Grab a Seat for the Ultimate Stoner Comedy Showcase
Do you love smoking weed? Do you love laughing? Do you love laughing while smoking weed? Join us for a stand up comedy show for and about stoners.
Some of D.C.’s best comics are coming to the festival -- the perfect outdoor showroom for you to get up-close with the stars of tomorrow. Read more about the comics below, and join them at the Stache Cypher Stage at 2:30pm for stage for a HIGH-larious comedy showcase!
About the Comics
Listen to Leon
A D.C. native, Leon Scott is an Emmy nominated writer and comedian working as a comedy writer for Get Up DC, a morning television show on WUSA 9. When he’s not hosting a weekly comedy showcase called "Attack of the Comics," he’s live streaming a show with Reese Waters called "The Barbershop", and an IG Live rant-based show called "What Grinds My Gears." Check out his two specials "District of Comedy" and "American Comic” wherever you stream.
Haywood Turnipseed, Jr.
Haywood Turnipseed Jr., is the founder of Attack of the Comics and has over a decade of experience in making people laugh all over the country. He has performed at the Kennedy Center; The DC Improv; Brightest Young Things 'Bentzen Ball'; the Underground Comedy Festival; 202 Comedy Festival; Cape May Comedy Festival; Baltimore Comedy Festival; Arlington Cinema Drafthouse; Drafthouse Comedy Theater (DC). Haywood has toured internationally, opening for names like Tony Woods; Sarah Colonna; Baron Vaughn; Wyatt Cenac; Hannibal Buress; and Dana Gould. Originally from the Holy Land of Indiana, Haywood now resides in DC with his family and is a U.S. Air Force Veteran.
Ashley Mayo
Ashley Mayo is a native Washingtonian who has been working the comic circuit in the DMV area for the past 8 years. She studied at the Studio Theatre acting conservatory and began her career in comedy shortly after graduating. Check out her groundbreaking situation comedy called “Bipolar Stories: A Mental Health Comedy Series” on IGTV at @mayo_thegreat.
Jordan Segue
Jordan Segue started performing while he was living in San Francisco, determined to release himself from the static of working in Silicon Valley, Jordan stumbled into standup comedy as an effective creative outlet. Jordan's style is that of a deadpan, thought-provoking, and respectfully irreverent storyteller. His favorite things are Michigan football (Go Blue!), his 16 inch cast iron wok, and his detailed spreadsheet of just the 137 restaurants that he would recommend in the DC area.
Mike Kurtz
Mike Kurtz, a PG county native, earned a permanent spot on D.C.’s famous list of things to do after having the idea to put on outdoor comedy shows during the pandemic. In June, as the region slowly began to reopen during a drop in COVID-19 cases, Kurtz got a friend in Northern Virginia to lend his backyard for an outdoor comedy show. This idea morphed into what is now called Cry Baby DC, and by mid-summer (and 200 shows later), his shows were spilling out of his friend’s backyard and into an alley near Wonderland Ballroom on Kenyon Street NW.