Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Farewell, Mr. Warmth

Episode Date: May 9, 2024

GGACP celebrates the birthday of legendary comedian and actor Don Rickles (b. May 8, 1926) by revisiting this tribute mini-ep from 2017. In this episode: “The Pride and the Passion”! "X: The Man ...with the X-ray Eyes"! Rickles and Newhart see the world! Don zings the commander in chief! Fambino Bambazzo buys the farm! And Gilbert reboots "C.P.O. Sharkey"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys. Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys. Once is never good enough for something so fantastic. So here's another Gilbert and Franks. Here's another Gilbert and Franks. Here's another Gilbert and Franks. Colossal Classic. Hi, I'm Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
Starting point is 00:00:45 with my co-host, Frank Santopadre. And we're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Furtarosa. And that music you're listening to is the music that would always play whenever the great Don Rickles would step out on stage. His theme music. Yeah. Yeah. We lost a giant.
Starting point is 00:01:14 Oh, yeah. Rickles was like one of those people that, he was all that was left of that era. Oh, well, Jerry, I guess. Jerry. Jerry's still around. That's really it. Yeah that era. Oh, well, Jerry, I guess. Jerry, Jerry's still around. That's really it. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:31 The great Vegas era. Yeah. The classic Vegas era. The Rat Pack era, if you will. I mean, they were, yeah, it was Jerry and Don. Now it's just Jerry. I can't think of anybody else. I mean, there's one surviving member of the Rat Pack, which is Henry Silva. Oh, wow. Who we have to get. I mean, there's one surviving member of the Rat Pack, which is Henry Silva.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Oh, wow. Who we have to get. I mean, the extended Rat Pack. Well, it's no Rush. The extended Rat Pack because he was in the Ocean's Eleven. Oh, yeah. But, yeah, I can't think of any other icons other than Rickles and Jerry. And that was that era when the coolest thing in the world was
Starting point is 00:02:08 drinking and smoking. Yep. Yep. Yep. We did an episode about Don Rickles turning 90 a couple of months ago. So we had to do, and the fans got in touch with us when he died and said, you guys have to, we're waiting for the Don Rickles tribute episode. So here we are. And you wrote a piece for Rolling Stone. Yeah. Which just appeared. Do you have that, Paul?
Starting point is 00:02:32 I don't have that. Of course not. Of course not. That's the one thing I don't have. Why would he come into the booth when you're written? Why should all of a sudden you make yourself worthwhile to the show the last time i saw you which was two or three weeks ago i confessed to gilbert yeah that i felt like i had become the zeppo of the amazing colossal podcast gilbert immediately replied the gummo but at least i know where i stand. Paul Rayburn, our researcher, is here, obviously.
Starting point is 00:03:05 Yeah, I tweeted out he was never politically correct, and he never apologized for it. Right, right, right. Which is what I always admired about Rickles. It was bigoted, it was sexist. And he didn't care. Well, we're talking about how he was the last of that era, the last comedian doing that kind of material, with the possible exception of present company.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Oh, yeah. I think there's a generational line there, absolutely. Yeah, there's a generational line. Gilbert is a follower in that tradition. I think so. I think you are a link to that. I mean, who's still doing jokes about Asians? Asian midgets, if I may say.
Starting point is 00:03:53 You're the missing link. Other than Gilbert Connery. I did a lot of research on Don in the last couple of days and finding something. Oh, and I should mention, since we were on the topic of me being part of the link, I will be doing a reboot of CPO Sharky. Really? Yeah. You're taking the legacy seriously.
Starting point is 00:04:18 While researching Don, I love this. I hadn't seen his act in a long time. I never had the pleasure of seeing him live did you ever see him live I saw him live yeah when how long ago like I remember me and a friend of mine sneaking into Westbury oh Westbury music yeah and we saw him and the thing that really made me laugh with Rickles is you know he, hey, the Chinese guy in the third row. And you go, there's no Chinese guy in the third row. He was just doing it anyway. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:50 One of the clips I saw, he's looking for an Asian guy. He finds some guy who's not even Japanese. You're thinking the guy turned out to be Filipino. And he says, I spent two years in the jungle looking for your uncle. How hilarious. But you're wonderful people. I laugh. How much you weigh, big fella?
Starting point is 00:05:15 200 on the left side of your ass. You weigh 200. This is the type of guy that goes to the toilet and the toilet goes, get off me! Probably sitting there and play with the roller. Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, my ass, you're a Jap. I'll tell you this. Three years in the jungle looking for your uncle. I'll tell you this.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Walking around going, Now I kid you, we're all brothers. God bless you my friend. What is your first name? Joe? Joe my ass, Joe. During World War II they were all Joe. You're a Jew, you gotta be. With that nose, if you're not, You're a Jew. You gotta be. With that nose, if you're not, you're an eagle.
Starting point is 00:06:06 I'll tell you this. Look at the nose on this. As you're breathing, my socks are coming up. I'll tell you this, though. Enjoy. Laugh at people. Why do I laugh at Whoopi and Robin and Billy? Why?
Starting point is 00:06:22 Because they get on my goddamn nerves. I swear to God, and Billy especially. You know, I don't know Robin that well. I know Billy. He keeps walking around saying, how do I look? Do I look good? You give him a cookie and he goes away. It's a real pain in the ass, I'll tell you that.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Anyway, look at the black brother laughing his ass off. Meanwhile, your partner's up in my room taking my jewelry. I'll tell you this. He was doing a show it was like uh you know honoring shirley mclean oh yes and and he said uh i i don't want to say anything bad about president obama he's a friend of mine he was over the house yesterday but he had to leave his mop broke i know and they cut that out they cut it out of the special yeah they cut it out of the special but the funny thing i mean i laughed of course and i think obama would have laughed i'm sure i'm sure he would have i'm
Starting point is 00:07:19 absolutely sure he would have well you know he ripped up reagan oh yeah famously at reagan's second inauguration i mean so he was he i was looking at interviews with him today there's a long interview online with him and charlie rose and he was talking about how an abrasive comedian an insult comedian not that he referred to himself as that could be performing for a president he found ironic he got a kick out of that oh yes that's somebody like him doing that kind of comedy but i i think ob Obama would have laughed. This is, I was watching. Oh, and, oh, wait.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Go ahead. There's one other story on the same vein. Yeah. One time he was in a restaurant and Morgan Freeman was walking past his table. And Rickles yelled, Morgan, get back in the kitchen. Did Morgan Freeman laugh? Either that or he stormed out and never went back to that restaurant again. There's a story about Sidney Poitier being offended by Rickles' comedy years ago. But apparently they became friends.
Starting point is 00:08:19 And he turns up in that John Landis documentary in Mr. Wolf. Oh, I remember he was in that. Yeah, yeah. Apparently, I don't know what changed over the years, but they became pals. You know who else Sidney Poitier is friends with? Who? Marty Allen. That's right. Yeah. Oh, Gino
Starting point is 00:08:38 told you that too? Yes, yes. Don't mention his name. Say, let's list him as some guy I know. As Mr. X? Yes. So Sidney Poitier was friends with all of these old Jewish guys. It's fascinating.
Starting point is 00:08:55 But I don't know about this thing about him supposedly being offended by. The other thing I saw in the John Landis documentary, there's a clip of Rickles saying to some woman in the audience, this is it, lady, if you're waiting for Billy Graham to come in and make your kid walk again. Forget about it. So funny. And it's so old school. Yes.
Starting point is 00:09:17 But it still works so beautifully. And I remember there was a thing honoring Clint Eastwood. Oh, yeah. And Rickles went over to Eastwood's wife and said, Cheer up, honey. You'll be coming into a lot of money soon. I know, that's another classic. He would find a guy in the audience and say,
Starting point is 00:09:35 This your wife? Keep your chin up. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this. And now back to the show. You have some tweets, Paul. I do. The funny thing is, for all these things we're saying, he was apparently a very warm, emotional kind of guy. Loved. Beloved.
Starting point is 00:10:00 And we have some of these, you know, Jimmy Kimmel, 90 years with Don Rickles weren't enough. One of the sweetest and most lovely people. not the way you normally think of Don Rickles, but one of the sweetest, most lovely people I had the pleasure of knowing. Don Rickles has passed away a giant loss at Billy Crystal. Bob Saget called him my friend, my dad, the funniest, biggest hearted of them all. They were tight. A beautiful husband and father, my heart is broken. Rest in peace.
Starting point is 00:10:26 Kathy Griffin, the friendship, the advice, and it just goes on and on that way. They loved him. In fact, he wrote something in,
Starting point is 00:10:33 I think in his book this comes from, he says, if people know me well, they know I'm an honest friend, I'm emotional, I'm caring, I'm loyalty.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Loyalty in this business is very important. That's nice. Isn't it? He had a lot of friends. He had a lot of friends in the business. Of course, Bob Newhart being his best friend forever and ever. That always made me laugh.
Starting point is 00:10:53 They were such an odd couple? Yeah. Yeah. And they used to go on vacation together. They traveled the world together. Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:01 And one time I- Ginny and Bob Newhart and Don and Barbara. That's right. Yeah. And one time I- Ginny and Bob Newhart and Don and Barbara. That's right. And I remember one time Newhart saying on some talk show that when you see Rickles performing on stage, he goes, that's all he can do. He can't do anything else. else like one time uh they they they usually it was like bob or the wives who are operating the home movie camera right well he said it was bob he couldn't do it yeah yeah he was inept and and uh so one time they allowed rickles to work the camera and they got like about an hour of their feet walking like he forgot to shut off. And they never let him use the camera.
Starting point is 00:11:50 That was a decades-long friendship, the two of them. And such radically different styles of comedy. Born May 8, 1926, right here in New York, right in Queens. Born in Jackson Heights. Yeah, Jackson Heights kid. I thought every comedian came from the Bronx. No, I, right here in New York, right in Queens. Born in Jackson Heights. Yeah, Jackson Heights kid. I thought every comedian came from the Bronx. No, I knew he was a New Yorker. I didn't know he was a Queens kid like me.
Starting point is 00:12:11 I was happy to see that. Jackson Heights. He was very close to his mother. Etta. Yeah. Yeah. In fact, Gino. Sorry, Mr. X.
Starting point is 00:12:22 Gino, if you're listening, I apologize. He made me do it. He said he used to end shows by paying tribute to his mom oh yeah yeah and and his mother sounded like a real stage mother I think she was yeah a little bit of mini marks in her oh yes yeah and I'm a Feldman and I heard like Frank Sinatra once said to Rickles, he goes, one of the reasons he likes Rickles is because their mothers were close. They're like Rickles' mother and Sinatra's mother were friends. I think that's kind of how Frank got to see him at the club in Miami. Do you know this story? Oh, I saw it.
Starting point is 00:13:05 Frank gave him his big break, didn't he? Right, but I think as the story goes, and if one of our listeners knows better than I, they'll let us know, but Sinatra's mom, Dolly, who was friendly with Don's mom, Etta, she saw him at, I think it was, Murray Franklin's nightclub in Miami,
Starting point is 00:13:25 and she got Frank to go. Oh, wow. She said, my son is playing at this club. And Frank went in, and as the story goes, that was the night that he said, Frank, make yourself at home. Hit somebody. Be yourself. Yeah, but apparently that's the story, that a friendship was born.
Starting point is 00:13:44 And he made some kind of joke. Sinatra had done a movie with Sophia Loren called The Pride's the story, that a friendship was born. And he made some kind of joke. Sinatra had done a movie with Sophia Loren called The Pride and the Passion. And Rickles made a joke. He said, I saw your movie, The Pride and the Passion. I want to tell you the canon was great. One of Sinatra's legendary bombs. You know this picture with Cary Grant? Oh, no.
Starting point is 00:14:01 Yeah. I think it's a Stanley Kramer movie. And he was one of those people who could get away with insulting Frank Sinatra. Yeah, yeah. I went back and watched the Tonight Show clip where he comes out and surprises Frank. Have you seen this clip? No. We'll put it up when we put this episode up on social media.
Starting point is 00:14:19 When he comes out and he bends down and he kisses the ring. Yes. And he sits down and he says, Mongo Manonaz yes and he sits down he says mango mananatso two bullets in the head thursday it's just hilarious it's hilarious we showed it today on the view uh it's what he got away with because they were buds yeah you know he could do it i want to talk a little bit too about rickles as an actor uh which is interesting uh i don't know how many people. I want to talk a little bit, too, about Rickles as an actor, which is interesting. I don't know how many people know this.
Starting point is 00:14:48 We've talked a little bit, and I think when we did the Don Rickles Turn 90 episode, we talked about his acting career. He was in one of those movies we've mentioned a few times on the show, and that's with Ray Moland. I knew you were going there. Man with the X-Ray Eyes. Yes, X-Man with the Ray Eyes. Yeah, Roger Corman movie. Yeah. One of our guests.
Starting point is 00:15:05 And Rickles was like this sleazy carnival manager. Right, sure. And don't forget when he played the bully to Mr. Dingle, Burgess Meredith, on The Twilight Zone. Oh, yes. Do you remember that one? He's the bully in the bar? Yeah. Is it Dingle makes the wish that he gets the super strength?
Starting point is 00:15:24 Oh, I forgot that one. Do you know the one I'm talking about? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Rickles is the, I mean, and he did a million TV shows. He was in, he worked with my boy Ben Gazzara. In Run For Your Life. Yeah, he played a comedian in that. Yes, he did.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Yes, he did. But also F Troop. He was Bald Eagle. Oh, yeah. Bald Eagle. He was Sid Krim, Maxwell Smart's army buddy on Get Smart. He was Lyle Delp, the convict on the Dick Van Dyke show. Oh, that's right.
Starting point is 00:15:53 So he'd have running things for more than one episode. Yeah, that was kind of like they were doing. He did two episodes with him. They were doing, you know, like every sitcom had to do their 12 angry men. Oh, yeah, the odd couple. Yeah, yeah. I think every sitcom has to do their 12 angry men. Oh, yeah, the odd couple. Yeah, yeah. I think every sitcom has to do that. He was bad luck Newton Monroe on The Andy Griffith Show.
Starting point is 00:16:16 He did Gilligan's Island. He did The Munsters. He did I Dream of Jeannie. He was a bank robber on The Addams Family Halloween Show. He did a ton of TV. And he worked with another one of our guests a lot, our previous guests, Frankie Avalon. Yes. Oh, and all the beach pictures.
Starting point is 00:16:32 All the beach pictures. Yeah. He's in Pajama Party. He's in Bikini Beach. He's in Beach Blanket Bingo with, you know, Gil. Oh, geez. Not only Paul Lynde, but the great Stoneface. Oh, Buster Keaton.
Starting point is 00:16:51 Buster Keaton, of course. And in one of those beach movies, it's very strange. They actually have him going from table to table with a mic, insulting people. Yes, strange. And it's weird. It's like, see here, he's funny in the clubs, and even though his character would never do this. Nothing to do with the rest of the movie.
Starting point is 00:17:13 Yes. I don't know that people know, I mean, maybe it's coming out now in the obits, but that he attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Oh, yeah. And his classmates, listen to this, Grace Kelly. Jason Robards. He knows.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Yeah. And Bancroft. Yeah. And a future co-star of his best pal, Tom Poston. Wow. They were all in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. And I guess when he, as the the story goes when he wasn't getting parts he started trying his hand at stand-up and i think we had i'm trying to remember who it was
Starting point is 00:17:51 it was cliff nesteroff who told us that he was not doing the insult stuff at the very beginning oh yeah he was an impressionist yeah did you know that he would do like peter laurie and gary graham very very early on. Yeah. Which is also interesting. Other roles, I mean, he had those three series. Johnny used to break his balls about the failed series. But there was the Don Rickles show where he played an ad exec in 1972. You mentioned CPO Shark.
Starting point is 00:18:21 Yes. Which I think actually ran a season and a half. Oh, my God. For Rickles, that was like gun smoke. If not two. And Daddy Dearest. Do you remember this in the 90s? Oh, my God. With Richard Lewis?
Starting point is 00:18:37 Oh, yes. How about that? Yes. That's obscure. Look up Daddy Dearest. In fact, somebody was telling me that they stopped over at the set of Daddy Dearest. And Rickles was talking to this guy and he goes, yeah, it's a fun show to do, except that I have to work with. And he points to his palm with his hand.
Starting point is 00:19:09 Oh, no. Yes. He didn't like working with Richard? Yes. I was at a taping of that when I first moved to L.A., which was really surreal. And, of course, he's in Kelly's Heroes. Yes. With Clint Eastwood.
Starting point is 00:19:26 With Donald Sutherland and Tellully Savalas and everybody else. And then he roasted Tully Savalas. Yeah, the roasts. Oh, he was great at those. You know what's funny in doing the research, too? I didn't know this. There's a clip online. I'm going to send this to you. Before the roasts, there's an episode of the Dean Martin Show where they bring him out and they put him on stage.
Starting point is 00:19:45 You know about this? And the audience is just filled with celebrities. Yeah. And I don't know if this is apocryphal, but supposedly they didn't tell him who was in the audience. Yeah. And it's this all-star cast of people. Barbara Eden, Pat Boone, Danny Thomas is in the audience. Jackie Cooper, Don Adams, Ernest Borgnine,
Starting point is 00:20:05 Lena Horne, and Ricardo Montalban. And it's the weirdest thing. I want to direct our listeners to it. I'd never seen it. I'd never known about it. And Dean comes up and he introduces the segment and he says, okay, Don's going to come up. He doesn't know
Starting point is 00:20:21 who you are. He doesn't know who's at the house. Martin is in the audience from Wild Wild West and salts his wife, and up comes Rickles. And I guess, unless it was faked, just kind of winks it and starts insulting Ricardo Montalban and making ethnic cracks and ripping on Don Adams. And it's pretty impressive. Oh, yeah. If he did it off the cuff. And I guess that was a precursor to the Dean Martin roasts. Yeah. Our listeners can fill us in. I have never met Don Rickles.
Starting point is 00:20:56 Yes. In all my days. In all your travels. I never had the opportunity to meet him. No. Never at the Friars. Never at the- That's what i would have
Starting point is 00:21:05 thought they we should have crossed paths paths i don't know he was so vegas based yeah and then and then la based i never saw him do i was at a bunch of those friars roasts that you performed in uh i never seen ever yeah he was never there for any of them and and in fact, they wanted, you know, in the more recent years to roast Don Rickles. And his feeling was like everybody that I worked with and was friends with are old gone. Yeah. So why do I need a bunch of 20-year-old comics? He finally relented and did something, I think, in 2014 or 2015. And they brought out Tina Fey and Jon Stewart and Amy Poehler to kind of roast him where he was sitting with De Niro.
Starting point is 00:21:48 Oh, that's when they were honoring him. They were honoring him, but it turned into a roast. Oh, yes, yes. And I remember at that, when Rickles comes out, the whole audience gives him a standing ovation, and Rickles goes, okay, you can sit down. It's not a Jewish holiday. I love that. No, I make fun of all people, Catholics, Irish, Jews.
Starting point is 00:22:12 Well, Jews, I don't like to make too much fun of them. No, we're perfect people. We really are. Kind of a few bump breaks with the Red Sea trick, but hey, you can't win them all. That's what I do. I laugh about people. Look at this elderly couple,
Starting point is 00:22:25 smiling and laughing, knowing, tops, you got another month. Tops. No, God forbid, you got years together. How many years you married, darling? 35 years to this guy? I'm married 49 years. 49 years. Don't applaud. you never saw her. Real Jew broad, just lays in the bed going, more jewelry, more jewelry. I don't know what you do, Pop. On a wedding night, we don't just rush at it.
Starting point is 00:23:04 I circle the bed, you got to do that and get an estimate. What do you got, Paul? Daddy Dearest. It looks like it only ran from September to December. Does that sound right? That is a short run. It's a short run. Wow.
Starting point is 00:23:16 I saw one of them. It's like seeing a comic. So I think you mentioned Richard Lewis. Richard Lewis was the co-star. Renee Taylor and Barney Martin. Oh, Barney Martin. Oh, Barney Martin. You know Barney Martin. Yeah, he's the one who played Jerry Seinfeld's father.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Very good. Yes. And since you brought up the 12 Angry Men episodes, he's also in the Lee J. Cobb role as the angry juror in the Odd Couple episode. And Barney Martin. The late Barney Martin. Funny guy. couple episode and barney martin funny guy barney martin was also did a commercial where i think it was a vacuum cleaner commercial wow i have no memory and he starts like dancing around while he's vacuuming and i remember in the commercial he looked like and acted like
Starting point is 00:24:00 luke costello really yeah how strange yeah i don't remember that. Do you remember Harvey Lembeck's commercial, The Land Baron? Oh. Where she says more like, where his wife says more like barren land. Oh, yeah. Does anybody remember this but me? I don't remember. With Harvey Lembeck, Eric Von Zipper? What are you asking Paul for?
Starting point is 00:24:18 He's insulting you in the spirit of Don Rickles. Yeah, that's right. If you showed Paul a clip and had the name printed there, he couldn't tell you what it was. There are some great, while doing the research, I found some great stuff, too. He made a movie called The Rabbit Trap with Ernest Borgnine. Does that mean anything to you? No. I don't even know what that's about. Wow. Maybe Paul can look that up or if we run out of time
Starting point is 00:24:49 we'll have our listeners chime in about it. He was in The Rat Race with Tony Curtis and Debbie Reynolds. Oh yeah. I know you know that one. Kelly's Heroes of course we talked about. He played Crap Game. This is interesting. He said, Charlie Rose was asking him in this interview if he had any
Starting point is 00:25:06 career regrets and he said that he never really did Broadway. He never got to do he never got to be in a stage play and he said 30 years ago I would have been, I think I could have played Max Bialystock. Oh, you know, he could have been a great Max Bialystock. Yeah, how different
Starting point is 00:25:22 that would have been than Mustel and so different than Nathan Lane, don't you think? Wow. A real edgy one. Yeah, he would have been a great Max Piali star. Yeah, how different that would have been than Mustel and so different than Nathan Lane, don't you think? A real edgy one. Yeah, he would have been great. A savage Max Piali star. Yeah. But I found myself thinking, God, I'm sorry that we didn't get to see him do that. And at one point he talks about, Rose asks him, and one of your favorite questions that you love to ask our older comedians is working with the wise guys.
Starting point is 00:25:44 Oh, yeah. your favorite questions that you love to ask our older comedians is working with the wise guys oh yeah and he tells a great story about a guy that wasn't laughing he started mocking the guy's wife and the guy comes backstage and says i'm gonna take care of you you know yeah yeah it's threatening him and charlie rose says what did you do and he says i made a call to new york he doesn't say who wow next night same guy in the front row don comes out does the act does the same thing does the same joke about is that your wife yeah yeah backstage the guy comes back he says do the line again do the line again he says to rickles he does the line and this time he turns to his wife and he says didn't i tell you
Starting point is 00:26:21 this guy's hilarious oh wow something had completely changed in 24 hours wow isn't that a great story that that's fantastic doesn't say who he called but anyway there's great stuff online too i had mentioned that mr warmth doc that john landis made his old friend john landis who was a pa yeah on kelly's heroes wow who was the who was the runner and there's that famous guy getting coffee there's that famous story that one time Rickles was at a restaurant and he was taking some girl there. And he asked Frank, he said- Oh, of course. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:56 You know, could you come over and just say hello? It would really help me out. And Frank walks over, says hello, and he goes, hey, give me a break. I'm talking to someone. goes hey give me a break i'm talking to someone he loved that story uh the charlie rose interview online is great it's an hour with him and he's very sincere and he's he's very very poignant talks a lot about his life a lot about his parents uh the book that you have uh yeah co-written by david ritz rickles book called rickles yeah rickles book is terrific our other uh our previous guest bob costas did a couple of nights with him oh yeah that's available on youtube wonderful wonderful to watch bob
Starting point is 00:27:37 collapse like an accordion yeah and fall out of the chair and uh as i said the mr warm stock that that john landis uh put together with larry rickles don rickles late son um is also also terrific the guy did a lot of stuff and i 55 year career and how did rickles son die again i don't know he got larry rickles he died in 2011 and i don't know how he passed but that was was rather sad. I do remember hearing that Newhart and his wife had been out of town and they flew to Vegas and they went right from the airport to Rickles House. I don't know any details. He died. He was a young man.
Starting point is 00:28:20 I want to mention, too, before we sign off, and we've mentioned a lot of this uh of don's stuff um of course the two great carson clips not only the sinatra one i mentioned but the one where where johnny is getting the rub down oh yeah and he goes oh i miss you so much it's online it's wonderful and then there's the classic clip where he had hosted the night before. Oh, and he broke Carson's. The Johnny cigarette box. You know this one, Paul? No.
Starting point is 00:28:49 And Johnny says, Johnny picks up the camera. He gets the camera crew and the cables. And they find out that CPO Sharky is taping across the hall. And Johnny goes and decides to shame him for breaking his cigarette box. And it was great television. I remember when that happened. Yeah. And also when Rickles did Casino,
Starting point is 00:29:10 and I saw two clips of him busting Robert De Niro's balls. Oh, yeah, he busted him up. And I heard like in one of them, in the middle of the scene when De Niro's doing his big scene, Rickles goes, wait, cut. And he holds up the script of the scene, when De Niro's doing his big scene, Rickles goes, wait, cut. And he holds up the script and he goes, he left out two motherfuckers and one cocksucker. Fantastic. Yeah, so find those Carson clips.
Starting point is 00:29:41 You know, we'll go out on a clip. And any of his roasts. Any of the roasts. You know, turning to Bob Hope. Is Bob Hope here? Is the war over? I love that one. Great. Just great stuff.
Starting point is 00:29:56 Any of those Dean Martin roasts. You know, we've talked about the Dean Martin roasts on previous shows. We've talked about how they were cut with a chainsaw. Oh, yes. Some of them are just not very good. He manages to emerge unscathed that's the he's great in all of them there's a lot of the dean martin ross that's dated yeah and it's like you know it's sort of smiling because you remember the person and rickles comes out and it just holds up they were made for him him and foster brooks oh yeah better than anybody because you got to get through the comedy of And Rickles comes out and it just holds up. They were made for him. Him and Foster Brooks.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Oh, yes. Did better than anybody. Because you've got to get through the comedy of Ronald Reagan or the comedy of Lorne Green or anybody or somebody else. I always thought that they'd have Gary Coleman roasting Orson Welles. Right. Jimmy Walker roasts Barry Goldwater. Yes. People who never met until five minutes before the show.
Starting point is 00:30:51 But yeah, check out those Carson clips that we talked about. If you haven't seen them, they're probably all over the web and all over Facebook now. And check out Gilbert's article about Don and Rolling Stone. Oh, yeah. Online. I'm calling him Don like I knew the man. Yes. Yeah, online I wrote an article.
Starting point is 00:31:09 Well, I didn't write it. They interviewed me about it. I don't have that article. Well, I wouldn't expect it. If I asked you to get a copy of Rolling Stone, you'd say, I wouldn't. You want to make a joke about his ethnicity? Mr. Rickles passing.
Starting point is 00:31:30 It really is, you know, when Jerry goes and it'll really be officially the end of that. Oh, my God. The end of that era. How's his health? I don't know. I hope it's good because we want to keep these guys intact and keep them around. Jerry Lewis, he's like one of those people who every single disease has hit him already. Yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:31:50 He bounced back from a lot. Yeah. So it was, you know, so many of these guys are in their 90s. Mel Brooks is in his 90s. Dick Van Dyke. Oh, yeah. I feel so blessed that we had Dick and that we had Carl Reiner, and we hadn't put Carl up yet.
Starting point is 00:32:06 But, you know, we're going to start losing these guys. I know. And it really is the end of that era. One of the reasons we do this show is to keep it alive as long as we can. Yeah, that whole Rat Pack ring-a-ding-ding era. Well, that old Vegas is gone gone you know and uh anyway we should try to get henry silva oh oh yeah who probably has some stories about that uh that era another one who's who passed away a few years ago but knew them and did a move one of their movies, at least one, was, oh, God, I forget every name now.
Starting point is 00:32:50 And I'm not going to ask Paul because I could spell a name for him. If you can spell it, I can find it. You're talking about a Rat Pack actor? Norman Fell. Norman Fell, sure. Norman Fell had loads of Rat Pack stories. I'm sure. Well, we'll get Henry Silver because he's the last guy, I think, from the Oceans movies.
Starting point is 00:33:12 And rest in peace, Mr. Warmth. Yeah. We were lucky to have you. The great Don Rickles. So, want to sign off? Oh, yes. I forget how this show works. We've only been doing it a couple of years.
Starting point is 00:33:29 I didn't mean to wake you. Yes. Well, I'm Gilbert Gottfried. This has been Gilbert Gottfried's... No. Frankie, you're going to work hard on this one. Okay. I'm Gilbert Godfrey
Starting point is 00:33:51 and I, of course, am here with my co-host Frank Santopadre and some asshole named Paul who I don't know what the fuck he does here. Whatever you'd like me to do. Below me.
Starting point is 00:34:06 Oh! And this has been Gilbert and Frank's amazing, colossal obsessions with our tribute to the great Don Rickles. See you next time. Take it easy.
Starting point is 00:34:22 Take it easy, for Christ's sake. What the hell are you? Tom Bas easy, for Christ's sake. What the hell are you, Count Basie, for Christ's sake? That was the Basie theme, right? You just made that up now, right? Let me ask you this. Was that worth losing your job? I'll trade you laughter for love I'll trade you one for the other
Starting point is 00:34:59 Laughter for that What can you lose Some madness for And for whatever it's worth Whether you like it or not I'll give you all That I've got I'll trade you sunlight for gold
Starting point is 00:35:28 One shines as bright as the other Love is pure gold And laughter the sunlight This is my life For all of my life And you are part of this life I live I swear that it's true
Starting point is 00:36:00 I love to do what I do To share this laughter I give for just a little love from me. I'm I'm I'm I'm

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