You cannot have the same kind of character again and again in every season or every stage of your life. You change, people change.
Speaking in Hindi has helped me a lot as I can tell my stories with the exact idiom in which they come to me. I think it also helps the audience when I am speaking in a language that is non-elite, so to say, as my stories are also from that perspective.
In any show, not everybody is completely with us on all the topics we talk about. We talk about Hindutva, and we talk about the problems with Islam also. If there are Muslims in the audience, laughing at the jokes on Hindutva, they will have to confront the jokes on Islam too.
When a new government comes, even the detractors want to give them a chance because they have been voted in by the people of the country.
In general, even when I'm not doing political comedy, I want to be clever and find the least confrontational way to say the most offensive things.
Revolutions can be messy but they can't be perceived as unjust.
Sometimes people don't want to laugh because it's wrong to laugh at their own establishment.
British comedian Imran Yusuf is fantastic and so is Shazia Mirza, also London-based.
I was writing stand up comedy for TV for around 5 years and just wanted to attempt it myself. Vir Das started an amateur comedians' night in Bombay in 2009 and I went for the very first one. It was a competition and I won the first prize.
Self-censorship is the most devastating thing for an artist.