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Saturday, 21 March 2026 - 13:21

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Amsterdam comedian Rogier Bak is taking on the Manosphere to honor his single mother

In an era of "alpha male" influencers and aggressive internet posturing, Rogier Bak is offering a different kind of rescue. Speaking on the latest episode of the Dam Yankee podcast with host Zack Newmark, the Amsterdam-based comedian dissected the friction between modern masculinity and his own upbringing. Bak, known for his viral takes on cultural identity, noted that his skepticism of the "manosphere" isn't just a bit; it’s a tribute to the woman who raised him, he said in the episode, now on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and many more services.

"We don't do romance in the Netherlands. We do paperwork," Bak joked early in the session, but the conversation quickly pivoted from cultural quirks to deep personal history. Bak revealed that his father passed away when he was just 12, leaving him to be raised by a mother who was then, and remains an incredibly important person to the comedian.

On the other hand, he says his father "essentially was pretty good at blaming everybody else for his own issues, rather than taking any accountability for his own failures, shortcomings, and just realizing [missteps are] human. So me having grown up with a mom who was the breadwinner, who was the stable element in my house and who was the most reliable person in my life, I've never grown up with the influence of men telling me that women should be a certain way. or that women should be submissive to a man or that women should play a household role."

Bak explained how this family dynamic shaped his perspective on the influencers currently dominating young men's social feeds. He has since figured out how to turn that childhood grief and social commentary into a sold-out tour.

[Hear Bak explain the ‘Alpha’ trap at 53:41]

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Image removed.
Comedian Rogier Bak during a stand-up performance in 2025 - Credit: Rogier Bak / Supplied to NL Times - License: All Rights Reserved

The path to his current success was anything but linear. After spending a decade in the United States, first at a high school in central Illinois, then to pursue basketball in Michigan, and design in New York, Bak was forced to return to the Netherlands when his work visa was not renewed. Leaving his American dream behind was a professional and personal gut-punch for Bak.

"I was visiting my mom and I got off the train here in Amsterdam," Bak recalls. "It sounds weird, but I remember watching a group of Dutch people get out of the train. I was like, 'I have nothing in common with you guys. Nothing. I don't identify with this group. And I don't know why."

This "reverse culture shock" became a catalyst for his comedy, yet the transition from an Illinois "farm boy" accent back to his Dutch roots involved a psychological hurdle that was a hiccup to his career before it began.

[Watch him describe the train ride that changed everything at 19:54]

If an identity crisis wasn't enough, Bak shared the story of the ultimate "rock bottom" moment. In 2020, as his comedy career finally began to gain traction, his personal life imploded. He and his wife decided to separate on the "day of the first announcement of the first lockdown in the Netherlands".

Believing the restrictions would only last a couple of weeks, like "everyone" was being told at the time. the couple decided to "weather that storm" together. What followed was a months-long living situation that Bak describes as "absolutely the most tumultuous time," trapped in an apartment with an ex while the world outside, his career, and his livelihood, all remained shut down.

[See how Bak survived a lockdown with his ex-wife at 25:30]

To hear the full story of how Rogier Bak turned a visa rejection, a grieving household, and a claustrophobic divorce into a global comedy brand, watch this full episode of Dam Yankee and YouTube, or listen to Dam Yankee on all major podcast platforms.

Rogier Bak is performing all over the place, including in Amsterdam on Thursday night, then in Ghent and Brussels over the weekend, before returning to Rotterdam and a special Amsterdam set with Nadine Froughi.

He then has tour dates in Prague, Bratislava, Berlin, London, Lisbon, Athens, and all over the Netherlands. Follow him on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook for updates.

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Episode highlights

  • The truth about his upbringing & the "Manosphere": A frequent critic of "alpha male" culture, Bak cites his own lack of a traditional male influence. His father passed away when he was 12, and he contrasts his mother’s strength and breadwinning status with his father, who was "pretty good at like blaming everybody else for his own issues." [View Clip]
  • The "Reverse Culture Shock" disconnect: Bak describes the jarring experience of returning to the Netherlands after a decade in the U.S. and feeling like a complete stranger in his own country. He recalls watching people exit a train in Amsterdam and thinking, "I have nothing in common with you guys. Nothing. I don't identify with this group." [View Clip]
  • The day the world (and the marriage) stopped: Bak describes the incredible timing of his divorce. He and his wife decided to separate the same day as "the first announcement of the first lockdown in the Netherlands." Believing the pandemic lockdown would only last two weeks, they decided to "weather that storm," and wound up trapped in the same apartment for months while separated. [View Clip]
Subscribe to the podcast on Youtube

Guest background

  • Born in Amsterdam in 1988
  • Moved to Central Illinois when he was 16
  • Returned to Amsterdam from New York in 2016
  • Played with comedy at a Boom Chicago class that year
  • First viral hit in 2021 with satirical Tik Tok clips about Dutch culture and healthcare
  • Touring his second solo show, Rogier Bak: To the Rescue!
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