How 2024 took Nikki Glaser to the center of the Golden Globes

Comedian, actress, writer, musician, podcaster, and roast master mommy Nikki Glaser has had an eventful year. Treasured in comedy for her unfiltered takes on sex, relationships and personal insecurities, Glaserβs fearlessness has earned her a dedicated fan following. But this year has been somewhat different for several roasty reasons.
βWinningβ Netflixβs live βRoast of Tom Bradyβ catapulted Glaserβs reputation worldwide as a sharp-tongued killer, opening doors that had been shut tight. On Jan. 5, she will make history as the first woman to host solo at the 82nd Golden Globes, and there is no telling who will find themselves in her comedic crosshairs.
Though sheβd likely never admit it, Nikki is obviously an overachiever. Even her accolades overachieve. Nominations for a Grammy, an Emmy, a Critics Choice Award and a Golden Globe for stand-up comedy on television for her newest stand-up special, βSomeday Youβll Die,β are proof of that.
Her brand of self-deprecation, brutal honesty and sharp wit has elevated her to stardom and changed her life. Glaser spoke to me about her career and life changes in a recent interview conducted over Zoom.
This has seriously been your year. It seems like it ramped all the way up too after βThe Roast of Tom Brady.β What a ride for you!
Nikki Glaser: Itβs been a year! It was kind of rough right after βThe Roast of Tom Brady,β I think because I felt like suddenly there were all these eyes and attention and expectations on me that werenβt there before. Before I felt like an underdog, where no one really noticed me. But expectations were high after the roast, and I just felt like, oh, my God, Iβve always got to show up that polished, that perfect, that precise, and I have to win everything I do now. It was like it turned into some kind of, βyou won the roastβ thing, and I didnβt even know it was a thing you could win. It just felt like I got a lot of attention for this really specific thing that Iβm good at, when it takes months for me to be good at it. It took a couple months for me to let myself off the hook a little, but I also learned a lot from the roast on how to approach these big events. So, when it comes to something like the Globes, I now know I can show up, and given the right amount of time leading up to it, kill it the way I did before.
Itβs a lot, though, and being on all the time becomes a little exhausting. I had a full-time job before with my podcast, and a special, and then the roast kicked in and a lot more things got added. I already had a full plate, and I didnβt know how much fuller it could get. Iβm very grateful for it, but itβs a little bit like you just gotta spend the extra money youβre making on self-care, on IV drips, on a makeup team so I donβt have to do it myself β it just becomes a lot. But Iβm so grateful and donβt want it to go away.
Your crushing the roast and its being broadcast live to such a massive audience were bound to get you a seat at the popular table. Itβs fun to see you get all of this love from longtime and new fans.
Yeah, there was such a nice reaction from my fans who have been there all along, like, donβt change! Itβs kind of the way I felt as a Swifty when she reached this next level β sheβs ours! Iβm really cognizant of that and I do appreciate everyone thatβs been there from the get-go. I can see through it right away when people say βIβve been a fan foreverβ but they only know my roast stuff. Itβs an interesting social experiment to have a rapid level of success in a short amount of time and see whoβs nice and who isnβt suddenly.
Ahhh, the industry. Doing a set in a club is unlike hosting a legendary awards show. How are you preparing for it?
In terms of running the set around town, people seem pretty excited about me doing the Globes. Iβve been telling the audience this is what Iβm doing, and I want to run it by you. Iβm bringing my audiences in on the project with me. Theyβre part of my team and weβre in this together. Iβm also approaching the Globes the same way as the roasts, where Iβm watching everything. Iβm consuming and trying to find what my opinions are about these people and these projects. Iβm really just trying to immerse myself in that world. Iβm trying to do a lot of visualization of what itβs gonna be like to walk out there too. Who am I gonna see? Thinking about what the tone I want to hit is and thinking about overall goals of the evening. My goal is just to walk offstage after that monologue and feel like, OK, the rest of this showβs a cakewalk. I did the hardest thing, everyone seemed happy, I didnβt piss anyone off, I didnβt ruin anyoneβs night, Iβm gonna make headlines for the right reasons of maybe saying some shocking things, but not upsetting anyone. You know, Iβm not going to have to avoid anyone at the after-party. The most successful thing I can do is just say the things I want to say. Speak some truth, possibly get some groans, claps, and βWhoa, she went there.β Iβm not up there to call anyone out or make some audacious political statement. I just want to have a good set.

Nikki Glasser in Rancho Mirage.
(Linus Johnson / For The Times)
I think weβre all also waiting with bated breath to see how hard you will go.
Actors take themselves so seriously, I think more than any other profession. Everyone just wants to look so cool in that room, and youβve spent hours and hours getting ready to look amazing. So, any kind of joke that would take you off that pedestal is a deep threat to you. I also think itβs an opportunity for celebrities to have a moment where they appear human and laugh at themselves. There are certain people in the room that are so uptight that I kind of want to win them over first, just so I can get away with the rest of the monologue. Especially if they only know me from roasts, they certainly are gonna be terrified of me. βSheβs out for blood!β Thatβs just not the way it is, though, so Iβm gonna have to remind them thatβs not what Iβm here to do, even though it might be what Iβm known to do. Then Iβll go ahead and do it, but not in the same way because this is obviously not a roast.
I also think there are opportunities to have fun with some of these people and bring them in on the joke β certainly, someone like Martin Short, Steve Martin or anyone who comes from a comedy background. There are opportunities to have fun with comedians in the audience, so Iβm gonna seek those out and really bask in those moments. Maybe Iβll even get to have a moment with Meryl Streep. How fun for me!
It really is incredible. Have you gotten any advice on your journey to the Globes?
I have. I never have too much confidence going into something where they might not know who I am and with some kind of fanfare waiting for me. The thing I learned from watching past sets is that I need to introduce myself to the crowd. No matter how much in the comedy world I might be known, they might not be savvy to that. A lot of people donβt know that world, so Iβm going to have to introduce myself to them and then self-deprecate enough to earn the opportunity to then deprecate them. Tina [Fey] and Amy [Poehler] reached out to me and gave me some really great advice about things you would only know if you stood on that stage and said jokes to that crowd. Their advice made me feel like you could only get this advice from two mothers. Iβm so glad to have them co-sign on this because itβs a really big social event. The first of the year. The first of the award season, and everyone is seeing each other after a long Christmas break of having plastic surgery.
Youβve got a lot of nominations to list off β Globes, Critics Choice, Emmys. Iβm into this Grammy, though. How did you hear about it, and who did you tell first?
I was on a plane, and I got a text from my publicist. I honestly didnβt even think that this was a possibility. I mean, there are some things you dream about when becoming a stand-up comedian, and winning a Grammy is not one of them. It just seems like you donβt even know that itβs possible. To me, it was just like, βOh, yes! I get to go to the Grammys!β Of all the awards shows, itβs the one that I have most wanted a ticket to because I love watching musical performances. The best musicians all in one room performing together is the best ticket in town. I just hope that my nomination can turn into a ticket! I think one of the first people I called was my vocal teacher because it just seems so out of this world. We work every week on this thing that Iβm not even nominated for, and, meanwhile, thereβs a song on the album, but itβs a comedy album that Iβm nominated for. I was also quick to tell my dad, who is also a musician. All the musicians in my life, I was quick to tell because I just knew that they understood the magnitude of such an honor.
How did you congratulate yourself on this insane honor?
Wouldnβt congratulating myself be a nice thing to do? I think I bathed a little bit, and I just kept saying it over and over. I would just come in from walking the dog and tell my boyfriend, βOh, babe. I forgot to tell you Iβm nominated for a Grammy.β I just kept bringing it up casually like, letβs not put this down. Letβs keep this thing up in the air because it is so wild, and Iβll probably never be able to say it again. You never know, but, yes, I should do something nice for myself. I just have not had any time.