Connor Wood, a comedian, podcaster, and social media personality who rose to fame with jokes about being unemployed during the COVID-19 pandemic, loves watching a good TV show. Broad City, Curb Your Enthusiasm, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Seinfeld, and Veep make the top of his list. So, naturally, when we met up in New York City’s West Village one May morning, he can’t help but tell me about his life like it’s a TV show.
Each story is remarkably episodic: There’s the one I’d title “The Gang Gets a Pig,” in which Wood and his sister bought a pig without their parents’ permission and hid it in their rooms in Texas. “The One Where Connor Broke His Arm” is an episode about Wood faking a broken arm for the attention (celebrities, they’re just like us!) multiple times before his arm broke for real. “The Cowboy Trials” is when he discovers that, despite his greatest attempts, he does not want to be a cowboy. And then there’s “Connor Gets Put on a Watch List,” in which we all discover Wood was born on 9/11.
Connor Wood: Man of the People
Credit: Joseph Maldonado
Shortly after Wood moved to the West Village in February, The Cut published a story highlighting how the It girls of the West Village spend their time. It went relatively viral, as a piece from The Cut does. When I bring it up, Wood acknowledges that his new home could be considered the influencer capital of NYC. But, he says, he didn’t choose the Village because of its proximity to influencer culture — a culture he doesn’t necessarily identify with — but because he was in a rush to find a place and his new apartment has “amazing light” which allows him to “film all day” and also not “fall into a deep, deep void.”
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