In 2013, Norcott was nominated for 'Best New Show' at the Leicester Comedy Festival for his show Geoff Norcott Occasionally Sells Out, about – among other things – the fact he was now a Conservative voter, which he then took to the Edinburgh Fringe.[9]
He returned to the Fringe in 2015 with The Look of Moron, a further development of his voice as a political comic,[10] and again in 2016 with Conswervative, which received wide political acclaim and a successful sold-out run.[11]
In early 2017, Norcott made his first of several appearances on the BBC's Question Time and made his debut as a regular on BBC Two's The Mash Report, a programme he continued to appear on, including after 2021 when it relocated to Dave post-cancellation.[12]
Norcott took another show, Right Leaning, But Well Meaning, to the Fringe the same year to further acclaim, and the show was later recorded as a radio special for BBC Radio 4, airing in 2018.[13]
In 2018, he made his first appearance on Live at the Apollo, and took a new show, Traditionalism on a UK tour.[14]
Later the same year, Norcott appeared on Mock the Week for the first time, being the first openly pro-Brexit comedian on the show.
A 2019 appearance on Question Time prompted another online backlash for Norcott, after a clip of him criticising European Union President Donald Tusk went viral.[15] The same year, he presented the BBC Two documentary How The Middle Classes Ruined Britain, in which he investigated issues like how some people 'gamed' the system to secure places in good schools, and accusations of social cleansing in housing.[16]
2019 also saw Norcott become the first white male to join the BBC's diversity panel, by virtue of his working class background.[17] He has spoken of the irony of having, as a "straight, white, middle-aged man", taken advantage of diversity quotas to further his career.[18]
In November 2020, it was announced that Norcott would be publishing a memoir entitled Where Did I Go Right?, in which he "unpicks his working-class upbringing and his political journey".[19] The book (and audio-book, voiced by Norcott)[20] was released in May 2021 to mixed reception. In a three-star review in the Daily Telegraph, critic Dominic Cavendish described it as a "frank, light-hearted account of how Norcott came from working-class origins in south London to forge a career in comedy" as well as "a sober mapping of the changing political landscape".[21]
Podcast
In February 2019, Norcott launched a podcast titled What Most People Think, in which he aims to "get to the heart of what ordinary people think about social and political issues".[22] Now recorded weekly, the podcast is funded by Patreon donations from listeners. Norcott claims to have refused approaches from would-be advertisers so as to avoid the risk of his content being influenced or censored.[22] The podcast has been described by The Times as "amiably polemical".[3]
Regular minor features which supplement the interviews include a "cuss count" in which Norcott recounts the number of swear words used in the previous episode; a letters section in which observations from listeners are discussed; and a final segment in which Norcott shares recent reviews left for the podcast on iTunes. In reading out listener contributions, Norcott often adopts exaggeratedregional accents reflecting whichever part of the country the correspondent come from.
Personal life
Norcott lives in Cambridgeshire with his wife Emma, whom he married in 2004. In 2014 the couple's daughter Connie, was still-born at 34 weeks, Norcott has spoken openly of their loss and in May 2021 on an episode of Cariad Lloyd'sGriefcast podcast.[23] The couple now have a son named Sebastian.[3]
Norcott describes himself as a "right-wing libertarian".[24] He has previously claimed to be the only outspoken Conservative Party supporter on the British comedy circuit[25] and more recently suggested that he is one of only "about six" right wing comedians.[18]
In 2017, he was listed as one of the 'Top 100 Most Influential People on the Conservative Right'.[26]