As an actress, she appeared in six episodes of Casualty between 2021 and 2022. Jones authored a children's book, The Amazing Edie Eckhart, about an 11-year-old girl with cerebral palsy, and a sequel, The Big Trip.
Early life
Jones grew up in Bridlington[6] in the East Riding of Yorkshire and went to Headlands School.[7] Her parents are teachers.[8] Aged four, she introduced herself to her class by saying that she had cerebral palsy that made her "talk slowly" and "fall over a lot". She lost a friend at the age of seven who told her that she was "very bad" at running games.[9]
Alongside series creator Laurie Nunn, Jones co-wrote episode four of the second season of the Netflix comedy-drama Sex Education, released in January 2020.[14]
Television
Jones has been a panellist in episodes of 8 Out of 10 Cats[2] and The Last Leg.[3] In 2019 Jones was a guest on Hypothetical and 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown.[5][4] She also appeared on an episode of Joe Lycett's Got Your Back.[15]
Jones has also appeared on BBC Radio 4's The News Quiz,[16] the Channel 4 online programme The Last Leg: The Correspondents,[17] the BBC Three series "Things Not to Say",[18]BBC Radio 4's Fred at the Stand[19] and BBC web series Period Dramas.[20] In 2021, Jones appeared in the QI episode "Sideshows, Stunts and Scavenger Hunts".[21] She participated in Celebrity Mastermind in 2023.[22]
Jones appeared as a panellist on BBC One's political debate programme Question Time twice, first on 12 November 2020.[23][24] Jones trended on Twitter each time due to the harassment directed towards her.[25]: 25:00
In May 2021, Jones starred in her own Channel 4 series, Trip Hazard: My Great British Adventure. Filmed during the COVID-19 pandemic, it features Jones visiting a number of UK tourist destinations, joined by other celebrities. In March 2022, a second series of five hour-long episodes was commissioned;[26] it premiered on 23 August 2022.[27] The programme has been nominated for a BAFTA.[8]
Jones presented the 2023 documentary Rosie Jones: Am I a R*tard? [sic], which is about online hate speech against disabled people. She reads messages written about her, explores the emotional effect of harassment, the inaction by social media companies and the motivations behind people who send these messages. The use of the slur retard received widespread criticism and led to the withdrawal of some contributors.[28][29][30][31]
In March 2022, Channel 4 transmitted Dine Hard, a five-part cooking show and chat show that Jones presented.[26]
Jones has had a number of acting roles, appearing on Silent Witness in 2018.[32] In 2020, she guest starred in an episode of the third series of the BBC drama Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators.[33] In August 2023, it was announced that Jones will play the lead role of Disability Benefits, an upcoming Channel 4 comedy series.[34] In January 2024, she starred in an episode of Call the Midwife.[35][36][37]
Jones first performed stand-up comedy without preparation at a friend's comedy night.[6]
In 2017, Jones performed "Inspiration" at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The show was 35 minutes long and contained jokes about her visit to the 2016 Summer Paralympics, using disabled toilets, and commentary on the words "disabled" and "spastic". It received 3.5 stars in Chortle[39] and three stars in The List.[40]
In 2018, Jones' Edinburgh Festival Fringe show was entitled "Fifteen Minutes". Jones talks about a hypothetical "able-bodied Rosie" and discusses a sexual fantasy about Ryan Gosling. She and her routine were featured in Edinburgh Nights, a BBC show about the Fringe presented by Nish Kumar. "Fifteen Minutes" received five stars in The Arts Desk[41] and four stars in iNews,[42]Chortle,[43]The Scotsman[44] and Broadway World.[45] It was listed by Evening Standard as one of the ten "best comedy shows to see" at the festival.[46]
Jones began her first solo tour, Triple Threat, in 2023.[25]: 21:00
Other work
In June 2019, Jones launched a podcast alongside the fellow comedian Helen Bauer, entitled Daddy Look at Me. The podcast features Bauer, Jones and a guest discussing their childhoods and what they did in order to get attention in their youth.[52]
In 2021, Jones authored a children's novel, The Amazing Edie Eckhart. The titular character, an 11-year-old girl with cerebral palsy, deals with the pressure of entering secondary school and becoming distant from her lifelong friend and support Charlie.[53][54][55] Jones wrote a sequel novel, The Big Trip, which was published on 18 August 2022.[56]
Comedic style
Jones has ataxic cerebral palsy;[57] she incorporates her slow speech pattern into her comedy, constructing jokes to subvert the punchline that audiences expect.[6][12] For instance, she has used the opening line "As you can tell from my voice, I suffer from being northern."[11] Jones unexpectedly refers to previous jokes later in her performances, a trait which one critic describes as "clinically planned".[44]
She describes her style as "cheeky",[6] commenting that she makes jokes that able-bodied people could not.[13] Jones' stand-up routines relate to disability and sexuality,[12] and have been described as dark comedy.[42]
In 2019, Jones received mixed reception for a joke she made on The Last Leg in which she said that as a 16-year-old, environmental activist Greta Thunberg should only be concerned with "drinking Lambrini and getting fingered."[58]
Jones said she experiences imposter syndrome, having grown up seeing comedians as fast-spoken straight white males.[25]: 22:00 She has also said that she has used jokes as a coping mechanism.[8]
Personal life
Jones is a lesbian. On the BBC Sounds podcast Duvet Days, she said "Growing up, there was nobody in TV or radio that looked like me – that sounded like me. There was Francesca Martinez in Grange Hill, but that was the only person really. And also my sexuality came into that, like when there was a disabled person they were very much the victim and they didn't have a sexuality, they were very much the stock disabled person. That meant growing up, I didn't accept my sexuality because I thought I'm not gay and disabled."[59]
Jones has spoken on the rights of disabled people, describing bullying that she has experienced and difficulties in her daily life.[60] She has expressed concerns over the particular vulnerability of disabled people during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the way emphasis on the virus affecting people with pre-existing conditions has led to disabled people being coded as "second class citizens".[61] During an interview with The Guardian, Jones commented: "I would love in the next few years to see more disabled comedians, directors, producers, commissioners. I hope disabled people can see me on TV and think: if she can do it, I can do it."[62] She receives social media abuse each time she appears on television.[25]: 28:00
In a 2023 interview with i, Jones said she was mugged five times in the course of two years while walking alone, targeted due to her disability. She said she was regularly rejected by taxi services when drivers assumed her to be drunk. Online, much of the abuse she faces is unwanted sexual comments.[9]
Jones began therapy during the production of Am I a R*tard?.[9] She said she would recommend it to "literally anyone".[25]: 30:00 Therapy allowed her to believe that she was not responsible for facing discrimination and accept the statement: "sometimes I am a victim".[9]