Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out - 107. Hasan Minhaj Returns: Good Boy Syndrome

Episode Date: September 4, 2023

Hasan Minhaj was one of the first guests on Working It Out back in 2020 and it remains one of the most popular episodes because of Hasan’s natural inclination to work out bits. Off-air Mike and Hasa...n often trade notes and ideas and today it spills into the podcast. Hasan compares comedy craft to Steph Curry’s approach to basketball, explains what it’s like to interview Barack Obama, and confesses to the guilty pleasure of watching couples argue in public. Plus, is Hasan going to host The Daily Show?Please consider donating to: Vituity Cares

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Starting point is 00:00:00 My dad is 72, and then my son is like two, and I'm 37. So I'm like the half, I'm the Rihanna halftime show. And they're both on like two ends of the couch, like on the iPad, doing the same thing, being like, like they're both angry at the iPad. And I'm just in the middle. I love this. But I'm hurtling towards this. I'm hurtling towards not. Towards your father.
Starting point is 00:00:21 Yeah. Yes, yes, yes. Like, it's good this is the way it's gonna end yeah what are you doing in between yeah
Starting point is 00:00:30 this is getting too heavy um this is getting like so real I love it though I love it really are you kidding me this is my favorite part
Starting point is 00:00:37 this is not very funny no I love this and I think this I hope this is what your next hour is about. That is the voice of the great Hassan Minhaj. I love this episode. When he was on the podcast,
Starting point is 00:00:57 he was actually one of our original guests in 2020. And it was such a popular episode. But not only that, whenever people ask, like, oh, there's 110 episodes, like, which one should I start with? I always tell people that one is the best one to start with because he's so good at talking through the logic of jokes and sort of like when you're talking no defined, like, beginning of our conversation or the slow round or the materials action. It just is all one, like, super mashup of all of those things. And so in some ways, that's sort of the dream of what the podcast would be. Two comedians riffing on stuff, telling stories, and kind of just finding out what they could talk about. There's actually a story he tells about Disneyland today
Starting point is 00:01:48 where afterwards I was like, have you been telling that on stage? And he was like, no. I was like, that story's amazing. Like, you've got to tell that on stage, which is really at the heart of, like, comedians, how comedians talk to each other when they're close friends, which is hearing what people say
Starting point is 00:02:03 and just essentially trying to convince them when they really like a certain story or joke, like you should really tell it on stage. He's just a great, great talker, a great storyteller. He interviewed Obama, Barack Obama recently. And I asked him about that. It's a great, great chat.
Starting point is 00:02:21 So I'm really hoping you like it. I just finished a run of The Old Man and the Pool in Edinburgh. I'm about to head to the West End in London to do The Old Man and the Pool. It's the finale. I'm doing 30 performances over there. And then I'm going to be back doing an all-new show in Boston. I actually just am adding this week a seventh and eighth show at the Wilbur Theater in Boston. I actually just am adding this week a seventh and eighth show at the Wilbur Theater
Starting point is 00:02:46 in Boston. I'm entitling the show Christmas Parmesan. It's got a few Christmas jokes, but mostly it's just my new hour of comedy. I'll also be performing my new hour of comedy in Vancouver as well as Seattle. Actually, we just added another Saturday show in Seattle. I love the Moore Theater. So get tickets to that if you're nearby. As well as we just added a third and final show in Walla Walla, Washington, which is a town that I have a lot of history with. We added a second show in Portland, Oregon.
Starting point is 00:03:23 All this is on Burbiggs.com. The best way to find out, this is the way you get the best tickets, is sign up for the mailing list on Burbiggs.com. I've had this mailing list for 20 years. It's always the first, first, first place where I tell people how to get the code for the best tickets to all the shows. And thank you so much for coming out to these shows. You can watch this episode, by the way, you can watch it on YouTube. The one that people have been watching like crazy is the Jim Gaffigan episode. That's on YouTube. It's a really fun one. You can watch this one on and just enjoy my conversation with the great Hassan Minhaj. You are currently working on your third hour.
Starting point is 00:04:18 Yes. That I wanted to do as a special. And this is your favorite part? This moment right now is my favorite part of the process describe that to me it is all blue sky and possibility and it could be anything there's parts of it where for people that aren't comedians
Starting point is 00:04:36 that are listening to this your show gets to a certain point where it pretty much is what it is and then you just have to hit human retweet every night oh interesting you're like chicago theater eight o'clock retweet it that's really interesting so whereas now it is the creation period yeah anything's possible put the beginning yeah do do your do the beginning of the front right you know what actually don't even do your closer right
Starting point is 00:05:03 don't do it yeah yeah and i'm and I'm going to go back and forth. This is the way my mind works between basketball analogies and comedy. Okay. And my friends make fun of me about this, and they're like, why do you do that? And I'm like, it's the only two things I know. Okay. I'm not going to just jump to another sort of metaphor. So when you start out, you learn very basic fundamentals.
Starting point is 00:05:23 Or they go, hey, you have the mic and the mic stand. Don't keep the mic stand in front of you. Right. So there's early performances of me at the Sacramento Punchline, and there's a fucking mic stand in front of me. And what are you doing? It's very basic. Put the mic stand behind you and continue, right?
Starting point is 00:05:39 Right. Early lessons instead of comedy. Very early lessons or whatever. Same thing with just shooting form just like get it in a pocket here use this as a guiding thing yeah
Starting point is 00:05:50 and just follow through versus like when you go play pickup say on West 4th and there's a guy in like khakis and dress shoes just straight up doing anything
Starting point is 00:05:59 and everything and you're like I think this guy's here for cardio he's having some sort of mental breakdown and he's playing pickup with us right now. He doesn't really play basketball. And you can tell by the way they shoot, like, oh, they're shooting from here.
Starting point is 00:06:13 Oh, right. Yeah. There's no follow through. So the basics, the fundamentals. Yeah. Same with standup. All of that's really important. But at the same time, things can be so rigid and comedy class-ish. It becomes- Set a punch tag tag. Yeah, it becomes predictable. It becomes, I expect and I already know what's going to happen.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Yeah. And one of the things that you love or I love most about art and the form, at least the form of comedy, is like, you got to surprise me a little bit. You have to. There has to be something here that subverts my expectations. This is such an important, any creatives will say, this is such a great universal for all art. Yes. Which is surprise.
Starting point is 00:06:53 Yes. You have to. Yes. And I agree with you. So there's the bread and butter things that you wanna have in order. You wanna have jokes, you wanna have stories, you wanna have some kind of structure,
Starting point is 00:07:02 but you also, you have to have a spontaneity to it. Correct. Yeah. Spontaneity. And then another thing that I felt like, I got to work on this a little bit more. And I have to be deliberate about it. Is this feeling of like fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:22 And you get to a certain level and you got to do so many shows on the road. And you're like, you're just jamming the show into like, oh, it's gotta be this. And this has to close cleanly and then go to this, go to this, go to, which is all very well and important. But I don't know if you've experienced this. You can also become a caricature of yourself.
Starting point is 00:07:42 I'm like, Birbiglia is gonna do the Birbiglia thing and he's gonna Birbiglia his way out of it you had jim on this gavigan will have a gavigan way out of it millennia i will we'll all have our moves and you're not defying expectations in fact you're just delivering straight up on expectations yeah um and then And then this is for me personally, is like, are you surprising yourself? And there was times, especially on the last tour, I was not having fun on the road. This actually isn't fun. And I'm not like surprising myself in new ways, in discovering new things. And to go back to basketball, did you see the Steph Curry doc on Apple TV Plus?
Starting point is 00:08:26 No, I can't wait now. No, it's great. Now that you're saying it. It's really, really, really wonderful and fantastic. But one of the things I hate about Curry being a Sacramento Kings fan is I hate the Warriors and the Lakers because the Bay and LA always shit on Sacramento.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Yeah, yeah. We're a very common punchline. That being said, as Steph is entering this final chapter of his career, I do have to give him props and be like, you're fucking amazing. You're great. But more importantly, and the lesson that I took away from him is, he's having so much fucking fun. Wow. And when I watch him play, I'm like, oh, he's not doing the set.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Fuck, he's not doing the set. Interesting. In fact, he's like doing the Sunday brunch set while Esty's watching and being like, oh, my set? Goodbye. Oh, he's doing the Montreal showcase while Robbie's in the room at comics. You're using so many names that people don't know. And he's fucking punting it. He's like, oh, this.
Starting point is 00:09:21 So you're saying Steph Curry in basketball is doing the equivalent of, in stand-up comedy, doing a set, throwing away your set list, disregarding whether the booker for Montreal or the booker for the Comedy Cellar is watching you on the biggest stage. Yes. Yeah, that's interesting. While his mouth guard's hanging out or something like this,
Starting point is 00:09:41 being like, oh, I'm not even trying right now, by the way. Oh, you're wearing a mouth guard for protection. if it's if a quarterback were to do a play in the fourth quarter and have his helmet just hanging off his head be like oh i'm not even gonna pull it down i don't care all that is to say is it was inspiring it made me realize oh this thing should also be extremely fun and it should be playful. And I think the place that, and I did this very much following in your footsteps, there was a part of me that really wanted to honor the form and the function of what this is. And in the process of that,
Starting point is 00:10:24 I may have lost a little bit of like just like the pure unbridled joy and fun of it the looseness of it so inspiring talking to you I'm so glad that we're meeting up today this is really giving me a fire why is it so inspiring?
Starting point is 00:10:38 I always find you so inspiring because I love your work and then when you talk when we're just talking this is might as well not be rolling camera rolling sound like this is just how we talk and that was the goal of the podcast in the first place
Starting point is 00:10:54 what's it like behind the scenes with two people who create stuff and how does that affect your life how does that affect your work or whatever and so I love that I love that you're sharing this with me because also like selfishly I'm like oh is going to push me into writing my next hour right now and writing my next movie right now. Cause I'm exactly the same place. Like 40 minutes is hot of my new hour. I was just at a club in New Jersey this weekend. I was like, 40 minutes is ready to go. And it's like, what's the other, what's the other 40 and what's the arc right for me that's
Starting point is 00:11:25 what it is yeah but like with with your specials they have an arc they bring you on a journey with you yes some very few stand-up comedians you know brennan and you and me and hannah gadsby look there's a handful it's quite a lot of gentlemen there's a handful. Alex. There's quite a lot of them. There's a handful of people. And in the UK, there's a whole lot. Right, who do these shows that are shows. And a lot of times people ask me this, and I'll say the same thing to you. Why?
Starting point is 00:11:55 I have my own answer. I'm curious why you do it. Oh, interesting. As opposed to just doing an hour of straight stand-up. Yeah, for me, at least the selfishly, I was trying to be as like green room, I'm hanging with my friends, conversational, funny and interesting on stage.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Yeah. So like there were times that I felt like when I would talk to people about comedy or about my set or the thing that I'm working on, they'd be like, oh, that's really interesting. But kind of like my Rooster Teeth Feathers seven-minute set could not capture that. Yes. So it's like, how do I show you how interesting my mind is? And again, the audience is like, what's Rooster Teeth Feathers?
Starting point is 00:12:40 The Rooster Teeth Feathers is a comedy club in Southern California that famously does not have a green room. You actually have to hang out. I can't believe we work in places called Rooster Teeth Feathers. Yeah, next to a tire shop. In the stress factory. What are we doing? It's like... But I also love that.
Starting point is 00:13:00 There's a photo of you in Rooster Teeth Feathers. There's a photo of Jerry Seinfeld in Rooster Teeth Feathers. Wow. Yeah, from like a booklet from like 1981 or something like that. Yeah. That's so funny. Well, you know that yours and my history goes to Montreal Comedy Festival. You did New Faces as well as a gala.
Starting point is 00:13:17 I want to say it was like 2013-ish. And you were so cool to me. You were very nice to me. Well, it was funny because, because I mean it's selfishly nice I didn't know you I just saw you on stage in real time I go
Starting point is 00:13:30 this guy's hilarious which is the best way to as a comedian it's the best way to meet somebody you don't have to fake a compliment when you meet them you go hey great stuff
Starting point is 00:13:39 that was good that was good stuff yeah no because it's the greatest gift when someone's hilarious. That's very cool. And you were a young kid, and I was just able to be like, dude, come on. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:13:52 Amazing comic. Thank you. And then I was like, where are you from? And you were like, Davis. I go, playing Davis in like two months. You should come open for me if you want. You go, absolutely. Cut to, you get the Daily Show like three weeks later.
Starting point is 00:14:06 You're like, hey man, I can't do it. I'm moving to New York to be on the Daily Show. But can my parents get tickets? And they did go. They loved the show, yeah. So we met then. Here's what I always think about working it out in relation to. If you have this person here, what's your burning question?
Starting point is 00:14:22 My burning question for you is, you had success fast. What did it feel like to have people resent you? Because they probably did. So I was 30 when we met. So I wasn't 30. Yeah, you're young. Is that young for comedy to make it?
Starting point is 00:14:36 Come on. 30? 30? 30's like, I think young. I mean, if you're real young, it would be 24, 25. Yeah, I mean, considering what I gave up. So I was supposed to go to law school, and then I deferred and then denied my admission. Wow.
Starting point is 00:14:52 So I basically like— Perfect for plot points. I burned the boats. Yeah. At 25. Yeah. So those five years before was a very stressful time for me personally. 20 through 27?
Starting point is 00:15:08 25 to 30. 25 through 30. Right. Because at the time I was like, oh, so you basically took a really great career path forward and you set it on fire. You didn't do the part-time thing. You didn't go like, oh, I'm to, I'm an L1 student by day. Yeah. And I do stand up at night.
Starting point is 00:15:27 Yeah. You really believe this is going to work. Yeah. While, you know, you're a feature act occasionally at Tommy T's comedy club in Pleasanton. Love the name.
Starting point is 00:15:36 Are you out of your mind? You know what I mean? Tommy T's. Tommy T's in Pleasanton. Wow. Yeah. And so what was the cut, the cutoff was rejecting the acceptance into law school?
Starting point is 00:15:49 Yeah, it was basically if you give yourself an out, you're always going to be like one foot in, one foot out. You're going to do this part time. And everybody that I looked up to in the Bay that was like really serious about it, Ali Wong, Moshe Kasher, W. Kamau Bell, Arj Barker, all of them, they were like all in. Yeah. You know, and you know this, like when you're coming up, there's the, okay, we all like this.
Starting point is 00:16:18 We're all passionate about it. And then the, oh, he's like for real, for real, all in. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I imagine from what i understand about you you were that at georgetown right yeah it was all once i got into the improv group i was all in on my whole life being comedy forever more wow yeah so that like 19 yeah 19 wow that's wild that is wild yeah because it was it was just a it was just a real inflection point it's like a true kind of like i want to do this.
Starting point is 00:16:45 And then once I got the improv group friends, I was like, oh, these are my folks, you know, like, and I feel that by the way, I'm 45.
Starting point is 00:16:53 I feel that today still, like when I see like you and Ronnie, like going at each other, I love that. I'm like, that's why I love being a comedian. Yeah. It's the funnest.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Like to me, it's like me, it's like a life choice of like the types of people you like to be around, like to give each other a hard time. And it's, I don't know. But what I was gonna say about the Ronnie thing too is, like you and I are close friends, but we don't roast each other. No. And I was thinking today, I was like, but we don't roast each other. No.
Starting point is 00:17:25 And I was thinking today, I was like, what would be your roast of me? Oh, wow. Because I got a lot on you. I would have to, if I had to do it, I would like do,
Starting point is 00:17:36 I would do an act out. It would have to be, it would be very physical and I'd have to take a joke and then I would like stretch it out. And I would kind of putter. Putter. Yeah, putter.
Starting point is 00:17:51 Softly putter. What I said was. Mine of you would just be like literally what Trevor Noah said about you, which is like you and Bina are Indian, Barbie and Ken. Right. Like you look too good. Like my thought about you is like, how long does it take you to get out of the house?
Starting point is 00:18:12 Your hair looks perfect. Everything looks nice. Your shoes are perfect. It's like, how long is it? What does it take you, an hour? No, it doesn't take me an hour, but that's very sweet of you to say. that's very sweet of you to say i'm just gonna accept the couple but we don't need to go you're a beautiful couple oh thank you yes
Starting point is 00:18:32 beautiful children yeah i don't know you know there's certain people in your life and by the way i people don't know this people don't know i'm say, you can cut this out. Okay. People don't know. People think you and Mulaney are like very nice guys, which you are. But people don't know you can fucking suplex people through tables. Yeah. Like if you play WCW versus NWO and N64 and it's like reverse and then they fucking suplex you through a table. You are so good at being like nice guy, nice guy. And then you tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap. And then you like fucking reverse it and slam through a table. You are so good at being like, nice guy, nice guy. And then you tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, and then you like fucking reverse it
Starting point is 00:19:05 and slam through a table. When I did the correspondence dinner, dude, Mulaney would send David Angelo and me these fucking haymakers that would just body people. Brutal. Yeah. And he would have 12. He could just like
Starting point is 00:19:21 Yeah. Yeah. Chat GPT. Just like. For me, it's because. It was incredible. I came up at the cellar. Yeah. In the early 2000s, just getting bullied by like Patrice O'Neill.
Starting point is 00:19:36 Like, and Todd Lynn and all these guys who were like the great bullies. Yes. Like the greatest bullies of all time. The greatest ever, yeah. And so honestly, I didn't even really hold my own with them. I just stayed alive. Yes. Like the greatest bullies of all time. The greatest ever, yeah. And so honestly, I didn't even really hold my own with them. I just stayed alive. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:50 And by staying alive, I got good enough to just be like, all right. So what was your Tai Chi? Because at that moment, because at that moment, you were probably like Mike Birbiglia, Conan guitar set.
Starting point is 00:20:01 Yeah, and they would bring that up quite a bit. Isn't that crazy? Like I knew you, I knew you before I knew you. I know. Like, I was like, oh,
Starting point is 00:20:11 yeah, yeah, he had the thing and then he had this like other special then this two drink mic and I like knew you and then now I know you.
Starting point is 00:20:17 Like, I have your number and I can text you and I can call you. It's truly bizarre, the whole thing. It's so surreal. No,
Starting point is 00:20:23 I mean, first of all, I played guitar early in my career i tried a lot of things yeah try everything when you're starting out i sounded like mitch headberg yeah you know what i mean like yeah you just copy everything you see sounded like stephen lynch for five minutes sounded like mitch headberg for five minutes sound like greg gerola for five but your story's so inspiring to me because of that. Oh, but the thing that you have, the secret special skill you have, that I feel like you don't sort of brag about is like you did that Obama thing and like you made fun of his playlist from the year. It's so funny.
Starting point is 00:20:57 All right. And it's so bold because like. But is it though? Yes. But like is it? Yes. Yeah, because I would be like, oh,, like, what if he just cuts this off? Oh.
Starting point is 00:21:10 You know what I mean? Really? What if he goes cold? Okay. Don't you have that? Because you have a thing in your personality. Yeah. Which isn't in your offstage personality, which is your shit starter.
Starting point is 00:21:21 Your onstage persona, like, you start things. Uh-huh. Like, that could be like, that could have made it bad. Yes, it could have. you're a shit starter. Your onstage persona, like you start things. Like that could be like, that could have made it bad. Yes, it could have. You asked like one of the most influential people in the last century. Yes.
Starting point is 00:21:32 Like, hey, by the way, there's no way you watch and listen to all this stuff. Yeah. And like, that could go badly. What were you thinking in that moment? What was the calculation? So the calculation in that moment is like, what I try to bring to these interviews,
Starting point is 00:21:48 whether it's like President Obama or prime minister trudeau or whatever there has to be this like so i have a text thread with all my boys that we grew up in high school together we've played basketball since we were in middle school we're called hit squad okay we played in like basketball yeah of course you know hit squad and you've obviously heard of what we've done at the 24-hour fitness Fitness Basketball Leagues in the Sacramento, greater Sacramento area since the early 2000s. Yeah, lesser known stuff, for sure. Of course, Hit Squad. So Hit Squad, we're on a text thread. But there's always this thing of like, what would Hit Squad ask of me if they knew I went to go meet Michael Jordan or I met Steven Spielberg?
Starting point is 00:22:23 They'd be like, how tall is he? Right. They would always ask you that sort of thing. So I always approach it from a very like, come on, bro, level with me. Yeah. Thing. And from a place of like, I'm not here to get you. Yes.
Starting point is 00:22:39 Like I'm not here on behalf of the wallstreetjournal.com. Right. To be like, Mr. Birbiglia, comedy is an existential moment right now. And with the threat of democracy, do you feel like some of the – and you're like, okay, you're trying to corner me into like giving you a soundbite on cancel culture. Yes. Got it. Like I'm not interested in this. Yes.
Starting point is 00:23:00 I'm not interested in this. Yes. But if there was like, I tried to approach it from like, it's a very like, come on level with me question. Yeah. But it's also innocuous. It is a warmup joke. Oh, that's interesting. Do you really read all those books?
Starting point is 00:23:16 Yeah. Really? Like you read this book by Abdul Razak Gurna? Yeah. Okay. Mr. President, what happened in TAR? What happened? What was your favorite thing about TAR?
Starting point is 00:23:30 And you cannot say Cate Blanchett. So explain TAR to me. That's very funny. And then if you can, then explain American healthcare to me. Like that sort of like, I love that. Just level with me. And I think he could sense,
Starting point is 00:23:42 oh, he's like being real right now. Like, I'm just like, just fuck the lav mic. Like you really read all those 10 books. Yeah. And Scribs Riley is one of your favorite artists of 2020. Yes. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:57 You know what I mean? Did you come away from it believing that he had? The moment where I believed him is where he goes, dude, how much time we got? And I was like, oh, oh, I like tried to check your cred. And you're like, don't. I think the music stuff, he was like, I'll let it slide. Where he's like, you think you're the guys are the only ones that listen to music and, you know, like irreverent stuff.
Starting point is 00:24:25 But when I checked him on like, you don't read all that much. I think 44 felt, hey, don't come at like my ability to read a briefing and like be an intellectually curious person. That's interesting. But my place was like, but we're both married guys with children. Like there's just too much. Where's the time? Where's the fucking time? Yeah. You know.
Starting point is 00:24:45 What wouldn't you ask him out of respect? So there was a thing at the very end of the interview called, let's not talk about it. Oh, really? Let's not talk about it. Yeah. But what I wanted to signal to him was like, I know each of these is like an hour and a half conversation,
Starting point is 00:25:05 but let's not talk about it. Yeah. So I also catched it in a joke. So I had all these cards. And so one of the cards was like Guantanamo Bay. Let's not talk about it. Yeah, yeah. And I was like, Edward Snowden.
Starting point is 00:25:18 Yeah, yeah. Drone strikes in Pakistan at a wedding. Let's not talk about it. Oh, my God. Let's just not talk about it. Oh, my God. And I was like, boxers, briefs, commandos in chief.
Starting point is 00:25:29 And then he's like, let's not talk about it. Classified, I know. So what I did is like, what I wanted to do was each of these alone. They're major. Drone strikes is foreign policy.
Starting point is 00:25:39 Yeah, yeah. The war on terror, right? This alone is like a two and a half hour conversation. Of course. Let's not, but I need to, Snowden, like that alone alone privacy and all that whistleblowing that's a two-hour conversation um guantanamo obviously in his campaign was like my first day in office i'm gonna close it did not
Starting point is 00:26:01 i was like okay we don't need to talk about it. Yeah. But what I had to signal to him was like, I know. And to the audience, I know. Yeah. Because I also had to be like, you are a former sitting president. You do wield incredible amount of power. This isn't like a hashtag sponsored post. Yeah. I want this to be a meaningful conversation. This may be one of the only conversations I get with you in my life. Let's do this for real. I don't have enough time to get into this,
Starting point is 00:26:33 but I want to let you know that I know and I want to let the audience know that I'm aware. And then I buttoned it with the, you know, boxers, briefs, commandos, and chief joke. Here's my, let's not talk about it. Just write down whether or not you're going to host the Daily Show. Oh, let's not talk about it?
Starting point is 00:26:47 You can write down your answer and put it down. The audience can only see my reaction to it. Sure, sure, sure. Okay. Okay. Got it. Yeah. Good to know.
Starting point is 00:27:02 This is what you expected, right? Good to know. Okay, there you go speaking of fun like this being the theme so there's this photo of us at andrew's air force base we did this us show with david letterman john stewart john mulaney judd apatow and micro biglia and then at the time president obama the first lady joe biden and joe biden that's right we're there and i remember remember there was like a bus ride there and a bus ride after. Yes. You're referencing a photo on, actually on my wall.
Starting point is 00:27:52 On your wall. You and me and Jon Stewart and Letterman and Mulaney and Judd. Yes. At Andrews Air Force. Yes. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, there was a bus. And Kristen Schaal was in the bus with us.
Starting point is 00:28:01 I'm remembering it. Yes. And I remember at the end of like our sets, we were all like, did you do that? Like, how did, like we were all like super analyzing it. And there was this little part of me where I was like, ah, we're overthinking this a little bit too much because it's just a gig and it's a USO gig.
Starting point is 00:28:23 We've done this gig before. Yeah. little bit too much because it's just a gig and it's a uso gig we've done this gig before yeah in fact like this is light work for all of us we know how to rip in front of this audience and i wish there was this part of me that i was like we need to act the way my dad did so letterman was there who's obviously a legend to all of us and i i remember there was like, there was people that kind of were like staying away from him that were like, hey, do we engage with him? Do we, like, we weren't shooting the shit with him
Starting point is 00:28:50 the way we were. I know. The way we were all commiserated. And then my dad straight up beelines and goes up to David Letterman. And he's like, who is your favorite president to interview? Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:29:01 You know? And he goes, I was going to guess Nixon. But what I loved about like his just like, Oh my God. You know? And he goes, I was going to guess Nixon. But what I loved about like his just like, let's just get right to it attitude was he wasn't like, oh, that's one of the greatest late night hosts in history. Rarely does Letterman come back and do stand up. Like he was going to, he was like quasi hosting, you know? And remember he was like stretching. He was doing a lot of like stretches backstage. Yeah, and also by the way,
Starting point is 00:29:27 it's funny you should mention that about your dad because the other, the other person that talked to him was Mulaney's dad. Mm-hmm. So it was your dad and Mulaney's dad were the only people who actually had the nerve to go up
Starting point is 00:29:36 and talk to David Letterman. But like, we're all surgeons and we're not going to talk to this other surgeon. Like, do you know what I mean? And my dad would, would have talked to him if he was there too.
Starting point is 00:29:45 I think it's honestly, people who are not in the field of entertainment are just kind of like, yeah, that's just some guy. Like it doesn't matter. Whereas we give a certain like distance to him. And so to go back to like the thing of it, the Steph of it and what we were talking about at the beginning.
Starting point is 00:30:03 Steph Curry. Yeah, Steph Curry is is you can play loose. Like, that's allowed. Yeah. And I think in a weird way, I also think the art form, culture, and art needs that now. Yeah, I think that's true. There was this moment, I think between 2015 to say like even just this past year where art in and of itself was put on this pedestal of like it can be a form of resistance. It can be a form to subvert power structures and all these things.
Starting point is 00:30:54 And I think we've all lived through the varying degrees of you do that and you can do these very sanctimonious presentations about its importance. Yeah. But at the end of the day, you're also squelching any fun of it. Yes. Or also, that's not the only way to be subversive or interesting. You're making the same point as the movie Tar. Sure, yeah. Yeah, totally. Totally.
Starting point is 00:31:10 Yes. I don't know the point of the movie Tar. I don't know the point of the movie Tar. No, it traffics in this topic a little bit. But you're absolutely right. I think that there's a degree to which people just want to laugh, just want to have a good time at the theater, just want to have a good time at the movies. just want to have a good time at the movies.
Starting point is 00:31:25 Yeah. I mean, Barbie making a billion dollars is a good example of that. Of course, there is a subversion to that. Right. But on its face, it's also very, very funny. And by the way, this is a lesson for me. So I'm going to apply this to me. I think my work would be more interesting if it was that. So this current
Starting point is 00:31:47 show that I'm doing, the new hour that I'm doing, uh, you know, and I'll start taking it to bigger theaters very, very shortly. Um, but one of the guys who opened for me, he said this to me privately backstage where he was like, Hey hey it still doesn't have like that like big like hassan minhaj like point at the end like i'm waiting for the the point and i'm like you know i don't think some of the themes that i'm exploring have this clean like yeah bow tie and it's all it's all done now yeah i'm in the same boat yeah yeah i'm touring with an hour right now that doesn't have a main event. It doesn't have a thing we're going towards.
Starting point is 00:32:28 Yeah. But that's fun too. Like I think that's all, like comedy, stand-up comedy is great in all versions of itself when the person who's on stage cares about what they're talking about, even if it's 10 different things.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Yes. Like my thing is like with a new hour, when you're doing a new hour, like I'm interested in what are you personally obsessed with? I'm always thinking about what am I obsessed with? Right now, I'm sort of obsessed with like my daughter's eight and like I remember now being eight. Wow, that's crazy.
Starting point is 00:32:58 Like I used to be, like I remember when she was a baby. Yeah. It's kind of like, I have a joke about this. It's like when you have a baby, it was kind of like, I have a joke about this. When you have a baby, it's like an animated sack of rice. You know what I mean? And then it's like a person who's like, Dad, I'd like to have dinner now. You're like, oh, shit. Wow.
Starting point is 00:33:16 I got to figure out how to teach her stuff. So Una's in the third grade. Yeah, rising third grader. Dude, I remember. That's crazy because I do remember the third grade. I remember Ramona Ramona Quimby age 8 like I remember
Starting point is 00:33:27 like my crushes in third grade are you kidding me yeah totally you remember your teacher you remember the movies you saw when you were 8 oh yeah
Starting point is 00:33:32 that is crazy yeah I mean so so now that's my my current obsession on stage is like what was I thinking about in third grade
Starting point is 00:33:40 and what is my experience with her now and my relationship with my parents when I was a kid and what's my relationship with her now and my relationship with my parents when I was a kid and what's my relationship with my parents now and all that stuff yeah my question to you is like what's your obsession like what do you think what do you think about a lot that you bring on stage right now it's kind of deciphering and I'm kind of working on it through the new show
Starting point is 00:33:59 is uh this is gonna sound so weird to say, but trauma and pettiness. Okay. Like I'm a very petty person. I'm all about it. Like one of the opening jokes that I have is like really fucked up. And sometimes people are like, what?
Starting point is 00:34:17 One of my favorite things in New York City to do is watching other couples argue in public. Oh, I love it. I fucking love it. I fucking love it. And I love it more when my wife is with me. Yes, yes. Like there's this weird thing where I'm like, they're losing.
Starting point is 00:34:33 They won't advance to the sweet 16. Absolutely. We move on and emotional March Madness. No, it's- In New York City, you get it all the public breakups. Like this is the Paris of public breakups. No, you're absolutely right. Joe and I have been talking about this lately in relation to divorces your friends get divorced yeah and you do like a divorce autopsy with your wife you go yeah they didn't communicate we we
Starting point is 00:34:55 communicate yes like right now we're communicating right so what is so then i was like there's no word for this in the english language they're, the explicit joy you get in the suffering of others. There's only a German word for it. Right, schadenfreude. Schadenfreude. Yeah, yeah. We don't have it. Schadenfreude, yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:11 Here it's just, I guess, gossip. Yeah, yeah. But we have American schadenfreude, which is not only, obviously, it's so German to enjoy the suffering of others, but we also have this other thing in America that we love, which is like, I call it like hate and ass energy, which is- Hate and ass energy. Just hate and ass, just mouth breathing ass. It's the explicit hatred in other people's joy.
Starting point is 00:35:39 I'm exploring that, like that just, you know what I'm talking about? It's just like the way we talk shit in the green room. Oh, forget about it. Just hating ass, mouth breathing ass, jealous. But I'm obsessed with like, why am I thinking this way? Why am I doing this? I have this thing where I'm like starting the joke where I'm like, so like, so is this like, yeah, we're in like, you know, we do couples therapy.
Starting point is 00:36:02 And I go like, is it wrong that i try to win yes and i did this in front of like roy roywood jr who's fucking hilarious and roy was like bro like don't you don't like good luck with your marriage if you're gonna do that but i'm like but i oh my god it's like i'm telling you dude i feel like they double team me yeah like it will have 60 minutes on the shot clock and they'll be like, so, how are we doing? And I'll be like, I think we're doing great. How are we doing? And then it'll just be like, and then with like three minutes left, they'll be like, do you have anything to say?
Starting point is 00:36:36 You know, I want to explore that. Yeah. The subtext of why am I doing this? Like, why do I feel this way? That like, do you know what I mean? Why do I feel like I have to defend myself in that way? Or why do I, you know? Yeah, no, and I have a line in my show right now
Starting point is 00:36:54 where I said my love language is keeping score. Yeah. And it's similar because it's like, I think about, I mean, because if you think about it, like a majority of my time is with my wife and my daughter. Right. It's probably 80% plus of my time. Your time with Bina and your kids is probably like 80% of your time.
Starting point is 00:37:13 Yes. And it's like, it becomes, and I wonder with you, like how do you draw the line of like well that actually is one step too far similar to the Obama thing except it's with your own life did we talk about this but what I will do and this is where I just give like so much props she lets me be me
Starting point is 00:37:40 she does not put constraints on that. Yeah. Basically her rule is like, I'll let, you can let it fly at the cellar at these like small shows. Yeah. Before it goes to Netflix.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Yes, yes. Can you show me the doc? Can you show me the Google doc of what's about to go live? Yeah. Or like before it goes to, let's say the Chicago theater, like big theaters. She'll be like,
Starting point is 00:38:03 can I just see what you're kind of saying? But she's never pumped the brakes on the exploration phase of it. But then I'll show it to her. I'll be like, is there anything that you feel like I should change or feels mean-spirited? Or is there a blind spot that I'm having where you could just like dunk on me here. Well, that's what I find is like, when I run stuff by Jen, more often than not, she'll point out something that is true also, but is contrary to what I'm saying. Because the best jokes are, I think, multi point of view. Yeah. So like, there was something that we were chatting about. I'm like, oh, I got to figure this out. Like we were chatting and I go, hey, Bean, have you ever felt, this is like the thing I was trying to talk about was like being in trouble in your relationship.
Starting point is 00:38:56 Yeah. Like a feeling that you get like, oh, fuck, I'm in trouble. Like, fuck, I'm in trouble. And I have this whole chunk about like a therapist asked me like, what's your, a lot of people like you that are like first generation immigrants, you have this thing called like good boy syndrome. You feel like you want to make everybody happy. You have like your family, you're sending money overseas to cousins and stuff.
Starting point is 00:39:15 You have your brother-in-law, sister-in-law, you have all these things. But good boys sometimes are like hiding a kink. There's something inside them that they're not sharing. Like what's your kink? And I'm just like, I don't know like acceptance you know like my biggest kink would be like if you know you know just my dad came up to me and was just like no one's mad at you anymore my god anyway so there's that idea that's a great one yeah I'm just working on that right and then what's mad at you anymore yeah I have the same yeah like you're just not in trouble. And then I was talking to Bean about this.
Starting point is 00:39:45 She's like, really, are you going to do a kink joke? And I'm like, it may or may not make it in. But I was just like, I was like, have you ever felt, I go, Bean, have you ever felt like you're in trouble? My whole life, from the moment I was leaving the house when I was at UC Davis when I was 19 to go to the punchline or, you know, to Tommy T's or to go do the open mics. I would like sneak out and I'm like, fuck, I'm gonna get back at 10.38 PM
Starting point is 00:40:09 and I'm gonna be in trouble. I'm going to be in trouble. I have to plug this hole sometime. So I'm like, I feel like everything that I've done has the majority of my adult life has been some sort of burden. Like, oh fuck, he's doing the thing that he's doing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:26 I go, have you ever felt like you're in trouble with me yeah she's like no and i'm like that's so interesting it's funny because like when you're saying the whole am i in trouble thing and jen and i have this conversation a lot of like she'll she'll be like am i in trouble for this or are you mad at me for this and it's like it actually is rarely true. Oh, yeah. I find that like most times that she'll say something, I'm like, no. But also, I think there's, it's more like there's an accumulation of,
Starting point is 00:41:00 you know each other, and Gaffigan and I were talking about this the other day on the podcast. It was like, you know the other, and Gaffigan and I were talking about this the other day on the podcast, it was like, you know the person so well that you can just squash them if you choose to. And so as a result, the person in some ways has such a perverse amount of power over you. You guys both are Oppenheimer in this situation. You have your emotional Manhattan Project.
Starting point is 00:41:21 Yeah, mutually assured destruction. Yes. Sure. But don't you think? Yeah, totally. Did your parents ever apologize to each other? Like, have you seen your... Not that I've seen.
Starting point is 00:41:32 I will call and... Isn't that crazy? I'll follow up. But I don't think so, no. You never witnessed your father say to your mother, I'm sorry. Or vice versa. No, although there's things about my dad that, you know,
Starting point is 00:41:46 I'm working on a joke right now about how when I was a kid, my dad would shout, all you want me to do is send the check. Just send the check. And I remember as a kid just thinking like, dad's crazy. And now I'm a grown up with a wife and child. I'm like, I know what he means about that. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:42:04 Right. Like, he's not wrong about the check. So there are these moments you'll have of like, this ties to the Obama interview, of like real emotional honesty. And I've come up to you after shows where I'm like, dude, that's so great that you're doing that. Oh, thanks.
Starting point is 00:42:19 You had this joke and I so thought you were going to change it in your last special about, I understand why some dads decide to leave. Why some dads leave, yeah. Some dads leave. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I understand. You're not saying it's right.
Starting point is 00:42:30 I'm not going to do it, but I get it. Yeah, you don't condone it, but you're like, I can see that. And I could see how you can intellectually analyze that joke and be like, don't do that. It could be considered cruel. There's all these other tabs that it opens up. But what I loved about the joke and you keeping that joke is, don't page A8 of the New York Times.
Starting point is 00:43:00 Don't opinion, like. Well, don't write this like there's going to be a comment section. Yeah. Comedy's not for a comment section. Sure. Correct. Correct. Because the New York Times comment section is actually pretty good.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Oh, it's lit. Oh, it's lit. Sometimes I go like, oh, this is as good as the article. Oh, let's dive in. Take me to page A8, opinion article. I'd be like, okay, this is the hot take, comments. Because what's great about that is that, like, that's being cross-checked. By the way, by New York Times readers.
Starting point is 00:43:34 By New York Times readers. Again, so that's like coastal liberal elites being like, okay, 324 comments just of relative sanity. I find them to be thoughtful. Yeah, very, very like thoughtful. Relatively thoughtful. Sometimes more than the writer. Right, correct, correct. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:43:53 Some of them are like, yeah, that's a fair point. Yeah, and so at times, what I loved about it is there can be this obsession with what you are saying as if it's congressional testimony versus you know what I mean. Yeah, no, it's dance like no one's watching. It's dance like no one's watching except it's write comedy like there's no comment section. Correct. Correct.
Starting point is 00:44:18 It's like, but you're right. But the soul of it, and I appreciate you keeping the soul and the smudge of it in. It is an emotional smudge. Well, it's funny because I say in that special, I go, you know, for the first time in my life, I thought I get why dads leave. I'm not going to do it. That's why I'm comfortable saying it, but I get it. And it's like there were like a handful of people who were like, that's a bridge too far. It was way, way outbalanced by people who said that was very moving to me, particularly people whose dads left.
Starting point is 00:44:49 Wow. That was the most moving part of that whole experience. Totally. And so you also talk about another thing that I thought that was great that you kept in the special. I'm like, keep this, please. Please, for the love of God. You talk about your experience going to the red light district. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:04 And then you finish the story by being like, am I in the way? Like, I think I'm a good guy. You know? And I think I'm decent. Yeah. I think I'm decent. And what's really beautiful about that is like, you can intellectualize that move and be like, I already know how this is going to get picked apart and how I could lose the audience or I could lose a reviewer. Yeah, for sure. And so what you start to do is you lose, what that does is you lose these like core soul moments that make the show great. Human beings, I think, are allowed to be messy, petty, complicated, not great.
Starting point is 00:45:43 Yeah, sure. Make bad decisions. Yeah. And that's okay. I know. And I would say that that part of it is actually meeting the current, needs to meet the current moment
Starting point is 00:45:55 that 2023, 2024 and beyond needs more than ever. Well, I think honestly, I think this segues into what I would, if we were off air, I would ask you and I would ask myself too. It's like, what do you think maybe in your next hour that you're going to crack into that's a flaw of your own that maybe you don't have a joke for yet, but maybe it's just something that you think about sometimes. Like, oh my gosh, I can't believe this is kind of what makes me not a good boy, to use your words. Totally. Probably the pettiness.
Starting point is 00:46:28 That's interesting. So in other words, like the pettiness of you looking at other couples and being like, they're not like us. Yeah, and all these like little things where I have to have, I mean, one of the things that I talk about in the show is I was like, yeah, I know there's something clearly wrong with me. One of my most seminal pieces of work is a 70 minute show that I wrote about a girl who wouldn't go to prom with me. And I wrote that show when I was 30. Right.
Starting point is 00:46:55 That's fucking insane. Right. That is so, I mean, that's, I mean, we are full Drake Petty here. I mean, we're petty. Yeah, this is like nuts. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:07 How could you, why, what is wrong with you? And so it's stuff like that, that I think is, you know, or like even, you know, we've been, I've been doing these shows with Ronnie where both me and him will be on stage and we'll roast each other. Go at each other. Huston versus Ronnie, Ronnie versus Huston,
Starting point is 00:47:20 or Huston hates Ronnie, Ronnie hates Huston. And we'll just go at each other. And people will be like, whoa, this is like unhinged behavior. What's the thing he says to you that you're like, that actually hurts? Is there anything? Oh, I mean, he said one that just bodied me. I asked him, I think he got invited to Chappelle's summer camp and I said this on stage
Starting point is 00:47:47 so we're basically airing out our grievances as friends and I go Ronnie I asked you if I could go to summer camp with you you know what I mean and if I could be your plus one and go with you and you were like oh I'm gonna bring Hannah instead or whatever and then he goes sorry like
Starting point is 00:48:04 Dave wants to hang out with funny people, not people that do PowerPoint. Oh, my God. And it fucking destroyed. Oh, my God. It wrecked the room. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Sorry, they're not going to have a PowerPoint, like, projector in Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Starting point is 00:48:20 You can't show us, like, a bell curve of like, like a bell curve of democracy or whatever. And he's like, yeah, he just wants to be with funny people. And he's fucking, Ronnie is roast in the crowd is going crazy. And I'm like, yeah, you're right. You're right. I, you know, and it was just, I was crushed. What's the biggest challenge in your life on a day-to-day basis what's the thing where you're like i just can't find the time to blank i mean it the is your joke man is the you have this joke about parenting where you it's not winning surviving is winning yeah yeah yeah and it's like man like i'll give you just an example, a hard example this week. I have to help my daughter with her homework.
Starting point is 00:49:10 She has these like little like homework packets that she does. And my son really wanted me to, he's, so I have a five and a half year old daughter and then a three and a half year old son. And he's into basketball now. Like he wants to play basketball. He sometimes walks by the park and like sees some of like the boys playing basketball. And my wife was like, he really wants to play. Like you should take him to go play now. When I tried to take him when he was a little bit younger, it was just too much. Like the ball's bouncing way above his, the rim's too high. It's just all too much. But he kind of like wants to like bounce the ball with both hands. Now I can see him. And just this week,
Starting point is 00:49:45 I was supposed to take him to go do that. But he's dually conflicted because he's really into trucks and sand right now. Yeah. So he was in the trucks and sand and then I went to go do that. And then I'm like leaving to go do this podcast. And earlier this afternoon,
Starting point is 00:49:59 Bean asked me like, hey, have you taken him to go play basketball this week? He said, you take him to go play basketball this week. And I'm leaving for the road tomorrow. And I'm like, hey, have you taken him to go play basketball this week? He said, you take him to go play basketball this week. And I'm leaving for the road tomorrow. And I'm like, fuck, I haven't. I have the ball. Like I have the little Franklin, small kid size, rubber basketball. The tiny one.
Starting point is 00:50:16 And just like, we didn't get around to doing it. And it breaks my heart. And I'm like, ah, fuck, I am a bad dad. And you're not. I mean, I think- But I bought the ball from Ace Hardware. Like there's an Ace Hardware down the street. I have it in the trunk.
Starting point is 00:50:29 Like I'm like, all right, we're going to go do it. But I got caught up doing his other things. But I didn't do the thing. I didn't do the memory, the core memory. I didn't do it. Right. But I think about this all the time with Una because I'm just like, I could be with her right now.
Starting point is 00:50:45 I could be downstairs. We could be making a puzzle. Yes. You know, we could be watching the tennis documentary. You know what I mean? But ultimately, then you think back to your own childhood and you're like, oh, well, actually, like, a lot of my core memories are just being with my friends or being alone. I know, dude. And then there's this thing of like, by the way, he's talking about the theme of being in trouble.
Starting point is 00:51:06 I'm like, fuck, I'm in trouble. Not with her. I'm talking about like I'm in trouble like, dude, am I a bad dad? Am I not pouring everything into this guy? Because what I mean by that is that like I should have at some point, I don't know, if I could. I'm Monday morning quarterbacking here but like he's obsessed
Starting point is 00:51:29 with chicken nuggets right now like he'll just eat chicken nuggets so I'll get these chicken nuggets and I'll chop a nugget into four
Starting point is 00:51:35 this dude will just fist them and wolf them down but what I could have done and we were watching like something on PBS or whatever like PBS Kids
Starting point is 00:51:43 or whatever what I could have done after we finished I was like let's PBS or whatever, like PBS Kids or whatever. What I could have done after we finished, I was like, let's just sit down and watch this. Sometimes I'll take a layup. Yeah. Like if I see an easy path to basket, I'm like, oh, fuck yeah. You just like wolf down these nuggets. And like, now you want to watch this for 30 minutes. I get to like sit and kind of like, I can take a quick power nap on the thing with you.
Starting point is 00:51:58 Yeah. Fuck yeah, let's do it. Yeah. But I totally could have been like, hey, let's go like to the park and like, let's go shoot. But I didn't I took an easier way out and now that I'm guilty I'm going to be gone Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Starting point is 00:52:12 and I'm like fuck I could have done that and am I a bad dad because of that you're not man we've had a tricky summer because Una this is a bit that I was trying to do last weekend but it's like we took her to a birthday party at this place called Urban Air. You ever heard of these places?
Starting point is 00:52:31 The trampoline places, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Totally. Like a big warehouse, like 40 trampolines. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you play dodgeball on them and it's crazy. They give you this form to sign when you walk in and and it's like all the worst things that can happen. Your kid gets paralyzed.
Starting point is 00:52:48 I've read it. It's fucking crazy. It's crazy, dude. And then it all happens. Yeah, yeah. All this stuff happens. She broke her foot at this thing. Una broke her foot at it?
Starting point is 00:52:57 Yeah. Awful. Oh, no. And then the one thing that's not in those forms is you actually can talk about it on your podcast. Got it. But you can't sue them. You can't sue them, but you can mention it. You can mention that some month wasn't.
Starting point is 00:53:11 You can monetize it on YouTube. Yeah, yeah. Got it. Understood. But I had a funny thing the other day. I'm forming it into a joke long term. It's like she was in a cast for like four weeks. And it was because a kid jumped in, a boy
Starting point is 00:53:26 jumped in front of her. It could have been anybody, but she said to me, she goes, Dad, boys are terrible. And I said you're absolutely right and it's not even for the reasons you're thinking. Oh, that's a great joke. That's a phenomenal joke. And then I started explaining
Starting point is 00:53:41 the patriarchy and she kind of lost interest. A lot of my stuff right now is like It's a phenomenal joke. And then I started explaining the patriarchy, and she kind of lost interest. Sure. Okay. But yeah. That's great. A lot of my stuff right now is figuring out, honestly, it's my life struggle of what do I have to teach? What can I teach?
Starting point is 00:53:57 She's going to go through all the stuff the kids go through, and I have to explain it as best I can. There is this summer. Have you guys done Disneyland yet? No. Okay. So my eldest, she's definitely Disneyland age. Okay. This is my take. I think prime Disneyland age, and there's going to be some Disney adults that get mad at me, but let's not even get into that.
Starting point is 00:54:19 Yeah, yeah. That's the comment section. Forget about them. I think it's five to eight. I think it's when you look at Mickey, you don't think it's just like there's a sweaty dude wearing a Mickey costume. That's very comment section. I think it's five to eight. I think it's when you look at Mickey, you don't think it's just like there's a sweaty dude wearing a Mickey costume. That's very astute. And it's five to eight.
Starting point is 00:54:31 And I remember when I met the cast of Tailspin in second grade, I'm seven, and I still went up and hugged them. I met Chip and Dale and like danced with them. And I wasn't thinking, oh, there's a junior in high school dancing with me right now. This is a great observation.
Starting point is 00:54:48 Okay. As soon as you get to fourth or fifth grade, you can see in Mickey's eyes, you're like, there's a person in there. There's like a dehydrated guy who's going to be chugging Pedialyte. You know what I mean? As soon as this is over.
Starting point is 00:55:01 You see like the humanity. I'm joking on ice right now. But my daughter, when she met Fantasia Mickey, there's this great photo I'll share, I'll show you it. She hugs Mickey and she closes her eyes. So she's just like, she gets on her knees and she hugs Mickey like this. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:55:18 And she really believes she met Mickey Mouse. It was like the most beautiful thing ever. And what's beautiful again about the experience, everybody at Disneyland I mean it is racially diverse economically diverse politically diverse you got fucking MAGA there you got Antifa everybody's there yeah all the all the park goers oh yes the star of the show is not Democrats Republicans Blacks whites rich it's it is we are here to see Lightning McQueen and Mickey and all the characters. Never thought about that. Oh yeah. We're here for a common vision, which is joy. Yeah. Like we're here for unbridled joy and fantasy. Yeah. Okay. And we want my kid to be
Starting point is 00:55:54 able to experience that. Yeah. And it's a very beautiful thing. Yeah. And I know there's a lot of criticism of Disney and corporate, yes, full agreement. I'm talking about just the idea of unbridled joy and fantasy of that. Very beautiful. But there was this moment where you go to California Adventure and there's this thing in Cars Land where you actually do the Lightning McQueen racetrack. You gotta wait in line.
Starting point is 00:56:20 It's like two hours. It's a lot. And everybody there is humbled by, it's really beautiful. I was just like, I'm fucking tired. My back hurts. I'm in cargo pants. But then this guy's in cargo pants too.
Starting point is 00:56:31 And we're just in cargo pants with our fucking hats and our sunglasses and like the sunblock and just like chugging water with a backpack. And we are all humbled by life. Yes. Like right in that moment, just life is straight up humbling us. But there's this family in front of us.
Starting point is 00:56:46 They get to the ride and the ride is really fast. And one of the kids, he's like six. You have to be taller than 42 inches to ride the ride. He doesn't want to get on the ride. And we've been waiting, mind you, like an hour and 40 minutes. And the mom turns around and she's like, Brendan, Brendan, this is your chance.
Starting point is 00:57:03 And then she looks at him and she goes, we're not coming back oh no you know and in the moment like the kid like looks at me and the joke
Starting point is 00:57:12 I'm like you know like you're not coming back you are not get on the ride oh my god dude because just do the mental math. 150 a ticket.
Starting point is 00:57:26 There was fucking six of you. Bro. Yeah, yeah. Bro, you're not coming back. And they're from Cincinnati. So I was like, not even direct flight. You're not fucking coming back. Get on, get on.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Get on right now. Dude, that is a great joke. But it was like this allegory for life. Yes, no, absolutely. Dude, I had this thing. And it's like one of my dreams and why like when I met you, I was just like, fuck, I met you or I met Mulaney. Or Dimitri Martin. Again, as a kid growing up in Davis, you guys did Conan.
Starting point is 00:57:58 And on my Vimeo page, there's like Hasan Minhaj Conan submission V8.mov. So I kept sending it to v8 v8 oh I love it and there's heartbreaking ones version 8 for the viewers at home
Starting point is 00:58:12 yeah but you can check the views and some of them are still sitting at zero for real? yeah so they weren't open and then when Conan ends
Starting point is 00:58:20 I was like oh fuck I never got to do you gotta send it to Conan Conan I never got to do Conan well I can't I Conan. Conan. I never got to do Conan. Well, I can't. I can't subvert it because now when... You know how Conan has his podcast,
Starting point is 00:58:29 Conan O'Brien Needs Friends. Oh, right. But all of his friends are people that have done Conan. Oh my god, that's so funny. For the most part. No, you should ask to go on that podcast because he would love that story. Yeah. That would make him so happy. Yeah, yeah. But that story that I lived through, and I never get to do Conan.
Starting point is 00:58:45 And this was to do stand-up on Conan. Five minutes. Five minutes on Conan. Yeah. Oh, I love that. You got to go on Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend and tell that story and then play him to five. The dream.
Starting point is 00:58:56 And then you walk out. Well, it's funny because- And I still remember the purplish glittery sort of weird backdrop. Oh, my God. Yeah, it was the dream. And I would see the purplish glittery sort of weird backdrop. Oh, my God. Yeah, it was the dream. And I would see the videos on MySpace. I'd go, whoa.
Starting point is 00:59:09 Yeah. Kumail Nanjiani was on Conan. Oh, my God, yeah. That must be so fucking cool. Maybe you could weigh in on this because I've been telling from my girlfriend's boyfriend show, I've been recently retelling this story about going on The Scrambler, which is a ride at the carnival. Yeah. And how when I was in seventh grade,
Starting point is 00:59:29 I asked this girl to go on the carnival with me, and I thought it was going to be my first kiss. And then I basically end up going on the Scrambler, and I throw up on the Scrambler. And it ends up on this special. And it's a fun story to tell. This is from one of your early albums, right? Yeah, from my girlfriend's boyfriend in 2011 or something like that.
Starting point is 00:59:48 And I've been telling that story on stage lately because I've been thinking about it in relation to like, Una's eight years old, she's in third grade and we're starting to tell her about drugs and sex and grown-up stuff. But I tell the scrambler story in the context of flashing back to my own childhood. Right. And I've been just thinking about the idea
Starting point is 01:00:14 of calling my show Please Stop the Ride because that's what I say to the scrambler operator. I go, please stop the ride because I know I'm going to throw up. Yeah, yeah. But I've just been thinking a lot about lately how when you're a kid, your life is a lot like
Starting point is 01:00:29 a ride. You don't feel like you can make many choices. Or at least I did. Really? Yeah, I always felt like you have to show up to school. You've got to leave at 3 o'clock. You've got to go to the program. You've got to go to camp in the summer. Whatever it is. Life you view on it's so different
Starting point is 01:00:45 yeah but then but then my but then where it's going is that when you grow up weirdly my experience is
Starting point is 01:00:53 I still feel like I'm on the ride I still feel like I can't quite do exactly the thing I want to do right I gotta make the flight
Starting point is 01:01:01 I gotta be in Cincinnati yeah yeah I gotta be in Austin you know yeah and not that I don't love that see I feel that part of it it be in Cincinnati I gotta be in Austin and not that I don't love that it's not that I don't love it and feel gratitude for it but I'm also sometimes like oh my god can I get off the ride for a moment
Starting point is 01:01:16 you know like there's this great line Kate Berlant was on the podcast recently and she goes it's crazy when you realize that life is consecutive oh wow that's great is that great yeah she's so right yeah life is consecutive yeah so i feel like i'm grappling with that recently oh yeah so to me the thing that i think about the most is like even when you were on the scrambler as a kid just i just felt this as a kid like there's this like
Starting point is 01:01:43 unsigned rapper energy of like, you motherfuckers just wait till I get the fuck out of here. Like then it's on. Because a kid is all possibility. The sun is rising. When you mean when you're on the ride? I'm talking about- When you're a kid.
Starting point is 01:01:56 When you're a kid. Just act it all. When you have to go to that camp that you don't want to go to. Or they take you to your aunt's place and you don't want to be there. You're like, just wait. Just wait till my time is mine. Someday. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:09 Your every debut rapper's first album. Your Get Rich or Die Trying. Your 50 Cent's debut. Just fucking wait. You are the Marshall Mathers LP. Just fucking wait till I get signed. Just wait till I get out of this fucking house. Wow.
Starting point is 01:02:24 It's on. The sun is rising. Yeah. You are all possibility. The same reason why like if I meet Una or you meet my daughter or my son, what could they be? That he could be an improviser.
Starting point is 01:02:36 He could be a doctor. He could be an engineer. He could be anything. There's all these possibilities. What's crazy is as you get older, the sun is starting to set. It's true. Doors are closing and there is no going back. You're absolutely right. Brandon, get on the fucking
Starting point is 01:02:50 ride. We're not coming back. You're not coming back. I'm never doing Conan. It's not happening. But let's scale. Let's do this at scale. I never got to do a Comedy Central half hour. Yeah. I was like, oh man, and they write your name and big on the back. There are things that you will want in life that you do not get. And the losses become bigger. A loved one gets cancer. A parent dies. The door's closed.
Starting point is 01:03:22 You're burying dad in the ground, throwing dirt on it the tombstone it's over And those things become realer Like as you get older And i'm feeling that more it is not an intellectual game It is a feeling thing of like dude. My mom had her second knee replaced Oh, man, she needs to take her diabetes medication. I am watching them enter this part of their life where I have to parent them. And this is very weird.
Starting point is 01:03:51 And also what I've realized is like- And doors are closing. The memories and doors of that are closing. The way I think about it sometimes is so many of my dreams have come true. But when your dreams come true, you realize that they never happened the way you thought they were going to. Yeah, true. And because your dream from 2001 is not what it looks like in 2023.
Starting point is 01:04:18 Right. Because the whole world changes. The thing that you thought that you could do is a 180 from what it was. Is that what your Letterman set was? Where you're like, I'll do Letterman and it'll change everything. And then it doesn't. And you're like, you wake up the next day and you go, oh yeah, still broke. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So like that is what adulthood has felt like to me. Yeah. I felt like these doors kind of closing. Yeah. Or I can now sense doors closing.
Starting point is 01:04:50 Yeah. Even in my body. Sometimes I'll sit on the couch, like I'm going back to Sacramento next week. And sometimes I'll sit on the couch. My dad is 72. And then my son is like two and I'm 37. So I'm like the half, I'm the Rihanna halftime show.
Starting point is 01:05:06 And they're both on like two ends of the couch, like on the iPad doing the same thing, being like, like they're both angry at the iPad and I'm just in the middle. Oh, I love this. But I'm hurtling towards this. I'm hurtling towards your father. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so like, I'm just like kind of like sitting there in between them. I love that visually, by the way. I'm just like, of like sitting there in between them I love that visually by the way I'm just like okay it's going this way yeah and you know my dad my his body type and my body top is very similar so when I look at that I'm like this is where it's going buddy
Starting point is 01:05:34 right like it's good this is the way it's gonna end yeah what are you doing in between yeah I know and that's where I feel so bad where I'm like fuck we didn't play basketball this week. That's going to do it. It's getting too heavy.
Starting point is 01:05:49 I love it though. I love it. Really? Are you kidding me? This is my favorite part. This is my favorite part. This is not very funny. No, I love this.
Starting point is 01:05:56 And I think this, I hope this is what your next hour is about. Yeah, stuff like this, yes. So, okay, the final thing we do is working it out for a cause. Is there a nonprofit that you'd like to support? And we will plug them on here and donate to them and link them in the show notes. One nonprofit that I love, I'm going to plug the nonprofit that my wife works for,
Starting point is 01:06:42 Vituity Cares Foundation, which is great. Yeah. I will donate to them. I'll link to them in the show. Oh, nice. Which is great. Yeah. I will donate to them. I'll link to them in the show notes. Encourage folks to contribute as well. Yeah. Hassan, congratulations on everything. Like, you're just crushing in so many ways.
Starting point is 01:06:57 And crushing as a dad. So you're saying I'm not in trouble? You're not in trouble. Not in trouble. Kids are lucky to have you. Thank you, man. You are the Steph Curry of comedy. Oh, dude, that's not even true, but I appreciate it. Same height.
Starting point is 01:07:06 Same height. Come on. There we go. Working it out, because it's not done. Working it out, because there's no... That's going to do it for another episode of Working It Out. I love talking with Hassan. You can watch his special, The King's Gesture, on Netflix.
Starting point is 01:07:23 You can watch his interview with Barack Obama on YouTube which is where you can also watch this interview right now you can follow Hasan on Instagram at Hasan Minhaj H-A-S-A-N-M-I-N-H-A-J and
Starting point is 01:07:39 check out Burbiggs.com sign up for the mailing list be the first to know about upcoming shows like I said, Vancouver, Seattle, Portland, Walla Walla, Boston, all kinds of exciting stuff, and of course, London. All that on Burbiggs.com. Our producers are myself, along with Peter Salamone and Joseph Burbiglia, associate producer Mabel Lewis, consulting producer Seth Barish,
Starting point is 01:08:01 assistant producer Gary Simons, sound mix by Ben Cruz, supervising engineer Kate Balinski. Special thanks to Marissa Hurwitz and Josh Upfall, as well as David Raphael and Nina Quick. My consigliere is Mike Berkowitz. Special thanks to Jack Antonoff and Bleachers for their music. Special thanks to my wife, the
Starting point is 01:08:18 poet J. Hope Stein. You can follow her on Instagram at jhopestein. Special thanks as always to my daughter Una, who built the original radio fort made of pillows. And thanks to most of all to you, the listeners. If you're enjoying the show, rate us and review us. Tell your friends, tell your enemies. Maybe you're waiting in line at Disneyland
Starting point is 01:08:38 and everyone is at their wits end. And you just say, hey, you know what would really lighten the mood around here? A deep dive on how to deconstruct comedy. Thanks, everybody. We'll see you next time.

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