The Adam Friedland Show (Cumtown) - LOGIC Talks Music Industry, Anime, His New Movie
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Have you said no to a freak off ever?
I was never invited, thank God.
You didn't get invited to a freak off?
Definitely not.
I wouldn't have gone in with this.
Does that feel like hurt your feelings a little bit?
No.
No, you would have said no, obviously, but it's a little bit like.
I don't do, I watch an animal.
I didn't go to the club for the first time until I was 28 years old and I was paid to be.
If I got a telegram or an invitation to a freakoff.
What is this, 1908?
If I got one of these invitations to a freak off, I'd say, listen, I humbly declined, but I
appreciate the concern.
guys we're back from vacation very excited to be back i obviously have to start by thanking our members
and patrons thank you for supporting the show if you would like to support the show there's a link
in the description of this video it says click to become a member you can sign up and get the
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Of course, obviously if you prefer to support the show
through Patreon, we have a Patreon set up as well.
There's a link in the description of the video below.
Thank you guys for supporting the show.
We love doing it and we wanna do it forever.
Let me start this week by addressing something.
I wish I didn't have to, but it seems I do.
As many of you know in my last episode,
I sat down with hip-hop legend G Herbo
and it sent shockwaves throughout the cultural
culture. It seems like many of those in the establishment didn't take too kindly to a new face
break dancing his way in to the hip-hop and R&B space. My name has been dragged through the
mud subsequently. My reputation has been brought into question. Most notably, libelist claims
were levied at me by prominent anti-Semitic DJs, Vlad, and academics.
Well, I kind of think it was really more of the bozo who's doing the interview. Right. What was his name?
I don't know his name.
Friedman or some, some, fuck, it's like one of these, like,
he wanted a, he had a Jewish kid,
probably got beat up, you know,
and finally has a little bit of a voice
and it's trying to be tough
because he actually called you a bitch on Twitter
or stuff like that.
Well, of course he...
He called you a bitch in the interview, too.
Well, yeah, he's trying to engage with me.
We already got the dossier on him.
We got him doing blackface all the type of stuff.
I just don't want to engage.
What?
He just don't want to do the picture?
Come on.
Yo, show me the picture.
Show me.
I want to see this shit.
Vlad, let me tell you.
that guy. I said, hey, man, I heard you
on debate. Hit me, I said,
you're a platform or mine, let's go. He didn't
respond. Show me the black face.
This is him. Okay?
And it's still over. No.
Come on now. Look at this. Yeah, listen, we
keep the files. We keep the files
on them. You know? So, like,
well, you're a racist. Fuck you.
Now, this allegation shocked me.
Anyone who knows
me knows that I hate racism.
But if there's anything I hate
more than racism, it's black face.
I've never participated in it,
and I've cut people out of my life for putting it on.
So when it comes to blackface,
I have a zero tolerance policy.
So I went looking.
I looked for an answer to how this image could possibly exist.
I scoured the dark web for hits.
I consulted with ranking members of law enforcement.
I even considered perhaps that this photo
was of a real African American
that looks exactly like me.
In the end,
The perpetrator was right under my nose.
Who is this Judas Ascarian?
Turns out it was none other than true crime podcaster Brace Belden.
Now, to avoid litigation, my lawyers negotiated a recorded statement by Mr. Brace Belden himself,
where he explains that this whole situation was entirely his fault.
And I will play it for you now.
This video is addressed to DJ's academics and Vlad.
My name is Brace Belden, and I wish we're meeting under different circumstances.
I've been a tremendous fan of both of your work for as long as I can remember.
Sometimes it feels like I'm on an amazing train being conducted by the two of you
that's filled with art, drama, music, rappers, and mafiosi alike.
I've learned a lot of lessons, and one of the big lessons that I've learned
is that I need to stand up for the truth no matter how unpopular that.
unpopular that might be. On a recent episode of one of your shows, I could not tell which, but
you both were both there. DJ Academics shows DJ Vlad a hurtful picture on his phone of a
comedian named Adam Friedland wearing both blackface, as DJ Academics tells it, and a cowboy hat.
Now, DJ Academics, I know that you have a fidelity to the truth and you wouldn't say anything
that you didn't believe. And so I have to let you in on
little bit of information that might damage my reputation, but at least will help burnish you
with facts. I made that picture. And that's not a picture of Adam Friedling wearing blackface.
That's a picture of Adam Friedling wearing a cowboy hat that I ran through a filter of an
application called Face App in the summer of 2017. I want to stress that Adam had nothing to do with
that picture. That may well be, and there probably are many pictures of Adam Friedland wearing blackface
out there. And if you want to damage his reputation or end his career or even his life,
I won't stand in your way. But that picture is not of Adam Friedman wearing blackface.
So to the DJs, Vlad, and academics, I'm here to stay. And I'm actually a pretty good guy
once you get to know me. I've been at too many funerals over petty squabbles like this.
So here's your olive branch. Meet me. Face to face. Here.
on the Adam Friedland show.
Before Twitter fingers turn to trigger fingers,
let's sit down like men.
And I can't wait to see you soon.
And our guest today is Logic.
He's a rapper as well.
So please enjoy the show, guys.
We'll be right back.
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Our next guest is a multi-platinum-selling recording artist.
He is here in New York City promoting his new film
at Tribeca Film Festival Paradise Records.
Everyone, please put your hands together for logic, guys.
Clap it up!
Where is he?
Ah, oh.
Thank you.
Thank you, sir.
Is this side okay?
This side is okay, yes, certainly.
Just making sure.
Good to see you.
Good to see you.
Good to see you.
Thanks for coming, dude.
Oh, I'm excited.
You know the show?
A bit, yeah.
Really?
You took a picture in front and stuff?
I can't believe it.
Yeah.
We've had one rapper here before.
It was Jada because someone manipulated and tricked him into being here.
Jada's the coolest guy ever.
He's the funniest and coolest guy ever.
Even though I've never got to meet him.
I took a picture out there because 10 years ago, I did my first late night television show.
This doesn't count.
What are you talking about?
This is a, we're in an office building.
This is incredible.
What do you mean?
Thank you so much.
This is why I wanted to do the show.
Really?
There's so much care and thought.
And yeah, so I did Fallon.
And I was so nervous.
And I'm still nervous.
Really?
No way.
So this is great.
I'm not Jimmy, I'm not Jimmy Fallon.
I'm just some schmuck.
You're the fucking, dude.
No, you're not.
And it was cool.
I took the picture because there's a picture of me, like, so nervous before.
And just doing that as a musician and now being here also as a filmmaker for my first movie.
Thank you for having me.
Congrats on the movie.
Thanks a lot.
Give it up for it.
I appreciate it.
A lot of your mixtapes and records, they reference films, obviously.
You wanted to be a filmmaker your entire life pretty much?
Before you wanted to be a rapper or no?
I've always loved cinema.
Also, if my voice sounds raspy, it's because I've been fucking talking a lot.
I've never been so exhausted and I think I had a cold and this whole thing.
You were on the view earlier?
No, I wasn't.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
All right.
But the thing that I've always loved cinema because it allowed me to escape my household and, you know, I guess mentally.
And the very like elevator pitch of my childhood is like, mother was a prostitute, dad was on crack, mom was alcoholic, brothers in the streets shooting guns and cooking crack and wildness and all this craziness.
So I was able to escape through cinema.
Yeah.
And my entry point into music, like truly, as a musician, I was about 13.
years old and I saw Kill Bill by Quentin Tarantino.
And the Riza, yeah.
James, he did the school.
He did the score.
Yeah.
And that was, and you were like, I want to be a musician from the Kill Bill score.
Yeah.
Really?
Well, it was, you know.
You hadn't heard hip hop before that?
I mean, I had ears.
You're from Rockville, Maryland?
Born in Rockville, yeah.
Raised in Gatesburg, but it's the same shit.
Do you think that, like, becoming a rapper was,
it was like a quiet rebellion against being from Rockville?
No, probably not.
I would have assumed you were a rocker from, I would assume, I was, sorry.
I see.
You know, is the influence for the movie Joe's Record Paradise?
Have you been there before?
Whoa.
I used to work in downtown Silver Spring.
This is what I've been wanting to ask you.
All right, Nardwar.
I bought some great records out of that shop.
So I worked on, I worked at the Discovery build, at Discovery.
Do you remember in downtown Silver Spring?
No.
The Discovery Networks.
You got a little, you got a lent on you.
I don't know, it's standard.
Okay.
I'm a disgusting.
I have OCEA.
Um, yeah, I bought some great stuff there.
Do you have you been there before?
I have and I would have never remembered it unless you just said it right now.
Really?
So it was just good.
You unlocked like a core memory.
Really?
Yeah, this is like right.
next to wild shit.
Do you remember that they're like the rare record section?
No, I don't.
They have like a section that was like a little bit like cordoned off.
Nice.
And I bought some, I bought some worded.
Yeah, yeah.
See it's the late night in.
Get out of the, get, hopefully ice takes that one away.
It's horrible, right?
No, I'm just because, sorry, sorry.
Sorry.
How old are you?
I'm 35.
So we're, yeah, we're around the same age.
For Shizzle.
Yeah.
That's, so like, so you have obviously a really crazy backstory, which
you like go into a lot in your career and stuff you reference and your your dad is like
something I found interesting when I was researching is like your dad is kind of like you've
reconnected with but it doesn't seem like as if you've reconnected with your mother like you have
great question yeah so my dad I mean that's a whole thing my mom so one of the last times I'd
spoken to my mom was on my 21st birthday and I hadn't seen her in a few years you know and the thing
about my mother is she's just a mentally ill person yeah know what I mean so I've
definitely relinquished any anger or any of that that I had yeah but I hadn't
seen her in a few years since I was probably 17 18 and the last time I'd seen
her she was like covered in blood and naked and screaming and the police were there
it was a whole thing my word it's wild yeah my sister calls me crying talking
about mommy says you don't talk to her because of me and I'm like what the
fuck does that have to do with this doesn't make any sense so
I call my mother, having not spoken in a few years, and I'm just like, look, respectfully, I don't talk to you because of you, and because there is no mutual respect here, and it's your way or the highway with everything.
So just know that.
And then she yelled at me and screamed at me and called me a n*** and then hung up the phone.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, gnarly.
Yeah.
You gave her the past, or no?
Definitely not.
No, no, no.
Pretty raw to be, like, exposing.
I mean, I guess it's part of your art and part of your career is, like, talking about...
I'm just an honest person.
Yeah.
You know, and I think a lot of that in hip-hop is very taboo.
Your father, you said he's...
Is he from D.C.?
He just spent his whole life in Chocolate City playing African percussion.
He played go-go?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Did he play go-go?
What was the first time you made a beat?
Oh, man.
Was it on the library computer at school?
No, I would.
I remember the first time.
Well, I recorded music before I ever made a beat.
I was about 15 years old.
And I had this super like dinosaur manila of computer and computer monitor.
And on the monitor there was this tiny little microphone hole and I'll just wrap into it like this.
And I still have the recordings.
Oh yeah.
I've every song I've ever recorded.
How many songs have you made in your life?
Probably.
Probably like two plus thousands.
Really?
Yeah.
And so what like got you?
you what got you like to LA this was back when like Twitter was just like you'd be
like you know I just had some eggs like that's what Twitter was for at the time yeah
me and other incredible musicians whether it was Big Sean Mac Miller was
Khalifa we were utilizing Twitter Instagram and YouTube especially Twitter as a
platform to promote ourselves which nobody was really doing at the time which
almost sounds like not real like everybody promotes themselves on Twitter now but
it was a different time so you're like pre-sound Cloud
kind of yes you're that you're the debt piff era this is yeah this is like
pre spot like I remember being called it from my manager at the time being like
yo Spotify Spotify I'm look the fuck is that shit uh-huh it's a Swedish thing you
get six cents for every one million players and some fish yeah they give you
fish was Swedish fish who signed you at Def Jam no ID really the legendary no
ID yeah he was he was your first mentor no ID was the one who told me I was a
producer so going back to what you were saying you know what kind of why I started
was like I'm like what I'm not a producer I just rap yeah but we'd be in the
studio and I'd be telling no idea like could you change the drums to like
these drums you did and can we get this on that and all this and he just he
had seen that and without kind of even announcing it to me was like just go work
with these people over here and he gave me some of his best musicians so cool
other producers and and taught me a lot taught me to Swedish fish I wish I was
that's I'm so jealous of it
Yeah.
What am I going to get put on by Jerry Seinfeld?
He's like, I want you to work with Andrew Schultz.
Jerry's awesome.
What?
I met Jerry in Vegas, and you lived in Vegas for a while.
I grew up in Vegas, yeah.
He's got some great opinions on global politics right now.
Yeah, I watch anime.
No, so being kind of coming under No Ideas wing, you're kind of, you're kind of, you're kind of, you know, you're kind of, you know, you, you're, you know, you, you're, you know, you.
you have a sibling in terms of him being a mentor also for Kanye.
I mean, that's the first thing that comes in mind for me.
For sure, yeah.
I mean, that's a big thing, regardless of the current state of my anime watching in the world
and the craziness going on.
You know, huge inspiration musically, especially in that era.
Did you see the genius documentary on Netflix?
No.
The Kanye one?
Oh, you mean the one, like the three-parter?
The three-parter.
I only sell two parts.
Yeah, so you don't need to see the third.
It doesn't go anywhere.
Yeah, because it unravels.
There's no, like, narrative there.
Because it's the sad part is that there's no, like, come to Jesus moment.
But the first one and a half parts is, like, amazing.
Because it's, like, a document of, like, the hip hop that I was exposed to as, like, a teenager, right?
Which was, like, the Mitchell and Ness Rockefeller Records kind of era.
But what's incredible about it is that you could tell that, like, Kanye is this guy that made the best beats, right?
And he made the blueprint, but he's a nerd.
He's a gay nerd.
And we're like, they're like, he's like,
but they're like, this gay nerd makes the best,
he makes the best beats.
And he's like, but I want to be a rapper.
And they're like, okay, sure, you know.
Yeah, you can be a rapper.
And literally, he's just being ignored by people
because they're like, a gay nerd could never be a rapper.
I remember hearing the college dropout when I was a kid,
and I was like, this is the first gay nerd
It felt like Wakanda or something for me.
It felt like Black Panther.
Oh.
I felt representation.
I was like, this guy, this guy, he's, he's, my mom makes me wear those polos when we're
going to fucking Thanksgiving.
I was like, this is amazing.
Woo, you got bars right now.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I think that it's really amazing, like in retrospect, I realized.
I was like, it really all changed then and there.
He really made the, he, he set the.
808 in heartbreaks, man, especially, like, that was the...
Is that yours, your number one?
No, I think that was the one where it's like...
He was being a gay nerd?
When I first went to L.A., and No ID played me, like, the demos from the sessions,
and I heard Kanye mumbling on it, chuff the yard.
I heard Kanye, like, mumbling, like, uh-na-na-na-na-na-na, like getting to it.
And I was like, well, you can do that?
Like, I thought everything had to be precise, and he's just going in there, like, not even
making words yeah just making sounds and I found it very inspiring yeah have you
have you interacted with him much never I'm kind of scared to really yeah like
you love one day like when you were like young yeah yeah yeah a thousand percent I
loved him yeah what's the most evil meeting you ever took did you ever get into a
boardroom there's the monopoly man's on the other side of the side of the table you're
like a thousand percent yeah that's pretty much every meeting really yeah and that's why
I ended up making my own movie myself, which we'll get to.
Going independent, yeah.
Yeah, but what the fuck was I saying before you interrupted me?
I don't know, I was talking about Israel.
No, before that.
I don't know, it's just this war, it's pretty much.
No, you were talking about no ID, and then he was suggesting
that you work with other people, and then, oh, and then, you know,
obviously you brought up Jay-Z, Kanye West.
I forgot.
Africa Bumbada, cool, cool Modi, Eric Bion, and Rock
Okay, I like it.
Care is one.
Do you like that stuff?
Of course.
A thousand percent.
But doesn't it sound like nursery, right?
It sounds a little bit baby, no?
When I listened to it.
Mary had a little la, it's like kind of a little bit baby.
I love the...
I don't want to, is that disrespectful?
I mean, it's just sometimes...
You might get jumped.
Where people at parties, like, trying to get with girls while like, well...
I went to the hat store today and I bought myself a hat.
Jackpin nimble.
Jack, but quit.
But that was the vibe, though.
Yeah.
It just sounds a little baby to me.
All right.
I don't know.
I love it.
I'm a student.
And I'm an MC, right?
So as a master's ceremony, I think it's very important that you do your research.
And I've done my research on hip-hop as I was entering this realm, and it's important to me.
What are your, like, primary influences?
It seems like you're kind of a Golden Air 93 kind of...
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love Illmatic.
I love Most Deaf, Black on both sides.
The roots, obviously, from Philly.
They're incredible.
I mean, Eminette.
Have you ever met Scott Storch?
Yes.
You know he was the original
Keyes player? Oh, I know, yeah. Keys put him in the roots.
How cool is that? How cool is it that
you know that? I love him so... I'm obsessed
with this guy. Yeah,
I swear to God. He smokes a lot of weed.
He got addicted to yachts and cocaine.
Yes. And now he's back.
I heard an interview once with
when he went on Drink Champs.
The first time he went on Drink Champs.
I never went on Drink Champs. You're thinking of Breakfast Club.
No, no. No, I'm talking about
Scott Storch and Noriega said he was so addicted to yachts that he picked him up at the airport
in a yacht and they took the yacht to TGI Friday like it was a like it was a car or something
how awesome is that how awesome is this I don't know this is great I'm sorry I'm sorry don't
apologize the bit it's it's not a bit it's a it's a funny thing that you said he commit to the
bit he also said another thing that him and his friends
got addicted to a thing called the Miami Blizzard where they say he said it was on his
boat with a legendary female pop singer and he offered her cocaine and she said yeah but
I don't do it in my nose I do it in my cullo and he's like really you could do that
and then him and his friends got addicted to just blowing drugs into women's bums isn't
that crazy they called it the Miami Blizzard wow that's so tight he likes it we
on one guy the camera guys are scared no I'm sorry dude you don't like you
don't like um smut smut smutty um subject matters have you seen my movie it's your
movie's like lovely yeah but it's full of some wild shit yeah but it's not like
blowing drug into like a row of porn star's bums it's not like so gratuitous it's
there's a heart in your movie I want to get to your movie actually we'll get
Later on.
Yeah, yeah.
Because I was like, yeah, I thought it was really nice.
And, like, I could see the influences,
and it seems like you watched the same movies as me growing up.
Clerks was clearly an influence, right?
You had Kevin Smith in the movie.
Yep.
But was high fidelity?
How much was high?
Oh, 1,000%.
John Cusack? Classic.
Do you remember when you were like...
A snack.
You remember being 12 and be like your heart, like, heartbroken by that movie?
Because you just wish you could get all the girls back.
It was a great film.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
I love that movie so much.
Me too.
Tim Robbins crushes it.
Tim Robbins is you just want to shoot him in the back of the head, that guy.
That means he's a great action.
With the soul passion?
Oh, it's terrible.
He's got the pussy tickler.
Yeah, it's terrible.
Yeah, no.
Did you have, like, peers that were, like, you know, like guys that you were, like,
around the same age as, and, like, you felt like you were boys with, or is it, like,
there's no friends?
No.
So I definitely always felt kind of alone.
You know what I mean?
Why is that?
Probably because I stick to myself.
Yeah.
Pause.
And so there was that whole thing, you know, but I'm a very open person.
So anytime I'd meet anybody, it's like we would definitely vibe.
So there's a lot of people on that list.
Like Travis was super awesome.
And schoolboys, a great dude.
And Absal was so cool.
And Dizzy Wright, I mean, me and Dizzy Wright went on tour together.
So, yeah, there was a lot.
Mac Miller was always super kind and cool.
Me and Wiz now, that's like one of my best homies and shit.
Big Sean.
Oh, I know he did.
He's huge now.
Yeah, it's insane.
He looks like fucking Dalsam from street fighters.
I saw a picture of him the other day.
I was like, Wiz Khalifa's jacked now.
Insane.
Yeah, and he's still piffing, too.
Big time.
He's just like lifting and piffing?
It's pretty difficult in most.
Piffing.
Piffing.
Yeah.
Pifting.
Yeah.
So, but you felt like a little bit of an outsider?
Yeah, understatement.
Because you got to understand, this is at a fucking time.
Well, one, I look how I look, right?
So there's just that immediate thing.
And then there's also the fact that I'm rapping about peace, love, and positivity.
Yeah.
And fucking sci-fi and anime and nerd shit.
It was very much so, like, we don't fuck with that away.
Really?
Yeah.
But I feel like nerds could be rappers, though.
No, nerds are rappers.
They have been rappers.
You know, it's like, look at Cuddy.
Look at Lupe.
You know, look at all these people who have inspired me.
And it was just, I don't know.
So you think that it's a, they're like, this guy's a total dweeb?
That's not nice.
For sure.
You should tell them that you were a cooking crack when you were a baby.
What were they doing?
They were in the suburbs.
Yeah.
Did you, did you have any mentors, like beyond no idea, like any rappers that have kept an eye out for you?
I don't know.
You know, I really feel like my first real mentor in life was Jesus Christ.
is Kevin Smith.
Really?
Yeah.
You met, like his films or like you...
No, like as a human beat.
Like when I met, it was just so much there.
Did you ever ask him about that tweet that he did?
Which tweet? There's a lot of tweets, man.
I don't know.
He did that tweet about him and his wife?
I don't have no idea what you're talking about.
You know what?
I'm not on the internet. I've been on social media in eight years.
I can find it.
It's pretty good.
You can read it.
No, you can read it.
It's fine.
You got it.
Just read it out of it.
Ten years in.
bone like we're cheating on each other with each other. A decade plus and her clit slash brown
slash taint-dash area still pones my dick. I love that. Did you ask you about that? That's so
romantic. Is that bars? You should put that in a song. It's all right. I'll sample this. Yeah,
yeah. Have you said no to a freak off ever? I was never invited. Thank God. You didn't get invited
to a freak off? Definitely not. I wouldn't have gone any. Does that feel like hurt your feelings a little bit?
No. No, you would have said no, obviously.
obviously but it's a little bit like I don't do I watch anime like I don't know how like I'm not that guy if I got I didn't go to the club for the first time until I was 28 years old and I was paid to be there in Vegas shout out Dre's yeah if I got a a telegram or an invitation to a freakoff is 1908 if I got one of these invitations to a freak off I'd say listen I humbly declined but I appreciate it okay so you'd be happy did you know did you know about that like
sinister side of you know of the business and hip-hop in general I didn't know
about none of that shit but that's that no that's some wild shit but I always
knew that it was filled with masochany and I was raised by women so my
reverence and respect for women is like through the roof like I'm not fucking
weird yeah and I've never seen anything like crazy happen or in front of me or
this or that but maybe it's because they know maybe I just present myself as a good
human being and they're like oh no we can't invite him he's he's not gonna come
He's not going to be down with this Illuminati shit.
He's not a freak off material.
Thank God.
Who's the biggest piece of shit?
I have no idea.
Probably did he.
No.
I don't know.
He could get off, dude.
What are you doing?
I'm just, I'm just.
You're doing the big.
Did you know he was doing Rico the whole time?
I have no idea.
I watch.
What is Rico?
What is Rico?
It's like the whole fucking the, the polo.
It's like an Italian kind of thing?
I have no idea.
Yeah.
It's a mafia kind of thing.
All right.
Is it, is it tough for you to court a female audience?
I don't think so.
But usually they're like allergic to logic and facts.
It's good, good bits, man.
I thought he would like that.
How important is it for a rapper to have a website?
Like a good website.
When you moved to L.A. to like to make it in music,
did you get like a business card or something?
I did have business cards.
That's kind of good. Well, you're trying something.
I just wanted people to be like, hey, I care of.
about this your first name was psychological yes yeah and then when did you drop
that when my fucking friend Lenny was like hey pass the salt psycho psycho like
did you drop the psycho was it like a kind of like I was a whole thing normal
now yeah and the all I'm not loco anymore just logic just Lenny big Lenny who
took me into his his basement when did you choose psychological like a buddy of mine was
like go through the dictionary that's like a 13 year old oh well I was 18
unfortunately when I picked this same it's fun so I just went and I was like
psychological and I read the definition it was like about the brain and the
mind and I was like yeah it's just like a Wu-Tang kind of word for sure yeah yeah
yeah I'm into lyrics
yo we need to I need to I need to put that in a beat I'm into lyrics can we
remember that I feel a little weird why because I think I just been going
because I know more about reps so I
I just hope I'm not fucking this up.
No, you're not fucking this off, dude.
You're fine.
Maybe it's the lights.
It's all right, dude.
This is a real talk show.
I saw you spent $226,000 on a Pokemon card.
Yeah.
On Charzart.
It's because I couldn't afford it as a kid.
Yeah.
So yellow.
Do you think that rich people should pay more in taxes?
I do.
I pay 55% of every dollar I make.
Really?
Yes.
Every single one?
Every single dollar.
Hmm.
On Pokemon?
No, to the government.
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What anime do you like?
Oh, I love Cowboy Bebop and Trigone
and fucking Samurai Champ Blue and Space Dandy.
Really?
Oh, yeah, big time.
Fucking Dragon Ball, especially Super.
I mean, Akira and fucking Spirited Away
and Princess Monoanoke.
Honestly, it's all the, like, people would be like,
like, I'm just naming the, like,
and my hero.
Barney.
Barney.
That's live action.
Blue's Clues.
Anyway, sorry.
I never got any of the anime.
I just love.
it. I love it. It's a whole
vibe. You know, something that's big
because I'm getting into like
this YouTube space. You've actually done this
pivot yourself recently and you're
like putting out content consistently
and you're kind of showing the real you to your
audience and stuff I've noticed.
But something I've noticed that's big is like
getting an
anecdote from a guest, like
a wild story about
a famous person
that you can then clip and then
that can go viral. So I was
wondering if you can give give us one of those yeah any good ones and I know
this is like a Elon Musk pause just give me a second I'm thinking no it's a
sign of intelligence to be like considering because there's so much I could
tell you okay here's the the time that my well one thing I'll just give you is
one of my favorite openings for my memoir for a chapter is I'll never forget the
I had a sleepover and my friend Richie saw my mom's pussy before she destroyed the television set.
So that's pretty cool.
But one time, it was 2013, and this was a year after I saw Jane Cole sell out the Fillmore at Silver Spring.
And I sold out the Fillmore on fucking mixtape, and I couldn't believe it.
And this dude throws this shoe on stage and almost hits me in the head.
And then my brother, in the crowd, just starts to be eating the shit out of this guy.
And while this is happening, somebody jumps off the second story and, like, breaks their leg and then surfs and jumps in the funny crowd and crowdsurps.
And then, in the end of the night, backstage, my brother's bringing the dude that he beat up into the greenwood.
The shoe throat.
Yeah.
And I'm like, holy shit.
We used to work together at Joe's Crab Shag.
Really?
I know this isn't like freak off level story, but this is all I got.
I thought you were going to be like...
Yeah, insert bit here.
Do you remember that someone did that to George Bush in Iraq?
Oh, and he was like, huh, huh, yeah, he duck the shoe.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah, apparently in the Muslim world, that's like the height of insult.
Politics, religion, all that shit is a super slippery slope, and I have used and will continue to use my voice.
For Gaza.
I've never checked out anime.
Where should I start?
Cowboy Bebub.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
What is that about?
It's basically about these bounty hunters in the future that live on ours.
It's a vibe.
You should watch sports, dude.
I'm not a sports guy.
Come on, bro.
I'm a sports guy with my friends.
Like, they have it on and shit, and I'll watch it and be like, woo.
Like, I'm watching this basketball game.
I'm like, here comes the motherfucking punt.
They don't punt in basketball, dude.
Okay, my bad.
I'm watching football.
I'm watching football.
I'm watching football.
It's like, here's the free throw.
It's whole thing.
It's fine.
Yeah, that the lint.
it's dandruff I didn't I felt bad about that you're still thinking about that I do I hold things in like
you're a multi-platinum selling a rapper do you remember when you were like you ever walk away and go fuck
yeah you did that on the way to pee no that's yeah that's that moment no come on dude yeah I feel
bad about it don't worry about it sorry um so like head and shoulders or what just rocking it no I have
I have something like a medicated I go to dermatologist is it a thing I've medical
have you ever been like yeah it's a struggle let's get a clip um it was 2007 um no yeah that's how
I feel I have a tremor um it's a neurological disorder it's called a cervical
dystonia which I think is weird because I don't have cervix yeah that's always a
cervical is the neck yeah anyway so when I was like 29 so in 2019 my head just
started going like this really and I can't stop it so like if I stay still my head will just shake
shake shake I haven't noticed you doing that well there's two reasons one because I move a lot
I have all these ticks and things that I do that I'm like do people understand like do they see
I feel like fucking rain man so I'll adjust my things and I'm really weird about it and I was very
self-conscious for a long time the cool thing about being self-conscious like if you're anxious or
you feel a little anything is just saying it I personally believe I'd rather
Like yesterday I did this panel and I felt horrible, so I just, while I was there at Tribeca,
I was just like, hey everybody, I'm having anxiety, I'm really tired, I think I might be sick
and I have to poop.
You said that?
And I just let it be known.
Yeah, it's a whole thing.
But anyway.
Oh, a thousand percent.
I'm just like, yo, this is what it is.
I'd rather be me.
So anyway, I found this fucking doctor who uses Botox, oh, I see the gears going already,
who uses Botox in the deep part of the muscles in the neck to weaken them because my muscles
go like this which force and it work yeah it works but it's where it's
wearing off because I have to do it once every every three months it's why I
have a be really sexy net when did you lose your view probably like 11 I'm a
virgin shut up yeah no seriously no you had like a wild upbringing you probably
just had you probably just no I've never had sex no shut up I've never had
sex just go on the record everyone's on read it right no no way does logic
my wife no for real my wife it was an artificial insemination it was a whole thing
like jesus christ no because you know we did it also that's like that's the original like
no consent there what's that guy so poor joe um i lost my virginity joseph fell for that she's like
it was god poor guy at 15 and then they wrote it in a book like for ever he's remembered is that
And 15 on her friend's couch?
Yeah, it wasn't great.
Yeah, it's terrible.
Yeah.
And then I fell in love with this girl, and then really happened.
And I was like, wow, this is like, it's like that scene in the 40-year-old virgin.
It's like...
Bags of sand.
No, not that one.
The fucking dawn of Aquarius.
Age of Aquarius.
Yeah.
Aquarius.
You know what I'm talking about?
Yeah, yeah.
Are you having fun?
I'm chilling, dude.
Okay.
That's a no.
Why?
I mean, if somebody asks you, you're having fun and you're saying,
out right now you probably have what 20 million dollars so you know my brand is made over
a hundred ms which is wild to think about and then you know you pay everybody out
there's a bunch of people in your pocket and commissions yeah government and all this other
shit so you know I'm sitting sitting above what you just said but it's nice nice
it's nice I you know what I really respect that because people people beat around the bush
with this crap I suppose but that's why I spent millions of dollars on this fucking
movie because I wouldn't have been able to do it any other way so really because
you didn't put the dress
The what?
The dress.
The cat, the cat, you didn't put it on the dress.
What?
That's what Cat Williams said.
Oh, yeah, I didn't put on the dress.
No, I guess not.
Let's talk real quick about, yeah, having a number one hit single, right?
Yeah.
How many times did the 1-800 song go platinum?
Last I checked, I think it was like eight.
Did you ever worry that kids were like probably prank calling the, the,
hotline for sure but I know that more people who needed help called so you
don't know that I do actually been more Congress wrote me a letter it could have
been more pranks though no I'm not saying like people didn't get help that's
obviously phenomenal but mathematically speaking I'm better for sure some more
pranks this all asshole yeah what did Congress write your letter what is it
they just kind of were just like hey thanks for your song like it's we've
ran all the numbers and seeing
that this has definitely had an impact on...
Just all of Congress wrote it?
Or, like, McConnell?
No, it was just like a...
They all signed it?
I got to find the letter.
They all signed it like a...
I don't think every person signed it.
I just know these motherfuckers sent me a letter and say thanks, and I said, thank you.
So who's like, who's the most famous person you've ever met?
And maybe you could do, like, a wild-ass story.
I don't know.
Who do I know?
Oh, Seth McFarland?
Okay, so check it out.
Family guy?
This is one person, yeah.
So me and Seth McFarland, I'm at his house.
It's like a fucking Lex Luther, like, it's insane.
Like, this place is gigantic.
He's got like four stories.
He's got a fucking IMAX, like, 500, 500-person movie theater.
And then he's got a nightclub in his house, like a lounge.
Wow.
Yeah.
And so me and him were working on this album that we're doing together where he sings 17
classic Sinatra and Kruner era songs, and then I chop him on my MPC.
And we're doing a whole album right now.
And so we're down there getting lit, okay?
It's not freak off, it's just us too.
So it's just like a two off.
But there's no sex stuff.
Doing drinking and stuff?
No, we're just drinking a little bit.
I'm sizing it.
No, but we're having a couple drinks.
But this is the night that he also on top.
So there's three people that convinced me to make a movie, all right?
It's J.J. Abrams, Seth McFarlane, and Kevin Smith.
And all three of those are my signatures that I needed three signatures to become a director
through the director's guild, and those are my three signatures, which is crazy.
Now, me and Seth are getting lit, and we're talking about everything.
We're talking about 90s cinema.
We're talking about fucking Sotomberg and Tarantino and Spike Lee and Jones and Sophia Coppola.
And then we're talking about Lawrence of Arabia and fucking Ben Hur and Citizen Kane and Orson Wells and classic radio plays and all this of the shit.
And he's just like, how the hell do you know about all that kid?
And I'm like, I love it.
This is what I do.
You know what I mean?
Like, I love it so much.
And he's like, well, have you wanted to act?
Have you ever wanted to, you know, make films and shit like this?
And this is the night when I was like, like, it began.
And I told him my story of how I'm sitting on scripts
and I tried to make it.
But every corner in Hollywood is followed by no or hurry up and wait.
And he was like, well, fuck that shit.
How much do you got?
And I said, X amount.
And he goes, well, then take a couple, you know,
however many millions it's going to cost and go make a movie.
And I was like, hey, oh, yeah, Seth McFallens.
And I left his house crying in my Mayback.
And I call my, I call my, I call my,
I call my wife and she's like, what's wrong?
And I'm like, I'm going to make a movie.
And she's like, that's amazing.
What are you talking about?
And I'm like, I'm about to spend millions of dollars on this movie.
What if it doesn't work?
You are, you're Jewish.
I always say when I go to the gym, like I do curls well like a Hasidic.
So I'm crying.
And my wife is like, why are you crying?
And I'm like, because I'm about to spend millions and millions of our dollars to make a movie.
And she's like, that sounds amazing.
Oh, it's ours.
It's ours.
She wasn't with you.
in the gym dude that's funny that's funny that's funny that's funny I made that
that money she made our children you know what I'm saying it's the hardest job
this is my Britney I love you're Kevin Federland you were you were married once
before that I was were you too young to be married or what was you know what
it's funny you could argue that I don't think I was too young but I was probably
too young. Yeah. And at the end of the day, that person just wasn't my person, not a bad
person at this. She wasn't your forever person. People grow and changed and we just changed
differently and that's all it was. It's not that deep. We should get into the movie a little
bit. Please. How do you feel now that it's out? Are you getting a good response? Well, it's not
technically out, but it is. Well, that's not that you've screened it. But the love, I mean,
motherfuckers are calling it a fucking, what is it, a situational masterpiece and comedy fucking
like Seidenfeld.
Instant comedy classic.
Like, I'm like, this is crazy to me.
But it's funny to just watch people cringe at certain things
or me talking about fucking getting molested or da-da-da.
And some people are like, ugh, like,
or might not think that's funny.
Or like, you probably shouldn't talk about that.
And I'm like, eat my ass.
Like, what are you talking about?
Like, I'm gonna talk about whatever I want.
But they were mean to you about saying that you were molested?
No, not they.
I'm just saying certain people I know
have felt a little bit about the tone
if I'm discussing those things or, you know, just stuff that can be very personal
because it might be triggering to somebody, which is completely understandable.
People are still acting like that?
This is my story.
Dude, come on, bro.
People are still telling you you can't mention that you were molested because it's triggering for them.
Oh, it's a wild.
People are insane.
Yeah.
But I'm like, people need to shut up.
I'm like, let me take.
And watch sports.
Like, see.
Anime, anime.
Or you anime or whatever, baby stuff.
So what's the second?
What's LP2?
What's LP2?
It's your eight-mile?
No.
It's your eight mile.
No?
No.
Everything after this is going to be...
I think this specific film, it's a little more slapstick and whatever.
Like from here, I want to make...
So there's two films that I'm going to do.
One is quite expensive, but people want to give me money, so that's great.
But it's like Spike Jones being John Malkovich meets Friday.
She meets Friday and Vanilla Sky, like, fucking each other at a freak off.
Do you remember watching that movie as a kid and just being brokenhearted because you feel
like you lost Padalepi Cruz as your girlfriend?
She was so hot in that movie.
She's the most beautiful girl ever.
I, dude, that movie, like, do you remember the Cameron Diaz line?
Which one?
Right before she crashed the car.
Yeah, she's like, I let you, you came in my mouth.
That means something.
I swallowed your cum.
When you fuck someone, your body makes it promise.
You were inside of me.
That's a sample.
That's a sample.
Logic, everyone.
Thanks, guys.
That was great.
I had a lot of fun there.
Do you enjoy it?
Do you enjoy it?
Thank you.
Thank you.