Matt Mathews has more than 15 million followers online and over a billion video views across platforms, and when his first world tour reaches Britain next spring, it gets four nights. One of those four is in a Grade I-listed Congregational church in Islington that also runs a twice-weekly drop-in for people facing homelessness.

That’s the bit worth chewing on. Variety broke the news of the Not What I Ordered World Tour, a 74-date run scheduled from September 2026 through May 2027 across Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. The headline figure everyone repeats is the follower count. The figure that actually tells you what the bookers believe is four, which is how many UK dates a tour this long has been handed.

Four UK nights, and one of them’s in a church

The British leg, as listed by TicketNews, runs Birmingham Town Hall on 16 March 2027, Manchester’s Albert Hall the night after, London’s Union Chapel on the 19th, and Glasgow’s Pavilion Theatre on the 23rd. There’s no arena on the British leg, no O2, not even a mid-size touring barn. The biggest of the four is the Pavilion at 1,449 seats – 677 in the stalls, the rest spread across circle, balcony and a handful of boxes.

Union Chapel is the one that makes me grin. It’s a working church, Congregationalist, built between 1874 and 1877, that hosts around 250 events a year and operates The Margins Project, a homelessness support service, out of the same building. Time Out readers voted it London’s best live music venue in 2002, 2012 and 2014. The seating is original wooden pews, which means a comic who finished his last American run in a 17,000-seat arena will, in London, be looking out at people sitting on church benches. The chapel already programmes comedy – David O’Doherty and Henning Wehn both have “Live at the Chapel” dates on its current bill – so the room knows the job. It’s still a peculiar place for a man with a billion views to pick.

Cautious sizing on a debut overseas run isn’t unusual, mind. Flight of the Conchords built a six-night ladder of small warm-up rooms before they put two nights into the Greek, and they’d been an arena act for years. Four British theatres for a comic who has never headlined here is a toe in the water, not a land grab. Whether that reads as caution or canniness depends entirely on how fast those rooms clear.

The American dates run on casino carpet

This is where the maths gets interesting, and it’s mostly casino maths. Strip the proper theatres out of the North American schedule and you’re left with a long lean on casino entertainment rooms – at least a dozen of them. Emerald Queen Casino in Tacoma, Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, the Golden Nugget in Lake Charles, IP Casino in Biloxi, Red Rock in Las Vegas, Parx Casino in Bethlehem, Silver Legacy in Reno, the Hall at Live! Casino in Hanover. The tour opens on 11 September at the Flynn Theatre in Burlington, Vermont, and closes its North American run on 15 May in Council Bluffs, Iowa.

Casino entertainment buyers tend to work on flat guarantees rather than the door splits most working comics scrape a living from. The house pays the act a fixed fee, eats the risk on the room, and makes it back on the floor afterwards – the comedy is a reason to get punters through the door, not the profit centre. That’s a long way from a charity festival that spends the ticket money before it reaches the acts, and it’s a long way from the £7-a-head door split keeping a back-room club alive. A guarantee from a casino is about the safest paper a touring comic can hold, which is presumably the point of routing two-thirds of the dates through them.

From farm chores to a 17,000-seat arena

The backstory matters here, because Matt Mathews didn’t come up through clubs. He’s described on his Wikipedia entry as “an American comedian, musician and photographer,” best known for farm-themed comedy videos on TikTok. He started shooting photographs at 16, built a boudoir studio in downtown Birmingham, Alabama, and during the pandemic began posting clips of his daily farm chores – one of which got over 13 million views. That fed a debut national tour in 2023 called When That Thang Get Ta Thang’n, and a 2024 follow-up, Boujee on a Budget, which after a sold-out 52-city run added more than 30 dates for 2025 and finished at Birmingham’s 17,000-seat Legacy Arena.

He’s now repped by WME and 3TEN Entertainment, and in the announcement carried by Variety, Mathews said this about the run:

“Taking this tour around the world honestly feels unreal to me. Growing up in Birmingham, Alabama, I never imagined my life would look anything like this. … The support from fans over the years has completely changed my life, and I’m incredibly grateful and excited to bring this tour to audiences all over the world. It really feels like a dream I never knew was possible.”

The gap between an online audience and a paying live one is the question every booker asks about a viral act, and it’s the same question hanging over a lot of the scramble to turn comedy reach into something monetisable right now. Demand can be real and still local; a festival like Rik Mayall’s, outselling its first year before the gates opened, proves people will pay when the affection is there. Whether Matt Mathews has that affection banked in Islington, as opposed to scrolling thumbs in the American South, is exactly what four British rooms are built to find out. (My favourite line in the cuttings, unrelated to any of this: Mathews is a professional barrel racer who’s qualified for the world championships at least three times. Comedy’s a broad church, and so, apparently, is the rodeo.)

The UK presale opened on 19 May, with the general on-sale two days later at 10am local time. The interesting test isn’t whether the 15 million followers are real – they plainly are – but whether enough of them are in N1 on a Thursday night in March to fill a church that was never built for stand-up. The pews don’t recline, the building’s listed, and the act has never worked a British room. Worth the train fare just to watch a TikTok star try to land a punchline in a space that’s somebody’s Sunday service the morning after.