Charger Challenge

2026 — Draper, UT/US

Async After Dinner Speech

Abbreviation AADS
Format Speech
Entry Fee $5.00
Overall Entry Limit 40
Entry Limit Per School 4
Entry 1 competitors per entry

Event Description:

After Dinner Speaking (ADS): What It Is

After Dinner Speaking is a humorous persuasive speech that uses comedy to deliver a meaningful message. The goal is not just to get laughs—it’s to leave the audience thinking.

A strong ADS feels like a polished stand-up routine with a clear point:
-If the audience laughs but remembers nothing, it’s incomplete.
- If the message is strong but not funny, it’s not ADS.

Time Limits

  • 8:00 – 10:00 (target range)
  • 30-second grace period (hard stop at 10:30)

What Judges Should Be Looking For

1.

The Core Balance: Humor + Message

This is the most important lens:

  • Humor should build the argument, not distract from it
  • The speech should answer: “What am I supposed to take away?”

Ask yourself:

  • Did the jokes reinforce the message?
  • Was there a clear, memorable thesis?

2.

Content Quality

Evaluate beyond just “funny”:

  • Originality – Fresh ideas, not recycled bits
  • Substance – Is there real insight or just surface-level commentary?
  • Relevance – Does the topic matter socially, politically, or culturally?

Stronger speakers:

  • Make a clear claim
  • Support it with examples, observations, or satire
  • Use humor as a vehicle for insight

3.

Humor Effectiveness

Not all laughs are equal:

  • Consistent humor beats one or two big jokes
  • Look for:
    • Setup → punchline structure
    • Callbacks (returning to earlier jokes)
    • Variety (wordplay, storytelling, exaggeration, irony)

Ask:

  • Did the humor land regularly?
  • Did it feel intentional and well-timed?

4.

Delivery & Performance

ADS is highly performative:

  • Timing & pacing (comedic beats matter)
  • Vocal variety (tone shifts, emphasis)
  • Facial expressions & physicality
  • Confidence and control

Watch for:

  • Rushing (kills jokes)
  • Overacting (feels forced)
  • Reading (breaks connection)

5.

Organization

Even comedy needs structure:

  • Engaging opening (often a strong hook or joke)
  • Clear thesis
  • 2–3 developed points
  • Transitions (often comedic or callback-based)
  • Conclusion that ties back and lands the message

A strong ending should:

  • Revisit the opening
  • Deliver a clear takeaway

Content & Conduct Expectations

  • Must be original
  • Delivered from memory or near-memory
  • Avoid:
    • Plagiarism
    • Reading from a script
    • Excessive vulgarity
    • Offensive/discriminatory material

**Judges should penalize content that crosses the line, especially if it harms inclusivity or distracts from the message.