This is the first in a new series of interviews, conducted by one of our writers, of interesting and influential figures in “modern Australian” culture and politics.
Lisa Spencer is an Aussie musician, comedian and satirist. She shot to fame via her social media clips lampooning everything from our disastrous DEI and aboriginal rights regimes, to her skewering of figures as diverse as Pauline Hanson and Abbie Chatfield.
1) You have gained a lot of attention from the right for your mockery of left-liberalism.
Yet people may not know that you grew up in the liberal utopia of multicultural Melbourne.
What made you come to your senses? Did you have one too many oat milk lattes from your favourite Fitzroy barista? Were you booted from a South Yarra yoga class? Or did the Vic ALP install a machete bin on your balcony?
I think it was the moment I saw a friend (who, by the way, did live in Fitzroy) post on her Instagram that the word “female” was “offensive to women”, “misogynistic” and “not inclusive to trans people”. Lol. I told her what I thought, and she called me transphobic and unfriended me. This was the same friend who posted on her Instagram telling people to get vaccinated or else they’re selfish and killing people. Pattern recognition started to lock in right there. And that’s also when I started to wake up to the whole Covid scam too, and when I began to see the corruption in the world and all the agendas being pushed.
So thank you to the trans agenda for being so retarded that I began to wake up. I’m trying not to view it as left vs right, but more so just stupid agendas ruining our society and people.
2) Speaking of Victoria, what has happened there?
It is hard to think of a place that has had a greater fall from grace. The state has gone from the “jewel in the Liberal crown” to a machete-filled crime-riddled hellhole in less than a generation.
There’s this phenomenon where we tend to gravitate towards people and places that are similar to us. The spiritual hippies gravitate to places like Byron Bay and Nimbin because somehow they become a place for these types.
Somewhere along the line, Victoria became the place for commies and immigrants who love machetes.
I do think it’s about time we reclaim it, though. But where immigrants can be deported and removed, communism is just an idea, and our minds can be changed, just as I have experienced myself.
3) Returning to your shift to the right, many of us feel that the culture has moved so far to the left that the only thing we have had to do to be classed as conservatives is to stay in the same place.
Simply believing in natural reality; that men can never be women; or that diversity is not a strength is somehow now grounds for getting yourself cancelled or called “far-right”.
Was this your experience?
Pretty much sums it up. But at the end of the day, it’s all just labels and just silly, childish tactics to demonise, discredit and stop you from gaining momentum or any sort of power or influence. They might label you anything, such as being “far-right”, associate that with something we’ve learned is bad: e.g. a “nazi”, “White supremacist”, “racist”, and then even associate that further with murder, war, and violence.
It’s the same tactic they use with anyone who questions anything like Big Pharma, vaccines, specific events like 9/11, etc. They label you a “conspiracy theorist” and then associate the conspiracy theorists with being “crazy” and then ta-da! Nobody wants to be seen as crazy, so you’d better not question anything and be a “conspiracy theorist”.
I think the solution to this is just to embrace the labels and remember why you’re doing it. Maybe you’re “far-right” because you’re trying to protect your family, your people and your country. Maybe you’re “far-right” because you want Australians to be happy, healthy and thriving, and to increase our birth rates. Well, to that I say – thank you, sir!
4) On a related note, you are, of course, a woman. What role do you think the increased social presence of women and the broader feminisation of the culture has had in bringing us to our current state?
As an example, liberal multiculturalism seems to hijack women’s innate caring and nurturing impulses for malign social ends (e.g. one billion refugees; “fur babies” etc).
The female tendency towards conformity also appears to create the worst kind of rule by HR harridan and lady-boss commissar imaginable (as Orwell wrote in 1984: “it was always the women…”)
What do you make of all this?
I think it has absolutely had a huge role in bringing us to where we are. It could be one of the biggest factors indeed. I’ll explain it how I see it, though: Firstly, the typical Monday-Friday 9-5 work work work thing really does not align with our monthly cycle and typically will stress us out, which can cause physical (particularly fertility) and mental health issues, making us typically not the best candidate for these roles.
Just putting women in jobs that were created for men and telling us we can work the same is a rookie mistake. Our very biology makes us different to men in many ways. In my experience and from what I’ve witnessed, we do better in roles that were designed by us and for us. Typically, this might be using our hands, in nurturing roles, raising children, and being creative and mindful of our cycle; Roles that are more closely aligned with our natural biology.
I guess a part of the problem is that we’ve been either brainwashed or led astray from learning about our biology and what suits us. And unfortunately, all of this has been a part of the plan… the idea that women can do anything a man can do (feminism), being “boss women”, ticks a few boxes in the globalist new world order: Higher taxes, breaking apart the family unit, and a lower birth rate.
I’ll also add that it also brings me back to the Bible, where Eve ate the apple and committed sin. Many people will blame the woman for this first act of sin, and of course, it was she who did it. But where was Adam? Why didn’t he stop her? Yes us women need to take radical responsibility, but also I think more men need to wake up, put a foot down and take the lead.
At the end of the day, pitting women and men against each other is a part of the agenda destroying us. I think it’s more about building a system that actually supports us as women and as men and as unique individuals. You don’t plant a seed in a particular location from a fruit plant that isn’t designed for that environment. You could try, but you will find out soon enough that it won’t produce any fruit. Judge it by its fruits. Our fruits are the full blossom and harvest of aspects of our life and our health.
5) Returning to your comedy, one of your primary targets are the spiritual and “new age” communities found in places like Bali or Byron Bay.
What was your experience with these groups?
Why do you think people are attracted to them? Like the poor, do you think the spiritual “will always be with us”?
I fell into the “new age” world in my twenties. It’s now pretty easy for me to look back and see it was all a bit of a grift, but I can also see how it lured me in. I wanted to “fix myself” and “heal”. Psychology is pushed heavily in society, and I think that’s what initially got me to this thought (I now think psychology is a bit of a grift, too). But I think I was also after the truth. I think that’s also why others gravitate towards the new age spiritual world. It has some truths and some elements that I think are good and where there can be a lot of learning, but ultimately, I think it can lead people a little astray. And like anything, I think it has been heavily corrupted. And yes I think we’ll always be searching for answers in the spiritual because sometimes life makes no sense and things happen that make us question why. Whether God is real or not (I believe he is), there’s a comfort in that and searching for answers.
My experience with racism living in India as a 1st gen Indian
I think we just need a Race Discrimination Commissioner to help ($400K salary)
pic.twitter.com/Pg9F7i9DcZ
— Lisa Jane Spencer (@LisaJaneSpencer) November 10, 2025
6) Relatedly, you have copped some criticism for your satire of our sari-wearing yoga-loving Subcontinental friends and for referring to yourself as “Indian”.
As you mentioned on a podcast, all you are doing is adopting the same “civic nationalist” approach to politics that many Indian migrants adopt in which any underlying ethnic or racial considerations are deemed irrelevant and all that matters is one’s purely legal or bureaucratic status.
Why do you think this issue triggers people so much?
Ha. I think that one in particular really just triggers people’s idea of what is right and wrong and what you can and cannot do. There are many double standards in society, and somehow, men dressing up as women or me doing an American or British accent is okay in our society. But dressing up as an Indian and doing an Indian accent crosses the line because it’s now “racist”. The same thing happened when I did a Greek/Italian accent (my “Rye bae chick” character). And you can’t be “racist” because then you’re a “White supremacist”, a “fascist” and therefore a “nazi”, and basically that means you’re very, very bad! Lol. It’s all BS.
7) Returning to the role of comedy, one of comedy’s best-known functions is to humorously raise certain hard truths that can’t normally be raised directly.
I would also argue that another present function of comedy is in the preservation of sanity. Many Westerners are now being driven mad trying to reconcile the DEI dogmas imposed on them (“transwomen are women” etc.) with their daily realities of living in societies that are increasingly incoherent and chaotic.
Is this your view?
What do you think people can do to stay sane under the current conditions?
Yes exactly. Comedy is meant to make people laugh and point out ridiculous things in life, including each other and ourselves. It’s a great mirror. No one should be off limits because comedy is meant to give relief from any limits. Comedy breaks down any rules and hierarchies and actually is the funniest when it pokes at all of this. If I can’t make fun of something or someone, then that’s superiority and actual supremacy. And to me, that’s even funnier to make fun of. A good sense of humour can make life a lot better for yourself and this world. You gotta laugh!
Making fun of all agendas that get shoved down our throats is necessary to fight against it and also to keep us sane. You can either laugh or cry. It’s a gift I think to give to ourselves and also each other. Of course, that doesn’t mean to ignore things or stay in fairy land where you don’t take anything seriously… but it does mean not letting things get the better of you, where you’re always angry, apathetic or feeling hopeless (which is probably how they want you to feel). We have to take action against what’s trying to destroy us, but also have a balance of joy and laughter because laughter is the best medicine.
I also think getting back to basics is the best medicine, too. Go get chickens, have heaps of children and make your own sourdough and kombucha. When you’re separated from nature, life eventually becomes meaningless. The spiritual hippies have some things right, I think.
8) On the state of Western societies more broadly, where do you think Australia and the West are headed? Outright civil war? Or a slow and steady crack-up and balkanisation?
I’m not sure, but an idea has popped into my mind a few times. Australia is such a large piece of land and such a large country. It has so many different environments – from dry and hot, humid and tropical, to cold and snowy. Our environment has a big part to play in how we develop and what we do. We’re also a young nation, so perhaps much less solid in our ways compared to nations that have existed for thousands of years. Australia was built by the Anglo-Celts (under the British colony), but now many people consider Australians to also be of European descent, not just British. The government has also been pushing for a new definition that now includes many different people too: “Modern Australia” = “multicultural”.
So, can we stop this, stop immigration, deport people and try to keep Australia European? Maybe, yes, but I also wonder if Australia might just become multiple nations where there are groups in different areas. The cities right now seem to have become this new “multicultural Australia” already (this might already be considered Balkanisation, I’m not sure). Whereas there are many areas across the country and coast where there are majority of Anglos and what Australia was originally. There are also areas where there are more Aboriginal people. And I’m not saying we can’t all be one nation, but typically, one nation requires unity.
But the idea of multiculturalism and, therefore, multiethnicity (in particular, dissimilar ethnicities), is that there is no unity. We already had the separation between White and Aboriginal, which I think is manageable for a nation to handle, but now we have more separation between many different cultures and ethnicities. Which I argue is much harder to handle. Because typically, it is in human nature to help our own people (which includes culture and race), rather than others. So we can’t deny that multiculturalism and multiethnicity will only make us more divided.
But in saying all of this, I’m pretty opposed to Australia becoming multiple nations and opposed to the globalists’ “New World Order” (making us lose our national identity as Australians and blend us all together). I’m sure WA and Queensland would love to break away from Vic and NSW, but I’d much rather stay as a whole nation so we can help one another, fight back and kick out the pests.
9) Finally, is there anything you are working on that you would like us to know about?
Do you have any particular plans for the future?
Honestly, I have no idea what I’m doing. I’ll be continuing to make videos, and also I’m hoping to get to Austin, Texas, again this year to do more stand-up comedy there and maybe try to get on Kill Tony again. It was a wild experience last time so I’d like to improve with that. And then on a more personal level, I’d like to get married and have like four kids. A woman can dream!
You can find and support Lisa here:
Insta: https://www.instagram.com/lisajanespencer
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@itslisajanespencer
X: https://x.com/lisajanespencer
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iamlisajanespencer
The post The Noticer interviews Indian comedian Lisa Spencer first appeared on The Noticer.
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I think we just need a Race Discrimination Commissioner to help ($400K salary)


