On with Kara Swisher - The Daily Show’s Josh Johnson Can Make Even A Recession Funny
Episode Date: April 10, 2025Emmy-nominated writer, stand-up comic and actor Josh Johnson may be the most prolific comedian on the internet right now. You might recognize him as a regular correspondent on The Daily Show, or maybe... you've come across his sharp political critique on TikTok (where he has 2 million followers), or watched one of his longer, philosophical stand-up routines on YouTube (where he has 1.5 million subscribers). Josh is currently touring the country (catch his Flowers Tour in a city near you), but he took a break this week to sit down with Kara at the Great Hall at The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City. They discussed Josh’s entrepreneurial approach to distributing and owning his work, how to make dry political topics like tariffs funny and relatable, what Elon Musk should really be doing with his money and how the ultimate antidote to fear is community. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram, TikTok, and Bluesky @onwithkaraswisher. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hi, everyone from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher.
My guest today is an extremely funny man and a real joy to be around comedian Josh Johnson.
You might know Josh as one of the regular correspondents
on The Daily Show.
He's the guy often doing the person on the street interviews
about everything from terrorists to Trump
to Black History Month.
But if you're really smart,
you know him from social media
where he's really built up his following
and has been blowing up of late.
Josh has over a million followers on Instagram,
over one and a half million subscribers on YouTube
and two million followers on TikTok. over one and a half million subscribers on YouTube, and two million followers on TikTok,
and he's incredibly prolific.
He's built a following by regularly posting bits
of his stand-up routines,
which are long philosophical journeys,
where he connects news, politics, and pop culture
to everyday struggles.
I think he's just a real treasure
and someone who is incredibly thoughtful.
And one of the best parts of it is, I was introduced to him by my son, Louis, I think he's just a real treasure and someone who is incredibly thoughtful.
And one of the best parts of it is I was introduced to him by my son, Louis, who's 20 years old,
who's been listening to him for a long time and really enjoys his really thoughtful takes
on lots of things.
And I think that's a good sign for our youth.
Josh is currently on tour around the country, the Flowers Tour.
I spoke to him on Monday in between gigs at a live event at the Great Hall of the Cooper
Union for the Advancement of Science and Art.
Cooper is a private college in New York City offering degrees in architecture, art and
engineering and the Great Hall has been the site of civic discourse and free public programming
since 1859.
Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and Barack Obama
have spoken here, and now me and Josh Johnson.
I also gave a commencement address for Cooper Union
a couple of years ago, and it was fantastic.
And in this one, it was equally so.
We had a packed house at a really wonderful venue,
so that's pretty cool.
Our question this week comes from fellow comedian,
Mike Ribiglia, who's an overachiever
and did several questions for us,
and we use two of them here. He's become a friend of mine, but more importantly has an astonishing
special coming out on Netflix in May called The Good Life, which he's been working on.
He's also interviewed Josh. I think you'll really like this interview.
It is fun and it is also surprisingly poignant. So get ready to listen. Buying a house has long been considered the best way to build wealth and move into true
adulting.
Isn't it? I mean, at least that's what society
wants us to think. Got to get a Birkin, got to get a home, you know. Okay, the handbag you can
probably manage without, but what about a house? Surely that's actually good, right?
We're going to find out this week on Explain It To Me. New episodes every Sunday morning, wherever you get your podcasts.
Support for On with Kara Swisher comes from Sophos.
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On the latest episode of Net Worth and Chill, we're uncovering the bourbon, boredom, brilliance
of Fawn Weaver.
I proved that the end result has nothing to do with where you begin.
You can make a decision at any point in your life to move forward differently.
She transformed Uncle Nearest Whiskey from a forgotten history to a $1 billion empire,
rewriting both Bourbon and Black entrepreneurship narratives.
This week, we're diving into her strategic playbook of reclaiming legends and building
generational wealth.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts or watch on the Your Rich BFF YouTube channel.
Josh Johnson, thanks for joining us for a live recording of On with Kara Swisher here
at the Cooper Union in New York.
So I have a really busy schedule, but you have an insane schedule.
You just came here tonight from The Daily Show,
where you've been a correspondent for about a year.
And you were also on tour.
You've been touring around the country.
This Friday and Saturday, you perform in Oklahoma.
Last night, you were in Dallas.
Next week, and you're back in Texas.
This has been going on for a while.
Talk a little bit about how you're conducting your life
right now as a comic.
What is it like to be a comic at this moment?
Okay.
I mean, I don't really...
I guess I don't sleep that much.
Yeah.
Same.
But also, there was so long where I would go places and nobody cared.
And so, it's nice to now have people want me to go wherever I'm going.
So I'm... Where was the worst place where nobody cared?
I had a book event where two people showed up. So I took them out to dinner, but
Yeah
So you're saying the worst place where nobody cared. Yeah. I did do a show
in
Mobile, Alabama
That
If they if they cared they would have come and it was raining when I got there and one of the producers was like I think we're
gonna get some more people coming in I was like I don't think we will I think
that the rain doesn't necessarily bring the people out. I think whoever is in here now is who we have.
Right.
And there was one person that wandered in and was very confused why I was talking.
Was like, clearly just came in for a drink and was like, oh no.
So you're doing a lot of, I want to sort of differentiate between online and I guess offline or real life,
but because you're one of those prolific comics on social media at the moment. You released 60 YouTube videos last year.
You post nearly hour-long sets on YouTube weekly, which what you're doing, you're getting millions of views.
They're all very different. A lot of current news and pop culture moments. Talk a little bit about
that and how you think about the
differentiation between, say, being in Texas and here or somewhere else.
Well, first of all, I do talk a lot. So that's how we got the numbers. That's how we got
to the 60 videos is that I could go on forever. If you all feel like living here, we can.
But I think that every place that you go to, whether you're in like Austin, Texas or Oklahoma
City or something, are going to have their general breakdowns of demographics and all the things that
we use to look at a place and try to decide what it is, try to put people in a place in a specific box.
Is it red?
Is it blue?
Purple?
Is it mostly black, white?
Is it like, does it have a hood?
Is it the boonies?
All that stuff.
But I think that for the most part, if you can accept that those demographics are there,
but still sort of approach it with the hope of being universal.
And I think you can get to some really interesting work.
I think that it is possible to create a through line
that people who have very different experiences
that will not converge can still understand
the thing that you're talking about.
And so that's my goal whenever I go to a place
is to not necessarily switch up everything that I'm doing
because of where I am, but sometimes where I am aids
the thing that I'm trying to speak to.
How do you pick things?
Because you do different things.
I was looking at you, you do these longer ones
that shift between a number of things.
You were talking about a fight
and then you were talking about Elon Musk and then you were talking about Elon Musk and then you
were talking about AI.
We'll get to Elon in a second because he's super funny as everybody knows.
But then you did this very, you do a lot of short ones which I like a lot where you did
one on Mark Zuckerberg's outfit which I loved.
Thank you for doing that.
As much as I enjoy Jimmy Kimmel calling him looking
like a Molly Deer or from Chechnya,
I love the idea that he's in the middle of the first
cross-racial midlife crisis, which I thought was beautiful,
was sort of a beautiful thing.
How do you pick it up and decide what to do now?
Was there a new story, for example, that popped up today
that you might integrate into your CNF? I was just thinking I was just on the way here
I was on a train here from DC and one of the things that I thought was interesting was
this idea that the the tariffs are manly
That they're manly tariffs and it's on I know it's gonna surprise you
But it's on Fox News right now
Trump terrorists will make you a man. That's Jesse Waters
Trump's manly tariffs pundit believes it could reverse the crisis in masculinity for example sure sure so
It's a penis yeah
Yeah, the way that I look at it, I suppose,
if I was going to add it to the set, right?
They're saying that this is manly.
I do think that it is manly in the way
that my dad would try to fix the sink, and he's not a plumber.
Yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah. So we know what I mean?
So like, we own the tools, because you can buy tools.
Yes.
Don't just let anybody have the tools.
They don't ask you if you're going to tear up your house at all.
They'll let you buy the hammer, the screwdriver.
They'll let you buy like the-
A hatchet.
It might as well be an automatic weapon if you don't know what you're doing with an electric
screw. And so then you bring it home and in your head as a man, you're like, I have the tools.
Like I do have them. So if anything happens, I'm at least halfway there.
Never mind the other half is like knowledge. And so then, so then there's like a leaky
faucet. And so you're like, okay, go time, this is what we bought all the stuff
at the hardware store for.
And so you get under the sink, you move all the lice,
all the stuff out of the way, and then you're under there,
and it's very uncomfortable, you're like,
wow, I can't believe that there are people
that do this without complaining.
And then you're trying to figure out,
you know, you've got your light,
because you don't have a light like you should because you're not an actual plumber.
So you've got your cell phone light up, pointed at the faucet with your legs hanging out of
the cabinet.
And you're looking up and you're letting the water hit you on the forehead because you're
like, I just want to make sure the leak is real.
Right?
And so it's hitting you on the forehead.
And then you're like, all right, time for tools.
And so you take your screwdriver and you're like, I don't know where this one I
Don't know if this one. Well, you're not actually supposed to use a screwdriver there, but yeah
And I know exactly what to do
And so so then the the way that that thought process goes of like I'm a man a man is supposed to fix these things
I have the tools the tools are right here, you know a tariff is a tool
It's not as if tariffs were invented this past week or anything. No, and obviously, you know
When when Trump was running he was running on strength you saw dudes that were voting for Trump talk about how we need strength right now and everything.
He's a man. He has a tool.
Let's just fix the thing.
And the only thing he's missing is knowledge on how the thing works.
Right. And that does mean that the house we're in is going to leak very badly for a long time.
Do you?
There you go.
Right, exactly.
So making jokes about this craziness, now you do man in the street bits as a correspondent
on The Daily Show, which are fantastic.
Have you noticed any change in reactions
over the last few months?
Have you been out lately since the stock market
took a massive dive?
No, I've only talked to people that I know
since the stock market.
I don't even know what you would call it.
Crashed. Besides a crash, yeah.
Crashed is what you're looking for.
I was trying to find a different word, like a synonym and then crash
is just the most appropriate.
Yeah.
Um, but basically ever since it really kicked off, so like that first day with
the Dow, with like the 1200 points and everything, you know, everyone that I
know was concerned in the way that you.
They were concerned in the way that you, they were concerned in the way that you get concerned
when you're like in an Uber
and you see that the light has turned,
but they're still looking at the directions.
And so you're like, I, are we about to crash?
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
All the time.
And then, and then the more I talked to people,
the more that they were like,
no, I think we've actually already been in the car accident
and we're doing that thing where you blink a lot
because you can't hear anything.
Cause you're like, dooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo I have not had the chance yet to do like a man on the street
since it happened, but every person that I've talked to has had, and across the aisle as well,
it's like I still have friends from back home in Louisiana
that vote Republican every time and everything
that have very similar concerns to the people
that I know here.
And I think that sometimes these connections get
made where people who are maybe diametrically opposed isn't the right way of phrasing it,
but like people who are so at opposite ends of the spectrum have one sticking point of
common ground for even a moment. And then speaking to that is what I would try to do,
whether it's a man on the street or just stand up.
So what would be right now?
Are people in places like Oklahoma
getting wary of Elon or what Trump is doing
or the cuts in the government?
Well, I think that there is a, there is a hesitance that I'm seeing in real people that doesn't seem to exist online as much.
The thing about being online is that it doesn't tell you how everyone is feeling and neither can being in person,
but it does tell you the most extreme version of what a person thinks.
If you don't have to be in person saying the thing,
you'll say whatever, right?
Like, I'm pretty tough behind a keyboard.
Yeah.
And.
Oh, how dare you.
Yeah, how dare you?
But you do see people online saying things
that are like, well, this is good,
this is the manly thing.
This is like gonna make men men again
because we're gonna have to work so hard to eat nothing
that we will be like men again.
Remember like our grandparents who were men
back when men were men?
You know the men that died young, those men.
We should be more like those men who got things like,
I don't know, like tetanus from not having the shot
or having the shot and not wanting to take it. Yeah, yeah. So we're really, I don't know, like tetanus from not having the shot or having the shot and not wanting to take it.
Yeah. Yeah. So we're really, I don't know. I used to truly believe, and I'm not trying to not answer
the question. You just reminded me of something. I truly used to believe that with enough
opportunity, education, and resources, we would all be like that meme. You know that meme that people make where they're like,
oh, if this thing never happened,
and it's like a futuristic utopia,
and there's like flying cars and stuff like that.
I used to believe that like with enough of everything,
we would get there.
And now I'm not totally sure that's the case
because we do have stuff and we're like, nah,
I'd rather it be like the 1800s.
Yes. That looked dope.
So I'd rather that as I sit on my iPhone, I'd rather that back when men were men
and those men wrote about how bad life was.
Yeah. So like like measles.
Let's do it again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so I think though that a lot of different
connection points are getting made
in how people are reacting to things.
And I think it's obviously, it's very difficult.
It's really hard.
If you spent a year and a half
sort of sounding the alarm
that things like this would happen,
and then no one cared or people laughed in your face,
and then they do start happening,
and then all of a sudden people care,
or they stop laughing,
or they still try laughing your face
while they're actively hurting.
And I think that like,
there, I don't ask anyone to to like live life as
I see fit but I do think that for some people there's a point where their
empathy sort of ends and they get on the sort of like nihilistic doom roller
coaster where they're like well good let's go ahead let's burn it all down
just so you can suffer just so you can learn your lesson. The leopards eat your face. The leopards eat your
face. And it's like, this is the thing about that. I totally understand where that logic comes from.
I also very much understand like that feeling, like that that's a very human thing. We all have
it for each other sometimes, like, and it could be politics. It could be you telling someone not to date someone.
You know what I mean? Like, it could be anything.
But the problem with, like, the Leopard's Eating Face Party
is that the satisfaction you get from watching the person
that voted for the Leopard's Eat Faces eat their face
is negating the fact that your face is also being eaten,
like, at the same time.
That's the whole reason you didn't want the leopard face party.
Cause you were like, I like my face. Right. And so, yeah,
I think I had that feeling when Bill Ackman who's been on the, the DEA brigade,
cause he's a world's expert on that. You know, I was thinking,
he does like 96 page tweets about DEI.
I did read one of them and it was long. It was long.
Yeah.
And I'm like, this is not the purpose of Twitter, but fine.
So I was going to do a 96 part series on hedge fund investing,
about which I know nothing, so that I could compete with him.
But he's very upset about the tariffs.
Oh, no.
He's very upset.
And he also-
Now he's upset.
Now he's upset.
And he also does not have an editor.
I've never seen a tweet... Fair.
I didn't know you were allowed to do it that long.
Yeah, yeah.
That's crazy. It's free.
Yeah. Yeah, they don't make any money on it.
He's working on a book.
Yes, he is.
I want to talk a little bit about how you got here
because you're originally, as you noted, from Louisiana.
You studied lighting, theater lighting?
I did, yeah.
Why?
Um, well, I was, I was looking for something.
I've always loved theater and I'm wasn't a performer in that way.
Like, you know, I wasn't an actor or anything, but I was, I was really engaged
with everything that the theater department was doing.
And so I decided, I started off as this communications major
because I thought that I was gonna write films
and I thought that communications was the best way,
like the best route to when I'm not writing films,
I could be working on something else
and I can just learn that general world of media.
And then I just found myself so passionate about theater
and the productions that the department was doing
that I thought lighting design
and the way that it's like subtle,
but incredibly necessary was something really interesting.
And so I graduated with a degree with that as my, my main focus.
But did you want to get on the stage and then just said, Oh, I'll do lighting
design because I'm, you know, it's almost like one of those movies where the
lighting designer turns out to be the beautiful girl.
And you know, it, it, it a sense I, but basically after I graduated, I just, I,
I did it for maybe three Three four months after I graduated
Locally with a lot of productions and stuff and then I knew I was gonna move Chicago and when I moved to Chicago
I had also started doing like a couple open mic nights and stuff like that
I've always had a real passion for comedy even more so than than design even more so than theater
But you hadn't done it before correct. I hadn't really done it
I had done like my college's like.
What prompted you to get on the stage to do that?
You know, I talk a lot.
And I was like, this is at least a forum
where I'm supposed to, you know?
And so I couldn't tell you honestly
from that very first time what made me do it.
But I know when I moved to Chicago.
What was your first joke? Oh, geez. I don't know what it it, but I know when I moved to Chicago. What was your first joke?
Oh, geez. I don't know what it was,
but I know it was bad.
I don't remember it well.
Do you know what it was about?
I...
There's a piece of the set that I remember
because I did a few jokes,
so I don't remember what the first one was,
but I had this one joke about how my family got a new alarm system.
And I like said the neighborhood that we lived in and everything, and then that someone tried
to break in and we found the alarm system works perfectly because the cop showed up
two days later.
And that was in there.
Slow burn here.
Yeah, I think I remember that one
because people actually like reacted to that one.
I feel like the other ones were duds.
Yeah, you had a good joke about being
in a fight neighborhood.
You live in a fight when you had your fight.
I've only lived in fight neighborhoods.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I feel like I also sometimes will
Categorize jokes by like a different thing than what is the memorable part of the joke? Mm-hmm, and so the joke itself you mean yeah exactly it's getting it
No, your discursiveness is really interesting because you wander all over the place. I do. Yeah, I like it
It's part of talking a lot. Yeah. Yeah, it reminds me. It's part of talking a lot. Yeah, yeah.
It reminds me of you.
You must study a lot.
That's what I was noticing on a lot of your tech stuff.
You went out and learned it.
As best I could.
Yeah.
I mean, if anything, that's what gives me, like, if I decide to a set about something
or someone and then in trying to find background on it, I'm realizing how little I understand
about the subject. That's what gives me at least more respect in how I talk about it.
Just because I know, even if the audience doesn't know, I know that I didn't,
when I read it, I didn't understand it.
Right. You were talking about tariffs backstage, about the formula.
Yeah, I was talking about the tariffs and I was like, I'm reading things that I'm just trying
to make sure all of it is true because is so far it's been very dumb.
Mm-hmm. And I just want to make sure it's as dumb as I think it is. Right.
Before I talk about how dumb it is because in case I'm wrong I'm like not
helping. I'm just making it seem. It's dumb. Yeah okay cool cool cool. Yeah yeah
you were asking he was asking if Chad GPT gave
Trump the formula.
Yeah.
And I heard that, and I was like, no lie,
I don't like Trump at all, but I need that one to not be true.
Let me go ahead and look up like 14 sources to make sure
that that's what happened.
Because I know that they got their own formula wrong.
And that was also like as someone who's never been great at math in class, I understand
exactly where they were coming from, messing up their own formula. But no one's ever depended
on me.
Right.
Do you know what I mean? Like, I never came home with a seat and mad that my mom was like,
that's it, we selling everything.
This is...
We were looking at you and you botched it.
We'll be back in a minute.
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When you were getting when you were sort of preparing and going on stage from being doing lighting you jumped on stage
And took the the mic did you have people you looked up to that influenced
your comedy? I mean, everyone sort of asked that question. Was it Jimmy Fallon,
Trevor Noah, John Stewart? Was there anybody you were copying?
I don't think so because I feel like what I was doing, I definitely had heroes
especially, but I think that one of the reasons it was,
it was what felt like difficult for me to find my footing
in standup for a little while,
was that the way that I wanted to do it
was not something that I really saw a lot of.
I saw pieces of it in other people, I suppose.
I really appreciate the way that
This this may not even make sense so feel free to stop it okay
But I appreciate the way that Carlin had almost like a timeless tense to him because he could have yeah George Car, he could have talked about one specific politician,
one specific moment in time, one specific story, but the takeaway, even when he did
do those things, was that this thing is applicable for the rest of time as long as this injustice
persists.
It's true, he holds up.
Yeah.
He does hold up.
I feel like, even though I talk about things topically, I think that if you let all that stuff sort of pass away,
you edit it out of the set,
there is an attempt I'm making to talk about a larger thing
that who knows, I don't get to decide
and I won't be around for if it holds up.
It's actually, your comedy, I would say, is philosophical.
Let me give you an example from a set you posted.
It's funny, but it's also very poignant.
I'm gonna read some of the lines you sprinkle through this 42 minutes and I don't think
I'm very good at this so I'm just going to do it.
The only way forward is with other people.
Your future is your neighbour.
Lay down trust at the feet of people you don't know.
If there's a community you want around you, all you have to do is be its founder.
It's so much more likely you're going to build a community than you're going to become a billionaire
There's a lot going on there that is this eternal thing that you're talking about these bigger ideas. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, oh
I
Definitely didn't have any jokes in that. No
I pulled them out. I hope the actual set made people laugh.
I made them unfunny on purpose.
The stuff from before. Okay, gotta work on some tags. But yeah, no, I think that those
are my attempts to take it away from just one specific thing. I understand that it is incredibly scary and disheartening
to see this sort of like, whatever you want to call it, Trump America or anything. But
Trump is a symptom of a larger issue and those issues will exist long after he's gone, long
after I'm gone because they're the issues that people make. And I think that there are
attitudes that get us back to places that we've been before where it already didn't work out for us.
We've seen it's like some of the worst parts of history seem like they're gonna repeat, but we already know.
We've already sort of learned the lesson and so that's actually what makes things timeless, sadly.
Isn't even someone being extra poignant or like having words strung together in a sentence that have never been done before is the
fact that we keep making the same mistake so if you can speak to a specific mistake and you can
hopefully find
Something to offer up besides just this is a mistake boo on you then I think that
you do have a
Catalog that you can look back on with a lot of things that hold up,
that people can enjoy or take something away from for as long as...
For a long time. You're right. Carlin really does hold up.
Even today, he's completely relevant, the stuff he says.
That said, you do a lot of stuff, of pop culture, as it's happening now.
Your most popular YouTube video at the moment
is Drake versus Kendrick explained to white people.
Yeah.
Which is brilliant.
Which some day people won't understand,
but still is fantastic.
7.8 million views in 10 months.
There's also Diddy's collapse, Untouchable to Indicted,
6.5 million views.
And of course, let's not forget why they're turning on Elon,
one of my personal favorites, with 4.5 million views. These of course, let's not forget why they're turning on Elon, one of my personal favorites, with 4.5 million views.
These are 40 minute plus conversational explainers
with lots of detours, which is,
I think your signature style,
although you do do the shorter TikTok ones.
Why do you think long-term is doing,
long form is doing so well for you?
Because people want more explanation?
Maybe, I don't know. I didn't necessarily engage with it that way because I figured
something out. I just was doing my set and then I put it out and people found it and
liked it and that's a real blessing. I don't really know if that will even be the case for for long
I just know that this is the way that I approach comedy
This is the way that I find it like fun and fulfilling. I'm happy that people enjoy it
It's not gonna be everybody's cup of tea. So I understand that as well, but to me
I think that in a world that's like bombarding you consistently all the time with
like a message as quick as possible, convince you of something and convince you of something
that's a belief that they would like for you to hold for the end of time because whether
reductive to which yeah, I think that at a certain point, if you if you really take your
time and think out an entire idea that there are gonna be people who
appreciate that and and appreciate the
The through line that you create the the line of logic
so at least they understand your worldview and the worldview of people that believe what you believe a little bit better and
I think that maybe that's what's resonating with people right now because I'm especially not really trying to convince anybody of anything
these are the things that I believe these are the things I think are funny and
The the great thing about the internet is that there is some passivity there
It's like if you really think that I suck you don't have to engage with me at all
If you're like this isn't what comedy should be or if it's for you and you're like oh I really wanted something that whether it's breaking
down a thing or joking about a thing that is obscure then you can find it
and you can have fun with it but I don't know because I also don't know if I'll
always do it this way. I think I think the whole thing any any creator is
supposed to evolve in some form.
And so this is what I'm doing for now.
Maybe I'll do something different a few years from now.
You know what I'm very attracted to?
One of the things, something I know about, like your Elon takedowns are brilliant, actually.
I have spent 30 years with that fucker.
And you seem to get it pretty quick.
Like, you know, he was okay for many of those years
and has sort of lost his ever-loving mind at this point,
but you have real insight into these tech billionaires.
They're giving you a lot of material, which is interesting.
Sure, but I also think it's just like, to me,
no matter what you're sort of like studying
to find background on, speak about as earnestly
and intelligently as possible, I think if you have an understanding of people, you'll
understand the situation.
And I've met people like Elon, and I've met people like Trump, and I've met people like
Chuck Schumer, and I've met people that remind me of other people, not saying that those people are the same
as the people that I'm mentioning,
but I kind of try to put a lot of the things
that I make through the sort of lens of like,
we are all basically the same.
And what I mean by that is that like,
I try not to pass
Judgments that hold forever because I truly believe it is just my thing I'm not asking anybody else to believe it
But I think that if I had been born at a different time as a different person, I would be them
I think if I had you know, the the
Like chemical makeup in the brain born in the time had the parents of the nurturing of a different person,
I'd probably be just like them.
I don't necessarily, like I hold my beliefs very strongly,
but I don't hold them so strongly that I'm like,
no, even if I had been born 20 years ago,
I think exactly what I think right now.
It's like, no, I had to be introduced to ideas.
I had to be brought along.
I had to learn.
I had to make lots of mistakes and logic and then be educated about them.
And that's just to get me where I am now.
In a lot of ways these people are regressing, you know, back from something else with the aid of certain pharmaceuticals.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I do think that some of that regression in a lot of its forms, no matter how it happens is like pain.
And I think that there are some people
that no matter how much money they have or clout,
no matter how they look to us on the outside
are deeply fearful of even the person,
of discovering the person that they are,
because I think you have to face a lot to do that.
And so rather than open themselves up to
what would potentially make them a better person,
or at least give them a deeper understanding of other people,
even if they don't change their mind about anything,
they sort of regress because that is the, I don't know.
A part of me sometimes, it's not an indictment on all of us,
but sometimes it just feels like the manly thing to do.
Yeah.
It's like, no, I'm not wrong.
If I just get louder, I won't be wrong because I won't hear anybody else talking.
Yeah. At the same time, they might just be assholes.
Yeah, that's fair.
You know, I'm always struck by how unhappy a lot of the richest people in the world
are. It's really quite something to see, like the unhappiness and the grievance
and the victimization.
That's really been, that's really what my book was about,
was their grievance, their constant
and exhausting victimization of themselves,
which is tiresome and no reflection.
What's, I mean, if it's a miracle
they can see themselves in the mirror at this point.
Yeah, I mean, when you don't have an Odyssey,
then you have to create one. And you only create one like one of two ways. There could be an see themselves in the mirror at this point. Yeah. I mean, when you don't have an odyssey, then you have to create one.
Right.
And you only create one, like one of two ways.
There could be an actual problem in the world.
Like, you know, I'm not going to tell anybody how to spend their money,
but Elon could easily be like, you know what seems unconquerable?
Hunger.
So I'm going to attack hunger for the rest of my life.
I'm going to go at war with hunger.
What are the best ways that we can attack hunger
and stop hunger, right?
Do you know what his solution might be?
Kill half the people.
I wouldn't want him to tackle hunger.
I feel like all my robots could kill half the people
and then everyone would look at him.
He's like Thanos.
He's literally Thanos. I'm literally Thanos.
I'm not saying he'd be good at it.
I'm just saying the thing that he chose was like, I'm going to go after like
the idea that people have ideas that I don't like.
I'm going to try to completely shift culture and thinking
in a way that is like so animal farm.
So 1984. Yeah.
And it's like you could. he's kind of out of problems.
So he has to make some.
Yeah.
And he's only out of problems because the real problems the world is facing are not
things that he's interested in.
Yeah, if only he hadn't hugged more as a child.
So one of the things in your 2023 special, you imply comedy has been a form of therapy
for you.
I mean, a lot of these people could use just even the smallest amount of therapy
And you even thank the audience your therapist for keeping you alive
Do you talk a little bit about that? Are you do you see yourself as a founder?
We can me you want to be around you. Do you following your own advice on your flowers tour?
Yeah, I mean the the purpose of the tour the idea is to for myself especially to sort of learn how to
Like plant these sort of seeds of mutual aid and things that we can sustain like long after the tour is over and long after
I'm gone and everything because I think that if you can
Set something up like that like we don't really think about the people who are the reason that we have like a 40 hour work week,
but there were people that like protested, died,
there were people who put themselves on the line.
And so even though they're gone
and we don't really know their names,
we get that benefit.
And so it kind of felt like, you know,
to answer your question, hopefully as succinctly as possible,
because I do talk a lot, is the same way
that when I moved to Chicago, I was like,
OK, I can either do lighting or I can do comedy.
One gives me a lot of joy.
One I think I'm pretty good at.
But both I'm probably going to be poor.
And so I just picked the thing that gave me more joy.
And I think that if I'm not going to be here forever anyway,
then it's more so what you what you sort of leave behind.
And so on Flower Store, we're we're doing our best to get better and better
in every city and community outreach.
And some of that community outreach is just letting the people know who come to the show,
what's already happening in their community, like all the good work that's already being done.
So even if we don't start something new, we let the people know that like, oh, there's
this animal shelter here that is just not even six blocks away from the theater and
they're taking volunteers and you can sign up or you can donate or whatever the thing
is because I think that one of the reasons people feel so beat down all the time is that
they are unaware in all the noise of the internet
of all the good work that is happening around them.
Yeah, and the solutions.
And so that is like what I'm attempting to do with the tour and each tour for the rest
of the time that I'm doing comedy is that I think that if you can go somewhere, I mean like flowers is a little on the nose, but every every
State has a flower cities have particular flowers that grow there in a way that they don't grow anywhere else
and so if you can visit and sort of plant these seeds and you can nurture them leave them with the people that came to
The show and and sort of leave that general message there that when you come back to sort of water
water that idea that there might be something that's grown in the show and sort of leave that general message there that when you come back to sort of water that idea that there might be something that's grown in the meantime.
It's interesting because Lincoln, that was a famous quote.
I think if I was remembered for anything, it's where I found a thistle, I planted a
flower.
I mean, it was one of his famous quotes is that he did that.
Wherever he found that, he planted a flower, which is interesting.
I wanna talk about that idea because,
I'm gonna shift gears a little bit
and talk about how it's a business too.
You just mentioned something you really like doing,
or you're gonna be poor either way, but you're not.
You're very entrepreneurial.
You have two specials.
One was self-financed and produced.
Talk a little bit about that,
because one of the things you're doing is sort of trying
to change a lot of comics, not just you are doing this.
There's a lot of calculation now happening with comics about how to be entrepreneurial
and I think they really are in a lot of ways.
So talk about how that is and lots of different comics have tried doing different things and
owning their comedy and it used to be you went on stand-up,
then you got on like the Tonight Show,
and then you got a series, and that's how it went.
That's not how it is anymore, especially young comics.
Can you talk a little bit about this?
Yeah, I think that there are ways
in which the economy is changing
that if you don't think very deeply
about what it is that you wanna do
and how you want to distribute it,
you will be not left behind in the way of like,
get in now or it's over.
I mean, like you will be sort of like following the lead
of a corporation who went ahead
and figured out how to get around
The idea that you could be independent
so for instance like while we while we sat here when like vaping was getting big, right and
There was all these things going on about how like big tobacco was scared of vaping and they were actually
Lobbying to try to get all of these like municipal laws passed and while some of that was happening, they were also quietly investing in vaping
and then buying vape companies
because they knew that the tide was turning,
everything was shifting,
and they weren't gonna be able to fight it forever.
And so I think that when it comes to distribution,
I think when it comes to ownership,
and when it comes to you creating the things
that you wanna make and having some say in how they get created that
Having having that ownership even if it doesn't look like much initially is gonna pay off dividends in the future because
You you can choose your collaborators like I've done my best to surround people
So surround myself with people that I trust with the things that I'm making.
And I want to make sure everybody feels content
with what we're creating together, you know?
That's yours, yeah.
Yeah, so it's like, even if the actual creation
of the thing is mine, if you are on the tour with me,
I want you to feel like a part of the tour is yours
and you can use the skills that you
you learn on the tour to go off and make your own thing in a way where I just feel like
corporations are very good at like trying to make you feel that way while also trying
to keep you the entire time.
And I think that the next wave of comedians that make money, whether it's online or like touring or anything like
that are gonna be finding more independent ways to to produce their
stuff and the the thing that big corporations have over being
independent or working on something that's like new in a way where you don't
know if it'll work out is that they have the structure in place and so when you
see something with that big of a structure, it can catapult someone.
If a company comes to you and they're like, Oh, we want to be your sponsor and
we're going to, we're going to fund your next three projects and everything that
that's very enticing, but they own that.
But it's all of your work, you know?
And I'm not, I'm not saying that you never engage with a corporation at all
I'm not saying that you never you do that on the daily show. That's yeah
Yeah, it's like you you you use the leverage you have when you have it and you build relationships that are just
advantageous to you as well
I think that there's sometimes a level of trust in
Systems that we found to not be trustworthy for a long time.
Yeah, I own everything now.
After I just got so sick of someone like Rupert Murdoch owning everything I did.
And I was like, you're an asshole.
And I would like to just own it even if I don't make money from it, which I do.
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So every week we get a question from an outside expert.
We've got, this guy came in with three questions
because he's an overachiever,
but we're going to play one of them.
Let's listen.
Hey, it's Mike Birbiglia.
I'm a comedian.
Also, I am a huge, huge fan of Josh Johnson.
Josh, my question for you is, do you feel beholden to the format that you've perfected
and invented these weekly, bi-weekly top topical 30-minute to one-hour specials.
And are you worried, secretly, deep down,
that the moment you wait a month to put out something new or stop,
people will tap out of the phenomenon that is Josh Johnson?
Wow. No pressure.
Um...
So, yeah, I think, one, that's so nice.
Like, Mike, that's so nice. Like Mike is, that's genuinely, wow.
It's a secret shiv, but go ahead.
Yeah.
I do think that there's a possibility that that happens, but there's also a possibility
that I put out a half hour or whatever amount of time until I die and people check out anyway.
It's like I can't control what other people do.
I can only do the best work that I can.
And for right now, I'm having a lot of fun
doing what I'm doing.
I'm very appreciative that people are enjoying it.
And for as long as it lasts, I'm thankful.
I think that people look at anyone
who is interested in their work as like
As if it's like you have to be interested forever or it counts for nothing if someone's a fan of what you do for seven years
That's incredible. That's and and maybe they don't stop being a fan, but maybe they're like, ah, we get it
I've had enough of him. Yeah, i've had enough of a man. It's like that's also okay
Like I think because there is a treadmill aspect to social media
and everything else you have to feed it.
Yeah, 100%.
And who knows?
I've had friends be like, oh, people
are going to take it for granted,
and then they'll check out, or maybe they'll watch,
and then they'll stop watching.
I'm like, yeah, but I don't know.
I'm doing it for the people that are there.
So I want to finish up talking about the role that comedy,
especially satire, is playing right now in I want to finish up talking about the role that comedy, especially satire is
playing right now in the political.
We started talking about that.
You talked about Carlin, who was the great one of the greatest political satirist and
also very funny at the same time.
What do you think your role is right now?
Yeah, I think that I think that my role, the thing that I hopefully do best is give
people joy.
And I don't know I think that it
would be dishonest of me to list a bunch of lofty things that I know that I can't
really do because we do need the serious people to do the serious things and I'm
here trying to make people laugh or I'll point out when I think something is dumb and I think that
No matter how much a person may need that that's not the same thing as passing legislation. That's not the same thing as
Well, they don't pass legislation but go ahead. No, no, that's very fair
That's very fair. I think I guess to a certain degree I am doing as much as
Congress, but I I mean did you see the other guy, the other guy,
that's-
Yeah.
The other guy named Johnson was like,
let's see what happens with what Trump does.
Let's give the guy a chance.
Yeah, I think that I,
my role, my responsibility is to do
what I'm doing right now and do it
to the best of my ability to like share as openly as possible
to remind people that they're not only
That they're not only not alone, but also that they have people right next to them that will take care of them
we're like so individualistic and
We're we're we have so much capital on the mind that you forget that you're not in constant competition with everyone you meet all day. And so I think if I can like nurture that
relationship and strangers towards each other, then I'm doing what I'm meant to do.
See, I'm asking you what your point is. I'm sorry. What is your point on this planet?
Is there anything you find unfunny right now?
planet. Is there anything you find unfunny right now?
That's a good question. I mean, I do think that there's even even though we're not in it yet, I look at the tariffs very
seriously. And I think about how there are people who, you know,
voted voted for Trump who are just happy to see rich dims lose money, because
they don't have any money in the stock market.
And I don't think that they understand that it doesn't stop there.
It's not like the stock market is this isolated thing and that a lot of people will lose jobs
when the rate of unemployment goes up, the rate of deaths go up.
Like, I do think it's something very, very serious.
And so there's a lot about it that I don't find funny.
I can still write jokes about how passionately it was put together
about people's reactions, about the inability of people to fix it.
And that still doesn't take away from the seriousness of the people
who will suffer from it.
So, yeah, I think the tariffs is one thing that, like, in earnest,
I don't necessarily find funny at all,
but I think I can make funny through pointing out the things that we all see,
you know, that sort of, like, emperor having no clothes aspect of lately.
Like, when you do that, the thing is not funny.
You're being led by someone who is deeply gullible, who isn't wearing clothes, but
it is funny to be like, hey, that's he naked.
All right, I have two.
The cutting of Amber Ruffin from the White House Correspondence in Orders next week or two weeks
from now, did anyone, what did comics think of that? Like, that, there was
that a comic there and they hired her for being edgy and then they said, well, we
don't need edgy right now. Yeah, I do think that there is some amount of, I
mean, I don't even know if fraternity is the right word, but there is, there is
some amount of camaraderie that every comic feels when another comic is
genuinely censored.
And I don't mean censored as in like they did their jokes, they made their money, then
people got mad and they're like, y'all are killing me.
I don't mean that.
I mean when someone genuinely loses an opportunity because of what they have to say.
And I think that if anything, I wish that more comedians
would be vocal about Amber Ruffin's situation
the way they are when a comic is like, you know,
putting stuff out, making their money,
but then getting backlash and somehow that's an attack.
But like actually losing an opportunity isn't an attack.
So I-
Absolutely. All right, my last question does come from overachiever Mike again. losing an opportunity isn't an attack. So I... Yeah, absolutely.
All right.
My last question does come from overachiever Mike again.
We're going to play the clip and then you can answer it.
Josh, do you believe in the concept of there being a goat in comedy?
And if so, are you the goat?
Or will you someday be the goat? Or
Are you open to accepting the title if one day it was given to you by the comedy gods?
Okay, and follow if you aren't the goat who is the goat right now in your opinion besides Mike obviously.
So
Sure, I can't hear the third question? No.
I don't.
I forgot what it was.
I don't believe in like a concept of a goat, really.
I think maybe if you ask me on a different day,
I'll give you a different answer,
but I think that when something like art is so subjective,
then you can be first at something, you can be the best at a particular thing but I
think that as long as we all have different preferences as long as we all
have different views on what art is I think it would be a bit short-sighted to
call any one individual the the goat and and that doesn't just go for comedy kind of goes for everything because time's not over
No, like it like
Don't get me wrong
If we really do all die if this kills all of us
Then yeah, I guess I guess not when when we are like in the ether if we still have consciousness
Floating in the universe we can we still have consciousness floating in the universe,
we can be like, that one guy was pretty good. Now that time's over and we know there's no
one else coming, that one guy, he did it, you know? And I think that one thing that
I find very interesting, and I think every comic knows this, is that the people who enjoy them the most the people who have found that
Comedian to be their favorites will call them the goat depending on who you ask
It's Wanda Sykes depending on who you ask is Maria Bamford. It's a bill Burtz Dave Chappelle
It's Chris Rock is Kevin Hart is it's whoever and I think that that that sort of thinking if it seeps too much
Into the into the mind it can actually
diminish the work. It's a lot like when you are a rapper and you're coming up and you have a live
connection to community and people vibe with what you're putting out because they're part of that
struggle that you're currently in because you're trying to get out of there but then you do get
out of there from success from Grammys from notoriety and then all of a sudden you kind of don't know what to do with it because now you're like one of the greats and
Then you don't relate to the people the people don't relate to you
So if you just approach all the art that you make the way that like a boxer is supposed to approach a fight
there are plenty of fighters who thought that they were the GOAT and didn't train.
They were like, I'm the best.
That's what's gonna happen to me.
I'm the best.
And then they got in the ring with someone
who didn't think they were the best
and they were pummeled to oblivion.
And it's like, yeah.
That was Rocky III, by the way.
Yes.
Yes.
Somebody finally said it.
And I think that that's what happens to artists
if they get two in their heads.
Yep.
And if they let people pump them up too much,
it's like, you know, I could also still snap.
Like, let's wait till I'm dead to call me anything.
Okay, all right.
I wasn't calling you the goat at all, it was Mike.
Yeah, yeah, no.
I appreciate the energy you're bringing
because that's very much like, look.
That is what's happened to a lot of tech people.
They've been licked up and down all day
and they think they're the best thing ever.
Last, very last question.
This is a really hard time.
It really is right now.
The terrorist, it's not funny.
What's happening is disturbing people
being taken off the prisons without having done anything
And in El Salvador, even if they're from Venezuela, etc. I want you to leave this crowd with one
Hopeful thing and then we'll head out. Um
Okay
Hmm
I think that however you're feeling right now, you should talk about it. And you should talk about it earnestly with people that you care about.
And I think that when you do that, and when you do that enough,
and not saying everyone works themselves into a frenzy,
I mean, when you talk about how you feel
about what's happening with other people,
you see how they feel about it.
I think that those are the ways
that you figure out what to do about it,
and when you know what to do about it,
and you take action, then things will change.
And so whatever you're feeling right now is not permanent.
It's not permanent in any manner of ways.
So even if things, let's say, quote unquote, get worse as
well, those things will not be permanent.
Everything changes with time.
And all we have is each other.
And so we have to take care of each other.
Each other are
the priority. I think that the way that people look at the market as well, you know, you
see so many YouTube videos go up on Friday, like how to protect yourself from the Trump
terrorist, it's like, it's not yourself. You cannot protect yourself. You will not be able,
if the Titanic is sinking,
you are doomed if you're trying to swim it alone to safety.
That's just not gonna work.
Josh, I said hopeful, but go ahead.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You somehow got to Titanic.
I swear I'm getting to it.
Okay.
But in case I don't,
you should just cut the episode right there. That would
actually be very funny. You're like, Josh, I said hopeful and then. Thank you. No, we
love to get out on a laugh, you know, that. But I genuinely believe that. I think that
we, because of how individualistic we've become and because of how we've been socialized to think about our own upward mobility, we deeply underestimate the power of cooperation
and community and it not only do I think that is the only way forward but I think
there's a lot of hope in the fact that we have have not yet seen its powerful
impact in our lifetime.
So once again, the people that fought for the four hour work week,
the people that fought for everything that we enjoy without really having to
think about it, they they were the people that came together for those efforts.
And so it can be done.
It's already been done before and we can do it again.
I would agree.
Josh, you're incredibly thoughtful, astonishing performer.
I appreciate you all. Thank you. Thank you so much for having me.
I appreciate you all. Thank you so much. Thank you.
On with Kara Swisher is produced by Christian Castro-Russell,
Kateri Yocum, Dave Shaw, Megan Burney, Megan Cunane, and Kaylin Lynch.
Nishat Kerwiz is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Special thanks to Kate Gallagher.
Our engineers are Rick Kwan and Fernando Arruda, and our theme music is by Trackademics.
If you're already following the show, you don't just have the tools, you actually know
how to fix a sink, unless you're lesbian and you already did in the first place.
If not, remember, you're more likely to build a community than become a billionaire and
it's so much better.
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Thanks for listening to On with Kara Swisher from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast
Network and us.
We'll be back on Monday with more.