Comedian Akash Singh Is Still In Denial About The Impact Of Wife’s Comments On His Career

Comedian Akaash Singh has broken his silence after months out of the public eye, sitting down for a candid interview. Singh, who has been notably absent from the Flagrant podcast, addressed the fallout from comments his wife Jasleen made on her own podcast, comments that sent the internet into a frenzy and left his career in an uncomfortable place.

Singh spoke openly about how the situation affected him, particularly when the criticism turned toward his wife. “The stuff they say about me will make me insecure. But when you’re saying this about my wife and you’re calling her all this vile stuff, people were messaging my mom and her mom,” he said.

He acknowledged the irony of the situation too, admitting, “I’ve probably done this to a thousand famous people, so I don’t knock the people who did it.”

But for all his honesty in certain moments, Singh seems unwilling to place any responsibility on Jasleen for the chaos that followed. He described her comments as things that, if he had said them, “everybody would say it was a joke,” framing the internet’s reaction as a misunderstanding rather than a response to what she actually said.

He pointed to their close relationship as reassurance, noting that she appears on their couch in 90% of her TikToks and that they share locations with each other on their phones.

What stands out most is the pivot Singh makes toward stand-up comedy as his singular focus, distancing himself from the podcast world that built much of his platform. “I got into this to be the best comic possible. Everything else is noise. Take care of my family. Be the best comic possible. Everything else is nonsense. My ticket sales were not affected. They’ve gone up if anything,” he said.

It is a tidy narrative, but it glosses over the reality that Flagrant has been a central part of his income and reach for years. Repositioning stand-up as the only thing that ever mattered, right at the moment his podcast presence has collapsed, is a convenient reframing.

He also invoked a higher power to make sense of the chaos, sharing that his wife’s response during the first week was, “God knows what’s true. We know what’s true.” Singh admitted his own reaction was far less calm: “I care. What are you talking about? Are you crazy?”

Yet somehow, he landed on the idea that all of it was part of a plan, a lesson from God about the nature of fame.