Club Random with Bill Maher - Ray Romano | Club Random with Bill Maher

Episode Date: June 9, 2024

Bill Maher and Ray Romano on vices, Bill’s first bit at an open mic, Ray’s acting career post Raymond, how many times Ray quit comedy before starting his career, Ray’s hilarious encounter while ...playing a cruise ship, Bill on how begging a woman to take you back is a huge turn off, Ray’s roughest gig ever, the desire to wash a city off of you after a bad show, how Ray downplays his achievements, and much more. Sponsor Club Random: https://public.liveread.io/media-kit/clubrandom Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Starting point is 00:00:34 And it's available now anywhere you get your books. The one thing I miss is going up in a room full of strangers and winning that audience over. That's the thing I hated the most. I would get a student loan. I would register. And my parents thought I was going to college. And I would leave the house and never go.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Is this a gift already? Well, you know, it's like when the husband gives a wife lingerie. Who's the gift really for? Exactly. It's my book. Yes, yes. I know.
Starting point is 00:01:10 I know the book. I want to show you what I wrote to you because I feel like it's so apropos for... Oh, it is a gift. Oh, I thought you were using it to plug. To Ray, the lifelong friend I'm just getting to know. I feel like that's where we are, right? Appreciate it. In another alternative universe, we've actually
Starting point is 00:01:28 spent thousands of hours together, and we enjoyed every minute of it. But there just wasn't time on this Earth. But how did we just missed each other coming up, I guess? Because you were at the improv, right? We were like Captain Tuttle on Mashed. You remember that episode where the captain, he just left. They were never really.
Starting point is 00:01:48 Oh, they never see that. They made Frank Burns go mad thinking he constantly dismissed him. But were you, did you, was your first place at the Improv? Improv LA. Oh, oh, I was. I mean, I did work at the Improv in New York. Oh, so you didn't start, you started out here.
Starting point is 00:02:07 No! New York! So the improv was your home club, was your place where you... Really was Catcher Rising Star. Improv, but you know, once you got to be a big act, you got to work all three clubs, the comic strip, the improv, you know. Yeah, and then the seller, too. And then the seller. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:28 How many years were there? 1979 to 1982. That's exactly, and I started in 83. See, Captain Tuttle telling you. I started in 83 and then I quit for a while and then started again. You quit? I had two tries at it. You know, I started once, the first time ever on stage was the improv, ever.
Starting point is 00:02:55 And I did well. Did you do well the first time? That kind of tends to be the- Of course not. How could you do well the first time? Because it's audition night and the crowd is very generous and I don't know, that seemed to be the way it went. That's not my memory. It was terrible. I was gasping for the oxygen of laughter, rudely
Starting point is 00:03:22 awakened to the fact that making my friends laugh was a whole different animal than making a room full of strangers laugh. I did obviously get enough laughs to get asked back. But I had the horrible experience the second time I went on stage. So I had the false hope that, oh, this is easy. And then I was rudely awakened. Well, you must have been if you actually quit. I mean, when you quit.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Yeah, I quit. It scared me so much. And then I tried again. And I quit again. And then the third time is when I said I got to give it a shot. So you quit and did what? I was, I mean, I did a lot of everything. But at the time that I started working as a standup,
Starting point is 00:04:16 I was delivering futons in New York for my friend. And you went back to that. I don't even think I was doing it then. When I was 23, I wasn't doing anything. I was going to college, dropping out of college. That's how painful stand-up can be when you're not good at it. It can make you go back to delivering Pujons, right?
Starting point is 00:04:39 It can make you quit. Yeah, as exhilarating as the first night was, that's how equally horrible the second night was. Right. And yeah, it scared me. It's an amazing phenomenon that people, well, first of all, just that a human being would want to like take the mood of a whole room of people or a thousand people or sometimes 25,000 people and music 50,000 people
Starting point is 00:05:07 and put that on your one back. That alone is a little weird to wanna do. And then to like endure that kind of apprenticeship. I mean, every industry has a type of apprenticeship. You're a computer programmer, you're working, you're learning the computer. It's not humiliating, learning the computer. It can be frustrating, or you know,
Starting point is 00:05:31 you wish you were going faster or slower or something. But it's not, but we, I'd like rank humiliation. I mean, real, like ego crushing. That's what I tell, there's always young guys who kind of ask me about what's the hardest part. Like, ego crushing. That's what I tell, there's always young guys who kind of ask me about what's the best path or whatever. Sure. Ray, you're a big star.
Starting point is 00:05:52 You're worth hundreds of millions in your big shows and movies and acting career and television. For stand-up. For stand-up, you tell them. What, give us your advice, Ray. Can I call you Ray or should I, Mr. Romano, hold forth. Who are you, are you mocking me or them? I'm mocking that whole syndrome
Starting point is 00:06:13 that we've all lived through a billion times. Where there was, I remember, not to blame him for it, he was good at it, but Lenna, when we started, he was a little older than us comics who had started and was doing better and he would, he had smoked a pipe back then and he would occasionally hold forth. But I've seen Rodney do it and you know. Do what, like hold court?
Starting point is 00:06:33 Well yes, the young comics gather around and they want wisdom from the elders. And I'm sure I've. By the way, I'm not saying I ever offered it. I'm talking about when kids, when guys ask me. I don't say, I don't say. I know, I know, they ask me too. I'm just saying it's how you offered it. I'm talking about when kids, when guys ask me. I don't say it. I don't say it. I know, they ask me too.
Starting point is 00:06:46 I'm just saying it's how you handle it. Telling you about the whole syndrome just creeps me out. I heard Seinfeld give one of the best pieces of advice to, I don't know what it was, but he said someone was asking him, how do you make money in comedy and stand-up? And he said, the way to make money and stand-up is to not care about making money and stand-up.
Starting point is 00:07:14 Yeah, that's like Elaine May's famous dictum, the only safe thing is to take chances. That's show business. Yeah, but I think also what he was saying was, just do it, you gotta do it and get better at it. You feel like you lived up to that? The only safe thing is to take chances? In some things, in other things, I'm just, I'm the... But like, you could have done a reboot of Raymond
Starting point is 00:07:39 for $12 trillion or something, I'm sure. And you didn't, you didn't bite it, that fat piece of bait. No, because I knew it wouldn't be good. Okay, but that's taking chances instead of just playing it safe. Playing it safe would be doing it. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Yeah. But to be fair, the money wasn't gonna entice me anyway. I mean, yes, the money's good. Well, I don't make choices right now for financial reasons. Because it all came out in the wash for us, didn't it? We're like so lucky. Because when you think about the old days and how many people you started with, I always compare it to the Army.
Starting point is 00:08:30 A lot of guys got shot. I know. And a few guys. And guys you thought, there's so many guys I thought, this guy's gonna be a star. And did better than me, certainly, I can't speak for you, but in the clubs. You mean in the clubs, yeah, I can't speak for you, but in the clubs. You mean in the clubs, yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:46 The guys I didn't wanna follow. Right, yes. But see, that's the thing. TV's a cool medium. This was the advice I learned almost as a child, but certainly as a teenager when I was thinking about going into comedy, I was very attuned to this shit. And I remember knowing that message,
Starting point is 00:09:05 it was Marshall McLuhan, who I guess my mother was interested in. I think he was also on TV. He's famously in Annie Hall, when Woody Allen is online for a movie, remember? And he's with the girl, and he wishes that somebody could come along and straighten out whoever he's arguing with,
Starting point is 00:09:23 and Marshall McLuhan, who was like... Because he was thought of as like a very smart guy at the time. And that was his big message, you know. Cool medium. And TV is a cool medium. Your people are watching you in a different setting than they are in a nightclub. That energy that blows people away in a small room does not permeate the screen.
Starting point is 00:09:47 So people like us, dull, plotting... both laugh We do much better, no, but we're not like... -"Badda, badda!" And then... No, you're right, because there are character stand-up acts that would tear the house down. Oh. I mean, and to try to find them a sitcom or whatever, they never panned out.
Starting point is 00:10:12 I probably have told this, but there was a guy, it's not that I won't say his name, I just can't remember at the moment, but he did this thing with puppets. But I mean, he would, yes, no one could follow him. I certainly couldn't. He did close the shows. I remember certain clubs were opening and he was getting like the topest dollar that they were paying, $2,000 a week. And the closing was he would put hand puppets and then they would pipe in the Rolling Stones
Starting point is 00:10:41 Start Me Up and the puppet would, I guess it was a Mick Jagger puppet. And I was in the back of the room thinking, man, I gotta get glasses. There's something in this I must be missing. The people are going fucking apeshit for this. And then, you know, no, it wasn't the glasses. I just, I didn't understand. Do you think that act would work now?
Starting point is 00:11:03 Like, I look at the guys who were character stand-ups, and I wonder if they would go over in today's audience. Well, Mick Jagger's 80 now. Wow, yeah. What's the best premise to, like, energize the crowd with? Although I hear that, I've heard from a number of people, the Rolling Stones, he is 80,
Starting point is 00:11:24 and they say the show is fantastic. And he, especially, is just like as he ever was. It's pretty amazing. Yeah, I have to go. I've never seen him live. No. And my wife wants to go too, yeah. You should definitely go.
Starting point is 00:11:38 I've seen them like four or five times. I'm not a concert-going guy. The first concert I went to, I'll tell ya, it was John Denver, and opening for him was the Starland Vocal Band. Do you remember that? I certainly know that. Afternoon Delight.
Starting point is 00:12:00 Yes, from Anchorman. Yes. When they sing in Anchorman. Yeah, yeah. Afternoon Delight. You're gonna find my babies. Yes. And when they sing in Anchorman. Yeah, yeah. Afternoon, July. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:09 Oh my God. But then I saw Chicago once, Chicago was like my favorite band growing up. What a band. They're still one of my favorite bands. Right, but you know they changed from the 70s and in the 80s and 90s they got more softer and pop, you know. Yeah, yes, that's true. That's true. in the 80s and 90s, they got more softer and pop, you know? Yeah, yes, that's true, that's true.
Starting point is 00:12:27 But they had, you know, I don't know how much you know about Terry Kath, their lead guitarist, who Hendrix said was better than him. Wow. And he, but he tragically accidentally shot himself when he was, yeah, 29 maybe. Oh. Oh, he was unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:12:45 You should watch, there's a YouTube video, 25 or 64, of them live in the 70s. That's unbelievable. That sure doesn't make me smile. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Terrible.
Starting point is 00:12:56 And the Beatles, we have that in common. Yes. Yeah. But Chicago, like, man, they're, you're right. When they were a rock band with a horn section. Yes, yes. And as a kid, well, you know, 13 or whatever I was,
Starting point is 00:13:12 horns were sort of like something from my father's era more. So you're like, it had to be really hot for me to like it. And they hit it. There was another band, Blood, Sweat, and Tears, that also had a horn section. They certainly didn't go to work in Chicago. They're still playing kind of Chicago.
Starting point is 00:13:31 Some of their guys are still there. I remember when they were inaugurated into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and my friend Rob Thomas did it from Matchbox 20 and his great solo stuff. Yeah, and you know he kind of acknowledged that they Said something about like, you know, oh, they're your mom's band and you know, he was just like hey, that's your mom's band I want to hang out with your mom. He wasn't saying it. He was when he inducted them, you know
Starting point is 00:14:01 He was he was putting down people who said that they were, you know, soft or. Well, yeah, because they don't remember, they don't know their early stuff where it was so soulful. No, I think, I mean, that's their most famous stuff. I mean, Saturday in the Park. Saturday in the Park, that's in my movie. I put it in my movie. Feeling Stronger Every Day was the song
Starting point is 00:14:22 that got me through my high school breakup. Really, I'm not kidding. You only had one high school breakup? I only had one girl. Yeah, I mean that one. I mean it was amazing I got one and then she broke my heart in a million pieces, which I was deserved. I'm not gonna say it wasn't.
Starting point is 00:14:40 But being young is so much harder than being old, if you have your health. If not, then it sucks even more being old. But you put yourself in such pain with your stupidity and you're just the old, if I only knew then what I know now, you could spare yourself. But I went through that, that was at least a year where every day was a knot in my stomach from the moment I woke up to the moment I went through that, that was at least a year where every day was a knot in my stomach from the moment I woke up to the moment I went to sleep.
Starting point is 00:15:08 Because of the girl. Yeah, because it was just like how do I get her back and I can't because once you turn off the pilot light, I always say, it cannot be reignited in a moment. You can make it go low, but if you turn the pilot light off, it will never go back on. You're not even ignited in a moment. You can make it go low, but if you turn the pilot light off, it will never go back on. And then you just, you are less attractive as a beggar.
Starting point is 00:15:30 Which is once you become a supplicant. You're like Oliver Twist. A little more, please. How long did you date her for? Like a year and a half. Like from sophomore. Was she a sophomore? I was a junior, she was a sophomore. It was my first date, taking a bus to the mall in January,
Starting point is 00:15:50 in freezing cold weather to see a movie. Yeah. And like being 17, like, we all, like, get a little complacent. But we, as we mature, we, you, we become self-aware of it and fight like letting on that we're maybe not as thrilled as we used to be. You were complacent with what? With the relationship. Oh.
Starting point is 00:16:15 After what's gone on for a year and a half or whatever it was, I just was kind of, I don't know, I think I was dickish about something. But you still were into her. I just kind of, I don't know. I think I was dickish about something. I remember. But you still were into her. Big, yeah. You know, I guess I was, the interest was waning, but once she dumped me, it was just about my ego.
Starting point is 00:16:35 And you know, then it's just, you realize that it's not really about the person so much when you really go through that kind of, it's a lot about your ego, or your sense of survival, like, oh, it's a blow. It's just a blow to an emotional part of you. So then I was just beside myself, and that song, Feeling Stronger Every Day, when that came on, it was the summer, I guess, of 74,
Starting point is 00:17:03 and it had been a year or so, and it really helped me. That was kind of the beginning of their more poppy kind of period. But it still had that great horn. No, that's a good rock song. Yeah. Please, don't ever say anything bad about feeling stronger every day. No, it's a good song. It's a good song. They had great songs in that.
Starting point is 00:17:21 Just You and Me, you know, Howl of My World was earlier. Howl of My World was my prom song, which I didn't go to. But that was the song they played at the prom. That was earlier. That was earlier. That was on their early albums. What's important is that I was feeling stronger every day, Ray.
Starting point is 00:17:40 Who is that? So who is your number one group, the Beatles? I remember you talking about them. Yes, I feel like they're always the premis into parries on the Mount Olympus of musicians and rock and roll. And I mean, everything they did first. Everything. Like music videos, like things you don't even think of.
Starting point is 00:18:01 Certain instruments, sound, whatever, stadiums. Did you, because you played the Mirage too when I was playing it. Did you go to love? you don't even think of. Certain instruments, sound, whatever, stadiums. Because you played The Mirage too when I was playing it. Did you go to Love? Absolutely. I would go, I've been there like 12 times. 12 times? Well, because I played The Mirage for over maybe 20 years.
Starting point is 00:18:19 So every once, they change it up. So if I was- But aren't you performing when that show- No, my show was at 10. Isn't your show at 10? Mine is now at the MGM Grand. No, I know that. Nine.
Starting point is 00:18:30 But at the Mirage. When it was at the... You were at the Mirage, right? It was. It was late, yes. Yeah, it was at 10. So you could go see the other show... We would walk in the back and it's... Oh, right. Same building. Yeah, it's in the Mirage, yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Oh, I should have done that. But I did see it. Oh, yeah. I would... I would tear up sometimes just sitting there. I used to like look sitting there and just, I used to like looking at the people and just seeing like when a song would come on, they just had to get into it and move, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:58 how it would affect them. Oh yeah. And it was just nostalgic. Well the sound system in there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was amazing. And then you have like midgets on tricycles and stuff. What?
Starting point is 00:19:08 Isn't that what it is? My recollection. That's for Strawberry Fields or Lucy in the Sky. Okay. I mean, I remember. It was Circus Way. I love Circus Way. You know what the best one was? Oh. I didn't see it.
Starting point is 00:19:19 No, I never saw it. That's the one that's on water. And there's little people flying all around there. They're over your head. They're just, it's amazing. And they do amazing stunts, but the water and the, it's those shows. Vegas, I was just in Atlantic City.
Starting point is 00:19:34 I'm sure you play Atlantic City and you're a big. I did play, but I haven't played there in a long time. Really, why? Well, where do you play? It was at the Borgata. Well, I mean, I live here now, so I mean. Yeah, it's called a long time. Really, why? Well, where do you play? I don't know. It was at the Borgata. Well, I mean, I live here now, so I mean. Yeah, it's called a road gig. Yeah, but a road gig for me is Vegas.
Starting point is 00:19:51 I don't do. Oh, look at you. Well, I don't, I. Yeah, you let them come to see you, right? Let them come to you. I just did my first corporate gig in like 15 years. Oh, I can't do corporate. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:04 I've learned. But it was in Vegas, that's why I did it. You had your first corporate gig in like 15 years. Oh, I can't do corporate. Yeah. I've learned. But it was in Vegas, that's why I did it. They all think, and I get offered crazy money. Yeah, I know. And it's not worth it because, see, they think, oh, we're hip, we're gonna love him. Because the person in charge of the entertainment committee
Starting point is 00:20:23 is a big fan. But it's 2,000 lawyers or some shit. Very often they're not that. And it's also a crap shoot to set up what it's gonna look like, how big is it? But I mean, I feel like you could do this easily. You're not gonna, you can not offend a corporation. I cannot.
Starting point is 00:20:42 Yeah, yeah. I mean, I'm an atheist and all this stuff. Yeah, but you just do, you do Mr. Salty, you do... Ah, Mr. Salty! That's from like, oh my God. You do fuck you, Mr. Salty. I hadn't thought of that. I remember that.
Starting point is 00:20:58 You're right, that was one of my big jokes. I came out... That's timely. That's still timely today. In this age of low sodium, you gotta give them credit. They're like. It was a few years in my life where that was very important to me, that Mr. Salty joke.
Starting point is 00:21:15 It was one of my biggest jokes. And now I can't even remember what the joke was. It was, you gotta give, I roughly remember, you gotta give Mr. Salty, the people of Mr. Salty credit, because in this age of health and low sodium, they're like, fuck you, Mr. Salty. That is funny. They're not changing the name.
Starting point is 00:21:41 It's kind of like Seinfeld's, you gotta give the Chinese credit. They're sticking with the chopsticks. That's always classic. Club Random is brought to you by the audio marketing gurus at Radioactive Media. Summer is almost here, a time when some businesses accept slowing down. When working from home means I'm going to the beach. Not your business. This summer, explore a new marketing angle by utilizing the power of audio by partnering
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Starting point is 00:23:20 So I forgot to plug my book, what this comedian said, well, Shag will shock you went to number one last week We're hoping there will turn to come in today for week two, but it is perfect for Father's Day So I thought dad like you Would like a perfect of my kids are watching right your kids are watching Yeah, that's right by this book for Ray Romano. Meet your dad. He deserves it. They'll love it. I just got to find a way to get my kids to watch you. Let's...
Starting point is 00:23:50 No, they do. They don't have to. They're fans. They're fans. All right. All right. Appreciate it. I'm taking it.
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Starting point is 00:25:07 Hot chicken in the window. This is one of many sounds in Tennessee with a story to tell. To hear them in person, plan your trip at TNVacation.com. Tennessee sounds perfect. I did a corporate gig at the Bellagio just a month ago, yeah. You did? Yeah. First time in 20 years, man.
Starting point is 00:25:27 And? I bet you it was great. I got out alive, you know? Alive? Come on. No, no, no. But you know the conditions can be crazy. They can be, what are they, are they eating now?
Starting point is 00:25:38 Are they this? Is it in a convention center that's true? That's true. I mean, those kind of crowds can be rough. I mean, I was at a charity event about 10 years ago, and the Eagles, out of the goodness of their heart, it's a charity event. We're playing it. And they go on stage, and they had just put out an album
Starting point is 00:25:57 that was an awesome album. It was their album. They hadn't put out one in 28 years. And I think this is like, oh, I think this is like 2008, maybe seven. So they opened with a new song from the album, so new. They didn't open with Hotel California. And the crowd just, I mean, it was just like it was a garage band. They got restless. Just restless, just completely ignoring it and talking.
Starting point is 00:26:25 And Henley was pissed. You could tell after. And I don't blame him. I very nearly stood up and just shouted, fucking shut up. It's the Eagles. Yeah, really. Well, who were they? Were the people lawyers?
Starting point is 00:26:38 No, it was a charity for. Oh, it was a charity. It was a charity for, you know, yeah, that's why they were there. I was, you know, yeah, that's why they were there. That's the thing she get. One of the worst gigs I ever had, and I don't want to trash the gig because it was the Gator Growl. You ever do the...
Starting point is 00:26:59 The Gator Growl. I think I know what you're talking about. I heard about this gig. Yes. It's in the stadium. Jacksonville? No. I think so.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Gators. See, I don't know college football. I don't know it that well either. It's very big. It's very big. And in Florida, it must be like, I have heard of this gig. I avoided it like the play. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:22 Well, it was the second year of Everybody Loves Raymond. And so I was one of the, and Chappelle was on it, Larry Cable Guy was on it, a couple of, and when I went up, there's I guess 20 or 30,000 people, you know, it's homecoming, so there's some parents, but mostly students, and my stuff, I never did, I didn't do the college circuit a lot at all.
Starting point is 00:27:46 No, me neither. Yeah. And now it's unthinkable. Oh yeah, yeah. Now it's just, I mean you would be, even you. Well you would have half this way and half this way maybe. I would be, first of all they would protest before even got on the campus.
Starting point is 00:28:01 Half of them. If they, I was uninvited when I was invited to be the keynote speaker at the Berkeley graduation and then re-invited. But today, are you kidding? These kids, that would be the first thing they would do is try to get me thrown. They don't want to hear anything they don't already agree with.
Starting point is 00:28:23 They don't want their minds pried open. And you know what? let somebody else do it. Yeah. Okay. I'll do it from my perch here in LA. I'll be a little white tower about this one. No, I could see where you, because you do speak about them a lot on your show,
Starting point is 00:28:40 which is, you know. I mean, I don't do it because I have anything against people in their 20s. I probably spend more time with people in their 20s than most people in my age do. Yeah, yeah. But I love kids. I mean, there's an exuberance that you cannot quench.
Starting point is 00:29:01 There's a love of life and of possibility, and it's all the things we know about youth. But I'm not going to hold my tongue when they embrace stupid ideas. And of course then they'll just say, the tritist, easiest, most erroneous thing lobbed at people like us is, you're old, now it's about just get off my lawn.
Starting point is 00:29:26 It's like, okay, so you put zero amount of thinking into the actual point I'm making. You didn't engage with the actual idea. If you did that, I would respect you. But when it's just like, you're old, get off my lawn, oh wow, you learned a cliche about age, and you noticed I'm a lot older than you. But what about the idea? Am I right?
Starting point is 00:29:46 Should we bring communism back? Because I think it's a bad idea. Maybe because I remember what happened the first time, and you don't, and you don't care to learn. But somehow I'm the asshole? Yeah. Yeah, I don't have that issue when I do my standup. But do you ever...
Starting point is 00:30:02 Why? What do you mean? Because the kids are... I don't talk about the things that you talk about. Yeah. No, but your stuff, obviously... Look, your stuff is universal. Oh, would I... I still don't think I'd go over with a college crowd. I don't think... That's why I didn't go over to Gator Growl, I don't think.
Starting point is 00:30:17 Oh, so you didn't. No, what I... I'll never... This was 30 years ago, and I remember... 30,000 people, and I remember 30,000 people, and I remember after about three or four minutes hearing a girl from about 10,000 people over, and I heard her voice go, you better start being funny. Oh. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:40 And yeah. That kind of shit. It was rough. That's rough, and that's not. It was rough. That's rough. And that's not early in your career. That's after you were a big success. Well, it wasn't. It was the second year of the TV show.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Well, that's third. To most people, having your own show is a big success. I mean, it wasn't the cultural landmark it became, but it was a success. It was like when I was on Politically Incorrect. It wasn't a giant, but it was, that's a success for when we started. That's our goal.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Yeah, well that's why they had me there, yeah. But whatever. I remember we were supposed to spend the night there and I told my manager was there and I said let's just go to the airport. The airport was like 40 minutes away so it must have been somewhere. But do you have- And said, let's just go to the airport. The airport was like 40 minutes away, so it must have been somewhere. But do you have-
Starting point is 00:31:27 And I said, let's just go, let's just get out of here. Yeah. Yeah. I didn't even wanna sleep in the town. I wanted to get, we slept at the airport. I once got, I once did horribly on a gig I was not ready to do yet in 1980 in Cleveland, in a restaurant, in a restaurant,
Starting point is 00:31:48 did terribly, like almost to the point of, you know, asked to leave, almost asked to leave level bad, you know? Like in the middle of your, yeah. It just, like, it did not work. It was a tough room, I was a real rookie, and it just, and then the next day, wouldn just, like, it did not work. It was a tough room. I was a real rookie. And it just, and then the next day, wouldn't you know, I get snowed in, and I'm at the airport for 12 hours, watching them, like, plow the runway,
Starting point is 00:32:15 just wanting to get this city off me, get home. Not that it's the city's fault, but just, I wanted to get Cleveland off me, get home and take a shower. And I have to live with it for 12 hours. Did you ever do cruises, cruise ships? Oh, no. I paid my dues. I can prove it, but that is a, I've
Starting point is 00:32:35 had beer cans thrown at me opening for rock stars, but I will not do a cruise. Well, then, because then you're with the audience for the next five days. And I only did it twice. And the first time went okay. Second time they said, we're gonna have late night comedy.
Starting point is 00:32:55 Me and the other comedian were like, we did a regular show, and then they said, now it's late night comedy the next night. It was still us, it was still us. And so, yeah. Of course, it didn't go well, and I remember walking, you know, in a cruise ship, I'm walking to my room, and I'm, you know, this way, this way, and I hear the people, a couple,
Starting point is 00:33:22 well, where do they get these guys from? And they turn the corner, and as I'm walking towards them, it's not wide enough to just walk by. We have to shimmy this way, like our faces. And he just insulted me, and I got him like. Was he aware that it was? Oh yeah, it was me, yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:44 It was only two comics. Wow. Now that I. And then you're living on the boat with them for the next couple days. It's kind of like you do a show at a club or somewhere, and right, you're just, the club is with you for the next two days.
Starting point is 00:33:59 That's how ridiculous it is. Yeah. And so like when you're at the buffet, you would see people and did anybody come up to you at the buffet? No, I don't think. And, hey, you were good last night? I don't think anyone, I don't, I probably stayed in the room for, stayed laid low for a while.
Starting point is 00:34:18 People think they're doing you a big favor when they say, I laughed. I'm just like, fuck you. So did lots of people. It's funny as you think you're immune to that now at this point in your career. And basically, well, you kind of, for the most part you are, because they're coming to see you now.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Yes, but people can still damn with faint praise. Yes. And we work so hard at what we do. Stand up especially, I've talked about it with Jerry, why I might stop doing it, at least for a while. Just like it's playing the cello. You have to practice two hours every day or whatever it is with the cello,
Starting point is 00:35:01 and it's that kind of thing. And I love that, and I have loved it. I will miss it if I don't do it, but yeah, you gotta be on it. Or, I mean, doesn't matter who you, to do on the- To do a show, to do a one hour show, yes. You can't just pop off and do it.
Starting point is 00:35:18 The more popular you are, and the more the audience loves you, and yes, when you've been around as long as us, the people who come to see you really do love you. You just don't want to disappoint. No. You just want to give them what they want you to give them and give them the best version of it.
Starting point is 00:35:35 But you know what, the thing that I miss, because I still like to, when I go to New York, I go to The Cellar, any night I can go, I go. Really? You still play the old clubs. There's just The Cellar, I do The Cellar. Any night I can go, I go. Really? You still play the old clubs. There's just The Cellar, I do The Cellar. But still, that's amazing. I live 11, I have an apartment, 11 minute,
Starting point is 00:35:52 I can walk there. And I still get charged up, yeah. And nobody knows you're there. And I do 20 minutes, you do 20. But- When you go over the yellow legal pad and just from all gives you the... Because they're new stuff. I do a couple new... I try a couple new things,
Starting point is 00:36:09 but otherwise... Oh, you just do your regular act? Well, if I'm doing 20 minutes, I'll have a... Yes, I will have a piece of paper with thoughts and ideas. I hope so. Try this, try this, try this, try this. I don't have 20 minutes of it. All right, but these people are getting you
Starting point is 00:36:23 for a bargain basement price. The least you can do is try out new material on them. They don't. But some of them don't. Most of them don't know the stuff, even the older stuff. Not old, but you know. No, but I'm just saying. I don't do anything I did on the one special
Starting point is 00:36:40 I did a couple of years ago. I retired that material. That audience is there for you to use. That's a showcase club. That's different than a real club or a real theater. They're only paying, what, $5 to get in? Well, it's a little more than that. Well, it was when I was there.
Starting point is 00:37:00 Did you do the seller? Yes. I was talking to, I think it was Sandra Bernhardt who was recently here and I mentioned the funny night where I was so bad that when I left, the MC, Bill Grundfest said, bad man went away. Oh yeah, I remember hearing that. Yeah, that wasn't Sandra,
Starting point is 00:37:21 because I listened to her yesterday. But I mean, it might have been Seinfeld. That's, yeah, yeah, that's good. Again, another. Oh, so you didn't go there, frequented a lot. I did. There was a time when I remember, because you were a big act, which is like, OK,
Starting point is 00:37:39 my third year in comedy. OK, you can work all the clubs, and then you do, because you're greedy. First of all, you want the stage time, but you also want the money, you know, which was just basically like glorified cab fare. We're talking about 15, 20 bucks. But if you worked on the weekends where there was an early show and a late show,
Starting point is 00:37:58 if you worked all the clubs, that would be six sets. I did that frequently. Me too. And of course, the sets were fine. It was like you were getting into cabs and get them. I drove. I drove. I drove from Queens and I would pop you.
Starting point is 00:38:14 To all the different clubs? Yeah. And where would you park? If I had to park by a hydrogen, I'd park and run in. Right. But I didn't. OK, well, see, that's better than what I did, because you were always sweating getting to the next set,
Starting point is 00:38:24 because you booked three sets in a two-hour time Yes, yes, and you just made it and I did my record was seven I did some of running often from the cab to the stage Yeah, like you walk you come into the club and they're like they're waiting for you coming and they push you on yeah, and what we and your clubs were the strip, the catch, and... Improv, strip, catch, and then... Stand Up New York. And then I remember doing Comedy Cellar.
Starting point is 00:38:51 But that was like so far downtown that it was hard to get to the... You know what it's like now, the Cellar? It's, it's, because when I started, they were lucky to have an audience on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, you know? They would have the staff sit there and you would have to go, you would have to go up for the staff.
Starting point is 00:39:11 So people walking down would see that they were, they thought they were customers in the, yeah. But now, do you know, it's like the hottest, it's Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, three shows a night. Three shows. Three shows? Three shows, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, four Friday, four Saturday, and a waiting list only. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:39:32 Yeah, yeah, and now he's buying. Good for him. He's buying another, and yeah, they opened the one around the corner where the Village Underground was, that's all comedy now, and then he just bought the McDonald's, the McDonald's went out of business, and he bought it, Noam bought it,
Starting point is 00:39:45 and he's gonna open up there. So what we did, where we had to go uptown, downtown, this time, that's a done, you could stay on one corner on that Friday and do seven shows and never leave that one block radius. Yeah, but it didn't teach them grit, right? They come out a bunch of pussies, okay? That's what you get when you put all the comedy clubs
Starting point is 00:40:07 on one quarter. Yes, that's true. We had to, I mean, I do look back and shudder, but I also look back and am in a way so grateful that I had to, we were talking about this in my office today because we have Abigail Schreier on this week and her book is about this, that kids just are not asked to go through things anymore.
Starting point is 00:40:30 Like if you're, you know, if the math test stresses you out, don't take it, it's okay. You know, and so they don't have the memory of like accomplishing something when they're young, of overcoming something, even shyness, you know. I mean, no one was more shy than I was. There was no suggestion that this was some sort of defect of humanity and so, you know, just,
Starting point is 00:40:58 you're a marginalized victim of something. You were just shy and get over it. It's not the world's problem, it's your problem. All right, all right. And again, this is where they go, get off my lawn. It's like, engage with the idea. Is the idea wrong? Argue with me on that level, I will respect you.
Starting point is 00:41:20 Hey, I'll be at the David Copperfield Theater at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino June 21st and 22nd in Las Vegas, the Orpheum in Minneapolis, Minnesota July 13th, and the Riverside Theater in Milwaukee on July 14th. July 26th, the MGM Music Hall at Fenway Park, Boston, Massachusetts, and July 27th,
Starting point is 00:41:39 the Toyota Oakdale Theater in Wallingford, Connecticut. I learned so much about Jerry Seinfeld this last month because of all the promotion he did and all the shows he did. And I've known this guy for a very long time. And look up to him, not a phrase I use with very many people. And also, just deeply friendship with him. But I didn't know a lot of these things. I saw him say to Howard Stern, like, the secret to life and he had a really deep friendship with him. But I didn't know a lot of these things.
Starting point is 00:42:05 I saw him say to Howard Stern, like, the secret to life is getting comfortable or something like that with your torture, because he was saying to Howard, all day long, all I'm doing all the time is looking for bits. And Howard said, that sounds like torture. And Jerry said, it is. The secret of life is to just find the torture
Starting point is 00:42:26 that you're comfortable with, something like that. And he said, he mentioned that, and then marriage, kids, it's all that. That is not my life philosophy. Do you look for bits all the time? Because I don't. No. I don't either.
Starting point is 00:42:40 Even when I was young and didn't have three kids and was just crazy mad about finding bits everywhere because it's like this new thing, and you're actually getting paid for it, even if it's $35, I remember literally in bed, like in the middle of coitus, writing something down on the nightstand without taking my dick out of the punani. I mean, that is a love of comedy, ladies and gentlemen.
Starting point is 00:43:06 But I'm the same way. The bits would, especially with kids, because I started talking about that, and it would happen. And I would say, hold on, and I would write it down, and then go to it later. That's the thing. I was never a purpose-filled creator. That's Jerry and Bill Cosby, same thing.
Starting point is 00:43:24 You have to write every day, get in front of the yellow legal pad, whatever. I could never do that. I was more the, I'll get stoned, funny things will fall out of my mouth. Just be vigilant about writing them down. Now, over the course of my lifetime, this is one of my big bugaboos that,
Starting point is 00:43:42 lots of gold I let fall to the ground. Because I didn't write it down at the time because I said, I'll remember. And I'm like, oh, fuck, what was that bit? It was going to work perfectly. But I would say over the course of my lifetime, I probably, guesstimating, got 67.2% of what I thought of. I did record.
Starting point is 00:44:07 When you were high? All my life. Oh, whenever, whenever. All my life. It would just come. Restaurants, I mean I have. Yeah, same for me, same for me. I wasn't one who said time to write.
Starting point is 00:44:18 I didn't set my clock and say time to write. But when I had premises and bits, oh shit, that's something funny, oh that's what I do. I would put it in the book. Then at some point I had to stretch it out and make it into something, right? So, and it's work, it's like homework a little bit, but then when you get on stage and you get a laugh
Starting point is 00:44:39 from something, that's the thing. Well that's the thing, playing the cello. It takes a lot of practice, but it's worth it when you're up there with the orchestra and you're getting the big laughs. But do you miss, because the one thing I miss is as hard as it was back then, but when you were good, when you got better and you were a standup,
Starting point is 00:45:01 is going on in front of a crowd that had never seen you before. Because that's never gonna happen again. That's what I miss is going up in a room full of strangers, and they paid their cover charge, and now here comes this guy, and now it's your job, and there's a little bit of a, you know, you gotta prove yourself to them,
Starting point is 00:45:20 and winning that audience over. That's the thing I hated the most. I swear to God and winning that audience over. That's the thing I hated the most. I swear to God. Now that probably... Wait, but I'm talking about when it worked. When it worked, it was great. Well, that's... I'm sure it was, but...
Starting point is 00:45:36 But you like it. And it doesn't speak highly for my character in this sense because it just come off as a little haughty. I would rather have been like you. That's the preferable way to be that, you know, no, I'm going to win you over. But I was like more haughty about it, I think. Well, you're talking about if they gave you attitude during your set, right?
Starting point is 00:46:00 Then you would be kind of like Larry David was like that, where Larry would turn on the audience, right? First of all, I wasn't, yes. When you're starting, you're not great. That's part of the equation. But another part is that, you know, when I play now, and for God knows how long, I'm attracting the people who know what they're getting.
Starting point is 00:46:20 So it's my audience. So the stuff works because they're my people. Yes. When you're in the clubs, it's my audience. So the stuff works because they're my people. Yes. When you're in the clubs, it's not that, it's potluck audience. And a lot of times, I did have great jokes that went over their head. See, I could see where you, there's a difference.
Starting point is 00:46:39 Mine stuff is more mainstream, right? So I know you're not talking about just specifically political humor, but you do have stuff, but mine's neither, whoever you are, you could probably identify with something I'm saying. I was never meant to be like this mass act that was going to play stadiums.
Starting point is 00:47:01 I'm more like HBO. HBO, Netflix has thousands more movies, and it's great. But HBO is a boutique place, it has a great audience, a nice sized audience, but it's not the biggest thing. And that's as best as I can do or wanna do with the kind of crowd. I'd much rather have that smaller audience that's more sophisticated.
Starting point is 00:47:24 I mean, that's what I'm selling is sophistication. I mean, I owe it to my New Jersey upbringing. But there's a lot of entertainment is just not sophisticated. When I was a kid, and I'm sure there are people going, you vulgar potty mouth, you think you're sophisticated. Well, you know, in this arena that we're in, where everything is like very unsophisticated,
Starting point is 00:47:47 you know, like, I like this lane. Yeah. You know? But it is always going to be somewhat smaller. But do you think it's gotten smaller? Has it gotten smaller? No, no, it's gotten bigger. But it has a ceiling.
Starting point is 00:48:01 All right. Because it's, you know. Not your audience, but in general. Yes, my audience. In general. No, mine. Specifically, my audience has a ceiling. Because it's, you know. Not your audience, but in general. In general. No, mine. Specifically, my audience has a ceiling. Much more, yours has a much bigger arc, I feel. I mean, not to, we're not competing.
Starting point is 00:48:22 I love you as you are. I'm conflict. We have to... And it's just different. It's just different. And that's what's good. Yeah, yours is different from mine. Mine's different from Seinfeld. It's like in The Godfather when Don Corleone says to Brosini, you know, like, good luck with your business.
Starting point is 00:48:40 I'm not going to invest, but it's a job. Inflict. Yeah, interests don't conflict with mine. We don't walk the same, we would be good on the same show because we both appeal. Could we co-headline? We'd be great because we both appeal to a sophisticated audience,
Starting point is 00:48:58 but it's just two sides of the thing. Right, so do you wanna? Yeah, I would love it. I've been, you know, I used to, I did The Mirage with Spade. So do you wanna? Yeah, I would love it. I did the mirage with Spade. Spade and I did the mirage. We would go headline. I was like, I could do it myself, and I have been doing it myself now.
Starting point is 00:49:14 But now the mirage is closing, so I went to the Venetian, I went to the Venetian. But I was like, it's more fun doing 30 minutes. You know what? That's a great compromise I should think about for instead of just not doing it at all. Do a little co. Maybe you do something and then how.
Starting point is 00:49:33 And then we did a Q&A. So instead of 90 minutes you do one hour, is that right? We had an opener and then David would do 25 minutes, I would do 35 minutes. And then we'd both come out and do a little Q&A thing for 10 minutes. And it was like, so, you know, when you gotta do, do you do an hour and a half?
Starting point is 00:49:54 Yeah, wow. Well, you gotta, because it's just you. In Vegas, though? Yes! Don't you have an opener? Don't you have an opener? No. Oh, no, I don't have an opener.
Starting point is 00:50:04 Yeah, I don't wanna, I can't do it. I don't wanna do an hour and a No. No, no, no. I don't have an opener. Yeah. I don't wanna, I can't do it. I don't wanna do an hour and a half. No, I don't, I never wanna. I get tired of myself. Really? 45 minutes. Well. It goes fast, but I mean, that's one reason
Starting point is 00:50:16 I'm thinking about hanging it up for this. Well, you wanna do your editorials, right? That I wanna do forever. That I want, but forever. That I want... Because that's... But they're different every week. You know, I mean, an act is something you build and it's... I always love that. I'm a builder by nature.
Starting point is 00:50:35 But it is like building a ship inside of a bottle. It's just a more elegant way to do it. Or maybe less elegant. I don't know. Some people like a ship in a bottle. I like an act. But you're constantly tinkering and making it bad. Yes. And is that good or bad?
Starting point is 00:50:48 I love it. I love tinkering. But you can't. But with your editorials, you can only tinker up to the point where you say it the first time. And then you don't get to go. Yeah, but I have all week. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:58 But you know with your act, you get feedback from the audience. Of course. And then you tinker a little more. Oh, I know. Yeah, of course. It's all that. It's that they're the director. I'm the actor and they're the director. And it's great. No, I love...
Starting point is 00:51:13 I'll miss that. I know what you're... I understand the kick you're getting out of doing your thing, because that's why I'm doing... That's why I wrote the movie. Yeah. You always got like a million fucking things going. No, really.
Starting point is 00:51:28 As far as like actual projects, I read more about your shit. Yeah, but you read about they announce stuff and sometimes. What's the next one you have? I bet you have one. Supposed to do a bio pic on Jim Valvano. You know Jim Valvano? No, who's that? You should know him.
Starting point is 00:51:49 He was college basketball. Oh, I don't follow college. But this was sports. Really. Take it easy. No, I have a very, this is a sore point, because people are on your case now if you don't follow women's basketball.
Starting point is 00:52:06 And my answer is, I don't follow women's basketball for the same reason I don't follow college basketball. I only want to watch athletes at their very best. That's not a knock on any of them. I don't watch golf, I don't watch hockey, I don't watch soccer. Sports is a waste of time. I enjoy it, you need a waste of time, but I'd like to limit that.
Starting point is 00:52:24 So I'm only gonna watch baseball, football, time. But I'd like to limit that. So I'm only going to watch baseball, football, and basketball, and mostly only in the playoffs. Except for football, that's every week. They're at their very best in the other sports. You just aren't into those sports. But that's the same sport. It's the same sport. Oh, you mean the best in that sport.
Starting point is 00:52:42 Yeah. Oh, I see. I mean, even... And I watch big tennis matches too. Of course they're great. The women athletes are great, but women and men are different. Yeah. Okay. And even Serena Williams said,
Starting point is 00:52:56 she kind of backed up McEnroe when he said, you know, the. Oh yeah, that's ridiculous. That's the number 300 player could beat her. Something like that. And she said, yeah. I mean, it's just when you play against a man, it just comes in faster. Because of nature, because of biology,
Starting point is 00:53:13 which I'm sure the kids are very angry about me even mentioning. How dare you bring up biology in a discussion about biology? But yeah, biology matters, kids. Again, engage with the idea. Engage with the idea. Don't just say, get matters, kids. Again, engage with the idea. Engage with the idea. Don't just say, get off my lawn. Well, where is everybody on that, on males who become females participating in female sports?
Starting point is 00:53:39 Where is that now? Are they allowing it? It's a great question. I don't think it's settled. People have different ideas. One is a third division. Yeah, the division where they compete with each other. The LGBTQ division, like males, females, and everybody else. Whatever stripe.
Starting point is 00:54:00 I never understand why the LGBTQ community wants to be lumped in like that. It's so, you know, remember Gilligan's Island theme? And the rest. And the rest. Yeah. Yeah. It was only two people for crying out loud.
Starting point is 00:54:19 That was somebody's thing. It doesn't just say, and then they did. The amount it takes to say, and the rest, you could fit in Mary Ann and whatever. The professor and Mary Ann. Oh, then they did. Yeah, then they did, because their agents got on the phone and said, come on.
Starting point is 00:54:39 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What was their credit? You may have seen her as the rest. She played one of the rest on Gilligan's Island. Anyway, that's my analogy to the LGBT.
Starting point is 00:54:57 So many different... But we were talking about sport. Oh, yes. What were you gonna say there before I... Well, Jim Valvano was a... Oh, Jim Valvano, yeah. He's the coach who's, the Jimmy V, you know, the Jimmy V with the SB awards.
Starting point is 00:55:11 Yeah, you have to educate me on college, I know nothing. Jimmy V, he coached NC State in the 80s, when they beat... That's Duke? No, North Carolina, North Carolina State. That's Duke? No, it's North Carolina State. Duke is Duke, North Carolina. North Carolina State. That's Duke? No, it's North Carolina State. Duke is Duke, North Carolina State.
Starting point is 00:55:29 Yeah, they're both in North Carolina. Yeah. I thought one was that. No, Duke is Duke. I thought North Carolina State was at Duke or something. Duke University, that's Coach K. And North Carolina State was Jim Valvano, who's an Italian guy from Queens. And he was this fish out of water
Starting point is 00:55:47 that became this coach who... You play him? Yeah, one of the biggest upsets was when they beat Yusit in the NCAA Championship. I don't even know this, but I think you're perfect for it. No, really. Just listening to this, it does sound like you are. You know who, if you see him, you know,
Starting point is 00:56:06 because he gave a famous SB speech, the first year of the SBs, he gave the speech about don't give up, don't ever give up. When he was dying, he died two months after that. He died like 10 years after he won the championship. Anyway, whatever. Can I tell you a college sports story about Mr. T? Yes.
Starting point is 00:56:23 So it's 1983, I'm on the set of. T. Yes. So it's 1983. I'm on the set of DC cab. Yes. Mr. T. And you know, a lot of time in between shots, as you well know, all your acting work. And I'm doing the New York Times crossword puzzle because that's what 27-year-old actor Billy Maher did. What day?
Starting point is 00:56:42 What day of the week was it? I don't know. Good question. One I could handle. Because the week was it? I don't know. Good question. One I can handle. Because I do the Monday and Tuesdays. Yeah. Okay. So I say, and the theme was college sports teams.
Starting point is 00:56:54 And I'm struggling. And I say, hey, Mr. T, do you know what the name of the Penn State team is? Nitty Lions. And I go like, oh my god, it does fit. Nittany Lions. I said, hey, why didn't they call them Nittany Lions? He goes, I sure as hell want some super white man. I remember it to this day.
Starting point is 00:57:20 How should I know what a white man? What one stupid white man did. It was just, it was either, you know, that was his character, it was surly. Were you a Rocky guy? Rocky was big in my childhood. Of course, well the movie, you mean? Yeah, the movie.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Well I was 20 when Rocky came out. Yeah, I was 18, yeah. So, I mean it was a big movie, but I had much bigger problems when I was 20. I mean, that's right in that age where you're just, you're an adult, but you're, I always call it the infancy of adulthood because just like an infant, when you're an infant adult, which is 18, 19, 20, you're powerless in the same way you were when you were an infant. Like everyone is more powerful than you about everything.
Starting point is 00:58:06 You know, you don't really get to control your own life, whether it's what you can afford and, like, what you have to do to survive. Were you home still? No, I was in college. You know, again, like, living in places I didn't want to live with people I didn't want to live with. You're not controlling your life, just like an infant.
Starting point is 00:58:24 I don't think I liked childhood because I wasn't want to live with. You're not controlling your life, just like an infant. I don't think I liked childhood because I wasn't in control, you know? I'm smaller, people could boss me around, tell me what to do. It all just grated against me. Yeah, but you, there's also something special about being a child and not having all the shit that you have now as an adult, the knowledge of it, everything is magic kind of,
Starting point is 00:58:50 isn't it, as a child? There is a magic still, there's an innocence? For me, the magic came later. You know, there is magic in life, there absolutely is. That explains the stripper pole. Exactly, you're sitting by a stripper pole. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, I mean, people are just, you know,
Starting point is 00:59:13 molded into different personality types. And I know from talking to parents, they always tell me, like, you can tell at the age of two what they're gonna be like. Like, oh, that's a wild one, you know? I wouldn't know this, but is that what you found? I don't know if that's true. My 26th, my youngest, was a lot of,
Starting point is 00:59:35 him and my wife just, boom. Punched each other? No, no, no, no. What? Just butted heads so much. That's odd for a boy to butt heads with the mom. Usually the boy butts heads with the dad. Well, yeah, I mean, he did. He did. He was...
Starting point is 00:59:55 not easy. He was not an easy kid, you know. He was rebellious. He's the youngest. Is there a syndrome with being... And he got out of it. He grew out of it. I mean, he was a kid. I laugh sometimes. He would, I remember when he was eight and he was trying to go outside.
Starting point is 01:00:10 And I was like, Joe, you can't go out without your shoes on. And he just looked at me and went, my shoes are on. And he was in bare feet, standing there in bare feet. That's what something Trump would do. Really? My shoes are on? Yes, I made that now. But he's, he's a great guy. That's what something Trump would do. Really? My shoes are on. Yes, I've made that now.
Starting point is 01:00:27 A little bit, yeah. But he's mellowed out. Yeah, I've heard that story. I hear a lot about kids in their 20s and teens, because my friends are always talking about their kids, or if I'm close with them, I ask them about them. And I've heard this story also. The kid who is a, just not getting his shit together,
Starting point is 01:00:51 and it's almost always a boy, not a girl. It's the boys who are in crisis, more than the girls at that age. Well, girls are too, with suicide and... That's my experience, and my daughter is the oldest, and she was the the a student, hard worker, go work, get a job, do this, and the boys were more like me. I was not that.
Starting point is 01:01:14 I flunked. I went to three high schools. I flunked out of two high schools. Flunked out? Yeah. But from just being irresponsible, from just cutting school, not going, not caring, just wanting to have... I was the exact opposite.
Starting point is 01:01:30 Exact opposite. I was number seven in my class, which is as high as I, I mean, that's about right. I'm not the smartest. That tracks, though, that tracks. Yeah, no, I was definitely afraid of not doing well in school Yeah, I didn't know what they were. It's not like my parents were gonna beat me I mean they weren't they you know, that's not cool. I finally graduated. I went to college
Starting point is 01:01:56 I went to Queens College, but I I would Register I would get here's what I would do. This is this know, I talk about stupidity. I would get a student loan. I would register. There'd be money left over on that student loan, and I would have money all of a sudden. And my parents thought I was going to college, and I would leave the house and never go. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:19 And so after like two years, probably, I had 20 credits. And then as I got a little older, I got a little more serious and I went back, I studied accounting and I got about 100 credits and I never graduated, but I actually graduated, I got a two year degree, but I never got the four year degree. But when did you, where in your childhood
Starting point is 01:02:46 did you have the idea that you wanted to be a comedian? Or was it not in childhood at all? In my teenage years, it was. Yeah. Yeah, I was always a fan of comedy stand-up too, you know. I knew before I was 10. Yeah. Like, I always wanted to do that.
Starting point is 01:03:03 I was probably the, you know probably the class clown, I guess. Class comedian, different than the clown. Yeah, yes, yes. The clown threw a spitball. The comedian said things that even the teacher sometimes laughed at. Did you ever make the teacher laugh? I don't remember that.
Starting point is 01:03:17 That's when I knew I was fucking sophisticated. I had nuns, but nuns didn't laugh, yeah, yeah. But I used to work in a theater. I used to... In a movie theater. I was an usher. And I remember it was a Neil Simon movie. And I remember I would know exactly every moment in that movie. And I'd be out in the lobby, you know, sweeping up the popcorn, whatever. And I knew when a funny part was coming up,
Starting point is 01:03:42 and I wanted to go in there and listen to the audience. I wanted to have the audience experience, and I wanted, yeah, to feel that. This was, I didn't know that I wanted to do stand-up yet, but I knew, I was, that's what, I was drawn to that, you know? And then stand-up was just, I had heard about it on audition night at the improv. Someone told me about, once a month they do audition night.
Starting point is 01:04:07 And I got five minutes up and that was the first time. And then when I do think about those years, what mostly stands out is being able to just survive on fumes. Like what was I actually surviving on? It wasn't money, it wasn't any women, it wasn't the promise of a better tomorrow because that certainly was in doubt.
Starting point is 01:04:32 Whether you were gonna make it as a comic, it seemed very far away. It was, the one thing it kind of had was the respect of some of those people who were a little ahead of you. The ones who said, yes, you passed the audition. You're a funny guy. That is really what I was surviving on in those years.
Starting point is 01:04:54 But also the audience, right? You liked being that feeling. No, because that wasn't bad either. The first year. Yes, you would bomb. You would bomb. Well, first year, I don't think I'd even get on stage. Firstly, you have to hang out at the club.
Starting point is 01:05:08 Yes, same as Sam. For a long time, okay. Then you get on last. Right. No, listen, that's what I tell them. We talked about this sooner, earlier, but I never got to it. The first few years is the hardest thing
Starting point is 01:05:23 in, I think, in any business. I always say it. Because. First two years. Yes, you think, in any business. I always say it. First two years. Yes, you go on like you say. You hang out, you go on last. So now you're the comic who's up in front of three drunks and two people. And you're the guy who can't handle that.
Starting point is 01:05:38 Exactly. You don't have the experience for that. I like what they do in medical school when they make you go to a residency and work 80 hours a week. Because that's who you want looking at you is some bleary-eyed, I know what it's like to be overtired, to think that they do that in hospitals.
Starting point is 01:05:55 But yes, you go on last, David Say, God bless him, loves him, still love him if he's around, once brought me on with the words, here's the last guy, I forget his name. And then walked off the other side of the stage into the bathroom and catch a rising star. That's funny. I love his memories, I really do.
Starting point is 01:06:14 Because they're memories. You want to relive them. Like people say, would you like to go back? None of them relive that, no. Yeah, well, no, but I no, but I look fondly back at when I was a comic and I was a working comic in the city and my kids were little, so that was hard too, but I kind of am nostalgic about that, you know?
Starting point is 01:06:39 Of course. What did your kids think when they were little and Daddy was a celebrity? Did they, I'm always fascinated about that moment. Paul McCartney tells that story about his kid when he was little and he said he was riding by on a pony and the little kid goes, hey, you're Paul McCartney. You know, the moment it dawns on the kid
Starting point is 01:07:04 that the parent is also this personage. and I was like, hey, you're Paul McCartney. You know, the moment it dawns on the kid that the parent is also this personage. I mean, well, I remember when I was a working comic and my daughter was the only, my daughter was born, we didn't have any, she was like three, and I had a gig in Delaware. I had a drive-through gig in Delaware and my wife decided to come over with my daughter.
Starting point is 01:07:26 So she's in the back of the room with my daughter. And she's three. She doesn't know what I do. Right? And she's coloring in the room. I'm on stage now in the room. My wife's with her. And I'm on stage.
Starting point is 01:07:42 And after about five minutes, I'm getting laughs. I'm getting laughs. This is what my wife told me. And my daughter just looked up and went, Daddy's funny. That's funny. So she didn't know what I was doing, but she realized I was making people laugh, I guess. Terribly, she said, Daddy's bombing.
Starting point is 01:08:01 Daddy's doing that same shit he does. Yeah. Daddy's a hack same shit he does. Daddy's a hack. Daddy needs to change the tag on that one. Oh yeah. The Gilligan's Island routine. But you know, my kids came to the show, when I got the show, so my twins were like three, four when the show started, and the show was on for nine years.
Starting point is 01:08:30 So we moved to LA. We were in New York when I got the show, and the first year I went back and forth. We didn't move out, because I didn't know if it was gonna get canceled or not. So my wife and kids stayed in New York. Second year we moved out. All right, so now I'm on a show. My kids are three.
Starting point is 01:08:47 When the show goes off the air, they're 12. So that's basically daddy. That's how they know daddy's universe, you know? And now it ends. Right. And they took it harder than I did. My twins are 12 years old now. It was not an easy... Because they couldn't get a good table anymore? And they took it harder than I did. My twins are 12 years old now.
Starting point is 01:09:06 It was not easy. Because they couldn't get a good table anymore? Yeah. They knew we were gonna fly private, but the transition was hard, man. I mean, it was, I don't wanna get into details, but it was rough for them, yeah. And I realized, yeah, all of a sudden,
Starting point is 01:09:23 that world that they saw daddy ends and I don't know. Do you remember that? Of course you do, you did it. Why? Do you remember that show? You did. After, I loved that show, it was like a dramedy. Man of a Suriname.
Starting point is 01:09:38 Yes. With Scott Bakula, right? And Andre Brauer. Andre Brauer. That really spoke to me. I mean, at the time of my life, that was a very... I mean, that's on the list of things I'm most proud of. Oh, really?
Starting point is 01:09:54 Yeah, I don't blame you. That's a really... Yeah. It was a really... I mean, it was just two seasons, and we won a Peabody Award, which means you're in danger of getting canceled. It means people think there's quality there,
Starting point is 01:10:11 but nobody's watching, really. And a month after we won the Peabody Award, we got canceled, yeah. What is the Peabody Award? I don't know. The guy Peabody is a guy. I've certainly heard of it. He was a guy, some smart guy from some college, university,
Starting point is 01:10:26 and they named an award after him. I have zero respect for any awards. It used to be a stone in my shoe, and now I love it. I don't want them to give me anything, because they're almost like the media. They've exposed themselves to be just not something people respect for good reason. Like an Oscar?
Starting point is 01:10:50 Any of them. Emmys is my category. But also Peabody, I mean, Larry King, every time I was on you he would say, you are more like Mark Twain than anybody that we've had in a long time. And I would take it as a great compliment. No, I don't know if that's gospel or if it's true,
Starting point is 01:11:07 but it always amused me that the Mark Twain Award did give out the award to like 20 people who might have been, I'm sure there were many of them, or all of them probably, or fine comics, but are not like Mark Twain. There's one guy who's actually like Mark Twain, much more than the people. Again, great actors, comics as they are.
Starting point is 01:11:28 That kind of stuff is very funny to me. Did you, you never did the Washington Press correspondence theater, right? I did. You did? Yes, I did it in 95. I did it too. Yeah, what year?
Starting point is 01:11:44 That's funny. Clinton? too. Yeah, what year? Clinton? Yes. Yeah, Clinton. And I did it for, and that's the reason they had me, because that was during, what's her name? What's her name? Oh, the woman who had the affair with Clinton.
Starting point is 01:11:59 Monica Lewinsky? Monica Lewinsky, yeah, it was during Monica Lewinsky. And so they hired the innocuous, yeah. Yeah. Well, they didn't make that cagey calculation with me. And I remember I said one bad word, I did say the word fuck in front of the President of the United States. And the next year, People Magazine wrote about whoever was hosting and they said, they wrote,
Starting point is 01:12:25 last year Bill Maher delivered an obscenity laced monologue. I love this, in one year, one fuck became an obscenity laced monologue. Oh, that's a, for them one fuck is all it takes. How did it go over with? You know, it's a shit rule because first of all, like nobody wants to be seen laughing at what they're not to go over with... You know, it's a shit room, because first of all, like, nobody wants to be seen laughing at what they're
Starting point is 01:12:51 not supposed to be laughing at. So you do need a juggler or somebody, like, who is not political at all. The mistake they make is going, oh, this is a political event. We'll get the political comedian. It's the last person you should get. Yes, but that's, I look back at mine and think, I shouldn't have done it because.
Starting point is 01:13:10 No, I wish I hadn't. Well, but you for that reason, me for the reason of, you should speak to what's going on. You should make jokes about, I wasn't even aware. The one person, and he and I are not really friendly, I don't know why, I don't hate him at all, and I hope he doesn't hate me, Stephen Colbert. Some people just don't vibe.
Starting point is 01:13:31 But I gotta give it, the one he did in front of Bush when he was in character was genius, and was the best one anybody ever did, and was ballsy. It was everything that to me marks excellence. It was truly funny. It was original, and it was courageous. And it spoke to what was going on at the time, right? Did you see this year's Colin Jones? I thought he did a good job. No. You know who he is, right? Of course! I've seen it live. Yeah, I'm sure you know, he has a... Oh, of course. He has a lot of life.
Starting point is 01:14:05 Yeah, I'm sure he did. He's a brilliant joke writer. Yeah. But I remember, I just did my act and I said, I don't do political, I just do my act. And they said, yeah. That's good.
Starting point is 01:14:17 They said, we'll pay you double. That's, yeah. Yeah. That's what they need to do. But then, you know, Arianna Huffington's looking at you like, why is he up there? You know?
Starting point is 01:14:28 Exactly. But you never did anything, to your great credit, that like embarrassed your kids, your family. I mean, so many stars have to walk some sort of walk of shame because they just... Well, I've done stuff that hasn't... That's not... You've had bombs, everybody has bombs.
Starting point is 01:14:49 That's not the same thing. I'm talking about, you know, getting out of your car and you can see your balls. Oh, wow, wow, wow, wow. You know, just anything that brings, like, where people... I always say it this way. Whenever you... If you can get through show business life without ever doing anything where it made people go,
Starting point is 01:15:07 oh. Yeah, but you've never done it, only if things you've said, things you've said, right? Let's not go there with me. But things you've said, but you're the guy, that's your job, your job is to go. Part of it is, yes, and I've also done stupid things, but yes, it's much more likely That's your job. Your job is to go... Yes, and I've also done stupid things.
Starting point is 01:15:25 But yes, it's much more likely if you're mixing dangerous chemicals that there's going to be something blow up. Or to use another analogy, you are going to make more errors at third base than second base. Yes. There's just more sharply hit grounders your way. Right. But you're the guy.
Starting point is 01:15:46 Yeah. You're the guy in the arena, as Teddy Roosevelt would say. I want to play the hot corner. Yeah. They don't call it the hot corner for nothing. So you don't even drink or you do drink? I don't drink. You know.
Starting point is 01:15:58 I have vices. I have my vices. What? I gamble too much. Really? You gamble like heavy money? No, not heavy money. But I'm not a gambler. I'm a gambler. I'm a gambler. I'm a vices. What? I gamble too much. Really? You gamble like heavy money? No, not heavy money.
Starting point is 01:16:07 But I was in Vegas yesterday. We went for a poker tournament. I drove home this morning. I got home at 1.30 this morning. A poker tournament? Yeah, there's a lot. You mean you're that serious about poker? Yeah, but it's nothing. It's, the stakes are low.
Starting point is 01:16:27 Well, how's the relative weeks? Well, how much is lower do you not wanna say? Because people were- It's the World Series of Poker. They have tournaments every day for three months. This was a thousand dollar buy-in. You put a thousand dollars in and- So how much can you lose at a time?
Starting point is 01:16:40 That's it, a thousand balls. That's how much the entry is. For each hand or? No, no, no, no. Oh. It's a thousand balls. That's how much the entry is. Breach hand or? No, no, no, no. It's a thousand dollar entry. There's 3000 people who are in the tournament. They play and when you get knocked out, you're eliminated.
Starting point is 01:16:55 They play until there's one winner, but they like the top 400 cash in. I never understood gambling. Why it was amusing to people. It just made me nervous. like I'm losing money slowly. I realized that even if I'm up, I won't be in five minutes. It's just, I'm just gonna slowly lose this money, which is okay if you know you're gonna lose it
Starting point is 01:17:16 to begin with, but to like really go there thinking and then be so disappointed because of course, you're not supposed to win in a casino. Well, you know what? They say psychologically, the gambler really wants to lose. Is that right? I don't get it, I don't get that, but they say subconsciously.
Starting point is 01:17:36 Really? They wanna punish themselves. Well, you know, I think it was one of those, Jimmy the Greek, somebody said, his most, the most favorite thing for him to do in his life is to gamble and win. And his second most favorite during his is to gamble and lose. Yeah. Isn't that right?
Starting point is 01:17:51 Yeah. It's just the thrill. Yeah. I mean, I've never got a thrill. I also think it's amazing what they get away with. I don't know if you saw recently, but the Supreme Court heard this ruling about affirmative action at colleges. It was brought mostly by Asians who said they were being discriminated at Harvard and a number of other schools, because if you just did it by blind admittance,
Starting point is 01:18:20 like 50% of Harvard would be Asian. They just do well on you. Just when I'm saying anything about anybody, the Asians, they can fucking do a test. So they were kind of penalized for like winning at the game. And I feel like the same thing goes on at a casino. Like a card counter, that's not cheating. Cheating is if I have a piece in my ear
Starting point is 01:18:47 and there's a guy across the way, you can see the card, that's cheating. Card counting is just being good at it. Just being good. He's not breaking any rules. No, he's just good at it, and you throw him out for being good? Yeah, no, it's...
Starting point is 01:19:03 I'm running as a one issue candidate on this and only this, this is my one issue, I can't take it anymore, this guy. I agree, I agree, yeah, what is he doing? He's just being smart, that's all. Do you have anything to plug? I gotta pee. I have a movie that I'm in coming out July 11th.
Starting point is 01:19:24 Well, this is the worst plug I've ever seen in my, I have a movie that I'm in coming out July 11th. Wow. This is the worst plug I've ever seen in my... Yeah, I got... You're like an old Jewish man on the porch. I'm not the lead. Oh, I don't want to bother anybody with my movie. It'll be a nuisance to you. If you're there, if you're there.
Starting point is 01:19:40 I'm fine here on the porch. I don't need to come in. If it's raining and you got nowhere to go. Anyway, the movie's called Fly Me to the Moon. Oh, OK. Fly Me to the Moon. It's with Channing Tatum and Scarlett Johansson, July 11th comes out.
Starting point is 01:19:55 Yeah, and it's about? Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum? Yeah. That's a major. I got a nice role. It's not super big, but it's not. So I'm guessing you're the love interest for Scarlett Johansson and Channing Tatum
Starting point is 01:20:06 is just like the butt boy that you're both. It's about Apollo 11. It's about the moon lady. It's like a historical fiction. That takes place in 69? Yeah, we went to NASA. We went to Cape Kennedy. It was cool.
Starting point is 01:20:19 But anyway, yeah, that's it, July 11th. And then this. Well, Fly Me to the Moon is also one of the great songs of all time. Not just done by Sinatra, but there was a very funny movie that was done in 1997, I'm guessing, called Down with Love. If you never saw it, I recommend it highly. It's with Renée Zellweger.
Starting point is 01:20:38 From 97? Yeah. Yes. It's a parody of the Rock Hudson Doris Day movies. So if you don't know the Rock Hudson Doris Day movies, it's not as funny. It's genius. The writing.
Starting point is 01:20:54 What's the name of it? And they have a club, Down with Love. But refresh yourself with the Doris Day Rock Hudson movies first. And then they play Fly Me to the Moon, as done by Esther Droboto, who was married, I think, to the guy who wrote, Antonio Carlos Jobim, who wrote all those great, brought Samba to America,
Starting point is 01:21:15 the girl from Ipanema, tall and thin and young and lovely. And she does a rendition of Fly Me to the Moon. So now I have what you're saying, I kind of have to watch a Rock Hudson. No, but you don't remember those Rock Hudson. Yeah, kind of. You know, they were really funny. I mean, they were of their time.
Starting point is 01:21:36 And the one, the big one they did, the plot is they're on a party phone. A party phone where people, kids have no idea what I'm talking about. It's even before our time. But you'd get on the phone and then be, you have to share the line with other people. Would you please get off this line? I have to make a call.
Starting point is 01:21:54 I mean, it's, so. Yeah, I saw, I watched Marty a little while back. It came on somewhere. Marty, yeah. Talking about things that are dated. And the mother was talking to her sister. You know, she had an Italian accent. And she goes, I want Marty to get married.
Starting point is 01:22:11 Come on, I want to see him get married. Look at me. How long am I going to be here? I'm a 57 years old. I said, what? Right. I said, oh, no. Well, I know.
Starting point is 01:22:24 We still have a future for us, right? All right, we're up. All right. You didn't have to take a break. No, I was having too much fun. I couldn't turn myself away from it. You pre-gamed it, right? Yes.

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