One might be forgiven for thinking that Comic Relief, that great British institution born in the mid-1980s amid a blizzard of plastic red noses and celebrity goodwill, had long since perfected the art of turning conscience into cash. Founded by Lenny Henry and Richard Curtis with the noble aim of making the world laugh while it gave, the charity once raised eye-watering sums through telethons that felt like a national knees-up. Yet here we are in 2026, with Red Nose Day looming like an unwelcome relative at a funeral, and a single tweet from Charlotte Gill lands like a well-aimed custard pie: boycott the whole circus. One reads her post—detailing yet another £340,000 grant to Bail for Immigration Detainees, that worthy outfit dedicated to springing people from UK immigration holding pens—and one is reminded of Clive James’s old observation that charity, like television, has a habit of promising the sublime and delivering the faintly ridiculous. Only now the ridiculous has curdled into something rather more sardonic.
Let us begin, as all good cultural autopsies must, with the founding father himself. Lenny Henry, that colossus of British comedy who could once reduce a nation to helpless giggles by merely donning a red nose and pretending to be a hapless African aid worker, has in recent years discovered a new vocation: demanding reparations. Not content with the millions Comic Relief has funnelled into Africa over four decades—money raised, one might add, by British punters sticking plastic proboscises on their faces and feeling temporarily virtuous—Mr Henry now insists that true justice requires a formal reckoning for the transatlantic slave trade and colonial wrongs. One pictures him addressing the faithful, voice booming with the same righteous timbre he once reserved for sketches about overfed vicars, declaring that mere charity is no longer enough; what is needed is a proper invoice, stamped and delivered, preferably with compound interest. The irony, of course, is exquisite.
Here is the man who helped invent the very mechanism by which middle-class guilt was converted into African hospitals and wells, now implying that the whole enterprise was a bit of a swindle unless it comes with a side order of historical atonement. One is tempted to ask: if Comic Relief’s donors are already atoning with their wallets, why the extra bill? Perhaps the red nose was always meant to be a down-payment, and the reparations speech is simply the final demand note. In any case, it provides the first, and perhaps most delicious, reason to reach for the boycott button. Why subsidise an organisation whose co-founder now treats its core activity as insufficient penance?
But the reparations angle is merely the overture. The persistent, if unproven, rumours that swirl around Comic Relief’s African disbursements add a darker, more Jamesian undertone—one of those quiet, lethal ironies the late critic so relished. Word on the sceptical street, passed from expat to aid worker to the sort of chap who reads the small print in charity accounts, is that a not-insignificant slice of the cash ends up in the Swiss bank accounts of the very dictators whose regimes the telethon appeals so earnestly decry. One imagines the scene: a warlord in some sun-baked capital, fresh from a Comic Relief-funded “empowerment” seminar, converting British ten-pound notes into Kalashnikovs and surface-to-air missiles.
The rumour is, naturally, impossible to verify without a team of forensic accountants and a helicopter; but then, so are most of the glowing impact reports the charity itself publishes. One recalls James’s dry verdict on foreign aid in general: it has a habit of arriving in the hands of people who already own the best Mercedes in the country. Comic Relief, with its celebrity endorsements and celebrity-scale overheads, has never quite escaped the suspicion that some of its largesse is less about digging wells than arming the well-diggers’ bosses. If even a fraction of the £1.6 billion it has raised over the years has been recycled into ordnance rather than orphans, then the red nose begins to look less like a symbol of mirth and more like a clown’s mask on a tragedy. Boycotting suddenly feels less like parsimony and more like basic hygiene.
Then there is the telethon itself, once the jewel in the crown and now a jewel that has been trodden into paste. Ah, the glory days—when Red Nose Day was a riot of cross-pollinated absurdity. The Vicar of Dibley gate-crashing Ballykissangel for a custard-pie fight; Call The Midwife witnessing Doctor Who materialising in Poplar to save the day with a sonic screwdriver and a comedy prosthetic; Men Behaving Badly being stunned by the presence of Kylie Minogue, all while Lenny Henry narrated the whole catastrophe with the straightest of faces. It was television at its most cheerfully puerile, the sort of event that made you forgive the licence fee for one night only. Compare that to the current iteration, and one is struck by the silence of the laughter track.
The 2026 version, if past form is any guide, will be wall-to-wall virtue signalling delivered by the same cohort of presenters who have spent the preceding year lecturing the public on everything from pronouns to plastic straws. Gone are the sketches; in their place, solemn montages of suffering interspersed with millionaires in designer casualwear explaining, with the pained sincerity of a minor royal, why your tenner will change the world. One half expects a celebrity to appear in a red nose and immediately apologise for cultural appropriation. The format has not evolved; it has been euthanised and replaced by a sermon with added celebrity cameos. The humour, once the charity’s unique selling point, has been quietly retired to the same pasture as political incorrectness and the notion that laughter might actually be the best medicine. What remains is a three-hour exercise in collective self-flagellation, punctuated by appeals that make one feel less like a donor and more like a defendant in the court of public opinion. Small wonder the viewing figures have sagged like an old red nose left in the rain.
And into this atmosphere of earnest deflation comes the specific provocation that prompted Charlotte Gill’s tweet: £340,000—not a trifling sum, even by Comic Relief standards—handed to Bail for Immigration Detainees. The organisation’s brief is admirable on paper: providing legal aid to people languishing in UK detention centres while their asylum claims wind their way through the system. Yet one cannot help noticing the slight mismatch with the telethon’s traditional imagery. The adverts still show wide-eyed African children and drought-stricken villages; the small print, apparently, now includes lawyers in Wapping helping failed claimants avoid deportation. One pictures the average donor, red nose askew, watching the appeal and assuming their fiver is buying a mosquito net, only to discover later that it has funded a judicial review.
The cognitive dissonance is almost comic—almost. In an age when the British taxpayer already spends billions on asylum processing and hotel accommodation, Comic Relief’s decision to divert comedy cash into the appeals process feels less like charity and more like a political subsidy. One is reminded of James’s line about good intentions paving the road to somewhere distinctly warmer than intended. If the donors wanted to bankroll immigration lawyers, they could have done so directly; instead, they are lured in with the promise of slapstick and emerge with a side order of open borders. The boycott, in this light, begins to look less like petulance and more like the only remaining form of consumer protest.
All of which leaves the would-be donor in a familiar quandary: cynical enough to see through the performance, yet sentimental enough to feel a pang at the thought of genuine need going unmet. The solution, of course, is not to stop giving but to stop giving to the circus. Local food banks, domestic hospice care, even those unfashionable British charities that still believe in quiet competence rather than celebrity photoshops—these remain untouched by reparations rhetoric, dictator rumours, or the slow death of the funny telethon. One can still stick a red nose on one’s face if the mood takes; it simply no longer needs to be Comic Relief’s proprietary model. The organisation that once made Britain laugh while it cared has, through a combination of mission creep, celebrity sermonising, and unfortunate grant-making decisions, become the punchline it once avoided.
Lenny Henry’s reparations demands, the whispered arms deals, the virtue-signalling presenters—all conspire to suggest that the joke is no longer on the audience. It is on the red nose itself. And when the clown starts lecturing you about historical guilt while pocketing your tenner to fund legal challenges in the immigration courts, the only sane response is the one Charlotte Gill proposed: switch off, sit down, and keep your wallet firmly in your pocket. The laughter, alas, has already left the building.