Guy Montgomery
Guy Montgomery is a New Zealand-born comedian, podcaster, improviser, and television host renowned for his deadpan stand-up style and innovative comedy formats.[1][2] Born 29 September 1988 (age 37) in Wellington, New Zealand, and raised in Christchurch, Montgomery graduated from Victoria University of Wellington at age 22 without a clear career path and initially worked odd jobs in hospitality and media.[3][2] At 22, he moved to Canada on a Commonwealth visa, living in Montreal and Toronto, where he performed over 400 stand-up gigs in a year—averaging more than one per day—to build his skills and develop a relaxed, conversational stage presence that contrasted with more aggressive comedy styles.[2] This intensive experience, equivalent to three years of performing in New Zealand, propelled his career upon returning home.[2] Montgomery's breakthrough came with the 2014 Billy T Award for top emerging stand-up comedian at the New Zealand International Comedy Festival, followed by multiple Best Male Comedian wins at the NZ Comedy Guild Awards, including in 2021 for the third time.[3][4] He received the prestigious Fred Award in 2023, recognizing his established excellence in comedy.[3] As a podcaster, he co-hosts The Worst Idea of All Time with Tim Batt, a cult-favorite series that began in 2015 and has drawn dedicated international audiences, including sold-out live events like a 350-person show in New York in 2016.[1] His most prominent creation is Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont-Spelling Bee, a comedic game show co-created with Joseph Moore and co-hosted by Aaron Chen, which debuted on Zoom and YouTube in Auckland during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown as an improvised entertainment for friends and comedians.[1] The format, blending absurd spelling challenges with celebrity guests like Hannah Gadsby and Hamish Blake, evolved into a television series on Australia's ABC, with its second season airing in 2025 and earning widespread acclaim for its "enjoyable to watch and irritating to take part in" dynamic.[1] The show's success tripled his stand-up audiences in Australia and led to street-level recognition there.[1] In 2025, Montgomery won the Graham Kennedy Award for Most Popular New Talent at the Australian Logie Awards for the ABC adaptation, marking a significant international milestone for the Kiwi performer.[5]Early life and education
Early years
Guy Montgomery was born on September 29, 1988, in Wellington, New Zealand.[6][7] As the middle child of three siblings, he grew up with an older sister and a younger sister.[7] His father's career in finance prompted the family to relocate to Christchurch when Montgomery was young, where he spent much of his childhood.[7][8] Montgomery has described himself as an extremely annoying child during family dinners, where his primary goal was to make his younger sister laugh so uncontrollably that she would snort food out of her nose and have to leave the table.[1][9] In one notable anecdote, he once pretended to be a South African exchange student while his parents hosted friends for dinner, leading his mother to chase him around the house in a mix of amusement and correction as she explained his true identity to the guests.[1] These playful disruptions highlighted his early penchant for humor and performance within the family setting.[1]Education
Guy Montgomery, who grew up in Christchurch, New Zealand, pursued higher education at Victoria University of Wellington.[10] There, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in theatre, film, and media, completing his studies around 2010.[7]Stand-up and live shows
Early performances
Montgomery began his stand-up comedy career in 2010 at the age of 22, shortly after relocating to Auckland from Wellington following his university studies.[11] His initial performances consisted of local open mic nights, where he experimented with material but soon grew dissatisfied with his inconsistent work ethic and limited opportunities in New Zealand's smaller comedy scene.[11] Seeking a more rigorous environment to develop his craft, he moved to Canada later that year on a Commonwealth visa, aiming to immerse himself fully in stand-up without the pressure of performing for familiar audiences back home.[2] In Montreal, Montgomery worked at a sushi restaurant by day while performing stand-up two to three nights a week at local venues, marking his first sustained exposure to international comedy circuits.[11] He then relocated to Toronto for seven months, where the city's abundance of open mic opportunities allowed him to perform a minimum of ten gigs per week—often more than one per day—accelerating his growth through sheer volume and isolation from his support network.[11][2] During this period, he shifted from scripted impressions of comedians like Peter Cook and Dudley Moore to improvisational sets, spending four months creating material on the spot, which helped him cultivate a more authentic, vulnerable style comfortable with pauses and audience interaction.[11] These experiences in Canada, which he later described as a "lonely year" that condensed years of potential development, were pivotal in building his confidence and comedic voice.[2] Returning to New Zealand around 2011, Montgomery made his debut full-length solo show at the New Zealand International Comedy Festival, earning critical recognition as an emerging talent.[11] This performance led to him winning the prestigious Billy T Award for top emerging stand-up comedian at the festival's Last Laughs gala.[12] The award, inspired by New Zealand comedy legend Billy T James and given annually since 1997 to promising performers, validated his early grind and opened doors to broader opportunities in live comedy.[13]Major tours and specials
Montgomery's stand-up career gained international traction through performances at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, beginning with a co-headlining show alongside Rose Matafeo titled Rose Matafeo and Guy Montgomery Are Friends in 2015. This collaboration marked an early milestone in his live comedy work, blending personal anecdotes with observational humor. In 2019, he debuted his first solo hour at the Fringe with I Was Part of the Problem Before We Were Talking About It, a reflective set exploring personal growth and societal blind spots, which received positive reviews for its introspective yet accessible style.[14][15][16] His touring profile expanded significantly in the early 2020s with sold-out runs across Australia and New Zealand. In 2021, Montgomery presented Guy Montgomery by Name, Guy Montgomery by Nature at the New Zealand International Comedy Festival (NZICF), focusing on identity and everyday absurdities, before taking it nationwide. The show was later adapted into a television special, airing on Australia's Network 10 in 2023 as part of The Malthouse Stand-Up Series, where it highlighted his deadpan delivery and self-deprecating wit. An audio version was released on Bandcamp in 2021, allowing broader access to the full set.[17][18][19] The 2022 tour of the same show, alongside live iterations of his panel format Guy Mont-Spelling Bee, sold out venues at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and other Australian stops, solidifying his appeal in the region. Building on this momentum, Montgomery's 2023 tour My Brain Is Blowing Me Crazy played to packed houses in both countries, delving into themes of aging, mental health, and modern life. The full special was self-released on YouTube in February 2024, garnering widespread acclaim for its energetic pacing and relatable storytelling.[4][20][21] In 2024, he toured New Zealand with Over 50,000,000 Guy Fans Can't Be Wrong, a satirical take on fame and fan culture that also appeared at the Edinburgh Fringe, earning praise for its sharp social commentary. The tour extended into Australia in 2025, including dates at the Adelaide Fringe Festival and Canberra Comedy Festival. A filmed version of the show premiered on YouTube in February 2025, further extending its reach. These tours and specials underscore Montgomery's evolution from Fringe performer to a mainstay on international comedy circuits, with consistent sell-outs reflecting his growing popularity.[22][23][24]Podcasts and audio work
The Worst Idea of All Time
The Worst Idea of All Time is a comedy podcast co-hosted by New Zealand comedians Guy Montgomery and Tim Batt, launched in February 2014. The show's initial concept involved the hosts watching and reviewing the 2013 film Grown Ups 2—widely regarded as critically panned—once per week for an entire year, resulting in 52 episodes of humorous, self-deprecating commentary on the movie's repetitive flaws.[25] Recorded in a basic setup at a Grey Lynn flat in Auckland, the podcast quickly gained traction after a 2014 shoutout from American comedian Paul Scheer on his How Did This Get Made? series, which helped propel it to international audiences.[26] The first season's endurance format emphasized the hosts' escalating frustration and absurd tangents, often prioritizing banter over plot recaps, which resonated with listeners seeking absurd comedy.[27] By December 2014, it had amassed over 150,000 downloads, with episodes averaging 10,000 to 20,000 downloads each in its early months.[28] A 2014 Vice profile further boosted its visibility, framing the project as a masochistic comedy experiment.[25] The podcast's success led to a second season in 2015, where Montgomery and Batt repeated the format with Sex and the City 2, again committing to 52 weekly viewings and reviews.[26] Subsequent seasons expanded the premise to other poorly received films and series, maintaining the weekly repetition while varying the content for freshness. Season 3 (2016) focused on the film We Are Your Friends, followed by shorter miniseries such as a 2019 run on Cats and a reverse-order marathon of the Fast & Furious franchise as the finale.[26] Over its decade-long run, the podcast produced over 800 episodes, evolving from strict film reviews to include guest appearances, live events, and thematic digressions that highlighted the hosts' chemistry and cultural commentary.[29] By 2024, it had surpassed 20 million total downloads, establishing it as one of New Zealand's most successful comedy podcasts and influencing the genre's emphasis on long-form, repetitive humor.[30] The main repetitive seasons concluded in February 2024 after a live screening event of Grown Ups 2 in Auckland, with hosts citing the mental exhaustion of sustained repetition and personal life changes as reasons for ending that format.[26] However, the podcast has continued with new formats, such as the "Good Times" series launched in August 2024, ongoing as of 2025.[31] In this new era, episodes like those in the "Good Times" series focus on varied comedic topics, guest interviews, and live events, with over 30 episodes released by mid-2025. Despite the toll, The Worst Idea of All Time garnered a dedicated global fanbase, including endorsements from comedians like Greg Davies and Ayo Edebiri, and won the Best Comedy Podcast award at the 2024 New Zealand Podcast Awards.[26][32] Post-finale, Montgomery and Batt continued occasional bonus content via Substack, preserving the podcast's legacy of turning cinematic punishment into comedic gold.[33]'Til Death Do Us Blart
'Til Death Do Us Blart is an annual comedy podcast co-hosted by New Zealand comedians Guy Montgomery and Tim Batt, along with American siblings Justin McElroy, Travis McElroy, and Griffin McElroy. The series premiered on November 26, 2015, and centers on the hosts collectively watching and reviewing the 2015 film Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2 during each episode, with a solemn vow to repeat the process every American Thanksgiving indefinitely, or "'til death do us blart."[34][35] The podcast's concept draws directly from Montgomery and Batt's earlier project, The Worst Idea of All Time, in which the duo committed to watching and reviewing poorly received films repeatedly over extended periods as a humorous act of self-imposed torment. This endurance-style comedy inspired the creation of 'Til Death Do Us Blart' as a collaborative extension, inviting the McElroy brothers—known for their podcast My Brother, My Brother and Me—to join in perpetuating the review of Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2, a sequel widely panned for its plot and execution. The hosts frame the series as an "eternal curse," emphasizing its unending nature, where upon a host's death, the responsibility passes to a successor to maintain the tradition.[34][36] Episodes follow a consistent format: the group views the film together (often remotely or in person), then engages in freeform discussion filled with escalating jokes, tangents, and increasingly unhinged interpretations of the movie's elements, such as Paul Blart's segway-riding antics and the film's Las Vegas setting. By 2024, the podcast had released its tenth episode, marking a decade of annual installments, during which the hosts traveled to Las Vegas— the primary location of Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2—for a live recording to heighten the absurdity. A bonus episode titled "Origins," released in April 2020, provided backstory on the podcast's inception and the hosts' motivations.[35][36][37] The series has garnered strong listener acclaim for its commitment to the gimmick and the hosts' chemistry, achieving a 5.0 rating across thousands of reviews on platforms like Apple Podcasts. Montgomery and Batt's involvement underscores their penchant for long-form comedic experiments, bridging their New Zealand-based humor with the McElroys' American pop culture commentary, and solidifying 'Til Death Do Us Blart' as a cult favorite in podcasting circles.[35]Television, film, and writing
Television
Montgomery's television career began in 2013 when he hosted the late-night comedy program U Live (also known as U Late) on TVNZ's youth channel U, marking his first major on-screen role and where he met future podcast collaborator Tim Batt.[38] He followed this by writing sketches for the hit New Zealand comedy series Jono and Ben at 10 on TV3 from 2012 to 2018, contributing to its satirical content and earning recognition in local comedy circles.[38] Early guest spots included appearances on the panel show 7 Days on TV3, starting around 2009, where he showcased his quick wit in comedic debates.[39] In 2021, Montgomery competed as a contestant on season 2 of Taskmaster New Zealand on TVNZ 2, finishing second overall with 158 points across 10 episodes, noted for his creative and humorous task approaches, such as wearing childhood photo t-shirts. He made further guest appearances on Australian programs, including Have You Been Paying Attention? on Network 10 in 2022 and The Weekly with Charlie Pickering on ABC in 2015, adapting his stand-up style to panel formats.[40] Additional acting roles included playing Brett in the 2023 comedy series Double Parked on TVNZ.[41] Montgomery created and hosted Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont-Spelling Bee, a comedy panel game show originally developed as an improvised web series on Zoom and YouTube in 2020 during the COVID-19 lockdown in Auckland.[1] It premiered on Three in New Zealand in 2023, co-hosted with Sanjay Patel, featuring celebrities competing in absurd spelling challenges. The format's success led to a 2024 Australian adaptation on ABC, co-hosted with Aaron Chen, which expanded to a second season in 2025 and garnered critical acclaim for its clever wordplay and guest lineups. The show has aired over 30 episodes across both versions, solidifying Montgomery's role as a prominent television host.[42]Film
Montgomery made his screen debut as a writer and actor in the 2015 New Zealand short film Return, where he portrayed the lead character Dominic, a young man grappling with personal loss and return to his roots. The film, which he co-wrote with director Ryan Heron, premiered at the 2015 Show Me Shorts Film Festival, earning the Best Screenplay award, and later screened internationally at the Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival.[43] In 2018, Montgomery took on supporting roles in two feature films. He appeared as a waiter in The Breaker Upperers, a dark romantic comedy directed by and starring Madeleine Sami and Jackie van Beek, which follows two friends running a breakup service for couples; the film premiered at the New Zealand International Film Festival and received acclaim for its sharp humor.[44] Later that year, he played Frank, the fiancé of the protagonist's daughter, in the psychological drama Vermilion, directed by Dorthe Scheffmann and centering on a composer experiencing synesthesia amid family tensions; the film highlighted Montgomery's ability to convey understated emotional depth in ensemble scenes.[45] Montgomery's most recent film credit came in 2020 with the comedy Baby Done, directed by Curtis Vowell, where he portrayed the eccentric Treemasters Official in a story about a couple navigating unexpected pregnancy while pursuing adventure; the film was a commercial success in New Zealand, grossing over NZ$1 million at the box office and earning praise for its relatable wit.[46]Writing credits
Guy Montgomery began his professional writing career in New Zealand television, contributing scripts to satirical comedy programs during the early 2010s. He served as a writer for the long-running sketch show Jono and Ben at 10, a popular series on TV3 that featured topical humor and celebrity parodies, where he helped craft segments blending news satire with absurd sketches.[38][10] One of his most prominent early writing achievements was co-creating and writing Fail Army, a clip compilation show he also presented alongside Joseph Moore. Airing on TV3 from 2015 to 2016, the series ran for 60 episodes and focused on humorous user-submitted fail videos, with Montgomery's scripts providing witty narration and thematic framing to enhance the comedic timing.[47][48] Montgomery transitioned to creating original formats, co-writing the short film Return (2015) with director Ryan Heron, a dark comedy that earned Best Screenplay at the Show Me Shorts Film Festival for its sharp dialogue exploring themes of regret and absurdity. In 2019, he contributed to the short comedy sketch Murder Me!, satirizing true-crime tropes through exaggerated narratives.[49][50] His most notable recent writing credit is as creator and head writer for Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont-Spelling Bee, a panel show that debuted on TV3 in 2023 and expanded to ABC in Australia in 2024. Co-written with Joseph Moore, the series combines competitive spelling challenges with improvised comedy, featuring custom word definitions and example sentences laced with puns; it has aired multiple seasons, praised for its clever scripting that balances education and entertainment.[1][51]Awards and nominations
Comedy awards
Guy Montgomery has received numerous accolades for his stand-up comedy and comedy festival performances, establishing him as one of New Zealand's leading comedians. His awards highlight his consistent excellence in live comedy, with multiple wins recognizing his sharp wit and innovative material. These honors span from emerging talent recognition to peer-voted achievements in national and international festivals.[52] In 2014, Montgomery won the Billy T Award at the New Zealand International Comedy Festival, an accolade for the top emerging stand-up comedian, which propelled his career forward.[52] The award, named after comedian Billy T. James, included a $3,000 cash prize and opportunities for further development, marking a pivotal early milestone.[13] Montgomery has been a dominant figure at the New Zealand Comedy Guild Awards, winning the Best Male Comedian category three times. In 2017, he took home the award for his standout performances that year.[53] He repeated the victory in 2020, also earning the AK Memorial Award for Best Joke for his routine on an "A to Z food list." In 2021, he secured the win again for his show Guy Montgomery By Name, Guy Montgomery By Nature, solidifying his reputation among peers.[54] At the 2023 New Zealand International Comedy Festival, Montgomery won the Fred Award for Best Show with My Brain Is Blowing Me Crazy, a prize honoring the top local comedian and named after the iconic character Fred Dagg.[55] The award came with a $5,000 grant and recognized the show's high-impact exploration of mental health themes through humor.[56] Internationally, in 2023, he won Best of the Fest at the Sydney Comedy Festival for the same show, earning a $1,500 prize and praise for his engaging, self-deprecating style.[57] This victory underscored his growing appeal in Australia.[4]| Year | Award | Event | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | Billy T Award | New Zealand International Comedy Festival | For emerging talent; $3,000 prize.[52] |
| 2017 | Best Male Comedian | New Zealand Comedy Guild Awards | Peer recognition for stand-up excellence.[53] |
| 2020 | Best Male Comedian | New Zealand Comedy Guild Awards | Also won AK Memorial Award for Best Joke. |
| 2021 | Best Male Comedian | New Zealand Comedy Guild Awards | For Guy Montgomery By Name, Guy Montgomery By Nature.[54] |
| 2023 | Fred Award | New Zealand International Comedy Festival | For My Brain Is Blowing Me Crazy; $5,000 grant.[55] |
| 2023 | Best of the Fest | Sydney Comedy Festival | $1,500 prize for standout show.[57] |