Clearly, you've never worked as a stand-up comic.
I have hired quite a number of them, mostly to do vacation fill or to do occasional appearances. None of them can come up with enough material to get through a week, and some are at a loss to get through a day.
In 50 years of programming or managing, I found only one stand-up comedian who could do a daily show and not burn out. But it turned out he had learned his craft at his father's radio station many years before and he understood the medium and was not frightened by it.
The ones who make it a whole week are able to tell stories rather than make jokes. Their humor is anecdotal rather than "scripted" and they do better. But they all complain that it is very hard to do radio because it is not the same as what they are used to. The hardest thing for them is not having a live audience for feedback and to bounce jokes off of.
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