Rosie Jones is a household name in British comedy, and she’s striving for national treasure status. Alongside her award-winning stand-up, Rosie is a familiar face on UK television – she’s fronted her own Comedy Central series Out of Order, starred in Channel 4’s hard-hitting documentary Am I A R*tard, and led two travel series, Mission: Accessible and the BAFTA-nominated Trip Hazard. She is creator and star of C4’s 2025 comedy-drama Pushers, a 6-part series based on Rosie’s original short Disability Benefits. Her acting credits span primetime dramas such as Silent Witness, Casualty and Call the Midwife, and she has also appeared as herself on Taskmaster, Live at the Apollo, QI, 8 Out of 10 Cats, The Last Leg and many more. Rosie is an accomplished writer across several mediums – she’s co-written Pushers, contributed to Netflix’s Sex Education, and become a bestselling children’s author with her Amazing Edie Eckhart series, praised by Jacqueline Wilson as ‘fresh, funny and ultra cool’. Her first non-fiction book, Moving On Up – a guide for young readers on bullying, friendship and resilience – was released in 2024. Rosie’s cheeky, joyful, brazen stand up has won her multiple awards at home and abroad, including the 2025 DIVA Queer Comedian of the Year Award. Her debut tour Triple Threat was nominated for Most Outstanding Show at the 2023 Melbourne International Comedy Festival, followed by a sold-out UK and Ireland run and a filmed special at Brighton’s Theatre Royal, which is available to watch here. Rosie’s latest show, I Can’t Tell What She’s Saying, debuted to packed audiences in Melbourne, has since toured around the UK, and will culminate in a recording at the Soho Theatre in March 2026. Rosie is co-founder and chair of the Rosie Jones Foundation; a charity whose mission is to empower lives and change minds and make sure no person with cerebral palsy feels alone or unheard. ‘Charm, smut, irony and laughs in equal measure’ Guardian