Chapo Trap House - 947 - Laugh Now, Cry Later feat. Larry Charles (6/30/25)
Episode Date: July 1, 2025Comedy legend Larry Charles (Fridays, Seinfeld, Borat, Curb Your Enthusiasm & much more) returns to the show to discuss his new book Comedy Samurai: Forty Years of Blood, Guts, and Laughter. We have a... wide ranging discussion of Larry’s life in comedy including post-war Brooklyn as a comedy incubator, grinding out avant-garde sketch comedy with Andy Kaufman, the prevalence of coke and other drugs in the comedy writing scene, getting tackled by the Secret Service trying to get a joint to Jimmy Carter’s sister, and the difficulties in comedic creative relationships. Larry also gets candid about his disappointment with the prevalence of zionism among his erstwhile comedy partners, and we talk about the humanizing force of humor in the face tragedy and despair. Pick up Comedy Samurai here: https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/larry-charles/comedy-samurai/9781538771549/?lens=grand-central-publishing AND: get your pre-order in for YEAR ZERO: A CHAPO TRAP HOUSE COMICS ANTHOLOGY starting today at www.badegg.co
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I have to start the show with getting something off of my chest.
I usually let these things slide, but this was pissing me off all last week and we're
often accused of using our platform to be petty little assholes, so I'm going to use
this platform to be a petty little asshole.
Last Monday, Derek Thompson of Abundance fame called out Will for a very tepid joke and
complained about our supposed unwillingness to engage in
Good Faith with their whole project saying quote they were pitched several
times to our show. Now I personally try to make it a point to read all Good Faith
pitches we get and try to respond with an at least a let me check with the team
and I have gone through my own email and the Chappo email account and we received
zero official solicitations from either Derek and Ezra themselves or any PR firm on
their behalf. The only thing I got was in a DM from that Armand Domoluski guy
saying you should have them on I could put you in touch which I took as
essentially a listener suggestion and politely declined and even then I
provided him with some contact info for other left media that might be more amenable.
But like abundance guys,
are you paying Armand or is he just freelancing abundance PR for the love of
the game? And either way, that's hardly a professional pitch,
let alone we were pitched several times. And furthermore,
Derek and I went to college together. We've met several times.
We have had more than one conversation over solo cups of old style.
If he doesn't remember me, I remember him.
We have many mutuals.
I have a hundred mutual friends with him on Facebook, just as an example of how in-network
we are.
I am not hard to get in touch with.
I am nice.
If he really wanted to be on the show a quick,
hey man, it's been a minute.
I've got this thing that might be interesting
for the media property you produce,
would have been easy to get across my desk.
And I would have left all of this alone,
but for later last week when everyone
from fucking John Favreau to Adam Gentleson
picked up Derek's pissy little crash out to bash our supposed obstinates. And to be clear we would have
said no to them but to be much more clear bitch you did not even ask. So I am
tired of these dirtbag abundists just making up slander about the pragmatic
left especially at this time that they should be interested in building coalitions for their little program. And for all that, to bring back
an old Chappo bit, Derek you are my plump quacking duck of the week and please
fuck all the way off with this bullshit. One thing I'll give Derek is that in no way
will I ever engage in good faith with his ideological project.
Well, you know what?
That is your role on the show.
My role on the show is to, in good faith, engage with pitches and bring them to you.
And it is just calling to me to have that whiny like, oh, they wouldn't have us when
he'd...
There was no reach out.
Anyway, I had to get that off my chest.
It's not that often that something, you know, as Michael Jordan said, and I took that personally.
And as Michael Jordan also said, fuck them kids. Hello everybody, it's Monday, June 30th, and we've got some choppa for you.
At the end of today's show, we'll be making a very exciting announcement that you'll
be hearing about from us incessantly for the upcoming month. But before we get to that, Felix and I are joined today,
once again, by the great Larry Charles to talk about his new memoir, Comedy Samurai,
40 Years of Blood, Guts and Laughter.
Larry Charles, welcome back to the show.
Thank you so much for having me. It's really exciting to be here.
Larry, the title of the book is Comedy Samurai.
And it's been said that a samurai must meditate every day on death and
each day imagine oneself as dead.
Uh, what is it?
Does a comedy samurai also consider life and death in such terms?
Death is probably my biggest theme, actually.
Um, I've always, all my comedy has been surrounded by death.
I've always found death to be a perplexing subject worthy of comedy
And so calm death and comedy go together hand in hand as they walk off into hell
Well, I mean, yeah when I when I read the book
I was I was really struck by this connection between comedy and death which I think undergirds a lot of your story here and
comedy and death, which I think undergirds a lot of your story here.
And if existence is a joke and the punch line is always the same
for you, like what comes across is that comedy is a way that we discern meaning from it. And like, is that is that how you relate to it?
Well, it's a I think that fear is a big force that drives comedy.
And I think death is something that we fear.
And so comedy becomes a way to process our greatest fears.
And death, there's no greater fear than death, I suppose, at least for me and for a lot of
comedy people, I think.
We have our egos.
It's very hard to let go.
It's very hard to shed that ego and get in touch with our nothingness
and our essence and our place in the universe. And the fact that it ends makes no sense. That's
one of the greatest absurdities that you go through all of this angst and these challenges
and conflicts, and then it ends. What's the point? So from Beckett to Mel Brooks,
I think that question keeps coming up, you know,
and it's a very absurd kind of equation
that we all must deal with at some point.
That part of the book, it reminded me of one of my,
my favorite jokes that I've ever heard in my life.
It was like shit, like 14, 15 years ago at this point,
but it was like a week or two after my dad died
and my mom like got us all iPhones.
And she, like, I went to the Verizon store with her
and like right when we got it,
like right when we were leaving
and I was like taking it out of the box,
she said, don't you wish your dad died every day? And I have always thought about that joke. It's
really funny. Like my mom is an incredibly funny person, but I never really made the connection
between the two concepts until this. And it is very true. I mean not just for the joke maker himself,
but I think for the audience. I mean I think the most difficult thing with comedy, the
thing that makes it ephemeral is when you break it down in its most fundamental forms,
the only way a joke can work is if for at least the duration of it, the audience can
think in the same way that the person telling the joke does.
They can at least understand their interiority.
That's the reason why it's so difficult and also why it's so fleeting that a shared
interiority doesn't, it isn't as lengthy or procedural
as like a novel or something.
But there's such a big connection with death because it is one of the only
things where everyone generally feels the same thing.
Well, kudos, first of all, to your mom who does have a great sense of humor
because to be able to make that joke in that situation, instead of somebody else making it and her being horrified by it,
that is a true comedian.
Um, she understands that the la how important, how, how much of a healing
tool in a way that laugh can be, you know, and it's true.
It caught you guys by surprise.
It might even caught her by surprise when she said it and that's another element of this comedy thing is
Saying something that no one was expecting
There are times when comedy needs to be predictable
You want to see the person trip over the thing and fall and there's a kind of an anticipation and then the delivery of that
But the surprise laugh, the thing you
could not have possibly anticipated, that has that comes
from a very deep place. And that's a very powerful app, it
usually has some kind of, in my belief, a chemical reaction
that's positive inside your body.
Yeah, well, it's this it's this sense that an introduction, you
write, I took a violent
approach to comedy, laughter had to hurt, laughter had to kill.
You said it was like a matter of honor, shame and humiliation.
Right.
And like, like, like a true samurai.
But like, it's this connection between, like, for me, like, what is the worst fear, as you
said, like fear is an important part of comedy. But it's also like what's most horrifying to us about life is what's the most funny.
And do you remember like like an or like like the first time you sort of
conceptualize that or that you like grasp for humor as your sort of sword and
shield to sort of deal with the, you know, the, the, uh, the horrifying experience of being
conscious in this universe.
Well, I think the first time or the, or the first period when I became
conscious of this was when I was a kid growing up in Trump village in Brooklyn,
uh, which was a lower income housing project built by Fred Trump, uh, and
Fred Trump and Donald would be wandering around and
Fred Trump looked like Satan and Donald, if you've ever seen a picture of him, I'm
not even exaggerating.
He's exactly what you imagine Satan to look like with the kind of mustache and
the, you know, very fake looking hair.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it kind of a very, you know, evil eyebrows and an evil smile, you know
And Donald was like Donald today, you know, he was like
He was just a 14 or a 16 year old version of what he is today, you know with the bad hair and the suit
But my neighborhood was kind of like it was built all the buildings to seven buildings were built at the same time and everybody moved in at the same time. And that caused this demographic explosion. So all these
boys were moved into this neighborhood at the same time. And it became like the playground,
the park was like a prison yard and it was very much like Lord of the flies, you know?
And if you couldn't, um, survive, you were
going to go down and every weakness would be used against you.
And one of the only defenses that a person like me had, uh, because violence was not
really a solution for me was humor.
I was forced to kind of verbalize in some ways by fears and make people laugh and disarm
them through that laughter.
And a lot of kids use that.
So that fear thing, that violence was met with humor.
And that was probably the first place that I became very conscious of it.
And one of the first adult books I bought, which was in sixth grade, walking down
Brighton beach Avenue at a secondhand bookstore for a quarter was catch 22.
And catch 22 was a book that I didn't know anything about it.
It just looked interesting from the paperback, you know, the, on the back.
And they used to give you a little synopsis on the back of the paperback.
And that book also showed me, wow, you could actually be funny about
war and death and maiming and dismemberment and pain and suffering and all those things
and make it like a legitimate thing, like in a book.
So those factors, I think, were very key to developing my sensibility.
Also my father was a failed comedian.
And his his professional name was Psycho, the exotic neurotic.
I mean, as far as like a literary influence, Catch 22 is, is, is, you know, been been huge for me, too, at like a similar age,
because it's not just that you can make something about war and death funny, but in fact, something about war and
death can be funnier than anything else.
Yes, yes.
Well, it taps into, I mean, I would say this is true of something like Borad also, it taps
into a forbidden place.
Well, like Felix's mom, it taps into a place where you should not be laughing.
This is not funny, but yet that makes it funnier.
That makes it more forbidden.
That is a, there's a catharsis in that.
And I've always been attracted to comedy that shouldn't be funny.
That's the greatest challenge to me.
Catch-22, that part, I mean, I think a lot of people in this general line of work, that was a foundational book, or at least the concepts in that book, because it's also, that is around the age where you can actually start to understand literary irony too.
Absolutely. and literary irony too. Like absolutely. Yeah, it informs like a sense of humor past just like
the things that you know as like a 12 or 13 year old.
Yeah, although as a 12 or 13 year old,
you're also kind of trafficking in
what we used to call sick jokes, you know?
Yeah.
You know, mother jokes or kids without limbs jokes or you know, dead baby jokes. Dead baby jokes. Yeah. You know, mother jokes or kids without limbs jokes or, you know, dead baby,
dead baby jokes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So you are.
You sort of collect them at that age.
Yeah, exactly.
You are kind of already processing, you know, why is this funny?
You know, and yet it is.
Well, I mean, it's a way of sort of conceptualizing your own mortality.
Exactly. Exactly.
So right from an early age, I think most kids are exposing themselves to it.
And some walk away kind of developing a sense of humor based on that.
And others walk away, horrified and never wanting to deal
with that kind of subject matter again.
Well, you bring up where you grew up in Brooklyn.
And like I think in that in that story about, you know, seeing Fred Trump
walking around looking like Lucifer and where you grew up in Brooklyn.
I think there are like these two threads that unite there
of like these currents of comedy in American life,
one of them being like the comedy triangle of Brooklyn when you grew up,
the produced like you, Brooks Larry David so much
of American comedy and this kind of comedy of discomfort this comedy of
like a sort of a your armor and staff that you can like protect yourself from
the world but also kind of get revenge on it but back to this idea that life
is an absurdity and that life is a joke you also have Donald Trump himself
speaking of things that shouldn't be funny but are.
At the end of the book, you write about people, I suppose, perhaps best embodied in our current
president who do view life as a joke because ultimately there are no consequences for them
and it means that you can hurt anyone and do anything and it doesn't matter.
And then the opposite of that is to like take the start from the same premise,
but come to a completely different conclusion, which is that the meaningless
of like you have to find meaning in life and there has to be like the life is the
joke, but like comedy is the meaning.
So like, what do you see as the difference here between like those two sort of New
York sensibilities as it relates to comedy?
Well, I think in some ways Trump, unlike me or most comedians, I think, are
comedy writers, he has dismissed at least as much as he can, the concept of death.
You know, I think he is not, not that he's not afraid of it, but he is in denial.
And I think that denial has allowed him to sort of do these outrageous things and not really feel the consequences of it.
Because he kind of has a sort of, and look, his family all lived to be very old, you know,
Fred Trump, Lucifer himself might even still be alive for all I know. So they I think that denial in some way of his mortality
Has kind of fueled a lot of his is his sort of arrogance about it and he has no humility
whatsoever and whereas the comedy writers who are very much in touch with that mortality with that temporariness
That temporary quality of life or have a certain humility about it as well And then that might be the distinction there possibly. Yeah, I I think that's a very good insight. I mean
Everything that I've ever heard about like Trump's
Whenever he talks about like, you know personal health or just his his general beliefs about like fitness or whatever
He's the closest thing we have to like
one of those Chinese emperors that drink mercury
because they thought it would make them immortal.
And it's obviously like, it's ridiculous and hilarious.
And it's sort of like, you know,
him being a product of his time in a way,
even though I don't think a ton of 80 year olds
think that like, exercising depletes your body's finite amount of energy that you have
for your entire life. But it does, you know, it does't know. I sometimes when you hear someone who has like such ridiculous opinions about
all of that and they love uponing on it, it shows that they are avoiding
looking at it at a deeper level.
Yeah.
Well, let me, let me, I agree with you and I'll give you an illustration of
this theory because there are comedians.
Like for instance, um, when I was younger, I, I, I used to write for a with you and I'll give you an illustration of this theory because there are comedians,
like for instance, when I was younger, I used to write for a comedian named David Steinberg. And so I wind up like at the Tonight Show with him when I was a kid and meet Johnny Carson,
or I would see George Burns or Jack Benny or a lot of these guys and my theater, and even like Billy Crystal, who I've worked with, I've seen the effect and I think Trump also
benefits from this and follow this for one second, the live before, and you
guys do live performances also.
So, you know, when you get that love from the audience, it's like a chemical reaction.
You know, I think science hasn't studied this, but if you ever notice
comedians like Jack Benny or George Burns or Donald Trump live very, very long
lives because they're exposed themselves to large doses of adulation and something
happens chemically inside of them.
It like de-ages them or something.
And I think that is part of the
Donald Trump formula. It's very similar to the old comedians. And there aren't that many around
like that anymore. They don't usually- I mean, Mel Brooks did just turn 99, right?
Right. There you go. Mel Brooks is 99. Exactly. And he allows himself to go and sit on the stage or stand on a stage and accept awards and
get accolades and he gets this unadulterated, unabashed love and somehow or another that
is a longevity tool for those guys.
And I think Trump avails himself of the same thing.
That specific feeling that you get from like,
you know, a completely enraptured audience,
I think it's pretty similar to anabolic steroids
in that, you know, for most people,
when you look at what anabolic steroids actually do,
and in a lot of instances, why a lot of them were created,
in some ways it's like a miracle drug.
The reason that most professional athletes take them
is because you can recover from injuries
at a superhuman clip.
You can train four times a day
and just be fresh enough to go again the next day.
But for some people, it's incredibly dangerous.
Steroids don't change your personality, but they just make you you, but more so.
So if there's like a Latin resentment or aggression there, it's probably going to
come out, especially if you're abusing them, especially if you don't have one
of those great steroid doctors.
Um, I also, I'm just going to say if you stop using them, you also,
there's a, that shrinkage that goes on too.
I mean, I've seen that when I used to go to the gym, I used to go to gold's
gym and you would see guys, you know, pumping up for these contests.
And then when the contest was over, they would shrink back.
It was almost like a, a Hulk kind of effect.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And I think the same thing is true with these, uh, If, if Trump suddenly stopped going in front of audiences and stopped having
rallies, I think he would shrink probably.
And that would probably be the beginning of the end for him.
Oh, yeah, I completely agree.
But I also, the other thing I was going to say about it is that we've done this
for like 10 years and we've seen a lot of, you know, people in the general, like And the worst thing for some people is validation.
And that, you know, in an inter-raptured crowd is like,
it is the highest form of validation.
And it's probably in a lot of instances,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know,
it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, it's like, you know, in an inter-raptured crowd is like, it is the highest form of validation and he's probably in a lot of instances made some of these people more
insane.
Yes.
Well, I mean, using Trump as that example, I mean, you could really make that argument.
He's gotten much worse as he's gotten more, because again, he has put the
audience into some kind of trance also, you know?
And so there was this weird interaction, this chemical, you know, kind of reaction going on between him and the audience.
The audience is getting something out of it too.
Uh, they have a need to sort of, uh, adulate, if that's a word and
he has the need for the adulation.
And so it's a perfect symbiotic relationship.
Yeah.
Larry, uh, like you mentioned, like the, the, the memoir really is like,
it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like, it's like adulation. And so it's a perfect symbiotic relationship.
Yeah.
Larry, like you mentioned, like the memoir really is like a tour through the history of American comedy.
And I want to get back to this, like where you grew up and like the
comedy triangle of Brooklyn and like you and these guys who went out to the West
coast to become comedy writers and really like defined like for what my lifetime
is, like what American comedy was. Do you think there's anything
quintessential about the Brooklyn you grew up in and like the Brooklyn Jewish
community that you and like Larry David came out of that like well what is
it about that experience that that lent itself to like creating the comedy of
like the latter half of the American century. Well, it was like a Kingston, Jamaica of comedy.
It really was.
I mean, it's like why this little area produced so many comedy people?
Because there's a lot of them beyond even Larry David and Millbrooks and myself.
And Woody Allen is really from that area.
Uh, Lenny Bruce is really originally from that area.
So there's a lot of people that you could point to who are from,
you know, even Andrew Dice Clay is from Sheepshead Bay. They're all, it's all this little small little area of Brooklyn. And why is, it's an interesting question. I've thought about it quite
a bit recently. I mean, I think there's a couple of things going on. First of all, incredible density
of population, all kind of up from the same place from Russia, from Poland.
This, the first generations of the people living in those neighborhoods were from Russia and Poland.
They were escapees from pogroms and, you know, the Holocaust or whatever it was.
That was, uh, again, facing death.
And so they were escaping death really is what they were doing.
And they came to America,
you know, and that sense of relief is kind of exhilarating in a way.
Also, there's this Talmudic sort of tradition of Jews sitting around and arguing about ethics.
Why is this right? Why is that right?
What if we did this? What if we did that?
And I think in that kind of those kind of discussions, humor was really kind of being born in a way, at least amongst that group.
You know, I think the idea of arguing and being contrarian about kind of important life questions led to humorous responses at times. And I think that's part of
it also. So it's this combination of things. And also, we were forced sometimes against our will,
but often not to read, whether it was reading the Torah or the Talmud or reading great Yiddish
writers like Isaac Bashevis Singer, who used humor to tell his stories.
They were bitter. They were ironic.
They weren't necessarily laugh out loud,
but they sort of prepared you for this absurdity that we're talking about.
And I think for a lot of the people from that neighborhood,
they were very conscious of the absurdity.
Even if they were professional comedy people, they were conscious of the absurdity of the life they had come from, the life they had come to.
And then the rituals, they were still kind of involved with the satyrs and the going to the temple and all that stuff.
And all those, you know, wrapping to fill in all these things are kind of silly.
And yet, you know, they did them and they followed the rules, but they also
recognize at least some of them, the absurdity of it as well.
Well, I mean, you're coming out of that tradition.
You're born out of that on the East coast.
Then you go out to LA and you find a new set of absurdities and rituals and
traditions, and in the book you write that the very first joke you sold was to Jay Leno.
And I'm wondering if you remember what the joke was.
The joke was something like, at the time there was a commercial on TV about Delta
airlines, Delta, the airline run by professionals.
And my joke was, what are they having the other airlines?
Amateurs?
You know, it was, it was something along those lines, maybe a
little bit better than that one. And I got paid on consignment also. What are they having the other airlines? Amateurs? You know, it was, it was something along those lines, maybe a little
bit better than that one.
And I got paid on consignment.
Also, he didn't, you know, he said, I'll try it out.
And if it gets a laugh on stage, I'll give you 10 bucks.
And he got kind of laugh.
And so I got the 10 bucks.
You didn't get a ride in one of his like vintage automobiles.
Well, eventually he was, he was very nice to me and very
generous. And again, at that time at the Comedy Store, that was another kind of coincidence,
a lucky break that the Comedy Store at that time was a kind of, it was a golden era of the Comedy
Store. You had Richard Pryor there, you had Robin Williams, they were both trying out material
constantly there. And the two big comedians, ironically, the two biggest comedians
were David Letterman and Jay Leno. They were the twin gods of the comedy store. And Jay and David
was very sort of, you know, he was, uh, he was more distant, hard to get close to, but Jay was very
much as, as you can imagine, he was like very people oriented, very much of a people pleaser.
And so he was very nice to me. And I actually went to his
apartment a few times and he had a garage even then. And he had
some classic motorcycles and cars shoved into that garage. So
I did see them. I did get a ride occasionally, but not for very
long.
Well, early in the book, like you're sort of your breakout like
into comedy writing
was on the TV series Fridays, which is sort of the like the all forgotten, like, because,
you know, Saturday Night Live is the institution.
But Fridays was really like this legendary cache of comedy talent and really like the
beginnings of Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm because it was you, Michael Richards and Larry
David. What was Fridays like? What was that experience like for you your enthusiasm because it was you, Michael Richards and Larry David.
What was Friday's like?
What was that experience like for you?
Well, it was interesting.
I had been a bellhop and a parking fella.
Literally, those are my two jobs before I got that job.
So when I got that job, even though I was thrilled and excited and making 10 times more
money than I ever made, me and the other writers were all a fairly radical bunch,
including Larry, David and Michael.
And we really wanted the show.
We were like desperate to make sure the show was not perceived as a
Saturday night live ripoff.
And the first thing the producers said to us was, you know, why don't you
guys go sit down and come up with some titles for the show?
So it won't be mistaken for Saturday night live.
And we all went off, you know, we were influenced by Monty Python and all
these kinds of very obscure esoteric things at the time.
And we came up with all kinds of crazy names for the show.
Even like symbols, like Prince, you know, we had like just a show
with different symbol for the name, you know, we had like just a show symbol for the
name, you know, and then we came back a couple of days later and we came into
the writer's room, the binders, our jackets, the stationary, everything said
Fridays and so clearly they had made the decision.
And I think in some weird way that sort of motivated us to make sure that we did
everything we could as writers, at least.
I don't think the actors were quite as radical as the writers, including Larry and Michael.
The writers wanted to make sure that everything they did would go as far and be as
transgressive as possible to set it apart from Saturday Night Live.
And again, we didn't fully succeed. But that was the goal, especially because we now were saddled
with this title that made it immediately a Saturday Night Live ripoff. What were some of
the things you tried to come up with to be like to sort of break the form and differentiate Fridays
from Saturday Night Live? Well, we did a lot of, you know, on Saturday Night Live,
the most interesting sketches often were the ones
that were on at the end of the night, you know,
as it got close to one o'clock in the morning.
And we wrote a lot more of those kind of absurdist sketches
that were sort of more Ionesco, you might say,
than they were like sort of va, um, Ionesco, you might say, um, then, then they were like sort of a vaudeville, you know, and we were like trying things.
We were experimenting a lot of synthesis of different forms together,
cut up technique almost like William Burroughs.
Yeah.
Try, trying to create a new form of sketch, you know.
And that was the chief example of that is the the famous Andy Kaufman incident
on Fridays, where he came in and like, you know, and reading the book,
I wasn't aware of this, like he made clear upfront
that I'm going to break one of these scenes.
Like that was his intention was to just like and have the actors
and like the audience not be aware of what's really going on here.
That's right. That's right. He he well, he was he was really like a guru of comedy at that time.
I mean, he was so avant garde. He was a performer. He was a performance artist, really more than a comedian.
But he did it. What made it so ballsy, so courageous was that he did performance art in front of
nightclub audiences, in front of comedy club audiences who were drinking and expecting
jokes and he would upend every expectation you could possibly have about comedy to the
point that people would be booing him.
And that would be the response he really wanted to get, you know?
He was not afraid of failure, which is such a key theme in comedy
as well.
He came to the show and he asked, he said, this is what I would like to do.
And we being the transgressive group that we were, absolutely embraced it immediately.
It just tried to figure out the best way to do it.
And that's how it turned out.
You also describe how Andy Kaufman, just as a bit, worked as a busboy at a famous LA diner
and you would be getting lunch there with your manager who was also Andy Kaufman's manager
and he would come and just clear the water glasses off your table.
It was amazing.
We used to go, actually, just to be perfectly accurate, it would be after the Seinfeld episode that we taped.
And Jerry and Larry and I, and maybe one or two people and George Shapiro, who was Andy's manager and Jerry's manager, we would go to this place, Jerry's
deli in the valley, just, you know, the same name as Jerry, but not no connection.
And we would have, uh, you know, a late night bike there and
Andy would be doing a shift.
He would literally be doing a shift at Jerry's deli as a bus boy.
No laughs, no trickery.
I mean, if you needed the water to be filled and he filled the water, you
needed a coffee, he would give you coffee.
He would clear the table, but no laughs, no interaction whatsoever.
And he did it for eight hours shift without breaking. It was pretty amazing. And we would
just be astonished that he was doing this. And, but again, that was part of what made
him such a unique and original performer.
Yeah. I think he used to be more heralded I heard people talk about him a lot more like 10 20 years ago, but I think especially today
he's sort of under heralded as someone who made a lot of a lot of you know,
contemporary more like ironic
like Tim and Eric type stuff possible.
And he's always talked about in these terms of him being this definitive break from what
was available at the time.
But there is something very fundamentally pure about it too, in that if you're doing
that for eight hours and the people you know maybe aren't even going too, in that if you're doing that for eight hours and
the people you know, like maybe aren't even going to come in that night.
The only reason you're actually doing it is because it's funny to you.
Yes.
That seems that that was like the, that seems to be like the fundamental thing
with everything that just, if it's funny to you, it's worth doing.
And then maybe eventually it'll be funny to other people
That's really good. Yeah, that's very true. I really I think that's a really good point
I think that it was a it was kind of a an experiment. It was an art piece
He wanted to see he was interested in what would happen when people didn't laugh or we you know
He was interested in questions that normally weren't asked in comedy and I thought
those are very bold questions. It was very you know for lack of a better term anti-comedy and he
wanted to see what would happen and he was willing to deal with the consequences of what would happen
so that made him a very very original and unsettling and sometimes at the risk of being unentertaining but he was not
afraid of those consequences in fact that's exactly what he was trying to
engender I will not say it
it's been a very hard week for me why I, you know, I'm not trying to be funny right now, this is true.
Because of last week's show, my job at Taxi is in jeopardy. My agent and myself are finding
it very hard to convince other people in the show business community to hire me for other television shows.
And you laughing at this, I think that you're laughing at it is pretty
tasteless. Another aspect of your chapter on working for Fridays and being in like
a comedy writers room and like having
the sort of the different personalities and also back to the sense of the transgressive sort of
subversive edge that you were going for on Fridays. I mean, you're quite frank that a lot of this was
fueled by drugs, just like the work schedule itself and cocaine in particular. And I'm just
wondering like what your thoughts are on the connection between drugs and American comedy for better or worse.
Well I would go one step further and say the connection between drugs and
American literature you know literature in general I think that you know when
you look at the beat generation or you look at different you know the Hemingway
generation you know there was always something, some substance, uh, fueling their, their, their sensibility and their
muse.
So I don't think it was that unusual.
That happened to be the drug of choice at that time.
The, uh, both Saturday live and we know what happened to John Belushi and on
Fridays, the schedule that was worked out was so inhumane.
Um, we had to be writing all the time.
And as soon as the show was over, we had to go back and come up
and sketch this for the next week.
And if you couldn't produce, you would fall by the wayside and be fired.
So there was pressure.
And to the point that we used to get the cocaine grams of cocaine delivered
to our desks like pizza.
And so we were always fueled by it.
And at first it was an amazing thing, you know,
and it really did fuel the confidence,
fuel the bravery to try things
and not be afraid of the consequences
in that Andy Kalpin type of way,
who was by the way, the most straight person
you could ever imagine.
But we used cocaine to reach that level of trying stuff that was experimental and to see what would
happen and not be worried about failing. In fact, kind of almost looking forward to failing because
that was sort of a cool thing to do. But what happened was eventually for a lot of people,
this didn't happen to me and I was lucky because I was eventually for a lot of people, uh, and this didn't happen
to me and I was lucky cause I was certainly doing a lot of cocaine, but at some point,
some people reached the point where they were becoming very addicted to it, where they moved
on to even crack and basically ruin their lives and kind of ruin their careers.
And that was the end for them.
They kind of spun out of TV altogether and never really worked again.
And other people sort of got their shit together and were able to kind of stop.
Like I did, I kind of just stopped cold Turkey at a certain point and was able to
do that because it went from being a confidence builder to destroying your
personality.
We went from before the show, we would spoon each other,
like the group of writers, like we had such camaraderie around it, to us, us eventually
just taking our coke, going into our rooms, closing the door, and just doing lines by ourselves,
and not wanting to share it with anybody, you know, because it was so precious. So the, the change
of personality was also very distinctive on the show.
And also sort of like, like the, the, the confidence boost, you feel like, God,
you feel like everything you're saying is the smartest, funniest thing.
But then like, yes.
And then, but then like not being able to have that feeling without cocaine is
like, that's a very dangerous thing.
Right.
But in some ways I think, um, and this, I think I would say this is true of acid
also, by the way, in some ways, those things showed you what was possible.
You know, uh, without, without those drugs, you know, you needed to do those
drugs to some degree in order to experience what that was like, cause maybe
you would not have obtained that level without them. And then once you're able to let go of those drugs,
you still knew what it was like to attain that level
and you could possibly try to attain it
without the help of outside substances.
Well, one of the best stories you relate from your time
working on Fridays was the incident
where you were tackled by the Secret Service.
Right. Could you illustrate for our listeners here,
the sequence of events that led up to you being tackled by two Secret Service agents?
Well, America was in a very weird place at that time.
And Carter, I think Carter was in the process of about to lose the election
and Reagan was about to win.
And Larry Flint had been there had been an assassination attempt on his
life and didn't, uh, it didn't kill him, but it handicapped him and he was, uh,
relegated to a wheelchair.
And, um, we had weird celebrities come to the show to hang out.
And one night, uh, Larry Flint and his wife Althea, who were very drugged up on whatever and their entourage, which included Ruth
Carter Stapleton, Jimmy Carter's sister, who was an evangelist.
They came together to the show and hung out in the green room.
And Larry Flint at that time was, he had gone, he had been through
a number of almost like Bob Dylan.
He had decided to become born again, Christian. Now, was it real or not? I don't know. at that time was he had gone, he had been through a number, almost like Bob Dylan.
He had decided to become born again Christian.
Now, was it real or not?
I don't know, but Ruth Carter Stapleton became his spiritual advisor.
So they all kind of rolled into the green room together.
They had Hell's angels with them for security.
Ruth Carter Stapleton, who was like a little old lady from Georgia.
You had Larry Flint and Althea, who seemed like they were really, you know, kind of stoned already
and they were hanging out there and word came down to the sub basement where the writers were that
the Larry Flint wanted a joint. And I immediately volunteered and I rolled up a joint and I want to, it was, the
show was about to start and I raced up the stairs and across to the stage and
into the green room and I'm racing towards the green room as fast as I can.
And suddenly I'm, I'm taken by two guys and I'm taken down on the ground.
And they're on top of me.
Like, what do you think you're doing?
And these were secret service guys because of Ruth Carter Stapleton.
And, um, I said, I said, I have a joint for the president's sister.
And they will, and that worked, you know, they were like, oh, okay.
And they helped me up and they let me in and I walked this really weird room
filled with all these, you know, disparate people and gave the joint to Larry Flint.
Well, your next, your next sort of stop on your career, and I
wasn't aware of this, is that you were a writer for the
Arsenio Hall Show. And Arsenio was like one of the, like, the,
was he like the first black late night host on American television?
Most definitely.
Yeah.
Most of it. He was a black star when there were no black stars
really on TV or very few.
And I think the interesting part of that chapter is like you talk about, um, just
sort of the, uh, the experience of being a minority in, in an organization, like in
a, in a mostly black writing staff and production team.
Uh, what, what, like, what did that experience teach you?
And also like, did it give you any insight into,
or do you think that there is something markedly different
in black American humor and white American humor
and how black and white people relate to humor?
What did that experience mean to you?
Well, I was struck by many different layers
of the black experience working on our studio.
I think that the background know, the background,
the place that people, that black people came from
was very different than the place
that Jewish people came from,
but there was a lot of overlap, you know,
that was one thing.
I mean, I think the idea of being the minority in a group,
which black people of course always experienced
in so many situations in the society.
But as a white person in America, being a minority is rare.
I also did this show Larry Charles Dangerous World of Comedy, where I went to a couple of African countries,
where I was, basically me and my staff, my crew, my small crew, were the only white people that we saw the entire country.
There was a kind of an educational, inadvertent educational experience to that, that I would advise everyone to try to avail themselves of.
Because it really gives you the perspective of what that's like, you know.
On our Cineo, you would see all the different stratas of black society, because you would see that regional differences, that shade, you know, skin shade differences,
educational differences, all the different intricacies of any society
were true in the black society.
We tend to generalize about black society.
Black people want this, black people want that. Black people do this.
And that was simply not the case.
Once you got deep inside the black community, you realized there was as much, you
know, diversity within the black community as any other community.
And that was the main thing that I learned.
And of course their humor was, was based on the same sort of frustrations and
angers and fears as the white community.
And I thought that also was very enlightening to know that, and this is
something I tried to also bring out on dangerous comedy, which was that we all
are really laughing and experiencing the same things to a large degree.
are really laughing and experiencing the same things to a large degree.
And if we recognize that more, it might sort of chill out some of the tensions that exist in the, in the country, in the world.
Did you notice, um, this is something I thought about a bit, um, because like
it, Chicago is there isn't like total racial parity demographic wise,
but a lot of neighborhoods are,
there's an equal amount of white people and black people.
My neighborhood was like kind of like that for weird reasons
because the U Chicago is there.
But I feel like there's an under discussed current
of like irony in black comedy, like
not to generalize of there being like, you know, a monolithic type of black humor.
But I think like black comedians shepherd the concept of irony, at least as far as like
audiences could understand it, probably more than like anyone since like the 1970s or eighties.
Well, I think you're talking, you know, again, if you go back to the origins of black
comedy, you think about Red Fox, who most people know maybe from San Francisco, but
what he was really most known for before that were putting out these incredibly filthy,
dirty party records. And there was a tradition.
It was almost black comedy was like an underground tradition for a long time.
And then Richard Pryor was very influenced by that.
And he came along and he brought that very underground sensibility, that
hardcore sensibility to the mainstream.
And he really single-handedly changed comedy across the board,
racially, you know, it didn't matter.
I mean, everyone was influenced by Richard Pryor and still to this day, you can see
the influence of Richard Pryor in the same way that you can see the
influence of George Carlin to be there.
The two people that basically affected comedy more
than anybody.
You know, you could talk about Lenny Bruce and you could talk
about Steve Martin.
There's a lot of people, but those two guys really, because
George Carlin was doing very kind of, it was very clever and
funny, but it was very safe comedy at first doing the
hippie dippy weatherman.
And he made that turn.
He discovered drugs, made that turn and started doing the seven words that you
can't say on television and Richard Pryor started bringing that underground
sensibility where black humor had resided and he brought it to the mainstream and
found out that the audience, all audiences really were craving that without even
realizing they wanted it.
And it was an explosion when he came out with his concert movie.
We've talked about Red Fox before on the show.
You brought him up as someone who was enormously
influential to Pryor, who's probably
the single most influential comedian of the last 60
or 70 years.
Red Fox is the way that Marlon Brando was the first like
on screen actor, you know, to not elicute like this, he changed acting by speaking in
a more natural way that conveyed emotions. That's sort of how I would equate Red Fox.
I would agree with that.
It's not that like comedy sucked until him, but there was no one. There was like a naturalistic way that he delivered jokes that like no one was
really doing until.
It's like there were there are jokes that were like gags, but like Red Fox was like
and like that that sort of underground black comic tradition that you're talking about.
They're the ones who like were able to sort of like to render with language, the kind of
shared obscenity of being alive and the experience of the shared obscenity of life
in like, you know, all its bodily functions and glory and sex and all that.
Well, that's where Lenny Bruce comes in.
Also, I think, you know, you, I agree with you a hundred percent.
I mean, I think Red Fox was like having a conversation with the audience, you know
rather than like
He was trying to tear down that wall between the performer and the audience and his performance style
And I think for most comedians most white comedians most
Conventional comedians they wanted that wall to be up. They were they were doing the typical routines
Whether they were, you know set up a punchline or, they were, they were doing the typical routines, uh, whether
they were, uh, you know, set up a punchline or whether they were monologues.
It was like, they were, they were not really interacting except saying what
they were going to say and getting a laugh.
It was a very sort of a binary kind of relationship.
And, um, whereas red Fox really tore down all those walls and, and when he
Bruce did too,
and just was like sort of interacting with the audience, I worked with Richard
Belzer years later, obviously, and he had a similar kind of reaction with the
interaction with the audience, you know, he wasn't really so worried about having
bits he was, he was more into like creating a moment in every show that he did.
And red Fox had that same quality also, even though, and that's why his albums
were all live albums because they were recorded at performances where it was
only like, this is the only time you're going to get this performance for red
Fox and next time it'll be different.
And it's like, even like the grateful dead, you know, it's like, you didn't
know what they were going to do from show to show. And then the great comedians, I think also, were trying to mix it up
and keep it surprising. So you weren't just going to see them do their tried and true routines.
Larry, like another big part of this memoir is I think it's a fairly, it's a very honest look at what professional, creative friendships and working relationships
are like and the sort of the highs and lows of professional and creative collaborations,
particularly in comedy.
And just like, you know, you and Larry David, like he figures very largely in your life
and this book through, you know, Seinfeld and then Curb Your Enthusiasm. What is it? What was
it about Larry David and your sensibilities? Was it like, what
were the shared sensibilities and what were the differences
that like that made for your creative collaborations to be so
fruitful?
Well, I mean, meeting him when I did, you know, again, these were
very sort of a fortunate set of events. I was like 22, 23.
He was like nine, 10 years older than me.
So he was already a man and I was still a kid.
And really I often say he was like the most influential person in my adult life.
I mean, going back to Fridays, he really taught me how to be a man in a lot of ways.
I mean, he taught me about discipline, about craft, you know, about integrity.
Those are three things that he really had already that I didn't even consider.
It was, they weren't on my, on my agenda at all.
And I realized how important they were and how important they were to what I
was doing also as a writer.
Um, so that right off the bat became very important.
Plus he was from the same neighborhood as we talked about.
So I immediately knew the dynamic, you know, I understood the dynamic.
So there was a lot there that we were in sync about right away.
We were laughing at the same things and we understood the language.
We had a kind of a, a Brooklyn, a South Brooklyn Brighton beach,
Sheepshead Bay language that we shared.
And that was very important also, but in other distinctive ways, I mean, he, his,
the books that influenced him were different than the books that
influenced me his big influence.
Yeah.
No, I was shocked by this, uh, that one of Larry David's favorite books and one
of his like sort of lifelong guiding stars and inspiration is Ayn Rand's, the
fountainhead and he sees in himself, how we're at a work as this uncompromising and one of his like sort of lifelong guiding stars and inspiration is Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead.
And he sees in himself Howard Roark as this uncompromising figure.
And you can kind of, you know, as crazy as that sounds, you can see it.
He is like a Jewish, Brooklyn Jewish Howard Roark, you know.
Well, I mean, you see that on Curb Your En like, like so much of the, of the, the episodes are like his refusal to back down from what he thinks is a
point of ethical or moral pride.
That's right.
And even in this on when we did Seinfeld, he would fight and I would back him up
always, I was always behind him on these arguments, but he would fight with the
network and with the production company
every week on every read through.
He would not relent. His integrity was unassailable.
He did not, he would not compromise as much as he was begged to compromise on certain things
about the show, which would have ruined the show.
You wouldn't be talking about Seinfeld today.
If he had done those things, he held firm and, and, and challenge them.
Like Howard Roark blows up the, the building.
Yeah.
He, he challenged them to blow up the show.
You know, he didn't care.
He said, go ahead, cancel us.
I would rather you cancel us than do that.
And so he always had that sense of just almost insane integrity that no one
else really had and really is the secret to some degree to his success. And something
that I absolutely processed and absorbed very closely.
My favorite part from the Curb Your Enthusiasm chapters that I'm hoping you could share with our listeners, is the story about what happened between you and Mel Brooks's assistant.
So weird. Very weird story. Yeah.
This is an example of life imitating art. I mean, this sounds like, I mean,
it began with an episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm about Mel Brooks's assistant.
And then you had to live out a real life Curb Your Enthusiasm episode with Mel Brooks's assistant. And then you had to live out a real life curb your enthusiasm episode with Mel Brooks's assistant.
First of all, the I had the thrill. I mean, I was so
thrilled of getting the chance to direct Mel Brooks, you know,
and I directed him for an entire season. And we got very, very
close. So I felt great kinship. And he was also a very paternal
influence on me. He was such a sweet, loving, generous person,
you know?
And so we did an episode in which his assistant is gay and she has her gay lover and Larry has this awkward encounter with her when he goes to see
Mel and kind of insults her and she tells her girlfriend who threatens Larry.
And, um, at the end of the season, the season was done.
The shows were on.
It was a big success, actually.
And I got a call from Mel saying, you have to call my assistant,
my real assistant and apologize to her.
And I'm like, why?
And he's like, well, she is a she's Filipino.
She's very Catholic and, um, she was very offended by the way
she was portrayed on the show.
And I was like, well, you know, we didn't even know anything about your assistant.
We made that character up and it had nothing to do with your assistant at all.
It just happened to be the assistant on the show for a storyline.
And he's like, please, I'm begging you call my assistant.
I can't afford to lose this assistant.
She's the best assistant I ever had.
Call the assistant and apologize.
And I love Mel and I thought, what the hell we're apologizing.
That's what curb is all about is apologizing.
So we, I called her and I said, look, I'm very sorry if you were offended.
There was nothing meant by it, blah, blah, blah.
And she actually said to me, I do not accept your apology.
Which I don't know if that's ever happened to me.
I know.
I'm like, well, what do you even do in that situation?
I've never had an apology not accepted.
Yeah. I was, I think you even do in that situation? I've never had an apology not accepted. Yeah.
I was, I think you have a dual.
Yeah.
I was at my wit's end.
It's like, now what do I do?
I tried to kind of talk her off the ledge.
I couldn't do it.
She said her entire family, she had, the show had shamed her entire family.
And I was like, I kept apologizing, but she literally would not accept the apology
and kind of hung up abruptly, uh, still in anger.
And I thought I'd be able to kind of bypass Larry on this one
and not have to go to him.
I thought I could take care of it myself and I couldn't.
So I had to go to Larry and I said to Larry, look, this is what happened.
The assistant has offended Mel Brooks, blah, blah, blah.
And he said, Oh, don't he considered himself to be the prime apologizer.
There was nobody better at apologizing than him.
So he said, I'll take care of it.
And he called her and she wouldn't accept his apology.
And so she wound up being offended.
I guess Mel was able to kind of keep wound up being offended. I guess
Mel was able to kind of keep her for a while. I don't know, maybe
she still is assisted for all I know. But we could not we could
not get her to accept the apology.
Well, as I said, like, the book deals a lot with professional
creative relationships. And what I liked about it is I think you show that in each of these relationships,
there is a credit and a debit, like often the things that you that lead to great,
you know, productive, great creative output in comedy can debit away from personal
relationships and there can be a cost that has to be paid here.
And I'm thinking about this in light of the way your relationship with Sasha
Baron Cohen comes off in this book because like you collaborated with him
on three films like Borat probably being you know like one of the most
successful like one of the most memorable comedies but you and Sasha Cohen over
the course your working relationship like that the debit started to grow and
I'm just wondering like how you regard you regard, because like, you know, you don't portray any of these people as villains, but I think you're very honest about like the difficulties, especially in comedic, creative relationships.
I was honest about what I observed in them, as long as I was honest about what was going on with me as well, you know, and I, I take, I take my
responsibility in that as much as anything.
Um, but with Sasha, you know, I, I, I loved Sasha really.
And I felt as close to Sasha as I felt to anybody creatively.
And in the situation that we were in on Borat, it really was kind of like, you
know, again, the samurai idea of life and death stakes to the comedy.
It really was.
And I was prepared to die for Sasha because we were in situations where
violence and, you know, mayhem were really always a possibility.
And I was prepared mentally to just step in there and save him and protect him at
any cost, even at the cost of my own safety.
So we couldn't have been any closer.
And that vibe really comes through the movie.
I mean, the exhilaration of feeling those kinds of feelings, you feel that in the
movie, it breaks through the screen to a large degree.
And, um, and of course, success breeds camaraderie as well, you know, by
the time we got to Bruno, the fact that it was such a, it was a flamboyantly
gay character changed every interaction we had with the world, everybody felt.
Instead of being patient with a Kazakhstan, which
they knew nothing about, even though he was a rapist and an antisemite and incestuous
and all these things, people were still patient with him, you know, and that kind of allowed
the scenes to unfurl the way they did in that funny way.
On Bruno, it was much more difficult because he was just a flamboyantly gay character.
People felt immediately hostile to him, immediately felt okay getting violent with him,
and jostling him and slapping him and threatening him.
And there were guns involved and it got much more intense.
And it led to more conflict with us as well, you know, like the direction of the story,
how that story should be told.
What was I thought was a more radical movie in a very good way, because it did show a
dark, hateful version of America that I thought was really unique for a comedy.
And it's also super funny.
But it's amazing how almost everybody in the world has seen Borat
But when I go around the world
So many of those same people have never ever seen Bruno
And I think the reason is because it was this gay character by the time he got to the dictator
Sasha's whole world had changed really he had become a gigantic star
he had been married and had a couple of kids by then.
And, uh, and he had started surrounding himself with much more of a show,
bid show business entourage.
And in doing so, I think, and in doing a scripted movie, I think he kind of lost
the killer instinct that he had on Bruno and Borat. And now he's playing a role and he, and he had to learn his lines and he had
to practice the accent with Borat and Bruno.
He really had just absorbed and incorporated those characters inside of him.
So that he knew what Borat, what Borat's underwear should be like in his socks
and what he carried in his pocket.
But with the dictator, Aladin, he never really had time, but also never really
spent the time to understand that character and instead was getting very distracted by
all the miscellaneous things that you have to take care of in a movie that weren't
nearly as important as getting his character together, which was the key to the care of in a movie that weren't nearly as important as getting
his character together, which was the key to the success of that movie.
He'd be worried about the flag color or, you know, the uniform and things like that,
instead of working on the character.
And it was very hard to bring him back to that place where to focus.
And he also started to rely on a lot of outside outside influences who gave him very contradictory
advice and not the kind of advice that he needed to make
the movie as great as it could be.
I felt, and he just threw a lot of people at every problem and
often purposely created conflict in every situation.
And all of this to me was distraction from making a great movie.
And it was very disheartening to see that process take place.
I know you're obviously like not dumping on the guy and it's you, you can have like an
incredibly complex relationship when you make a lot of things with somebody and they, you
know, there's this, there's a sch's a schism, either slowly or very rapidly.
But what you describe, I mean,
it sounds like the worst whiplash
someone like that could get.
I was a huge fan of the L.E.G. show
and I actually saw Borat with my mom.
She's coming up a lot here.
But it's one of the funniest movies I've ever
seen.
Um, but the thing I always felt, especially a lot with a lot of like the
Borat performances that were on the L.E.G.
show, but especially with the movie was how difficult it must have been for him
to sort of zero out everyone while also being able to like, event some sort of
usable material from their reactions.
It must've required, you know, an enormous amount of focus and also a
very weird type of solitary confidence.
But then just becoming a normal celebrity, that's the, your brain is
going in the complete opposite direction.
Yeah.
I, you know, you mentioned Marlon Brando before, and to me, uh, since Marlon
Brando, Sasha actually, in a way like Marlon Brando, uh, introduced a new form
of acting to me, Sasha should have won an Oscar for Borat because nobody has
done a performance like Borat where he is Borat 16 for that really, I think. I mean, people loved him and loved the movie, but as, as an acting exercise,
he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor.
And he was a great actor. And he was a great actor. And he didn't get credit for that really, I think.
I mean, people loved him and loved the movie,
but as an acting exercise, that was unprecedented.
And I think over a course of time,
rather than kind of honing in on that,
the way Andy Kaufman I think would have if he had lived,
I think that Sasha wanted,
he didn't want the pressure anymore.
He didn't want to be frightened every time he went
into a scene that he was going to be hurt.
I don't think he wanted to go through that again.
And, you know, refused to do a Borat sequel at that time.
And, you know, I think that he wanted a kind
of an easier way to make a living, you know, I think that he wanted a kind of an easier way to make a living, you know,
and I think being a Hollywood star was a lot easier than being Sasha, the guy who did Borat.
And I think he moved in that direction.
And I think artistically, that sort of hurt that hurt him and also compromised his muse which had been very sharp and
Singular and then suddenly was not quite as special it took the edge
He took the edge off his own his own comedy sensibility
well, we talked about
Sort of the ephemeral nature of comedy and like how sort of transitory it is like what a low shelf life
It has for even the best the best committing material. And then also throughout your career, your
willingness to push the boundaries and to be offensive, to be
subversive, to portray things that shouldn't be funny, like to be willing to
risk that. And I think part of that is the instability just, I'm just speaking
for myself here, of having been a fan of a lot of your work and a lot of the collaborators that you've worked with.
And in no way am I asking you to like condemn them or apologize for them.
But it has been weird for me personally, to see now like particularly someone like Bill Maher, who is someone I used to really love, but now who I think is using his comedy in a way that I do genuinely find offensive.
And not only not funny, but I'm sort of like now I have to wear the shoes
of being like I'm actually offended by a comedian.
And like, you know, in light of his, you know, like
ongoing support for what Israel is doing to Palestine right now.
Jerry Seinfeld, I could throw in there, too.
Oh, like, what do you make of that?
And Sasha, Sasha, too, by the way. Oh, like what do you make of that?
Sasha too, by the way. So yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So like, like, like the issue of like a Zionism and comedy and like that, that
instability there where like now I have to feel uncomfortable for liking a comedian.
Well, I'm very disappointed.
You know, I mean, I really love all three of those guys in a very profound way.
And I'm very grateful to all three of those guys in a very profound way and I'm very grateful to all three of those guys
But I am also extremely when when you talk about Israel and Palestine
I am extremely disappointed that they have been so blind
To the realities of that situation. I have been to Palestine three times once with Sasha and
you know, I, I, I, I'm surprised at how they're, uh, the take that they
have come up with on that situation and, uh, going to Palestine and meeting the
people in Palestine, as I did in, uh, dangerous comedy and meeting comedians
from Palestine, um, it was, it was clear that these people are victims. They're prisoners
Um, they just want peace. They're not warlike people. They're destitute
They are the underdogs and you would think comedians would relate to that
but instead, uh this kind of blind support for for this israeli genocide, I mean it
blind support for this Israeli genocide. I mean, because I don't know what else to call it.
People argue about that word, which seems absurd to me also.
It's like, well, call it whatever you want.
Tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people
being murdered needlessly, children starving, maimed, killed.
You know, it's insane.
I mean, how you could justify that and how the American
media and the American system, basically just like the American government, justifies it.
But when you see comedians supporting that, it's very disheartening. It's very perplexing
and confusing and disappointing. And it is a big area of separation between me and those three people.
Is, is there casual support for, for a country like Israel in the
midst of what's going on right now?
So I, I, I don't know how to explain it.
I, Bill, Bill was, has always been that way.
Sasha has always been that way.
But even now when things have kind of amped up so
much in that part of the world, they have not really veered from that stance. And that surprises
me. Well, I mean, like Bill Maher, especially because like you guys did religious like a whole
documentary that sort of puncturing the absurdities of organized religious faith and religious belief
and all the violence it causes. So like Bill Maher's Morrison is weird because he's like, I'm 100% an atheist, all
religions are stupid. I don't believe in God. But he did give
Israel to the Jews. And that's 100% true.
Yeah, he's, he's saying, I've seen him cite the Bible in
those arguments. And it's like, okay, now it's now it should
dictate policy. And Sasha too, like I, before he became more outspoken with designism stuff in less few
years, the thing that really surprised me was he was a big, you know, we have to stop antisemitism.
There are tropes everywhere. And I thought, would you apply any of that rubric to your own work?
Would you apply any of that rubric to your own work? Would you apply this incredibly, like, hectoring, punitive language policing towards, you know,
what your work might say about, like, Muslims or gay people for that matter?
Well, I...
In both cases, it...
Like, and I don't think that, like, Borat is, is like an invective against Muslims, but it's just in both cases, it's two people completely
going against what they've done their entire career in some sense.
Yeah.
I'm very, I'm very open.
I don't believe that anything is off limits.
I believe that any, any subject could be a subject for comedy if you find the right angle.
And I'm happy to make fun of everybody and everything.
If you could find the right angle for it.
Uh, this kind of transcends that to some degree.
Um, you know, it, it almost, it defies a logic in my opinion, you know, to see
the suffering that's going on and, um by the way, that I did the Netflix show, the Larry Charles dangerous world of comedy was to show that these places where we are, you know, militarily
in the middle of the world, we are in a place where we are in a place where we are in a
place where we are in a place where we are in a place where we are in a place where we
are in a place where we are in a place where we are in a place where we are in a place by the way that I did the Netflix show, the Larry Charles dangerous world of comedy, was to show
that these places where we are, you know, militarily destroying these countries and destroying
lives permanently, you know, here are the people that we are doing this to. Look at these people,
they're just like you. What would you do in this situation? You know, and I had hoped that it would cause more sort of
Dialogue about that stuff, but it really didn't and instead a lot of people just retreated to this pro-israeli
statuses pro-zionist stance and allowed that to sort of
Be there. They just took a rigidity behind that and just have not wavered
from the beginning of, uh, this, this, uh, this particular period, which of course, the,
the, the period, the historical period is goes back way before October 7th, you
know, and, um, but, but the propaganda has been so effective that you, when
you're a kid in Brooklyn, like I was going to Hebrew school,
there was no doubt that Israel was God's gift to the Jews.
You know, you believe that, you know, and it took, it took a while, like around my time,
my bar mitzvah for me to start questioning all this supposed wisdom about it and realizing it was all kind of bullshit.
And, but for a lot of people, they still buy into that.
They buy into the propaganda.
But maybe we shouldn't be surprised because they buy into the propaganda
about America, too. You know? Yeah.
I mean, I don't know, like in going back to like comedy being like,
how do how does one make sense of the most sickening and horrifying things
that they're aware of in their own lives or in the world. And like for me,
there is nothing more sickening or more horrifying than what's
being done to Gaza right now. And I was trying to think about
like, yes, I agree. But yet still still somehow, like I still
kind of have to relate to it, in some sense, in a comedic sense,
because you know, comedy and tragedy are really just matters
of perspective. It's like, what's comedy and what is
tragedy is just like, well, give it a minute, and I'll tell you, I don't know, depending on what happens. And I was thinking like, I was,
I was struck by this, speaking of propaganda, this propaganda video that I saw, and this just struck
me as like, we're gonna talk about like sick comedy, or even like a Larry Charles style joke.
This was a piece of propaganda produced by the Gaza humanitarian foundation, which is already a
sick joke in and of itself, because because essentially it's just a firing squad.
And it was this guy who was representing the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
He's at one of these aid delivery checkpoints and he's giving his whole spiel about how
everything you've heard isn't true.
We've delivered millions of meals, we're helping people, we're saving lives every day here.
And at the very end of the video, you hear like a, you hear a machine gun fire go off.
You just hear a brrat of a gun being fired. And I'm like, how many takes of that did they
do where like they still, how many, how many fucking gunshots are going off that that was
the best take of that propaganda video? But they're like, we're definitely not killing
people here. And then as the video ends, you hear a machine gun go off.
Yeah.
No, I think that you're right.
I mean, there is an absurdist comedy to that,
and we can laugh at it.
I mean, having visited Iraq and having visited Palestine,
even the people there have a sense of humor about it
on some level, because again, that is one of the few survival
techniques that they have available to them.
Humor is one of the last bastions that you can, of defense for those people.
You know, that's the only way they get through the day is to sort of try to laugh.
But man, they are really the, it is a lot of pressure in that situation to try to laugh.
You know, it's very hard to do when you see children, you know, being maimed.
It's hard to laugh.
You know, even we were talking about dead baby jokes before, you know, but it was very
removed from reality when we were kids.
Now it's real, you know, and it's very hard to separate it.
Yeah.
You know, as we were talking about, like, how do you, what is the humor in this
situation and, you know, of course it is, it's always like in the absurdities and
the inherent contradictions, but it did make me think, um, I have, like, I've
seen not only a lot of like really funny jokes and videos for people who live in Gaza, like there's
there's a guy who's like he's like a fitness, not influencer, but he does fitness videos,
and he lives in Gaza. And they're like, they're like very dark at a lot of the time, for obvious
reasons, but like, really, he just has like an an innate sense of timing and absurdity.
But I also thought of people in Yemen. Yemen experienced a horrible mass starvation by
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates from their incursion during the Yemeni civil war starting in 2015.
And it was horrific and millions of people
experienced starvation and they were,
some of the worst, a lot of the tactics
that we're seeing the idea of use
in terms of using an air force
as sort of like an execution squadron
were debuted in Yemen by these GCC countries.
But both like people in Ansar a lot proper and just regular
Yemenis who aren't affiliated have made like some of like the
funniest videos and jokes about this whole thing.
Yemenis in particular are really funny.
Yeah.
I'm thinking of the guy who brought his donkey to the, uh,
the square in sauna, uh, where he just wrote F 16 on the side of his donkey. Yeah. And yeah. And it,
in both instances, it seems like it's, it's sort of like, not so much like survival, but kind of
like a fuck you. Yeah. Yeah. That's a very good, I think that is part of it, you know, I think it is Like the only statement they can make that people will pay attention to you know
It's it's like beyond understanding and so you're looking for some way to communicate the horror and the absurdity and
People have the the innate ability to pull that out to find the humor to find something funny
ability to pull that out, to find the humor, to find something funny about this horrible situation that they're going through. And that maybe gets them through, you know, again, there's an audience
for it too, amongst the people who are suffering. You know, I found very much that there was great
responsiveness to the Palestinian comedians that I met, to the Liberian comedians that I met, who
had just been through that civil war at that time. You know, and I'm sure with, you know, in Somalia, the same thing,
people were desperate as desperate to survive as they, as they were, they were
desperate to be able to laugh because of you and humanize them and kept them
human to themselves to some degree.
One of the, yeah, I think that's a great point.
I mean, one of the ways that, you know, these massacres,
and I was talking with someone today about how
it's under discussed how much of an effect
the Iraq War had on the American consciousness,
that it just, it made it okay for millions of people
to be killed and for it to just,
hey, it was this silly mistake
that inherently devalues
human life.
But the way that they're able to do that then and now with Israel's genocide that we're
facilitating is by just sort of like characterizing the people that are killed as just a sullen
mass of victims that are permanently meant to be in that state.
By showing them producing comedy, it actually reinforces their humanity for people who aren't
willing to see it.
Or enrages them, or just enrages them because they still have some humanity left.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Right.
Well, that's true too.
Basically, without that, they are characterized as being
subhuman, they are, they are not, they, if they don't claim their own humanity,
no one else is going to claim it for them.
And so they, they are the way we can, the way we can allow people to be
slaughtered like that, whether it be Iraq or Palestine or cows and chickens is to sort
of take away any kind of soul or humanity from those things.
And we are very casual about mass death in this country.
And we have, we've been okay with it with Native Americans and with black people.
And, you know, we don't think too much about the animals that we eat every day who are
in these factories being slaughtered by the thousands.
And so we don't think about the Palestinians as being human either.
And so we can, we can kind of rationalize in our mind, oh, we're not really killing people.
You know, we're just killing, we're killing this mass of masses who are not really
human. And it makes people feel because if we felt that if we felt the truth of that,
which a lot of people do and more and more are, if we felt the truth of that, we would, we could not
allow it to continue. No matter what side you might be on, it really doesn't matter. It's no different than
the Holocaust in a sense. And I think a lot of people are offended by the idea of comparing
what's going on in Israel to the Holocaust and all the ironies that are inherent in that.
But we allow that to happen too. We allowed the Holocaust to take place as well, and we didn't do very much about it until it was almost over.
And but again, the propaganda is we saved the day when we didn't enter World War Two
until it was almost over.
So there's a lot of lies at the heart of how people feel about all these issues, you know?
Yeah, and the way that they are dehumanized in Israel and America does this too, when
we're more directly involved, when we are more, when we're using our military more,
the it's the old style of dehumanization.
These people are savages.
They hate your way of life.
They want to kill you.
Everyone, every child that we kill is preventing another terrorist from being created.
Like things that are identical to what the third right was saying.
But the newer method that's being employed for a lot of Americans is not to
say that, but to just sort of, you know, this sort of like, oh, it's just, it's such a troubled region.
It's such a troubled place.
They got such a, you know, what a raw deal it is to live in Gaza.
I guess. And there's this implied thing of like, well, I guess it's just there a lot to be victim, to be killed forever.
They're just unlucky. And maybe maybe we can send some aid, but hopefully they figure it out.
And that's dehumanizing in the way that it just, it, it's like removing their faces,
removing all their human aspects.
Well, it's about thinking about it as little as possible, you know?
Uh, and, and again, the American, uh, the way the American government deals with it was that they lay all these
burdens on the American people.
They confuse them, they overburden them.
And so there really isn't, we don't have the bandwidth to have sympathy for anybody,
except ourselves, the way this country works now.
And so we see how ICE is going about destroying these families in our neighborhoods and this, and we feel powerless and out of that
powerless comes a numbness and out of that numbness comes an apathy, you
know, and like, thank God it's not me and I just cannot deal with this, you
know, cause I'm having enough problems on my own.
And, uh, you know, again, how do you, how do you navigate through that morass? It's, you know, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it this, you know, because I'm having enough problems of my own and
You know again, how do you how do you navigate through that morass? It's you know, almost impossible I mean you touched on this in the dangerous world of comedy
but like
You know like the the corollary to the example of people who are experiencing a genocide still finding humor in
Their situation or being able to like somehow
laugh about the you know even unimaginable circumstances that they
find themselves in their humor as an act of rebellion and defiance and kind of an
assertion of humanity the corollary to that is that people who perpetrate the
genocide or like you know or use the example of like federal law enforcement
arresting you know mothers and separating them from their children.
They use how they use comedy too.
And they use comedy as a weapon, like both against the humanity of their victims,
but also as a kind of like an anesthesia for their own innate humanity.
No, you're right. I mean, that's part of the propaganda is using comedy as a weapon to
to sort of lighten the reality in a way like by making fun of it if
As the the oppressors make fun of it and get humor out of it and get laughs out of it
It's a way to sort of take away the true serious of it
Avoiding the serious questions that are sort of inherent.
So they're using comedy in that kind of very evil way, in a sense.
But yet at the same time, as we know, there is an audience for it.
And you watch Trump.
But very crucially though, it's not funny.
It's not funny.
They've not managed to make it funny.
But see, it goes back to Andy Kalkman in a way.
What is funny?
Because if, if Trump makes some kind of like off-handed joke about some of these
dire situations and the people around him laugh, as far as he's concerned and
they're concerned, it is funny.
And so the definition of funny itself is threatened by that kind of humor.
You know?
Yeah. All right. Uh, Larry Charles, I think we will leave it there. The book is Comedy
Samurai, 40 Years of Blood, Guts and Laughter. Larry Charles, thank you so much
for your wonderful memoir and for spending some time with us today.
Thank you guys. It's great to see you again. I look forward to doing it again
as soon as possible. It's always great. Our cool man. Thank you. Cheers, Larry. Thanks
Okay, before we before we wrap things up for today. I promised you a very exciting announcement
Something you are going to be beaten over the head with relentlessly, but I can say with full confidence that this is actually
The most excited I've been to announce an ancillary chopappo Trap House project that we are ready to now share with
you and the rest of the world. So it is my distinct pleasure to
announce officially year zero, a Chappo Trap House comics
anthology. Excelsior comic book fans. We've partnered with the
fine folks at Bad Egg Publishing to produce a new anthology
comic series featuring five original stories, one from each of your beloved podcast hosts.
The first of three volumes will be available for pre-sale starting July 1st.
That will be today when you are listening to this.
You can make those pre-sale orders exclusively at www.badegg.co.
Each volume contains a new installment
of each of our mind-bending tales of the fantastic.
First up from yours truly is The Clinton Hill Horror,
a Lovecraftian detective story that delves deep
into New York City history and cosmic terror.
Then from Felix is the long-gestating loop jumper,
the tale of a rogue agent who uses quantum suicide
to fight the deep state across time and space.
Next up is Amber Frost's Beat the Dang Devil,
in which a coal miner fights agents of Satan
to save his soul and his family
in an Appalachian
twist on the evil dead. Then from Matt Christman, Josh Androski, and Amber Frost,
we have an illustrated companion to his No Parasong. Josh and Amber have
collaborated with Matt on this illustrated adaptation that presents
dramatic scenes and key moments of Matt's Spanish Civil War history.
And then finally, from Chris Wade and Joel Sineski, we have Crew Expendable, a near-future
sci-fi story presenting the devastating consequences of the privatization of a Mars colony.
This will feature art from Simon Roy, Justin Greenwood, David Cousins, Ken Knutson, and Dean Cots.
But over 100 pages, magazine size, beautifully covered for $45 cover per price per volume.
Pre-orders are available now until August 1st to guarantee shipping in September.
Bad Egg is also running a free shipping promotion for orders over $100
and having a sale on site for non year
zero books. So order your copy of year zero, a Chapo Trap House comics anthology
at www.badegg.co. That was my that was my prepared spiel. But I would just like
to speak from the heart here that like, this is as far as like the the ancillary
Chapo Trap House collaborations projects that we've worked on, this has
been unbelievably exciting for me.
It has been really rewarding.
I have really enjoyed writing my story.
Each of the comics that we've come up
with are fantastic.
The art is 1000%
professional. These are like these are
top not top flight comic book
artists. This will be like a truly
beautifully done package featuring
all original stories of mind-bending horror, science fiction, fantasy, action,
and Spanish Civil War history. From yours truly to you, our beloved listeners.
Now you can be our beloved readers. It's a real comic, Will. It's a real
comic book. It is a real comic book. This is Tales from the Chapo, the Chapo-nomicon.
Like I said, speaking for myself, I cannot fucking wait for you guys to get the first
issue of my story.
We've all been off siloed kind of working on our own things together and we're just
now starting to see everybody else's stories and it's been very excited to see all the
art come through for everybody.
Everybody's thing is perfectly themselves.
I also just want to shout out my co-author Joel Soninski,
who some of you might know as the, uh,
he is writing the book for the Instagram hit musical, uh,
slam Frank right now,
which I know has been garnering a lot of, uh, uh, energy on Instagram.
And I think that if you're listening to this program,
you would probably enjoy the whole joke of the thing of slam-frank
I would also like to single out my artist Ken Knutson. I don't know what I expected
but what he delivered was above and beyond anything I
Have just been so impressed by what he's done
in some cases I gave him pretty broad notes
and he delivered to me the greatest visibly stupid operator
that I've ever seen.
You look at his face and you're like,
that's a stupid man who's killed dozens of people.
I was blown away. Every new illustration
that I got was just mind rendering.
Yeah. And for my own part, my story is illustrated by Simon Roy, who you might be familiar with.
He's done a number of posters for Choppo. He has for like 20 years now, like even long
before Choppo started, has been my favorite comic book artist. And like I said, I cannot wait for you to see what
he's done with my story. The Clinton Hill Horror, which is my take on H.P. Lovecraft.
This is essentially like the Brindle fly musing of H.P. Lovecraft and my own
sensibilities. You know, I think that like you may be surprised that I wrote
this as straight as possible. I wrote this as straight a horror story as I could and
Like I said, it delves into some of the forgotten history of New York City during the Revolutionary War
It is it is a hundred. It is very much. It is my tribute to HB Lovecraft, but is very much
My attempt to do a as straight down the line as possible a horror story in the mold of Lovecraft.
And I think the illustrations for it are incredible and I can't wait for you to see it.
We'll have some sample illustrations up on the, all this information will be on a blog post on
the Patreon tomorrow. So, and we'll be mentioning it throughout the month, but there'll be some
sample pages on that blog post too, so you can see what we're working with here.
too, so you can see what we're working with here. My story is about an operator who the good days have passed.
The greatest moment of his life was when he was put into Delta Force because of how handsome
he was.
The Saudi government paid him to assist GIGN in retaking the Grand Mosque from that insane
guy in 1979.
They accidentally killed a British pilot during the Gulf War due to not knowing how to use
a laser designator and his life has fallen apart.
His friend commits suicide.
He's about to shoot up a rehab clinic because he thinks it's like the building from New
Jack City because he's stupid.
The Carter.
He thinks it's the Carter.
He literally goes, they have drug dealers dressed up as doctors here.
This is so evil.
But then the man who discovered that overdosing on quantum cocaine will allow you to time
travel visits him and
he realizes the only way to undo all the pain that he's gone through is to commit
quantum suicide. Luke Jumper, change the past redo the present kill yourself.
Well like I said like unlike the show we really were siloed off like these are
all totally from each of us as individuals. These are
all stories that we did not collaborate on. These are all of
our individual efforts to like, create six issues of an arc of
an original comic story. But then taken together, they're
very much everything you know and love about Chopper
Trap House in one, I think, beautiful comic book anthology package.
So buy early, buy often.
You'll be hearing a lot about it, the pre-order this month.
So year zero, a Chopper Trap House comics anthology coming to you soon.
Badegg.co.
Badegg.co.
All this information up on the Patreon tomorrow.
That does it for us today, everybody.
Bye bye.