Having comedians he grew up admiring such as: J Anthony
Brown, DeRay Davis, Luenell, Kevin Cease, Chris
Spencer, Marlon Wayans, Deon Cole, JJ Williamson, Ricky
Harris, Red Grant, Honest John etc. all share the stage with
him and call him hilarious, funny, or a great writer has
been one of his career highlights and a dream come true...
Hailing from the Los Angeles area, the American born
Nigerian is making a huge wave on the comedy scene.
Not yet 25, comedian, writer, and actor CHINEDU, has
already established himself as a comedic presence
performing repeatedly at some of the country’s most
renowned comedy clubs: “The Comedy Store”, “The Laugh
Factory”, “Improv,” “HAHA CAfe Comedy Club,”
“The Comedy Union,” “The J Spot,” etc. as well as touring
California’s UC and State colleges annually.
Most recently, Chinedu’s comedic talents can be seen on television in his own one hour comedy special on The African Channel, which still continually airs internationally. Appearing on numerous stages, Chinedu provides the audience with a fresh point of view, hilarious logic, and classic jokes that will make you want to repeat them to a group of friends the next day at work. A writer for famous comedians and well known sketch comedy groups, Chinedu has been labeled by audiences and bookers as clever, ready for primetime, hysterical, and original with jokes that can go anywhere!
Chinedu’s material derives from his life growing up in the Los Angeles area with foreign parents from Nigeria, his college moments since graduating from one of the top party schools in the nation (UCSB), his years as a special education middle school teacher in Los Angeles’ inner city, his creative sarcasm, times of being broke, witty angles on stereotypes, politics, sports, relationships, ex girlfriends, girlfriends, everyday issues, and everything else under the sun.
Chinedu KNOWS what’s FUNNY plain and simple; when performing gigs believe you will always get your money and time worth, just give this man a spotlight and a mic, and enjoy the GENIUS.
...Typing in third person is so weird.


