Judging by her social media numbers, so do tens of thousands of other people. One of the reasons Burton likes to post her crowd work on social media is because it’s spontaneous. “You only have so many bits, right?” she said. If she posted those, people would know a lot of her jokes before they came to her shows.
Burton’s animated affect is a natural on stage and her humor is infectious, which caught the eye of a Washington Post reporter.
“I’m best known for my high-energy, witty punchlines, and infusion of the law and my life experiences into my comedy,” she said in the write-up, “Meet 10 Funniest Comedians Working in D.C. Right Now.”
The 2017 graduate also infuses her comedy with political humor, a flavor that is decidedly D.C.
Take her joke about her friends. “I love my friends. My friends are absolute delinquents, though. They remind me of George Bush. Like, every day, they show me that some children did, in fact, get left behind.”
“There's a lot of political humor that you can do here that you can’t do in other states just because of our proximity to the capital,” she explained. “So many people in the audience work on the Hill. They’re consultants. They’re lobbyists. They’re lawyers.”
It All Started at Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery
In 2022, an ad for an open mic night caught the 6-foot woman’s eye. Burton has always had a knack for making her friends laugh and is a “huge extrovert.”
She had also decided she was going to stop drinking.
“There wasn’t any huge overarching reason for why I decided to do it,” she said. “But sometimes I think you build bad habits and I realized that sometimes those things were taking me away from the things that I cared about.”
She also realized she needed something new to fill her evening hours, so she signed up for the open mic at Rock Bottom. On that lighted stage, she rediscovered the adrenaline rush that came when, as ACC Rookie of the Year, she was playing Division I volleyball at UVA. Found again was the energy she got from crowds while she sipped cocktails in nightclubs.