Rosebud Baker doesn’t tell jokes so much as tear into the truth with her teeth. She’s one of those comics who walks onstage looking like she’s about to confess something terrible—and then she does. Dark humor, personal scars, stories steeped in grief, family dysfunction, and the kind of privilege that gives you a front-row seat to power but not a lick of protection from pain. She’s lived it all, turned it inside out, and made it funny in the way only the brutally honest can. Born in Alexandria, raised in McLean—the kind of Virginia suburb where politicians live like minor gods—she grew up orbiting the Bush dynasty. Her family tree was a redwood: James A. Baker III, Secretary of State; lawyers; politicians; a legacy so heavy it could fold a child in half. Her father, emotionally distant and swallowed whole by work, was almost a rumor that ate dinner at the same table. And then there were the sisters. Three surviving, one gone. Graeme. Seven years old. A whirlpool drain. A graduation party that ended in a tragedy too big for a family of any size. Rosebud was never the same again—and she’s never pretended otherwise. Grief aged her like weather on wood. At Langley High School, she flunked classes, quit cheerleading by suspension, and wore her anger like armor. Emerson College gave her a degree in acting, but also alcoholism, depression, and the kind of spiraling grief that doesn’t ask permission. Europe with her sister Hallie should’ve been healing; instead it was a months-long bender with museums in the background. She told her family she’d come home for rehab. Group therapy sessions that she lied her way through. A grief counselor she didn’t entirely trust. AA meetings that finally stuck. Sobriety in 2007—a single, trembling foothold in the long climb out. The kind of resilience no one cheers for because it happens in the dark. Before stand-up, she chased acting. Independent films. Off-Broadway. Odd jobs to pay the rent—nannying, waitressing, writing horoscopes under the name “Rosey,” which feels like the punchline to a joke she hadn’t written yet. In 2010 she joined Girls Who Like Boys Who Like Boys—a Sundance reality series about the friendships between straight women and gay men. She appeared with her friend Sahil, both of them orbiting each other’s pain and hope on camera. Acting kept her afloat for a while—indies, small roles, the critically praised film Turnabout in 2013—but it wasn’t home. Her father finally said the one thing that actually landed: It was permission. Or maybe it was a dare. She stepped onto a stage in Austin during a cross-country road trip and something clicked. Comedy wasn’t therapy—not exactly—but it was a place where pain made sense. A place where you could say the thing everyone else was too polite to touch—and get applause for it. Her first New York performance was at the Metropolitan Room in Chelsea. After that, she became a street-level grinder. Four, five sets a night at the LOL Comedy Club in Midtown. Open mics in basements, bars, backrooms. The kind of comedy life where you eat rejection for dinner and hit the stage anyway. In 2018, Just for Laughs named her a New Face. Amazon’s Inside Jokes followed her journey there—nerves, ambition, the whole ridiculous pursuit of validation masked as craft. She was on her way, even if most people didn’t see it yet. March 2020. Pandemic panic. She launched Find Your Beach with comedian Andy Haynes—her future husband and favorite sparring partner. Two voices, dark humor, honesty, a lifeline for listeners who were cracking under lockdown pressure. Her first comedy special, Whiskey Fists, premiered in 2021. A gut-punch delivered with a smirk. Comedy Central saw it. Fans saw it. Industry people finally paid attention. That same year HBO Max brought her onboard as a writer for That Damn Michael Che. Nominations followed—WGA, Black Reel Awards—proof that she wasn’t just a performer. She had teeth on the page too. In February 2022, she joined the writing staff of Saturday Night Live. It’s the kind of job comics whisper about like myth—where careers are made or broken, where jokes go to heaven or die in dress rehearsal. Rosebud didn’t just survive; she thrived. By SNL’s 50th season, she was one of the writers steering Weekend Update, one of the show’s beating hearts. You don’t get that job because you’re lucky. You get it because you can turn news into blood and laughter at the same time. She left SNL in August 2025—three years, dozens of sketches, a mark left on a machine that never stops moving. Her second special, The Mother Lode, dropped on Netflix in February 2025. She filmed half of it at eight months pregnant, the rest a year after giving birth. Two versions of the same woman—one carrying a child, one carrying the exhaustion of motherhood—woven together into a single hour of truth. It wasn’t just stand-up. It was testimony. Her comedy is dark—not performatively, but organically. Death. Trauma. Alcoholism. Domestic abuse. Family dysfunction wrapped in wealth. She tells stories with a scalpel and a smirk, carving open wounds like she’s showing you a treasure chest. Her jokes twist. They sting. They don’t apologize. She learned the craft by transcribing the greats—Attell, Schumer, Chappelle—and breaking their jokes down to the bones. Setup. Tension. Release. Blood. Don’t look away. Rosebud Baker is the kind of comedian who doesn’t flinch. The kind who survived the kind of heartbreak that could’ve turned her into a ghost. Instead she turned it into material, into purpose, into a map out of the darkness. She’s proof that pain doesn’t make you funny— And if it makes other people laugh on the way out?The Girl Who Carried Too Much Too Soon
She moved to Brooklyn instead.From Off-Broadway to Reality TV: The Years Before Comedy Found Her
“Maybe you should try stand-up.”2014: The First Mic, The First Hit of Light
The Podcaster, The Writer, The Woman Who Didn’t Blink
From the Open Mic Trenches to 30 Rock
Netflix, Pregnancy, and A Special Split by Time
The Style: Broken Things Made Beautiful and Terrifying
What She Really Is
but telling the truth about it might just save your life.
Well.
That’s just good showmanship.
