Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend - Tiffany Haddish
Episode Date: September 27, 2021Actress and comedian Tiffany Haddish feels amazing about being Conan O’Brien’s friend. Tiffany sits down with Conan to chat about the life-saving power to make others laugh, why success is the be...st revenge, and phone sex hotline coaching. Plus, Engineer Sam debuts a new gadget to help keep Conan on track during the show. Got a question for Conan? Call our voicemail: (323) 451-2821. For Conan videos, tour dates and more visit TeamCoco.com.
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Hi, my name is Tiffany Haddish, and I feel amazing about being Conan's friend.
Hello and welcome to Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, the podcast where I, Conan, well I'm part of a
never-ending quest to find real friends, make connections in a world that I think's gone quite
insane. I'm joined today, as always, Mr. Matt Gorley. Hi, Captain. Yep, thank you, sir. And of
course, on this voyage, because Sona had to depart the ship temporarily in order to have children in
the lifeboat and raise them for a while, and then I hope come back, which she will. I don't know why
we're going with the boat analogy still, but we have one of the deck hands who swabs the deck,
always a chipper smile on his face, has been brought up from the very bowels of the ship,
covered in soot and grime, to take the place of the temporarily absent Sona, whose birthed twins,
Mikey and Charlie, in a boat. We lowered into the sea. I don't know why she couldn't have had the
twins on our boat, but again, this is my fault. I took the analogy way, way too far. We don't even
know what boat she's on now. She's in a small boat. We put her out to sea, and then she will row
back once the children have... Wait, we put her in a boat in a little dingy. She goes out by herself
and delivers twins, and then is supposed to row back to the our boat? Well, I think Sona's very
hearty person. She's very... Sona has punched me many times. I'm not worried about Sona. I'm worried
that we made her do this. Oh, no, no, no. No, no, no. Contractually, I have to point out,
and legally, I didn't make her do this. Just as part of this analogy, I said, I think it's best if
you go have the twins on a small dingy out at sea, so that I can record the podcast on the
main ship here, and we'll have David, the lowly deckhand, take over for you while you're pushing
two children out of you alone in a boat floating in the South Pacific. It just seems like a lawsuit
waiting to happen. I'm trying to... God damn it. I'm doing my best. I love analogies. I love to
stay true to them, and I tried to go with this, and then you guys forced me into this. No,
we'll stay with it. I think we're going to mutiny, though. Oh, you're going to mutiny? Yeah. What
do you have? Do you have a tweed saber you're going to hit me with? What are you going to do?
All right. You're going to take away my subscription to NPR. Is that what you're going to do? I get
it. And give you your subscription to Boomer Magazine? Oh, nice. That's what my son says all
the time to me now, Boomer. Boomer. Can I say something? You do point out people's looks a lot
like a Boomer, though. Can I say something, please? Yeah. Okay, I get it. I guess I'm the old man.
Guess what? This old man served his country pretty bravely in the Falklands. I didn't see you
doing much. The war that England fought? Yeah. Yeah, I was visiting England at the time as a
college student. And when the call came that there was a minor skirmish in a weird part of the
world that everyone's forgotten, I was there for England. Okay? Second of all, I apologize. Yeah,
I don't like my son calls me Boomer all the time. And everything I do, he says Boomer, Boomer. And
I looked it up. I'm not a Boomer. Are you not? Well, they technically... Are you generation X?
No, I think I should be. I'm right on the line between a Boomer and Gen X. And I don't like it. I
think the line runs right through like 1963, which is when I'm born. And so I think of a Boomer as
someone who was at Woodstock, okay? And I was pooping my diapers at Woodstock. I mean, I was 30,
but get it, folks? But I mean, I don't... I think of Boomers as people that were saying, yeah,
I'm going off to see Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. I'll be back later. And then I'm gonna
join the Manson Cult. To me, that's a Boomer, okay? I'm seeing here that the Boomers are 1946 to
64. Why? You are a Boomer. But listen, I'm so soundly in the middle of the generation X generation
that I can let you in, but you have to be asked in like a vampire. So you still got to start being
nice to me. Can I be a Gen Xer, please? Is there a test? Yeah, there's a bit of a test. Okay. Well,
I don't like... You admit I did get screwed a little bit on the timing of I think 64 is going
way too late for Boomers. Because how can a Boomer encompass someone who was born just as World War
II was ending and me? That's ridiculous. Who came of age, you know, watching Scooby-Doo cartoons.
That's insane. That's way too... I know, but yet there is a divide between you and me. Look,
I'm wearing flannel like a grunge guy. Everything about you says grunge. Everything. Everything
about you says... I just remember you were there in 91 in Seattle. Remember when it was all going
down? You can see you in the background a lot. I was in Whittier listening to Wilson Phillips.
It's so funny. Whenever I hear Whittier, I think of Nixon, you know? Yeah. You grew up blocks from
Nixon's house and I just love that you used to listen to Wilson Phillips with an aging Richard
Nixon. Would he come over to your house? Oh, is Matt here? Yes, former President Nixon. He's in
the basement. Is he listening to... Is he listening to Wilson Phillips? Yes, he is listening to
Wilson Phillips. I'd very much like to join him down there. I think this is quite a trio. Are you a
carny or a china? I'm a... I like chinized. Good God, the game's on that lady. Are we taping this, by the way? First
podcast. That was the first podcast ever. You could argue was the Nixon tapes. That's the first
podcast. Yeah. Yeah. Remember when you listened to the Nixon tapes? I don't because I wasn't alive as
I was a Generation X. I know your Generation Xer, but they're called tapes and you can listen to
them later on. I know. Yeah. Yeah. So you're probably unfamiliar with anything. I'll tell you
about Glenn Miller someday. There's actually a way to listen to that music, even though you weren't
alive at the time. But, you know, think about it. The Nixon tapes really are the first podcast and
it would have been very funny if he had done it. If you were listening to it and you heard him doing
at, taking a break to do ads. Yeah. So he's... So Nixon's in the Oval Office and he's talking to
Haldeman and Ehrlichman and he's like, oh, yeah, no, we gotta get these bastards. We gotta get them where it
hurts. How much money would it cost to get into a break into the Watergate Hotel? Well, we could...
We have a team that would do it and it would cost about this much. Well, we could get that money.
Yeah. We could get that money. Yeah. Well, just hang on just a second here. It just puts me in
mind of... I'm looking at a photograph here of my lovely wife, Pat, and I'm thinking, wouldn't it be
nice if this photograph was on glass? Wouldn't that be something? Well, let me tell you it can be.
Fracture prints. With fracture prints, you'll get this wonderful picture of Pat or one of the
Eisenhower boys or your dog checkers. You could have it on glass so that when Pat Boone comes by
the Oval Office to swap stories, you can show them pictures and they're on glass preserved for
all time. Anyway, fracture. Anyway, back to you, Ehrlichman Haldeman. How do we get these fuckers?
We've got to get in there and we've got to get those goddamn Pentagon papers back. There's got to be a
way to store papers and I'll tell you one thing. If you want to keep track of papers, you'll need
the right software to do it. And that software. I wish Conan was a better improviser and could come up with a fucking company.
What is it, Matt? What's a good software company that has? QuickBooks. There you go. QuickBooks. Oh, yeah,
QuickBooks software. That way you can keep track. You can get the Pentagon papers at Daniel Ellsberg Stoll.
You can get them and you can keep on quickin'. You can also keep track of all your slush funds,
what they're accounting app. And this enables you to then take that money and you can send it to those
Cubans right away without having to put it through the mail. Anyway, back to the podcast. Today's episode,
we're going to get those fuckers. Those fuckers, we're going to hit them and hit them hard. I swear to God,
I can do nine hours of Nixon's podcast. Keep going. Please, if you liked Nixon's podcast, Riff, please
encourage me to do it some more because I've never been happier. It's a spinoff. It really makes me happy.
Well, our first guest today, of course. This is, of course, Dick Nixon needs a friend and, God,
let me tell you what I really do. I mean, President of the United States, I'm now safely in my second term.
Haven't got a godname. Well, of course, there's Reverend Billy Graham, but, you know, he's kind of a
fair weather friend. Doesn't call when things are going low. Anyway, I should get on to my first guest
today. My guest today is an Emmy Award-winning actress and comedian you know from the movie
Girls Trip. Oh, God, I saw that with Pat. We walked out. We didn't understand any of it. And, of course,
the TBS series The Last OG. Oh, I wish I understood what that meant. OG Gordon Liddy. Oh, that must
be about G. Gordon Liddy. You're right. The Last OG. Oh, G. Gordon Lee Elephant. Now you can see
her in the new film, the card counter. Oh, I'm going to see that. They're going to screen that
tonight in the bowling alley underneath the West Wing. I'm so excited to teach with us today.
I'm going to switch my voice back to Conan soon, but good God.
Tiffany Haddish. Welcome.
You know, it's funny because I was thinking about you today because I was so excited that I get to
talk to you. I love you. I love your story. I love your energy. And I'm just delighted that you're
here. Seriously. Well, I'm delighted to be here with you. I love you. And you're dancing. Okay,
yes. I got the crazy. I love that dance. The spring dance. I love it. Man, yes. If I go to,
when I go to my grave, people will be like, what did he do? He did that dance. Anything else I do.
It's so funny because over the years, I've worked a lot with your friend, Kevin Hart.
And I see these points that are very similar with you and Kevin. You both lean into this positivity
and put all this energy into what you're doing 140%. And I believe in that. And I think,
I don't know if you see that, if you see the ways in which you and Kevin are kind of similar.
Oh yeah. I definitely see how similar we are, but I also see how different we are. But,
Well, you're much taller than Kevin. Well, much taller. Way better looking.
Also, you don't yell at me. And everything I've ever done with Kevin, all he does is yell at me.
Well, because it's like a little man chewing out a giant. David and Goliath.
It's true. But for me, I mean, I like to shout and stuff too. But I try to be more sophisticated
with it from time to time, especially with men. I don't want to yell at men unless they do something
down. But I am loud. And that's because I'm partially deaf because I've been through things.
At least I think I'm partially deaf. Do you really think you're partially deaf?
I'm pretty sure I'm deaf and I left ear. I think I talk really loud and I try to talk softer,
but then I feel like, no one can hear me or I'm doing AMSR. I try to talk lower. And I think
I'm deaf in my left ear partially because of the stuff my mom did. Because when I used to get
slapped, you get slapped. And I think that messed up a little something. But also, I think it's
from alcohol. Because you go partially deaf when you drink. And I think it stayed.
Oh, seriously? I don't know. I just made that part up.
Well, I think I was going to say. But think about it. A lot of people are always loud.
Yes. Because you become partially deaf when you're intoxicated.
Right. And also, I don't know if it's that, but it's also you think everything you're saying
is so fantastic. It should be shouted out to the world. Don't you think it's partially that too?
Amazing. Or is that cocaine?
I don't know. I don't know. I've never done cocaine.
I've never done cocaine either.
Let's do it now.
But I know. I know. Fuck no, man. I've done so many cocaine. So many people are dying off of it,
man. But I was thinking about getting some cocaine seeds and growing those in my backyard.
And then, because I'm a friend believer.
Wait a minute. Cocaine seeds?
Yeah.
Matt, are there cocaine seeds?
Well, isn't it the cacao plant or whatever? Is that not right?
Yeah. It comes from the cocaine plant. Google it. Google it.
I never thought that there was a cocaine plant. I just don't think of it.
Where did cocaine come from?
I just thought Al Pacino had all of this.
It comes from somewhere. They say it comes from Columbia. That means it's a lot of sun.
It's gotta be. I know. I wasn't thinking.
It grows somewhere.
I just wasn't thinking.
And I know that you can chew on cocaine sticks and it doesn't get you high like cocaine does,
but it gives you energy like Red Bull.
Right.
Here we go.
Cocaine is a tropane alkaloid and stimulant drug obtained primarily from the leaves of
two cocoa species. So I guess it does.
You're right. Okay.
So I get two cocoa plants, plant those, grow them myself, then I smash them or dehydrate them,
smash them up, make the powder, and then make a tea.
I don't want you doing this just because we started talking about it on this podcast.
Well, I will not be doing any cocaine until I turn 70.
When I turn 70 is when I should be doing hard drugs because that's when the fibromyalgia
kick up, the arthritis, all the poor joints and stuff.
You know, this is a great idea that you have is this idea of, because I've pretty much stayed,
well, completely stayed away from drugs all my life. And I think what you're saying appeals to
me, which is maybe 72, 75, I start trying some stuff, not going crazy.
Oh, I'm going to go crazy.
Every week, I'm starting on my 70th birthday. I'll try one new drug.
I'll write a book about it. It should last about three months, maybe four,
but I'm fucking high out my mind. And we'll see what happens.
That's why I got to keep my body strong and healthy now.
So by the time I turn 70, I can try all the drugs and I still live,
and I can write a book or do a movie on it called Granny So High.
You really should write this idea down as a book because I'm telling you,
a lot of people would take it seriously.
Right. But then it's like, okay, my first time trying mushrooms, that experience,
LSD, acid, cocaine, crack, crystal meth. I've already been smoking weed.
I'm saving crack for my 90th birthday. And I'm just going to do a,
I'm going to go to a real crack den and I'm going to do crack at 90.
I grew up around crack dance. So I'm cool on going to one. I'm going to do it in my mansion.
Right.
Because if you're going to do crack, you got to do it like the best of them.
Okay. Got it.
Yeah. Whitney did it. And she was in a mansion when she did it.
Yeah, yeah. I think.
And you haven't done a lot of research on this.
I haven't. I mean, I just know that she said, where are the receipts?
Oh, right.
Show me the receipts.
Was this on her reality show? I can't remember.
I don't know. She did an interview with somebody and they was like,
is it true that you're a Brian crack? And she said, show me the receipts.
Where are the receipts at?
You don't often get a receipt, I'm guessing, when you buy crack.
I don't think so, but I know you can get one when you buy weed nowadays.
Right. Oh yeah. Well, now weed has become like getting a fine wine.
Right.
I mean, especially here in Los Angeles, it's amazing.
I used to have to spend two hours just to get some weed, just to get a little baggy,
a little eighth of weed, because you have to go to the weed manhouse,
then you got to talk to him, make him laugh, try to get a discount.
Next thing you know, two hours and went by and then you finally get your weed and then you're
like, dang, now I got to go to work. I can't smoke it till I get off work.
I love that you said you go to the weed man and you got to make him laugh.
And it occurs to me, and I know this about you, but you've figured out early in your life
that you had this gift and that it could literally save your life.
Definitely. I figured that I pretty young went about 10, 9, 10 with my mom.
I noticed because she would say things like, I'm going to beat your ass.
I'm going to beat your ass. As soon as we get to the house, I'm going to beat your ass.
If I could make her laugh four or five times before we get to the house,
she forget about the beating the ass threat until later on, usually.
It's like a surprise. Then she go, wait a minute.
Wait a minute. Uh-oh, you were ass whooping.
But it's like, that was a technique to distract her.
And then I saw Who Framed Roger Rabbit and the detective says to the rabbit,
why are these people doing these nice things for you? He said, because I make them laugh,
Eddie, if you make people laugh, they'll do anything for you.
And I was like, oh, that's the ticket. That's how I'm going to get help with my homework.
That's how I'm going to get somebody to save me.
That's how I'm going to get a husband and all these cool things I was thinking.
It did work. I was able to get kids to, I couldn't read that good.
I couldn't really read at all. So I would use my ability of memory and my charisma and my
funniness to get boys with deep voices to read to me. And I would memorize every single word
they said, not staring their mouths. Why do they need to have deep voices?
Why am I excluded from this? You have a deep voice.
No, I have a terrible, I don't have my voice. But if we were in school,
I would tell you you had a deep voice. It would be deep to me.
And I would believe you too.
Because I'd be like, oh man, Conan, your voice is so cool.
You think so, Tiffany? Oh man.
I love to hear you talk. Your laugh is the best laugh.
Hey, can you do me a favor?
I will do anything for you, Tiffany.
Really? Awesome, awesome. Can you read this paragraph to me?
Really this whole page?
Yes, I will.
Oh, cool.
It was a dark and stormy night.
Oh, can you read it? Keep going.
You are so good.
Man, you are, it's incredible. I've seen you do it in movies and on
television. And I got to chat with you briefly at a TBS backstage thing once.
I walked away from that experience and just was saying,
she is like the nicest person I've ever met.
And I've met some really nice people.
But I just had a great talk with you backstage and you have the power.
It really is incredible to be sitting right across from you and watch you lock in.
And it's like a crazy 10,000 watt beam hitting me.
It's really fantastic.
Well, because I also care about whoever I'm talking to.
If I didn't like you or I don't care, I'm a total bitch.
Is that true?
I'm so fucking rude because I start saying exactly what I think.
And then some people are like, oh my God, Tiffany.
Tiffany's nice to some people. She's such a fucking bitch.
And I'm like, well, I don't like you. You're a fucking liar.
Really?
People be lying to me.
And I think people think I don't pay attention that I don't know anybody
or that I haven't read a book or have an understanding of how business goes.
I think people think because I'm funny and silly and sweet
that I don't understand business.
And I'm a businesswoman first.
And I'm cool and everything.
Then when you disrespect or you go behind my back, you stab me.
Well, now I turn into a vicious beast and I don't play no games.
And I will cause, I'll be like, look, you a lying ass bitch straight up.
So I don't even know why you're talking to me.
Did you have this?
I can't remember exactly who said it.
It might have been Nathaniel West, but he said,
Hollywood's the only town where you can die of enthusiasm,
meaning people around you just saying, you're the best,
you're the best, you're the best, but nothing happens.
And they don't mean it or they don't really help you.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah. That was the beginning of my career where I was not the best.
I was not the best.
They're like, you're amazing. You're great, Tiffany.
You're so beautiful. And people would try to sleep with you.
And I'm like, if I was so great, why are you trying to fuck me
and not trying to make money off of me?
If somebody really thinks you're great and amazing,
I feel like in this business, they're going to try to make money with you
and fuck you too.
Not just fuck you in and be like, oh, we'll get to the money part.
Like, no, no, no, no.
Get to the money first. That make me wet.
And I used to love saying that all the time.
You tell them that.
Yeah. Because comics would be like, oh, can I open up for you?
And they're like, well, Tiffany, I mean, are you going to open up them legs?
I remember one comic said that to me.
And I was like, open up my legs to do stage time.
That's stupid.
That's unbelievable too.
I mean, I know it's completely believable.
Real.
Yeah.
And they're like, well, you pretty.
I don't know if you're really going to be that funny.
I'm like, you have seen me do sets.
If you don't think I'm funny, just say no.
But if you're trying to fuck me,
well, you got to pay me to fuck me and you got to pay me to do stage time.
I'm going to need $100,000.
Tiffany, my price is so much lower.
First of all, no one's ever tried to fuck me.
Everyone's always like, let's get this straight.
We want to make money off you and with you,
but we don't want to see your naked body.
That was always made very clear up front.
But it was really hard though, because especially being young,
you know, I was like 19, 20 years old.
And I definitely went through my whole phase,
but I was on some like, I'm only going to fuck people
that I think can do something for me or that I want to fuck.
And it needs to be something that they can do for me
that I can't do for myself.
So I was able to book myself in different comedy clubs.
I was able to get rooms and do shows.
So I felt like, well, I can book myself for shows.
I can get myself on stage.
So I don't need to fuck you to get on stage.
But if I think you're hot or whatever,
I think I might bust a nut, then I might fuck.
So yeah, but most of the time,
I was mostly fucking dope dealers
because they could pay for my acting classes.
Is that true?
Yeah.
So the dope dealers would pay for-
For my acting classes and also they was gangsta,
you know, and they were bad boys.
Yeah.
So you like the bad boys?
I did then.
Now I like, now my taste has changed, you know.
Unlike men, my flavor, my taste changes over time.
I think men, once y'all turn 21,
that's the type of woman you always want.
That's what I think.
What you think?
Well, I'm going to have to clear this with my wife, but-
Y'all moves don't change or nothing change.
Like, nothing evolves.
No, I, men don't evolve.
I mean, y'all evolve like financially, mentally.
We evolve somewhat and kind of in a,
I think one of the things that scientifically,
I learned this a while ago,
men testosterone levels fall over time.
Now I never had a ton of it.
Okay, let's get one thing straight.
I think you did.
I had my share, but I didn't have like a double dose.
And you see these people out there that have just their men
that testosterone makes them crazy in their teens and 20s.
And all they can think about is sex.
Yeah, but your sex moves don't change.
You guys still do it.
There's like grab left titty, move shirt over.
It hasn't evolved since fucking 17, 21.
You know what I'm saying?
Grab booty cheeks, smile in her face, tell her she smells good.
Ask her if you can taste her.
Hey, I've had all of this written on my hands
since I was 19 years old.
I can't believe you just said it in the right order too.
Damn it.
Grab left kitty, yes, number one.
Grab left suck right.
Every now and then it starts to fade out
and I have to rewrite it again, it's sharpie.
And my wife's like, you don't need that anymore, you ass.
You're like on automatic.
We've been married 20 years.
She's like make a mistake and try something different.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh my God, yes, yes.
But that's my assumption from my experience in life.
And I only come to that conclusion because some of the dudes
that I slept with when I was 19 and 20,
I went ahead and tried out again in my mid to late 30s
and they was doing the same fucking moves.
And I was like, you haven't fucked enough bitches
to come up with some new shit?
Don't you watch porn?
You ain't getting no new moves, bro?
Like, you still doing the same thing?
Like, that's why I stopped fucking with your ass
in the first place because you was doing these dumb ass moves.
So your homework, I need you to go watch a lot of porn.
I mean, not necessarily watching porn,
but maybe just try something different.
Think outside the box a little bit.
I feel like my testosterone levels have gone up though.
Yes.
And so I'm a lot more aggressive.
And those same comics that were telling me
I couldn't open up for them, now they're asking me
to hook them up with spots and stuff.
And I'm like, Kim, will you open up your legs?
Now, that's a question I was going to ask you.
Will you spread those cheeks, sir?
Would you?
Now, what would go in there?
Yeah.
I got a few ideas.
Yeah.
I have a flashlight in my car.
My question is, yeah, okay, people have these fantasies
of someday the role is going to be reversed.
And sadly, for a bunch of people, it never happens.
For you, it's happened in this spectacular way.
What do you say when you encounter someone today
who you know for a fact told you spread your legs
you can get on stage?
I say, will you spread your words?
Do you really say that?
I have said that to some.
I have said it.
Or when somebody's like, yo, Tiff Le,
I want to do this show with you and I'll host it
and then I'll bring you out.
Like you be the headliner and I'll bring you out.
And I was like, you're introducing Tiffany Haddish?
No, no, you need me, right?
And no, because when I needed you,
it was really inappropriate how you came
and you were really mean.
And I'm going to do this the nicest way possible.
No, unfortunately, I can't.
I want to, but I can't because I really don't want to.
But there's a little part of me that,
because I wanted the young side of me,
the little girl, the young girl,
you know, the 20-something-year-old girl
wanted to work with that person, right?
That would have been a dream come true for her.
But then the way that she was treated and mishandled,
and for a lot of young women in comedy,
they would go for that.
They'd be like, cool, sure.
And then nothing ever happens, right?
And then a little piece of your soul is gone, right?
I think I'm a firm believer
and every time you sleep with someone,
a little piece of your soul goes.
They take a little piece with you, with them.
And you take a little piece of that person with you.
Sometimes it's some crazy motherfuckers
and mean, not good people.
And you got to carry that around
and this little piece of you gone.
So I'd rather give a little piece of myself
to somebody I want to be around,
I want to lay down with,
not so that I can entertain the world
or not so that I can get some money or whatever.
I have to want to give a piece of myself, right?
And there are some raggedy dudes
I have given a piece of myself to for no money at all,
for free, just because I thought they looked good,
or they made me laugh or they made me feel safe
in that moment, right?
And I learned some valuable lessons from it.
And what I have immensely learned is my success
is the best revenge I could ever give to anyone.
And I don't have to share it.
That's fantastic.
I think there are so many people in this business
that have success and it makes them feel,
for whatever reason, guilty.
They feel like a fraud.
They feel like what?
Because they fuck somebody to get there, probably.
Well, but I think it's more complicated than that.
I think there are people that just think success in general.
Why me?
And you have about as clear-eyed a view on it
as anyone I've met.
But success is like every day you wake up,
you're successful, right?
And it's what you decided is.
And it's what you decide you deserve, right?
And if it's a little more than what you decided you deserve,
well, wow, that's great.
That's a fantastic attitude.
That's the best.
But it's heavy.
Success is heavy.
And you got to be strong enough to carry it.
So I think when people feel like, why me?
Well, it's because it's so heavy
and you got to keep it up, right?
And if you weren't prepared,
well, it's not as wonderful as you thought it would be.
Well, also, there are so many people
that I don't think they like themselves at their core.
And so they think if I can get the Tesla or the Bugatti,
if I can get the big house,
if people recognize me when I go into a restaurant,
that's going to take care of this feeling I have.
And it doesn't, it actually makes it worse.
It makes it way worse.
There's, you know, if you go to Google
and you go put in, how do I, right?
And don't push your enter, just put in, how do I?
The number one search thing is love myself.
That's the number one thing people are trying to do
is love themselves.
And that's really the number one thing you got to do
before you can do anything else.
Right.
I am constantly, on a daily basis,
working on getting rid of the programming
that my mother put into me every fucking day.
And what was her program?
Uh, that you're ugly like your daddy,
you're not good enough, you're stupid, you're dumb,
you're never going to be shit like your daddy.
You're like, it's so many things.
What are you, an idiot?
You can't make, just do the simple, pay attention,
like all these things.
And so I get in the mirror and I talk to my therapist every week,
but I get in the mirror every day.
And I try to, I imagine that every cell in my body
is a little computer, right?
And you program that cell with the words
that you say and the thoughts that you have
and the feelings that you feel.
And as a, as a human, you can change your mood.
You can change it like really quick.
I mean, I learned that from Instagram
because one second I'm looking at a picture
and I'm like, ah, this is cool.
Next second I'm laughing.
Next second I'm watching somebody die.
And I'm like, oh my God, what the fuck?
So your emotions can change pretty quick.
And you can decide because you're in control
of this machine, this human machine.
So I get in the mirror and I look at myself in the eyeballs.
I don't look at anything else.
Look at the darkest part of my eyes.
And I go, Tiffany Haddish, I love and approve of you.
Tiffany Haddish, I love and approve of you.
And sometimes I cry so hard
because I'm not in a love and approval mode.
I'm not feeling that way.
And I'm like, the moon is full and my hormones
it's all over the place.
And I want to fuck 17 dudes and I'm bleeding.
Like whatever, it's just going on.
But I have to breathe.
It's really 17.
I'm sorry, I know you're on a roll here
and this is very profound, but 17.
Sometimes, I mean, I'm a 40 something year old woman.
Okay?
I feel like I'm an 18 year old boy on the inside.
I do fuck everything.
But I have integrity and dignity and I will not.
But there's a part of me.
15 maybe, yeah.
Poor common, poor common.
Yeah, yeah.
Take your clothes off now.
I say, baby girl, relax, relax, calm down.
Do you want some water?
Calm down.
Do we need to get common in here?
I talk you off the ledge.
No, I've become strong enough to talk myself off the ledge.
But it's just, I think every woman deals with it.
Every healthy woman anyways.
When you get to a certain age, you're like, ah,
and like you guys are coming down and we're going up.
That's why we got batteries.
But back to the profoundness.
Solar power.
Sometimes when things get too deep, I crack jokes,
so I don't cry.
But that's, you know, this is what I admire so much about you
is that you are an extremely energized, hardworking,
and relentlessly positive person.
But you're also wise.
You need to have the wisdom sometimes of the things
that you've been through that you carry with you.
And I think you do that really beautifully.
You contain all of that at the same time,
which I think is not an easy thing to do.
No, it's very difficult.
And like I forgive, which is I think the hardest thing
to do in the world is forgive, but I never forgive.
I was going to say the same thing.
I am the same way.
I will never forgive.
I will never forgive.
I'm an elephant.
I will never forgive.
I want to have the mind of an ant.
Just remember moments, but I cannot.
So what about, what did you go through, Tiffany?
Like it's your dream, like after something like,
when you do a girl's trip and it's just everything
explodes for you and you're having like, you've arrived
and everybody's just talking about this electric performance.
Some people might struggle with that.
Did you struggle with that at all?
Were you just ready?
Like, thank you.
I was ready.
I had been planning and plotting.
I don't know if people noticed, but like,
soon as girl's trip came out, like shortly thereafter,
like a month later, my special came out.
And then two months after that, my book came out.
And then a month after that, the Carmichael show came back.
Like I had been plotting and scheming and planning for years.
I love that.
But I didn't know, I knew, I knew my special.
When I'm like, whatever movie is the movie,
then I'm going to drop my special right after that movie.
I always knew that when I was on the set of girl's trip,
like the fourth day, I'm like, I know the chemistry is good.
I don't know if this movie is going to do great,
but it'd be a great way for me to drop my special
after this.
Because I'm with these four, I mean,
with these three, you know, huge black female stars,
like somebody's going to watch that special after this.
And that does to me prove that, you know, deep down,
you really do trust yourself.
You've been working on this for a long time.
You had like a, you were like a general with a military plan.
Yeah.
And kept losing a lot of battles.
You kept losing a lot of battles.
A lot about like, got a lot of nose.
But you know what, you have a great quote on that,
which is the rejection is my protection.
Yes.
And I love that quote of yours because I know exactly
what you're talking about, which is, yes,
you got a lot of nose and you got a lot of things
that didn't go your way and you made that work for you.
Like when SNL, man, I auditioned so many times,
I just knew I was going to like, oh,
I would be so good on that show.
And it kept telling me no.
And I was like, damn, why, why, why don't they want me?
And then I get to host and I'm like, thank you, God,
for letting me work on this show.
Of course.
Because I would have went to jail.
Yeah.
Because I am a control freak.
Like, oh, my ideas aren't being heard.
My dad, I would, I would quit.
I would have ran, like I would have,
I don't know what I would have did.
I would have not been good though.
Also, if you could go back in time and you could get SNL,
other things change too.
So then maybe there is no girl's trip.
Maybe a lot of other things don't happen.
And then the way it worked out,
you came back to SNL as a host and went an Emmy for it.
Right.
That's sweeter.
Way sweeter.
It was the most valuable lesson I ever learned.
I feel like besides how to wipe my ass and wash my body,
that was one of the most valuable lessons.
Everything that you want is not for you.
And you will get what you need in due time.
Yes.
And there's so many movies and TV shows I've auditioned for
that, you know, I'm like, I was,
I would walk out of that audition like, ah, I killed it.
And then I'll find out that give it to somebody else.
And I'm like, what, what?
And then I say, Tiffany, it's OK.
You got two more auditions tomorrow.
You got three more auditions.
Then I see the show on TV and I'm like, well, thank God,
I wasn't in that because that's a piece of shit.
But also look at it this way, what if you get when you're 25,
what if you get on a sitcom and you've got a catchphrase
and the sitcom does well and everyone knows you
as that kooky lady with the catchphrase.
And then it goes off the air two years later.
And then you're trying to reinvent yourself and people say,
say that line from Silver Spoons or whatever.
Right, right, right.
No, the success that you want sometimes
can completely screw you over.
Right.
And you have to learn how to reinvent yourself.
It's so funny because like when I bombed the Miami show
and it was like the only thing they were talking
about the New Year's Day.
And it was crazy how like for two, three months,
everybody's talking about me bombing
and Cat Williams is talking shit.
Everybody's talking to shit.
So when I do shoot my special,
I said, I'm going to make this a focal point.
I'm going to talk about my failure,
my bad day at work because if every time I make a mistake,
I learn so much from it and it makes me grow.
When I meet people that are perfect,
I'm like, oh, they must be an alien.
Yeah.
Because or you're hiding fucking kids in the basement.
And also, yeah.
And what's more boring than that too?
It's boring.
Like, come on.
So I use it to my advantage.
Then boom, get a Grammy for that.
How about them pot of beans?
I ain't funny.
Cat Williams, where's your motherfucking Grammy, sir?
By the way, Cat Williams.
My favorite.
Yeah.
Cat Williams once canceled on my show
like five minutes before the show.
And so I just, we just thought, oh, I hope he's OK.
He was, then we find out from tourists downstairs,
oh, he's been hanging around in the lobby,
30 Rock talking to people and taking pictures.
And they went, wait a minute, he's fucking in the lobby.
He's having a good time.
And he's having a good time talking to people.
I actually thought it was very funny.
It just, I don't know, at the time,
I don't even remember being mad.
And I thought, that is Cat Williams.
Yeah, yeah.
I can't make it too.
Sorry, Conan.
I can't make it.
I'm enjoying my fans.
Wish I could.
He didn't say what he was doing.
We just heard he can't make it.
And we assumed, oh, he's in the hotel
and he's not feeling whatever.
So family, someone died.
No, he's in the lobby, one elevator right away,
walking around shaking hands with people and taking pictures.
He's enjoying himself.
He's enjoying the fruits of his labor.
Yes.
And you probably had more fun doing that
than talking to me on the late night show.
Would have been hilarious as if you guys
would have came down with a camera.
I didn't know.
I didn't know.
I didn't find out till later.
I would have loved that.
That would have been great.
If I could have, if I had have known,
I'd have dashed on there with cameras and said,
Cat, what are you doing?
And I'm sure he would have been hilarious.
He would have been.
We've been like, yeah, I didn't want to get on the elevator.
It wasn't my thing.
It was like, it's my fans.
I don't want to leave my fans behind.
If we're going to see this interview,
we've got to deal with all of them around us.
These are my people.
This is my crew.
And then he could roast on them individually.
But also, you know, when you talk about making that decision,
there'd be so many people, very highly paid people around you
who would say, we move on from this.
We don't talk about bombing.
So many people told me not to talk about it.
Don't talk about it.
And we, you know what?
They're wrong because when you get up there and they say,
oh, Tiffany spoke about her bad night and what was going on,
suddenly they love you more than they did before.
Right.
Or like how one of my friends was like,
I don't feel it, but she's not my friend no more.
But she was like, I'm going to destroy you.
I'm going to tell everybody how you slept with this person
and that person.
You did this.
And I was like, bitch, you ain't read my book.
I already talked about it.
I already talked about it.
You so stupid.
You so stupid.
Like I figured if I just talk my truth, just say what it is.
Like it's like, you can't, there's no weapon
that you can hold against me except for like an actual gun
or a spear or something.
You're going to have to choke a shit out of me
because I'm going to tell the truth.
I love, you know what I love?
I love someone trying to blackmail you.
And you get an, you sort of get an anonymous call like,
Tiffany, if you don't give us a hundred thousand dollars,
we're going to report.
You go like, oh no, no, no, it's on page chapters.
It's on chapter eight page 152.
Oh man, somebody tried to hit me.
We did, I did an old sketch back in the day
and the sketch is horrible.
And I did it with another comic and it's a horrible sketch.
And now they're trying to like, they're like,
I'm going to put it out there that you did this sketch
and I want to get paid off and you're going to have
to give me money.
And I'm like, oh, okay.
Can you put that in writing?
And I took it right over to the FBI.
You're trying to blackmail me.
That's, that's your extortion, right?
Took that right over to the people's like,
I'm not giving up no money for bad art.
It was horrible art.
Hey, put me in jail.
Fuck it.
Like what you going to do?
Are you going to be canceled?
Nope.
Nobody can cancel me, but God and myself.
Because there's always going to be, you can say,
we're not going to put you on TV anymore.
We're not going to, we're not going to put you on,
you're not going to be allowed to perform in live shows anymore.
Okay, cool.
I could work in the Santa Monica Pier,
give me an outdoor performing license.
I could perform anywhere.
I'll buy me a fucking restaurant and turn that into a venue.
Somebody going to come and see me though.
Just like it's people that want to go see Bill Cosby right now,
which I think is fucking crazy,
but I would kind of want to watch too.
The Bill Cosby Fresh Outta Jail Tour.
I'm just saying.
Is he going back out?
I heard he's going back out.
Somebody was telling, and I read about it too,
like promoters were trying to book him for venues.
And there's like, the woman in me is like,
no, don't, don't even partake in that.
Don't pay attention to it at all.
But the comedian in me is like,
if he talk about anything in prison,
it's probably going to be hilarious.
That's fascinating.
Are you able to see,
this is where we get into the artists versus their behavior.
It has changed me.
I don't want to hear him try to be funny.
I don't want to, it has influenced,
I can't separate the two.
I don't think I should.
Yeah, but this nation has done it so many times.
We got Jefferson on the money.
It's a lot of black Jefferson's.
Yeah, it's true.
But that was the nature of the beast then.
That's not somebody I would want to meet.
If I could resurrect people,
I wouldn't want to resurrect Thomas Jefferson.
Yeah, that is completely understandable.
Because I'm afraid.
Try to resurrect Jesus first.
Yeah, Jesus first then Jefferson.
No, then Michael Jackson.
Yeah.
Elizabeth Taylor, that's somebody else I've always wanted to meet.
Yeah, nobody's perfect though.
And we all have sins.
We're all like, imperfect creatures.
And I really feel like it's not up to us to judge everybody.
That man did contribute a lot to our society.
A lot of black people went to college
because of the shows he created.
A lot of black men are really good fathers
because they watched him on TV.
The appearance of what a good father is.
So, I mean, it's a very hard pill to swallow.
Yeah.
I don't want to swallow.
Yeah.
I don't want to swallow.
No, I think, I don't care who you are,
what he was doing was just absolutely horrendous.
It's atrocious.
Atrocious, horrendous.
It's disgusting.
And I wonder if it happened to him in jail.
I don't think so.
You don't think they might have got a little of that?
No, I don't think so.
Cosby Pudding.
Oh, Jesus.
I don't think they got it in his booty all.
I don't think they got it in his booty all.
I just wonder.
I mean, that's what I sometimes think.
I'll never think of Cosby Pudding again.
Friends in prison, you know, I dated dope dealers
and they say when somebody comes to jail
for any kind of rape of any sort, that it happens to them.
Yeah, they take care of things.
Yeah.
I mean, he did walk a little different when he came out of there.
I just wonder.
I need to stop thinking about it.
It ain't none of my damn business.
It happened to that man's asshole, but I feel like that's good.
You know, it's funny because I had a list here of things
I wanted to ask you.
And number 77 is, what do you think happened to Cosby's ass?
Yeah.
And so I can cross that off.
Could you imagine if something did happen?
There's one guy in jail that's like, I've had that Cosby ass.
Number two, he's gross.
He's going to talk.
I don't know.
I'm sorry.
My brain is disgusting.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I was a phone sex operator for 30 days.
It's a little disgusting.
Yeah.
Hey, could I make it in that business, phone sex operator?
You would make so much money.
You would make so much money.
The men that worked, first of all,
we are literally two buildings down from where I worked
as a phone sex operator.
Right now, in this podcast studio.
We're in this studio, right?
But like three, four buildings down on the corner,
I have worked as a phone sex operator.
It was like a big phone bank situation.
And there were a lot of women that worked there.
Most of them former inmates out of jail.
And at that time, this was like the late 1900s.
It was 1998.
And it was very hard to get a job
once you come out of prison, right?
But it's very easy to get a phone sex operator job.
And there were three dudes that worked there.
They were the top paid people that worked there.
They made the most money on this phone sex operator line.
Some of them would sound like women,
make their voice like women.
Some of them just make their voice like a regular dude.
And they would be talking to other men.
And it would be.
Oh, so I'd be talking to men.
You'd be talking to men and women.
Oh, OK.
You'd be talking to whoever gets passed in on your line.
Yeah.
And you've got to be OK.
I'm a pretty good improviser.
I can go with a scenario.
Yeah, you can go with a scenario.
So like the caller would call in.
First of all, to get the job,
they would have you read a script.
And as long as you could read the whole script,
you're good to go.
You don't have to sound super sexy.
It's good if you sound sexy and horny and all that stuff.
But you don't have to sound like that.
Right.
Because I don't think I would necessarily sound sexy and horny.
I think you sound like it now.
No, I sound constipated.
But that's sexy and horny, because you're constipated with semen.
See?
You're constipated with semen, see?
Right.
I think I would be, and you would probably coach me,
and I would do great.
Can you make a girl, boys?
Yeah.
Is that perfectly good?
Yeah, perfect.
Yeah.
OK, so.
And we could do like a party line together.
Yeah.
Yeah, what's your name?
My name's Kara.
OK, Kara.
My name's Patricia.
Hi, Patricia.
You sound so hot.
Yes.
Yeah, she's very hot.
You're so hot.
Will you have a caller?
Hey, caller.
Hey, caller.
Hi, hi.
What's your name?
What's your name?
My name's Lance.
Oh, Lance.
You're going to appear something, aren't you?
Yeah, do you have anyone there constipated with semen?
Oh, yeah, I think Kara is constipated.
I'm very constipated because of the semen.
You hear how her voice is trembling?
Yeah.
Because she's so excited.
Yeah.
You sound like you live in Pasadena.
I do, I do.
I would be terrible at this.
No, no, no.
Kara, Kara.
Tell them what you look like, Kara.
Um, I'm 6'4".
Oh, wow.
Like a model.
I'm 5'2".
Yeah.
And I'm...
You can climb her.
Yeah, I have red head with freckles.
Firecratch.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm a fireman.
Oh, well, you'll put this fire out, I hope.
Kara.
Kara, tell them how big your tits are.
Yeah, tell me, Kara.
Kara, I'd love to know how big your tits are
because typically I'm a grab-brite-sucked left,
but I want to tell them.
Damn it, we're all working off the same playbook.
But that's how you do it.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I want to make sure I talk about this
before we go because this is...
We've been messing around a lot
and actually talking about, I think,
a lot of fascinating stuff.
But the thing that you're doing,
and I absolutely love this,
you're defined people to figure out
what you're going to do next.
You're saying...
Because it'd be very easy for you to fall into a slot of,
this is what Tiffany Haddish does.
And with this new film, The Card Counter,
you're saying you're going to see me as an actor.
I think I've invested enough money in acting classes
that I can do damn near anything.
And I'm not too concerned
about what others may think.
Like, oh, I don't know if that's going to work for Tiffany.
I don't know.
Really, I mean, it's very against who she is.
Well, fuck her.
Who I am is one thing.
And my ability to do something else
is a whole other thing.
And like, I'm getting ready to hit y'all
with some Shakespeare in a minute.
I'm going to be talking about these, all these.
Pimps and shimmy laminates.
I'm learning French.
I'm always going to do stand-up comedy.
I'll be eight years old, no teeth,
because I did so much crack, it's still telling jokes, right?
Well, you love it.
You love an audience so much.
And but I have to...
I'm looking forward to doing live shows
on Broadway one day, you know.
But I mean, but to me, the fact that you have proven
time and time again and with your latest movie,
you're showing people that know that it's
a completely different skill set,
locking eyes with Oscar Isaac and doing a scene
and making it real and bringing that to life
in a completely different atmosphere
than the one you came up with.
Right.
It's not easy.
I mean, it is, but it's not.
Like, I'm so used to doing comedy, right?
Like, when I'm doing drama, I feel a little bit bored
because I'm so used to, like, thinking,
how can I flip it?
How can I...
What can I do to tickle their soul?
How do I penetrate their spirit now?
Because I think that's what comedy is.
You're, like, tickling someone's soul.
You're sharing a, like, vibration.
And in drama, I feel like it's like everybody's watching,
but we ain't really laughing.
We just watching.
And so, but I want, like, everyone to be involved.
So in this movie, it was easy, but it was my ego.
It was hard.
My ego wanted to be, like, yatta-ta-da-da-da.
Hey, the crew isn't laughing.
Come on.
Let's get the crew laughing.
The crew seems like they're bored as fuck.
Come on, come on.
And it's funny because, like, we would do the scene.
It was like my ego was screaming to say something funny.
Do something.
This is heavy.
It's, but we're bored, right?
And I'm sticking to what, you know, Paul Schrader.
I mean, it's freaking Paul Schrader.
It's Paul Schrader.
We're going to do what he asks.
It's cat people, man.
It's my guy, right?
And I'm sticking to what he wants.
And then he'll say, cut.
And I'll wait, like, a whole long beat.
And then I'll crack a joke.
That's for my ego, just to hear the crew laugh.
And to also shake that off.
Sure.
A little bit.
And then Oscar's always like, Tiffany, you're, like, Jesus.
I just want to follow you around.
I'm like, really?
Or do I make you horny?
Are you probably both?
Maybe, maybe.
I doubt it.
That's the horny part.
But definitely we laughed a lot in between scene.
In between.
Because my ego needed that.
And so I still got things I got to work on.
It's something about the sound of laughter for me.
That's really my drug.
Like, hearing you laugh today?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, man.
I'm just going to make this good for me for, like, three days.
Well, that's great.
You know what I'll do?
I'll make a recording.
Really?
Oh, wait, wait, we're doing it.
We're doing it.
You can wake up to it.
And Common will be like, turn that fucking thing off.
Well, it's 730.
No, but my alarm used to be baby's laughing.
Oh, that's great.
I used to make my alarm be baby's laughing.
Because when I'm really depressed, that's
like, that's the way I wake up.
To get my, because you got to reprogram, man.
You got to reprogram.
Depression is just bad programming.
Well, I have just, ah, boy.
I love you, too.
And no, I'm serious.
I love talking to you.
I love you.
I love talking to you.
Your energy is infectious.
I think if I came into this interview with any disease
in my body, it's gone now.
Yes.
I seriously, if I had one wish, it's
that I could get in a time machine and go back to when
you were at a low point, when you were 15 or 20,
and appear before you as a weird, tall.
You did.
Woman, and just tell, no, and just tell you,
tell you everything's going to be so great for you,
and then disappear.
Because I hate hearing about you being in pain,
and being afraid, and having a hard time.
When you were young, but I also know
that's why you're here, and you're so amazing.
Exactly.
It made me strong.
I think growing up, I think your childhood years and teen
years are probably the most actual difficult time of your life.
When somebody's like, oh, my 20s were horrible,
and my 30s.
But really, I think being a kid is the most difficult time
because you have no power.
You have no power.
No power to make anything change.
And no say so no.
And I think about that little girl a lot.
And I just, you know, I celebrate her as much as I
do, and I still cry about it sometimes because shit,
I can't hug me.
I mean, I hug me, but I can't go if I could.
I heard the Catholic Church has a time machine.
Yes.
You heard about this time machine at the Vatican?
No, I haven't heard about it specifically,
but they have all kinds of stuff at the Vatican.
I heard there's a time machine there,
and I've been trying to make friends.
Even though I'm Jewish, I'm still
trying to make the right Catholic friends
so that I can jump in that time machine.
Trust me.
I'm very Catholic, and I will find that time machine for you.
Let's find it.
We'll go back and we'll.
Conan and Tiff's excellent adventure.
Yeah, we'll get in the time machine.
We'll go back and we'll take 12-year-old Tiffany
out for ice cream, and we'll show her just
how incredibly successful she becomes.
That 12-year-old Tiffany will try to fight us.
She will not fuck with us.
Well, maybe you talk to her first.
We're going to have to show up.
She's not going to trust me.
She's going to be like, bitch, you got them all, but I don't trust her.
She's not going to trust me.
What's 12-year-old Tiffany going to do when a six-foot-four
orange-haired man jumps out of like a vortex?
She's going to be like, are you my social worker?
Tiffany, you're an absolute delight.
Thank you.
And I'm just congratulations on everything.
I'm so, so, so happy for you, and you deserve everything
you have times a million.
Thank you.
Hey, Conan, you know, at the end of every interview with a guest,
we flash you a wrap sign usually through the studio window, right?
That's true, yes.
That happens because I text Sam and Sam flashes it to you,
but Sam has taken it upon himself to create something rather special
to do this instead of holding up a paper.
So, Sam, take it away.
Now, normally when he texts me, I stand up
and I wave the paper frantically in a way that startles you
and the guest.
Yes, what I will say, and I'm not criticizing you, Sam,
because you're just a guy trying to do his job,
trying to do what he was told, and probably not giving it
a lot of thought, but anyway, what you've been doing
is you write on a giant legal pad in a Sharpie wrap,
exclamation point, exclamation point, exclamation point,
and you wave it around as if it's on fire.
Insanely.
And what happens is I've noticed the guests think
that you're telling me to wrap it because it's too boring.
It looks like you're saying cut it off, cut it off.
Whatever subject I wave it on, it seems like that's the offensive.
Yes, and I look over and I see the light go out of their eyes.
We lose the momentum.
They think they failed because someone's clearly telling me,
let's cut our losses and get out now.
Yes.
Okay, so after the Michael Keaton episode,
I went home, rewatch Batman, and see if this resonates with you.
You would obviously be Batman, gorely would be your Robin,
sonar would be your Joker.
David is either Superman or Jimmy Olsen.
Oh, definitely Jimmy Olsen.
Aaron's their two-face, Will is the Riddler, Adam Saxon,
who's the guy from Popeye that's always trying to get hamburgers?
Oh, Wimpy.
Yeah, it would be Wimpy.
And then I would be Alfred, so I made you a cocoa signal
to light up now across the wall there,
instead of me waving a piece of paper.
See that light in the shape of your hair?
When that.
Where? I don't see it.
Across the wall, when that lights up.
Oh, that, oh my God.
Where you can see but the guest cannot.
Yes.
That's time to wrap it up.
That's perfect, because I can see it but the guest can't.
That's correct.
You have color options too.
Oh, there's red, it's red, and now it's sort of a teal and pink.
This is fantastic.
Now, I know you, there's green, here's the problem, I know you, Sam.
You're going to turn the light on, and then 30 seconds later,
if I'm still in the middle of an amazing anecdote
with a huge A-list star,
you're going to stand up and start waving your hands
frantically and pointing towards the light.
Even better, after that I can make it pulse.
Whoa, look at that.
So that means like extremely wrap it up or that you're bombing.
I love that Batman, when his signal goes off,
it's a plea to help the city, when yours goes off,
it's to please stop talking.
Yeah, my bat signal is stop yapping.
Please stop coming to Gotham.
That's a great system, and you know, Sam,
I thank you, and I'm sorry if it sounded
like I was putting you down earlier.
You seem like a very bright and capable man who probably,
again, as I said before, just was, for some reason,
being very thoughtless at a crucial point.
Yeah, I think that's a good definition to me,
thoughtless at crucial points.
Yeah, I mean, you know, waving a legal pad frantically
at Michael Keaton, one of the biggest.
And you left a piece off, it says wrap up per gorelly too,
so no matter what I do, it pins it on Batman.
Yeah, it's always nice to put in a little legalisms
per gorelly in tiny letters.
No, this is great, I love your signal,
and my eye is always drawn to anything that looks like me,
so the fact that it's a Conan caricature
that then lights up and pulses is fantastic.
So when you see the shape of your hair light up,
it's time you're needed.
You know, I do take the wrap signal with a grain of salt,
because I know that you're just letting me know
that about an hour has gone by.
Oh yeah, in no way does this mean I think you'll wrap it up.
Right, you should know, but anyone who knows me knows,
if you've ever been to a party with me,
and I'm telling a couple of my classic Hollywood tales
from behind the scenes, and I've had a few glasses
of Pinot Noir, you know that I'm not about to stop talking
when it's suggested.
My only fear now is that Liza, my wife,
is going to get one of these, and actually get like 15 of them
and position them around the house,
and God forbid one of my kids gets the remote control for that.
We need to talk to them, Sam.
We got to, we can start selling these things.
I agree, happy to.
Kidding, they'd pay top dollar.
Yeah, my son is just now, who's 15,
is just now realizing that if there's an adult gathering
of people around a table, and we're all chatting,
that if he comes in and starts selling me out
and talking about ways that I've fumbled,
bumbled, and stumbled around the house,
or in any way been kind of an ass or a fool,
he knows that those kill with house guests.
They just love it.
And so he'll come in and start selling me out
on those kind of stories, getting huge laughs,
and I'm just sitting there, and it's my son.
I'm not allowed, I guess we're not allowed
to hit them anymore.
But you just have to take it.
Well, that's as good a time as ever to flash the rap signal.
No, no, no.
I want to talk more about, I like hitting children.
There, I got it out.
Every time we're free.
Listeners, you can see this flashing Conan rap signal
on the Team Coco podcast Instagram.
Our supervising producer is Aaron Blair,
and our associate talent producer is Jennifer Samples,
engineering by Will Beckton, talent booking by Paula Davis,
Gina Batista, and Britt Kahn.
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