The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1946 In the Sobriety House with Fritz Coleman
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Today, Adam and Dr. Drew welcome comedian & legendary weathercaster, Fritz Coleman and they talk about the golden age of Los Angeles, the history of The El Portal Theater, and he shares his start on t...he air, his stand up career, and his struggles with addiction as well as his successful sobriety. Plus, Fritz shares his son's struggle with addiction, his successful journey to sobriety with Dr. Drew's help, and they try to get to the bottom of AM radio. Leave us a voicemail: SpeakPipe.com/AdamandDrDrew OR Click the microphone at top of the homepage, AdamandDrDrew.com For more with Fritz Coleman: ONE MAN SHOW: 'Unassisted Residency' Live at The El Portal Theater -  January 6th, 2025, February 23rd 2025, & March 30th, 2025 WEBSITE: Fritzcolemancomedy.com INSTAGRAM: @realFritzColeman TWITTER/X: @theFritzColeman
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Recorded live at Corolla one studios with Adam Corolla and board certified physician and addiction medicine
specialist dr. Drew Pinsky
You're listening to
the Adam and dr. Drew show
Yeah, get it on got to the Adam and dr. Drew show
Doctors board certified decision to confess better Fritz Coleman a fixture from my
Time that I I could living in Los Angeles
You'd have you'd be hard-pressed to miss Fritz Coleman hit the air in 82 left in 2020 weather
stand-up comedian and just man about playwright playwright good see you
Fritz great to see you gentlemen and happy to be talking to you it's my
favorite people thanks an interesting career which is local versus national,
although you've done plenty of national stuff, I assume.
I am huge between Santa Barbara and the Mexican board.
But you know, it's like I walk through the Burbank airport
and I see a big poster and Colleen Williams is on there.
And Colleen Williams was doing news
when I was in high school.
I felt like, I mean, and if not, not much. I graduated high school in 82. Fritz Coleman hit
the air in 82, you know, and if you did it before June of 82, then you would have been on the air
when I was in high school. And so there's a part where I go, wow,
I mean, these careers are going 40 years, 45, 50 years,
which is unheard of in show business, but it's local,
which is, I don't know if that's ever gonna happen again,
or maybe it's never gonna stop, I don't know.
I don't think so.
I think, you know, I was in radio for 15 years.
That's a very nomadic existence as well.
You don't have a career that long and TV is the same very few people stay at the same station for all that time.
I'm beyond lucky and I can't explain to you why it happened.
Amazing.
Yeah, I mean and also because everyone is so spread out now, we're
never going to have the relationship with the people we had back when we had it.
Although local news has managed to find a little thing that it does that television,
I mean, everything else we do on TV other than football or maybe
baseball, you can do on other platforms. And local news is another one of those
things that can do it live. And it also occurred to me when Adam mentioned
the length of your career, Fritz and Colleen's, that NBC has a long history. It
was Jess Marlowe and Kelly what
was Kelly's last name? Kelly Lang. These guys also had 30 year
careers at NBC that's where they sort of cultivate that stuff. Yeah and also you
brought up baseball we could all name the infield from the Dodgers back in the
day because it was our we grew up with them, you know
I'd say yeah people are traded in free agency
People move around a lot now. It's a lot of free agency. No people don't stay in one
One place. That's interesting anymore fritz has a one-man show at the el portal theater, which is
My childhood theater, essentially. We had the Guild, the El Portal, and the Lorena, I think it was, all walking distance. They
had to be walking distance for the Corollas because no one was going to drive anybody
anywhere. You know how expensive gas was back then? It was 44 cents a gallon, Drew.
And my mom drove a VW Squareback. And the El Portale Theater was almost a mile and a half away from the Corolla house. You know how much that would have cost? It would have been like 11 cents.
Oh, gosh.
You understand?
Big money in them days.
Not to mention wear and tear on the belts.
Oh, tires.
Retread tires, true, but they still wear out.
Yeah, so I would walk to the El Portel on Lancashim, which is now in NoHo, right?
Arts district?
Right.
It's a great, I love theaters with history.
You perform, it's fun to work in a place that has some backstory.
And that place started as a Vaudeville house.
Bob Hope and Red Buttons performed there in Vaudeville house Bob Hope and red buttons performed there
in vaudeville in the 20s and then it became a huge movie palace and that's what Adam went
yeah he called it the movie palace in fact it was it was nice I performed there quite a few times
after is it near the television arts and science,
the Emmy building?
Yeah, it's on Lankersham, sort of by the train station,
for lack of a better term, over there.
Where Uncle Frank used to live.
Uncle Frank, Jimmy's Uncle Frank used to live there.
I built the Acme Theater that was down the street,
a little more toward Ventura
Boulevard which is still there it's a Stanley Meisner theater or something like
that but I built that place. And after it was a movie palace did it have another life?
No but what happened was when she was eight years old Debbie Reynolds
used to ride her bike to that theater to watch movies. And then when she became a star,
she would always use the El Portel as a place to work out her new Vegas act.
And so they named the stage in there,
the Debbie Reynolds stage in the El Portel theater.
It's just got a lot of great history. I love it.
Wow. But the bathroom is named the Fritz Coleman.
It is. Did you know that?
I love that. I'm making that up true
That's actually the dressing dresser
Yeah, it's got a lot of history and I saw
crazy old 70s movies there back when you would just see whatever rolled into town like
Doc Savage, you know, I didn't know what it was.
I still don't know what it is.
It was just it was all about air conditioning back then. Right.
So you rolled in and I know we've talked about it before.
You got a radio background.
You've got a a stand up.
We're doing stand up back in the day.
My stand up is the reason I got the weather job. In 1982, my friend who was an anchorman at Channel 4, John Beard, brought
his boss and his boss's wife to see me perform at the Comedy Store one Friday night. And
I had talked on stage about having done the weather in the Navy against my
will, because I worked for Armed Forces Network and they forced you to do whatever
you had to do if you didn't know anything about it.
I didn't know anything about the weather, but I had to do it anyway.
And I told a couple of anecdotes about that.
And after the show, I went back to meet John's friends, Steve Antinetti.
Drew might know him, But God bless him.
He gave me my career.
He was the news director at the time.
He said, this is a weird question,
but do you have any desire to come to Channel 4, do some fill in for me,
some weekend weather, some vacation relief work?
And I said, you did hear me say that I don't know anything about the weather.
I said, perfect.
There's no weather in California.
This will work out.
Yeah.
And I was making twenty five dollars a night at the comedy store and I almost
passed out, so I auditioned the following week.
I got the weekend job.
And then when my predecessor, Kevin O'Connell, left, I was bumped up to the main
job and retired two weeks shy on my 40th anniversary.
I always say it's the greatest
stroke of show business luck since that woman was discovered at Schwab's pharmacy in the 40s.
Is there, what does it feel like or is it good or what baggage does it come from
being a celebrity in your town which is, Fritz would have been very recognizable to anyone
who lived here. A large percentage of people watched the news. There were three channels
to go off of for quite a period of time, you know? And so you would walk into a deli and
they would know you, you know, and people would recognize you.
And it's it's it's a kind of local hero thing.
You could probably travel around with some anonymity.
But you live in the town that you're famous in.
It's an interesting dynamic because, you know, Hollywood is not like a regular town.
So on the show business food chain,
being a local news person is just below
dinner theater and it's important for it.
And but but you do get recognized.
But I mean, there are real stars.
Sure, you see me in Gelson's, but Tom Cruise was just at the deli counter.
So it negates any importance.
But but the thing about it is it's an
interesting relationship you have with
people when you're on the local news for 40 years.
It they they make you feel like a neighbor.
Right. It's more like a neighborly.
It's it's sort of an equal footing.
It's not, oh, my God, they put you on a pedestal.
You're just you're like a friend, your friendly face
and part of their life for many years.
And it was, you know, when you come into their home at the exact same time,
every day for 40 years, 5 18, I would show up.
And the only way they could tell it was not yesterday is I had a different color
tie on. It was 5 18. And after a while, you are
assimilated into their family life. You're like the regularity in their life.
And it's really interesting.
And quite honestly, it's a gift
that they sort of accept you over a period of time.
And it's the salad days of television too,
when everybody had their TV on
as part of their evening activity.
And that's kind of over with too now, right?
At least the way it was.
Well, everyone had their TV on, but-
Three channels too.
Yeah, I mean, everyone still has their TV on,
but there's 500 channels.
Right.
And you guys were talking about the change in local news.
The big question is where is local news gonna end up
in all this shift?
Because streaming is killing network television.
So network TV, NBC, ABC, CBS, they're all in defense posture now.
How can we make this last?
There will always be a market for local news.
But I think the delivery system remains to be seen,
what that's going to be. Are they going to end up as a podcast? Who knows? No, because I know
sometimes we go, let's keep our direct TV going or at least find a cable because if something should
happen, I want to be able to tune into the local news and see what's up. You know, 100% get an
earthquake. I want to hear what's going on. What is Colleen doing? That's really like you guys were saying is the only value of local losers live events live sports
Yeah, a brush fire a mudslide or something where you can offer information that can save people's lives
But that doesn't happen every day. So they have to find a way to survive the other
360 days and you guys mentioned Colleen. I strangely had dinner with her three days ago. Oh really? Yeah, I got a you know
All I'll make you feel young fritz
I have I have two cars
That I could drive in from Malibu and one is an all-electric
Audi and the others is not an electric car the Audi
Does not have AM radio
because it's all electric and it doesn't have AM.
And I love talk radio.
I've always liked talk radio.
And people think it's cause I'm old,
but I listened to talk radio when I was 19, a lot.
I could do the KBC lineup with Dr. David Viscott
and Michael Jackson Michael Jackson the English
South African
Michael Jessica, I knew though. I know the lineup dr. Dean Adele, you know these guys I enjoyed it and I
Should be driving the electric car because it's plugged in and it's juiced up and it's essentially free and the other one's kind of a gas
Guzzler, but I think about sitting in traffic for an hour without my AM radio.
And I'm like, I want my AM radio.
And I go, well, you have a phone filled with podcasts.
I was like, I'm making the radio.
I think some people are trying to react to it because they're not manufacturing cars
with AM radios anymore.
They're about to start that.
But didn't KFI is now on FM.
They're like on KLSX
they're on the old 97.1 or something aren't they somebody's gonna do something and I do have it
that I'm not much of a conspiracy theorist but they the people that love electric cars do not
like AM talk it's a totally different group. And there
are other countries in like Europe, England, they don't have AM. AM is a bunch
of conservative people with a lot of ideas that the people who like electric
cars don't like. So the notion that they would bend over backwards to figure out
a way to get AM in your electric
car is sort of insane because they look at AM radio's propaganda and they look at the
electric cars the future.
Right?
So why would you go to bat for AM?
We have KNX out here.
I mean, AM served a purpose.
I remember when there's an earthquake, you would always tune in KNX immediately because
they had the immediate update.
But what I don't, I don't understand is how much more expensive is it to
manufacture AM radio?
Why can't they leave it in there for emergency stuff?
Well, they, they, it's always, it's a little, to me, it's dubious.
Somebody could explain it, but here's the deal.
Somebody could explain it, but here's the deal. They say that the AM frequency is interfered with
by the electric car.
Oh, okay.
And, right, except for, we can achieve many things
from a technological standpoint that are pretty miraculous.
Not getting AM into electric car is not that difficult.
In terms of overcoming an obstacle, you know, reusable rockets.
I would bet if yes, if somebody was highly motivated to figure this out, they could.
And then it would cost an extra seventy nine dollars a unit,
which you could pass along to the consumer.
I just don't think they're that motivated.
That's that's it.
So Fritz, I know you talk about drugs and alcohol
and sobriety and addiction in general.
Drew's pretty qualified to discuss that as well.
I didn't know-
Know that you're better.
I didn't know your story vis-a-vis addiction.
Nobody better. I didn't know your story vis a vis addiction.
Well.
I come the male side of my family is a pretty continuous string of alcoholics.
My father was one.
I was well on my way to being one.
My last drink was March of 1984, which was my
my last glass of wine. That was two months before I got married.
I was doing a little self assessment
and I was thinking to myself, what's the what would be on my Achilles heel
in being a successful father or husband?
And that would be drinking.
And I was working at a comedy club.
I was getting free drinks seven nights a week, which is a recipe for disaster
with my particular personality.
So I stopped and I was not I was not full on like waking up in areas that I didn't
recognize, but I was I was developing the habits that my father had.
My father struggled his whole life.
He went to rehab one time.
And I understand the hereditary properties of addiction. And then my older son,
who suffered from ADHD, was diagnosed with that, which is a great assault on your self-esteem
Began drinking and then he began smoking pot and then he began
shooting heroin and then he was living in a homeless encampment for six months and
This is what year approximately that that was
That was in the 90s and I will say say... Adam, he just needed a job.
Cornelius.
Yeah, Cornelius.
Well, Dr. Drew probably doesn't remember this, but he was the guy that facilitated getting my son
into his first rehab, which was Los Encinas in Pasadena. And Dr. Drew had this great program
on Wednesday nights for the families and parents of addicts to learn about the biology of addiction and there's nobody better than understands this disease more
than he did. As a matter of fact, people would go once and that would be it.
But I always felt like we could go back a couple of different times.
Well, as often happens with addiction,
he fell out of Los Encinas after a couple of weeks because he wasn't prepared to be
sober and he ended up going to rehab five times and and he's been sober for two
years. Oh that's good. And so I'm and I can't believe it. I you know he was an
opioid addict and with fentanyl and everything it's it's a miracle. It's a
miracle. Did he miss meth? Did he knock you down meth? Because that's the thing
that really makes it tough. No he didn't get on meth for some reason.
Oh God, the two together.
I'm so thankful that he didn't get on meth where his teeth and his bones deteriorate. He didn't go through that.
Well, their brains deteriorate too. It's just getting them sober is almost impossible.
I will never forget. Dr. Drew just off the cuff did this, I guess it was like an hour and a half
cuff did this, I guess it was like an hour and a half primer on what addiction does to your body and it was so helpful to my son's mother. Oh good, that means a lot to me. I had like five hours of
material that I would sort of scatter in in different ways. Yeah. And yeah, it's such a
challenging illness and you know, but your son actually is right in the average in the sense that there's data out of Harvard that shows for a severe
alcoholic which he had some bigger monkey on his back than just alcohol so
to speak and for a severe alcohol it takes on average four treatments and
five years to get one year of sobriety on average. Oh yeah. So he's right in there.
Some people have gone seven, eight, nine times.
Yeah. I'll tell you one of the darker aspects of his story. He, and Drew, you would know this guy,
do you remember the felon that started the community recoveries? Oh yeah. Yeah. Okay,
so I think the fourth rehab that my son went to he went to the community recovery in Calabasas
Oh boy, and he walked out of there and that's when he really spiraled downward
He was this is a kid who was definitely afraid of needles were shooting up
He found another heroin addict girlfriend and they lived in a homeless encampment in the tohongo wash
Which is a place I would ride my bike every day and I had no idea he was in there.
Oh, my God.
I, I,
I met this retired narcotics detective from the sheriff's department who was
doing P.I. work and I said, can I pay you to help me find my son?
So I gave him pictures and he said, you know, where he was copying the drugs.
And I said, I think it was the North Hollywood train station.
So he would go down there.
And after a couple of weeks, he called me and said, I want to have coffee with you
and explain what I found.
So.
I had coffee, said I found your son.
He's living in the Tohunga Wash in a homeless encampment.
I will rescue him, but I'm not going in there alone.
It's too dangerous.
I have to hire an assistant.
I said, OK.
He said, what do you want me to do when I find him?
I said, he said, do you want me to arrest him and put him in rehab?
I said, no, he's been in rehab four times.
Just tell him his family loves him.
We're not going to give him money, but we're here to help him.
And we love him desperately. No judgment. Right. not going to give him money, but we're here to help him and we love him desperately No judgment, right?
So that that appealed to his guilt enough and he got out and he called
Community recovery again
And community recovery said we will take you back, but you have to go to our redemption program
Oh boy, which was two weeks in the wilderness in Colorado.
He said, if you can be straight for 24 hours, get on a bus and ride to Denver, we'll pick
you up and you can go into this program and start again.
So we got in the program, went up to community recovery in Denver.
He was really doing well.
He was sober for about six months.
And then, and you probably know this story Drew the place
got busted for insurance fraud so they had 60 addicts to this place that were
put out on the street because they had nowhere to go so then my son went into
another one of his dark areas and now that guy is in jail for like for three
life sentences or something I don't know what the guy's name was, but the lives this guy ruined.
I wish that was the only case of that around that time.
I'm sure.
There was ridiculous stuff going on then.
Yeah, and that whole, you know,
I don't know how you feel about this, Drew,
the whole sobriety house thing,
that's a very marginal situation.
Oh my God, yes.
There's no oversight.
Correct.
It's expensive and there's no accountability for the addicts when they're in there.
Do you know why that happened?
Because a lobby, well, another do-gooder group that really created so many of the
circumstances of people dying on our streets, one of their great strokes strokes of genius was we don't want doctors involved with these places
They're a special interest group. They need to be not involved
Period doctors and nurses were not allowed to be involved. And so that's that there's no there's nobody watching
It was like five or six people paying six or seven hundred dollars a month
It was a great investment if you wanted to have it buy a house and then turn it in. That's right. Yeah
But there was no accountability. A lot of these places are run by people that have been sober
six months and then heard about it and did it themselves and so it's like so anyway to answer
your question uh uh Adam uh addiction has been part of my family life for a long time and the
real and I know that Drew has addressed this on the intervention show.
But some of the real damage is the peripheral family damage
because my middle child, my youngest son, who is Kelsey's youngest
son, still suffers from the train wreck that this boy caused in the family
because we were always getting phone calls at night from the cops and he was in the twin towers and I had to get out there at six o'clock in the morning.
He never got the attention he deserved in high school and he suffers from that now. It's very hard for him to open up and you know express himself because he just wasn't we weren't there for him as parents when our older son was going through this whole thing. So it's a nightmare on several levels.
We need to take a quick break, but we'll come right back with Fritz and continue this interesting
discussion.
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all right so fritz colman uh god fritz colman unassisted residency live yes that is uh at the
el portal theater in our town of north holland 26th, 6 through February 23rd.
I couldn't imagine the burden of, I mean, homeless is sort of a homeless addiction,
you know, it's like having a teenager who runs away. I mean, what, are you ever
gonna get a good night's sleep not knowing? You know, the patients will
always say too, they go, you know, we suffer a bit
But but not nearly as much as the people around because we're loaded. Yeah
So yeah, I mean what I mean, you just wouldn't wish that upon your greatest enemy, but two years
sobriety now
But we're so thankful he communicates with us when he was in the throes of his addiction. He wouldn't answer a text
He wouldn't answer a phone call sure now. He checks on us. How you doing today dad?
I mean that doesn't sound like much but it's a gift
Oh if you in communicado with your child since he was 16 years old, he's 36 now
Wow, well also getting about going about your day, especially if you have a high-profile
Job like you have, you know going in being this funny guy on TV
light-hearted, you know Fritz brought comedy to the weather and
Meanwhile, you know, your son's living on the streets while you're hitting your mark and you know saying
the temperature in Simi Valley. I mean that's gotta be, I mean that's a burden.
It's a hundred percent true and Drew will know we went to all the family meetings and
we went to the Al-Anon meetings but when you're somebody everybody knows that shoots the anonymity in the back. Yeah, right
So, you know you you it wasn't bad for me because I was so happy to have somebody listen
That was could understand what I was talking about. Yeah for my ex-wife
It was very difficult because there was no anonymity was her family and you know, she wasn't the famous person
It was really interesting. Yeah
That's rough, but at least there's no weather here.
Well, there is now. Thanks to climate change, I probably wouldn't have had my job much longer. It's still late night and early morning, low clouds, hitting 74 by 2 PM. That's the weather every day.
That's the weather. I did that for 40 years. Did- My whole job was to think up new ways
to say the same thing.
Morning clouds, foggy, it's the afternoon sun.
I just called myself the palate cleanser
between the tragedy and the sports.
That was my whole responsibility.
Yeah, and also uniquely we had to give
the temperatures out at the airport.
I always thought it was funny because I don't,
I probably, the one place I need to know least what the temperature is
It's the airport because I'm first I'm not going but secondly, I'm leaving
Yeah, you know, I'd like to know the temperature of the place. I'm going to but the airport
That's all indoors. But lax is always something and
I I lived in the valley with no air conditioning and
and I lived in the valley with no air conditioning. And I know, and I like worked in Chatsworth
and work construction, you know,
so heat, my car didn't have air conditioning,
my parents' house didn't have air conditioning,
my apartment later didn't have air conditioning,
my truck didn't have air conditioning,
and my workplace didn't have air conditioning.
So temperature was a big deal for me.
I was affected by it and it was a difference between you know misery at
work versus work. You know when you work construction, you work outside, if you're
working in Receta and it's a hundred and eleven degrees, you're gonna have to
deal with something. You gotta deal with it, you know. And if it's 70...
It's as fast as next to Woodland Hills, which deal with it You know and if it's seven that's worth is next to woodland hills
Right on any given day could be the hottest point in America. It is it is not yeah
I mean chats are worked in a warehouse and Chatsworth and it
It was miserable if it was a hundred and fourteen degrees outside or for the seven even it's fine. And so
I
always remember living in the valley
and they do the news and they talk about the weather
and they'd say, tomorrow, we're gonna look forward to,
and they would start off in Malibu
or Venice Beach or Santa Monica.
It's gonna be 73, the low marine layer.
And I'd go, that doesn't sound too bad, too bad.
And then they'd go to LAX LAX 77 degrees I
go just warming up a little bit it's not bad and then downtown 86 degrees and I'd go okay all right
we're still under 90 and then they go the San Fernando Valley 117 and I'd go oh shit and I'm
like why won't you start in the valley and make your way to Malibu because I mean Malibu was
45 degrees cooler than where I was working in Rosita and you couldn't really imagine
That there could be that big a difference because it was only eight miles away
It's a crow just over the hills is the crow
Flute was it all connected to the price of the real estate.
Oh, is that what it is?
I knew it.
I knew it.
Yes, it was always perfect over there
and miserable wherever I was working and going.
Fritz, I think we're gonna have you back
and talk in the next episode of this show, if that's okay with you.
I'm completely with you. I'm happy to be here.
Again, Fritz Coleman, Unassisted Residency, and that's a live show. It's a one-man show.
And that'll be going on January 26th, February 23rd, and March 30th at the El Portale, which is a beautiful
converted live space I
Think if my memory serves
Then that doesn't matter. I'm looking at Emmy, but I think Sarah Silverman shot one of her stand-up specials there Yeah, Wendy Lehman did a stand-up special in there. Your picture is hanging back in the hallway from some event you did there
I think it was in combination with a bunch of other comedians
So it back in the hallway and may have been to commemorate me watching Doc Savage there in 1974
But I gotta check that all right great to see you my friend. Thank you so much
I'm gonna be in Oxnard levity live doing stand-up on Friday
Seven o'clock and then off to Houston and then off to Phoenix.
You go to Amcroll.com for all the live shows.
What do you got, Drew?
Check out Dr. Drew.TV and subscribe on Rumble
and Ask Dr. Drew.
So, until next time, I'm Amcroll for Dr. Drew
and Fritz Coleman saying, mahalo.
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