The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - Tiger Woods Envy, Rude Jude Appears and Private Jet Therapy (The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics)

Episode Date: September 16, 2023

In this episode of The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics, the fellas talk about infidelity and the difference from the days of Frank Sinatra to modern days with Tiger Woods. They also had Sirius XM radi...o host "Rude Jude" Angelini on to talk about being an author and his feud with Chet Hanks, Tom Hank's son and they end the show talking about the greatness that is Howard Stern.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome back to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics. I'm your host, Big Brother Jake, a.k.a. Jake Warner. My government name. Once again, we have a great show for you. First up, episode 231, titled Tiger Woods Envy, which aired on April 18, 2015. The fellas talk about celebrities and infidelity. From the days of Sinatra to Tiger Woods, Tiger, Tiger Woods, y'all. Things have definitely changed.
Starting point is 00:00:33 Listen to their take on this. Listen. When you watch that Sinatra doc and he's like, well, Sinatra was fucking Jeannie Lynn over here. But so was JFK. And she was, well, actually, she was Sinatra's ex-girl. And now he's fucking her. But Sam Giacano's fucking her, too. And he's a mob boss.
Starting point is 00:00:57 So, you know, the Kennedys, you know. Now, Robert Kennedy was not, you know, happy. Because he's trying to bust Giancana. He had to tell you, hey, you got to stop fucking. The mob guy's got a guma. He's married, too, I'm sure. Sam Giancana, he's a married guy. I'm sure he's a married guy.
Starting point is 00:01:20 But anyway, his guma, you know the chick he's fucking? The mob guy? Well, the president of the United States is fucking the same chick. So his brother, who is attorney general, is like, hey, bro, I'm trying to fuck the guy with the wayfarers. The guy over there, I'm trying to indict this guy on racketeering charges. And you fucking his girlfriend is kind of muddying the water just a little bit. Your name keeps coming up. So maybe why don't you just pull out
Starting point is 00:01:52 and stop banging the mob boss. So weird. This is, oh, this is why whenever they do the Camelot thing, I'm like, yeah, he was bringing interns into the pool and telling them to blow. By the way, being injected with amphetamines and opiates. I don't care about that. I'm just telling you. So now I agree with you, Drew, in terms of the technology.
Starting point is 00:02:24 Not so much the technology, you know, you brought up now there's a camera in the parking lot and we can see surveillance film. We may or may not check it. I think the argument is what is the argument really can revolve around what's your price. In other words, at what threshold is somebody going to take that risk? Like a million dollars becomes Linda. Well, can I say this? Kate Upton and a million dollars should go to the same thing. In other words, at what threshold is somebody going to take that risk? Like a million dollars becomes Linda. Well, can I say this? Kate Upton and a million dollars should go to the same.
Starting point is 00:02:51 You know what I'm saying? No, I agree. And, you know, here's the deal. Back in the day, Sinatra just banged around and then he went home. Don't worry about it. And there were no consequences. Sometimes a newspaper would write something, whatever. Who the fuck cares?
Starting point is 00:03:10 I'm balls deep in a starlight, you know? And then he'd just go home and his wife had to sort of work around it. Yeah. Had to deal with it. Now, a days. By the way, they would even, they would sort of defend it. It's like, he's a special man. If you want to be with a special man, you've got to be willing to put up with this kind of thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:26 God bless him. Especially the fucking narcissistic sex addict. Well, it is. No, I've always said we fucked. And by the way, Gary, you got to figure out California law because my theory is that whenever this you're going to get half of the empire thing came around, guy started putting their dicks back in their pants. Because I really think Sinatra's thing would be like, you know, oh, you want a divorce? Have fun living in an apartment back in Hoboken.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Well, it's not that anymore. It's you have to move out of the ranch that you purchased in Toluca Lake, and you can go live in an apartment over there. There's something changed along the way. Well, it's probably good. It is. From that standpoint, anyway. It's good from that standpoint. I don't think it's good from the wifey standpoint in terms of on the ball.
Starting point is 00:04:26 And, okay, and that's interesting, but you always complain about that. Oh, no, no, no. We know what that topic is. No, I think what we did is we said to the wives of the privileged, look, here's your golden parachute. If you ever feel like this is not going the way you'd like to go, you can remain here, and the guy's just going to leave. And you'll take half of whatever it is he's killed himself to earn over the last 15 years or whatever it is. But if I mind you, the same thing goes the other way if the women's my primary breadwinner.
Starting point is 00:05:02 I love it when it comes to that. I know. I know. I love it it that's my favorite story but because i love it how fucking outrage how angry the chicks get yeah because like yeah you feeling it you're feeling this yeah sister i like that but here's the deal there is no group on the planet it does not work you know look at the american indians hey here's a nice chunk of land. Don't worry. You don't have to work.
Starting point is 00:05:28 Great. Give me the fire water. I'll see if I can get diabetes. Honestly, what we did to the people on the island of Bikini, we moved them all off the fucking Bikini Island because we wanted to blow it up. Yeah. We wanted to do a little testing on an A-bomb. So we're like, hey, Islanders, good news.
Starting point is 00:05:45 Bad news, you got to leave. You're not going to live off of fishing anymore. Good news, we'll take care of you. Good news is we'll put you on another island. We'll just give you a bunch of booze and a stipend. You can hang out there. Next thing you know, the guys are fat shooting pool all day. You can't say to any group, men, women, I don't care, whatever your nationalities,
Starting point is 00:06:02 how hardworking you are, whatever, Here's the underlying current of this relationship. If you ever find yourself not liking it, you get the house. You get the kids. You get the money. You get everything. And not expect it to affect them. Everything affects everything. I mean, right?
Starting point is 00:06:24 We need to be more diligent about that because the law of unintended effects. But Tiger, I would argue, not so happy having fucked his family up and all that. I would say he'd be a much happier guy. I mean, how much – you've seen his wife. Where's he going? What's the deal? Listen, there's nothing better than different. I understand that, but at a certain age, it becomes like.
Starting point is 00:06:49 No, no, at a certain age. At a certain age. I agree. Unfortunately, when Tiger was doing this, he was 32. That ain't the age yet. 52 is more the age. Yeah, look, he married a very, very beautiful blonde. Exquisitely beautiful.
Starting point is 00:07:07 But as I think historically, we've, you know, Jackie O was no five either. Right. It's I got the power. I'm in another city and I do what I want. And by the way, part of, you know, let's face it, guys do the part of becoming the youngest person to ever win the Masters or the President of the United States. It's not all about driving a Ferrari. Well, it's why you drive the Ferrari.
Starting point is 00:07:38 It's about driving some fresh pussy. Why? There's two line five. All right. Greg? Yeah. Sorry. What's going on? What's going on? Let's do Line 5. All right. Line 5. All right. Greg? Yeah. Sorry. What's going on?
Starting point is 00:07:46 What's going on? What's up? You there? Yeah. What's up? Oh, who's this? Adam? Yes.
Starting point is 00:07:56 Who'd you call, Greg? Adam, Dr. Drew. Big fan, big fan. Adam loved Road Hard. Bought it. Sat down, watched it. Made my wife watch it. Loved it as much as any Albert Brooks movie.
Starting point is 00:08:05 Oh, wow. High praise. Did your wife enjoy it? My wife loved it, and her parting comment was a very, very sweet movie as well. Beyond all the jokes. Beyond all the jokes. He wasn't going for sweet. Adam, I've heard you talk about the surgery and the path and how you were hanging doors a day later. I'm trying to get my mind ready for upcoming shoulder surgery. 13 hours later, but yes, technically the following day.
Starting point is 00:08:32 The only thing I can compare it to that I went through was my vasectomy five years ago when the guy said you'll be fine in two days. And two weeks later, it looked like they forced me to play goalie in the NHL All-Star game with my hands tied behind my back and my testicular region repeatedly pounded. Wow, you paint pictures of the world. Any advice going into shoulder surgery? And I know, like you've mentioned, it's me thinking of the now now versus the future now, and this is all very easy and very normal and yeah slow down
Starting point is 00:09:06 here so here here's the thing hold on a second drew every i've said it many times everybody reacts differently to pain you and i and that's pain but to surgery you and i react yeah very differently to the exact same procedure yeah i'm not i for me I try to explain to people, even though I am technically a hero, this is not intestinal fortitude that got me out of the bed the next day and some sort of John Wayne-based grit. No, you just could. I woke up and I went, I feel fine. And Lynette said, where are you going? You just got surgery. And I said, I feel fine.
Starting point is 00:09:41 And by the way, if I don't feel fine, I'll stop doing what I'm doing. My body will tell me to stop if, in fact, I need to stop. But until then, because I feel fine, I'm going to move on. I, on the other hand, was having violent rigors and couldn't move and couldn't even sit up, and it was a mess. And, by the way, I'm thinking, after having my
Starting point is 00:09:57 prostate surgery, that my main reaction is to anesthesia. I react very lightly to anesthesia. Passionate, but lightweight. And I swear to Christ it took me six months to come back to anesthesia. I react very passionate, but lightweight. And I swear to Christ it took me six months to come back from anesthesia. I'm not kidding. Fuck you. It was not fun.
Starting point is 00:10:14 So our puss friend Greg might have a similar thing. That's all I'm saying. Yeah, well also Greg is building this thing up to such an extent. No, I think he's saying he's not. He's like pushing it away. No, no.
Starting point is 00:10:27 But he's saying, when I had my last surgery, this is what happened. And this is how I react. And now I'm very much concerned about it. It's going to be difficult because people react differently. And the thing is, there is a physiological component to this. But there's also a psychological component to this but there's also a psychological component to it there's a component all right component i wish and well i wish it were more psychological well you are probably a little more in touch than most right but for a lot of people
Starting point is 00:10:57 there's a physiological thing yeah what i'm saying at 30 psychological yeah i woke up the next morning and knew i had surgery knew everyone's told me to lay in bed for two days. That was fine. But I also knew that I felt completely fine, and I did not let my psychological override my physiological. My physiological felt fine. I just got up and went to work. And I also trust things, which is, I know doctors tell everyone to stay in bed for two days. Why do they give a fuck?
Starting point is 00:11:26 You know what I mean? If you're a professional skateboarder and you get a fracture of your pelvis or your forearm or whatever, the doctor will tell you no more skateboarding. Okay. No more doctoring. You know what I mean? This is how I make my living. Oh, I mean, no more for good. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:42 I mean, sometimes others go stay off the skateboard. It's like, listen, that's like I can't stay home from work for six months. I have to go back. I have to get up. I have to do things, you know. In their mind, play it safe. Yeah. So what they do is, well, this doesn't affect Adam Carolla.
Starting point is 00:11:55 It does affect Dr. Drew. Dr. Drew, it affected for two weeks. Adam Carolla affected for 10 minutes. I'll meet you in the middle. Stay in bed for a week. That's what they tell everybody. Yeah. You listen to your body.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Welcome back to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics. Up next is episode 246, which aired on June 13, 2015. Adam and Drew have Sirius host and author Jude Angelini, a.k.a. Rude Jude.
Starting point is 00:12:27 You know, Rude Jude from the Jenny Jones show. He used to come on there all the time in Act the Fool. Well, he came on the show and he never disappoints. They talk about Jude's feud with Chet Hanks. You know, the son of Tom Hanks with that crazy Jamaican accent he does and all that stuff. It's hilarious the way this broke down. Take a listen. I would like to hear the interview a little bit that caused all the controversy.
Starting point is 00:12:53 Well, it looks like you asked that. Can I say something? Gary got up and left, by the way. So don't bug him until he gets back. I have a problem with people having a problem with Chet Hayes saying nigga. Well, that's what I wanted to bring up. That's where a lot of the controversy is spinning. They sort of missed the part that you
Starting point is 00:13:11 had to deal with and went, this is a white dude using the n-word so liberally and he feels like entitled to because he claims it is his cultural privilege. So what do you say? It's generational, first off. People like me born in the 70s, it was still a weird thing. It was still very, very much like, you know, it was mostly black people said it.
Starting point is 00:13:32 But if you go to the hood, man, you see Mexicans saying that shit. You see Puerto Ricans saying that shit. You see Asians saying that shit. You see Arabs saying that shit. So it's kind of like it's a little, your rules are a little muddy. Second. Malibu? You know, the hood of Malibu. Not so much.
Starting point is 00:13:47 But that's the thing. It's like you can't pick and choose who gets to use the fucking word. If you've been selling this word for the last 40 years through your culture, you're selling me your clothes. You're selling me your language. You're selling me what you drink. But you can do everything but not that word. Like N.W.A., you know, one of the biggest groups out there. It's a do what I say, not as I do type thing.
Starting point is 00:14:07 And I don't feel like you can have it both ways. Do your African-American black friends argue with you about this? Or they agree with you about it? I don't. I mean, some people agree. Some people don't. But, like, I agree with Rude Jude in this sense. That if you're going to grow up on a steady diet of this culture
Starting point is 00:14:26 and it's being fed to you and you're consuming it and you're buying it. I mean, what you're doing is you're consuming it and they're selling it to you. Then that's part of your thing, whatever your skin color is. I don't use it in my vernacular. I don't shy away from it in a quote. Because, yo, if I write something something i want you to quote me properly i don't want you to fucking not quote me properly so i out of respect for whoever wrote that thing i i i use the word but to be fair if you're reading it you know something with a shit or a fuck on television you're gonna you're gonna edit it you know yeah this is true this is true but like if we're not
Starting point is 00:15:04 in tv then like and i'm not disagreeing with you i'm being intentionally argumentative but but but You're going to edit it. Yeah, this is true. This is true. But if we're not on TV, then... And I'm not disagreeing with you. I'm being intentionally argumentative. But I just feel like... It rubs people the wrong way. No, no, no. But here's what I've been saying for a million years. Nobody gives a fuck if Chet...
Starting point is 00:15:19 What's this last name? Chet Hayes says nigger. No, really, people truly don't. Chet Hayes? Yes. Is that what he goes by? Yes. People really don't give a shit.
Starting point is 00:15:31 I mean, day to day. Not you, not your kids, not your wife. We have to pretend like we give a shit. Yeah, we just don't like him. But we don't really give a shit. At the end of the day, it's a rich kid. It's a son of a rich guy who's using a word that we've announced is wrong because it makes us feel better about ourselves. And at the end of the day, it's not going to change anything or make a difference.
Starting point is 00:15:52 And we get into these stupid debates. And, yes, Drew, you have to roll your eyes because you'd be off the fucking air if we didn't spend our lives arguing over nonsense. And think about it like this. Like, you are not allowed to say a word because of your race. Isn't that racist? Yes. Yes. Of course it is.
Starting point is 00:16:08 Listen, I'm not disagreeing with your argument. I'm just saying that we live in a time where the people that... You're putting us in that time. Where people... We don't have to. There's a convention now. Right. But it's turning.
Starting point is 00:16:21 Maybe. There's a convention now where people in a minority group lay claims to language. I was giving you crap about transgender the other day. And now African-American. People say, you have to come to us. We'll tell you how to use these words in our language. And I'm just saying, that's the convention we live in. But let's get us to away with that.
Starting point is 00:16:41 Because that, in a way, is perpetrating this minority thing. It is. You need special little treatment about this and that. If you want to be equal, you got to get the good and the bad equal. You don't get the fucking special privileges equal and then like, you can't just have. And here's the other thing. Think about it like this. Look, nigga is a bastardization of nigga.
Starting point is 00:17:03 Like, this is, it went from racist white motherfuckers calling black people that, and it's used as a slur. They flipped it, and they're selling it back to those people's grandkids, man. Like, yo, you won. Walk away. Throw your hands up. You fucking won. You made these racist fucking redneck motherfuckers call each other the word you've been calling, they've been calling them right you won the game and made money off it and you're fucking making money off of it like don't be butthurt walk away you won i uh no truer words were ever
Starting point is 00:17:36 stated uh we have a little the interview by the way that uh we spoke of from uh rude jude and uh tom hanks's son you almost ain't making it on the show. What were you doing out in the lobby, man? What was going on with you, man? First of all, the security guard was flexing on me for no reason, man. What was you doing? Bro, I don't know. They must have thought I was like a motherfucking troublemaker or something.
Starting point is 00:17:57 Were you just sitting there quietly? Bro, I was sitting there quietly, minding my own business. Everyone was giving me the stink eye. I don't know. People was grilling me. Me and my man cash right here and then we go up to take a fucking picture in the little photo booth security guard tells me that i'm not allowed to do that yes okay well you you're not so then what happened you're not allowed to do that you're not a celebrity you're not tom hanks. You just came out of his dick, bro.
Starting point is 00:18:28 Why are you talking? You're not on the mic. Shut the fuck up and leave. How about that? No, no, no. Get the fuck going. That's right, guy. That's right. Get the fuck going. He's over here
Starting point is 00:18:43 yelling at me off mic, man. What'd he say? I'm a tight ass, bro. Beat it. Yeah, okay, I'm a dick fucking bell. Shit just got real in here. Thanks, man. I appreciate you, man.
Starting point is 00:18:54 Say it while you're walking. Thanks. Oh, now you're going to fight me. Okay, beat it. Man, shit just got real in here. What's up with your boy, man? Bro, I don't even know what he said. He wasn't supposed to say nothing.
Starting point is 00:19:05 That's the whole point. I'm over here to talk to you. I don't know that guy. Now wait, is that the guy Beverly Hills that Jason's with? Is he a scary guy? He's one of my friends, bro. He just looked like a frat boy.
Starting point is 00:19:22 Yeah, but sometimes loyalty. Sometimes cats gotta know when to be quiet. Man, I hear that. I hear that. All right, so you had some problems up front. Yeah. You almost got kicked out. We had to come fucking get you.
Starting point is 00:19:35 We had to come get you from getting kicked out. It's uncomfortable for me to listen to that. Yeah, listen. Why? Because it was a bad moment? Yeah, I just don't. I wish I would have handled it better well first off and made made for entertaining radio and satellite radio and
Starting point is 00:19:52 secondly that's good i mean it's a good it's a good gene to have the part where you go uh i wish i would have done this differently or handled this better, even in the face especially of praise. It's one thing when somebody demands an apology because you wrote an email that was really shitty that got leaked out to the whatever. Now you have to go up to the podium and say, I got a prepared statement in front of me that somebody else wrote. I wish I'd handled this differently. Most people understand that part because they're fighting for their jobs. But just saying it is an interesting glimpse
Starting point is 00:20:31 into your psyche because it's probably how you get out of a really shitty part of Detroit into having a book that's optioned by Mark Wahlberg. The constant self-reflection, evaluation with the attempt at bettering. It's funny you say it because I went home that day and I had an awful day.
Starting point is 00:20:49 After that, I had an awful day. I couldn't get that off of my mind. I was like, God damn it, man. That shit went south. And then I get all this praise for it. I'm like, all right, man. Fucking whatever, man. Awesome.
Starting point is 00:20:58 But also, just to go a little more globally here, you grew up in a horrible circumstance. And you now are in a much better circumstance in terms of where you are in your life. And it comes up, talking about the community that you come from and that we're talking about formally with the N-words and whatnot, this notion of, well, here's where you're born and here's where you're going to die and you don't stand a chance i hate that message and what i want is the message that's sent what could i do how could i improve what can i do better i hate it when the politicians get up there and go well you know it's not a level playing field and the cops are out to get you know, it's not a level playing field, and the cops are out to get you,
Starting point is 00:21:48 and you don't stand a chance because of the color of your skin or whatever your last name is or your religion or whatever it is or whoever your mom is or dad isn't. But anyway, moving on. You're stuck. You're screwed. Don't worry. We'll fix it. But by the way, they never get around to fixing it.
Starting point is 00:22:02 So you have something in you that said, I need to fix this myself. Yeah. What is that? I just watched my, like, man, my old man is one of his, he's got a lot of great things about him, man. Like, I'm half him. You know what I mean? Like, just like you're half your old man. You know, like, I'm half this motherfucker.
Starting point is 00:22:23 That's fighting words. He's going south now again. But I've watched him not take responsibility for his actions. And I've watched him play the victim. And when you're the victim, one, you don't have to take responsibility because this happened to me. But you're like a leaf floating down a river. You have no control of your life. I think I've said that before.
Starting point is 00:22:44 You're a poet man so so it's like yo i you have to you have to yeah we this is an unlevel playing field yeah this motherfucker like has it better than you you can't get away with the shit he's getting away with but you can win and if you can't win then go fucking kill yourself man what are you here for we'll be right back with more of the adam and dr drew show classics and last up for today we have episode 277 titled private jet therapy which aired on september 30th 2015 adam talks about the greatness of howard stern and drew breaks down his appearance on the show and he shows a lot of love in this clip here. Check it out.
Starting point is 00:23:32 How are you doing, Drewski? Holding up pretty good. Feeling good? Enjoyed your Stern appearance? Yeah. Remember yesterday you were on Stern? It's hard to remember. Yeah, well, as you listen to to this obviously it was earlier in the week
Starting point is 00:23:46 but uh on monday but yes uh yeah people i don't have too many bad bad outings for stern because what stern does is he does his homework he he researches things they research the shit out of everything well to be fair somebody does, you know, this thing, it's the same thing that I would get when I would tell people, I built this studio. You built it? Yeah. So you did everything? You drove every nail? So you sunk the drywall screws?
Starting point is 00:24:17 I have guys. We work together. I pay them. I believe it's not a lie for me to say I built this studio. I never then preface it with every single fucking piece of joint compound and spackle that went on the wall was applied by these loving hands. It's not that. No. I design it and I do some of the work and then I have other people do the work.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And the reason I say that, because I don't like to talk about myself, is I don't think that stern watches every movie reads every book and does whatever right he's the grand poobah yeah and under his regime they watch all of it they do all the stuff yeah and it's a it's a top-down thing i just said to gary um hi g Gary, my Gary, 10 seconds ago, not Bubba Booey, you know, we have a, we had a documentarian come in last week. I said, where's the guy's DVD? And everyone's like, I don't know. I'm like, well, we need it. Go get it.
Starting point is 00:25:16 Let's go. Let's go. It's, yeah. What was that? I'm thinking, I am trying to implement these policies yeah so that stern-esque policies well so that then when the guy comes in literally either i will see it or someone else will see it i'll have notes and then you'll ask questions now i'm always amazed the depth and breadth of the research he has and that he's familiar with it see he knows exactly
Starting point is 00:25:46 how to familiarize himself with enough of the stuff that he's got it ready to hand you know what i'm saying listen i think it's phenomenal the way he's you know i say it every fucking time every time i do one of these goddamn radio junkets it's the exact same thing it's a bunch of radio or TV junkets. It's the exact same thing. It's the guy who's in Market 371, and he's out there in New Mexico, and he's you know, so when you
Starting point is 00:26:15 what theater are you at? And for me, it's 545 in the morning, and I'm not sure what the name of the theater I'm at in New Mexico is, you know. Oh, and I end not sure what the name of the theater I'm at in New Mexico is, you know. Oh, I end up with this. Well, go to my website and you can, okay, so
Starting point is 00:26:32 and it's that Friday or Saturday and now you did a documentary about a guy on the road? No, I did a Newman documentary and then the other things, an independent, oh, independent, when's that coming out? No, it's been out for four months so what's that called? And I was like, this is how you stay in New Mexico.
Starting point is 00:26:49 Right. You think the Sterns and the Kimmels and the whomevers don't do, oh, well, now this guy's on top. He doesn't do it. He can coast. Oh, no. Oh, no. No, no. Same prep.
Starting point is 00:27:01 Same guy. Day in, day out. And to be fair, sorry to burst your bubble, but when he was prepping for the show the day you were on... It's impossible to do the math. Yeah. When he was prepping for the show the day you were on, you were not his number one priority, let's just say. He had Sidney Crawford rolling in immediately after you. And trust me, that was where he was focusing his attention. And yet he had a complete familiarity with all your stuff.
Starting point is 00:27:31 Yes. Pretty amazing. Well, he's assembled a crew and a protocol. Yeah. And he's a part of that. The crew, I'm imagining, pulls the stuff from the book watches the doc does the this, does the that. I hear it's Will mostly that does all the research. I don't know
Starting point is 00:27:49 who all does and then they hand him the stuff and then he sifts through it and probably highlights the stuff he wants. Same way with a late night show or anything else. He has an interesting position about podcasting that you affirmed but I didn't think put a fine
Starting point is 00:28:07 enough point on it. Well, why don't you reiterate? His position on podcasting is nobody should do them. No one can make any money doing them. Nobody can get a real audience doing them, except you, except Adam, which he's always given a little out for you. Even you, he's skeptical, has actually got a pirate ship afloat. Well, can I say this, as long as we're talking about Howard Stern?
Starting point is 00:28:36 He lives in a world, and always has, where if he's not into it or doesn't know about it, it doesn't really exist. And we all are guilty of that to some degree. But even I, who didn't watch Breaking Bad, understand it's a phenomenon. In his mind, it doesn't really exist if he doesn't participate in it and or watch it. So when you take a thing like Stern and, let's say, sports, complete disconnect. Just complete, just not interested. And when he's not interested, it ain't there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:15 It's funny because I was talking, I was on the elevator ride down with Ronnie, the limo driver, down with Ronnie, the limo driver. And I said, Ronnie, you watch this Paul Newman racing doc because he's a big car guy. You're going to like it. I said, I don't. Stern likes Gotham. He does. He likes comic books. Oh, if you told him the new Star Wars trailers up on Vimeo, he'd run for the computer.
Starting point is 00:29:44 But when it comes to cars or whatever, it's just a complete disconnect. It's just not interesting. And look, we all have the stuff we're not interested in. I'd like to think I could watch the documentary King of Kong as a guy who hates video games and enjoy King of Kong because of the human component of it. Yeah, it's an interesting story. Yeah. But for a lot of people, so I told, anyway, I told Ron, you watch it and spread the good word around there.
Starting point is 00:30:14 Because I get it. But what I'm saying is this. In Howard's world, it's terrestrial radio or Sirius XM, whatever, and the podcasting is, what? And then it becomes like something they do, something that's huge in Tokyo. You know what I mean? And you go, what? Oh, the kids. Oh, it's huge with the thing.
Starting point is 00:30:36 And you go, really? Nah. That won't last. It doesn't, because it's so far out of his world. I think he does that thing where it doesn't exist. Now, probably should understand, like we understand, there's plenty of shit we don't know about, never heard of. There's bands that my kids, my daughter listens to that I've never fucking heard of. But I'll take their word for it.
Starting point is 00:31:00 They're huge. Yeah. take their word for it, they're huge. Yeah, I understand. He never gets into that zone, into that world of sort of 22 and under, of the YouTube and the bands. He doesn't seem to be aware of that.
Starting point is 00:31:14 Well, I'm using the band as an example. There's plenty of youth-oriented stuff he's into that involve Spider-Man. Right, right. And green pajamas or whatever the fuck. I see. I don't. I'm the exact opposite. I have no interest in comic books, whatever, graphic novels,
Starting point is 00:31:32 Spider, any superhero, anything. It feels insane to me, but that's what he's interested in. But what I'm saying is I understand that Spider-Man is good for 300 million bucks at the box office. Yeah. That part. I'm not going, but I understand. Somebody's into it.
Starting point is 00:31:46 Somebody's into it. Yeah, so I think that's just his take on podcasting. He's probably been told that, well, look, every time I leave the show, one of his staffer underlings go, hey, I really liked yesterday's episode. So they listen. They listen. But I always, the man is a pro. That's the part. You know it.
Starting point is 00:32:12 I know it. His interviewing has gone to best on the record, best of all time. Really. Larry King got nothing. Nothing. I can't think of nobody. Nobody comes close to the can't think of a 60. Nobody.
Starting point is 00:32:25 Nobody comes close to the interviewing he does. Maybe you. Maybe you're true. No, what it is. I'll tell you why. All right. You tell me, then I'll say it. Go ahead.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Why? No, I'm thinking you should go first. All right. I'll go first. Go ahead. It's research, prep meets following instinct. And training, by the way. And his training has been his psychoanalysis.
Starting point is 00:32:48 Well, yes. And let's not forget repetition. Doing it over time, developing. Repetition sometimes gets static. Well, no. He's been evolving it with repetition and growing it. He's better at 60 than he was at 45. He's better now than he was two years ago.
Starting point is 00:33:07 Well, there you go. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. Okay. Let me... Ooh, now the real truth. Let I. Should be spoken.
Starting point is 00:33:14 Let King Adam tell you, too. You brought up Larry King. Yeah. Larry King doesn't have a sense of humor or much of a personality. He's a good guy. Ryan Seacrest doesn't have... there's not much of him there. So he interviews. And they do a good job interviewing.
Starting point is 00:33:34 But it's a two-way street. I mean, it's a sort of saying, well, this guy's a great interview, but the person who's interviewing needs, I don't know, it's like sex. You can't just have one person. I'll be good at it. I'll be good enough for the both of us. It's not really going to turn out that good. I mean, you can have a very competent interview, but you can't really go those places unless the person who's doing the interview has a good sense of humor,
Starting point is 00:34:10 interesting intellect, wants to pursue things psychologically, and so on and so forth. So it's not just the interview. Howard is sort of interviewing himself as he's interviewing Paul McCartney. And that's the part that gives it the extra. All right, that'll do it for this week. Thanks for listening to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics. Remember to check back each week for new episodes. And while you're at it, don't forget to like, subscribe, and rate us five stars wherever you get your podcasts. I've been your host, Big Brother Jake, a.k.a. Jake Warner.
Starting point is 00:34:37 Thanks for tuning in. Deuces!

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