
Australian comedian ditches US trip due to concern she could be denied entry over Trump jokes
An award-winning Australian comedian has cancelled a planned trip to the US after receiving legal advice that she could be stopped at the border due to her previous jokes about the Trump administration.
Alice Fraser, who has appeared on Australia's ABC and the BBC and toured internationally, was due to head to New York in the first week of May to promote her recently published book.
She planned to apply for an O-1B visa, which permits comedians to live and work in the US if they demonstrate 'extraordinary ability' in the arts. But after widespread reports of people being denied entry to the US and travellers being detained, Fraser sought advice from an immigration lawyer.
'I asked [the lawyer] what I thought was a ridiculous question – that I do political satire and have a fair few jokes floating around on Elon Musk and Donald Trump, and whether that would be a risk,' Fraser told Guardian Australia.
'I thought I was being paranoid, but she said it might [pose a risk] and they'd almost certainly Google me. She said while the vast majority of people will be able to travel in and out … they're definitely doing increased scrutinising.
'If I didn't have two children, I might be more open to taking a risk, but the vision of me being there with a baby strapped to me and held up and hassled, or worse … I'm not up for that.'
According to immigration law group Reeves 'the US government is relying on social media screening more and more during the vetting process to gather extensive information', noting an online presence offers insights into 'interests, associations and potential security concerns'.
Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter
Foreigners have had their devices searched at the US border and been denied entry, including a French scientist who had messages on his phone critical of Donald Trump.
Travellers have been incarcerated in Ice detention centres and held for weeks, including Germans Lucas Sielaff, Fabian Schmidt and Jessica Brösche; British graphic artist Rebecca Burke and Canadian businesswoman Jasmine Mooney.
Fraser has been a regular critic of Trump as a contributor to political podcasts and radio shows, telling the Sydney Morning Herald in 2020: 'I wouldn't take an IOU from Trump if he wrote it on the money he owed me.'
She appeared at the Melbourne International comedy festival this week as part of the satirical political podcast A Rational Fear – billed as a 'federal election special' or a 'how to evade deportation' special.
Fraser lived and worked in the US on an internship visa more than a decade ago. She said the planned May visit was a 'real opportunity' to promote her book, but travellers now 'don't know what to expect'.
'There's a sense of unreality, this country which has presented itself as very stable, in terms of freedom of speech, is now behaving very unpredictably,' she said.
'People who have always been OK will probably still be OK but people on the margins will be discouraged – and that's disappointing. You lose the voices around the edges.'
Sign up to Afternoon Update: Election 2025
Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key election campaign stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
According to Smartraveller, which provides advice on behalf of the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, an ESTA or valid visa allows travellers to board a US-bound plane or request entry at a land border but doesn't guarantee entry to the US.
Smartraveller notes customs and border protection have strict requirements and 'broad powers' for temporary detainment or deportation when assessing eligibility.
'Officials may ask to inspect your electronic devices, emails, text messages or social media accounts. If you refuse, they can deny your entry,' it states.
'You may be held at the port of entry or a nearby detention facility. The Australian government cannot intervene on your behalf, and our ability to provide consular assistance in these circumstances may be limited.'
Even if granted entry, the US may keep devices for months if a traveller refuses to unlock them.
Fraser said she wouldn't stop making jokes but she also wanted to return to the US.
'I will go to the America that will have me, when it's no longer reasonable for a visa lawyer to say I should purge my social media before I go there because a joke about Elon Musk might be considered hostile to the nation,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Chris Mason: The UK's position on Iran is clear but will the US listen?
The prime minister has spoken to President Trump in the aftermath of America's attacks on in the end, the call beforehand demanding a yes or no answer didn't is not to say it might not in the days and weeks to British government is making it known that while it was told in advance what Washington was about to do, it didn't take part and wasn't asked so there wasn't a call from President Trump asking the prime minister whether the UK would be involved, for instance via authorising US warplanes to use the UK military base at on Diego Garcia in the Indian repeatedly pressed publicly for "de-escalation" as Sir Keir Starmer puts it, and questions seemingly being raised privately within government about the legality of getting involved, saying yes to a request for help from the White House might have been saying no would have been difficult too, after months of assiduous effort put into developing a good relationship with President acting alone and choosing to send its planes direct from America meant that massive, binary decision from Sir Keir wasn't depending if, how and when Iran chooses to retaliate, some of these trade-offs could soon return. For now, though, how should the UK's approach be assessed?In short, the government wills the ends America is pursuing, but is conspicuously not endorsing the other words, it doesn't want a nuclear armed neither is it saying it supports Washington's means of trying to remove that outcome - bombing Tehran's nuclear Conservatives see this as equivocation and "moral cowardice".On Friday, the Foreign Secretary David Lammy, alongside France, Germany and the European Union, met Iran's Foreign Minister in Geneva, Switzerland - but President Trump was publicly dismissive of these efforts.A day or so later, and the attacks they did, the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke to Lammy by had met a few days earlier in foreign secretary has again spoken to his Iranian opposite number Abbas UK is encouraging Iran to talk directly to the has been making it clear for days that it won't talk to America while it is being hit by the Lammy has also spoken to the Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar, pressing the case for a diplomatic solution and to the foreign ministers of Egypt and Cyprus - and then spoke again to UK position, for now at least, is clear - the government believes a diplomatic solution from here on in is the best way to secure an Iran free of nuclear weapons into the long America chose not to listen to this argument from London, Paris, Berlin and elsewhere before its air question is whether it will now they have can expect a minister, probably the foreign secretary, to face questions on all this in the Commons on Monday on Tuesday the prime minister, President Trump and plenty of other Western leaders will gather in the Netherlands for the annual summit of the Nato military alliance. They will have plenty to discuss. Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to read top political analysis, gain insight from across the UK and stay up to speed with the big moments. It'll be delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


NBC News
36 minutes ago
- NBC News
Political reaction to U.S. strikes inside Iran
NBC News' Hallie Jackson reports on the dissent within the GOP over President Trump's decision to bomb three sites inside Iran.


NBC News
40 minutes ago
- NBC News
U.S. officials: Iran threatened terror attacks inside U.S.
NBC News has learned that Iran sent a message to President Trump at the G7 summit that if he ordered strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, then Iran could activate sleeper cells in the U.S. to launch terror attacks, according to two U.S. officials. President Trump said the U.S. strikes 'completely obliterated' Iran's nuclear program. NBC News' Peter Alexander 22, 2025