Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Bill Burr Returns
Episode Date: June 28, 2021Comedian Bill Burr feels honored to be Conan O’Brien’s friend. Bill sits down with Conan to talk about the art of roasting, steering into shortcomings with character acting, his fandom for CHiPs ...and other 70s tv, and dog advice. Plus, Conan gives an update on his beach house situation as he and his team Review the Reviewers. Got a question for Conan? Call our voicemail: (323) 451-2821.For Conan videos, tour dates and more visit TeamCoco.com.
Transcript
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Hi, my name's Bill Byrne. I feel honored to be the great Conan O'Brien's close friend.
Oh, God, that do that.
He never calls.
Hello and welcome to another episode of Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend podcast where we
will just let it all hang out. I think literally we're all sitting here nude.
Yeah, I think that it just automatically now people think let it all hang out like you're
in this. It was like a term in the like think that in the 70s or late 60s they'd be like
let it all hang out man just be yourself. But now of course, because people are perverted,
it became a euphemism for let your penis hang out, let your appendage hang out of its zipper,
its enclosement, if you will. That's not what I meant. I'm not that kind of comedian. I meant we
just act like ourselves. We just let it all happen. We let it all hang the way a cock. I don't know why
I did that. Sorry. I went, I had to. I had to get away from it.
This is the guy that gets on us for doing big dick history.
I know.
Yeah, you had to do another plug for that thing.
Very important segment.
It's funny. You guys talked about made a joke about us being nude. I, the other day,
it was very hot here in Los Angeles, really hot and you will support me on this, Sona.
I never wear shorts.
No, I very rarely see shorts.
I mean, it can be, I can be in the desert. It can be like 120 degrees and I'm always,
my legs are always covered.
It's dangerous.
What?
It's dangerous for you to wear shorts.
And for onlookers.
I made the mistake the other day of wearing shorts because it was so hot and we were taping
the show. Martin Short was the guest and he came out during rehearsal and I wish you had
been there for this Sona because he is one of the best insult comedians of all time and we
weren't even rolling tape or anything. And he just told in two minutes, 155 cruel jokes about
my legs and me wearing shorts. And I mean, I can't even remember most of them because it was
like a machine gun and everyone, the crew, everybody was howling and laughing at me.
Now, so you're off to summer camp. Is that the idea? You know, I'm going to go to summer camp.
Is that, well, I hope you have a good time. You know, and then now is that those freckles,
they're benign. Are they benign? Have they been chet and just whang, whang, whang, whang.
And of course, I maintain he's, you know, funniest human being on this spinning globe.
He's hilarious, but merciless. And I, I remembered thinking it's the one time I wore shorts and
I'm never wearing them again. Okay. I don't care if it's. So he hurt your feelings a little. No, no,
I just, it's. It's okay if he did. No, it just, like, he found the vulnerability. I must completely,
I must immediately seal the vulnerability. You know what I'm saying? When they built the second
death star, they didn't build the same vulnerability again. Did they, Matt? Yeah, they did. Oh,
did they? Oh, yeah. It was worse. No, I'm sorry. I mean, I should have. Yes, I did, but yeah,
they did. Well, yeah, instead of just a thermal exhaust port, you could fly a full couple of
ships in there and get it this time. I didn't realize that I can't remember. I thought it blew
up. I can't remember why it blew up. But I get what you're saying. I think like one time I wore
a sweater with a collar on it and you lit into me and I was like, I'm never wearing that again.
Why did you have that sweater? Conan. What do you mean? Why did he have that sweater?
What he just wanted? Why do you have shorts? Well, everyone has shorts. Yeah, but come on.
You know, you're gonna get made fun of. Right. That's true. Here's the thing. You make fun of
yourself. You're the one who always says how like, pale your skin is, how many freckles you have,
how freakishly long your legs are. I had a memory in camp. I was in summer camp in freedom, New
Hampshire. The year was 1974, I think. And I'll never forget, the food wasn't great on this camping
trip. And I remember they, someone lopped off a giant slice of spam and dropped it into a frying
pan. And I looked at it and then I looked at my legs and realized that they look exactly the same.
If you want to know what my bare flesh looks like, open any can of spam from like the 1940s.
I've heard you reference spam for your flesh before, but I didn't realize there was an actual
origin story. Yeah, there was an origin story. I remember looking at it and then looking at my
leg and being really bummed out and then taking a bite out of my leg and realizing it tastes
very similar to spam. I'm not saying this to make fun of you, but I just thought that during the
summer, especially when it's really hot, you have to be covered like head to toe,
to wear a hat and like long pants and like UV protection shirts, which I didn't even know
existed until I started working for you. And bulk and bulk.
I do have UV protection shirts stashed everywhere. Yeah. The way an alcoholic hides bottles.
You're dope at it. I have UV protection, a shirt stashed. So you know in those any after
school movie or whatever, when they depict someone who's got a drinking problem, you know,
they, it's always someone opens a closet or something and there's all these empty vodka
bottles. That's what it's like for me, but it's cut off sleeves. It's just the sleeve that comes
up that you can buy from some company and they're called like gloody duties and you pull them on
and they cover just your sleeves. Gloody duties. And I've got all those loose fitting shirts that
all those companies make. Yeah. And I've got SPF 50 stashed everywhere. I know. It's not your fault.
It's not my fault. God did it to me. A cruel God. A very cruel God. Well, I'm going to have a guest
today who understands my pain. That's true. You are. Yeah. And this is maybe, you know,
he'll understand. My guest today is a hilarious comedian and co-creator of the Netflix series
F is for Family. He's now on a comedy tour across the country and tickets can be found at
billburr.com. Thrilled. He's with us today. Bill Burr. Welcome.
Last time you were on, you said, you felt great and you only said that you felt great because
you knew that I couldn't take a compliment, that it causes me pain and humiliation. You know,
it's funny. I forgot that I said that and that was my thought when I said great this time.
You and I are made of such similar stuff. You understand. So I walked in the door and you
looked up at me and you went, Jesus. And I went, Jesus. No, you said it first. Oh, I said it first.
Okay. I walk in and I see you and I go, Jesus. And you say, Jesus, that's all I grew up hearing
anybody say when they saw anybody else good, bad or indifferent was, Jesus. Jesus. That was the
one I wanted. That can mean like, oh, Jesus, I don't like this guy or that can mean like, I love
this guy, but I'm just not allowed to say that. Yes. Jesus was everything. It was just Jesus.
Jesus. Oh, look at this character. Oh, God. Look at this guy. That's another one could go anyway.
Look at this character. I knew so many people who weren't funny, but their way of being funny was
anyone would walk in the room and go, oh, Jesus, look at this guy coming in here. Look at this
guy. Oh, God. Now we're in for it. You're like, well, there's no joke there. There's nothing there.
And you'd be like, oh, God, Jesus. Oh, God, here comes this guy. Oh, God. Oh, boy. Oh, God.
Oh, here comes trouble. Here comes trouble. Look at this guy. Hide your wall. It's just like,
it was just it's standard. It just like just lines that just fit. Yeah. Also, you know,
in a bit like that one time, Colin Quinn, he used to do all of those, those social stupid things
that people say. Yep. One of my favorite ones that he did was the, and you know me,
like you just like, like the arrogant guy and you know me, you know, I'm not, it's like, no,
I don't really know you. I don't know you. I don't know you and I don't care to know you.
You know how I am or whatever. It's just like, yeah, I liked ever since he's done that bit,
I kind of realized how many people do it and how self-serving it is. Oh, boy, you know me.
You know me and me. Oh, God, don't get me started because you know me. There's another thing. I
knew a producer. You know me. I don't give a fuck. I never met you before in my life. That's why I'm
bringing it up. I knew a producer when I first came out to LA, one of my first jobs and the guy
didn't have a sense of humor and he'd just be like, oh, look at this guy here. Whenever I came
into a room, look at this guy. Look at this. Uh-oh. Firecracker. What are you talking about?
You've not described my personality in any way. I'm not a firecracker. You don't need to look out.
It's filler. It's filling the awkwardness of coming in there. He probably knows he isn't funny.
He knows he isn't good at small talk, so he's just accepted it and it's his autopilot dialogue.
But you know, I realize that. It's like when Matthew McConaughey goes, all right, all right,
all right. That's just him dealing with being famous and getting from the car to whatever the
fuck he's going. He goes, all right, all right, all right. And he just plows through.
I have found, and I hate to admit this, but I have found that if I quickly meet a group of people
and they're like, oh, Conan, I go, oh, hey, how you doing? If there's four of them, I'll say to
three of them, nice meeting you. And then the last one, I'll be like, I don't know about this guy.
Not so sure about him. And the first three are like, oh, that's great. Oh, that's great. And I
shouldn't admit that because it works every time. You make the escape during the laugh.
I make the escape during the laugh. That's when I get away. That's when I get in the car really
quickly and I go. But if you pick one guy and you go negative hard on him for no reason,
the other three like it. They love it. And I don't understand. They have status now.
Yeah. They have more frequent flyer miles in their conversation. Yeah. They're like, oh,
man, Conan really ripped Matt a new ass. So Matt, well, what did Matt, you know, what's?
Yeah. I don't know about Nick. Matt's and coach, they got bumped up to business class.
Yeah. They feel great. And you just kept going. Nice meeting you guys. But Nick, I don't know
about Nick. Oh, man, you should have seen him rip Nick a new asshole. He fucking tore Nick apart.
Did he? All he did was say, I'm not so sure about Nick. Seconds after learning he even existed.
Dude, he smelled it on you. Oh, man. He just knew who you were. He got you. He fucking roasted you.
Yeah. That's a very overly used word now. Roasted. Yep. Roasted is an art and it's like,
it takes time to really roast somebody, preparation and jokes and all of that. It's just if somebody
just came by and, you know, shit, they're just shitting on you. Yeah. There's shitting on you,
which is actually more insulting than being roasted because somebody cared enough to sit down and get
some writers and pretend that they said it, right? It's how most people do it. Just shitting on somebody.
Yes. That can just, you know, that's just the first thing. Hey, look at your fucking shirt.
I saw, yeah. Well, I notice this a lot too. If you look at how the media covers late night shows,
I just noticed that there always, some late night hosts will just do kind of us like, more or less
say, yeah, you know, Ted Cruz or somebody's, you know, he's not my cup of tea or something. And then
you read on one of the online things, host Roasted Cruz. I hate that. And you're like,
and then you look at what he said and you go like, not really, but it's all, you know,
you got to get click bait. And it's just, and also take down, total take down of Trump.
That's that, but that's used straight, that it's used on animal videos too,
because I was watching one the other day. They actually do take each other down.
No, but it was one, I wanted to see something, if anything, if I got an orangutan had a natural
predator. I don't know why I got, I was watching every, every which way you can. And then I just
started looking up a ring of 10 and I just want to see if it had a natural predator.
And somebody went down this and I forget what animal it was, but it says, you know,
it absolutely, you know, destroys the orangutan. Nothing happened. Although it was one that said,
you know, Wolverine destroys wolf. And what really came up was the wolf came up,
bit it a couple of times and then just realized it was more trouble than it was worth.
But the Wolverine didn't really do anything to him other than just be a pain in the ass.
And it went away. But the title, you would have thought it was just like, oh man, this Wolverine
is going to somehow hang on to, I mean, this wolf's going to hang on to this Wolverine,
take the punishment and kill it. Like usually.
But that's, but they got you to watch the whole video. And I think that's the essence now
of our discourse in the United States is everyone's roasting, taking down and destroying someone
else. And then you look at it and they're more or less just saying, you know, I don't really agree
with what he did. Yeah, I don't really agree with their policy. The best is when I like when they
take with comedians, they'll take something you said on a podcast or your material, and then
they shoehorn it into their political opinion. Yeah. Yeah. And then they act like you said it
and they're like, wow, I never thought of it that way. It's like, no, this is how you think.
And now you're trying to make it seem like I said that. And it's one of those things you can't
jump in and say, that's not what I meant, because then you just, it's not worth it is said a lot
nowadays. It's not worth it. Don't get involved. If you pay attention to it, it's strange. If you
don't, the world is exactly the way it's always been. Yeah. I have my advice to everyone listening
is really don't pay close attention. Most problems work themselves out, not global warming, but
it's too big a problem. I can't think about it. Just don't pay too close attention to what's
happening in the world. That's a bad message, isn't it? It's the only way to protect yourself.
I've just gone back and I'm watching all these movies from the 70s because that was a great
time for me because I was young and all. It wasn't a great time for most people, but it was a great
time for me where I was just a kid and I just had a paper route and I collected football cards.
So I go back then, I see the cars, I see the movies, I see the price of gas and I just sort of
tune out what's going on now. It's a way to combat the real bad stuff that is happening and then the
chicken little bullshit where everything gets so blown out of proportion now just because they need
people to look at what they're trying to get you to click on. So I actually stumbled across
some good movies. You know what, I saw that I had never seen was Straight Time with Dustin
Hoffman. I had never seen that. I don't know if I've seen that movie. Straight Time with Dustin
Hoffman. I'm going to write that down. Oh my God, is that a great movie? I just noticed
things were, they just looked shitty in the 70s. They just did. When I was growing up,
all cops that I would see, all the Boston cops were heavy guys that just didn't look happy or
look good. And now I walk around, policemen for the most part are in very good shape. Something
changed. Yeah, they have Instagram pages. Yeah. And when they're not wearing the uniform, it's like,
what's up with those man-titch you fat fucker? So now they all, they get, they, everybody's
getting shamed on... Dude, I'm wearing a hoodie right now because even just the weight I am right
now because we had three birthdays in my family this month. So I've been eating cake like almost
every single night, which has been great. But you know, my age is just over. So I put on, you know,
put on like 10 pounds or something. So now I'm shaming myself wearing the hoodie until I get
in the t-shirt shape. Here's the thing that happens to me. I see it because, you know, when we,
during this process of like wrapping up the nightly show after all these years, I'm just
constantly exposed to videotape of me over the years. And I can see, oh yeah, in COVID,
I gained some weight. And what happens to me, and it's an Irish curse, is your face gets rounder
and my cheekbones disappear. And I look at my face and I have such self-hatred and I'll see
it and I'll go, you fat fuck. I do it all the time. Did you like that? Did you enjoy that food during
COVID? You fat fuck. And I'm talking about myself. Hey, you fat faced fuck. You look like Daniel
Patrick Moynihan. Can't go for a walk, princess. Yeah. What it is, you know what I'm saying?
We grew up in such a bullying time that their voices, they've left us decades ago,
but their voice is on a loop. Right. Your parents, the jerk on your paper route,
the bullies, all of that is like on a loop. So I'm interested to see where this new way of doing
things is going to go. What do you mean the new way? Well, having fat people on billboards
and being called heroes and stuff, they're just going the complete other direction,
like where that leads. People calling them heroes? Yeah. I think people are not shaming them,
but who's saying you took that burger so I could live? Who's acting like they're heroes?
You know what I mean. You know what I mean. You know how bad- You know me. You know how we got it.
How bad we got it and we were in shape and because we were orange people, what happened to us?
Everybody got it back in the day and now like not only are they, you can't give anybody any
shit. I mean, you're basically preventing them from getting early onset diabetes with the fat
shaming. You really are. That's what you're doing. It's not your motivation. It's just because you
don't like your parents or something so you attack the fat kid, but in a way you're helping them out.
I don't think putting them up on the billboard, sharing them on to continue eating these hostess
cupcakes is the way to go. First of all, you know- I'm fucking around. You're fucking around.
Okay. You know, but you know what? It was a different time. You were just talking right now
about it was the 70s and I was in a summer camp and I really was unhappy and the counselors weren't
nice. It was this camp up in Maine. I'm not going to name it. No one was nice. No one was nice in
the 70s and what happened was I remembered my, the sunblock had just come out and literally in
the previous summers when I went to camp, I got so badly burned because I'm a red-haired guy in the
sun because I had no- Dude, he looks like a lobster. You look like a lobster. I remembered, oh, we're
going out on the, on the water. We're going to get in these aluminum canoes. I'm going to cook.
So I ran up to my cabin and I quickly put on some sun protection on my legs and I went down and the
guy who ran the boating expedition, the counselor who must have been about 20 years old was like,
well, well, well, look who's late. Why are we late? And I said, well, you know, I had to put on my
son, my son. Oh, he had to put on his son. And he got all the kids to laugh at me and I'm like,
no, I just, it's so, the son, oh, the son. And just, I thought today that's a lawsuit. But back
then that was just- When you do a singing honor and you come aboard, Mary. Yeah, no, it was, it was
just non- Oh, do you think you're ready now to get on the boat? Would you like a parasol?
Hey, how's Precious doing? Do we need to go ashore? Yeah, it was all, it all was that.
So- It was, I mean, I have a hard time describing that to-
Yeah, but now I'm finding though, it's just becoming like this overcorrection where, you know,
there was some scandal recently and one of the people was a gatekeeper, you know,
that's all the same story. You're a gatekeeper. It's just like, no, it's just like my fucking job
to watch people. And if I feel it's like what my boss, who I worked for, they act like they're
up here like, ah, I'm not going to make your dream come true. They were just saying like,
dude, I showed up and they were like, you know, we already have enough freckled face
jerk offs, you know? And it's just like, dude, that's a bad example. But like,
that's how casting directors talk. Like when you walk up, if you look like a plumber,
like that's what that's all they're thinking. They're just going, plumber, plumber, plumber.
Until you start talking and they get to know you, it's your job to get yourself out of there.
That's like, you know, you know, my whole fucking acting career. I know your acting career. The
second I showed up, they're like, oh, doesn't get the girl, doesn't know how to, doesn't know how
to fight, fireman, cop. You know what I love? Until I lost my hair and I, and then UFC came
along. So everybody like, you shave your head, people, you know, it's all in the ears. You
know the cauliflower ears. They know you can't fight your way up a wet paper bag.
But wasn't it like Vince Gilligan? I have podcaster ears.
You must be a podcaster. Your ears are pristine. Vince Gilligan. Vince Gilligan saw you and knew,
like for Breaking Bad, he saw, he saw that he didn't put you in like a narrow slot. He didn't
put you, he didn't. He didn't. He gave me the role that I always wanted to do. And what was great
about it is I worked with LaVell Crawford and he was such a physical presence of the fun working
with him was I didn't have to be tough then because it was just, I was just brokering like,
listen, you don't want to deal with this guy. Let's just let's that Beniki scene. That's all
that was like, this is what's going to happen. Blah, blah, blah, blah. And we're going to keep
this guy happy. So then I didn't have to do all of that stuff, but I still got to be this sort of
guy that goes around, you know, dirtbag like threatening people. And it was so much fun.
So was your dream to be a dirtbag threatening people? Well, yeah, just being the guy that
does everything right. I mean, you can end up driving like an ice cream truck in a movie who
wants to, I mean, I want, I want to be driving the Starsky and Hutchcar, at least be the guy like
one of my dreams acting gig is I always wanted to be the perp getting chased down an alley.
Yep. That throws the trash can down. And then right when you get to the chain link fence,
they grab you and you're like, yeah. Then they interrogate you. You get halfway up the chain
link fence, but they grab you by your waist and they drag you down. You're like, no.
Yeah. And then I got to become the dirtbag and form it. And they start pulling me out in daylight
because I'm not giving them all they want. Like, come on, man, you can't be coming up to me out
here, man. Maybe I'm using like, who didn't like, I love that character. I always wanted to,
like, what's great about that? That's what I love you at eight, nine, 10 years old, paper route,
looking up at the screen and saying, that's me. I'm the guy that they're dragging into daylight
so that so that everyone else will know I'm a snitch and I'll get the shit kicked out of me.
That's what I want to be. Yeah, I don't see any fun in playing the cool guy ever.
Right. It's just like, and I also don't think like, you know, it really is, it's how I look.
So what I've learned, the key to acting is like, if you don't look like these beautiful people,
is you just steer into, you know, your shortcomings, you just steer into them.
Right, right. So I sort of like, you know, with some of the acting
gigs I got lately, like when I come into hair and makeup, I just go, okay, my head's a blank slate.
Like how dumb can we, I did something for this kid, Tyler Falbo, we did this thing that we
sold on Quibi and then they went under and we're going to see where it's going to land. But I did,
it was this guy who was basically stuck in the 90s. So I had those really bad 90s hair plugs.
You remember those ant legs things? So they, remember the guys would just get like a line of
them and then they'd run out of money and then try to grow them back. So it was like, I had those
with like, you know, the thing, the stuff on the side and then sort of like a mullet and a bad
like tribal tattoo peeking out. And it's just like, I find, I don't know, those are the guys,
I kind of like watching that. Another thing great about watching 70s movies is like the
character actors and what they added to scenes and stuff. While the movie star was in there,
you know, I watched some Clint stuff. So a lot of like Jeffrey Lewis in there and
Harry Dean Stanton and just guys like that. And then I think coming out of all of that would be
Philip Seymour Hoffman. Like he has a movie. I can't even get through it. His character is so
excruciating. I had to watch it in 10 minute clips. I forget it. It was, he was a banker
with a gambling problem. And he starts taking money out of the bank gambling. And it's just
every time you just like, you start, you start getting caught up in his gambling, like you're
rooting for him to win. And of course he starts winning. And you're like, you know, cash out,
go back to the fucking room. And he wouldn't, I got about 50 minutes into it. And I never finished
it. And it's like Sandler in Uncut Gems. I don't know if you saw that. Oh, yeah. Yeah. It was so
good, but you're rooting for him to go further into his addiction and then get out just in time.
Oh, that last, the last bet that he has, the last bet that he had. I mean, I was like, I was,
I was watching the game with him. But you know, it's funny. There's, there's stuff too.
Nick Kroll came on my show once early on, and he did a bit where he imitated a guy in a 70s
movie eating. And he was like a dirtbag detective. But in the 70s, things weren't as cleaned up as
they are now in movies. You know, now we depict wealth a lot. We depict people being beautiful
with theirs. And, and Nick Kroll does this great impression of a guy. And he's just talking. And
he's, he's in a shitty diner somewhere. He's in Boston or he's in New York. And he's, and he's
talking and maybe he's a cop. Maybe he's a, and he's talking and he's just jammin' fries. And so
he brought fries out and he was just jamming. I do remember that. He was jammed into his mouth
and talking at the same time. And I thought, you're right. That is every movie in the 70s is
someone pushing greasy, unhealthy food into their mouth while they're telling you about the deal,
what's going to happen with the deal. And a pet peeve of mine is actors eating in scenes. Yes,
because they don't eat. You didn't know. Oh, but if they do eat, they overact eating. Oh, yeah.
And it's like, can you close your fucking mouth? I don't need to hear, listen, you smacking that
whatever the fuck it is you're eating in Dolby's Surround Sound, which by the way, scares the
shit out of kids. I took my daughter, she's four years old, to go see one of those Snoopy movies,
some rated G thing. And first of all, you get in there, it's pitch black. And then because they
know the parents are there, they're trying to get you to see the PG, they show PG trailers. But
there's like people dying and there's bad people and that it just like, it's scary. I had to pull
her out. But we got like eight, a toy story it was. And then she'd actually seen it at home. And
but because we were in the dark and it was so loud that the by the time Sid came along,
she's like, dad, I don't want, I don't want to see Sid. I go, you want to see Sid? She goes,
no, Sid's a bad guy. Yeah. Yeah. And it's so loud that it's overpowering. I was like, all right,
let's let's get out of here. You and I have this shared obsession about the 70s. And we go back
and forth. We text each other. I know where this is going. Well, we got into a thing where you
started talking about how chips is one of the great TV shows of all time. And I responded,
no, no, no. Chips is an absolute piece of shit. And I think we both overstated. We probably both
overstated. I love shows. You know, Ellie has changed so much and they don't give a shit about
history. RFK was shot right down at the Ambassador Hotel. They knocked that fucking thing down.
Oh, I didn't know that. It's like a little kids school now. You go to Dallas, they went too far.
It's like you step into the Zapruder film. They haven't changed anything. They've got a ride you
can take. Yeah, they have like an edge. In Dealey Plaza, you can get in a car and you can drive through.
They shoot you with paintballs? They shoot you with paintballs. And yeah. And then you go,
I want to go around again. You know, I want to be Jackie this time. It's awful. It's awful.
And apologies to everyone. But this is what it is. This is what it is. But here, this is what it is.
But I'm telling you, every show was the sergeant or whoever getting them all together and saying,
guys, we got a problem and Punch and John and everyone's, they kid around first and they,
they're going to be in the disco contest. You know, yeah, maybe I have punches like, yeah,
yeah, I'll be in the disco contest. Punch, you can't disco dance. Hey, you'll see, I'll show you guys.
Another show did the same thing called Hill Street Blues. But because it was in New York,
oh, it's so gritty. It was the same show. It was such a different show. It was the same show.
It was not the same show. You're out of your fucking mind. It's not the same show.
Catchphrase. Hey, guys, be careful out there. Okay. He had a catchphrase. That's fine.
And then the crazy guy with the black hat, with the mustache biting on people.
No, what are you talking about? Hill Street Blues is New York's citizen pain.
They had that Southern guy in that leather coat. Oh, you're right. You're right. You're right.
I'm from Texas. I became a New York fucking police officer. Oh my God. This is so great.
You can shit on anything. Chips had the first fucking trans guy. They didn't even know it.
They had Bruce Jenner. She, Caitlyn. Well, he, Bruce, you can see they eat. Caitlyn.
They are beyond you on pronouns. God, damn it. My point is this. That was the bear claw on top
of the bed. Hey, you just yelled they and that wins the whole pronoun thing. I retreat. But my
point is this. You watch chips and the big flaw of the show is that the guy always says, okay,
there's a problem. And they're like, what's the problem? Someone's robbing jewelry on the highway
from trucks. It happens. It doesn't happen. No crimes have ever been committed. I mean,
I gotta see the episode. Every single episode, there's like, there's art heists and it's happening
on the highway. There's a forgery ring. Oh, do they have a warehouse? Should we go raid it? Let's
go raid their warehouse. Did you audition for the show? They're on moving trucks. They forge on
moving trucks at 65 miles an hour. And the only people that can bring them down are two guys
on motorcycles. You know what I like? You know what my favorite thing about that? I did audition
and I got turned down. What was when they would have like, first of all, whenever they would show
them, if they did a wide shot of the traffic, you could clearly see that they were driving maybe 18
miles an hour. Everybody was sort of like in formation. And then my favorite thing was when
they would have the car piled up, like the 20 something car piled up on a clear day. They'd
just slamming in Georgia. At the end, there was still that guy in the end who still doesn't see
the whole highway is full of crash cars, hits it full speed and inexplicably not only launches
himself over the pot, the audio he's still on the gas is going. Well, Bill, what younger,
I was just figured he had like a heart attack. No, no. What younger listeners don't know is that
the way we drove cars in the 70s is we would put a cinder block on the gas pedal and then we would
climb into the back seat. Yeah. And we would, yeah, that's what we did back then. That's the way
things worked. Maybe you were too mature. That's what it is. You're an elitist. You were on your
way to Ivy League school. Look at this dribble. I'm going to write for the tasty spoon or whatever
the fuck it's called, right? And then there's no place called the tasty food. Whatever the
hamburger joint, whatever the fuck it was, tasty pudding. No, no, that's not. I never worked
with those people. Whatever the fuck. Yeah, look at that. That was the worst. I looked down on them.
Whatever that was, whatever. I got my stuff. Father, I wish you go to Harvard.
Why is that, son? I wish you writes for the tasty spoon.
My first treatise would be on the flaws in chips. Mistakes made.
I wasn't doing well. I got a D in math and was pulled out of Little League Baseball
and my dad had a one for all and all for one and all of us, all the kids had to leave sports and
then he was anti-social. So then we never went back to him. My D in math ended it. So I mean,
I needed something to pick me up. So I didn't feel like thinking. Right. So I watched it and
who was cooler than Frank Pontorello? He was tan. He had pigment. He had nice fucking white teeth.
He was good looking guy. Crushed and ass. He's a very good guy. It was great. And he was right
next to the prototypical good looking Hollywood guy, the blonde-haired blue-eyed dude, and he was
getting all the ass. He was very progressive. And yet, Bruce Jenner, pre-Katelyn. Talk to me
about Hill Street Blues. Talk to me about that. What's he on? On Halston Street down there.
Get the crazy guy with the black hat. Come on. I'm fucking with you because I love Hill Street
Blues. I actually have the theme song on my phone. You do? Yeah. I love it. I love it. What do you
mean you have it on your phone? I want to hear it. I want to hear it. I feel like you don't believe
me. No, I believe you. I have the, you know, it's another great one. You know what's funny? The dirty
hairy soundtrack is a great one. That's a great one. But you know what? I have on my, I swear to
God, I have this on my phone too. It's great. I shut my phone off because I'm a professional,
unlike yourself. No. Well, I don't believe in that. You've been doing this a long time. Dude,
your glass is thick enough. Would you get those from your sister?
I'm trying to make my face look less fat. He's over there, down in his stockings. I'm making
my face less fat. I have the, I've needed glasses for at least eight years and I refuse to get them.
Oh, really? Yeah. Just feel like it makes your eyes weaker because I feel like once you start
wearing them, your eyes adjust to that and then don't, you take them off. Right. So you're just
going to not see stuff. That's great. That's great. I wish I could not hear some things,
if you know what I mean. I know what you mean. I hear you loud and clear. I hear you loud and
clear, buddy. All I have now is the Jefferson's Taxi. You know who wrote the theme song and
sang it was the one who played Malona, the neighbor on Good Times. Oh, she wrote and played
and sang that song, the greatest song ever. How talented was she? Rest her soul. She just
passed away. Sanford and Son theme, one of the great themes of all time. That's Quincy Jones.
Dude, I swear to God, I had it and it took it away. The opening music in the 70s was fantastic.
You have that on your phone. Do you listen to that when you're like on the treadmill?
What do you mean? No, I'm going to send you the charges. Right there.
Arithinal James Simpson. 200 yards last week. 180 yards this week. It was the most exciting
fucking thing when Howard Cosell would do the fucking highlights. Oh my God, I get chills.
I get chills when I listen to that. I can't find this. I have a theme from F Troop. I don't know
why. I never got into that show. It's ridiculous. It's absurd and it's why can't you be that kind
of chips? You know what? I'll give chips another chance. Because there aren't horses instead of
motorcycles. You forgive them. No, I'll give it up for Punch. I'll give it up for Estrada. He's great.
He's one of the coolest things that ever happened to me is a standup. I did a benefit
for the LAPDs and I showed up. It was during the day and I was like, I don't know how this is going
to go. And it ended up being great. We had a great time and I was standing up there. And when I looked
in the crowd, Frank Pontorella, Eric Estrada was there because he still has like a connection
with those guys from doing this stuff all the years. And I looked at him and gave him a little
nod. He gave me a smile, gave me a nod back. Not nice. But I had to leave because I had something
to do so I didn't get to say hello to him. There's a restaurant. I could have said despite what Conan
thinks. Oh, come on. I have a great respect for Eric Estrada. I just think the writers were doing
a lot of coke. I think they were trapped. They were trapped. All the crimes had to be committed
on moving vehicles going 65 miles an hour. Can you imagine the fun they had in that writers room
pitching show ideas? All right, this guy steals waterbeds. He does it on the 101.
He steals them on the 134. But then he takes them to the 101. The only way we can catch him is if
only we had policemen. He's an environmentalist. He steals the waterbeds and then he empties them
in the LA River. Let's fucking reboot the series. And we'll do it the way you want it.
I want it to be. Hey, this time we do it right. That was a big 70s thing. Come on, Conan. What do
you say? One more time. One more time. And this time. This time we do it right. We do it from punch.
We do even know what we're talking about, Sonia. Do you know these shows? Do you know chips?
I know chips. I might be too hard on chips. I might be. I don't remember a lot of it. But
I do remember it was a lot of crimes on wheels that it was very mobile. Art forgers that would
paint the forged art in a moving truck, which, I don't know, it got to me. It got to me and I
probably overreacted. But look, you're acting like they won awards. They didn't. These guys,
they got health insurance. People enjoyed what happened. I mean, you got to look at it for
what it is. You're right. You can't get mad that pop music isn't Frank Zappa or Miles Davis,
whatever the hell you're into. You got to look. You pretty much nailed it there, buddy, boy.
You know, at the tasty spoon. Well, listen to me. The only music we'd listen to
was Zappa and Miles Davis. We deconstructed the masterpiece that was F-Troop.
These guys, wacky. He was his cowboy head sideways.
I was a child. No wonder I didn't get into fucking Harvard. I thought it was because
I was dumb. I was just watching the wrong shows. Would you guys like these shows now?
What shows? Or is it nostalgia? Like liking Chips and the F-Troop and all that.
Do you know what's great about those shows is they weren't trying to be ironic. They weren't
trying to ironically be cheesy. And I find that a lot of stuff nowadays is like that whole,
it's so bad. It's a good thing. I agree with you. And then people started writing towards that.
And I thought there was sort of a bad period in writing comedy where the mainstream was,
everything was awkward. This happens, then this happens, and then it's just awkward.
So then you didn't really have to write a punchline. You just sort of have your head
sitting around like, okay, would you like some more salad? I mean, just everything just sort
of ended like that. And that's why on F-Troop every week, someone with the cannon wouldn't go
off and then someone would at a frustration kick it, one of the wheels would fall off,
it would go sideways, it would shoot the tower, and the tower would fall and a guy would have to
jump. And I thought when I was seven years old and they were watching reruns, I thought that
was the funniest thing in the world. I just thought it was hilarious. They weren't trying
to say anything other than just to amuse me. But yeah, what was the subtext of that?
That white people aren't that guilty because we were just these fumbling, bumbling idiots.
So how dumb must have been the Native Americans? But they weren't Native Americans,
they were Italian men. That's what makes it, it's more anti-Italian than anything else,
if you think about it. F-Troop is anti-Italian. It's Italians that are so confused they think
they're Native Americans. Oh yeah, I saw an old Hawaii 501 time. The prep they were going after
was Asian. And they're in Hawaii. They could at least just hire a Hawaiian. But instead,
nope, they still hired a tan white guy. And I don't know what sort of invisible tape they put
to try to make his eyes look Asian, but it was making my eyes white. It was just...
Yeah, it happened. That was in the movies and on television. I mean, anyone who watches breakfast
at Tiffany's now and sees Mickey Rooney, do they even show that movie anymore? They excise that part?
Like, there's no way... I don't believe that... It's a weird thing where I don't think that they
should, because they should show how ignorant white people are. We were. And what happens when
there's one culture just dominating the whole, like, that's their fucking narrative. But I don't
know. Let's try to go a little more positive here. I love those women that are just like
timelessly beautiful. The woman in the movie you just said, I always forget, Breakfast at Tiffany's.
Audrey Hepburn. Audrey Hepburn. You know, I saw the other day in Point Blank, Angie Dickerson.
Oh my God. Oh my gorgeous. Have you seen... So funny, I ran across a photo of Angie Dickinson
from, like, 1962 to Western, almost 1961. She's the most striking human being I've ever seen.
She's just so absolutely gorgeous. And then she was just beautiful, consistently. Which gets back
to me why I steer into... I go the other way. If there's going to be people like that in the
movie, my only hope of getting in there is to just, you know, ramp up my baldness and weird looks.
Well, okay. Here's an area we could help me, because, you know, I'm at a crossroads. You know,
I've done as much late night TV as one can possibly do. I gave it my all. I'm very happy to move on
to something else now. Movies. What's... I've never given it a shot, but I've always thought,
you are... When I see you in a movie or a TV show in a dramatic role, I completely buy it.
You're very good. I think that if I showed up in a movie or a TV show in a dramatic role,
it would be a complete disaster. No, you'd have to hide in the person is what you have to do.
So what you'd have to do is just change your look, have them change your look, and then,
you know, do a different walk and a different way of talking and stuff like that.
People would still see... I get... You know what? I did one long Zombeaver, a movie about zombie
beavers. Uh-huh. And I did a scene with John Mayer. And John Mayer, they put this shit on him
in a mustache and he did an accent and like people didn't notice it was him. I mean, you figured
it out after a while, but you figured it out when his character picked up a guitar and shredded.
Shredded, yes. No, but there's a thing, but then there's that thing where if they initially don't
know it's you, then they'll give you a chance. Like, oh, shit, that's cool. I don't know. I got the
beady eyes, those thin lips. He's doing that. He's like that guy that's not going to kill himself.
And he says, threatening suicide. No, Conan, you're great. I saw you as that extra in that
SNL sketch. Yes. That's exactly what I was doing. Destroyed. I was pulling you in. It was a little
distracting how tall you were compared to all the other extras. It became Gulliver's travel since
you got up and walked. I looked like the lurch. I thought there was a little people shooting
harpoon rope around you. Get him off of the set. You can basically, or you could set the, you know,
God knows. You could talk me up. You could bring me in on something. You know, you could do me a
favor. Conan, why don't you write a short? Just write a short. Okay. Conan, the barbarian, rebooted.
Yeah. And this time he's a shirtless, pasty guy who's done with the talk show world.
And you're hunting down the creators of chips. Yes. Everybody in the writer's room,
one by one. And this is the thing is ridiculous as that is. Do you then do the short as serious,
as humanly possible? Right. And those fuckers, you know, they need a job at this point. They need
insurance. They'd be willing to get off. And I do it in black and white. I do it like in that very
classy looking black and white. Or that it looks like an art film. Or you do it like a heavy metal
what they used to do back in the day on the ballad ones where you start in black and white.
And then when the guitar really kicks in, then they would go into color. Remember that? Yeah.
You could kind of like open it up to all genres. Would you invest in this movie? Absolutely. Okay.
And my investment would be the greatest encouragement.
That's my favorite thing in, in divorce proceedings. You know, so and so supported this
person, like they're out there doing all the work. You could do it honey. Then they stay home
and they become a house manager. Oh, I thought you were hanging out by the pool
while the nanny raised the kid. I didn't know you were managing the house. And second,
there's money there all of a sudden. I was the CEO of the breakfast cereal section.
Therefore, I would like 90 grand a month.
You have no idea the pressure I was under to keep those plastic cereal bins full.
Full. God knows he wasn't around to pour the milk. Oh, Bill, we can help Sona.
Sona is about to give birth to twin boys. She's never had kids before. And I'm telling you,
she has, she has a little, uh, just a little dog, Oki. And she's got to go. She can't. Exactly.
Listen to me. Listen to me. Listen to me. Listen to me, Bill. I keep telling her,
she says, Oh, that this dog is the center of our lives. Oh, look what Oki did. We got all
these pictures of Oki. We found a funny hat for Oki to wear. I was in this great. She intact. Oki,
okay. And I told her the minute these twins show up, it's over. You're not even going to feed that
dog again. It's going to be mafia war between the dog and the babies. It's just, they're just going
to look at each other and they're just going to know somebody has to go. Oh no. You're going to
have to, you ever see Sophie's choice? No. No, no, no, no, no, no. That dog's got it. How big is
that dog? She's a little 15 pounds. It doesn't matter how big the dog is. She doesn't matter.
You know what? This is what you do. If you want to keep the dog, you got to get those little
loop things, metal loop things put in every room. And then you get a short lease and you just have
to have the thing chained to the wall the entire time. Oh my God. No. It might be great with kids.
Yeah. It might eat them. You never know. That's the fun thing with dogs. I had to get rid of my dog.
You did? Yeah. What happened? Well, I did it. I was a man about it. I wasn't like doing these people
that fucking took her to a shelter. What'd you do? I took her out back myself. No. Gave her 100
dollars. Gave her a favorite snack. Put two right behind her ear. Oh no. Oh my God. Oh my God.
No, you know what? My shit. No. My two right behind the ear. No. My trainer ended up taking her
and she's still alive to this day and I still get to see. I haven't seen her much during the pandemic
because there hasn't been a lot of travel. But was there tension between what was the reason?
You just, it just didn't work. Because it was, it tried to kill all of my friends and we just
knew that it was, it wasn't going to work. And I put it this way. The dog was hard for my trainer
to handle. Like he had, he said, I had a slow cooker for like two years and now she's finally
going to be friends with another dog, which is amazing. When I watch the videos, I'm still nervous
because she's, you know, a strong dog. What kind of dog was it? Oh, I don't want to. I don't
want to spread the rumors. Got it. Yeah. Got it. But a powerful dog. A powerful. A carcaspanule.
They bite more people. A carcaspanule. I didn't know that. A carcaspanule. I'll tell you what,
you know what? You know what? Bastards who, if I was running shit, I'd get in the fuck out of
this country. You know what they are? Those fucking large poodles. Oh. It's a combination
of their size, their energy, and the people that own them and their inability to control them. Those
fucking things come just dragging their owner down the street with this. You know what? They got
the same haircut. One of my favorites. You want to talk about disappearing into a character.
Sean Penn and Carlitos Way. Yeah. Kleinfeld. Yeah.
Lawyer. Kleinfeld. You ain't a lawyer. You were gangster. He had the perm. Yep. Yep. And then
he had like, we had glasses, right? And he was balding. Oh my God. It's one of my favorite
Sean Penn movies. I love that movie, even though I did the Pacino line. Kleinfeld. Anyway, what was
I talking about? Yeah. So basically, you know, I love the dog so much. It was like, I cried. I cried
when I had to give the dog up. And I gave her up. And then when she came back, you know, I brought
her around the house. I had her on a leash and everything. I just wanted to see. And my baby
was sitting on the bed where she used to sit. And she looked over and I saw her ears go up,
which I knew from training, don't let her fixate. But I was like, let me just let her fixate and
see what she does. And she looked over at the baby. Ears went up and she went,
I was like, all right. That's why you live in a different state.
But I'm telling you, I have, I had a golden retriever when we brought.
Oh, that was funny.
But they're great for a baby. We brought my daughter home as a baby. And this thing,
my daughter would crawl up. Michael J. Fox said the greatest thing on your show,
I think, about a golden retriever. He said they're great dogs, but they'd go home with anybody.
But yeah, if you're having a kid, my daughter used to pick up a block, crawl over and just
wail away on the golden retriever. And it sits there and takes it. And it looks at you like,
this is my do. You know why? This is my do in life. And I'll take it. It's a child. It doesn't know.
I need to be patient. That's exactly what you want. It's not what it is. What is it? They got no hot.
Any dog, I'm just going to Boston guy, any dog that lets some little shit kid.
I understand once with the wood block, but at some point you got to look over like
he's got no hot dude. He's fucking soft. He's letting them walk all over him.
I'm not saying you got to bite him. You can get him a growl. Get him a little snap the jaws.
Let him know what he's dealing with. No, that's great. Yeah, I'd love to have a dog again.
I always wanted a bulldog, but I just can't imagine having a bulldog in this heat out here.
I also worry about, don't bulldogs have bad hips and they start to fall apart after.
That's German shepherds. They have the bad hips. The bulldogs, there's some flap in the back of
their mouth. You got to get it removed. But it's like they were genetically
they were created by people with lots of breeding and then they've got some flaw
that makes their life a living hell, don't they? Yeah, I don't know. I really would love to have
somebody explain to me how you breed a wolf down to a bulldog for the specific job of
when they bite a bull on the nose. I don't know. Half of my knowledge was given to me in a bar room.
I don't know, but it's like there's some dog, like the fox how they like bred it so it could be
like with the pointy snout and long body so he could go down the fucking hole and get the goddamn
thing or something like that. It's like, how do you how fucking perverted are you? If you're just
sick, if you're just think of like a German scientist, you know, thinking about how we're
going to breed this down and we're going to get this so that it has a long thin paw so it can
reach into a window and grab a jewel, you know, it's amazing. I bet if that dog over there,
look at the legs on that dog, but if that dog, fuck this dog over here.
When they were done banging, we could get ourselves a longer dog.
Just hear me out and then we just keep doing it. Yeah, we create our own species. We'll be gods.
What the longest fucking dog you ever saw? Longest fucking dog you ever saw?
There'll be women around the block winding up. What's happening is people did that.
People did that and people continue to do it. All right. And where is that on Twitter?
I'm going to wrap this up. You know the dog breeding thing? You know what's crazy?
The last hour, that's what scared you away. The dog. Oh, no, it didn't scare me away. I just,
you know, we got to keep things to time. We run a tight ship. I don't know how you do it,
but we like to kind of think it's going hard. Yeah, we get it. You're good at math. You went
to an Ivy League school. I'm good at math. I know what an hour is. Yes. Thank God. Thank
God I went to Harvard. They taught me that an hour is composed of 60 individualized minutes.
They taught me that and the other thing not because it was easy, but because it was hard.
Some people choose to say you're good at math.
I choose to say why. And I choose to say why. God, that's a fun answer.
Some people would be happy banging Jackie on asses. Others would have to bang Marilyn too.
Some people look at a short dog and think it's long enough. Others say, what if that dog
fucked another dog? There was somewhere longer. You'd get a longer dog. We're going to do that
in this century and we're going to do the other thing. By the end of this century,
we will have the right dogs fuck each other. So a dog can go down that hole and then that fox is
like, some people say, why won't you leave that fox alone? I say, why not kill it? Okay. We're not going to top that one. We're not going to top that one. We get out right now.
Why don't you just come on this thing like every week and we'll just be like, Jesus, Jesus, and then we'll do this and it'll be the easiest thing.
Come on whenever you want. All right. It's a great time of the day. I will look you in the eye and I will say I love you. I love you too. All right.
And if us two gingers got together with the dog, we could have a threesome and then a red-headed fucking dog. There's a dog that looks like us. There's a white one with the freckles on the nose. It's a hound.
All the other dogs bully it. Dover, God bless. All right, guys. Thank you. Let's do a little bit of the review, the reviewers. This is where I dig into the reviews on Apple podcasts and we comment on them. In a way, we're kind of reviewing the reviewers themselves.
Hence the name, review the reviewers. Thank you. Someone finally got it. This is a five star review. Okay, that's good to know. And the whole thing is really in the subject title, though I'll read the whole
thing just because I think it's really important. Second thought there. But first of all, did you ever get that mortgage paid off? Now, they're referring to the beach house mortgage. Do you remember that we used to do the ads for?
Yes. And then really quickly, this person goes on to say, just wondering, re-listening and it reminded me, I love you, Sona and Matt Cohn and you're all right.
Hey. And you pick the ones that you want to read. Well, that one I just pulled out of a hat. There's no way to go. You were tearing, you were looking through a hat for six hours until you had fun.
So what's up with the beach house? Remember, the whole thing was that these ads were paying off this beach house of yours and then we never heard it. In the very beginning of the podcast, I used to say, it was just a joke. I would say, well, I'm about this beach house and I put down too much money and we like the idea that I would talk about how
I'd gotten myself into a bit of a financial bind and then I would hear seagulls in the background and waves crashing. And then I would just say, you know, State Farm. That just amused us for a while. And then it just kind of went away because it stopped amusing us as much.
But I think in the beginning it was kind of funny. It was so fun. I enjoyed that. What we would do is have, you know, Sona would always say, haven't you paid the beach house down yet? And I'd say, well, and then it was always me making a bad financial decision that got us deeper into the hole.
So I would say, well, I built a deck and you'd say, oh, you built a deck. Yeah, I built a deck and they told me to use teak, but I didn't. And the deck costs a lot of money. And instead, I used balsa and the wood swelled up and it got washed away. And I, I borrowed money against the mortgage to build what you borrowed money.
And then I was in more trouble. And then I'd go, anyway, Snapple has a new flavor. And it was the transition that was making us chuckle. But after a while, we realized we'd spend about 40 minutes talking about the beach house before we got to the ad.
Yeah. And it wasn't efficient. No, it was kind of a fun joke. But man, just to get to a couple of ads that would otherwise take 20 seconds to read, I would do 40 minutes of exposition about this fake beach house.
I know.
And we were all enjoying it. And I think it's one of those things that just had its time. And then we moved on.
Yes.
And I dare say maybe we got too lazy to invent whole fake reasons why I needed to do the ad.
I know.
I believe that was almost three years ago.
Was it really?
When we started doing that? Yeah.
Well, three years.
You know, I have to say the pandemic screwed up my sense of time completely. But, you know, for old times' sake, maybe we'll throw in a different conceit sometime. Just for, just for old times' sake, you know.
We don't have to.
You don't want to? You know, I bought a racehorse. Did you know that?
Oh, you did?
Yeah. I bought a racehorse. And I thought I was making good investment. It was very expensive.
Is it fast? Can you actually race it?
Well, I find it's not. This is embarrassing. It's not technically a horse.
I'm still going to put seagulls and waves under this.
Yeah. Do that. It turns out. And I don't know horse flesh that well. But it's a mule.
Oh, no.
Yeah. It's a mule. And it's got a gamey right left leg. I said right left rear left leg. And also right left leg. It's left. And it's right legs.
And the front are switched.
Oh, no.
And I was, so I paid, you know, racehorses are very expensive.
Yeah. How much did you pay for this?
$650,000.
Coney.
Yeah. I thought it was a pure breed. And I thought that this was the offspring I was told of a horse that won the Kentucky Derby.
Oh, no.
Yeah. And a mule.
I saw a photo of it. I bought it online. And then I did a Venmo.
And I know. Coney. Oh, my God. And a mule can't even, in my right, can't even have a baby. So you can't put it to stud. No. Mules are sterile. Oh, God.
And it's got milky eyes, weird milky eyes. It can't see well. So I had to get it fitted for glasses.
Yeah. Just so, you know, it can see, if it's going to race and I'm still determined that it race, so I got it orthopedic shoes and glasses.
Do you have a jockey?
Well, that's the other problem. Any self-respecting jockey refuses to get on it.
So you have to do it?
No, I'm too big, but I'm going to get a child. A child it doesn't know any better.
Oh, one of Sona's twins.
Dress it. Yeah. Probably one of Sona's twins will ride it. It has to be at least three years old so it can get its legs around the top of the mule.
But anyway, that's what we're going to do. My wife is very upset with me and I'm in a bit of a hole financially, which leads us to this next ad.
Bombas.
Yeah, bomba socks. Ever buy a mule? Oh, wait, that's not it. Ever feel your feet need socks? Well, bombas does it, man. They do it every time.
They really engineer those socks and they put a lot of thought, which I wish I had done when I bought the fucking mule with the milky eyes and the screwed up legs and tried to enter it in a real race.
But I blame the internet. That's the internet's fault.
Conan O'Brien needs a friend. With Conan O'Brien, Sonam of Sessian and Matt Gorely. Produced by me, Matt Gorely. Executive produced by Adam Sacks, Joanna Solotarov and Jeff Ross at Team Coco and Colin Anderson at Earwolf.
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