Postavke privatnosti

Buy tickets for Nikki Glaser - 09.05.2026., The Wiltern, Los Angeles, United States of America Buy tickets for Nikki Glaser - 09.05.2026., The Wiltern, Los Angeles, United States of America

STAND-UP COMEDY

Nikki Glaser

The Wiltern, Los Angeles, US
09. May 2026. 21:45h
2026
09
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Nikki Glaser tickets at The Wiltern - sharp late-night stand-up comedy in Los Angeles for bold comedy fans

Looking for tickets to see Nikki Glaser in Los Angeles? The Wiltern hosts a late Netflix Is A Joke Presents: The Pete Davidson Show program with sharp stand-up, personal storytelling and festival energy for fans who like comedy with a bite. Plan your ticket purchase in time

Nikki Glaser at The Wiltern: a late slot for fast, sharp, and very adult comedy

Nikki Glaser performs on 05/09/2026 at 21:45 at The Wiltern in Los Angeles, in a slot announced as Netflix Is A Joke Presents: The Pete Davidson Show (LATE SHOW), with a line-up listing Pete Davidson, Netflix Is A Joke Fest, and Nikki Glaser. This is an important detail for the audience: this is not a classic solo hour of stand up where it is known that one comedian carries the entire evening, but a festival comedy program with several names and a late-night rhythm. Precisely that kind of format often means quicker shifts in energy, fewer introductions, and an audience already ready for sharper material as soon as the lights go down.

In recent years, Nikki Glaser has grown from a niche stand up favorite into one of the most recognizable American comedy names. Her humor is not a soft pillow for an audience that wants to nod along comfortably. It is more like a friend who says what everyone leaves unsaid, then laughs at her own awkwardness before you have time to decide whether it is uncomfortable or brilliant. Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why Nikki Glaser is special on stage

Glaser builds comedy on honesty that sounds spontaneous, but is clearly precisely polished. Her frequent themes are relationships, sex, aging, insecurities, pop culture, and all those small social lies people use to look more normal than they are. Her style combines observational humor, personal storytelling, darker self-irony, and roast energy. Do not expect a gentle "family friendly" performance where everyone feels protected as if on a tourist bus with a guide who talks only about pretty facades.

What is interesting about her is that she often leads the audience through topics that, in another performance, would sound like too much information. In her delivery, it becomes material with rhythm: confession, jab, twist, then another jab. When she talks about relationships or her own habits, she does not position herself as someone handing out life lessons, but as a person who has been in chaos long enough to know the furniture layout. This especially suits an audience that likes comedy in which discomfort is not hidden, but used as fuel.

Performance context: a festival evening, not just a routine tour stop

The slot at The Wiltern fits into the broader framework of the Netflix Is A Joke Fest program in Los Angeles. In 2026, the festival takes place from 05/04 to 05/10 and brings together different forms of comedy: stand up performances, live podcasts, recordings, special programs, and evenings with multiple performers. For a visitor, that means the audience does not come to the venue only for one classic evening of laughter, but for a festival week in which Los Angeles is full of comedians, fans, and industry guests.

That is exactly why the late 21:45 slot has its own logic. It is a time for an audience that does not expect a gentle introduction to the evening, but the final part of the day with an already warmed-up stage. If earlier shows often carry the feeling of "let's see what awaits us", a late stand up slot is more like entering a room where the conversation has already begun, someone has said something too honest, and now everyone wants to hear what comes next.

Reputation: from specials to major television stages

Glaser's recognition does not come only from clubs. A wider audience knows her from stand up specials, television appearances, podcasts, and roast formats. Her performance in Netflix's The Roast of Tom Brady in 2024 was especially resonant, where she stood out as one of the most noticed participants of the evening. Her 2024 HBO special "Someday You'll Die" earned her nominations in television award categories, and the Recording Academy nominated the album connected with that special for a Grammy in the comedy category.

Her profile grew further after she hosted the Golden Globe Awards. That job requires a precise balance: enough sharpness for the audience to believe that comedy is happening live, but also enough control so that the gala evening does not turn into a traffic accident with better suits. Glaser handles that kind of environment well because her basic tool is speed - quick reaction, quick sentence, and enough self-awareness to know when to let silence work for her.

  • Style of humor: sharp, personal, often explicit, with plenty of self-irony and commentary on relationships.

  • Audience it suits best: viewers who like direct comedy, roast energy, and themes that do not avoid uncomfortable details.

  • What not to expect: sketches revealed in advance, a theatrical plot, or an evening where every sentence is intended equally for all generations.

  • Evening format: announced as the late program of The Pete Davidson Show within the Netflix Is A Joke Fest context, with Nikki Glaser in the line-up.



Humor that goes straight into awkward everyday situations

Nikki Glaser works best when the audience recognizes a situation before it would admit it itself. These can be conversations about dating, the body, fame, friendships, sexuality, panic about one's own decisions, or that moment when someone says "just be honest" and then gets offended because you really were honest. Her comedy often uses personal confession, but not as a diary entry. The point is not for the audience to say "poor Nikki", but to recognize itself and laugh at its own version of the same problem.It is also important to say this: her material can be explicitly content-heavy. That does not mean the point is only shock. With Glaser, explicitness is often a way to skip the polite surface and immediately get to what actually bothers, attracts, or embarrasses people. For an audience that likes tidy comedy without edges, this can be too direct. For an audience that likes it when a comedian does not pretend that everyone in the room is nice, rational, and emotionally stable, that is exactly the reason to come.

Seats are disappearing quickly.

The Wiltern: an art deco frame for comedy with an urban nerve

The Wiltern is located at 3790 Wilshire Blvd in Los Angeles, at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Western Avenue. The location itself is practical because the Wilshire/Western station on the Metro D Line is directly across from the venue, which is a great advantage in a city where the sentence "I'm going by car" can turn into a separate episode of existential drama. For visitors coming from the Downtown LA direction or connecting via other metro lines, public transportation may be simpler than looking for parking at the last minute.

The venue is part of the well-known The Wiltern and Pellissier Building complex, recognizable for its Art Deco architecture and greenish terracotta facade. The building dates from 1931, and the Los Angeles Conservancy describes it as one of the city's recognizable Art Deco sites. That means the evening does not begin only when the comedian steps onto the stage. It begins already upon arrival, beneath vertical signs and in a space that has old Hollywood theatricality, but without needing to act more important than the show.

Practical for arrival


  • Address: The Wiltern, 3790 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90010.

  • Public transportation: the Metro D Line stops at Wilshire/Western, directly across from the venue.

  • Parking: paid parking options exist in the area, and it is advisable to leave earlier because of evening traffic and the festival slot.

  • Show time: the program is announced for 21:45.

  • Doors: for this late program, doors are listed as opening at 21:00.

  • Mobile phones: a phone-free experience has been announced for the event, with YONDR pouches for mobile phones, smart watches, and similar devices in the performance space.



What the live experience looks like

Stand up in a venue like The Wiltern is not the same as watching a special at home. At home, you can pause, rewind, check a message, and return after three minutes. In the venue, there is no such luxury, especially if a phone-free experience has been announced. That usually pushes the audience toward better concentration: reactions are louder, silences are clearer, and the comedian senses when the audience is with her and when she needs to change speed.With Glaser, that relationship with the audience is especially felt because her humor lives on rhythm and trust. If the audience accepts that the evening is going into more honest, dirtier, and more self-ironic corners, the performance can take on the feeling of a conversation that has spun out of control, but is being led by someone who knows exactly where the exit is. That is the difference between a comedian who merely "has jokes" and a comedian who knows how to take an audience through discomfort without losing control of the room.

Solo performance, festival evening, and what that changes for the audience

At a solo stand up performance, the audience most often comes for one comedian and expects a full authorial arc: introduction, development of themes, a stronger central block, and a finale. Festival programs or evenings with multiple comedians have a different dynamic. There are more changes in tone, and the audience often gets a broader cross-section of styles. One comedian may play on personal confession, another on absurdity, a third on crowd work, a fourth on brutally short punchlines.For this slot, it is especially important that the event was published as The Pete Davidson Show (LATE SHOW), and Nikki Glaser is listed in the line-up. That is why it is fairest to expect an evening in which her performance comes as part of a larger comedy program, not as a pre-announced solo special. That does not reduce the reason for Nikki Glaser fans to attend, but it sets realistic expectations: you are coming to a late festival evening, not to a performance with a fixed theatrical schedule of scenes.

Who this evening will suit best

This event is especially interesting to an audience that likes the American stand up scene in its faster and more direct form. For couples, it can be fun precisely because Glaser often touches on topics couples otherwise open only after two glasses of courage and one misunderstood comment. Groups of friends will enjoy the festival energy and late slot. Fans of the roast format will be drawn to her ability to be sharp without seeming as if she is simply throwing insults randomly like confetti with bad intentions.If you are coming because you saw her in television appearances, it is worth keeping in mind that the stage is a different terrain. Television cuts rhythm, the camera chooses reactions, editing smooths transitions. Live, you can see how a comedian builds tension, how she waits for laughter, and how she returns to a topic when the audience goes one step further than planned. In a good stand up evening, part of the fun is precisely feeling that everything is happening now, in front of people who cannot hide their reaction behind a screen.

It is worth securing tickets in time.

Los Angeles as host of comedy week

For a stand up audience, Los Angeles is more than a backdrop. It is a city of clubs, television studios, streaming platforms, writers' rooms, and comedians who test material in the evening and try to sell it as a series idea in the morning. During Netflix Is A Joke Fest week, that feeling intensifies because the program spreads across multiple city spaces, from large stages to clubs and special events. Visitors traveling to Los Angeles for the show can combine the evening at The Wiltern with exploring Koreatown, the Wilshire corridor, and other festival slots in the city.

Koreatown is a practical choice for an evening out because it offers many restaurants and bars within a relatively small radius by Los Angeles standards. That is useful for a late slot: dinner before the show, the metro or a short ride to the venue, then entry without rushing. Just do not count on traffic making sense because you have a plan. Los Angeles often reacts to plans like a comedian to a joke that is too easy - it ignores them and goes its own way.

What to pay attention to before heading out

Since a phone-free experience has been announced for the event, it is good to agree with your group in advance where you will meet before entering and after leaving. When the phone ends up in a locked pouch, that modern ritual disappears: "where are you?", "I'm here", "I can't see you", "by the door", "which door?". That can be a blessing if you want to watch stand up without screens glowing in your peripheral vision, but it requires a little more organization than an ordinary night out.

It is also worthwhile to check the rules for bringing bags and prohibited items before arrival. The Wiltern lists safety and organizational guidelines for visitors, including restrictions on certain items and recording equipment. With stand up, this is especially important because recording does not only disturb performers and the audience, but can ruin material that comedians have been developing for months. In other words, the best souvenir from an evening like this is not a blurry recording from a pocket, but a sentence you will try to retell the next day and realize that without her timing it sounds considerably more suspicious.

What to expect from the evening at The Wiltern

Expect an audience that knows why it came: a late stand up slot, a known festival label, a venue with character, and a comedian whose humor does not dance around the topic but goes straight through the middle. Glaser is strongest when she combines personal vulnerability and cold precision, so her jokes often sound as if they came from a real conversation someone should have stopped three sentences earlier. That is exactly why she works live - the audience hears the thought before it is fully beautified.

For visitors who like neat, predictable humor, this may be an evening with edges. For those who like comedy that admits relationships are complicated, the body is strange, fame is absurd, and honesty is often socially impractical, Nikki Glaser is a very interesting reason to come to The Wiltern. Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.

Sources:- Live Nation - data were used on the event name, the 05/09/2026 slot at 21:45, the venue The Wiltern, and the listed line-up for Netflix Is A Joke Presents: The Pete Davidson Show (LATE SHOW).

- Netflix Is A Joke Fest - the context of the festival in Los Angeles was used, the duration of the festival week from 05/04 to 05/10/2026, and Nikki Glaser's profile as a performer in the program.

- The Wiltern - data were used on the venue address, arrival by public transportation, the Wilshire/Western station, visitor rules, and practical information for the audience.- LA Conservancy - data were used on The Wiltern and Pellissier Building complex, Art Deco architecture, and the year 1931.

- Television Academy - data were used on the nominations of the special "Nikki Glaser: Someday You'll Die" for 2024.

- GRAMMY.com - data were used on the Grammy nomination for the comedy album connected with the special "Someday You'll Die".- Curations LA - practical data were used on doors opening at 21:00 and the phone-free experience with YONDR pouches for this event.

Everything you need to know about tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser — on location The Wiltern

+ Where to find tickets for the stand-up comedy show by Nikki Glaser?

+ How to choose the best seat to enjoy the stand-up comedy show by Nikki Glaser?

+ When is the best time to buy tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser?

+ Can tickets for the stand-up comedy show by Nikki Glaser be delivered electronically?

+ Are tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser purchased through partners safe?

+ Are there tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser available in family sectors?

+ What to do if tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser are sold out?

+ Can I buy last-minute tickets for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser?

+ What information do I need to buy tickets for the stand-up comedian named Nikki Glaser?

+ How to find tickets for specific sectors for the stand-up show by Nikki Glaser — location: The Wiltern?

5 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

Find accommodation nearby


You may be interested

Thursday 27.08. 2026 19:00
Palace Theatre, 34 W Broad St
Friday 28.08. 2026 19:00
Palace Theatre, 34 W Broad St
Saturday 29.08. 2026 19:00
Connor Palace, 1615 Euclid Ave
Sunday 30.08. 2026 19:00
Connor Palace, 1615 Euclid Ave
Friday 04.09. 2026 20:00
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, 3570 S Las Vegas Blvd
Saturday 05.09. 2026 20:00
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, 3570 S Las Vegas Blvd
Sunday 06.09. 2026 20:00
Chumash Casino, 3400 CA-246
Friday 11.09. 2026 20:00
Cowlitz Ballroom, 1 Cowlitz Wy
Saturday 12.09. 2026 20:00
Cowlitz Ballroom, 1 Cowlitz Wy
Sunday 13.09. 2026 19:30
Hayden Homes Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Dr
Friday 18.09. 2026 20:00
Hard Rock Live, 1 Seminole Way
Saturday 19.09. 2026 19:00
Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall at FSW, 13350 FSW Pkwy
Sunday 20.09. 2026 19:00
Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall at FSW, 13350 FSW Pkwy
Friday 25.09. 2026 20:00
The Venue at Thunder Valley, 1200 Athens Ave
Saturday 26.09. 2026 19:00
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, 630 Hamilton St
Saturday 26.09. 2026 21:30
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, 630 Hamilton St
Sunday 27.09. 2026 19:00
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, 630 Hamilton St
Thursday 01.10. 2026 19:00
Clowes Memorial Hall, 4602 Sunset Ave
Friday 02.10. 2026 19:00
Clowes Memorial Hall, 4602 Sunset Ave
Saturday 03.10. 2026 19:00
Bomhard Theater at Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts - Complex, 501 W Main St
Page: 2 / 3Total: 60

Culture & events desk

The editorial team for arts, music and events brings together journalists and volunteers who have spent years living alongside stages, clubs, festivals and all those spaces where art and audience meet. Our writing comes from long-standing journalistic experience and genuine involvement in cultural life: from endless evenings in concert halls, from conversations with musicians before and after performances, from improvised press corners at festivals, from premieres that end with long discussions in theatre corridors, but also from small, intimate events that attract only a handful of curious people yet remain engraved in their memory for a lifetime.

In our newsroom write people who know what a stage looks like when the lights go out, how the audience breathes while waiting for the first note, and what happens behind the curtain while instruments or microphones are still being adjusted. Many of us have spent years standing on stage ourselves, participating in programme organisation, volunteering at festivals or helping artist friends present their projects. This experience from both sides of the stage gives us the ability to view events not merely as items in a calendar, but as living encounters between creators and audiences.

Our stories do not stop at who performed and how many people attended. We are interested in the processes that precede every appearance before the public: how the idea for a concert or festival is born, what it takes for a comedy to reach its audience, how much time is spent preparing an exhibition or a multimedia project. In our texts we try to convey the atmosphere of the space, the energy of the performers and the mood of the audience, as well as the context in which all this happens – why a certain performance is important, how it fits into the broader music or art scene, and what remains after the venue empties.

The editorial team for arts, music and events builds its credibility on persistence and long-term work. Behind us are decades of writing, editing, talking with artists and observing how scenes change, how some styles come to the forefront while others retreat into the background. This experience helps us distinguish fleeting hype from events that truly push boundaries and leave a mark. When we give something space, we strive to explain why we believe it deserves attention, and when we are critical, we explain our reasons, aware of the effort behind every project.

Our task is simple and demanding at the same time: to be reliable witnesses of cultural and entertainment life, to write honestly toward the audience and honestly toward performers. We do not deal in generic praise; we aim to precisely describe what we see and hear, knowing that every text may be someone’s first encounter with a certain band, festival, comedian or artist. The editorial team for arts, music and events therefore exists as a place where all these encounters are recorded, interpreted and passed on – humanly, clearly and with respect for the very reason it exists at all: the live, real event in front of a real audience.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
This article is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or approved by any sports, cultural, entertainment, music, or other organization, association, federation, or institution mentioned in the content.
Names of events, organizations, competitions, festivals, concerts, and similar entities are used solely for accurate public information purposes, in accordance with Articles 3 and 5 of the Media Act of the Republic of Croatia, and Article 5 of Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council.
The content is informational in nature and does not imply any official affiliation with the mentioned organizations or events.
NOTE FOR OUR READERS
Karlobag.eu provides news, analyses and information on global events and topics of interest to readers worldwide. All published information is for informational purposes only.
We emphasize that we are not experts in scientific, medical, financial or legal fields. Therefore, before making any decisions based on the information from our portal, we recommend that you consult with qualified experts.
Karlobag.eu may contain links to external third-party sites, including affiliate links and sponsored content. If you purchase a product or service through these links, we may earn a commission. We have no control over the content or policies of these sites and assume no responsibility for their accuracy, availability or any transactions conducted through them.
If we publish information about events or ticket sales, please note that we do not sell tickets either directly or via intermediaries. Our portal solely informs readers about events and purchasing opportunities through external sales platforms. We connect readers with partners offering ticket sales services, but do not guarantee their availability, prices or purchase conditions. All ticket information is obtained from third parties and may be subject to change without prior notice. We recommend that you thoroughly check the sales conditions with the selected partner before any purchase, as the Karlobag.eu portal does not assume responsibility for transactions or ticket sale conditions.
All information on our portal is subject to change without prior notice. By using this portal, you agree to read the content at your own risk.