BRAVE BAD BITCH: AN INTERVIEW WITH BRITTANY BRAVE
MAR–15–2025





Words by: Jennie Bull
Interview with: Brittany Brave

  • Please give our Moody readers some background on who you are and what you do.
    • yes, absolutely. Oh, my God, every comedian's favorite, every meeting, favorite moment, is talking about themselves. No kidding. I am a stand up comedian, actress, all the things, advocate, podcaster, too many things on my resume. I was born in New York and raised in Miami. If you've never seen me live or don't know anything about me, some of our moody staff knows, but I'm very feminist, I'm very sex positive, I'm very queer positive, and I'm a ball buster, I think, as well too. So that's how I would describe myself. Yeah, you are.

  • Bad Bitch Brunch is happening on March 29 and features an all-female / queer lineup. Why are spaces like this important?
    • Well, I think they've always been crucial, just because it's a collection of voices that are always marginalized and doubted in society and fighting for mainstream respect and credibility. So it's always nice to just kind of round out the story and hear a little less from straight white men and hear a little more from people that are not that you know. And I think now more than ever. I feel like beforehand, those events were important, right, and and and necessary, sure and and special. And now I think given our current administration in the state of the world, they're, they're pretty fucking crucial, actually, to be honest, like beforehand, they were a little more supplementary, and the movement was moving and progressing at its own pace. And now that we have a president who just wants to basically shun and and harm anything that doesn't look like him, which is a big orange fascist Cheeto, we thought now it's actually a survival technique, I think, to like, create these spaces and this programming for people that are literally having their rights taken away. So it's an act of rebellion, and it's a big push back, and it's a safe space, which I think a lot of people need, because our mental health is really fucked right now due to everything. So yeah,




  • I completely agree. And how did your community come together like the community of the different comedians and the people organizing this brunch. How did you guys all fall into place

    • Yeah, so I curate it and I take it across the country. It's a very Miami show. I'm from Miami, and energetically, when you watch the show, it's very Miami in all the best ways. It's naked and sexy and loud and sassy and fucking ratchet, and I couldn't have created the show anywhere but the 305 but it actually came together. Interestingly, I was working for a really misogynist Company in Miami, an Instagram page, meme page, and I was the only woman they ever put on the payroll, and I was only woman they 


      • Yeah, so I curate it and I take it across the country. It's a very Miami show. I'm from Miami, and energetically, when you watch the show, it's very Miami in all the best ways. It's naked and sexy and loud and sassy and fucking ratchet, and I couldn't have created the show anywhere but the 305 but it actually came together. Interestingly, I was working for a really misogynist Company in Miami, an Instagram page, meme page, and I was the only woman they ever put on the payroll, and I was only woman they