artist as well. I am planning on having an art show in 2023. Right now I am most proud of my comedy special “Something Pretentious” on my website www.dustindavidcomedy.com. What sets me apart from most other comedians and artists is that I am fucking hilarious.

What do you like best about our city? What do you like least?
What I like most about Hollywood is the acceptance of being weird. I really used to resent being called or seen as “weird” but after spending a good amount of time alone, I feel like I came into my own in that way. Hollywood is kind of the perfect place for me to be weird in a community with other people doing the same thing. Sometimes it feels like a bunch of people from different places having the realization like “Yeah, I have to get out of here. I’m too weird for this place.” What I like least about Hollywood or maybe it’s the part that I find so baffling is how a city can have so much money but can’t allocate enough money to adequately care for the city’s most vulnerable citizens. I’m sure there is a lot of ignorance on my part as to why things are the way they are but it’s really heartbreaking to see people really trying to get help and leaving empty-handed.

Contact Info:

Image Credits
Dustin David, Alex Steed, Amber Carter-Laflamme, Dare Williams, Elise Alves

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