Saturday, April 18, 2026

Sherri Shepherd’s “Make It Make Sense” Tour at Wilbur Theatre Was More Than a Comedy Show

At some point, you realize there’s a difference between going to a show and actually experiencing one.

Having recently sat down with Sherri Shepherd on the The Jayman Show with Jaiye Bynoe, I had already seen a side of her that felt real, unfiltered, and grounded. Being at this show, courtesy of that experience, gave me the chance to see that same person in a completely different setting. And what stood out immediately was this, nothing about her changed.

This past stop of the Make It Make Sense Comedy Tour at the Wilbur Theatre reminded me of that in a very real way.

I’ve had the privilege of meeting Sherri Shepherd a few times now. This wasn’t our first interaction. But what stood out to me this time wasn’t just the show. It was the consistency of who she is.

Nothing about her has changed.

The same warmth. The same openness. The same kindness that people see from a distance is exactly what you encounter up close. There’s no switch. No performance behind the performance. And in today’s world, that’s not something you take lightly.

But let me take you inside the room for a moment.

Because what happened in that theater was something I didn’t expect.

Before anything else, you could feel it. People had come from everywhere. Not just across the city, but across states, even across borders. I remember speaking to one person who had traveled from Hong Kong just to be there. Another had come in from New York. That alone told me something important before the show even began.

This wasn’t just an audience.
This was a gathering.

And once Sherri stepped on that stage, it all made sense.

There’s a way she carries the room that goes beyond comedy. Yes, people laughed, and they laughed a lot. But it never felt shallow. It felt shared. It felt like everyone in that space was in on something real.

At one point, she did something simple. She asked the audience about their ages.

You’d think that’s a small moment. It wasn’t.

Hands went up across the room. People in their 20s, 30s, 40s, all the way into their 80s. Some smiled, some hesitated, some chose not to say. But what became clear in that moment was this, what she was creating on that stage wasn’t limited to one generation.

Everyone was part of it.

That’s rare.

I’ve been in many rooms, many stages, many events across the world. You don’t often see something that genuinely connects across that kind of range without feeling forced. This didn’t feel forced at all.

It felt natural.

Throughout the night, she spoke about life in a way that didn’t try too hard to impress. She touched on family, on personal moments, even stories about her father, and you could feel how those moments landed in the room. People weren’t just laughing. They were relating.

And that’s where it shifted for me.

Because it stopped being just a show.

It became a space.

A space where different cultures, different backgrounds, different generations all sat together and found something in common. For a few hours, nothing else mattered. Not where you came from. Not what you believed. Just the shared experience of being present.

And honestly, it felt good.

After the show, I had the chance to spend a little time with her backstage. Conversations like that, they don’t always come with a clock. You don’t rush them. You don’t try to force them into something structured. You just let them be.

And once again, she was exactly who she’s always been.

Kind. Present. Real.

That’s not something you can fake over time.

Walking away from that night, I found myself reflecting on why it stood out so much.

Yes, it was one of the best shows I’ve attended. But not because it tried to be.

It stood out because it didn’t need to try.

It was honest.
It was human.
And most importantly, it brought people together in a way that felt effortless.

In a time where division seems louder than connection, moments like this remind you that there’s still something powerful about simply sharing a room and feeling understood.

And that, more than anything, is what I’ll remember.

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Sherri Shepherd’s “Make It Make Sense” Tour at Wilbur Theatre Was More Than a Comedy Show

At some point, you realize there’s a difference between going to a show and actually experiencing one. Having recently sat down with Sherri ...