Daniele Tinti talks about himself in the new episode of “Another podcast” (watch the full episode on our YouTube channel). Between Rome, where he was born, and L’Aquila, where he grew up, Daniele learned that the things that matter always carry with them a certain amount of fear. He felt it before rugby matches, when the tension closed his stomach. He still hears it today, just before going on stage. A Roma fan to the point of tears, devoted to Totti as to the idols who teach us to dream, he discovered stand-up comedy far from home, in England, looking at the greats from overseas. But irony has always been his mother tongue: already at school he understood that being able to make people laugh is a little magic. Now one of the most beloved comedians of his generation, he works on his shows with the discipline of an athlete. He writes a monologue for months, dismantles it, reconstructs it. For him, making people laugh is a serious thing, so much so that he accepts the risk of making a mistake. Because sport, life and comedy teach the same thing: you can lose a game, make a mistake, fall and then get back up. Maybe laughing about it.
