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Published 12:00 1 Jan 2021 GMT
Updated 17:01 4 Jan 2021 GMT
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Eventually moving to Dublin for a broadcast assistant job, Alison started gigging more and more - to pay the bills, but also because she loved doing it. Soon she was hosting comedy nights, packing out venues, and writing and starring in her own RTÉ2 series, Nowhere Fast.
Since then, the Co. Westmeath comedian has become a household name. People know her for her podcasts, The Alison Spittle Show and Wheel Of Misfortune. They've gone to her sets in Electric Picnic's comedy tent. They've seen her perform at the 3Arena to over 10,000 people.
On stage, Alison tells stories as if she's chatting to her friends, plowing through bits and anecdotes barely leaving time for the audience to catch their breath. Her sets can feel intimate even when they're in front of hundreds of people. Alison is popular because she's incredible funny, but also because she's so likeable.
And still, she has been subjected to hate. Like most women thriving in any male dominated industry, she's been trolled for her work, her opinions, what she says, and what she looks like.
"Is it more difficult to be a woman in comedy?" A blatant question, sure, and one that Alison says she gets asked a lot.
"It is more difficult," she says. "It almost comes with the territory. I have female friends who are journalists and they get way more hate online, just for having opinions. For that to change, misogyny would have to change, and there's no vaccine for misogyny.
"The best way to deal with it is to ignore it, and I should listen to my own advice a bit more. It can be a bit of craic when you get someone really stupid, but most of the time I don't look in my inbox. I don't need to know what people think of me anymore, it's not something I seek out."
Nor is she seeking out jumping back into touring any time soon. Although she misses it, the stresses of having to reschedule gigs time and time again during the pandemic have made Alison adamant to take a bit of a breather this year.
That, and to spend more time doing things important to her. "I'm not even going to think about touring," she says. "I had to postpone three times this year, so until [the pandemic] is done, I'm just going to take the gigs where I get them. I'll be happy with that.
"This is the thing about 2020, everyone kind of does their end of year list - and I've done it myself - like, this is what I've done, this is what I've achieved, but with 2020, it really doesn't matter. It wasn't the real world, it was like a lost year.
"In 2021, I hope I cop on a bit and not care so much about what other people are doing. I want to do what feels right. Of course, I'll do stuff for money, but I want to make stuff I want to make, and not stuff that I feel like I should be making."
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