Published: March 27, 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online — Independent, Insightful, Global.
The hit global comedy format LOL: Last One Laughing has returned to screens this spring, and one of its breakout stars has opened up about the “psychological warfare” involved in the competition. Speaking to The English Chronicle, the comedian described her six-hour stint in the windowless, neon-lit studio as a “slow-motion nightmare,” where the simple human impulse to giggle becomes a source of genuine physical and mental distress. For the uninitiated, the rules are deceptively simple: ten comedians are locked in a room together; if you laugh, you’re out. The last one standing wins a massive cash prize for charity.
“It is a unique form of torture,” she laughed—safely outside the studio walls. “Your brain starts to malfunction. By hour four, everything is funny. A stray piece of ham on a plate looks like a masterpiece of observational comedy. You’re biting your tongue so hard it bleeds, trying to replace the image of a peer in a tutu with the most depressing thoughts you can find—like the current ‘hospice funding cliff-edge’ or the ‘ripple of fear’ over the Iran war. It’s a very dark place to be.”
The star also revealed her “nightmare opponent”—the one person she dreaded facing in the arena. “It’s not the ones who do the big, loud props or the physical slapstick,” she explained. “It’s the ‘silent assassins.’ My nightmare was Romesh Ranganathan. He doesn’t even have to say anything. He just gives you that look of utter, soul-crushing disappointment. It’s so absurdly dry that it’s impossible not to crack. When he starts doing a deadpan monologue about his disappointment in the national dental recovery plan, you’re finished. He’s a tactical genius of the un-funny.”
The show’s 2026 season has seen a spike in viewership, partly due to a public looking for “escapism with a side of schadenfreude.” Producers have upped the ante this year by introducing “The Joker Card,” where a guest legend—this year rumored to be Dawn French—enters the room for ten minutes of unrestricted chaos. “When the siren goes off and you see a legend walk in, your stomach just drops,” the star admitted. “It’s like being a gladiator, but instead of a lion, they throw a woman at you who is incredibly good at making fart noises with her armpit.”
While the show is undeniably hilarious for the audience, the medical reality of “stifled laughter” is surprisingly intense. The comedian noted that she left the set with a tension headache that lasted two days. “The human body isn’t designed to suppress that much joy,” she joked. “I had to go home and just laugh at a blank wall for twenty minutes to reset my facial muscles. It’s the only job where being ‘the best’ means being the most miserable person in the room.”
As the series reaches its finale this weekend—just as the UK enjoys 17°C spring sunshine—the “Last One Laughing” will finally be crowned. For the star, the prize money is going to a mental health charity, a fitting choice after a day spent purposefully avoiding a dopamine hit. “I’d do it again in a heartbeat,” she concluded, “but I’d probably bring a picture of my tax return to look at whenever Romesh starts talking. That’s the only way to survive.”



























































































