David Sean Anthony (born August 26, 1967) is an American comedian, actor, screenwriter, and podcaster. He is best known as the creator and co-host of the comedy podcast The Dollop, in which he tells notable stories from American history to his friend and fellow comedian Gareth Reynolds, who has not heard the story before. The pair have a second podcast, The Past Times, where Anthony picks a paper from a day in history and reads it to Reynolds and a special guest. Since 2019, Anthony has also co-hosted the podcast The Audit with writer Josh Olson.
From age five, Anthony knew he wanted to be a comedian. As a child, he would stay awake to watch comedians on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and enjoyed watching Evening at the Improv and Saturday Night Live. He grew up listening to the comedy albums of comedians such as Richard Pryor and the fact that Robin Williams was also from Marin County was significant to him. He first performed stand-up at the age of 23.
Anthony has performed stand-up comedy on various late-night shows, including Jimmy Kimmel Live and The Late Late Show, as well as on Comedy Central. He has performed stand-up in every state in the continental US and all over the world, including the Just for Laughs Montreal Comedy Festival and the Melbourne International Comedy Festival. In 2015, the Herald Sun gave his show "Hot Head" a 4-star review and called it "hugely enjoyable." Also in 2015, he appeared on the nationally televised Cracker Night as part of Sydney Comedy Festival 2015. His 2015 comedy tour and subsequent album, Hot Head, were based around his difficult childhood. He has released two comedy albums, Hot Head and Shame Chamber. Both albums charted on the Billboard Comedy Album Chart -- Hot Head at #4 and Shame Chamber at #5.
In 2006, Anthony's first staff writing job was on The Greg Behrendt Show, a daytime syndicated talk show. He also appeared on the show playing comedic characters, including the recurring character Waffle Man. He has also worked on several pilots with Bob Odenkirk.
Anthony had multiple job titles on the show Maron on IFC. He played an exaggerated version of himself, and his wife was played by Amy Smart. In the show's second season, he was added as a staff writer. He became the show's story editor in the fourth season and directed an episode.
In 2015, Anthony was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Outstanding Script in the category of Episodic Comedy for writing the Maron episode "Racegate." In 2019, he wrote an episode of Deadly Class for Syfy and was credited as a co-producer. He was a story consultant on the scripted audio drama Bronzeville written by Josh Olson and starring Laurence Fishburne. He has written a screenplay based on the Piedras Negras jailbreak.
When Anthony and Behrendt learned that a podcast in Australia called TOFOP had a similar vibe to their podcast, they invited the hosts, Wil Anderson and Charlie Clausen, to be guests on Walking the Room. This collaboration led to Walking the Room gaining a significant following in Australia. In 2012, Anthony and Behrendt appeared on stage with Anderson and Clausen during the Melbourne International Comedy Festival in an event billed as Superpod. The Festival immediately lost the recording, and the four podcasters discussed the loss that night on the episode "The Death of Superpod."
Anthony regularly appears as a guest on other podcasts, including FOFOP, a podcast started by Wil Anderson when his TOFOP cohost, Charlie Clausen, was unavailable to record for an extended period. Anthony was the first guest host, resulting in the nickname "Guest Charlie Number One." Anthony guested on The Naughty Show podcast, where Gareth Reynolds was a co-host. The pair hit it off, and Anthony invited Reynolds to fill in for Behrendt on Walking the Room a couple of times. Anthony has said that Reynolds is the funniest person he knows.
As Walking the Room was coming to an end, Anthony started a new podcast called The Dollop. He was tired of talking about himself and decided that the new podcast would be more structured. The original plan was to have a different comedian sit in each week, and Anthony invited Reynolds to be the first guest. As soon as fans heard the episode, they overwhelmingly told Anthony to stick with Reynolds as his permanent co-host. The Dollop is on the All Things Comedy network.
On The Dollop, Anthony presents an event or person from American history that he has researched to Reynolds, who usually has no idea what the topic is going to be about. Reynolds then reacts to the story, and the pair improvise as they go. When they tour, Anthony presents a topic from the state or country they are in. Fans of the show have taken to calling themselves "Rubes" in homage to one of the podcast's early subjects, baseball player Rube Waddell. The Dollop has toured across the United States, Europe, and Australia, where live podcast performances have repeatedly sold out theaters.
Anthony often frames stories from the point of view of laborers, enslaved people, women, and the poor. He credits Howard Zinn's book A People's History of the United States, which he first read in high school, for "radicalizing" him.
Anthony and Gareth Reynolds have a second podcast, The Past Times, where Anthony picks a paper from a day in history and reads it to Gareth Reynolds and a special guest. The pair have collaborated on a number of projects, including a book based on their podcast titled The United States of Absurdity: Untold Stories from American History, which was released in 2017. They put out a limited-run series of England and UK Dollop episodes. They also made a web series called Trash Toons, in which they watched and discussed old cartoons, and put out webcasts of political coverage. In 2020, they did a special episode of The Dollop on Comedy Gives Back to raise money for comedians whose careers were affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
From 2019 to 2022, Anthony co-hosted the podcast The West Wing Thing with writer Josh Olson. The hosts discussed the politics of the TV show The West Wing from a leftist perspective and the effect it had on modern politics.
Currently, Anthony and Olson host The Audit podcast, where they audit a variety of online classes, docuseries, and other media products created by political figures and boil them down. With the rise of MasterClass, TED talks, and celebrity biographies, the country's political elite are bombarding us with information. Dave, Josh, and a rotating coterie of guest hosts consume so-called educational content, then offer a review detailing the sociopathy and insanity they find in the messages.
The podcast festival ran for six years and featured many comedians, including Marc Maron, Aisha Tyler, Doug Benson, Greg Proops, and Paul F. Tompkins. My Favorite Murder taped its first-ever live broadcast at the festival. Their guest to tell a hometown murder story was Anthony, who talked about a serial killer who stalked women on hiking trails near San Francisco. After the Sofitel Los Angeles hotel in Beverly Hills put a member of the Podfest community's safety at risk, the festival moved venues, and Anthony publicly recommended against staying at the hotel.
On August 25, 2019, Josh Levin posted a thread to Twitter accusing Anthony of plagiarizing one of Levin's articles for a Dollop show at Chicago's Athenaeum Theatre in 2017. Levin's article was cited by The Dollop in the show notes but was not mentioned in the recording. Levin stated that there was no way to click on the sources in the episode description, but it was then shown that Levin did not have the setting correct on his phone and that the sources were easily accessible. In a reply to the thread, author Paul Brown stated that The Dollop had also plagiarized sections of his book The Rocket belt Caper for a 2017 episode. Brown's book was cited in The Dollop show notes but not mentioned on the recording.
The Dollop hosts have stated it is a fair use podcast. Anthony told the San Francisco Chronicle, "We want people to find the source material and know who's writing it. The whole reason I'm doing the podcast is to get these stories out there because they're important."
In 2020, Anthony backed Nithya Raman for Los Angeles City Council. He encourages others to become involved in local politics, believing it is a better way to effect change than focusing on national politics. He is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America.
Another issue of deep importance to Anthony is climate change. He has spoken about his fears for the planet as a whole and for his own child's future. He actively protests against new construction that is detrimental to the environment. Anthony, with his Dollop co-host Reynolds, formed a group called Plan It Change 10. The group's mission, as stated on its Facebook page, is to "get people who want to fight climate change together into groups in their cities and towns and turn our fear into action and art."
Anthony often stresses his belief on his podcast and in interviews that marching against something is not effective by itself. He believes people must "put pressure on authorities, get in their faces, and yell at them." He strongly supports workers and unions going on strike.
Since 2006, Anthony has been married to Heather, a doctor of psychology. They have a son together and three named Maple, Larry, and Pablo.
| Veep | 2016 | Reporter |
| Hidden America with Jonah Ray | 2016 | Gareth |
| Director's Cut | 2016 | Richard Speck |
| Comedy Bang Bang | 2015 | Pranked Guy |
| Dave | ||
| Self | ||
| Businessman | ||
| Customer | ||
| Director | ||
| Showrunner No. 2 | ||
| Florida Stay Reporter | ||
| Matteo | ||
| Jason | ||
| Technician | ||
| Dave / Meteor Man / Repo Man |
| Cohost |
| Guest on live episode from LA Podcast Festival |
|
|