Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Mo Amer
Episode Date: May 12, 2025Mo Amer (Mo, The Vagabond, Black Adam) is an award-winning comedian and actor. Mo joins the Armchair Expert to discuss feeling anxiety only when there’s something unsettled at home, embraci...ng the responsibility of being a comic that’s also made a personally and culturally meaningful thing, and the best part of his new show being that he gets to introduce different layers to his story. Mo and Dax talk about his brilliant telecommunications engineer father relocating their family from Palestine to Kuwait, living through the Iraqi invasion that catalyzed the Gulf War, and creating a supportive Sandlot brotherhood that still exists to this day. Mo explains how his teacher encouraging him to do Shakespearean standup rocketed his entry into comedy, performing some of the greatest sets of his life returning to Iraqi war zones, and the emotional rediscovery of long-lost home movies of his family and childhood.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert.
I'm Dak Shepard and I'm joined by Monica Padman.
Hi.
Today we have Mo Amoron.
Yeah.
I'm a big fan of Mo.
Mo is great.
Mo is a standup comedian and an award winning writer.
I first saw him on Rami, which is another show I love.
Friend of the Pod.
Where he plays Mo in that, but not our Mo in Mo.
Mo plays Mo in that, but then in his show,
he's a different Mo.
He's a different Mo, but very similar.
Also Black Adam and two stand-up specials on Netflix,
Mo Amr the Vagabond and Mo Amr Mohammed in Texas.
And he's on tour right now with El Oso Palestino Tour,
which is the Palestinian bear.
Yeah.
That's what that translates to.
This was so interesting. Another incredible story. Yeah. We're what that translates to. This was so interesting.
Another incredible story.
Yeah.
We're just coming off a John story
and then now we have this.
We're getting some epic tales in this garage.
We are, also very Ki-Hee-Kwan.
Yeah, I was thinking a lot about Ki during this episode.
Yeah, we're accumulating some wild.
You can really take some circuitous paths
to this town of Hollywood.
That's right.
Please enjoy Mo Mo Amher.
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He's an up-chair expert.
He's an up-chair expert.
He's an up-chair expert.
Do you get anxiety before you go out on a talk show that you're gonna have to pee once
you get out there?
Peeing is not the anxiety, no.
It's not.
That's last on the list.
No, no.
What is it?
I just watched you and Seth, actually, I have something in common with Seth.
Edibles, fuck me up.
I'm terrified of that.
I don't really get anxiety.
I get anxiety only if something is not settled at home. You know, if something is off.
Uh-huh, you'll carry that.
I'm a very sensitive person.
I can feel my family's energy.
If something's wrong, I'll know it's wrong.
Right.
I don't know how to describe it.
It's like the antenna.
Spidey sense.
That's the only time.
No compulsive rumination thoughts.
Like I can acknowledge the pee one is insane.
I'll be in the dressing room at Kimmel
and I'm waiting to hear the knock.
I stand in front of the toilet.
And then when I hear the knock, I go,
one second, and then I do my last pee.
Because I'm so nervous that it's 12 minutes.
Do you think you're at risk of ever peeing in your pants?
No, although if ever there was a place to try it,
it would be on Kimmel.
That's true.
Kimmel's the one to do it.
Yeah, for sure.
It's the same place to pee or soot. It's so easy to talk to. It feels so calming. I'm doing Kimmel. That's true. Kimmel's the one to do it. Yeah. For sure, it's the same place to pee or soot.
It's so easy to talk to.
It feels so calming.
I'm doing Kimmel tomorrow, actually.
I don't know if you knew that or did you say that?
I'm doing it Thursday.
Oh, that's funny.
That's awesome.
Let's do it on the same.
Let's do it.
I'll go to yours, you come to mine.
That's perfect.
Why don't you guys tell the exact same story?
We'll plan it.
Oh.
It's gonna be great for him
because he's first.
I know, because he's first.
Just see you on the show as an Arab growing up in America.
That'd be so great.
That's kind of what they do on Weekend Update.
Do you ever watch this stuff with Shay?
Oh, fuck Shay, man.
No, I'm just kidding. That's my brother.
It's gonna be downhill from here, guys.
But him and Colin.
No, these are my guys. They're my friends.
Yeah, where they write jokes for each other that they're not allowed to tell.
And they have to read out loud.
On Christmas, I think.
Whatever the last show is, they do that.
That's fun.
It's diabolical.
It is.
I know, it's scary.
And much higher risk for Collin.
I would say.
Yeah, definitely.
Especially because Che was really trying
to get him into trouble.
He's genuinely trying to put him
in the worst possible pickle.
But in a weird way, I'm like, they're geniuses.
They've hacked the math of this.
And really, we are dying to see this white guy
make a terrible joke, because we know
the risk is career ending.
And they figured out how to do it.
Yeah, they have.
No, it's perfect.
But there's no blame.
Yeah, the whole thing's a weird part.
The black guy wrote it.
Yeah, exactly.
I didn't come up with this.
I didn't mean to say the N-word.
He told me to say it.
He made me say it.
I have to do it. It's written.
I read everything that's on my mind.
Don't be disrespectful to not do it.
Yeah, I agree.
You know, what gives me, not anxiety,
but the thing that causes me to go down, like, a thought process,
especially since this is specifically about the show,
and there's so much to discuss within the series itself.
It's like, what clip do you show?
What exactly do you talk about?
And I'm a stand-up as well. It's like, I clip do you show? What exactly do you talk about?
And I'm a stand up as well.
It's like, I just want to do jokes.
I just want to be a guy on a couch.
But I'm in this extraordinary position
where I'm the only Palestinian on television
with his own show created by a Palestinian star
and director by.
But it's like, what are you going to do?
What are you going to say?
Everybody's like, come on, buddy.
We all want to hear what's your take.
Exactly.
Tell us what to do.
I really just want to be a comedian. Exactly. Tell us what to do.
I really just wanna be a comedian.
That'd be really great to do that,
but I understand that there's an immense responsibility
that comes with my position,
and you can't just be a clown all the time.
I have said this a bunch in the past,
which is for the young black dude
who's from a shit situation
and makes it out and becomes successful,
it wasn't bad enough that he had to go through all of that and be extra special to get here.
But now he's also burdened with the responsibility of representing the black community and speaking
out on all issues.
And I just have always felt like if you want to be political, great, but just to have to
inherit that on top of everything else, it seems like a weird reward.
No, I agree.
And I would be resentful a bit if I were in a position
where it's like, no, no, I wanna tell jokes and have fun,
and I'm entitled to do that as much as anyone else is.
So does it feel like a burden at all?
It definitely doesn't feel like a burden.
It's funny that book says the burden and the glory.
Oh my God.
Exactly right.
That says it all.
Wow.
It's the sun. Yeah.
I really do feel stand-up itself is an art form since that's how I started out.
Technically, I did theater in high school and I was doing stand-up at the same time.
And once I started educating myself of what stand-up comedy is and the history of stand-up,
historically speaking, the greatest stand-up comedians have always made you laugh and made
you think.
Yes.
Of course, there's like the Dangerfield who's just silly and amazing one-liners.
That's incredible.
One of the funniest guys ever, really.
But if you look at it, everybody's top five is someone who really made you think.
Yeah, who's your top five?
Oh, man.
Can we agree on Brian just number one?
Yeah, for sure.
No.
It's close.
I don't like to put them in any particular order.
Yeah, that's fair.
Because they each have a fascinating skill set that the other one can't do.
Like Pryor and Carlin.
Carlin has a particular skill set.
He's ahead of the game in the most incredible way where everything he says today is relevant,
but he has a certain structure.
He has to write every single thing down.
And you have Pryor, which is really freewheeling, which is my style, really.
I write everything on the fly.
I have to do it in front of the audience.
I can't sit down and just write it out.
I'm inspired by the audience.
I need that.
So I appreciate those skillsets.
So I really don't like to put them in a particular order,
but these are the comedians I truly admire and love so much.
A good analogy would kind of be like,
you're asking who's your favorite athlete
as opposed to who's your favorite basketball player,
favorite hockey player. Pryor's doing something different than Jerry Seinfeld than Cosby was sitting down and doing this.
Yes.
Chappelle, do you like Chappelle?
Of course. Yeah, we've done thousands of shows together. Pryor, Carlin, Bill Hicks, to me is up there.
Unfortunately died so young, but he was on that trajectory of being truly ahead of his time and magnificent in his own way.
Chappelle is on my top five just because I've seen him personally, thousands of shows together.
It's like seeing inside of how a Rolex works, like how the mechanism all flows.
It's just really fascinating to see that.
And I feel like we're very similar in ways.
A lot of things overlap between us and I'm just grateful to have one of the greatest
of all time and to be able to see him,
and he's my brother, he's my mentor,
but also like family, so he's up there, of course.
I don't think there's a debate there.
Then the fifth is really hard.
It's like Eddie Murphy, but he stopped.
He got so famous.
Once you stop doing standup and want to come back to it,
it's almost impossible.
Yeah, it's very impressive that Seinfeld was able
to come back and do a real show.
But he never really stopped doing stand-up.
He always would show up, and his show was stand-up.
Murphy became a rock and roll man.
A lot of young people wouldn't even know he was a stand-up player.
Yeah, exactly. But those are the albums I used to listen to.
But when I first started stand-up, I was only been in the country
like five years.
So I didn't really know anything
about the history of Stand Up.
I would be at open mics and be like,
oh, you sound like Kennison.
I'm like, who the fuck's Kennison?
They're like, who the fuck's Kennison?
You live in Houston.
People thought I was full of shit
because I didn't have an accent.
To them, they feel like, oh, if you're an immigrant,
you should have some kind of accent.
The fact that you don't is baffling,
so we don't really believe it.
Like I would tell my friends when they first found out,
because you don't talk about it,
you just walk around like,
hey, I don't have citizenship yet.
You're trying to fit in, not stand out more.
Yeah, but it never really comes up.
You just want to ball in the neighborhood,
have a good time.
You're not really thinking about it.
It's not like we're going to go travel to Europe together.
Yeah.
They know the family, but you're too young,
you're too naive,
you're thinking about too many other things
to share your immigration status
just didn't really come up at that time.
Now, this is linked to the obligation
to talk about being Palestinian in this moment,
but also, do you get sick of having to tell your story?
Because your show, which we're gonna talk a lot about,
is your story, so you inevitably do have to share it.
Again, back to the, I just wanna be funny,
I don't wanna have to tell this fucking story, back to the, I just wanna be funny,
I don't wanna have to tell this fucking story again.
There's some fatigue, for sure,
but it's mostly not coming from sharing the story
because I am introducing different eras of it
and there is so many layers
that are baked into each experience,
whether it is the Gulf War, growing up in America.
There's really fun ways and interesting ways
to explore that as a storyteller.
I am really intrigued by that, and I want to dive into it
and capture all the subtleties and bring them out.
That is the best part of writing the TV show
and creating a show.
That is really emotional at times.
I can't explain to you how many moments in the series
while I was filming, especially season two,
where I would have to go off and just weep
and then come back and then start over
and then direct, and then start over
and then direct, okay guys, so what we're gonna do is,
you know?
Yeah.
Process.
Co-star's like, how the fuck are you doing that?
I saw what happened.
I saw it.
You were in the corner crying, buddy.
I was like, can you just shut your mouth?
You weren't getting anything from craft service.
You were whimpering to yourself in front of it.
That's fun.
I really do enjoy that, whether it's super emotional
or just straight up comedic scene that we're shooting
And you're just feeding lines to Hamid which is one of my favorite characters in the whole season the thing that I have happening
To me right now, especially on tour is all the people sharing their experiences with me sure yeah
You have to hold a lot and that's a massive
Thing that's the most difficult part may have people coming up to me talking about they lost 200 family members.
I held a kid yesterday.
He's three years old.
He's from Gaza.
He's getting treatment here.
He's lost his mother.
She was 23.
And I'm like holding him.
And I'm like, mm?
Yeah.
You know, just thinking about him.
I just had a son.
He's 17 months.
I can't even imagine it.
Yeah.
That's the stuff that's really, really, really heavy.
And that's where the responsibility comes.
But literally, there's nobody else speaking about it, really, really heavy. And that's where the responsibility comes.
But literally, there's nobody else speaking about it
from an actual Palestinian perspective.
Right, I hear a lot of young white liberal kids
telling me about it.
Yeah, well it's good.
People should engage in this conversation.
That's the only way to truly have any kind of progress
is engage in these talks.
But no one is coming from my background talking about it.
At least no one has the voice that I do
or the platform that I do.
So just to engage in that,
and it's also a massive test for me as a comedian,
because I can always go up and just give me a topic,
dissect this, have a blast with it, make it funny,
no problem, but to toe that line is dangerous.
Well, that's what Chappelle's so masterful at.
And yeah, I need his perspective on Black experience.
The insight that he has repeatedly given me
is just incredibly valuable and so authentic
and from the inside that I always appreciate that.
Can't agree with you more.
To start, you were born in Kuwait.
I was, yep.
I got food poisoning in the Kuwait first class lounge.
Oh no. And then had food poisoning for 28 hours of flight back. I'm food poisoning in the Kuwait first class lounge. Oh no.
And then had food poisoning for 28 hours of flight back.
I'm sorry, that's not funny.
No, it's really funny.
Can you think of a worse scenario than food poisoning setting on as they close the door
for your 14 hour flight?
That's horrible.
I had a similar situation, did not last 28 hours.
That is misery.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I had a similar situation from Sweden to Frankfurt,
catching my connection flight in Frankfurt.
Before I boarded the flight,
I thought it was just a regular sparkling water.
So I take a drink of it, I was like,
oh my God, this tastes god awful.
It's pear, fucking pear sparkling water.
I'm like, God damn you Swedish people.
Who drinks pear sparkling water?
And whatever formula it takes to make the pear taste,
that flavor, that perfume, just created the worst possible
bubbling sickness, the storm system had to form,
a hurricane was forming, all the blood was leaving my head
and it going right to try to rescue my gut.
I either needed a pass gas or take a poo.
I wasn't sure about what was gonna happen.
And that's a risky thing to do.
I feel fainted.
Yeah, you can't sit there on the plane.
Or sweaty brow ridge.
Sweaty brow ridge.
A full blown waterfall situation
from every area possible, the back of the dome,
the front of the dome.
I need to say, you now look like someone
that's smuggling stuff
on an airplane.
I shoved cocaine up my ass and now it's backfiring.
That's what it looks like.
I finally hear the ding to get up.
I was like, I gotta go to the restroom.
We gotta figure this out.
I felt really faint and right before I grabbed the door,
I just go down.
Perfect, right?
Oh no.
You collapsed.
I just fainted and I wake up to three
of the hottest Swedish, German flight attendants.
They're like, are you okay?
What's happening?
Have you been partying y'all?
What's going on?
Were you at the beer garden and had so much fun?
You want to have some more fun?
I was like, no I wasn't.
Leave me alone.
You're diabetic.
I was like, no I'm not diabetic.
Thank God I'm not diabetic.
Stop making me panic even more. Just leave me alone. You'll die of bad tickles. I'm not diabetic, thank God I'm not diabetic. Stop making me panic even more.
Just leave me air.
It was horrible.
I just needed to pass gas.
That's all I needed.
Just pass gas and it was all gone.
Wow.
My first thought upon waking up
and seeing the Swedish ski team would be,
are my pants full?
Cause we don't know what happened.
We don't know what happened while I was out.
Oh yeah, true.
And these are very beautiful women
and I might have full cargo.
Yeah, we had an armchair on tell a story about that
where he pooped in the lane.
Yeah, yeah.
In the aisle.
Oh my God.
And all these beautiful flight attendants were there
and there's poop on them now.
Oh no, are you serious?
Yes.
You just have to tell yourself in those situations.
That's horrible.
I know.
I might jump off the fucking plane.
Just hear the pilot, yeah, he just jumped out
of the back of the fucking plane.
He's got three rain slickers tied together,
hopefully that'll.
I'm such a shy person, I don't even like taking off
my shirt in front of people.
It's not like I can't do it, I do it.
I got the pool and stuff, but I can't imagine a scenario
where I shit my pants on a plane
as everybody and they're all looking at you.
We'll just say, ideally if that happens,
you wanna wake up and see three ugly old men
going with it. Yes, yes.
You're like, yeah guys, I shit myself.
You know what it's like, hey boys, yeah.
I'm disgusting like you guys.
Smoking a cigarette with shit on his fingertips,
like you don't care.
Yeah, I remember, it was 62, nam was worse.
I shit myself an hour ago, welcome.
Yeah.
Okay, so, dad is a telecoms engineer.
Great segue, yes.
Yeah, we're going back to Kuwait.
It was sharp.
Let's bring up your deceased father after all this shit.
You lost your mother in 19...
God forbid.
Yeah, we're not gonna wait for that one.
Straight into that.
Yeah, my father was a telecommunications engineer.
It was quite the first stop when they left Palestine.
When my mom and dad married, prior to that, my father got his telecommunications engineer in England.
The first job offer was actually in Doha, Qatar in the 60s.
So they lived there for like a year, but that's the reason why they left.
This is a job, just like if you're in Houston and you get a job in Kansas or if you're in LA,
you get a gig, you gotta go film in Toronto, same thing.
So he was in Doha and then he got a job in Kuwait.
And that was where my family settled
and we're all born there.
He worked for the Kuwaiti Oil Company,
he built one of the first radio stations in Kuwait.
He was instrumental in creating wireless communication
at that time between oil rigs.
He was a really brilliant dude, truly ahead of his time.
My mom would always tell me like,
oh, he had a cell phone in the 60s.
That big thing that you put on your shoulder
and it's a massive box in the microwave.
He was that guy.
He always had to have the top tech whenever it comes out.
You guys left when you were nine,
but how long had they been there?
Oh, since the 60s, 25, maybe 30 years there.
And they would go back and forth to West Bank,
where my family lives and grandparents are.
And did they come to love it when you guys did leave?
Did mom miss it?
It was more than just love in Kuwait.
It was more the normalcy of the life that we had there.
As a great life, my uncle and my cousins
lived three houses down, all my aunts.
Everybody settled in Kuwait,
and we had a lot of family there. My grandparents and some of my aunts three houses down, all my aunts. Everybody settled in Kuwait, and we had a lot of family there.
My grandparents and some of my aunts, of course,
a lot of the extended family was still in the West Bank.
But we had this real unification
where we would see each other every weekend.
There's a barbecue every weekend.
All my uncles are talking smack
and playing all these different games,
and whoever loses has to buy the dessert.
Was your dad gregarious and loud?
Yeah.
Are you more mom or dad, I guess?
I'm a really solid mix of both.
I have the exploratory, like my dad had.
He really wanted to figure out what was going on.
He would really travel a lot and wanna see the world.
So curious in that way.
And my mother was very funny, poetic.
She still to this day writes poetry, and that's her life.
She wakes up in the morning, she's inspired by something, she writes it sometimes it's super sad,
but thoughtful and sweet, sometimes it's funny.
I feel like I have a great mix of both,
but my dad was really outgoing,
he was the first guy on the dance floor,
get everybody going and he was that guy for sure.
I have a ton of memories of 49,
do you remember living there?
Everything, but we also come from the Sham region,
which is basically Santa Barbara.
It's so gorgeous.
The weather is stunning.
There's not really any desertous regions
unless you go super south or you hit the Jordan Valley.
That's where it becomes that way.
And there's bedouins there, of course.
There's tons of sheep herders.
We do come from a farming culture originally.
Santa Barbara seems to be the place,
when my parents first came to visit here,
we went to Santa Barbara on a day trip
and they were like, this reminds me of India.
I was like, what?
And then we've had a few other people
from other places say like,
Santa Barbara is kind of like this person, this person.
It's a comfort car a lot.
Yeah.
As it turns out.
Turns out.
It's not really suited for that kind of living,
to be honest.
You don't go to explore the desert there,
but surely in Kauwait we did that.
I mean, I used to ride the bikes with kids, set up mounds and we'd just dive off of them.
You just bounce off of that shit and just keep going. Just ruthless. Hop on the back of dirt
bikes and fall off going 40 miles an hour. But you're eight. You're just like rubber band.
Doesn't even matter. You went to a British speaking school. What kind of classmates did you have?
People from all over the world. What kind of classmates did you have?
People from all over the world.
A bunch of expats lived in the neighborhood we resided in.
Since my father worked for the Kuwaiti Oil Company, this is a compound situation.
That neighborhood, north and south, is where we lived in Ahmadi, had so many families,
super, super diverse.
You're talking about British, Pakistani, Swiss, everybody lived in that neighborhood.
And most of the people in that neighborhood working for the oil company.
Exactly.
Everybody had a different job within the company itself.
Like Aramco Oil Company, you go overseas, that's the biggest oil company in the world,
number one, but it's like driving onto a military base.
Oh, right, right.
Our neighborhood at the end of it, there was like the hospitality palace.
So anybody that visited, there would be presidents that would visit, they would put them up there.
I would ride by on my bike if I was a kid
and try to see who was staying in the palace.
All the time.
Would you, yeah. All the time.
I'd be so curious, like is Michael Jackson
gonna come out of the palace? Exactly.
Oh no, we're all over it.
We'd see cars come in, we'd be,
you know, immediately just pedal over there
and talk to the security guy in the front
and try to figure out who this wealthy man is.
What is happening?
He's like, trust me, you don't want to know.
Michael Jackson?
President of Malaysia or something like that.
Okay, let us know.
Sultan of Brunei.
Yeah, Michael Jackson, we used to mimic him.
He was the thing back then for sure.
Oh, God, yeah.
So, Gulf War breaks out in 91.
August of 90.
The reason why I remember exactly the Iraqi invasion
was then, and I remember it quite well
because I was supposed to have my tonsils removed
two days after they came in.
So I was like, damn it.
So now I still have my tonsils in.
Oh, tonsillitis.
Fuck you.
Might've been a happy accident.
No, it's not, bro.
It's miserable.
I have enormous tonsils.
I bet they're gorgeous.
They're massive.
They are gorgeous.
There are mountainous.
You can ski off of those fucking things, for sure.
You could probably get them out now.
I am so scared.
Adults aren't supposed to do it.
It's like 50-50 bleed or something.
Crazy, like heavy bleeding.
Was it someone on here too?
Six weeks to eight weeks recovery, no talking.
They cauterize it, but you can't feel
if it's bleeding down into your stomach.
That's all I needed to hear to make it even worse.
But why are the kids more, why are they able to?
I don't know, if they're tinier or easier to cauterize.
I can't see, okay, tinier or easier to conquer.
I think it's not as mature enough.
It's an in and out procedure for kids.
But someone was just telling, an adult was really battling
whether or not to do it, and they don't like to do it
on adults because of this bleeding.
I went to the top specialist at UCLA and they were like,
50, 50, they're gonna bleed, but you'll be fine.
It's just gonna take a lot longer to heal.
I was like, you know what?
I'll just take antibiotics.
Take my big ass tonsils out of here.
I do a lot of voices too.
Like, what if it affects how I do all these accents?
What if I just end up talking like Z-Soldier's time down?
I said, yeah.
My life is ruined because I sound terrible.
So, the invasions in August, the U.S. enters,
as I remember, because my birthday is January 2nd,
and I got my license in 91 on the 2nd,
and it was the only thing that played in the radio.
I feel like it was maybe January 1st of 91, the U.S. entered.
Yeah, I had left before that.
It was really, really intense,
because that was the first time I knew that we were stateless, number one.
I just knew this happy life.
I didn't know anything was wrong.
I was like, why don't we just go back to Palestine?
And they're like, no, we can't necessarily do that either.
It's not the best next step.
Let's figure it out.
Your parents, you see them and they're your pillars.
They're always in control.
There's nothing ever wrong.
Seemingly know everything.
And to see them so worried.
And I remember this to this day,
that call at 6 a.m. those days, the phone,
ring, ring, you know.
I was like, who the hell's calling?
I remember getting up, Elma picked up the phone, was like,, brrring. I was like, who the hell's calling? I remember getting up, and my mom picked up the phone,
and was like, Saddam has invaded Kuwait, hangs up,
and now everyone is out to try to get
as many resources for the house.
Food, rice, water, whatever you can get to just store it.
That's when everything changed,
and they got to our house at one o'clock in the morning.
I slept through the whole breaking of the door,
ransacking the home.
They were threatening my mom and my dad, who's in this bedroom? Who's in this bedroom? They
were pointing at my bedroom and they were threatening they were going to throw a grenade
in the bedroom. Tell us, tell us, tell us. They were trying to figure out who works at
the Equator Oil Company since the whole reason of their invasion to begin with is supposed
siphoning of Iraqi oil.
Was that their premise?
They were diagonally drilling in?
That's what they were saying.
I don't know.
That's the bigger conversation to me now.
As a grown ass man,
I see what's everything going on living in America.
Now I know who's been putting all these people in power.
Yeah.
Let's talk about that.
But that was the premise is that Kuwait
was stealing from them and he's there to take it back.
But then since it's the Kuwaiti oil company,
so our neighborhood was a hot one
and it was all about collecting people
who could help manage and turn over the control of it.
Exactly.
Your dad's like, I just do telephones.
Well, that's the biggest fucking thing, communication.
Okay. Yeah.
That was probably on their top five list,
transferring all communication to et al.
So my dad had
one choice, either do it or potentially your family is at risk, might take them all out.
You're not going to find out if they're bluffing or not.
Yeah, exactly.
You're just going to say, yeah, it's me. What are you going to do? So he was forced to go
in and redirect from what I've heard, some of it at that time, and he regrets it. Didn't
feel good about any of it.
Well, he had to protect himself and his family.
He loved Kuwait and he loved the people of Kuwait. He loved everything there and he regrets it. Didn't feel good about any of it. Well, he had to protect himself and his family. He loved Kuwait and he loved the people of Kuwait.
He loved everything there and he was just saddened
to see it all happen that way,
but he was also just protecting our family.
Soldiers would show up early in the morning at our house
and all throughout the whole street.
It was pretty regular, but I felt like our house was a spot
and play soccer with these guys,
having like, hold the machine.
I was like, I don't wanna hold the machine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah., was that weird different life,
just everything changed.
Right, and trying to evaluate,
are these guys mean and evil?
They weren't. Right.
But when they first show up with the guns.
They have moments though,
I remember this guy, he had a thick stash, huge,
but I was really fast as a kid,
and I played tons of soccer,
so I was killing these older guys.
He just socks me real hard.
And I remember being laid down on the ground, and I look up,
and I see him, and this is how he felt, like he was laughing.
He goes, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh.
And I was like, that's evil, bro.
It felt evil. I know he's not.
He was just fucking with me, but I can't forget his face.
If a sketch artist was sitting there, I could draw him.
You never forget that.
But yeah, that was a wild experience,
that I slept through that first initial invasion. They took over the whole neighborhood. My
mom and dad are both in a really terrible position. My dad particularly, and a bunch
of other employees or ex-employees. Some people were able to get out before they came in.
It's a really, really difficult situation, especially with us kids. And there's other
kids that are studying overseas. What about them?
Give siblings?
I think the money is gone. Yeah, I'm the sixth.
Sixth, okay.
So all the money's gone overnight. Saddam said, oh, the Kuwaiti Dinar is equivalent to the Iraqi Dinar. Well,
Kuwaiti Dinar was like four times. Absolutely insane.
So how did dad get you guys all out?
In the show, I had to tweak it. But in real life, what happened is my mom and myself and
my sister out. My brother stayed with my dad. We got on the bus. My mom strategically hid the money in the suitcase
in a really insanely savvy way.
I never saw the side of my mother.
You just think your mom's a superhero at this point.
Like, how are you coming up with this?
Like grabbing the razor, cutting down the zipper,
putting equal amounts of money on each side.
It's incredible, sewing it together.
I just remember it to this day
and going through it all, basically war zone,
through another war zone to
Amman Jordan to my mom sending my sister and I to Houston by ourselves. How old was your sister?
She was 18. So 9 and 18. You're so scared. I'm assuming miserable. I don't want to leave
I can give a shit about the guns like it didn't bother me at all. I was very fearless
I did not care. I would go out still on my own, scope it out, what's happening in the neighborhood.
I was just kind of crazy that way,
but I loved my friends and I wanted to see them.
And I didn't necessarily allow that invasion
to like change that for me.
And I knew they weren't gonna hurt me.
Like they're not gonna hurt kids.
They were very gentle with children actually,
but I didn't wanna leave my mother
and thought I could be really helpful.
Right.
It wasn't like, I don't wanna leave you well my friends.
No, it was more like, hey, I'm helping hand. This sucks, I don't want to leave you well my friends.
No, it was more like, hey, I'm helping hand. This sucks. I have to go. How are you going
to do this on your own? And that was the thing that really ripped me apart more than anything.
Who did she send you to? My brother. He was studying in Houston.
Is this the brother that became a doctor? Yes. He's a PhD in biochemistry. Super brilliant.
Amazing human. And then she by herself goes back to Kuwait. And that's where all the real hell started.
Because there was all this posturing between America and Iraq.
And Saddam is saying, go back.
No, we're not going to go back.
This is ours.
Oh, yeah.
Then the oil fields went on fire.
And now it's a completely different world.
Literally noon looks like midnight.
Then of course, the Iraqis started a retreat.
It was a big heist. They were clearing out Mercedes dealerships. The Iraqis like midnight. Then of course the Iraqi started a retreat. It was a big heist.
They were clearing out Mercedes dealerships.
The Iraqis were overnight.
He released a bunch of prisoners just to create chaos.
That was his strategy of war, I guess.
Then there was a massive situation
that happened with my mom and my dad.
My dad in particular, the Kuwaitis started regaining power
as they should, it's their country.
They started forming these different militias.
They came into our house.
This is my story from my mom.
They knock on the door.
They ask, is a car for sale,
because we're liquidating everything.
And she goes, I don't know if it's for sale.
Let me ask my husband.
She asks him, and as he comes out,
they put a hood over him, kidnap him, he's gone.
She doesn't know where he is.
Nothing. Then the American soldiers come in. So you had the Iraqis come in, burst down the door. They put a hood over him, kidnap him, he's gone. She doesn't know where he is.
Nothing.
Then the American soldiers come in.
So you had the Iraqis come in, burst down the door.
You had the Kuwaitis come burst in the door.
And then you had the US soldiers come burst in the back door.
My brother is a nerd virgin, has his own issues.
It's chaos, she's trying to get medicine for him.
She doesn't know where my dad is,
who's diabetic and has his own set of issues.
It's a whole fucking movie.
So my dad was able to call my mom.
They were like holding all these people, trying to see who's the actual traitor, who's not
the traitor, who stuck for us, who didn't.
They're trying to regain their power.
I honestly don't hold anything against the Kuwaiti.
I totally get why they're doing it.
Unfortunately, my dad was in an impossible situation.
Somebody has to vouch for you.
You can't just leave.
They got to know it wasn't an inside job for sure
And I genuinely don't hold anything against them. I really love them equate. These are so much gentle sweetest people
But in this situation is awful. She doesn't know where my dad is
So they had like all these makeshift prisons and office buildings and stuff
They were holding people and torture them certain degree to get stuff out of them. And what did they have issues with at the jail?
Communication they couldn't get fucking calls out. They couldn't get a dial tone.
So my dad goes, I can fix it. Yeah, yeah. He fixed it for him. While he's fixing it,
they're not in a room, he calls my mom. Uh-huh. Listen, you got to find the Prime
Minister. He's a friend of mine. He loves me. He's the head guy in Kuwait. You got
to talk to him. He's the only one that can free me. Just get to him and let's get the hell out of here.
And my mom was like, what about the money?
We have to get your money. You're owed this.
This is your money you worked 25 years for.
You gotta get it back.
And my dad's like, fuck the money.
He's like, just get me out of this hellhole.
And my mom goes, the gangster that she is,
I'm gonna find this guy and I'm gonna get your money.
She's driving, soot is in the air.
It's just disgusting.
All these oil rigs on fire has caused chaos
throughout the roads and the environment
and breathing, everything.
So now she's just on a journey trying to find him.
This is three weeks.
She says it was one time the militia had this checkpoint
and they told her, how do we know this car is not stolen?
Because people are just stealing so much.
He goes, I need to see the title for this car.
She goes, I don't know where the title is for the car. We need to find it. You can't get through
here. She goes back to the house. She swore to God, she said, I don't know how it happened,
but I couldn't see anything. It was pitch black. I just reach into a pile of papers
and it's the title of the car. Most incredible thing. She goes in after weeks and weeks trying
to trace this guy down. She finds some jail. She hears that he's there. This prime minister,
she's talking to the outside security. She's talking to the outside security,
she's crying to him saying,
my husband's been wrongly imprisoned.
He goes, if you don't stop crying,
I'm gonna put you in jail with him,
like kind of threatening her.
She goes, listen, I need to talk to the prime minister.
He knows my husband.
He gets scared, he's like, what?
Oh yeah, he's here.
So my mom walks into this building.
She can hear guys not having the best time,
let's just say that.
She's walking down this flickery hallway.
She goes and makes a right into the guy's office.
She looks around the office.
It's pristine.
It's gorgeous.
The direct opposite of the building she just walked through.
But then she looks at all the technology in the room.
She recognized it immediately.
She goes, this is all my husband's stuff.
And he says, who are you?
She tells him who she is, tells him who her husband is.
He freaks out, he's like, where's my stuff?
I love him, where is he at?
He's not a trade, he's a great man.
How many letters you need, I'll sign them all.
Sign a letter for her, she went back,
she picked him up at the airport.
They meet at the airport with my brother and my dad,
comes in, he's 50 days now, full beard,
and they go, where's your two other kids?
And she goes, oh, they already left. And they go, how do we know they're not here?
And they're hiding.
We imprisoned his father.
He's innocent.
What if they want revenge or something?
He's like, we don't want revenge.
We forgive you. Forget it.
He's over there.
He's like, no, now you got to show proof.
Oh, geez.
So she has to go back another two days of that.
Then she collects my dad.
They go to Amman.
My mom, my brother come like nine months later.
Wow. Then she collects my dad, they go to Amman. My mom, my brother come like nine months later.
Wow.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Lamont Jones's world is shattered
when his cousin dies in custody
just weeks after entering prison.
The official report says natural causes,
but bruises and missing teeth tell a different story.
From Wondery comes Death County PA, a chilling true story of corruption and cover-ups that begins
as one man's search for answers but soon reveals a disturbing pattern. Lamont's cousin's death is
just one of many and powerful forces are working to keep the truth buried. With never before heard
interviews and shocking revelations, Death County PA pulls back the curtain on one of America's darkest institutional secrets.
This isn't just another true crime story. It's happening right now.
Follow Death County PA on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can binge all episodes of Death County PA early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Death County PA early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
At 24, I lost my narrative, or rather it was stolen from me.
And the Monica Lewinsky that my friends and family knew was usurped by false narratives, callous jokes, and politics.
I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen, and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
So I think listeners can expect me to be chatting
with folks, both recognizable and unrecognizable names,
about the way that people have navigated roads to triumph.
My hope is that people will finish an episode of Reclaiming
and feel like they filled their tank up.
They connected with the people that I'm talking to and leave with maybe some nuggets
that help them feel a little more hopeful.
Follow Reclaiming with Monica Lewinsky on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Reclaiming early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple podcasts.
["Wonderful Wonders of the World"] Yeah, I've never told a story. It's crazy that I said this.
Ninety-two, your dad called?
About 92. I got to Houston two days before Halloween in 1990.
And then Halloween happened, and I've never seen Halloween before.
Why is everybody dressed like demons?
Where did my mom send me?
This is evil.
You heard we were a godless country.
And boy, we delivered.
It was so funny.
It was so scary.
Everyone in devil costumes.
I've never even seen cleavage.
And like, all the girls are naked.
I'm like, whoa.
It's just crazy.
And asking for chocolate and candy.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, man, I'm in.
You know, it's just wow.
Trick or treat.
And I had a British accent.
I stuck out like a sore thumb.
Nobody really researched the neighborhood we moved into.
It wasn't like the greatest neighborhood right out the gate.
My brother, he doesn't know.
He's a young kid, too.
He's a super nerd.
It was next to a stop and go.
And that's the only thing we had. I would go there. And that He's a super nerd. It was next to a stop and go.
And that's the only thing we had, I would go there.
And that's when I knew America, I'm gonna go back to war.
What did your mom and dad do in the States?
Once he came to the States, he's an entrepreneur.
So he owned electronic stores actually in Kuwait as well.
Like a side gig.
He was like the first best buy there.
Like Radio Shack basically before Radio Shack.
So he opened up a place in Houston.
He opened up a 99 cents store,
but then he started with his knowledge,
realizing that it's a poor neighborhood.
He was like, oh, I can bring telephones
that they don't have access to for a really great price.
So he brings them in and he starts showing them.
It was a 99 cents plus.
That's how they get you is that plus.
Sure. So he's a wide range of goods.
Like how do we go over $20?
He adjusted to American culture pretty quickly.
He's adding the plus.
He wore a suit every day.
He would call people from the living room
and tell them you want a free cruise.
He figured it all out.
You want a free telephone.
It's $200.
Guess what?
Congratulations!
It's so funny.
But he would sell these phones.
Had a whole display of a wide
variety of phones that did different
things. Whether if it was a football
phone, whether it was one that you could push a hold
button and it plays music of your choosing.
And you're like, what? That was like
the tag of that time.
So he had all of it and we would sell
like hotcakes. So I think that eventually
he would have probably gotten back in the telecom and we would sell him like hotcakes. So I think that eventually he would have probably gotten
back in the telecom and the way that cell phones are today,
I mean, I always think about it.
I had a discussion yesterday, I was like, I wonder,
probably been very rich actually,
I think about him.
Yeah, certainly.
Yeah.
So he dies in 94?
December, 1995.
So you're young, you're 14?
I'm 14, yep.
Why did he die so prematurely?
I think it's the losing everything in your late 50s.
I say it's like going from rags to essentially riches
and going to rags again after spending your whole life
trying to create a future for yourself and your family
and your kids and having the ability to provide for them
on a level that is gonna be really difficult to do
at this age.
And he never really diversified his funds.
He was so safe in Kuwait,
never really thought something was gonna go down like this.
And unfortunately, that's what happened.
I think all my dad's friends and my uncles,
they all died fairly young.
The massive, massive stress of the war,
carrying that burden, carrying that weight around really took its toll,
and eventually chipped away at him, unfortunately.
How scary does life get at 14 with him now
out of the picture?
Oh, it's terrible.
Emotionally, you're gone.
I was already checked out because my mom didn't
come for like nine months.
So I was really angry about being there without my mom.
My sister is an absolute saint.
God bless her. She only knew how to cook one dish. angry about being there without my mom. My sister is an absolute saint, God bless her.
She only knew how to cook one dish.
One of the things that my mom gave my sister
was a recipe book that had all these different pieces
of paper from different eras,
from my grandmother, my great grandmother,
from my great, great, great grandma.
It went back almost 100 plus years.
It's pretty intense, but these are all the recipes.
These are gold.
But she would only make one dish
and I just come home seven days in a row like rice and lintel
again ah where's my mom I want to go home and meanwhile cut to my mom she's like
driving through oilfield and trying to fight with you little ungrateful bitch it was really
difficult and I was always very independent and adventurous and I wanted
to be out nobody could really control me and I didn't know what to do with my emotions.
So I was a 14-year-old kid in high school,
was just skipping.
I already knew I was gonna be a comedian.
Did you make friends easily?
Oh yeah.
So you landed on your feet, you were social.
It was rough at first.
The British English thing did not help.
It was a Mexican situation pretty regularly,
but then the British accent was like,
you're not Mexican, but what the hell are you?
Yeah, usually in my class, I was the first Mahomet there. I spoke British English, and at times
I did not know that British English, certain words were significantly different meaning than American English. I walked up to my fourth grade teacher
I was like, Mrs. Strand, can I have a rubber, please? I made a mess on my paper, you know, and she's like, what?
You came on your paper?
You came on your paper? My friend on your paper? You wouldn't have.
You were wearing my purple.
My friend Bruce is like, you fucking in fourth grade?
What is fucking?
You know, I had no idea.
We had a cat.
You don't say cat.
In British English you say pussy.
And I walked up to Bruce.
At recess, the most embarrassing possible spot,
I was like, Bruce, get small.
He was like, what, man?
He was like, I have a pussy now.
Isn't it fantastic? And he was like, what? I learned as quickly was like, what man? He was like, I have a pussy now, isn't it fantastic?
And he was like, what?
I learned this quickly about black people,
they can't hold it in, they have to tell everybody.
He'd be like, come on everybody, gather around.
Press off the presses.
Exactly, he got everybody around
in front of the entire class at recess.
He was like, watch this.
He's like, Mo, do you have a pussy?
And I was like, yeah, I have a pussy, isn't it lovely?
It's small and lovely, just kept going with it.
Jose lost his mind.
He was like, what bro, you have a pinocchio for real, bro?
Like, that's insane, you know, bro?
And he was like, so confused.
This playground sounds like a sitcom.
And he paused and he goes, can I see you, bro?
Like, I don't believe you.
Yeah, I got punched a lot in the beginning,
but I learned quickly.
You had the right skill set, it sounds like, minimally.
You weren't lonely.
That's a blessing.
Oh, when I threw a football, everything changed.
It was like, oh, this guy can throw the fuck out
of a football.
Oh, no kidding, you could.
Very, I would play ball, I'd play basketball.
I was very unassumed.
Nobody knew that I could play that well.
I wasn't always like overweight.
I almost died in sixth grade.
I hit my head on the bottom of a pool
and that's when I gained all the weight
because I was in a neck brace like this the whole time.
I was like, I almost died.
I was terrifying.
I don't know why I knew exactly what I had to do.
I was spitting blood.
Again, it was almost Halloween.
So everybody thought I had like blood capsules
and I was joking around at the pool.
And I was like, no guys, I think I'm about to die.
I walked right past my mom, grabbed a towel,
wrapped it around my neck. I was like, mom, you I think I'm about to die. I walked right past my mom, grabbed a towel,
wrapped it around my neck.
I was like, mom, you need to take me to the hospital.
Oh God, you're so lucky you weren't paralyzed.
So lucky I wasn't paralyzed or dead.
I just think about it, not even for that,
I think about like my mom.
She didn't have enough on her plate.
Okay, so what's happening financially though
when dad is out of the picture?
You just have to fend for yourself,
you have to figure it out.
So my mom worked at a Mexican restaurant,
which turned into Taco Cabana, which is very famous.
He used to, everybody goes to Taco Cabana.
It's like the fast food chain of Tex-Max.
Dinner was lots of Mexican food.
But also you can negotiate for rides.
Hey man, I'll throw in a quesadilla
if you can just bring me here or take me there.
I had two quesadillas.
All right, now you're asking for a lot.
We did two quesadillas and talks, but I want four rides.
We just negotiate.
Honestly, it was really dark,
but also some of my greatest years
and my friends that I've made when I was 11 years old
in that particular neighborhood, we're like the Sandlot.
We made a pact.
We're gonna raise our kids together.
We're gonna go to college together.
I always said, I'm gonna be a comedian.
You guys are gonna go to college.
I'll visit you guys.
And everything really panned out exactly how we all set out to be.. I always said, I'm gonna be a comedian. You guys are gonna go to college. I'll visit you guys. And everything really panned out exactly
how we all set out to be.
And really, truly that group of friends,
that camaraderie, that brotherhood that we created
in that beautiful neighborhood
got me through everything, that support system.
All the while you guys applied for asylum.
You don't have passports, right?
You don't have a Kuwaiti passport.
In the Middle East, it's all about your lineage.
So when you go there, actually, when you enter, they say,
Esh Aslak, what is your origin?
And you say, Palestinian.
You even get Palestinian ID cards?
It's worthless.
It's actually worse.
My uncle always taught me, don't get the ID card.
If you do, then you're not ever going
to be able to fly into Tel Aviv when you get your US passport.
You're always going to be subjugated to the cages. You literally have to go through this apartheid system where you go through
cages. He says, just don't do it.
Okay. And even though you were born in Kuwait, you don't have any-
That's not how it works. It's all based off of your origin, where your parents come from.
So my parents are both Palestinian, so you're Palestinian. You don't get Kuwaiti citizenship
because in Kuwait, it's all tribal. So if you're an original Kuwaiti from that area,
the government takes care, like you should.
You get a stipend.
Yeah, so the resources that your country is producing,
you actually benefit from those resources.
They can't do it for everyone.
So it's like, you have to be from that land
and your right is your right.
My right is in the West Bank and Palestine,
or in Haifa that was now gone as Israel.
So now we go to the West Bank
and whatever is there, that's for you, but that's not for you here.
So that's not how it works.
It's where you're actually from,
where your parents are from, particularly.
So I guess we get into some of the complexities
of this immigration story you have
because you're just waiting forever on the asylum list,
however that process works.
But in the meantime, you have no passport,
you can't come and go.
You're just in this kind of purgatory.
Yes, exactly.
For how long?
Took me 20 years before I got my citizenship.
But when I turned 18 is when I was able
to get a social security card.
I was in the system before, but I couldn't get the social.
And you can't work until you have a social, right?
You can't work. I still worked.
My mom would volunteer me down there,
business owners, when I had jobs that I didn't want to do,
but I did, where I didn't wanna do,
but I did, where I would sell like fake Rolexes
or fake watches through my dad,
because he would go to the wholesale district.
Once he passed away, Alain Hamour-Garros,
so his friend gave me a job,
and then I started learning about wholesale business,
import, export, and I started seeing,
let's see, I'm wearing this nice watch.
I'm like, bro, that's crazy, he goes, ah, it's fake.
I was like, oh, it looks amazing though. And so I was like, oh, I think I could hustle these in school and on the street here.
All I have to do is wear it and then they're going to ask me where you got it.
And I'm going to tell them it's for sale.
So that was my shtick.
I would just put on Versace sunglasses and be working at the cashier or whatever and
probably be like, oh man, those are dope.
I'm like, oh, it's the last pair, bro.
Y'all sell them to you if you want.
It's 125.
They would leave and I'd take out another pair and put it on.
Sure, sure.
Your second to last pair. And it would be so bad because to you if you want. It's 125. They would leave and I'd take out another pair
and put it on.
Sure, sure.
Your second to last pair.
And it would be so bad,
because at the end of the week,
they're all wearing the same shit.
And they would come in really mad and aggressive.
Like, bro, you told me it was the last one.
I was like, look, look, look, look, look.
For real though, this is one of one.
This Movado watch is the only one I have.
There's no other design of this.
I promise you, nobody else is going to have this.
And they'd be like, oh man, that's cool. I promise you, nobody else is gonna have this.
And he'd be like, oh man, that's cool.
I was like, yeah, I would sell that one.
I was really good at it to the point,
my dad's friend put his own stand up
and I was like, what are you doing this?
You're not gonna compete with me?
This is crazy.
He goes, bro, you're selling at my location.
And that's where I learned about business, right?
It was like, oh, I'm using your place of business.
I owe you commissions.
You gotta kick up.
I didn't know this.
And he goes, it's a valuable lesson.
Don't worry.
You still sell.
Just give me the commission.
I was like, okay.
Yeah.
When we meet Mo on season one,
he's selling shit out of his trunk.
He's got like a full shot.
It's a very condensed version.
I really wanted to do more with it,
but I think there's not enough space in the store to figure out. In the first season, it was a full shot. It's a very condensed version. I really wanted to do more with it, but I think there's not enough space
in the story to figure out.
In the first season, it was a whole thing
with COVID and civil unrest and George Floyd.
It was like a nightmare making season one.
It was really, really tough.
But season two, I had the whole vision for it.
I knew exactly what I wanted to do at the time.
To do the Reader's Digest version,
you go to the rodeo and Bill Cosby's performing.
You're young and you see that,
you decide you want to do that.
You're a shit student, a teacher says to you,
I'll let you stand up so long as you're making fun
of the course material.
Yep.
That's a lucky, weird thing that happens.
Mrs. Reed and Ms. Broderick, my English teachers,
specifically Mrs. Reed, she really was noticing
that I was losing it.
Because I was a pretty good student before that,
and I basically threw away my ninth grade year,
essentially at that point,
and she was trying to salvage whatever she could out of me.
She said, if you go up in front of the class,
like at first she said,
how would your father feel if you don't graduate?
Which I was like, oh, that's a cold shot.
Hit me in the hardest way.
And then she was like, don't you want to be a comedian?
I was like, yes.
Look, I'll let you do standup in class.
If you could throw in some Shakespeare
that we're working on now, you'll get extra credit,
but you don't always have to do it.
And I was like, great, can I do it now?
I literally went in front of the class,
read out of the book.
I don't know this by heart, it's a monologue from Macbeth.
You know, like, I don't fucking know this.
And so I did just a funny version,
the British voice that I used to have,
and kids were dying.
I was like, I'm hooked.
So I was like, can I come in tomorrow?
I'll write a set tonight.
And she was like, okay. Did it, killing? I was like, oh my hooked. So I was like, can I come in tomorrow? I'll write a set tonight. And she was like, okay.
Did it, killing?
I was like, oh my God.
And then I would just do it every Friday.
And she took me into the theater arts department.
It was Ms. Kreiser, I'm still closer to this day.
My theater teacher from high school.
She goes, listen, this kid's been coming to class.
He's doing all this original material.
I've never heard before.
He's doing all these accents.
It's hilarious.
She goes, I think he belongs here.
Yeah, I am.
And I was like, maybe.
The next year, did theater. Graduated with honors She goes, I think he belongs here. Yeah, I am. And I was like, maybe.
The next year, did theater.
Graduated with honors in theater, honor with thespian.
Had a partial scholarship
for the School of Film and Television in New York.
I passed, I didn't even tell a single soul.
I don't want them to talk me into it.
I didn't want to leave my mother or my brother.
I wanted to be close and just build up my standup chops
and let that define my career.
And then you enter at 18, this funniest text and-
Jesus is the funniest person in competition. They have this around the country in each city, but that was a big one. If then you enter at 18, this funniest Texan. Jesus Funniest Person competition.
They have this around the country in each city,
but that was a big one.
If you can get into that.
That was my first time on stage at a comedy club.
And I get there and I was so excited.
My buddy Nick, who drove me to the club,
he was my guy, he still is, for two quesadillas.
Yeah, for two quesadillas, that's right.
He looks at me, he's trying to be corny.
He's like, you ready, Mo?
This is the first day of the rest of your life.
But he was being serious also.
And then I went up, caught the bug,
made this wild-car position.
I realized when I signed up, I was like,
oh shit, my materials for high school students,
these are grown-ass adults.
I need to fix this.
So I rewrote something till three o'clock in the morning.
I go up, I do it.
And I get into the system that way
and I find out what I need to do.
I joined it the following year.
I made the finals, didn't win the thing, but then I went off
and just started doing stand-up.
By the time I was 19, 20 years old,
I was already headlining shows
and traveling overseas without a passport.
Yeah, how is that?
You got a refugee travel document,
and it was a really painful process, very expensive,
but that was the only way to go overseas.
Because you were doing a lot of stand-up at bases, right?
I did some bases.
The first tour that I did some bases.
The first tour that I did was April of 2001.
It was Italy, Germany, and Sicily.
It was a baby, obviously five months before 9-11.
It was just a totally different experience.
And then I went to Japan, Korea, and Guam,
all those military bases.
In February of 2002,
it was polar opposite from when the first time.
Now everything is heightened,
but I wanted to do those shows and be myself because I was deathly afraid of
being myself. I said if I can go in front of the troops and be myself, talk shit,
make them laugh, I could be myself for anybody. That's why they love me. I went
on many many tours and my experience was actually that the soldiers themselves
had interacted with someone like me many times
and they were excited to see me.
Versus when I was touring in the South,
early on in my career,
it was their first interaction with someone like me.
It was that polar opposite,
actually well traveled human beings
and more knowledgeable than you think
and it's not as unsafe as I thought it was.
I went back to Iraq.
I did shows there, still with a refugee travel document,
in war zones, the very place that we left,
and I'm doing shows on bases all throughout Iraq
in the most desolated locations where
they can fucking kill me and throw me somewhere
no one's gonna care.
I had some of the best sets and one of one experiences
in a state in Saddam Hussein's palace,
which is converted into a hotel.
And I just went there just to see it for myself
and collect information and put this thing to rest
that's in my heart that was just lingering.
And I wanted to see my aunt that I haven't seen in 19 years.
She was the only one that was still living
in Kuwait at the time.
So it was many different things.
I had to sneak into the country basically.
I'm here for the US government,
and kind of just moving him in that direction.
He was like, okay, and he just let me in.
And then when I was leaving,
I stayed three extra days to see my aunt,
and I wasn't supposed to.
So the military wanted to walk me back to the airplane
with the other comedian, Olivia Harrington.
And I was like, we're fine, we're adults, bro.
We're gonna go.
And he's like, no, no, military protocol.
I gotta escort you all the way to the plane.
I was like, God damn, how the hell am I gonna do this?
And Olivia's like, maybe you go hide in the fucking bathroom.
I was like, okay.
And then he gets a call and he runs to the SUV,
see him talking, this is what's going on.
He comes back and like, sorry guys,
Bradley Cooper just landed from Afghanistan.
I gotta go get him.
We're like, all right, thank you Bradley.
You wanna hear something crazy?
I was with him.
Yes. Dude, that's crazy? I was with him. Yes.
Dude, that's fucking nuts.
It was me, Bradley.
My body just got chills.
Yeah, that was wild.
Dude, I remember the fucking flyer.
It's all in me right now.
Yeah, and we were in Kuwait
and we went on a boat ride in Iraq.
There was like Zodiac boats
and they were fucking doing cool maneuvers and shit.
Bro, I wanna like laugh and cry at the same time.
Somehow I'm involved in your getting to go into Kuwait.
Gas simulation.
I didn't see that coming.
Bro, I didn't see it coming either.
Yeah, that's when I got the fucking food poisoning coming home from that.
We had been in Afghanistan for eight days and I had been eating at the defact, like microwave hamburgers.
We get to the Kuwait first class lounge,
and I'm looking at all this fresh tabbouleh
and delicious vegetables, and I'm pounding it,
and Cooper goes, bro, you're going very hard
on the salad bar in Kuwait, and I'm like, it's good.
It's a first class lounge.
That's what gets you, by the way, is the damn salad bar.
Yeah, it's always salad, the stereo.
You gotta be careful.
100%.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Bro, I'm freaking out.
That's fucking hilarious.
I'm freaking out, because I did tell Bradley that story.
They need Bradley Cooper.
That's so wild.
Yeah.
I remember the fucking poster.
Was there anyone else or just you two?
There's another person.
It was Bradley and his cousin, me and Aaron Eckhart.
Oh my God.
Wow, that's funny.
That's really wild.
You literally crossed paths.
They were literally all there at the same time then.
Because I was about to say, yeah,
they didn't let us do shit.
Anytime we tried to wander or stray,
or the first time I went, we landed in Qatar,
the GIs took us to a nightclub,
and it was like, I'm going to go on the dance floor.
I had to get that cleared.
There's too much.
They don't want the drama of you getting kidnapped
or some shit.
It's not about getting kidnapped,
it's you merely making an ass of yourself,
making them look bad, because there's literal money at stake that they get every year.
Last thing they want is that getting fucked up,
some guy bozo'd out, you know?
Like, thanks, Papa, we're getting half a billion dollars
over here and you want to have a good time,
I thought I fucked up this contract.
Yeah, Monica's so sick of this story,
but I still think it's very funny that I did this.
I had heard on my first tour
that Larry the Cable Guy was coming next week. They make you sign up for the show, Monica's so sick of this story, but I still think it's very funny that I did this. I had heard on my first tour
that Larry the Cable Guy was coming the next week.
And they make you sign all this shit when you're there.
You're signing the Apaches, the Blackhawks.
You're just signing everything.
Yeah, yeah.
And everything I signed,
which had been signed by all the previous people,
I wrote on every single one,
get her done, Dax Shepard.
Because I'm like, he's not gonna have the catchphrase.
I'm gonna steal it.
I love it.
What does he write?
I really liked that one.
It's kinda like what you were saying at Kimmel.
I love that actually.
They didn't make a sign, shit.
We walk in, we're like, come on, get on stage, bitch.
Tell us a joke, whore.
Okay guys, hey, it's really rough out here, eh?
If you were tracking your stand-up career,
what are the big level ups?
Because, of course, I become aware of you watching Rami,
which I love, and I'm like,
who's this most hysterical person who needs his own show
and then immediately had his own show?
Thank you.
That's my experience with you.
So what was happening in that stand-up?
It's different levels that you start to pass.
In 2011, Dave was making his comeback,
starting to like really tour.
And then we happened to be in the Bay at the same time.
He was in Oakland, I was in the Bay doing stand-up.
And it was me and my buddy,
I was a respondent, long-time collaborator,
worked for years.
He was like, Dave's in town,
let's just go over and hang out.
So I would go over, hang out with him.
And he was like, hey, you wanna open?
I was like, yeah, I go up.
And then he was like, you wanna come tomorrow?
I was like, yeah, cool. He was like, you know, I'm going to Atlanta, you wanna come wanna open? I was like, yeah, I go up. And then he was like, you wanna come tomorrow? I was like, yeah, cool.
He's like, you know, I'm going to Atlanta.
You wanna come to Atlanta?
I was like, yeah, cool.
Next thing you know, it's eight years
of just constant touring with him.
But 2014 was the big turning point for me with Dave.
He just gave me the inspiration.
After a show at the House of Blues in Dallas,
he walks up to me after my set, he's like,
Mo, man, that's killer, bro.
What if you do a short film in front of your special,
I produce it, think if you do it right,
you can win an Emmy, and it hits me in the shoulder.
I was like, oh, shit, short film.
I couldn't sleep to save my life.
It was like a week or two of me just obsessing
on what this short film would be.
Must have listened to a hundred tracks.
I'm a really visual person.
I need music to help me illustrate the entire picture.
And it just clicked when I listened to Elvis Presley's,
That's Alright Mama.
That song, that's alright mama.
That's alright now.
That's alright mama.
You just do as you do.
Oh, that's alright.
You know, when he did that, I saw my mom putting everything
together, getting us out of Kuwait.
I just saw the entire thing, which is the same scene that's
in episode seven now of the first season.
I wanted it to be the opening.
But anyway, I put it together.
I was like, this is it.
I was trying to pitch Dave on it.
And Dave was like, oh, god, what if this sucks?
You know, I inspired this guy to fucking do it.
It's a personal story.
Do I want to tell him it sucks?
It's always a scary thing, I get that,
but I knew it didn't suck.
I knew it was a bad ass.
Was on the bus on tour in Austin.
I grabbed his speaker.
I was like, you're listening to this.
And I put it in, put it down,
and I mapped the whole thing out for him.
He was smoking a cigarette, he goes,
shit Mo, that's genius.
Don't do it in the special, you need to do a TV show.
I was like, fuck a TV show.
So I became this whole other obsession.
So I started writing down all these
really transformative moments of my life,
young kid or teenager or an adult,
my experience in war, all these significant scenes,
or even a moment with my grandmother
how she was teaching me how to eat hummus.
Things that I've never forgotten that I put in season two,
I just put them on index cards,
scene by scene I would work it out.
So I'd had a hundred scenes accumulated
that I just could mine through.
I told Rami about it in 2014, early 15 actually.
I was like, yeah, I think I had this idea,
but I want to do my stand-up special first.
He goes, no, let's do your TV show, this is great. I was like, yeah, but I think I should do, but I want to do my stand-up special first. He goes, no, let's do your TV show. This is great.
I was like, yeah, but I think I should do my special first.
I did for Netflix at that point.
That explains a lot of the story,
and then I can go into the series.
And then he was like, well, fuck it.
If you're not going to do that, I'm going to make my own show.
So he goes off and makes his own show.
He was like, come do my show.
And I was like, I don't know.
Because you want to do your own show?
It's not about the own thing.
I'm just very protective of ideas.
And once you put ideas out, they're kind of over with.
I just didn't know if it was right or not.
I really wasn't sure.
Because you're playing Moe, who owns a restaurant on Rami,
and you're like, well, now I'm stuck with that character.
Right, right.
People would tell me that that was like an argument initially,
and I was like, I really don't care.
Yeah.
Yeah, nor should you, but I could see that being something you were hung up on. That was something I was totally hung up on. I was like, I really don't care. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Nor should you, but I could see that being
something you were hung up on.
That was something I was totally hung up on.
I was thinking about it.
It was just like, I was just curious.
And then later on, he always jokes.
He's like, remember I begged you to do this?
I was like, nah, he didn't fucking beg me.
It was just going through the bullshit, you know,
just trying to figure it out and making sure that it's
the right thing for you and for me.
Like, it's all love.
Last thing I want to do is do something bad for you, either.
It was an awesome thing. But being on Rami is the first on-screen acting.
I think I did Crashing first, like a guest star.
That was Pete.
Pete, yeah, Pete's show.
This is an impossible question to answer for you,
but you're immediately so insanely natural.
Were you shocked by your own ability?
We try to be humble right now?
I'm just a little bit.
That's what I'm saying.
You can't really answer this question,
but I have to imagine there's a big relief
at how fucking relaxed and in your body you are.
Oh thank God, yeah, for sure.
That's an unknown.
It's not easy.
Most people are not. Most people are bad at it.
You get really rigid in front of the camera.
Most people do. Yeah.
I feel like I was completely born to do it.
Good. It felt so good and comfortable, loved it.
I felt like I finally was doing the thing
that I was always meant to do.
Maybe more than stand-up?
Oh, it's close.
I love stand-up so much.
I love stand-up because of the vulnerability
and allowing yourself just to speak your mind
and the ability just to do three shows
at Chicago Theater, man.
It's its own thing.
But we just did 10,000 people. Like, I'm just backstage literally thanking God before I'm introduced.
Just remembering sleeping on fucking floors in every spot that you can imagine, every airport,
every courtyard, anything just to try to make it. So I'm very grateful for that.
But this whole experience, like, oh, this is what I'm built for. I'm built to tell stories.
I'm built to do television, built to do movies, doing Black Adam was huge too.
I felt so natural in all that,
and I just start reflecting about my life.
I didn't create myself.
It's okay to talk about it.
I didn't make me.
You're the product of a lot of context.
But also there's certain things, bro,
that'll blow your fucking mind.
The guttural feeling I had when I saw Stand Up
for the first time, and the journey that it was supposed to take me on,
that wasn't the first time.
I thought it was, but it's not.
When I was seven in Egypt, my dad took us to a play
and the lead of that play, his name is Adil Imam.
He's an iconic Middle Eastern actor, Egyptian.
He's like the goat of all goats, of all comedic cinema
and live performance.
I love this man.
I watched him.
I'm seven.
I don't really even know totally what they're saying,
but it's a captivating experience.
On that trip, there is a photo
that literally tells the future.
If you look at that photo,
I know it sounds crazy to say this,
but I'll show it to you.
It literally tells the entire future
of what I'm supposed to do.
It's absolutely baffling. And then my mom, as much as she was so worried about my future, because she's never heard about staying up as a really viable art profession or a career path,
so long when it's an arduous one, of course, she has every right to be like, this fucking sucks.
I know engineering results in a roof over your head.
Yeah, exactly. But she didn't really understand. And then she told me recently, she goes,
when you were 18 months, when you barely could start walking,
you're running around, you would turn off the TV,
and you would start entertaining us
on front of the television.
It's already there.
I don't know why it's there, but it's there.
But then this picture, bro, it'll freak you out.
I gotta pull it up.
Yeah, pull it out.
Yeah, we need to see it.
Okay, we have the picture up.
This is in Egypt.
This is the last family vacation in 1988.
I'm in the red short, right?
Yep.
1988, the guy that has hands on my shoulders,
his name is Yusef Idris.
He's literally one of the most legendary screenplay
and authors of any generation of Middle East, okay?
I'm wearing a shirt that's basically
a US military recruitment shirt
that nobody fucking knows I'm wearing.
Clearly we've run out of stuff
because we extended our stay.
It says join the forces, kill.
Kill, yeah.
It's absurd, right?
My mom clearly run out of shit, right?
So it's there, it's gone.
She just picked out a bunch of stuff we ran out of things.
You didn't even look at it.
I have a camcorder.
It's an over the shoulder camcorder.
This is the very camcorder that I found 30 years later
that's in the series, if you watch the ending.
That's what I'm holding.
You show footage of your father in Palestine, right?
I do.
When my aunt told me about this camcorder,
I was literally asking about it two days prior.
I was on tour in the Middle East.
I look at my manager, I'm like, look at this picture.
I was reflecting on this photo.
And I was like, wait, what does this fucking shirt say?
And I started zooming into it.
I was like, oh my God.
And I look at the camcorder, I was like,
I have so many memories with this camcorder, it's insane.
I was like, what's the, isn't it crazy?
The guy who has his hands on my shoulders
is one of the greatest writers
of our generation of filmmakers, storytellers. I have a camc hands on my shoulders is one of the greatest writers of our generation of filmmakers,
storytellers. I have a camcorder in my hand. The two main characters after me in my show is my mom and my brother and the US
military invades Kuwait two years after this. That is wild.
Yeah, that's really fucking wild. It's so insane and the camcorder itself goes missing. I think it's gone.
I'm bringing this up in Kuwait. I'm being really reflective. It's so insane and the camcorder itself goes missing. I think it's gone. I'm bringing this up in Kuwait.
I'm being really reflective.
It's very painful.
And also I'm going there.
They're building a tent for me to do a show.
It's like, oh my God, what's happened?
Really in this deep sense of reflection.
My aunt is going in and out of memory.
She's having Alzheimer's starting to really get worse.
But she remembers me.
She's holding my hand.
Don't go, don't go, don't go.
I'm just looking at the clock.
I was like, I'm so sorry.
I have to go up in like an hour.
I have to go.
She's like begging me not to go.
It was so gut wrenching.
I'm sitting there in my hotel room, just crying.
Yeah.
Bro, I wonder what happened to this camp quarter.
I always remember this.
I'm just reflecting and how everything is happening.
I hear people cheering from outside the room.
It's a 2,000 seat or whatever they've built for me.
This is just surreal.
Trying to integrate all this.
Trying to just make sense of it all.
Like how did this all happen?
It's nuts.
I was like, everybody, can you please leave?
I just didn't know how to reconcile.
But I was having, not like excited about going on,
but I just didn't know how to channel my feelings anymore.
And so I called, actually FaceTime Dave.
He was like, oh shit, man,
you can have one of the best fucking sets you ever had.
I already see it.
And I just wiped my tears.
Like you right, went up and literally one of the best.
I did 90 minutes just destroying the place,
freestyling, integrating Arabic to English.
It was like a master class.
It was like fucking, two days later,
when I'm on Jordan, I'm visiting my other aunt
and we're hugging and kissing.
She's loving on me.
She's like another mom to me.
We just ate a really dense meal
and I was trying not to like pass out.
And I hear her say, I have a camcorder.
That's what it sounded like to me.
I was like, what?
Oh God, it's so sleepy.
I was like, did she say camcorder?
No.
And I didn't register it.
Then I see her walk back in.
She has back problems.
She's in her late seventies.
This camcorder, I was like, what the f... I freaked out.
And then my cousin walks in with a bag full of VHS tapes.
I was like, what is going on, dude?
That night, I'm in the hotel room.
I'm staring at the video camera.
I have my opening act, Adi Khalifa,
and my manageable stuff in the room.
I can't stop thinking about it.
And Adi goes, you want to see if it works, don't you?
I was like, yeah.
I open it up, plug it in, comes right on. I was't stop thinking about it. And I.D. goes, you want to see if it works, don't you? I was like, yeah.
I open it up, plug it in,
zoop, comes right on.
I was like, give me a VHS tape.
Give me, give me, give me.
Like a watch and a little viewfinder.
First tape, Michael Jackson.
I was like, I'll take it out.
And next tape, Michael Jackson.
I was like, guy, I'm gonna die.
It's very high.
Next tape, it's a house party.
We don't know where, we don't know what it is.
I watch him for about five minutes. I was like, oh, where's my dad? I really want to see my dad. I was like, oh tape, it's a house party. We don't know where, we don't know what it is. I watched him for about five minutes.
I was like, oh, where's my dad?
I really wanna see my dad.
I was like, ah, he's probably filming.
Damn it.
Right as I say that, he walks into the frame.
He's taking pictures of everybody.
He's like, dancing.
I'm losing it.
I'm like laughing.
Yeah.
Crying, laughing, crying.
Meanwhile, my friend Adi, my opening,
I didn't know he was filming, but I was for 17 minutes watching.
He filmed the entire thing.
And I caught footage of me as a little kid in our house in Kuwait.
It was just insane to get footage from my dad
that I didn't know existed anymore and nobody had.
And I found it almost 30 years later. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Did it almost help you go, oh yeah, that was real?
It did.
That's a great way to put it.
It's so far away in so many ways, geographically and time-wise.
To see it, I would imagine you go like,
all right, I haven't imagined this whole thing.
No, this is absolutely real.
And of course, seeing my mom and younger,
she's serving fruits.
Yeah.
There was a time where we were at our house,
and my dad is very hospitable.
He just loves artists as well.
He'd have people there.
There was guys reciting poetry, freestyling.
And they would get your name.
You would go, Dax, Dax, Dax, Dax.
You know, they would play all the way.
And they would go on a rant about you.
It was so special.
And I'm sitting there wide awake.
And all the little kids are like sleeping except me.
You can tell I'm loving this.
You want in on it.
It was super cool.
Just having footage of my dad grabbing me like that,
it just killed me, man.
I was like so happy.
While I'm recreating the scene in the series,
I forget that I do because I cast him
as my cousin in the show. And as we're about to do the scene in the series, I forget that I do, because I cast him as my cousin in the show,
and as we're about to do the scene, he goes,
remember I was with you when that happened?
He's like, remember I filmed it?
I was like, oh my God, I knew that's right.
I send it to my editor.
I was like, hey, here's the doc footage
of me discovering it.
Here's the actual footage that's on there.
If you could just hold it for me
and then do a rough cut at the end
so people know that there's a real story.
And when I saw it on the cut, I lost my fucking mind.
Weeping, like, what did I just do?
It was like one of those things.
That only the divine can facilitate something like that.
It's impossible.
I think it's hard when people die,
you kind of remember their death.
That's the first thing that is top of mind. So to click back into their life
when they were happy and joyous and living with Vitality,
that's a gift.
I feel that.
Oh, that's beautiful.
Now, the show is twice 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
You won, and I'm very jealous.
There's only one award I've ever coveted
and I campaign for all the time.
And I don't even know what it gets awarded for,
but the Peabody.
Yes.
That to me feels like,
oh, you transcended Hollywood somehow.
It was beautiful.
It's kind of a rad group to join.
Of the people. Very prestigious.
Malcolm Gladwell.
I felt that way about the AFI too.
It's just in a room and they only pick 10 shows
and 10 films and that's it.
That's so cool.
And you're just in that room and you're like, oh my God, Sigourney Weaver,
fucking Steven Spielberg,
James Cameron and I talking about watches,
better call Saul's honor so you have everyone there,
Bob Holterkirk, I'm like, what's going on, bro?
It's nuts, and then they bring in Al Pacino
to tell a story out of nowhere.
It was like, hate award shows.
I really hate award shows because there's a bunch of losers,
but you guys are all winners.
That's nice, yeah.
That's nice, whoah, whoah.
He really walked in like that.
He was like, I got a paper, I got a speech,
but I fucking hate papers.
I just want to tell you a little story.
One of the best stories ever.
I don't know, you know, the first role I did
was a godfather, you heard of it.
I can't believe it, I'm fucking doing a godfather.
I just got to tell you before this though, you know, I did a lot of drugs and alcohol,
you know, it got me through a lot of hard times.
It was really worked out well for me.
I'm not advocating for it.
I'm just saying it was really good for me.
Let me tell you something.
Did I get nominated for an Oscar?
I couldn't believe it.
I got nominated for an Oscar.
So what I did was I took so many fucking quailies and I drank so much, I was fucked up out of my mind.
My manager at the time had to wash my hair.
Couldn't even wash my fucking hair.
Takes me to the Oscars, you know, we're at the Oscars
and I'm sitting in a chair just fucking losing my mind.
High out of my mind, drunk, and then I realized,
oh my God, what if I win?
I gotta walk up to the stage.
Oh no, now I'm panicked. I look over at my manager, I was like, what if I win? I gotta walk up to the stage. Oh no, now I'm panicked.
I look over at my manager, I was like,
is it almost over?
He goes, it's only been 40 minutes,
we've still got another three hours to go.
He goes, oh no, three hours, I can't handle it.
And he was so paranoid, I was so paranoid about it.
What if I win, I gotta walk on the stage, I can't walk.
It's impossible, I can't even stand up.
How am I gonna go give a speech?
It's not gonna work out.
And then comes up our category, finally comes up,
and they go, the winner is Jack Lemmon.
And I fucking celebrated, you know?
I was so fucking happy.
And the next day in the papers, they were like,
look how beautiful Al Pacino is.
What a great supporter of art, supporter of Jack Lemmon.
And I was just happy I didn't fucking win
and have to walk up on a goddamn stage.
Hysterical, and he goes,
okay, I'll read from the paper now.
Since the baby was like right there.
That was a great experience.
Yeah, that's right.
But it seems like the show's wrapped up.
Yeah.
Yes.
Look, you get as many swings as you can
and you don't know how many you're gonna get.
So I feel sincerely this second season is like a masterpiece.
I feel like the eighth episode is something so unique.
Chris Storer gave me one of the sweetest compliments
and he was just like,
you did something really dangerous,
but never inflammatory, which is an enormous feat.
And it was tender, it was thoughtful, it was sweet,
it was heartfelt, it was funny and kudos to you.
When he said that to me, I was like, thank you.
I felt really seen,
because it was almost basically
an impossible position to be in.
Do you talk about October 7th?
Do you have it? Do you get into it?
Did season one wrap on October?
No, season one didn't really have a particular date to it,
but I decided to date the entire second season.
So when it opens up in the first episode of season two,
you could see it's September, 2022.
And then it takes us all the way to October of 23,
but then the whole season ends on the 6th of October
in Tel Aviv Airport before their strip search.
So I did that very deliberately
because every time I started,
first of all, if we talk about it,
then that means the family doesn't get to go back, obviously.
They can't go back and visit if there's a war going on.
Not gonna happen.
Secondly, you're making everything seem like
it all started at that point, which is also not fair.
And people need to know contextually
what the world looked like before that.
Thirdly, every time I started getting into it,
it became a full-blown drama,
and the base of the show is comedy.
And we explored it.
I wanted to see what it looked like.
I do a gut check right away.
It was like, uh, it does not feel good.
That's not it.
You only have two seasons.
This is the best foot forward here.
And if there's a scenario where a third comes around
or the question comes up, do you want to do it?
Do you want to get into it?
I'd have to really think about it
because I genuinely believe I'm being objective, sincerely.
The first season was really, really hard and I'm blessed that we were able to get all the
accolades we did for the first season.
But what I was able to pull off with the second season, I feel so
blessed that I had such a great support system.
Why am I having a son at the same time, being so focused on nothing else and just so
zoned in about making sure to tell the best possible story.
And I feel like we did that.
I'm so relieved.
You know what I mean?
Because it is an impossible position.
A lot of opportunity for failure.
Exactly.
Whenever you take on something that has about 90 ways
it can go bad and then a couple could go good.
Also people who have their own projections on the subject matter.
Which is everyone.
Exactly, which is immigration, Latinos. It's not just the Palestinian family who represents many different buckets, right?
We go into a detention center in episode two. I've never seen that in any show, much less a comedy.
But also telling these detailed stories, showing also how privileged I am as a refugee in comparison to other people's experiences.
Another guy's talking about cartel apprehending them for four days.
And he's like, how'd you get here?
Like, well, I took a bus.
And then I took a short swim.
And then he tries to make himself feel better.
Like, well, you know, in the 90s, we fled the Gulf War, you know.
But then we took a flight.
I think it was Delta.
So just showing how absurd even I am in my own scenario.
And I just love the misdirection of like,
you think it's gonna be a hypersexual comedic situation
and then it goes into a political conversation,
which things do, especially in that environment.
I would have put the mask on.
Yeah, I wouldn't, I couldn't do it.
If anybody else in the room,
I have performance anxiety for sure.
Any sexual activity for sure.
The master wants him to fuck his wife with a luchador mass.
He has also a palestino to do it.
He doesn't want to do it.
I can't do it.
All that would have been easy.
I physically can't do it at all.
And so I was genuinely me.
I don't know if you had told the line between the character myself, but I remember
having like a girlfriend and she had this dog and he kept looking at me while we're.
I was like, dude, stop looking. I was like, I can't, you gotta get this dog out of here, bro.
It's making me feel terrible about myself.
Our old dog, she loved to watch.
I'm so shy, bro. I'm telling you, I'm super shy. Even if it's a pet.
A loved one.
Yeah.
This is like, bro, what are you doing?
But our dog Lola didn't just want to observe. She wanted to like walk around and get a little closer.
Sometimes I feel fur on my leg.
No, come on.
And then I was like, Lola's a fucking pervert.
And then I was like, wait, is that what's going on?
Or when Lola looks at me, I feel like a pervert.
I'm aware of how perverted I am with this third person.
I'm really sad we brought this up now.
No, it was fun to play with that.
Okay, so now you're on tour.
Yeah, and the name of your tour is...
El Oso Palestino Tour.
The Palestinian Bear Tour.
The Palestinian Bear Tour.
Which is a play on the character in the show.
It's just side jobs to make a living in Mexico.
He's a luchador, but he's really just there to get his ass kicked.
He doesn't have any skill set whatsoever.
I did a few of those takes, bro.
That shit is real, man.
It hurt like a motherfucker.
My back went out a few times.
I'm like, dude, what is going on?
They're like, hold onto the rope, squeeze your abs.
And then we're gonna hold you from your ankles.
But you gotta hold yourself.
And I'm like, whoo!
But I'm not planking.
It's an extraordinary plank.
I can plank for several minutes.
Shockingly, I can do it.
We'll do it right now, buddy. Let's go. I knew you were several minutes shockingly. I can do it
I knew you were a good planker. You can't tell I'm face
Appreciate it. Yes, just put this
For real, it's a female. She's like kicking my ass. I'm like brothers. Where's the stunt guy get him in there? I thought this was gonna be fun. This was disaster. Get me out of the suit is hot. I'm sweating
I do black Adam. I can do my own stunts. Let, it's hot, I'm sweating. I did Black Adam.
I can do my own stunts, let's go.
No, I can't.
I can't do all of them.
That's not your lane.
Driving a car like a lunatic
and getting thrown from the ropes
are completely different things, buddy.
Completely different things.
So how many dates are you doing?
I think I've done 45 already.
I'm not sure.
You can get tickets on my website, moamer.com,
M-O-A-M-E-R.com, you can follow me on Instagram.
I gotta film another special, so I'm just going hard.
I want this to be spectacular.
I want it to be the best special that I've ever done.
And I feel like with getting older, having a son,
and what's going on in the world,
the way you filter things and when you see things,
everything is different.
I see things really differently.
As a father, as a man,
just coming off of season two itself
and how really massive lift that was
and relief of seeing people.
The reception that I'm getting on the road now,
it's one of the most beautiful things.
Yeah.
How is your Instagram,
because Instagram is, well, social media is a cesspool.
Yeah, it really is, it's tough.
It's tough.
Do you face a lot of backlash and weird stuff there?
I try not to look.
Number one, I really, really avoid it.
I have a team that curates, I approve everything
because I really don't want to spend my days online
and on social.
It was so time consuming and vacuous
and everyone's just yelling at each other.
No one's really making sense.
There's no actual progress being made.
It's just people declaring what side
of every fight they're on.
Exactly.
And then the worst part of it to me is no one's
listening to one another.
So you're talking and I'm just thinking
about how I'm going to respond.
You're not there to learn anything.
You're there to broadcast your position.
And a fight.
Exactly.
So I've avoided that.
And sincerely, I haven't had any issue,
like with season two, I think that the balance was perfect.
And the fact that it was based off
of my actual experience in life.
And then you can see not all of it.
Surely you fictionalize certain things.
But a substantial amount of it is copy paste.
What the divine has given me on a silver platter.
You don't want to mess with that.
You can't write anything better than that.
You're holding a camp quarter.
Just go with that and build around it
and making sure to expand it
and make sure it flows into the overall story
and that's it.
Stay focused and have the right balance of comedy
and drama and emotion tapped into it
and take people on this ride and let it do the talking.
Well, not to be too corny and make you uncomfortable,
I appreciate it so much. Rami, for me, was the first big, like,
I really, really enjoyed almost being forced
to see what the experience is like.
Yeah.
And same with you.
And so I'm grateful we live in this.
The negative would be, like, a niche economy of content,
but the great part of it is I get to watch Atlanta.
It's a great era.
I hope the pressure doesn't stop these stories
from being told.
Yeah.
That's the scary part is that a lot of people
at my shows, like, how'd they let you do it?
One guy said, how are you alive?
I was like, bro, pray for me.
What the fuck are you talking about?
How am I alive?
It's a good, sweet, honest, that's how shocked people are.
Yeah, it's a scary time.
Because that's how extreme the suppression
of free speech has become.
And if we don't like what you're saying,
then we can just literally deport you to another country.
Like what the fuck is going on right now?
I know.
I don't really worry about it,
but I just hope that it doesn't happen.
I hope that the artist community,
specifically here in LA and Hollywood,
they understand that we need more of these stories.
You can't suppress speech. If you don't like what somebody's saying,
you just need more speech, right?
Right, right.
You need to counter. You don't need less.
Everybody gets to share their stories.
You don't have to love it.
You don't have to hate it.
You can appreciate it.
Yeah.
Well, have fun touring and then also act more,
cause I love watching you act.
You really are just born to do it.
You're so effortlessly comfortable.
Mo, I'm delighted to meet you. I'm so glad you came and did this.
Yeah, this was so fun.
Yeah, so good to know both of you. Really, truly. This is so fun.
Oh, good.
Really, really. What a great experience. I'm going to do this in my garage.
You should.
You really should.
You got a garage?
Just me, just sitting there.
All you need is a garage.
Love, man. Thank you so much.
He is an armchair expert, but he makes mistakes all the time.
Thank God Monica's here.
She's gotta let him have the facts.
Oh, this is fun.
This is scary.
So you hit me with an idea.
Yep.
Which is after we chit chat for a while
and we get into the facts,
I'm gonna cut your hair while you read the facts.
Yes, because you have boasted many a time
about your haircutting capabilities.
Yeah.
And I've never experienced it,
and I need a haircut so badly.
I know, but I told you, this is not the situation.
Like I need you on a tall chair in the kitchen
with a lot of light, and we gotta discuss what you want.
But what you're telling me is you just want the ends trimmed.
I mean, you can do some other stuff if you want.
That's some big new layers.
But be careful.
So you can play with it a little bit.
Okay, we'll see, we'll see what we can do.
But I do have my tools.
I got my tools.
Yeah, you got your scissors and your brush.
Like normally I would use this comb,
but I was thinking your hair,
I don't know if I can get this comb through your hair,
can I? Have you ever? So I was thinking your hair, I don't know if I can get this comb through your hair, can I?
So I brought one of the girls brushes.
Have you ever cut hair on an Indian woman's head?
Yeah, I only do Indian women's.
Oh, then you'll be fine.
You'll be fine with that comb.
Do you think all Indian women have the same hair?
I mean, they seem to, from my point of view,
it seems pretty similar. I don't think they're exactly the same hair? I mean, they seem to, from my point of view, they seem pretty similar.
I don't think they're exactly the same,
but yes, I think there's a thickness.
Although Matt once told me, Matt, our friend,
who's a hairstylist, told me that the actual strand itself
is of mine is not that thick, it's more like medium.
It's the density.
There's a lot of it.
So density.
Density.
Yeah, I've never seen a blonde Indian.
Let's start there.
No, they don't.
No, it's like green eyes, cat eyes,
as your father would say.
Well, green eyes happens there sometimes,
but no blonde hair.
No, right?
No, I've never heard of it.
There's gotta be albino Indians though.
Well, exactly, that would be the only way.
Albinism.
We learned a cool word today on armchair anonymous.
Oh yeah.
Edenistic?
No, Edenic.
Edenic.
Yeah, and it meant-
To describe an environment as Eden-like,
like the Garden of Eden.
Yeah, I liked that. Edenic.
I liked that.
God, I'm glad you remembered it
because I said out loud I'm gonna commit that to my-
Repertoire. Repertoire. People loved your David said out loud I'm gonna commit that to my repertoire.
Repertoire.
People loved your David Chang story.
I just wanna add that.
I looked at the comments and people,
many people write, this is all of us.
It's all of us, right?
We just don't know how to operate in the world.
Humans do not know how to operate.
We get so nervous, as if people get punched
for doing it wrong or something.
I did send it to Callie, of course.
I sent her the text.
She said, what is going on?
And I responded and she said,
but where is the bread from?
Oh.
We still don't know a really important.
Rob can, he'll handle that right now.
Can you find out?
The bread that his children didn't eat
that he brought home for his children.
I was gonna say, oh, what you got there about?
Oh, there's a bit of a standoff in our household.
So Kristen, as you know, you've tried it.
She's in her sourdough phase.
I've never tried hers.
You haven't?
Only Amy's.
What about Molly's birthday party?
She brought over like two fresh loaves.
You didn't get into it.
No.
I had some, I cheated.
And I also, I was like, you know, I already told you,
so I'm like, no, sourdough's got the least amount of gluten.
I can eat it.
And I had it.
There's nothing better than sourdough out of an oven.
Forget it.
But anyways, my kids are like, where's the white bread?
They miss the white bread.
And cousin's like, I'm making the bread.
You have homemade bread, rightly so.
And Delta's like, I want little square white pieces I'm making the bread. You have homemade bread, rightly so.
And Delta's like, I want little square white pieces of bread
and I get it.
You definitely get it of all people.
Because I'm a trash monster.
I like crappy stuff.
No, when you have your five dishes that you make,
that you used to make, those were your special dishes.
And one of them is a tuna.
Chicken salad sandwich.
Excuse me, a chicken salad sandwich.
It's been a minute.
It's been a minute.
I haven't had it in a while.
Chicken salad sandwich.
That one's hard because I don't eat bread anymore
and I gotta just eat this and watch you guys.
Yeah, well you can have it on the sourdough, I guess.
How often are you cheating with the sourdough?
I'm not.
When she got into the face,
because you can't imagine waking up
and the whole house smells like a loaf of sourdough.
Like it's actually now maddening that I don't,
I had a week of it.
I'm like, yeah, this is where it's not working.
My skin started flaking, my wrist started hurting.
I also gained like immediately,
I just mysteriously gained like eight pounds.
Well, we, yeah.
Go ahead, what did we talk about?
That I gain and lose weight really quick?
No, that like, I think you're just underweight,
like your body wants to weigh more.
So of course it's like getting something
and it's gonna hoard it.
I don't know if you inception me, but I've been eating more.
Oh.
Yeah, I'm not sure.
Is it that or is it that you're,
you got back from New York and you had all this yummy food
and now you want yummy food?
Well, then I got back down to 194.
Right.
And then I think vanity.
I'm like, I don't like my face at 194.
No, maybe you are having,
you know how they call them sympathy pains
when a woman is pregnant
and then the man also experiences pains.
You know, I gained a crazy amount of weight
when Kristen was pregnant the first time.
And you said that was like sympathy weight or something.
I just don't know what it was,
but I find that every man I know has done that
when their wife is pregnant.
But is that just because like the woman is eating more?
I think she's like driving it a little more
because she's got these weird urges
and there's more shit around and maybe that's part of it.
And maybe you are like, you know, like, if you,
I want people to think about this.
The next time you're at a booth at a restaurant
talking with somebody, start paying attention
how you inadvertently mirror each other's body language.
If someone puts their hand on their,
rest their face on their fist, you'll do it.
Just be aware of it.
I mean, we don't.
In here. Yeah.
I wonder if we were at a booth at a restaurant we would.
Oh, thanks.
We had an expert on, say, something about dad bod
that like the husband or the father stores fat differently
in his body when his wife's pregnant.
Knowing that he's not gonna sleep and...
Oh, interesting.
But my big thing was we were at one of the checkups
and I just hadn't been on a scale in like four or five months
and I got on, I was like, oh my God, I've gained 22 pounds
and I didn't even notice.
I think it's maybe more that like she's eating more.
Oh yeah.
There's more on her plate, literally.
Yeah.
So then you're just matching that.
Yeah, something happens.
But anyway. It's pretty consistent.
You might be having sympathy.
Weight gain. Weight gain
from us all being on our periods.
Could be.
That's a good story.
Whiskers.
Oh, okay.
Oh no, don't, this is. Yes, of course this is a good story. Thisiskers. Oh, okay. Oh, no, don't, this is-
Yes, of course this is a good story.
This is embarrassing for her.
For whiskey?
No, I-
I don't need to say who.
Oh, okay.
I mean-
Why is it embarrassing to have your period?
I would be embarrassed.
You would?
Yeah, I'd be embarrassed by that story.
Oh, okay.
I don't think she would, but I won't risk it.
Well, there's a woman, but there's only-
There's a lot of women in my house.
Nicole's there nonstop, but there's only- There's a lot of women in my house.
Nicole's there nonstop, my sister's there nonstop,
I got Kristen's there nonstop.
This is a whole bevy of urine in and out of there.
Yeah, it's not me.
You popped some tampons in those trash cans for sure.
Maybe years ago.
I don't really use tampons anymore.
Oh, you're over it.
I use period underwear.
Okay, that's the rage. I use period underwear. Okay, that's the rage.
I use period underwear.
And there's a lot of rages.
People use the cup.
Yeah, we talked about this.
You're anti. I'm afraid of that.
I'm just afraid of it.
I'm not anti.
And we have a friend we want to honor,
but we have a friend in the pod that uses the Diva Cup.
Yeah, and she also told us a story of someone,
she was at a wedding and a girl's popped it,
you know, pop and locked.
She was dancing.
She was dancing.
And the cup spilled?
It fell out and blood flew everywhere.
How does the cup pass your underpants?
She wasn't wearing any.
What a kinky broad.
She's on her period, not wearing undies
and on the dance floor popping and locking.
Who is this woman?
Do I know her?
No.
If you're able, I mean, it's like suctioned up there.
You should be able to keep them.
You should be able to go underwearless
to a wedding in a dress.
I mean, technically, I'm sure when I wore.
If I did something like that, you'd be like,
that's so arrogant.
You know you would.
Yeah, I would say that.
But listen, I have, I'm sure,
at some point in life when I was wearing tampons,
wore a tampon without an underwear.
Oh, definitely, like in a bathing suit.
But your bathing suit's the underwear.
You're not not wearing underwear ever.
And then add, then you're on your period,
and you decide that's when you're gonna
not wear your underwear? Let me tell you why. If you're wearing a certain dress, decide that's when you're gonna not wear your underwear. Let me tell you why.
If you're wearing a certain dress,
like let's say you're going to a wedding or something
and you're wearing a certain dress
and you don't want underwear lines,
you'd go without.
Even in the day of the thong and everything,
that's still an issue?
Even still depending.
I mean, there are some good underwears that you can use,
but there are certain dresses, like you can just see it.
So there are times that I-
I gotta go to more weddings. There are times that, like you can just see it. So there are times that I- I gotta go to more weddings.
There are times that I haven't worn underwear.
Be raw dogged.
Yeah, and then-
No, commando.
I commando.
And if I'm on my period-
Fuck it.
That's a tampon.
And I'm not worried a tampon-
Can you give a specific time ever?
Like this sounds so theoretical.
Can you tell me a time you were on your period,
put a tampon and went out of the house
with a dress on and no underwear?
I've been on my period for, I mean, since I was 11.
100 years.
I mean, since I was 11 or 12.
You got it at 11?
Or 12, I forget.
You live next to a nuclear reactor?
No.
I was an early bloomer.
Okay.
And anyway, I have been on it for a really long time.
And then I like, I know the feeling of what it is
to have a tampon in and not have underwear.
In your house.
I'm asking, can you think of a- Not in my house.
Are you telling me right now,
you have a memory of going out on a dress?
Yes.
No one needs on your pier.
Yes, I have a sense memory of it.
I don't have an actual memory of it,
but I have a sense memory.
Dax!
We have a commitment to each other here?
Exactly.
To be honest.
You can't feel like- And to believe each other!
You can't feel like you did.
You either, you gotta say I did or I didn't.
That's not fair.
Okay, I apologize.
Listen, I remember I wore a dress sort of recently
that I didn't wear underwear.
I do know that.
And I kind of feel like I was on my period then.
And I think I wore a tampon specifically
because I don't really wear tampons anymore.
And I remember I had to wear it.
Yeah.
Because of this.
It's weird to say wear it.
I know.
Wear a tampon.
I had to put one in.
Yeah.
Plug, plug.
I would never be worried about popping and locking
and the tampon falling out.
No, of course, yeah.
So I can see why the Diva Cup, you wouldn't-
I have no experience with it,
but it seems crazy there's a cup in there
that's relying on a suction seal
and that that seal couldn't break.
Anyone who's ever used any suction cups, they're wily.
It's like, I think it's like big.
So the fact that the whole thing is up there,
it does feel like it would be-
Is it like a teacup?
Like kind of, I think, but rubbery, I think.
But as big as like a coffee cup?
No, not a coffee cup.
No, it's like a golf ball maybe.
No, bigger than that.
Much bigger than a golf ball.
Natalie uses them.
She does?
Yeah.
Is your dog ever eating it?
No.
Okay, well let me get to the story.
Okay, fine, tell the story.
There's a lot of updates? No. Okay, well let me get to the story. Okay, fine, tell the story. There's a lot of updates on Whiskey.
Okay.
A new update on Whiskey is he's a bad to the bone.
That doesn't help me. Do you see it?
Because it needs to be next to a big lighter or something.
Here it is next to. A micro penis?
A tampon.
Oh, okay, so it's the same length as a tampax.
Okay, so Whiskey, you need to know some updates about Whiskey.
Okay. One thing is he's bad to theax. Okay, so whiskey, you need to know some updates about whiskey.
One thing is he's bad to the bone.
Okay.
He's killed over a hundred men.
What are you talking about?
Whiskey's eaten 100 men.
He's bad to the bone.
Okay, you just really wanna say bad to the bone.
Well, I wanted to tell you about whiskey.
I know.
Well, first of all, he was tripping, he was president of the a lot. Well, I wanted to tell you about whiskey. I know. Well, you know, first of all,
he was tripping, he was president of the hallway.
Right.
And I wanted to tell you about that.
And you seem to enjoy that.
No, I want to hear about whiskey
and I know he's bad to the bone.
He's eaten 100 men.
And 150 women, but he doesn't talk about that.
Eww.
He's bad to the bone.
He's sounding kind of like a Tito. A tiger. Okay, so he's bad to the bone. He's sounding kind of like a Tito.
A tiger.
Okay, so he's bad to the bone.
Okay.
And someone in my household put a tampon in the trash can,
which is advisable for your plumbing.
Correct.
So I'm on a high five,
this unnamed person who put a tampon.
Because Whiskey's bad to the bone and he loves blood.
Ew.
He went and ate the tampon, okay?
Yeah.
Then, and I am, she won't mind this.
I just want you to know, she won't mind this.
And this is a big honorable mention
because this, I've said this before.
My sister Carly is fucking down.
When shit needs, when the gnarly stuff needs to get done,
my sister will do it.
She will.
She is, she's fearless.
So they were taking whiskey back to the bone,
to on a walk and he pooped out half a tampon.
Yep.
And then a little while longer,
he pooped out, tried to poop out the rest of the tampon
and now the cord, the string, the rope.
And now he's got a rope hanging out of his butt
and he's a bastard, right?
So you can't get close to him because he's bad.
He'll bite you.
He'll eat you like the hundred men he's eaten.
And so Carly's trying to get this fucking thing
out of his butt and he's trying to bite her
and this whole thing, it's a battle.
Then I guess she had to take him to her house
and put him in the sink and get him warm water on him
because he calms down and he gets a bath.
Oh my God.
And then she had to pull this thing out of him.
Oh! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Oh. Oh. These dogs, man.
You are so lucky that your sister did that
because he would have died of TSS.
That's what, that's what Kristen goes,
is he gonna get toxic shock syndrome?
I'm like, no, your butt is so different than your vagina.
No.
Yeah.
Maybe hit, we don't know about his.
You need to get a proctologist on it.
I don't think you can get toxic shock syndrome
in your butthole from a Tampax.
I'm sure you can.
In a day.
And it's a tampon.
The Tampax is the brand I prefer.
Kind of like, I like Huggies.
Tampax, radiant.
They always, man, these ad campaigns,
and I tip my hat to them,
because what a product to have to sell on TV.
And you know, they have these commercials
and someone's like sailing.
They like to put you like in an article situation.
Yeah, because that's when you need a tampon
when you're in a bathing suit.
That's why.
Yeah, this is more, I think like,
oh, it's gonna be a long sailboat ride.
I don't know.
It's always like someone's in a field
and there's a lot of flowers.
Like they're trying to de-stigmatize, I guess,
get, keep whiskey away.
Uh-huh.
But yeah, they got to name it whatever name I just said,
radiant or something.
I just, I think they have their work cut out for them
and I applaud them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I get it.
God bless them.
Or you got to sell depends.
Yeah.
Hard product to sell.
In some ways it's a hard product.
In some ways it sells itself. Cause like if you need it, you get it. You just mean depends. Yeah. Hard product to sell. In some ways it's a hard product,
in some ways it sells itself.
Cause like, if you need it, you get it.
Well, yeah, you just need them.
Yeah.
You know, no one's on the fence about getting depends.
You either need fucking depends or you don't.
Well, maybe that's why tampons have had to step up
their game because there are competing products.
I don't like the branding of this.
Why?
Do you like it?
Period underwear? I mean, that's what I call it. the branding of this. Why? Do you like it? Period underwear?
I mean, that's what I call it.
Grab my period underwear.
Don't you think there's a,
I think the Tampax people should take a stab
at period underwear,
because I think they could top it.
Well, it's not all-
Like freedom panties or something.
Can you let me finish, please?
Yeah, sorry.
So excited to talk about female products.
I know.
There are brands, Nix. Knicks is a brand.
So you don't, you don't have to say period
under where you can say like.
Get my Knicksies.
Sure.
Knicksies, regular Knicks.
Yeah, it's got, it already starts with an X.
So I'm, I love it.
Is it N-I-X?
And then there's one.
Or is it N-I-C-K-X?
K-N-I-X.
Well, great.
K-N-I-X.
So like knitting.
And then there's, um, Thinx.
That's a huge brand.
Another Axe.
Yeah.
Axe is a trusted letter in the vaginal space.
It is, maybe they are not stealing.
Maybe they are-
Inspired by the tampaks.
They're building upon the tampaks.
Yeah, the trust that these people have tirelessly built
with this product that is, you know.
Look, nothing against the tampon industry,
but this is better for you.
If I was in the ad game,
I would want to get put on Tampax.
Cause you wanna bite off a lot, you know,
you wanna challenge.
It's like, if you're an actor,
you wanna play someone dying of something or whatever, you know, you like, you want to challenge. It's like, if you're an actor, you want to play someone dying of something or whatever,
you know, you want to challenge.
And I would like, I think to cut my teeth
and make a name for myself,
I'd love to just like blow out a Tampax campaign.
Okay, how are you going to get these people back on tampons?
The people that have left to the cuff and to the-
You want me to just net like right off the cuff?
Yeah, you're in a meeting right now.
Here we are.
Guys, our sales are plummeting.
And why?
Because there's all these competing trends now that,
look, I hate to say it, and this doesn't leave this room,
they're better for the women's bodies.
Wait, nothing is better.
What if you're sailing?
The cup is-
You're supposed to carry, what you're trying to tell me is that a woman
on her in her cycle is supposed to have a purse
full of underwear?
No, they'd use the cup.
That's not a move for an elegant lady out on the town.
Yeah, see this is where-
The fact that you gotta carry extra undies with you?
What are you talking about?
Well, once you've soiled your nicks,
just like a tampon, you gotta change it.
Well, no.
So you gotta change these.
No, you wash it.
You technically rinse it out.
Yeah, oh.
See, I got a lot to work with here.
But hold on.
Also, the cup is different.
Forget the cup.
Well, that's a huge thing.
This is Tampax versus underpants.
Okay, fine.
Are you trying to tell me that the day you get your period,
you put on a pair of nicks and you leave them on
for the duration?
Okay, great.
But I leave mine on all day.
Even a very heavy, heavy day?
I wanna be choosing my words carefully.
Yeah, I do my flow, even at its heaviest,
one can sustain it.
What if you go on a sailboat? Then I'm wearing a tampon.
Bingo.
So we build on that.
For the adventurer, for the person engaged,
sure, if you're a couch potato, where next?
If you wanna get out and see the world,
if you don't want your period to keep you sidelined
on the bench, you still wanna go sailing
and go to amusement parks.
There's only one brand for you.
Cause you can carry extras in your purse
discreetly like an elegant lady.
No one wants to have, no one, you know what I would do
is I would have, thank you Monica.
Here we go, I got my pitch, okay?
We start the commercial with a woman in line
at an amusement park.
Everyone's having a great time.
Her child asks her for a sucker.
She goes in her purse to get it.
The purse comes dislodged
and on the ground tumbles five pairs of underpants.
She's mortified.
And then a girl next to her looks at her person,
she's got Tampax in there.
And then she winks, pretty good spot.
No one wants underwear to tumble out of their bag
at the amusement park, Monica.
100% no one wants tampons to fly everywhere.
Well, they want it because they're not humongous,
like underpants.
Or if they think it's a sucker.
No men, all the men off of this campaign immediately.
This is so embarrassing and bad.
Absolutely not, absolutely not.
Every woman has been in a situation
where a tampon's fallen out and it's like the most-
Mortifying?
It is so upsetting.
What would be-
When your tampon falls out of your backpack.
I want you to be, please be honest with me.
I am.
You get to choose.
Yes.
You're on a date with this unnamed guy
that was at Saturday Night Live.
And your purse falls over
in either a gigantic pair of underwear fallout,
because they're big, right?
To cover everything.
Hold on.
Am I imagining them correctly?
You're not, okay. To cover everything. Am I imagining them correctly? Okay.
I need to take a break.
Okay.
You call time.
As we've established, I am currently on my period.
Yeah.
So-
Fuck, where are you keeping all these other underwear?
Exactly.
Where do you see, there's no,
I'm not carrying any underwear.
There's no underwear in my bag.
You don't-
I think you're reckless.
I think you need a backup pair on you.
I'm not gonna say who, I know someone who wears them
and they go through a couple a day.
Yeah, sure, some people do.
Yeah.
Same as your tampons.
And so that person has to carry
an extra pair of these grundles around, okay?
So we just can see the fact that someone might need
to be carrying grundnels with them.
Now my question is your purse falls over at dinner
on a date with a boy you like
in either a very large pair of underwear fall out.
Stop that.
They're very, they're not as big as you think.
You think they're diapers.
They're not.
Diapers.
That's another great angle.
I'll start calling them diaps.
No, stop.
Okay.
Listen.
I never know when the fun's gonna end.
I've put up with a lot here, okay?
If this man would rather me get TSS
slash have to put cloth up my pussy.
Save cotton, please don't use that word in the campaign.
That's off when you want to the consumer.
Pussy or cloth?
Yes, no, no.
That word doesn't work in advertising
as much as I wish it did.
Thank you for explaining that to me.
If this man, this hot man who I think is kind and nice
and from another country this man is.
Oh, that's, you're giving away a lot of clues now.
I think this man from another country really understands
that Americans are crazy.
That other country is a lot more buttoned up
than this country.
No, but not in this type of area.
Oh yes.
No.
Yes.
Dex, you don't know what it's like to be a woman.
I know I don't, but I do know the difference
between I won't say the name of the country
and our country, and we are much more foul.
Not in the female hygienic space.
Guys there are like, ooh, about everything. No, but in general, they wear more pads there.
Okay?
So the answer, your answer is, lock in the answer,
you'd rather have a big pair of underwear fall out
than a tampon.
No, that's, I wanna get a little more nuance.
I wouldn't, and stop saying big pair of underwear.
They're bigger than the ones you normally wear, right?
They're not.
Like there's a pair you'd be happy to fall out, right?
We agree on that?
Listen, I'm currently wearing a thong, period underwear.
Oh!
This is what I'm saying.
You don't understand what's going on.
I haven't seen that product.
I've seen different versions.
Yes, and it looks, it has lace.
Oh wow.
It looks like underwear.
Okay.
Okay.
Hot underwear.
Okay, great.
Now what I wouldn't want to happen,
I will say this, what I would not want to happen
is my bag falls out, dirty period underwear falls out.
Now, and be honest, you're not gonna pitch them
in the fucking trash can when you switch
no.
Grundles in the turlet.
So yeah, you could be in a situation
when you're carrying.
I'm personally not though.
Used, used.
So I can't.
But for the person who does have to change midday,
they have to carry that around.
So okay, they clearly now,
they also have to carry a Ziploc bag.
Great product, I wish I was on that also have to carry a Ziploc bag.
Great product, I wish I was on that campaign.
I swear by Ziplocs.
Now they have, not only do they have this, you know.
Go on.
A pair of underwear, I'll leave it at that.
Thank you.
That are soiled.
Yeah.
In a Ziploc bag.
I mean, now this is a little, this is crazy.
Cause the guy who's not as hip in a feminist like me,
who I already know about all these products.
You do not.
But for the untrained guy.
Okay.
He sees a pair of undies in a Ziploc bag, Monica.
I'll tell you a thousand percent what he thinks happened.
She shit herself. Okay. That's a Ziploc bag full Monica, I'll tell you a thousand percent what he thinks happened. She shit herself.
That's a Ziploc bag full of shitty underwear.
Okay. And is it hot?
Well, now you're, that's an interesting counter.
See, now listen, this is what I, yes,
would I rather a little tampon fall out.
It's not delicate.
Yeah, it's inspirational. What was it called? Radiant. Radiant. A radiant tampon. Yeah, delicate. It's not delicate. Yeah, it's inspirational.
What was it called?
Radiant.
Radiant.
A radiant tampon falls out.
Okay, it falls out.
Yes, I would prefer that to dirty period underwear
falling out at a restaurant.
In a Ziploc bag.
Better in a Ziploc bag, at least, than on its own.
But it says they poop themselves.
If that happened,
the underwear, Ziploc bag slash regular stinky underwear.
When it happens.
I would say, ugh, that's embarrassing.
Oh no, this is like David Chang all over again.
No, I wouldn't dress it.
I would address it.
I'd be like-
And there's flies too.
Just, there's immediately, I wouldn't dress it. I would address it. I'd be like. And there's flies too.
Just.
No.
There's immediately, there's a fucking swarm.
In fact, before he even sees it, he hears,
whoa, is there a swarm?
I heard a swarm of flies.
No.
And then Whiskey runs across the restroom.
Oh my God.
I would say, I don't wear tampons anymore
because they're not good for you.
Oh, and I'd say, I'm so glad you're taking care of yourself.
Exactly, and that's the end of that.
Yeah.
Don't you think?
Well, okay, say that again.
Oh, that's so, I'm so embarrassed.
I just don't wear tampons anymore
because they're not great for you, for women's bodies. And because you don't wear tampons anymore because they're not great for you, for women's bodies.
And because you don't wear tampons anymore,
you had an act, you pooped your pants?
Oh no, is that what you think?
Yeah, cause it's in Ziploc.
Oh no, no, sorry, sorry.
It's just period underwear.
I'm starving, let's see the discernment.
I hate men.
All men off the campaign now. Let's see what kind of appetizers they got. You're not a turd.
Can we have a can of Raid?
Like you aren't having sex with people on their period.
Oh absolutely, I love it, I love it.
Please.
Yeah, yeah.
One of my, yeah, I'm gonna leave that there, yeah.
Yes, of course, I don't give a shit.
I also don't care if you have shitty underwear in your purse,
but I do think I'm a rare, rare customer.
I don't care if you have a turd, also don't care if you have shitty underwear in your purse,
but I do think I'm a rare customer.
I think you're probably a rare customer, but I-
I would be like, oh, so glad you're shit, your pants.
Now I gotta tell you about 25 stories.
Yeah.
Look, it's tough.
Yeah. It's tough. Okay, well, Mother's tough. Yeah.
It's tough.
Okay, well Mother's Day is right around the corner,
so think about getting Mom either of these options.
Whatever you found would be a compelling argument.
We've said three now, diva cup, underwear.
Yeah, choice is yours.
If you're a poppin' locker, you wear dresses,
these are all things you gotta consider.
Yeah.
They're great, I'm just having fun.
I'm having a good time, and you were too.
Okay, so anyway, she pulled the tampon right out of there.
She's such a gangster, Carly.
And do you think there was now poop in there too?
If I ever got in a situation
where I had accidentally killed somebody,
and it was one of these scenarios
where it's like, there's no way I can,
my story's not gonna hold up.
Like literally the choices are, it was an accident, eh?
And my choices are call the police and go to prison forever
because it looks insane or get rid of the body.
And I can't do it myself.
I do need one person and Aaron's in Detroit.
Oh, okay. I do need one person. Okay. And Aaron's in Detroit. Oh, okay.
I'm calling Carly.
That's the right call, right?
I mean, I'm upset, obviously.
But that's not your lane.
Well, cleaning up bodies.
Cutting up a body.
Oh, it's cutting up and I was bearing it
or putting it in the ocean or something.
It's Robert Durst.
Okay.
Yeah, I'd rather not.
Right, you know, there's other calls you'd rather.
I would keep it a secret.
Yes, I would trust you to tell you this happened.
Okay.
But I'm talking about the dirty business.
Yeah, I'm just also not very strong,
even though I've been doing my farmers' caries.
Intermittently.
I did them last night.
Oh, you did?
Yeah. Oh, good.
While you were watching ER?
No, when I was going to and from. I just do it when I see them. Getting. Oh you did? Oh good. While you were watching ER? No, when I was going to and from.
I just do it when I see them.
Getting a glass of wine?
Kind of.
Do you ever do them on your way to get another glass of wine?
They are like right there.
I mean, I can't say I haven't done them after a night out.
Sure.
Well of course, because you're feeling stronger than you are.
You're feeling like overly confident.
Yeah.
I think I actually am ready.
So I have been doing two 40s. Yeah. I think I actually am ready. So I have been doing two 40s.
I think I might be ready to move up.
Good.
Yeah.
But I'm not going very far.
How far are you supposed to go?
Longer than to your kitchen probably.
Well, I go back and forth until it feels like
it's really falling out of my hand.
Okay.
You think that's bad?
I think you can look up.
I wanna say they're supposed to last
either 30 seconds or a minute.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
I don't do them, so I don't know.
All right, I'll look it up.
Okay, you wanna do facts and get a haircut?
Oh yeah, I do.
Okay, great.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
Well, I'm just gonna start by saying this will be my first haircut I've ever given sitting down. Oh, really? Yeah. Oh, you like to stand.
Well, no one's ever cut your hair sitting down, right? It's a crazy, yeah, but it's okay.
Okay.
All right, so first I'm gonna start by grooming you.
Okay.
Okay, don't forget to do the facts though,
because that's also your job for the listener.
I already forgot.
Like if you're watching, this will be fun,
even if you're not giving facts,
but for the listener, you're gonna have to give your facts.
Okay, I just really like it when people brush my hair.
Yeah, I bet you probably never want the haircut to start.
Yeah, can we just?
I can see why you wanna trim.
There's- See?
Yeah, you have some strays.
It's gotten really out of control.
And a lot of them are kind of mid-level,
so that's a little tricky.
Those are the layers.
Yeah, well, okay, we're gonna start.
We're gonna start at the bottom.
Do you want me to do anything with my head?
No. Okay, great.
Yeah. Okay.
Now the facts.
Yeah, tell me about the facts.
Tell me when you're making your first cut.
I already did.
Wow, were you not scared?
What happened?
I just fucking cut myself.
Oh no. You know why? I always I just fucking cut myself. Oh no.
You know why?
I always cut, I cut like this, Monica.
I cut like this.
And because your hair's down here,
I have to cut like this and I just cut my finger.
It's okay.
We're gonna continue on.
Oh God.
Okay, get me one of your nicks.
I'm gonna wrap a nicks around this
and see how absorbent it is.
Okay.
Are you sure you're okay?
Yeah, absolutely.
Okay. Now this is from Mo okay? Yeah, absolutely. Okay.
Now this is from Moe.
Oh, wonderful.
Moe Hammer.
Moe Hammer.
This was a great episode.
Really interesting life.
Yeah, incredible.
We've had a few people on lately
with really interesting lives.
Yeah, John.
John Bernthal. John Bernthal.
Moe. That's it.
That's where it starts.
That's pretty much it.
OK, now I have to check myself.
I said that we had someone on Armchair Anonymous
who told a story about how they pooped in the aisle of a plane
and it got everywhere and it got on the flight attendant.
Yeah, I didn't remember that story when you told it.
Did that not check out?
No, it happened, but it was the flight attendant called.
It was flight attendant stories.
Oh, okay, okay, that makes more sense.
Or plane stories or something,
and she told it from her perspective,
she's the one that got pooped on.
Oh. Yeah.
As if the job's not thankless enough already.
I know.
It's one of your main stick up force.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I enter the plane a little bit self-fulfilling prophecy.
I'm suspicious someone's gonna try to be mean to them.
Yeah, you want it to happen, really.
I don't, but I'm looking for it
and you find what you're looking for.
That's like the best way to sum it up.
How's it going with the haircut?
Pretty good.
Okay, great.
Bleeding pretty good, but that's okay.
Oh my God.
It's okay, it's okay.
Should we put the cotter, should we cotterize?
At some point, I'll put a Band-Aid on it for sure.
It's gonna get a Band-Aid.
Okay, well do we wanna cotterize it?
With a chemical cotterization.
Yeah, that we just learned about. That we just learned about.
That's an Easter egg farm chair anonymous.
And it's a dick.
It is a dick.
Okay, when do Michael Che and Colin Jost
do their like swapy?
Or they write jokes for one another?
That happened at Christmas.
They might do it more, but that was at Christmas.
Seems to be the Christmas present they give us.
Yes, and then last time they did it,
they talked about Scarlet's vagina,
and it caused some issues.
Oh my God, Dex, hold on.
No, no, no, keep going.
I just showed Monica the blob, but it's okay,
I just dabbed it and got a bunch of hair inside of it.
Wait, do we wanna get-
No, everything's fine.
Continue on.
Nothing's happening.
I'm nervous for you.
Don't be nervous.
Okay.
This is not my first time bleeding.
Yeah, but I feel bad.
I think that you know what happened? This is God smiting me for all the period talk.
Oh!
Now he's given me a lot of blood, well her,
now we know God's a woman, and she has smited me.
You're right, it is a ding ding ding.
Wait, can we pause for one second?
I am gonna get a band-aid,
because I'm gonna have to pull out the layers a little bit.
Yeah.
Okay, great.
I might have one in my bag. Do you want me to go grab one?
Is Carly inside?
She probably is, yeah.
Yeah, I'll go grab one. Okay, go.
Be careful not to get any blood on your white shirt.
I'm trying not to get blood on my white shirt.
Are you so far happy with the cut?
Yeah, I mean, no, we're just, no.
Cause we just started?
Okay, okay, okay, don't get upset.
Okay.
Now why shouldn't adults get their tonsils removed?
They will experience more pain
and slower healing compared to children.
And there's a higher chance of complications
like bleeding or infections.
Okay.
I am gonna have to get your hair,
your hair's gonna look crazy in this interview.
Great.
Or not interview, but fact check.
Because I'm gonna have to flop over the layers
over the back of your head.
I don't even know what that means,
because like, that's hair cutting lingo.
Okay.
Yes. is like, that's hair cutting lingo. Okay. Yes, so I still don't really understand it.
Like, must be the size of the tonsils would be my guess.
Right, the bleeding's the issue?
Yeah, there's like bleeding,
but you'd think a kid's tonsils
would lead to more bleeding.
Because they're big.
So here's what I'm saying.
You're gonna have to deal with that.
Oh, do you want me to hold it?
No, it's okay.
Let's get a little blood in there.
Oh.
Great.
Great.
Our next area.
Okay, now when did the U.S. enter the Gulf War?
January 1st, 1991. January 1st, 1991?
January 16th, 1991.
Oh, okay.
God, I really thought it was like right on my birthday.
I mean, close.
Maybe not.
Maybe they were about to,
so they probably talked about it.
Okay, now the Kuwaiti citizenship thing.
I'm gonna give your hairstylist credit.
This is a complicated cut you have.
It is? Oh yeah.
That's Jenny, that's why.
Oh yeah, that makes sense.
Hi. Hi.
Mom goes, he comes in and he goes,
Dad cut his, your dad cut his finger
when we have a band-aid.
Yeah, yeah, when you give me a band-aid.
And I was like, what?
And he was like, cutting Monica's hair.
And I was like, what?
What's happening now in this show?
Yeah, this is, I think, what we refer to
as jumping the shark.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, this may be the last
successful episode of the show.
Oh my God!
I know, he really did it.
And Monica's hair's in it.
Yeah, that's what I told her.
Do we wanna rinse it off?
We'll do that afterwards.
I just need to stop it so I can finish this haircut.
Pfft.
Why did you let him do this?
Well, I actually, I asked for it.
You should have seen my hair, it was way too long.
Oh yeah, your ends do look spiky.
Right, they're really bad.
Thank you, Lincoln.
I love you, hide your face.
Okay. I'll do my, I love you, hide your face. Okay.
I'll do my, I can't guarantee it, but I'll try.
Do you know I was telling Monica
that Whiskey's a very bad man who killed 100 men.
You said he's bad, bad to the bone.
She doesn't like you.
Well, no, I just don't like, well, as you know,
I have my struggles with Whiskey.
Yeah, everybody does. Yeah, I just don't like, well, as you know, I have my struggles with whiskey. Yeah, everybody does.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's nothing to make about that.
He's a prick, as the whole family will tell you.
He's killed 150 women and he doesn't even care.
He doesn't talk about that.
I think he's ashamed that he's killed that many women.
Well, that's a nice way.
More than men.
Yeah, like men deserve to get killed.
I took it as like, he's so proud of himself
that he did that, that's like an unspoken.
Like he doesn't even.
Like it's tougher to kill the men.
Yeah.
Yeah, he had a mind that he did all of that.
Ugh, like he doesn't even think it's a brag.
Exactly, so he doesn't mention it.
I'm gonna be honest with you, like this is gonna be fine,
and you're gonna need to see Jenny when you get home.
Okay, I will.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Great.
Okay.
Great.
Yeah, I promise.
Shout out Jenny Cho.
Best hairstylist in the world.
Alive.
Okay, well, I'll let you guys continue.
Thanks, Link. Thanks, love.
Thanks for saving the day.
The hair color.
The show will go on.
It must.
Okay, bye. Bye. Bye, on. It must. Okay, bye.
Bye. Bye, sweetie.
Love you.
Okay, now back to the fat, how's the blood?
Blood's done.
We're all done with blood.
Great, it didn't bleed through the bandaid?
Nope. Great.
It's not like that penis story.
I don't think I'll need a chemical cauterization.
Okay.
Now, I asked AI about the Kuwaiti passports and stuff.
Okay.
In citizenship.
And it said, in general, no, being born in Kuwait
does not automatically grant you Kuwait citizenship
or a passport.
Kuwait follows a Jew songuinus,
that means right of blood principle, rather than Jew
soli, right of the soil.
This means that citizenship is typically passed through Kuwaiti parents, not by birthplace.
A child born in Kuwait to non-Kuwaiti parents does not automatically qualify for Kuwaiti
citizenship or a passport.
There are very limited exceptions.
If a child is born to unknown parents
or in specific cases where the father is unknown,
but the mother is Kuwaiti, but those are rare.
Great. Yeah.
I mean, not great.
If you're born there, I feel like you should be a citizen.
Oh, me too.
Yeah, yeah, so not great, but great.
Not great, but great for the information.
Great to find out, yeah.
Let's see, the Peabody's.
Do you think maybe we'll get a Peabody for this fact check? Oh, this might be the information. For you to find out, yeah. Yeah. Let's see, the Peabody's.
Do you think maybe we'll get a Peabody for this fact check?
Oh, this might be the one.
I mean, I bled for this episode.
Yeah, you sure did.
That's what I'll say in my speech.
And, yeah, and so did I.
Quite a bit of blood.
Oh yeah, we're both bleeding.
Rob, you got any blood back there?
Not yet.
Okay, the George Foster Peabody Awards
or simply Peabody Awards or the Peabody's
named for the American businessman and philanthropist,
George Peabody, honor what are described
as the most powerful, enlightening,
and invigorating stories in all of television,
radio, and online media.
Because of their academic affiliation
and reputation for discernment,
the awards are held in high esteem
with the media industry.
And as I told you, they are presented
by the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communications
at the University of Georgia, ding, ding, ding.
Dingos.
And we still don't have one, even though that's the case,
which is pretty upsetting.
Doubly embarrassing for us.
It really is.
That we should have a home court advantage
and still no Peabody.
And they, when you're in college there and you're part of the journalism school, which
technically I was because my PR degree was with Grady, you could apply and basically
audition slash try out to be one of their like student judges.
And I did that and I did not get chosen.
You could have been a voice in the Peabody's?
Correct.
Oh wow.
Anthony got picked.
Oh God, he is, I'm impressed you're friends with him.
Yeah, it speaks to my-
Because he kind of blows you away
in a lot of these competitive situations
and you still love him.
Because he just killed you at Major Dong.
Mahjong, yes, he did.
He won like three out of three games.
Yeah, I guess that's true friendship.
It is, it is.
That's how I felt about Aaron.
Aaron was just so much physically superior to me
in everything boy related as a kid.
His coordination and his athleticism was off the charts.
We both tried out for the basketball team in seventh grade
and I didn't make it and he didn't even wanna do it
and he made it and then he just didn't play.
Sure, that reminds me of an even worse thing that happened.
With Anthony?
No, with Cali.
So when I lived in-
Oh, I remember this story.
Yeah.
I think, what was it?
When I lived in- Oh, I remember this story. Yeah. I think, what was it? When I lived in Atlanta after college
and I had an agent and was trying to work in Atlanta
before I moved to LA, you know,
the auditions that come through aren't that frequent.
Right.
So it feels like there's a lot of pressure on them.
There was a commercial audition for,
I don't remember, it was a fast food brand company.
And they basically said like, bring a friend to the audition
because you needed to like be interacting
with someone in it.
And she booked it.
Oh, and she didn't wanna be an actor.
No, she wasn't there to act.
She was there to just be there with me
and do this thing, and then she booked it.
I'm pretty sure I did cry about that.
You did. Yeah, I think so.
But you guys made it.
Oh yeah, I didn't blame her.
Even then I didn't blame her,
but I was like, man, I suck.
Yeah, a non-actor beat me.
Yeah.
Oh yeah, that's rough.
Yeah.
I'm sorry that happened.
Thank you.
You just gotta stick with it, you know?
Yeah, war of attrition.
Yeah.
Well, we've cleaned up the back.
Okay.
Yeah, I mean, again, Jenny is gonna need to come in here,
but let me just do it.
I'm gonna flit around a little bit while you finish.
Okay, yeah, because you said you like to be playful.
Yeah, yeah, and I'm gonna try to clean up
just some of these strays.
Okay.
I'm gonna tell you right now,
you are free of gray hair, which that's nice.
Yeah.
Good for you.
Did you pull any out?
No.
You didn't see any, that's good.
No, I mean, there's some that are like
a slightly different color, right?
Oh God.
But they're not gray.
I don't know how to do this,
but let me just take a look at the side here a little bit.
We did not touch the sides,
which conventionally you wanna cut the whole hair.
Oh, is that normal?
That's what I've been told.
Okay.
Are you regretful right now
that you didn't take this opportunity
to shave one side of my hair?
Oh!
Stop!
Stop!
Ah!
I can't believe you guessed this.
I brought this down in my pocket.
Ah!
Ah! I was like, is she gonna see this thing hanging out of my pocket?
This whole thing was leading up to freaking you out and just going.
It really feels like you're doing it.
Stop, stop, stop!
Did you get some?
No. Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Okay, well it looks a little healthier back here.
What about this part I'm holding?
I already did that, that's why you were holding that.
Oh, phew, okay, so it's done?
Yeah, I mean, I should probably just quickly look over here.
I didn't look anywhere over here.
Let me just quickly see what we got over here.
What if I fucking shaved the side ear?
And you were so mad.
Yeah.
And then you looked in the mirror and you were like,
fuck, I look awesome.
I mean, this was your opportunity.
Well, there'll be others.
You're cheap.
No, you're not even cheap, you're lazy.
You're really, I've been trying to coordinate with Jenny
for like a month.
All right.
Oh my gosh.
Okay.
All right.
It's a little better.
It's definitely less straggly, yeah.
Yeah, it was a little wispy.
It was a little too wispy.
Yeah, nice.
How do I look? That's an improvement.
Yeah, yeah, it's better.
Okay. Again, you need to see Jenny.
Rob, what do you think?
Yeah, it looks good.
Okay, great.
It looks great.
Yeah, it looks good. From the camera.
Gorgeous.
All right, well, that was great.
All right, Rob, sit down.
That I could actually do a good job.
I think you did a good job.
I did a fair job.
You have way less split ends.
Great.
All right, that's it.
Love you. Love you.
["Wonderful Music"]
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