A roast event celebrating the past year's highlights, featuring comedians Mark Normand, Ms. Pat, Sam Morril, and Tim Dillon, filmed at The Bellwether in Los Angeles on December 17.A roast event celebrating the past year's highlights, featuring comedians Mark Normand, Ms. Pat, Sam Morril, and Tim Dillon, filmed at The Bellwether in Los Angeles on December 17.A roast event celebrating the past year's highlights, featuring comedians Mark Normand, Ms. Pat, Sam Morril, and Tim Dillon, filmed at The Bellwether in Los Angeles on December 17.
Photos
Jeffrey Ross
- Self - Host
- (as Jeff Ross)
Patricia Williams
- Self - Guest
- (as Ms. Pat)
Featured reviews
I absolutely LOVE Sam Morrill and Tim Dillon, as well as Mark Normand but my god, their material sounds like it was from the staff writers of At Midnight. But for as lame as most of their stuff was, it never comes close to how pedestrian Jeff Ross consistently is. I used to love his stand up but anyone who loves comedy can guess his punchlines before he delivers them. Worst of all is his new gimmick of pretending that he has a joke so offensive that he shouldn't even do it. Then he does the joke (a Menendez Brothers joke) and it was truly awful. Not offensive or edgy. It was just dull and silly. Spare yourself the time waster on this and watch Hinchcliffe and Nikki Glaser on the Brady Roast.
This has to be the worst roasting event I have seen in a while. The jokes fell flat and were not funny. They kept on falling flat and the host kept on talking up these so called big names that no one has heard off. It was pitiful and dreadful to sit through this disaster. Even poor John Stamos could not stop this runaway train that's going nowhere. I feel like people in social media have better humour and zingers. This bland and forced humour goes nowhere. There was no wit, humour and just cheap cracks that went nowhere. A roast is supposed to be funny and outrageous, pushing the envelope. The only thing I wanted to push was next on this show. Terrible roast by unfunny personalities.
This Jeffrey Ross joke sums up Torching 2024: "Quincy Jones died this year. His middle name was Delight. That is also what he saw before he died." That's a joke an 8 year old would be proud of telling.
A room full of comedy writers decided something that stale was suitable for a Netflix special. Another comment said this show had 25 writers. It must've been 25 monkeys at 25 typewriters, except they didn't write Shakespeare; they wrote... this.
A few comedians fell back on their own stage material, so there were a few half-hearted laughs there, but most of the 2024 related "comedy" was dire. Shallow, cheap, and obvious dad jokes that people make while watching the news and quickly forget. The comedians should've worked this material over into their own voices, because it needed a second or third pass. The impressions of Diddy, Biden, and UHC CEO were a thing that happened, but again, it's all so corny that even Jimmy Fallon wouldn't pretend to laugh at it.
The one time I genuinely laughed is when a comedian called this the "Temu Tom Brady Roast." That level of self-awareness is commendable. The Tom Brady Roast brought roasts back to life in 2024, and Torching 2024 killed them. I wonder if this show saw Delight before it died?
Nope, still not funny.
A room full of comedy writers decided something that stale was suitable for a Netflix special. Another comment said this show had 25 writers. It must've been 25 monkeys at 25 typewriters, except they didn't write Shakespeare; they wrote... this.
A few comedians fell back on their own stage material, so there were a few half-hearted laughs there, but most of the 2024 related "comedy" was dire. Shallow, cheap, and obvious dad jokes that people make while watching the news and quickly forget. The comedians should've worked this material over into their own voices, because it needed a second or third pass. The impressions of Diddy, Biden, and UHC CEO were a thing that happened, but again, it's all so corny that even Jimmy Fallon wouldn't pretend to laugh at it.
The one time I genuinely laughed is when a comedian called this the "Temu Tom Brady Roast." That level of self-awareness is commendable. The Tom Brady Roast brought roasts back to life in 2024, and Torching 2024 killed them. I wonder if this show saw Delight before it died?
Nope, still not funny.
This roast was trash. The typical Comedy Central roasts are usually hilarious, so naturally I see the roast master Jeff Ross, and assume it would be more of the same. This was a disappointment. I don't think I laughed once. No one was fluid/natural and it felt like it was a rushed, forced, thrown together money grab. Absolute garbage. And I'm all for up and comers in the comedic game, but these people were not funny. I get the impression Netflix curated their jokes because if this is their best, YIKES. I'm hoping the cast is better than this on their own, because this was not it. Zero out of the ten, do not waste your time.
The Netflix roast special "Torching 2024" unfortunately highlights a significant flaw in the genre: the repetitive inclusion of the same unfunny personalities. This trend detracts from the overall enjoyment and creativity of the show. While Ms. Pat was a refreshing addition, managing to bring some much-needed energy and humor, she was one of the very few who emerged relatively unscathed from this cringe-inducing experience. The jokes often felt forced and lacked the cleverness that typically defines a good roast, leaving viewers disappointed. The reliance on familiar faces who consistently fail to deliver engaging content is a recurring issue in these specials. Ultimately, "Torching 2024" misses the mark, failing to provide the sharp, witty humor that fans expect from a roast, making it a lackluster watch for those hoping for genuine laughs.
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- Runtime42 minutes
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By what name was Torching 2024: A Roast of the Year (2024) officially released in Canada in English?
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