Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Bill Burr Returns Again
Episode Date: March 17, 2025Comedian and actor Bill Burr feels good about being Conan O’Brien’s friend. Bill returns once more to discuss his new special Drop Dead Years, the specific kind of funny that Boston produces, why... we all need to stop arguing with bots on the internet, and more. For Conan videos, tour dates and more visit TeamCoco.com.Got a question for Conan? Call our voicemail: (669) 587-2847. Get access to all the podcasts you love, music channels and radio shows with the SiriusXM App! Get 3 months free using this show link: https://siriusxm.com/conan.
Transcript
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Hello, my name is Bill Burr.
And I feel good about being Conan O'Brien's friend, but I feel this is a little red flag
that might be a little narcissist that I got to fucking say why I'm his friend every time.
I feel like I've already answered this question.
I'm called a bottomless hole.
There's no filling this.
Every time you're going to have to repeat.
Gee, what is that like? Ha ha ha ha!
Follies here, hear them yell
Back to school, ring the bell
Brand new shoes, walk and lose
Climb the fence, books and pens
I can tell that we are gonna be friends
Yes, I can tell that we are gonna be friends.
Hey there, welcome to Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend,
sitting here with Sonam Ossessian and a giggling,
I don't know why, Matt Gorley.
It's the way I introduced the show, so just get over it.
You can't giggle every single time.
I can't get over it because every time,
it's hilarious, it's like a nosebleed
of change of environment. You go from, w to, hi, and welcome to the show.
I'm a professional broadcaster.
Okay, and I have a question, and this is a serious question,
which is can I become flexible at my age?
I mean, physically flexible.
And this is something I've been thinking about a lot lately
because I know people do yoga and stuff.
I am a particularly tight, tight-assed gentleman
of a later vintage.
You see me all the time trying to stretch it out,
don't you, Sona?
I think your body is capable of it.
I don't think your mind is capable of it.
Be honest.
I'm being very honest.
Sounds honest to me.
I think your body can become flexible if you work at it,
but you're also so like tightly wound,
you're just like, ugh.
No, but you see me trying, right?
I do see you trying.
I do a lot of like squats and bends and I'm trying,
and I was doing a live show with Tignotero once,
and she, I was backstage just trying to stretch
before I go out and she had the microphone
and could see me and was just calling me out
in front of the whole audience.
Like, Conan's doing these stupid stretches
that you will in no way, it was hilarious.
Of course, she's hilarious.
I'm kind of fascinated with this idea that I think there's part of me that
thinks because of what I come from,
this very tightly wound, I don't know,
Boston Catholic, whatever you want to do.
Sure.
Then my own propensities that it's never going to happen.
Then there were days where I think,
no, I could do this.
I could do this.
I could become a flexible person.
But then I think there's another school of thought.
No, if you're not flexible at the age I'm at now,
you can look it up, like Google away.
I don't think that's true.
And I'm sorry, do you wanna be flexible just to be flexible
or to what end?
Is there a sport you wanna play?
I'd like to become a sexual athlete.
Oh dear.
A sexual athlete?
No, no, what I would like to do is,
yeah, I don't wanna stiffen up as I get older.
And as you're wearing some like,
Yeah, and I'm bringing it up today because,
as you know, I'm still displaced, whatever,
very fortunate to still have my place,
but I do sometimes just pick clothes
out of the back of my car,
and today I picked this stuff out and realized
I basically wore what you would wear to a gym today,
which I rarely do.
I usually like to dress.
Can you stand up?
Yeah, sure.
I think it looks like you're in the Hunger Games.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is, this. My wife got these for Hunger Games. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
This, my wife got these for my son.
He didn't want them.
And I put them on.
And then I realized.
I'm very uncomfortable.
I know, you should be.
There's this weird crosshatching.
It looks to me like I'm on the set of Logan's Run,
the TV show from Ortron.
Right, right.
And this is not me.
I never do this.
I think you're just missing a headband.
Yeah, but because I'm wearing this,
I do feel there's a little bit of an 80s vibe,
but also because I'm wearing this,
when you wear clothes like this,
you start doing stretches and it was on my mind
because I started doing stretches today
out in the main room where everybody is
and I got on the floor and other people, RJ.
RJ.
RJ who works here at the podcast.
He told me he's been stretching
like on a professional level since he was five.
Yeah, he stretches an hour a day.
He stretches an hour a day.
And here's the thing, he can't stand.
He's so relaxed and loose.
I admire that.
No, no, he's brought into work in a bowl,
like a spatula, and they pour him into his seat
and he does his work.
But no, he's very impressive.
He's super physically fit and-
I think he's a black belt.
He is a black belt.
He's like a multi-degree black belt in Taekwondo.
I take back my reaction.
You should, because he can fucking crush your head.
Maybe we should get him in here.
He's probably out there. Is RJ out there? Can RJ come in? Because I'm very impressed with RJ. And you know what? I agree, black belt in taekwondo. I take back my reaction. You should, because he can fucking crush your head.
Is RJ out there?
Can RJ come in?
Because I'm very impressed with RJ.
And you know what?
A lot of people work here.
Not impressed with a lot of them.
I literally go around looking,
is there someone here who I'm impressed with?
Please, have a seat.
RJ.
Hi, RJ.
Hey, guys.
So RJ, I should be asking you this question.
First of all, what is your actual position here
at the show?
So I am Adam's executive assistant.
Right.
And I do a lot of stuff for basically
whatever Adam asks for, I just kind of do it.
Like, that's the easiest way of saying it.
That's just kind of sinister.
Yeah, that sounds...
So I saw you the other day breaking into an ATM
with a crowbar.
He asked for money. I know, I know.
And he said, I don't want to use a card.
Anyone can use a card.
Use this crowbar.
We were talking the other day, you mentioned stretching.
It's been in the back of my head.
And then today, before I know it, I'm on the ground,
you're on the ground and you're showing me
these different stretches.
And you did one where your hips basically just flattened out
like a spatchcocked chicken.
They had just been, and I was like,
my hips will never do that.
I would need an operation.
No, no, no, no, no.
So we were doing frog pose, and it just, it takes time.
The thing with flexibility is you can't force it at first.
You kind of have to let your body ease into it.
And then once your body can ease into it,
that's when we figure out how to contract muscles
in a certain way.
Yeah.
And then when it lets go, when you let it go,
then you fall forward.
Sona will tell you,
cause Sona has spent many years observing me.
She watches how I wash makeup off.
Oh my God.
She watches how I brush my teeth.
And I could start a fire on my face.
Everything I do is, is to say everything,
but like quick and hard, like let's get this done.
And there's a self-loathing involved in it.
So stretching is the antithesis to all of that.
And it's breathing.
It's a lot.
And yeah, just being calm and patient.
Can you just kind of toes without bending your legs?
If my, I'm gonna say if I had an operation
where my knees were removed
and my feet were presented to me.
That's how I am.
No, I am, my problem is of course,
I have a little bit of an unusual build,
very long legs, shorter torso proportionally.
So yeah, if I really lean for a while,
yes, I can get down there.
I can't even do that.
Well, you're a mess.
I mean, I don't wanna. Yeah, that's true.
You're not.
So.
I do think it takes time.
I think you get sometimes impatient.
You're like, I wanna be flexible now,
but you have to just like take your time with it, maybe.
Can you be patient?
First, my question is, RJ, would you be willing,
I shift you away from your responsibilities with Adam,
because whatever shit you're doing for him,
he can do for himself.
And you just become my full-time stretch guru.
Yo, that'd be great.
Let's do it.
We'll both dress how you're dressing today.
Yeah, we'll do it.
Oh really, we'll both dress like a guy dress how you're dressing today. Oh, I understand. Yeah. We'll do it. Oh, really?
We'll both dress like that.
Like a guy from an early 80s space television sci-fi show.
For sure.
Yeah, I do, I'm into this.
I wanna try it.
I wanna try and become more flexible.
I wanna evolve.
This is something I'm saying as a serious thing.
I am interested in this concept that I can keep evolving, that I can keep changing in certain ways.
A lot of cool things have happened in the last 10 years
that I didn't see coming.
So why couldn't I become flexible?
I agree.
Yeah.
And I think you should definitely put the work into it.
Like, and then be patient and breathe and chill.
No, I want RJ to do it.
I want him to do,
is there any way that you can do all the stretching?
I'm not involved, but then somehow, you know, and breathe and chill. No, I want RJ to do it. I want him to do, is there any way that you can do all the stretching?
I'm not involved, but then somehow,
I inherit all the benefits.
The inheriting part, probably not,
but I need somebody to be like my camera guy
when I'm stretching.
Oh.
Like, don't ever see my hand photos.
I have.
He is like full, like past splits.
It's amazing. Wow.
I know, it's pretty incredible.
That's crazy.
And, but also you started when you were five.
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was really into martial arts.
The first thing I told my mom of what I wanted to be
when I grew up was a Power Ranger.
So then she got me into martial arts and I just stayed.
I ended up doing that for a little over 20 years.
To the point where you can take a Power Ranger now.
You can beat one.
Let's do it.
Let's find a Power Ranger.
I think I just joined like the evil side button.
There's probably one walking around Hollywood Boulevard
and you're just gonna start kicking his ass.
Poor guy's gonna have like a fanny pack.
He's just trying to get money.
He just wants a tip so he can take a selfie with you.
Suddenly he's getting wailed on
by this red bearded martial artist.
Well, RJ, I'm very impressed by what you can do
and I will try to learn from you.
I will try to absorb.
You are now my, you are Yoda to my Mark Hamill
in the second one of those things that later became-
Luke Skywalker empires to expect.
Let's just skip the-
It was the second-
Honor the text, please.
It was the second one and then I guess now
it's actually the 15th.
Well, I'm with you on that.
How's flexibility of personality going?
Nope.
Is that in play at all?
Iron rod.
Maybe we evolve into a nicer person.
Maybe that's what we're...
Who's gonna listen to that podcast?
I know, it's gonna suck. It'll suck.
Hey, let's go see the new Don Rickles.
He's really nice to the audience.
And he gives everybody some fruit salad.
Later. Don Rickles is broke.
Thank you, RJ.
All right, guys, let's get into it.
My guest today, that's right, RJ's a redhead.
I'm a redhead.
My next guest today, also a redhead, hilarious comedian
whose latest special,
Bill Burr, Drop Dead Years, premieres March 14th on Hulu.
He's also making his Broadway debut
in Glengarry Glen Ross later this month.
I love this guy.
I'm thrilled he's with us today.
Bill Burr, welcome.
You and I have, we have a special connection.
I really believe that.
We're both gingers.
We both grew up-
Unsightly from the Massachusetts area.
We're sort of the, with the spice in the stew.
That's what the gingers are.
We can't be next to each other.
Like we're only allowed LA.
LA County only allows us to hang out once a year and have a dinner.
There's only two of us that are allowed to be together.
Two gingers from the Boston area that are incredibly, a weird mixture of bitterness, right?
That has, I mean...
I would have gone with anger first, but okay.
We'll go bitterness, anger, confused.
I hide my anger, I think, or have in the past.
Don't I hide it better than Bill?
Oh, God.
Oh, yeah.
Children, don't I hide it when I'm smacking you
in the station wagon?
Agree with all my points,
or there will be a discussion afterwards?
But Sona, you've seen, and Matt,
you guys have seen up close the Beast, right?
You've seen the Beast.
We have.
But for many years on television,
I was a quote, good guy.
But there was a Bill Burr inside me, always, always.
Yeah, I think there is.
Why do you gotta put your anger on me?
I had nothing to do with you and whatever happened to you.
How do we know?
How do we know?
We were in the same era, I know you're younger than me,
but I remember- Well, you were older than me
and you were always taller.
So I mean, if anything happened, it was you.
You threw the ice ball at me or socked me down at Fitzy.
Something happened.
Stole the stereo out of my fucking shit box car.
What do radio thieves do now?
I don't know.
You don't know what they do.
You're going to take the whole dashboard out and just walk around with this odd shaped iPad?
Has anybody got a 2023 Mercedes? Back in the day, you could steal a stereo
and fit in everybody's fucking car.
Another job lost to AI.
Do you go back to reunions and things like that?
A high school reunion?
I don't know if I told you this,
but I went back to one of mine years ago,
a high school reunion,
and I was doing the late night show, well-known person.
I go back and this guy comes up to me and he goes,
hey, go on and remember the time that you and me
busted into that liquor store down by the point
and we stole all that booze but the cops came
and we both took off and you went left and I went right
and you got all the booze and then you drank it yourself
and I'm listening, I'm like, you have the wrong guy.
I have never had a parking violation in my life.
I didn't drink until I was like 26.
He's got the wrong guy, but he inserted me into a story
and I thought, I bet that happens to you.
Unless, no, you were probably the guy that was stealing.
I don't understand how someone doesn't,
was it that six foot four Ginger or was,
I mean, how many of you were out there?
Right, yeah.
There was that guy I went to high school with
who looked like Jane Lynch.
I couldn't remember.
I think I committed a crime with him.
No.
I went to high school with,
I had a really cool grade.
Like everybody, like it was funny.
It was sort of like everybody, by my senior year,
everybody was sort of collectively partying
with each other.
So there wasn't like, you know, you had the cliques,
the jocks, you had the people that took wood shop,
the, you know, the burnouts or whatever,
and then just the background people like me.
And then by the end of it,
we all used to go down this place, Dan Road,
which was this industrial park
that was slowly being built,
taking over the woods or anything.
But they had like all of these dirt roads back there
and these burnt up cars for insurance and shit.
We used to drive down there and drink. And every there and these burnt up cars for insurance and shit.
We used to drive down there and drink.
And every weekend at the party just kept getting bigger
and bigger and everybody was sort of high and drunk
and just kind of got along with each other.
So I've only been to one high school reunion.
I went to my 25th and I had a great time.
But because I do standup, like I go around and I run in,
a lot of people come out to my shows.
So I kind of have like like, this never-ending
sort of high school reunion, which is cool.
When they hit me up or whatever, I always, you know,
end up talking to them backstage and shit.
And I get freaked out about how old their kids are versus mine.
But I chose...
You got young kids.
Yep. Eight and four and a half.
Wow. Okay.
My kids are in their late 50s.
My children...
You have sciatica.
You started a little bit late, too, and I'm late 50s. My children. I have sciatica.
You started a little bit late too,
and I'm still way behind you.
Yeah.
Yeah, you're way behind me.
You know, I watched your special.
In many areas.
Yes, I, exactly.
Don't rub it in.
I watched your special, Drop Dead Years.
Loved it, and I know it's coming out.
When's it coming out?
I wanna make sure I get it.
It's out right now.
Okay. We're taping this a little beforehand. We're know it's coming out. When's it coming out? I want to make sure I get it. It's out right now. Okay.
We're taping this a little beforehand.
We're taping this in 1974.
1974.
We're very excited about the Red Sox next year,
the 75 Red Sox with Fred Lind.
It should be amazing.
And I'm glad that busing crisis is finally over.
Oh, finally, yeah.
No more racism.
No more racism in Boston.
And I'm looking forward to that story
just sort of disappearing
so Boston can move forward.
Yeah. Boston will move forward. Yeah.
Boston will be fine.
Yeah.
No, but I watched a special
and you talk about going to the funeral of a friend.
First of all, it's a very, very funny,
I feel it's a redundant saying Bill Burr
had a really funny standup special.
Why is it so hard for you to say that about me?
I said it twice.
I just root against you.
You know I root against you.
You couldn't even open your eyes.
All right, I'm admitting he said something
that was mildly amusing.
This fucking bad shit.
Achieved some success.
Another ginger from Boston.
There's only room for one.
Just what I needed.
But I watched your special and it was, it's fantastic.
You talk about losing a friend and going to the funeral.
And of course you have some very funny observations
about that, but it opens up, it feels like you're opening up
a little more on this special about your personal life
and some of your struggles and it's fantastic.
Oh, thank you.
I kind of, you know, I was of that belief
as most people that come from the East coast
that, you know, your anger and shit
is like your security blanket.
And then it's made you who you are.
It's why you're funny.
It's why you have character.
It's all of this stuff.
And if you, for some reason, let go of this
and actually enjoy life
or maybe take
responsibility for your actions and see how your behavior affects other people, for some reason
that's going to be like the undoing of you. There's a lot, I don't know about how you came up,
but like in standup, there was a lot of stuff out there. Don't get married, don't have kids.
Basically don't find happiness. That is the kryptonite to comedy.
And I've found that it's, that's not true.
And it's really the opposite is once you kind of,
you know, get yourself to a new place,
you can kind of revisit a lot of shit that you talked about
with like a new like sort of point of view of it.
So yeah, no, I'm, listen, but believe me, dude,
I've only gone up like one flight
of the Empire State Building
that is my messed up personality, so, you know.
This is the eternal question.
And it's one I've thought about in comedy,
which is you can be funny or you can be happy.
And I really believed in that dichotomy.
And I remembered years ago living in LA
and stating that to least...
Getting molested. I remember years ago, living in LA and stating that to least...
Getting molested.
Doing the things you had to do to get a late night talk show.
Come on, it's out there now.
All right?
It's better when you say it.
Conan, say the name.
We all did what we had to do.
You know, I'm here now.
It was a different time. Different time. A lot of to do. You know, I'm here now. It was a different time.
Different time.
A lot of couches.
You know what?
No one wanted me on a couch.
Right?
I mean, let's just be honest.
Not even your therapist.
No one, yeah.
No one was like,
I gotta get me a piece of that Conan.
But-
That featherless ostrich.
Why?
Why do I invite you back?
I don't know.
It's not right.
Oh my God.
But to your point, I really did believe that that was a choice you had to make and I was
okay with-
Of being miserable, yeah.
Being miserable and.
I thought it made me tough.
Yeah.
I thought all of that stuff, like, you know,
you know, and all the movies that you watch,
they just, they made you believe in,
I remember I watched the Dirty Dozen.
I watched the Dirty Dozen and there's that scene
where they have to shave in cold water
and we ain't shaving and blah, blah, blah.
So I was sitting there thinking like,
oh, tough guys shaving cold water. And I shaved in cold water, and we ain't shaving and blah, blah. So I was sitting there thinking like, oh, tough guys shaving cold water.
And I shaved in cold water for like seven years
as like a fucking dental assistant standup comedian.
And like, it was like just something that I,
it was a subconscious thing that,
it was all of this stuff had happened to me.
So you just always thought I can't, you gotta get tougher.
You gotta get tougher, you gotta get tougher.
So all of this stuff that's happening to me,
I won't feel it.
And what I was really doing was I was walling myself off.
And it was so funny.
And there was a lot of information out there
about people being walled off and all of that.
And I would just watch them fascinated,
like how the fuck do you not know what you're feeling?
Not even realizing that I was the exact same way.
And yeah, no, it was mushrooms.
Mushrooms turned me around.
I had one mushroom trip and it sort of woke me up.
See, I've had people tell me I should do that.
I've never done that.
And I also have a long way to go.
I'll admit that.
I think I've made progress.
Ted, you can be honest.
I really do think you have.
And I think mushrooms might be good for you.
You've always thought pot would be good for me.
I did, yes, I do. Pots are always thought pot would be good for me. I did.
Yes, I do.
Pots are depressed.
That pot is like, I don't know, weed isn't weed anymore.
Oh, it's intense.
I mean, that shit was like, yeah, these people came over for fucking Thanksgiving, right?
Why can't it just be Thanksgiving?
Because you know something?
It's how I grew up talking.
Okay, okay, I'm just saying.
I don't mean it in a bad way.
I went to my fucking kid's christening.
Yeah, no, I know, sorry.
So I had some friends over for a little bit of a chat.
I'm just saying. I don't mean it in a bad way. I went to my fucking kid's christening.
Yeah, no, I know, sorry.
So I had some friends over for what is arguably
I feel the best holiday.
This isn't what I really feel,
but I said fucking Thanksgiving,
but I really love Thanksgiving,
because yeah, it's a nice hang
and you don't have to buy anything at least.
No, who doesn't like the fucking turkey?
I can't stop looking at that camera, I don't know why.
Who doesn't make some fucking giblets and gravy?
As he sips his dainty little coffee.
Ice coffee.
I had to get rid of the straw.
I'm not evolved enough as a man
that I can drink out of a straw.
I still feel all right about myself.
I just think of it as an aluminum dick.
Just doing my part to show that I'm an ally.
Aluminum dick.
Can't wait to take another sip.
Oh my God.
Oh, come on, Sona.
This episode is called Conan Swallows.
Um.
Um.
Anyway.
What was I talking about?
So I had some people over for Thanksgiving.
This guy go, he has a joint, right? So I'll take a couple of hits, whatever. I go, what was I talking about? So I had some people over for Thanksgiving. This guy, he has a joint, right?
So I'll take a couple of hits, whatever.
I go, what is this?
And he told me, he goes,
it's a nice afternoon sativa, right?
So didn't that sound like the wind was just blowing
through my non-existent hair?
So I go, all right.
So I took three of the hits off of that thing
and I just wasn't at Thanksgiving anymore.
I mean, I was like there, I was like,
my wife just, people kept talking to me.
My wife just kept going, he's useless, he's useless.
You gotta wait a couple hours.
It's so powerful, yeah.
No, I'm not, it's too late for me.
No, that's why I ended up texting you
some of the jokes a few days later.
That thing where we were doing the thing,
me and this other guy were high out of our minds
and like nobody in this industry
has been buying anything since the strike,
but they're taking meetings, wasting your time, so we were like, we should waste their time back. We were just pitching sequels to our friends, Me and this other guy were high out of our minds and like nobody in this industry has been buying anything since the strike.
But they're taking meetings, wasting your time.
So we were like, we should waste their time back.
We were just pitching sequels to perfect movies
that didn't need a sequel.
And my favorite was Two Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest.
This time he's keeping the sink.
And it's all about the Indian guy.
After he throws it, he picks the sink up and he's running with it.
Tommy Lee Jones is chasing him.
It's just basically comes to fugitive.
It's fugitive.
Yeah.
You merge fugitive.
Yeah, and my favorite part was he's standing
near the waterfall and he's like,
this sink means a lot to me.
And Tommy Lee Jones is like, I don't care.
I don't care.
He jumps and then he jumps. So I opened that up to my podcast listeners.
Dude, regular people are so fucking funny now because they're pitching jokes and so now
they're funny.
Somebody here, the best one, wrote a sequel to Schindler's List.
It was called Schindler's Wrist.
It's about the carpal tunnel Schindler got writing the list and the therapy that happened.
And the movie just ends with him being like,
yeah, it feels pretty good.
Just totally anticlimactic.
How you feeling, Schindler?
I got to say, pretty good.
You're a wizard. Well, you've changed your life a lot, right?
You've cleaned up your act a little bit.
I mean, I feel I have.
My wife, I don't know.
I just don't know if I'm ever going to get over that hump.
She's, first of all, I love your wife.
Listen, enough about you and your private desires.
I'm just saying, we live in an experimental age.
We live in a time when-
Hey, man, you're sucking an aluminum dick.
Hey, and I have no shame about it.
I gotta tell you, the second-
Hold on a second!
The second the tie comes off, I'm telling you, man, this guy, he becomes a different guy.
Yeah.
There's always a clip on anyway.
No, my wife is, yeah, she's the best.
She's the best.
You guys came over for dinner and she's fantastic.
And I feel I accomplished the same thing.
I found the right person.
I found someone who is on me, understands me,
does not let me get away with shit.
Sometimes she lets me get away with a little,
just because she's like, ah, let him go.
Yeah, just let him blow out the lines a little bit.
Yeah, yeah, exactly, let him go.
But yeah, Nia's amazing.
Yeah, she is.
Just when you're fucked up like me,
I do need, the one big thing in our thing is
I had to let her know, I go,
I need an atta boy every once in a while, okay?
You can't just every fucking day be reading me the riot act.
I mean, I know I'm a fucked up guy
and I know that I'm difficult to live with,
but every once in a while, you know,
I did make waffles this morning, you know,
I don't remember that being brought up.
No one says attaboy anymore, by the way.
Is that just expected?
Yeah, attaboy.
No one says attaboy?
No, no one says attaboy.
How about there you go?
There you go, Conan.
There you go.
You did it.
Look at you.
Look at big boy over here.
It becomes real passive aggressive.
There you go.
Look at you.
Must be nice.
Must be nice.
I got that one.
I got that one from somebody who's completely fucked up their life.
He goes, oh yeah, you're out there in LA doing things.
Christmas is coming up, you got money for gifts.
Must be nice, must be nice.
And I'm just like, oh yeah, it is.
Life is pretty good when you're not doing drugs,
getting fired every two weeks.
Also, I'm sorry, this guy is coming to you
with a real low bar.
Oh, you know, must be nice.
Oh no, that was it, that was it.
Must be nice.
That was it.
Must be nice, you got some sneakers you can, must be nice. Oh, no, that was it. That was it. Must be nice. That was it. Must be nice.
You got some sneakers you can put on your feet.
Oh, that was, that was, it was building towards that, you know.
I mean, you know, yeah.
It's just, it just was one of those things.
And I always told my, I said, listen, dude, if you're in a hole,
if you're reaching up, I'll try to pull you out.
But if you're face down in it, digging it deeper every day,
I'm not fucking, I'm not getting involved in that.
And he just couldn't get his head around that.
And then he'd go, I don't know.
The last time I talked to him,
because I'd been working out, I've been working out.
I go, oh, that's great.
I thought he was turning his life around.
He lost a fight to his son.
Wait, that was his workout?
He came at his son and lost? No, he was working out because he lost a fight to his son. Wait, that was his workout? He came at his son and lost? No, he was working out because
he lost a fight to his son. So he's like, Oh man, I gotta, I gotta, I gotta lay off,
gonna lay off this shit. It's just fucking no, but that's one of the things. That's the
craziest motivation for I got to hit the gym. I know, I know. I'm signing up. Hey, well,
what made you come in? Well, I'm fighting my 17 year old son
and he got the better of me.
So this was my wake up call that I need to work out
so I can beat the shit out of him.
Right, and people always say like,
why are so many people from Massachusetts funny?
And I always go like,
cause that is the kind of person you run into all the time.
And he said that's without a bit of funny,
it wasn't supposed to be weird,
or anything. He was just straight up talking to me going like, yeah, man, he's strong now. I mean,
he actually like knocked me down and stuff. So, you know, I've been doing the curls and it's just
like, do you ever think of just like maybe going out to like have a cup of coffee and figure out
what's going on with you guys? Like, I don't think you want, you really want to, you don't want to
fight your son. I don't think he wants to fight you. And I'm like, no, I know, I know, but still, you know,
just like, you know, it's one of those, I don't know.
I go back to, and another thing too,
I always remember when you were in Massachusetts,
is people would always, oh, you know that guy?
Oh, dude, that guy's a character.
He's a character.
And everybody is like this, like,
it's like they're very like uninhibited
and they get into like these habits
and these things that they do.
And they don't realize like how colorful they are.
And it's not until you travel and you go back and you just, you come back to Massachusetts, you're like, you go to like, I don't know what it's like now because like sports is like, so I can't stand the direction that it went into.
But when I used to go to like tailgates at the fucking Pats game, you know, when you were like drinking on route one, we used to park in this guy's backyard.
And then you walk down train tracks, active fucking train tracks, people walking, holding hands with kids.
And then you would go up the under route one up the thing and then walk in and just the shit that you saw, the stuff that people said, it was a comedy show from all the way, people trying to be funny, people not being just being who they were.
You get to your section before the giant,
fucking screens took over.
There was a class clown in every fucking section.
And I used to try to be that guy and sometimes I was,
and then there was sometimes there'd be a guy
funnier than me and then I would just be entertained by him.
And that happened at Red Sox games,
Bruins games, big time Celtics, all of those things.
And I think like these TV screens
and all of this shit that they have now,
it's just like crowd control.
Like the second there's a stop at your play,
that's like, you know, they got these dumb races
and your section has to root for it
to like win a t-shirt and shit.
It's dumb.
Were you, I was of the era where my brother and I
would go down
to Fenway Park without it, just would think,
hey, let's go watch a Red Sox game,
and we'd walk down and you could get bleacher seats.
Oh yeah, for like eight bucks.
Yeah, and we would get bleacher seats
and we would sit in the bleachers, no planning,
no like we got tickets, and we would go
and we'd sit up there and what they did was they hired,
this is back when the Red Sox-
They'd stand on Conan's shoulders
and then hold themselves up over the Green Monster.
What's happening up there, Luke?
Hey, Luke, who's ahead?
The Reds are giving us a shellac.
And then the beginning of his comedy career,
hey, you guys were supposed to pull me up.
Fuck you, you fucking redheaded cunt.
And then they just...
Hey, that's the title of my autobiography.
That was supposed to be a surprise, Random House next year. Hey, that's the title of my autobiography.
That was supposed to be a surprise, Random House next year.
Fuck you, you fucking redheaded cunt.
I was doing a pre-promotion for it.
Thank you.
No, but we would sit in the bleachers
and what was hilarious was they used to hire
like football players, these massive linebackers
from I think BU and they would, you know, guys with massive necks,
and they were the crowd control,
but not professional crowd control.
Their job was just, if anything got out of line,
if they saw some people like having a little too much
to drink and maybe getting into it,
starting to fight a little bit,
these guys with massive necks from BU would go running up
and they would wail on people.
And that was more, we went to watch that
more than we could watch the game.
Well, the art of bouncing back then,
it was nobody knew how to deescalate a situation.
It was all just ramping it up.
I still remember, I was doing this gig
at Nick's Comedy Stop and downstairs was a nightclub.
And I still remember the night, these guys,
they kicked this dude out.
And I don't know if this guy ever walked again.
They basically, it was a dance floor.
And you know, you're in there, it's super fucking loud.
You know, Belle Biv De Vaux era,
like that shit was playing, you know, poison or something.
And then you just heard this commotion and I looked over
and I think it was two bouncers
and they had just grabbed this guy,
picked him up and started running full speed with them.
And there's like innocent people there.
And the crowd just parted like that.
And they had him like nine feet in the air
and the door jam is like eight.
And they were both running like a 440 with this guy.
And like from the middle of his back
to the back of his head just slammed into this middle thing.
And he folded it like a chair,
just threw him out onto Warrington Street.
I remember everyone like, oh!
I like that you can't get through this without laughing.
Because, dude, it was...
That's the most Boston part of this.
So anyway, his spine is seven!
Ha ha ha ha ha!
No, but now, like, there was, like, no cameras.
So it's just like, like, if you ever did that today,
forget about there'd be cameras,
the owner of the club would be like, dude, I'm gonna have a lawsuit every fucking weekend.
You guys are fired.
So they just threw that, everybody was like,
oh, and everybody just went, oh!
And then the music's still playing,
and it was the funniest thing ever as far as like,
it took a good minute for relaxed dancing to happen again.
It was kind of like...
It was Belle Bim Devo.
No, it was definitely like the tone had been set.
I'll never forget, like they must,
and then they must have done that more than once
because they were working together.
They just grabbed the guy.
I knew a guy that was a bouncer.
He said, sometimes we would just walk up to somebody
just to start a fight and we'd just walk up to him
and be like, hey man, you gotta get out of here.
And they didn't do anything.
And they would just do it hoping that they would,
cause they, you know, a lot of guys who weren't juice
back then and it was, you know, it wasn't the cream
that they have now that also has like a suntan lotion
or whatever, a sunscreen in it,
whatever these guys have now.
That's what I use.
It was the horse tranquilizer shit.
So they like wanted to get into fights.
And I somehow, I avoided all of that.
I avoided all of that shit.
Like past a certain age, I just stopped,
I was like, these guys,
like people getting their fucking ears bit off and stuff.
I knew this guy, like his party trick,
he would eat a light bulb.
Oh my God.
Oh yeah, gums bleeding, smiling at you.
It was just like, yeah, these guys, these guys.
It was a better time.
These guys are on another level.
I'm just gonna stick to the comedy.
And yeah, there was some really interesting,
there's a lot of characters back then.
A lot of characters.
It was funny, you did this special in Seattle.
I almost sensed you love to go to a place
where you feel like you're not just gonna,
you could go to certain places
where you're just gonna get, where you know what their attitude is and you know you're not just gonna, you could go to certain places where you're just gonna get,
where you know what their attitude is,
and you know you're gonna get unconditional love.
Obviously you have a lot of fans in Seattle,
but you go there, I think,
because you want to challenge some
of what Seattle may stand for right now in some ways.
Is that possible?
Well, I did what I did in Seattle
because of collectively the way they think,
but like if I did it in Utah,
I would have did it a different way.
Yes, exactly.
It would have been the same thing
to kind of like, you know,
like mess with them a little bit.
But you like the pushback, you enjoy it.
Well, yeah, because the thing I can't,
I don't want to-
It's your, I mean, it's the cold shave for you.
There's part of you that wants to go someplace
and you did this for years on my show,
which was why I always loved you,
but you would have the take
that wasn't the comfortable take
that everyone would applaud at.
You would always want to put yourself in a situation
where you weren't-
Push people away?
Yeah.
That's what I'm doing.
No, but it was hilarious.
And I think something that's quite unusual about you.
Well, the reason why I love the city
and then that theater for me is a funny place
because everyone talks about like Nirvana
that they were the ones that knocked off the metal bands
off the top 10 on MTV.
And it was really, I felt when Pearl Jam put out that video
and Eddie Vedder climbed up at the Moore Theater
and dropped down into the crowd and it was like,
okay, so that Nirvana thing wasn't a fluke,
there's more of these bands.
And it was like the first time that I felt like old,
you know, I was about 23.
There was no more exciting birthdays, you know,
I had, you know, 16, you get your license,
18, you're an adult, 21, you can drink,
22, you graduate college.
This was the first kind of like, oh, now I just go, all right, license, 18, you're an adult, 21, you can drink, 22, you graduate college.
This was the first kind of like,
oh, now I just go, all right, bye, good luck with your life.
We're watching these people.
And it was just funny to me to go back to that place
where that happened,
because it took me forever to like that band.
And now I like them, but it took me forever
because I was just like, fuck those guys.
Wait, Pearl Jam?
What was your beef with Pearl Jam?
They knocked warrant off, it was so stupid.
Oh, wait, because you liked warrant?
It wasn't that, it wasn't, what they represented
was I wasn't young anymore.
It was the end.
I see, I see.
Listen, even I knew when all of those W bands
were coming in, that like, this is like the end
of this shit. W bands.
But there was also still some, like, I'll tell you this,
what's that face?
Oh my God, I'm flicking on the name here.
When they did Monkey Business, Sebastian Bach.
Skid Row.
Skid Row.
Dude, them live on SNL doing Monkey Business
or whatever, I'll put that up against anybody.
Sebastian Bach and the whole band sounded fucking unreal,
but the whole industry at that point
was already moving on to Grunge and it's a killer album.
So there was still, you know, any genre
there's gonna be like awful versions of that.
But like, that was just my first experience of like,
oh wow, this is like over, you know?
So that's kind of why I picked that theater to do it.
Cause it was funny to me like to come back to this place
that remind, and then, you know, drop dead years,
this whole mortality thing that I was thinking.
Yeah, you talk about, you say there's these ages
when men, not women, men just drop dead.
And you say it's 49 to 61.
Yeah, and anything after that,
you're just looking at a prolonged illness.
Oh my God.
Oh.
No, you got to, but you say that's the age, you're just looking at a prolonged illness. Oh, my God. Oh.
No, you got to...
But you say that's the age, that's this window,
and he said, it doesn't happen, it's really funny,
I don't want to blow your special,
I want people to watch it.
These are the years I'm in,
so I've got to make sure I go to the hot doctor,
and I've got to make sure I watch what I eat, dude,
and then, you know, then you can make it to that,
to that next level, where, you know,
you're that old guy at the golf club
talking about how they just took your gallbladder out
and just talking about what ails you.
I could never be that guy.
I've tried so many times to get into golf.
I just cannot fucking do it.
I tried it once and I thought,
it's gonna take so much work for me to be very bad,
that I'm gonna put that time
into maybe getting a little better at guitar.
Like that was my-
And nobody seems to be enjoying it.
Like you talking about anybody goes,
I was going, yeah, first four holes were good.
And then I couldn't have my fucking driver.
And then they're like, why would you keep doing this?
And it takes forever.
And it's mind numbingly like boring.
It's just, I like watching pros do it.
I like that my friends enjoy doing it,
but I would rather go do shit.
I'd rather go play drums, ride a motorcycle,
fly a helicopter.
Like, why wouldn't you do that as opposed to fucking say,
what are you doing? 112 yards?
What are you doing? What are you going?
You going 7, 8 iron?
And they got their fucking sniper scope.
It's so fucking, it's so dumb.
It's so dumb. It's like all you guys need to go home and either get divorced or work on your marriage.
Because there is nothing, nothing is happening here.
This is, it's like a library.
Like you got, it's like the whole, it's so quiet.
All of this shit.
It's just bad.
It's just bad.
And everybody with the wacky, you either wear really wacky clothes, like you're in a Three
Stooges sketch or, or, or you dress like you're, you know, Tiger Woods adjacent or whatever.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Oh, he's a scratch golfer.
Okay.
You guys are scratch golfer. How is he?
That's amazing.
Like he's dunking.
Well, this makes me happy,
because I sometimes am adjacent to a lot of people
that are golfers.
Jeff Ross golfs a lot and likes to talk about golfing.
Eduardo just said he does said it all the time.
Eduardo just said it all the time.
Yeah.
No, listen, if that's what gets you going, that's cool.
I tried.
No offense to you.
No, because I'm joking.
It does look like a great hang.
It does look like a great hang.
We should talk all the time.
It's just not, it should be nine holes.
And I would argue maybe seven.
Seven holes. Like is there a golf slider thing that I can do?
Like three holes?
There are courses that offer nine holes.
No, there's one off the five that's a par three.
There's one down in Torrance that's an 18 hole par three.
It's like, that's what I, yeah.
I'm going in with three clubs, 48 balls,
and I'm not looking for any of them.
I don't give a shit.
And I count every fucking stroke.
Like if I go to tee off and I miss,
I go, oh, that's a breakfast ball.
No, it isn't.
It isn't.
It isn't.
I was trying to hit the ball and I missed.
That fucking counts.
Setting the tone.
These are gonna be honest scores today.
Nobody looks at you.
They all look down at their silly pants.
No, it attracts and rewards dishonest people.
A lot of contractors, real estate agents, lawyers.
You're just running a lot of people.
You're a happy man now.
That's what I like.
I know your anger fuels you.
Dude, I went on a motorcycle ride the other day
that was fucking life-changing.
It was just, it was fun.
I was riding this. Where'd you go?
I went up the canyons in, I think, La Quina,
something like up that way.
And it was my buddy's bike and it was a big bike.
And I was on those big Harleys with the fucking Ferring.
So it's like scary.
It's like you're on Clydesdale.
And on the way up, I was kind of scary.
But on the way back, I kind of got the feel for it.
And I kind of did my version of tearing through the canyon.
And I was euphoric for like two days doing that.
And that's like just something golf has never done for me.
Like I remember a couple of times I've hit good shots
and people are going,
that's the shot that's gonna make you come back.
It's like, no.
It's not.
Do you have nighttime golfing?
I would do that.
Like those driving range things,
those with the big net, that looks like fun.
You know, those checks there,
the people drinking and stuff. Yeah, top golf. That looks like fun, you know, those checks there, the people drinking and stuff. Top golf.
Yeah, top golf.
That looks like, like if I was young,
this is like a nightclub with golf.
That looks fun.
But like to actually just like become a member,
you have to vote on things.
Like you join this sports HOA.
Okay, we got a dentist here.
Seems like a good guy, wants to be a member.
See Conan, you take him out for a round of golf
and feel him out.
Feel at least our kind of person
that we want in our little clubhouse here.
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know.
In each away.
I can't.
Yeah, no, It really is.
You know, you talked about one thing.
There's so many things you bring up that I relate to.
And one is you don't own a gun, but you like guns.
And you bring this up in your special.
And I kind of relate, meaning-
I'm too scared to own a gun.
No, no, I don't want a gun in my house.
I'd love to have one.
Oh, you would? I don't want a gun in my house. I'd love to have one. Oh, you would?
I don't want a gun in my house.
I don't want to, but I've kind of always been fascinated
by guns and the times that I've been in situations
where someone's let me shoot guns.
I've found it to be very cathartic.
It's really interesting to me.
I like to kind of get the basics down of it,
but I don't want to own one.
Yeah.
I understand that.
Because I know that I am like, I mean, the joke I do,
I lose my cell phone, like I'll walk into a room
to get something that I forgot and then I will leave.
And in the process of getting that,
I'll have left whatever was in my hand.
Yeah.
And my passport, I'll get to the airport,
fuck, and I got to go back.
Like I am too, whatever it is.
However, my brain is like, you have to be on it to the airport, fuck, and I gotta go back. Like, I am too, whatever it is, however my brain is,
like, you have to be on it to own a fucking gun,
especially if you have kids in the house,
and like, you know, you kinda gotta know,
kinda know where your skill set is, you know?
So, like, I learned a lot of shit, like, in like aviation,
where, of not, is flying within your ability,
you know what I mean?
So you're always looking at the weather
and stuff like that.
And I just always look at that stuff.
You keep the odds in your favor
and you don't just do something when you're up there
because what you're flying can do it.
It's like, do you have the ability to do it?
Is it safe to do it here or whatever?
And, you know, just doing stuff like that.
Like, I just look at like, no, I like,
I go into gun stores all the time.
I like the old school, like revolvers, all like those cop shows that I watch. I'm like, oh, I go to gun stores all the time. I like the old school revolvers,
all those cop shows that I watch.
I'm like, oh, that's the Clint Eastwood right there.
That's Beretta had that or whatever.
And I like the old school rifles and stuff.
But I'm not into the, I don't know, the semi-automatics.
No, no.
What's the one that everybody wants to get?
The AR-15?
The AR-15, yeah.
To me, that's like the electric car of the fucking gun world.
You know, like if you just have a revolver,
that's like driving a stick.
You know what I mean?
You gotta be good at it.
That shit's kind of like, you know,
you're just watching your misses
until you hit the fucking person.
What?
How many true though?
How many fucking opportunities do you need?
Jesus Christ.
It's like 900, anything is's firing 900 rounds a second.
You don't have to, there's no skill.
It's a gunfight meets T-ball.
Yeah, so, no, but that's also like another thing too,
is what I'm trying to do now, like when I'm going out there,
is I'm trying to more like bring people together,
which is a really hard thing to do because everything gets politicized
like fires, viruses.
I did a Kimmel the other night.
I deliberately was apolitical,
complimented the fire department, department of water.
And somebody takes a clip and said that I, you know,
Bill sides with Gavin Newsom.
It's like, I couldn't pick that guy out of a fucking lineup.
I've seen him after games when they cut to KTLA
and they show him for a second, salt and pepper hair,
sort of a squid job. Sure, he's a game show host, yeah.
Yeah, I have a vague understanding of who that guy is,
but like, I didn't know what party he was in.
I don't watch any of that shit.
I don't watch any of it. You don't watch news.
You're not a news junkie.
There is no news, yeah.
There is no news.
It's just all people's fucking opinions.
And then politicians are grossly underpaid.
So they let you vote.
So you get to choose who goes,
oh, my guy won, or my guy lost or whatever.
And then they go in there.
And then the rest of the time,
you don't get to like vote on what they're voting.
They vote on it.
And the people that own them, you know,
they're working for them.
And all of those guys, like, you know,
they're all worth like 40, 60, 80, hundred million dollars
making like six figures a year.
How do you do that legally?
How do you Conan?
I don't have the answer.
I know you don't and everybody,
but the geniuses they got everybody,
like they divide, divide, divide every fucking time.
CNN does it, Fox News does it.
And I find these people that who watch that shit,
it's like people who come out of prison
who are institutionalized,
and they can't fucking live unless they're inside.
You watch that 24 hour news enough,
and you start thinking paranoid thoughts,
and you follow those paranoid thoughts onto the internet.
There's gonna be a website that agrees
with whatever fucked up thought you have,
and then validates it.
Then you just go like,
my last time I did Kimmel,
somebody wrote to me
and was like dead certain that Jimmy Kimmel
was a CIA operative.
Well, he may be actually.
I don't, I mean, I don't like to add fuel to the fire.
Oh, okay.
I was with him in the CIA for a while.
It was me.
You were in the CIA.
Now what did you do to get kicked out that the CIA for a while. It was me. You were in the CIA. Now, what did you do to get kicked out
that the CIA disowned you?
They said, we don't want a hairless ostrich.
Featherless.
Featherless.
Oh, OK, featherless.
No, it was me.
It was Fallon.
There was a bunch of us that were in heavy CIA training.
There were.
I was asked to leave.
Fallon kept singing.
They asked him to leave.
I was asked to leave. Fallon kept singing, they asked him to leave.
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh...
Uh... Uh... Uh... Uh... Uh... that people are conspiring about and you realize how ridiculous their theories are because you actually have a little bit of information. It's like, oh my God, like that's me.
That's how I was.
I used to think all of this shit
and I was putting things together
and I forgot that I didn't know any of these people.
I was a zillion miles away or whatever, but.
My least favorite thing in this era we're in
is everyone's certain, is certainty.
And I like whatever happened to uncertainty, whatever happened to, I like comedy where I admit, is everyone's certain. There's certainty. And I like whatever happened to uncertainty,
whatever happened to, I like comedy where I admit,
I don't know, I don't know what the answers are.
And I'm gonna think of some stuff that is amusing to me
and share it with you and hope that you find it funny.
But I see it a lot in comedy now,
there's a lot of certainty.
And in politics, everyone's absolutely 100% certain
about everything.
And that's the thing I've-
I was guilty of that like early,
I like to think earlier in my career.
I was doing this and then, you know,
now I'm trying to do more of that.
So I always try to like, always just let people know
that I don't watch the news and I don't read.
And this is just what I feel.
It comes across that you don't read.
It's very clear.
Okay, good.
No, that's good.
Cause I don't want the responsibility of that.
Like, you know.
Can you read?
Are you able to read?
I mean.
They said you're acting at sound
like it was a decision that you made.
No, it depends on like, you know,
when I was really fucked up, like really fucked up
and didn't know I was fucked up,
it would take me 20 minutes to read one page.
Because every word or sentence would remind me
of something like my brain was like on spin cycle
and it took a long time to understand that.
I just thought I was dumb
because that's what they said when you,
there wasn't like all of these diagnoses, you were just an idiot. And so that's I just thought I was dumb, because that's what they said when you were young. There wasn't like all of these diagnoses.
You were just an idiot.
And so that's what I thought.
I said, oh, it's taking so long because I'm dumb.
And then after I was, oh, I know,
I think I might be a little traumatized.
I don't know what the fuck it is,
but I also knew enough not to take any drugs because of it.
It's like, oh, you know,
I can kind of like try to figure this out and get myself. It's like all these idiots taking ozempic.
It's like, do you really think after all that cake you ate
that all you have to do is shoot this thing
into your fucking leg and then you're gonna be skinny?
Like, okay, not to do a pun here,
but you can't have your cake and eat it.
Like there's gonna be an unbelievable disease
on the other side of that.
You don't just get to melt the pounds away and there you go.
That was weird. And don't just get to melt the pounds away and, there you go. That was weird.
And then I just did this.
You too.
Somebody was trying to claim that these sugar companies
are now breaking down what's an ozempic,
and they're putting a chemical in their candy that's
going to override the ozempic.
And it's just like, so my body is basically a battlefield.
Like, I'm not even a person at this point. Well, that's my thing why I don't watch the news of politics, because nobody's just like, so my body is basically a battlefield. Like I'm not even a person at this point.
Well, that's my thing why I don't watch the news or politics
because nobody's talking about that shit.
Or you watch like a fucking baseball game
and everybody's holding up a sign of somebody they know
that beat or died of cancer and nobody's saying why.
Or asking why do all that.
They never did that.
People used to smoke at the fucking game
and you knew less people that died of cancer.
Like I want people to start holding up signs like,
you know, thank you, round up.
You know, stuff.
And you watch how quickly MLB will cut away from that.
Because they make, they're in business with those guys.
Yeah.
Oh, here I go. Now I'm going on the internet.
You know, that's okay. That's okay.
So you're positing that there's a lot of carcinogens out there
and no one's talking about it.
No, I just wish that regular people, which is most of us,
would just stop yelling at each other.
Stop letting these fucking idiots get you stirred up.
Stop arguing with bots.
Like, no matter what the fuck is on there,
like, you know, like, the LA fires or something.
Like, it's, ah, that's because of Biden.
Ugh, because of Trump. Ugh, Kamala.
That's all you got to do.
And then all of these fucking people
just jump on the hook.
And it's a fire.
It's a fire.
It used to be something you didn't argue about.
There's a bad fire.
I know.
Just watch Chinatown and just realize
that this place shouldn't be here.
Right.
We've all known this.
It's a desert.
There has never-
You ship water in.
Yeah.
I can't believe I live in a desert
and there's no water in the hydrants.
No.
Oh, Jesus.
There's some in your ice bath.
People, your lawn is all green.
This did like, we were living like idiots out here.
We know that we're living on like this,
we're living on the moon
and it looks like we're living in New Hampshire.
Like that's eventually that that's gonna come around,
you know, and every year we have a drought
and they tell you not to take as long a shower
and blah, blah, blah, and we all fucking blow it up.
I think we're all responsible for that.
I don't think you just blame it on, like, a political party,
and I don't have a solution for that,
but I don't think the solution is to sit there
and blame people and try to, you know,
happen during your watch, Conan.
This is on you. The St, Conan. This is on you.
The St. Francis Dam disaster is on you.
By the way, they found out years later
that they built that dam into a prehistoric mudslide
and they didn't have the technology.
And that guy carried the guilt of that.
When the St. Francis Dam collapsed out here
and like a 30 foot wall of water went to the valley,
they found people's bodies down in like fucking Mexico.
And this guy carried them.
Again, he can't get through this without laughing.
Oh my God.
That is so Boston.
They found bodies in Mexico.
I mean, I just can't imagine you're in your log cabin
or whatever, Jimmy crack corn and I don't care.
Just this fucking wall of water.
And then if there is a god,
you wake up talking to him, still holding your bitch,
spitting out fish, what the fuck happened?
Spitting out the fish.
Like a cartoon.
I know, I know like a cartoon.
Oh my god.
I can't believe you're the guy who built that shit
and you're like, what happened?
He probably heard it.
He probably heard it go through the sound of it.
What is that?
What is that?
That's the shit you built, you fucking asshole.
What made you think of the St. Francis Dam?
Look that up.
When did that happen?
Oh, this is even better.
It gets even better. Francis, after the dam collapses, some fucking asshole wanted to climb up it to do like the
original selfie or whatever.
He climbed up on top and he fell off and died.
It was built between 1924 and 1926.
And when did it collapse?
1927.
The dam failed in 1928.
Oh my God!
So we're sitting here talking about current events and you just go right to the St. Francis
Dam collapse in 19-
Because I know you like old timey shit.
I do.
You like Winston Churchill and Theodore Roosevelt.
I've been to his house.
He has the library of a 90-year-old.
When he was missing, he should have greeted me with a pipe.
I have a pretty good library.
He does, they're all leather bound.
Oh, come on.
They're not all leather bound.
Oh yeah, no, he was.
You know what I should have in my house?
He was totally intimidating.
He was going, I've read all of these.
I did not.
And he goes, and all this information is in here.
It's all in my mind.
And you will all sit here and listen to it.
Oh my God, it's the longest night of my life.
Oh, come on!
I get it, Conan, you've read about the Third Reich.
Jesus Christ.
Dennis Miller would have been like, take it easy.
Take it easy, cha cha.
Yeah, Jesus.
I would love to see the two of you guys
two big brains going back and forth.
One of my old girlfriends took a photo of me
and it's like on this beautiful beach, like 1994,
when I took like my first vacation ever
and I'm on the beautiful beach in the Caribbean
and I'm sitting there and I'm reading
William Shire is Rising Full of the Third Reich.
It's like a telephone book with a swastika on the cover.
And I'm completely in shade because God forbid.
What country were you in?
No, I was in the Caribbean somewhere.
And so God forbid I get any sunlight at all.
And I'm wearing, you know, Rose Kennedy's sun hat
underneath an umbrella.
And I'm reading this giant morality tale
about the rise and fall of the Third Reich in tiny print.
You know, I went to Prague and I went to that church
where those guys holed up who shot that SS guy.
Yeah, yeah.
And they stayed there for like fucking,
I don't know how many days just fighting these guys off.
They tried to flood it and drown.
They still got the bullet holes in there.
So it's unreal.
Like World War II is just like this thing, cause it wasn't here. When you go over there, it's just, and they still got the, like, there. It's unreal. Like World War II is just like this thing,
cause it wasn't here.
When you go over there, it's just,
and they still got the, like, if you go into like Berlin,
and what the few structures that are left, you're like,
oh yeah, this really fucking happened.
You know, where you go to like countries that they bombed
and they just have the ugliest buildings
because after the war they were just leveled
and their economy was done.
So they just had to like,
just build these things really quickly.
I was doing my travel show with my team
and we checked into this town and Lintz, named Lintz,
and we're walking around and I said,
every building here looks like it was built starting in 1950.
Man, for whatever reason,
they bombed the shit out of the place.
And so I got on my phone, looked up Linz, like what happened in Linz.
And Linz is the, it wasn't his birthplace,
but it was the town where Hitler grew up.
The Allies knew that.
It was also, I think it was in armaments,
they built armaments there.
And so they bombed the shit out of it.
And you can see that every single building,
and I've seen this in Cologne too,
where the only thing they didn't hit was the cathedral.
The cathedral.
And I've talked to people there and they've said,
people who think, you know, war,
who romanticize war need to come to these places.
Oh no, it's brutal.
Because every single building was demolished.
Everything.
There's, in what are they calling it,
Czechnia, whatever they're calling it now,
there's a town where they, I haven't gone, I would never, it are they calling it? Czechnia, whatever they're calling it now.
There's a town where they, I haven't gone,
I would never, it's just too sad to go to,
but like when they killed that SS guy,
for some reason they, I don't know,
I forget the story of-
They assassinated him.
The resistance assassinated him.
So they found out whatever town,
some of those guys they thought they were from
and they fucking killed everybody in that town.
So they have like this, you know, these silhouettes of like, you know, men, women, children.
It's just fucking, it's fucking brutal.
It's brutal.
And then what's funny is when you go.
What's funny.
This is unbelievable.
Go, go.
I'll tell you what's funny is you go to Stockholm, Sweden, okay?
And it looks like you're in the Keebler Elf's like home city.
And you're like, well, why did this one survive?
And you found out they remained neutral.
Yeah.
Yeah, so they let the Nazis, they looked the other way
as they use their trains to go into Norway.
And then that whole fucking thing was a while
cause I went over there and they were talking about how,
Norway had fought to get the bottom third of their country
liberated from Sweden and they had just gotten it back and then during World War two I don't this was
some like you know petty shit they let the Nazis go in there and you know fuck
them all up so the Norway's economy was flattened in Sweden just because they
were still standing became this economic power so Norway was so desperate they
tried to sell the bottom of the third of their company country back again and
Sweden's like yeah now we don't want it Jesus and then
they found oil there and then the Swedes go now we go over there and do jobs that
they don't want to do but everybody has like a sense of humor about it now
because no one was alive when all of that shit happened you know what I mean
right kind of but it was yeah it's pretty fucking, it's pretty wild.
Well, I knew this is where the podcast was gonna go.
At the very beginning, I said,
I'm gonna get us to the devastation in World War II.
Hitler was into architecture though.
That's why he left like Paris and Prague alone.
He just like, they're too beautiful to destroy.
That's just such a funny like wrinkle in his personality.
Like, cause he's murdering 6 million people. Ooh, is that Art Deco?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He did at the end, want them to burn Paris.
And he, and one general was like-
Cause he couldn't have it.
He was like a fucking jilted lover.
Yeah, exactly.
So at the very end, he wanted to, you know,
I'm just, I'm tired of you letting Hitler slide.
Bill Burr. We've...
One of my favorite Norm jokes of all time.
What?
He was on Letterman, he was talking about Hitler,
and he goes, he goes, you know, uh,
he goes, the more I read about this guy,
the less I like him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
God bless you, Norm.
He just totally presented it like he was the only guy
who had ever read up on it.
I don't know if you ever heard about one of the worst people
of the last century, but.
I'm getting into it.
Listen, I wanna make sure we get the word out
on your special, it's out right now.
And it is called?
Drop Dead Years.
Yeah, Drop Dead Years.
And it's on Hulu, streaming on Hulu.
And yeah, I'm very proud of it.
And I'm looking forward to, I guess when this thing airs,
when this airs, I'll be doing
Glenn Gary, Glenn Ross on Broadway at the Palace.
That's fantastic. If you'd like to come,
if I'm allowed to invite a ginger.
I might have to have Odin Kirk invite you.
And maybe that's, we'll find a loophole.
Yeah, yeah.
Me and Ed Sheeran will come together with Ron Howard.
Yeah, from the day I met you,
I was like, no one's mind works like yours
and it's a beautiful thing to behold.
Oh, I didn't know which way that was going.
The day I met you, I was like,
why did we book this guy the way your brain works?
I'm constantly saving your stories.
It's exhausting.
You're exhausting, Bill.
Well, I, right back at you, man.
I always love coming on whatever you're doing
and hanging out or whatever it is.
It's effortless, man.
You're one of the funniest guys I know.
And you know that's sincere,
because I couldn't look at you when I did it.
I know. You looked over that way.
Two Irish guys can't look at each other.
We can't look at each other. That's another...
All right, let me tell you something, you fucking cunt.
I love you to death.
I wouldn't throw you in shite
for all the fucking chileles in fucking O'Toole town.
That's another Norm line.
He had a line once where he said,
I went home to Christmas break and it was all right,
but at one point I accidentally made eye contact
with my father.
And I was like, I know what he's talking about.
We all know what he's talking about.
Oh man, that guy.
All right, Bill Burr, go in peace
to love and serve the Lord or whatever.
That's it. All right.
Well, thank you guys so much for having me.
And yeah, I don't know how to wrap this up.
This is my job. This is your job.
That's it, everybody. We'll be back after the break.
We'll be right after the break.
We'll be right back.
You gotta go buy a mattress, we'll tell you which one to get.
Sarah Michelle Geller, when we return.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Courtney Thorne Smith, when we come back.
I can go back to way old shows that I did.
Say we got so and so next.
Yeah, yeah.
Come on in.
Come on in. Conan O'Brien needs a friend. Dude, say we got so and so next! Yeah, come on!
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Bye.