The Church of What's Happening Now: The New Testament - ERICA FLORENTINE & TREMENDOUS! | #239 | UNCLE JOEY'S JOINT with JOEY DIAZ
Episode Date: April 17, 2023Welcome to UNCLE JOEY'S JOINT... It's Monday, April 17, 2023… Today we have ERICA FLORENTINE in Studio! Erica is an Author and Ghost Writer and helped write "Tremendous" with Uncle Joey! Visit Eri...ca here: https://www.ericaflorentine.com "Tremendous" is Available for Pre-Order now! https://a.co/d/auftOBa This podcast is ALWAYS presented by ONNIT! Go to https://www.onnit.com & Enter PROMO CODE: JOEY, JOINT or CHURCH This episode is also brought to you by DraftKings, The Freeze Pipe & Liquid IV… DRAFTKINGS Support the show by downloading the DraftKings Sportsbook app & sign up with the code JOEY. New customers can make a $5 pregame moneyline bet & score $150 in bonus bets if their team wins. Call (800) 327-5050 or visit gamblinghelplinema.org (MA), Gambling Problem? Call 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (CO/IL/IN/LA/MD/MI/NJ/OH/PA/TN/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA) 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MA/MD/MI/NH/NJ/NY/OH/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. VOID IN ONT. Eligibility restrictions apply. On behalf of Boot Hill Casino & Resort (KS). Bet $5 Get $150 offer (void in MA/NH/OR): Valid 1 per new customer. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 pre-game moneyline bet. Bet must win. $150 issued as six (6) $25 bonus bets. Promotional offer period ends 5/28/23 at 11:59PM ET. No Sweat Bet: Valid 1 per customer. Opt-in req. NBA same game parlay bets only. Min 3-leg. First bet after opting-in must lose. Paid as one Bonus Bet based on amount of initial losing bet. Max. wagering limits apply. Ends at the start of the final NBA game each day when offered. Liquid IV Support the show and get 20% off at https://Liquid-IV.com by using code JOEY at checkout. THE FREEZE PIPE Support the show and get 10% off with the code DIAZ at https://TheFreezepipe.com Follow Uncle Joey on Social Media: https://www.Twitter.com/madflavor https://www.Instagram.com/madflavors_world And don't forget..... The Mind Of Joey Diaz on PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/joeydiaz JoeyDiaz #Madflavor #UncleJoeysJoint #TheJoint #displate #manscaped #bluechew #CBDLion #HeartAndSoil #DraftKings #BetterHelp #stamps #RocketMoney The JOINT is Produced by: Michael Klein aka @onebyonepodcast on Social Media: https://www.Instagram.com/onebyonepodcast https://www.twitter.com/onebyonepodcast Huge Thanks to BEN TELFORD for the Tremendous intro video..... https://spoti.fi/unclejoeysjoint
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This podcast is brought to you by Onit.
Go to Onit.com and look at the great selection of supplements.
If you find something you like,
pressing code Joey and get 10% off delivered right to your house.
What's happened, you bad motherfuckers?
It's Monday, the 17th of the month.
And in honor of 420, Uncle Joey's joint is brought to you by Freeze Pipe.
The best bongs in the fucking market.
How do I know?
Because I've been smoking since I've been in fucking diapers.
Get ready to smoke without throat burn for the coldest smoothest fucking smoking experience
You've ever had get a freezable pipe bubbler or bong from the freeze pipe
The secret is this it's the glistering chamber pop that baby in a freezer for an hour and watch as you smoke is cooled by
300 degrees listen guys you know me dog I love my little bongs and when it comes to freeze pipe
Whether it's the bubbler whether it's to bong whether it's the pipe whether it's the pye
and now the tornado which is fucking tremendous.
420 is here and freeze pipe biggest sale of the year is about to end.
That's right.
It's the cannabis Christmas and you can save up to $40 on select pipes,
bubbles, bongs, and more.
Visit freespipe.com and find your new favorite piece.
Use something like that's not on sale.
Use code Diaz and save 10% on your entire order.
Again, that's freezepip.
pipe.com, use code Diaz for 10% off your entire order or shop the 420 sale, guys.
Enjoy and smoke yourself until it comes out of your fucking ears.
You understand me?
The joint is also brought to you by.
Bam!
Liquid IV!
Listen, festival season's coming up for you young bucks.
After days of booze in the desert, stinky feet and weirdos breathing on you,
you're going to need to refuel.
Liquid IV has your covered.
Just one stick and you're going to get five essential vitamins
and it hydrates you quicker than water alone.
Two times faster than water alone.
It even has three times the electrical lights
of traditional sports drinks
and it comes in 12 delicious flavors
like seaberry.
Oh my God, strawberry lemonade, tremendous.
Pinya calada fucking blow your wig off
and you know me, Concord Grape.
I'm still slinging dick like Uncle Joey.
That's my person.
No favor.
There's the Concord grape and the fucking cherry and the tropical punch.
Oh my God.
Liquid IV has five essential vitamins.
You need to fuel you best.
B3, B5, B6, B12, and vitamin C.
It's also non-GMO, non-glutin, dairy, and soy-free.
So do me a favor.
You could grab your liquid IV in bulk of nationwide at Costco, or guess what?
You get 20% off when you hang out with your uncle Joey.
So go to Liquidiv.com.
Use code Joey at checkout, J-O-E-Y.
That's 20% off anything you order when you shop better hydration today.
Using promo code Joey at liquid ivy.
All right, I got liquid IV and I got a whatever the fuck.
It's time to sling some dick.
Let's get this podcast started.
What's happening, you beautiful savages?
It's Monday the 17th of April.
Unbelievable.
We got a great week coming up.
We got 420 the celebration of fucking potheads.
So Thursday we're walking around like fucking dawn of the dead or gack the fuck up,
paying $100 per joint in New York City.
But it's good.
It's fun.
Hopefully we'll have some great weather.
And that's it.
We got a whole new week with a whole new fucking set of rules.
It's a Monday motivation.
This Monday, ready for this?
We got a fucking guess.
The author of Tremendous Miss Erica.
Mother fucking Florentine.
Thank you for coming on.
Thank you so much for having me.
I'm so excited.
I'm happy that you're here and stuff.
I want to just ask you some questions to get people.
We wrote a book together.
I talked.
She wrote it and put it together.
She's the real mastermind behind the book.
We released it May 2nd.
You know, we've been working on it for two fucking years before I met you.
I was making notes for 10 years, didn't know what to do.
And it was just the perfect collaboration.
You know, it's funny just to let you know.
This was a very hard book to write
because it just wasn't one element.
There was so many elements of this book.
Just to let you guys know about L.A.,
how I tell people that they don't know dick about dick.
I was stuck for years trying to write this book.
And there's a lady who advertises huge, huge,
in the writing community in L.A.
Like, she spends tons of money on advertising.
her goal is to help me finish writing your book
she charges you this much
and it's very reasonable
I finally contacted her
like about a year before I came here
I was stuck and she was mutual friends
with an acting coach
Ivana Chubbick that had a lot of programs
working through her school
so I contacted her a metaphor lunch
she showed up like with fucking three assistants
you know
I mean it was guys
it was one to hold coffee
the other one to hold a dog
and the other one to hold the phone
and listen
I wish I was exaggerating
I wish I was fucking lying
to you people
it was like sit with her
and meanwhile she had to be tipping the scales
at 400
she had like a donut
a crumb bun and a fucking
Starbucks that looked like
a fucking tub of ice cream
and three assistants
and she was talking
to me and then going, hold on, send Johnny a text.
Send Johnny Depp a text.
I'll meet him for lunch on Thursday.
And then, Amelia, watch him with Fifi, you know.
The coffee, I don't understand.
Put some more.
It was fucking, I thought I was getting put on.
Like, I thought, and it was like 500 for the fucking consultation.
Like, just to meet where it was 500 bucks for this fucking, you know, limo.
And you're like, what the fuck?
and she read, I spoke to her,
she called me a week later,
she goes,
after much discussion with my colleagues,
you either have to pick this,
you have to pick a subject here.
We cannot do the criminality
and the comedy and the cocaine,
the kidnapping, it would not work, you know,
and I was like, okay, thank you for your time.
And then she tried to get me an earbeat.
Like, you know, if you wanted to work,
I'd have to refer you to myself.
It would have to be like a three-woman project,
and I would need nine assistants, you know, wanted to sharpen my pencil.
I mean, it was fucking comical.
I still see this lady putting ads up.
I'm telling you this because I want you to really understand what you did.
I still see this lady putting ads up.
I still get emails from her.
Come to my workshop, how to write a book in three days, you know what I'm saying?
It's a scam.
It's a fucking, that's just to let you know.
I went through, you know,
I was first I signed with an agent out of New York.
And it was, you're not even going to believe this shit, guys.
Because we don't, you know, it's like I tell Mike some stories sometimes.
Like, how come I didn't know that?
Because Mike, I was going through so much at the time.
I never had time to tell people how hard it was to put this book together.
First I had a guy that was a consultant.
He, oh, he was, this guy didn't even write with a pet, and he still had a feather.
You know, he wrote the doctor.
This guy wrote everything.
He wrote the Declaration of Independence.
He wrote every.
I mean, if you listen to him, you know,
he helped this guy with the script, you know.
It was a fucking nightmare.
Nobody, he would tell me nobody wants to hear about the criminality.
Nobody wants to hear about the cocaine.
I mean, it was fucking sad.
I had that guy, and he would rewrite all my shit
and send it back to me,
and it sounded like my book was getting written by Robin Hood.
Like, I went to the Valley of the Darkness in.
There's no darkness in Jersey, motherfucker.
You guys just have no idea.
This went on and on.
Then I got a book agent that was going to put me with two writers.
Those two writers were God awful.
One guy showed up with flip-flops, and he was picking his toes
while he was talking to me on 43rd Street and 8th one time at a coffee shop,
picking his toes with the fucking pen.
Okay?
I don't know.
And he was like sniffing it, and then he'd go deep on his toes.
Even I don't do that shit in public.
In public, I do it in private.
He's got a special pen to.
No, no.
So then I have a comedy showcase.
And he goes, I want to bring the book office to the comedy showcase at the stand.
This is the old stand.
Erica, he comes in looking like you did today, beautiful.
And within minutes, he looks like Uncle Dan.
He's disheveled.
He's got two beers and things.
He's talking about the next cover.
I'm like, what are you talking?
talking about. The next thing you know, I try to get him out of the comedy club. And he goes,
let's go next door to a bar. I know these people. He goes next door. He asked the bartender for a drink.
You can tell him he annoyed the people there. The bartender just turned his head and went the other way.
You know what this motherfucker did? He went behind the bar and started making his own cocktail.
A fight broke out in this bar. And here I am. By the stand, I have no idea where I am. And there's a fight in
this fucking bar because the guy
I walked in there with decided
to go behind the bar and make his own fucking
drink. Then they called the stand
and they said shit about me which
even the people were like he didn't do anything.
I wasn't even drinking. I don't even drink.
That was what I went through.
It was constant.
It was constant. Then I had people
who would just contact me.
Like the podcast, I'm a writer
and I live in San Diego. I had a girl who was
committed. I'm doing this. Disappeared.
Crazy.
Disappeared.
Then I had another girl who was, oh, what's the big school they all go to in L.A.
CSU?
What is it?
USC.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
USC.
I was a valedictorian, you know.
Yeah.
I created the Kardashians.
Oh, my God.
She wanted me to write the book, but doing one-man shows.
So every week I would have to go on stage at the fucking, at the something thing.
right next to a weed store.
I still get emails from this loser theater.
They do like Halloween shows all year round.
The guy's like a ghoul fest.
Like he's into ghouls and shit.
I'm sorry I'm fucking taken from your time, Erica.
But I just wanted to show you how valuable you were to me.
I appreciate that.
I mean, I think the thing is a lot of people say that they're writers.
And a lot of people, unfortunately, are not.
writers. Now, I'm not saying I'm the best in the world, right? Everyone has lots of things to learn
still, but I have come across so many people who tell me they're an expert writer and they've
done all these sorts of things and then you have them do a two-pager to give you a sense of what
their style is and it's not writing. I think it's, you know what it is? It's like, I would say right around
the time I was graduating college, probably like 2009.
timeframe, blogs became so big.
So anyone with a keyboard could be a writer, right?
And if you had some sort of degree that could match with it, you didn't necessarily
have to have a journalism degree.
You can have some sort of communications degree in general or maybe even not.
And you can just market yourself as a writer.
And, you know, it's also funny, too.
I'm thinking of all these people who claim that they can write these books.
I've seen.
So now I've been ghost.
writing books for a few years. And if you do a Google search, people will say, oh, I'll write your book for
$500. How are you going to write somebody's book for $500? That's not a quality piece of work that you're
going to get for that. But yeah, they just market themselves that way and then upsell you on things
that have nothing to do with writing. It's a whole thing. At the end of the day, I always think if
someone's trying, especially to pull a memoir together, their important life stories, you have to
to work with somebody who is on the same train of thought as you,
who's not going to guide you away from,
don't tell your criminal stories.
Those are part of your story.
You know, somebody telling you not to tell that is silly.
They don't know your audience.
Your people love your criminal story.
I mean, come on.
And also, I've shared bits and pieces just within my close circle,
people that aren't familiar with some of your criminal stories
or other things in your past that have read it.
And they're like, I cannot wait to read the rest of how this is going to play out.
I told some of my friends, I'm like, you know, there's one chapter that's called The Kidnapping.
And they're like, what do you mean?
We can't wait to see what the kidnapping is about.
You know, like, people are living for this.
And, you know, anyone who would guide you away from telling important stories are just silly.
I don't know.
I mean, I just, I was now like, look, right now I live conflicted because
I have all this comedy knowledge, you know,
and I love to sit with people and help them.
But the problem is you have, I have to decipher,
and it's very hard to tell somebody this.
And it's very hard to charge somebody money for this.
When you pass on this type of stuff,
you're doing it as a labor of love.
And there's too much of that in LA,
that people are inexperienced.
There's too much of that in New York.
There's too much of that anywhere.
Where people are inexperienced and they teach workshops.
or something like that.
Yeah.
And it frustrates you as,
because the most frustrating thing is to want help.
You don't want somebody to do it from me.
Eric, I don't want somebody to do it for me.
I just need guidance and help.
And you're not going to find that a lot of time.
You're not going to find quality guidance.
And I know from stand-up,
with stand-up, I went through 20 agents.
And then I realized, guess who the best agent was of me?
So I would hustle roles, you know, based on Pete, what do you go?
Oh, Joe, I went for this audition.
They're looking for you at this audition.
I would even tell my agent.
I would just do it on my own, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
Because it's a waste of time.
But what I'm trying to get to is it's so weird when people are looking to do something.
The quickest path is to just do it themselves until, and that opens up those doors.
I enjoyed the blogging.
When the blogging first came out, that opened my, that was the first door.
I had on MySpace.
I would do the Monday morning blog
way before podcast came up.
You got to find them.
The first five of them were
God awful.
Because I had never written.
The only thing I had to ever written was
I'm driving down the road and all of a sudden I think about a joke
and you write out a piece of napkin.
Like key words and the jokes, you remember it.
But I hadn't written longhand, you know,
like the whole thing.
Oh my God, I remember like two of them going.
And people were like Joey.
You got to go back to school.
Your pronunciation, you're not stopping.
Too many commas.
It was God awful.
It's a process.
You're just not going to get up off the boat and fucking write.
And I realized, honest to God,
whatever advance they gave us for this book,
I already spent mine.
I already gave it to Jean Perret and all those other writers
that wrote how to write books.
I would spend my,
I gave Samuel French $60,000, easy over the years,
with comedy books.
and comedy writing books and how to write and how to write comedy.
And the thing is, if you're going to write a book and try to sell it,
at least I would write the book, I would buy the book, $25,
read two chapters, but I would miss what they were saying.
To write, you have to write every day.
That's it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's it.
You're not going to learn how to write.
It's like jujitsu.
You can watch all the instructional videos you want.
Eventually, you're going to have to get on your back and start fucking rest.
motherfuckers. And it's the same thing with writing. And I didn't know. I would write
comedy thinking, I'm doing what Jean Perrette told me, all these other great writers. If you're
not writing, writing is the, you don't even need a book. You don't even need to buy Jean Perra's
book or Erica Florentine's book on how to write. You don't need to. If you write every day,
if you get a fucking notebook and just go, I'm going to write a page every goddamn day. In five
years, you'll become a great writer. It's all pointed at you. I fully agree with you. I
always say when people come to me and say, you know, I really want to learn how to write on my own.
And I want you to give me the guidance, but I don't want you to actually do the content for me.
Just help give me any advice you have.
And I always start with that, just write.
Just even if it makes no sense, just put pen to paper or type it or whatever you want to do with
it.
Just write and write and write and do it every single day.
And I'll be honest, I still, I've been writing my entire career and I still take very,
writers workshops. I'm doing one currently. I just, because it's helpful to continue to write every single
day and then also get people's feedback. Like, I'm always doing those sorts of things unrelated to my
projects because it helps. It's the only way that you're going to be able to start making any sort of
progress. But I agree there's tons and tons of information out there, how to be a writer.
You'll spend a million dollars in books. How to
be a comic, how to be musician,
how to be a guitarist, how to draw.
Yeah.
You'll drop millions of dollars
buying and searching for the answer.
Now there's online courses that people are saying.
Yes, yes.
Hard, like hot cakes.
Like what?
Like hotcakes, they're just going.
Really?
How to draw, how to act,
whatever.
Now, when I was a kid, you joined the fucking
drawing contest, remember? You drew a picture
of a parrot. And if you won,
you won $5,00.
and no, you didn't win any money.
They sent you $500 and Etzels and...
All the difference.
Yeah, I clearly.
Trust me, I drew that parrot a few times.
That's why I became a comic, you know what I'm saying?
It's great.
I love learning.
I love reading about somebody.
Like, I always love fucking the Spielberg book on writing.
You know, I think that's just to hear the Carrie story.
I was like, yeah, that all those books, and I would get jealous.
I would buy those books, read them, and then fuck you, Stephen King.
You know, you motherfucker.
And it's just, it's writing, you know, what college did you go to for writing?
I went to University of Delaware.
So I, yeah, and I actually wanted to be a New York Times journalist.
I wanted to write for the New York Times.
So I was, I mean, on the path.
That's what I really wanted to do.
And it's funny because no matter how hard you think,
you're learning and excelling and how hard the courses are and you think you're growing.
My first job at a local newspaper took me a year to be like, I can't even do local.
I could never do New York Times.
I never thought about the fact that I'd have to actually ask people very difficult questions.
And I don't have the personality to do that.
So things like, I mean, I should have thought about this in college when I'm so adamant
on this New York Times career path that, you know, let's say somebody passed away in the community,
tragically, a teenager.
They would send me to the parents' house to knock on the front door and get a quote from the
parents a day after the child died.
And I am just my personality.
I'm just not cut out for that.
There's certain things that I can do, but that was just a no for me.
So I worked at that newspaper for a year, and at the year mark, I would,
come home crying and I'm like I had to go stalk the brother of this girl who just died
who did not want to speak with me and I get it now looking back I'm like of course that's part
of being a reporter but I knew a year in I'm like if I can't do this there's no way I have no
shot at the New York Times literally no shot yeah I just have no shot unless they're having me
right you know feature features on something yeah so then I was like oh maybe I'll
for magazines and at the time magazines we're starting to fold too i mean they have some great
online magazines now but it's just not the same as it used to be so it's so funny it's so funny
that you were saying that about uh i fucking forgot i got to stop smoking pot in the morning but it's
weird how you think you want to do something this is why we were just having this conversation
last night with some parents.
This gentleman was telling me how
he's really fearful about
his daughter going. You know, their kid's a little older.
And he goes, Joey, my biggest fear is college.
How am I going to do this?
Four years. I got two kids, and they're
two years apart. I'm going to salesmen
and all this shit.
And we were talking about the, do you really
need college anymore?
Do you really need college? And I've
always stuck to my thing.
I tried to take classes at Glassburg.
You know, for money, and I quit.
I just couldn't cut it.
And then on my own pace, I found myself back to Colorado Mountain College
and I was doing okay again.
And that's because I took that year off.
I really took that year off.
And I still believe it's such a hard sell.
It's a hard sell.
I'm going to have to have a hard sell with mercy.
But my proposal is, here's the deal, Merce.
You're not going to go to college after high school.
You're going to take a year off.
I want you used to get a retail job.
I don't give a fuck what it is.
Make up, books at Barnes & Noble, cars, it doesn't matter.
Something where you have to deal with the public for one year, one year.
In that year, I'll pay your car payment, I'll pay your rent, your meals, whatever you earn, it's all yours.
One year.
Just give me that one.
Save or whatever.
Save, save or don't save.
Yeah.
I'm not even looking for that.
I'm looking for you.
to realize with Erica,
realized
Erica grew up,
I can't wait to be
in New York Times right
and there's nothing wrong
with that goal
but you didn't really plan it out.
Nobody does.
We're fucking 16.
Who the fuck are you
to put on my lap
when I'm 18?
That I have to pick
my career decision for life.
Yeah.
And this is the other mistake we make
also that we look at this
and with our children
a lot of use are too young for that
and go,
this is going to be a hard sale for me.
This is a hard sale for anybody.
How can I think?
that ball up.
You know, your cousin, I don't go to college when you, I'm going to take care.
You see, you're like, thinking, oh, I want to be with my friend, Dad.
You know, I want to go to college.
They're going to University of Delaware.
We're all the same fraternity.
But I know, for a fact, if she takes that year off,
and just deals with people, gets to know that people are liars,
people come in and go, oh, Erica, I'm definitely going to buy that car.
I'll be back at three.
And I'm all of a sudden, you're outside drinking coffee,
and you see them pulling out of a Volkswagen lot.
People are you, fuck you.
You're like, what happened?
People are liars.
People are fucking liars.
Oh, they ran into a salesman.
You follow me?
Or they ran into a salesman.
You thought you were being a salesman by being very nice.
And I realized that I can never be a journalist with this podcast.
When we used to do a lot more guests on the church, there's one guest I'm thinking about in particular.
He came on and there was some friction in his life.
I'm not the type of person to go.
By the way, talking.
talked me about this situation
to turn this into
because I always wanted a podcast
I'm not doing 60 minutes
Yeah
You follow me
That's where you use that type of line
People already know that
But not really
Because when I did that podcast
People hit me up for weeks ago
We didn't like that
You didn't bring that topic up with them
And I was like a podcast
For me is a happy place
Yeah
I don't want a podcast to argue with people
I don't want this to start arguments
With other podcasts
That's not what I do this
I don't know where this
There's enough of that going on
There's enough of that shit going on.
I just want to crack jokes and smoke dope and see a friend, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
But I always thought that that was brutal about me having to go, like, dig a little deeper in.
Yeah.
Like confront people.
I could do it on the street.
That's how I am, too, though.
I can do it on the street.
I am like, not on a podcast.
I don't want to create that moment of, you know what I'm saying, unless you tell me before the podcast, bring it up because I want to talk about that.
Yeah.
That's how they want to.
I always think, yeah, I just, my personality outside of work is very, I'll ask people questions.
I'm very strong personality.
But when it came to doing things like that, I just couldn't do it.
But it's funny how you're saying you wanted to do the positive end of the conversation.
And that's why I ended up switching into public relations and internal communications, because it was all writing.
but it was the positive end of it.
So if you're looking at an issue,
PR's the entire purpose
is to figure out what's the good about this situation
and let everybody know versus
somebody just died.
Let's go to ask their family about it
or looking into the more negative aspects.
I just felt better about
what the work I was doing
and it's, I mean, it was sad.
I used to go into New York City
and take pictures in front of New York Times.
Just, you know.
I bring my friends, like, we had to walk in front of the New York Times and we'd have our little cameras and take pictures and it's embarrassing, you know, but that was my dream.
And then it just took one year to realize I'm never going to be able to do that.
It's really crazy while we're on the topic, what the business of news is.
Yeah, yeah, people want to hear about, you know, oh my God, Michael Klein is getting married to Cynthia.
The Philadelphia Clines, you know, that's great.
You know, how many newspapers will that sell?
The people will get married, their families want to buy the newspaper.
You know, I think about Don Henley's song, Dirty Laundry, when you were saying that,
get the widow on the set, we need dirty laundry, you know.
You know, what is the news?
What has the news become and what is the fucking news?
It's somewhere that we go to get information and what's going on,
but you really think about it, the news has become...
They're telling you what you want...
So, 247 and WPIX.
What's the first 15 minutes of the news?
A kid burnt to death in Harlem.
A baby died, the house fire.
Three people have been displaced by a fire.
It's all bad fucking news.
So you look at the news and go,
what the fuck is this, right?
And then we have the pay channels,
like your CNNs and your Fox and all those,
and I'm not politically inclined.
But I know that each one represents a different that Democrats over there.
Don Lemon's a fucking hypocrite.
He's a liberal.
He's this.
And they're all doing the same thing.
Bashing Trump.
Right?
To get the most viewers.
Like it's just really crazy what the business of the news is.
And how either you're a news person.
To me, I don't want to wake up to the news.
No.
Ever again.
Ever again.
Ever again.
Yeah.
As I'm eating my series.
my captain crunch
or whatever the fuck makes me happy
what's the cereal
that's pop in the morning
and you listen
like an idiot
and you listen
I don't want to hear
about the three kids
that burnt the death
at 7 in the morning
before I have to leave
my fucking house
so that's why
I don't watch the news
right
but look at what the news
has become
like and sometimes you watch
you ever be in a dentist office
and you're like
come back in two minutes
we're going to show you
a spring cassero
and you're like
you know what
I'm at the
dentist office right now and even if I was home I wouldn't want to see a spring cassero on the
news but then you're like wait a second if they're going to told me a spring cassero and the three black
kids that burnt the dent in the Bronx yeah I'd rather get the spring cassero yeah I'd rather get the
spring cassero so true yeah I used to because I was so I mean I even went to a high school for communications
because I was already convinced then that I wanted to be a reporter um and I would have newspapers
subscriptions and I would read the news. I mean, this is so nerdy, but I really did it. I would read the news.
I was so obsessed with knowing what was going on all the time. Currently, I mean, I have what could
be described sometimes as crippling anxiety. That's the last thing I need to see. To your point in
the morning, I don't need to set my day into anxiety written that I'm going to, I don't know,
going to get shot in my supermarket. Like, I don't want to have to think about that. It's not that I
block it all out, but I really limit my news consumption to, and I try to keep it to just celebrity
stuff. It's fun. I don't have to get stressed about it.
Even the celebrity stuff. Yeah. I look at it like, oh, what's the, I don't know, if I want to hear
news about something, I want to hear news about the world, happy stuff. You know, I used to make fun of that,
you know, eyewitness, what's the one that we watch at 630, but all the older people watch?
I was just, no, no, no, ABC World News Report.
Oh, yes, I used to watch that too.
Yeah, I used to watch that, too.
The pandemic destroyed me.
That destroyed me.
And I used to always make fun of it and go,
I got to wait until the last 15 seconds where they show you the blind kid that plays Beethoven
to make you happy.
Here's this blind kid playing Beethoven.
And you're like, oh, my God.
You're like, okay, we're back.
But it's true.
They give, so after you just tortured me for 28 minutes,
of bad news, how we're going to get the worst no report this year,
the stock market's going to go down, interest rates are going up,
now you're going to go, oh, now we're going to show you a happy story from Iowa.
Yeah.
A kid with one eye who plays ping pong, and then, you know,
Yeah, a one eye is shit.
It's just fucking crazy, man.
So when, after the newspaper stuff, what was your next move?
Yeah, so then I,
Like I said, I was like, you know what?
Public relations is the total opposite of what I was currently doing.
So I started looking into it and I got a really lucky to get a fellowship with Johnson and Johnson and Rutgers.
And Johnson and Johnson brought me into their communications team and I was doing PR and comms.
And I was just writing all day.
And it was the best.
So I was like, all right, here we go.
Here's a career that I can, you know, be into.
It's good stuff every day.
It's fun.
I still get to interview people.
but it's not, I'm not looking for negative answers.
I'm actually looking for what's going on that's great in their life.
And from there, I did that for quite a while.
I've worked in different PR agencies in the city, and it was awesome.
I really loved it.
Just at a certain point, corporate America, after 10 years of it, I was just not loving it anymore.
That's a complete different situation, especially when you're right.
Hold on one second.
I'm going to break the commercial break.
and then we'll come back and we'll finish this up.
And now for a word from our sponsors,
Coxuckers.
Thank you for taking a minute from the joint.
Listen, Uncle Joey's joint is brought to you by Draft Kings today.
It's NBA playoff time.
Get it on the big hoop action with Draft King Sportsbook,
an official sports betting partner of the NBA.
New customers, you're going to place a $5 pregame money line bet,
and if you score, you're going to get 150 and bonus bets
when your team win.
Who's better than you?
Nobody.
Plus, everyone could score with the no sweat, no game parlay every day during the NBA playoffs.
Just open the Draft King Sportsbook app, opt in, and place the same game parlay on any NBA game for $10.
If it doesn't hit, you'll get a bonus bet back up to $10.
So do me a favor.
It starts with you.
It's NBA.
We got UFC and we got Major League Baseball.
Download the sportsbook app today.
Sign up with Code Joey, new customers.
You're going to get, just put $5 on a pregame money line bet.
And if you score, you get 150 in bonus bets.
Who's better than you?
Draft Kings.
Do me a favor.
If you got a gambling problem, call 1-800 gambler.
In Massachusetts, call 1-800-3-27-50-50.
In New York, call 8778.
Hope, New York.
Eligibility restrictions apply.
See Draft King slash Sportsbook for details and state specific responsible gambling resources.
Thank you for all that.
The bottom line is download the Draft King Sportsbook app.
Bet $5 on a money line bet and get 150 in bonus bets when your team wins.
Stay black.
Code Joey.
We're back, bitches.
Anyway, now back to now back to the.
thing people want to hear.
And it's very interesting how we got together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's funny because, like I said to you, I was struggling a lot with the book.
I have a great book agent.
His name is Gordon.
And the thing I liked about him the most was his patience.
Yeah.
You know, he was very patient with me.
Anybody else that I had spoken to about writing a book, they were always very go-go.
He just kept telling me, just write a sentence a week.
Right a sentence a week.
and I felt like I was,
this relationship isn't going nowhere.
You know, when you have an agent
for theatrical,
you know, you have to go on an audition.
When you have an agent for comedy,
you have to go do these things.
With this book, I didn't know,
I didn't even know what to start.
I'm not a writer.
So I didn't know.
You know, I had aspirations of things I think I could do.
I can write for a magazine.
Get sports illustrated on the phone.
You know, you're an idiot.
So when I moved here, I was frustrated.
you know, with the book, I kept putting it away.
I think the last girl I was working with,
that's the one that lived in San Diego
and would come up on Thursdays or something.
And I kept telling, I go, listen,
let's just do this for like a week straight,
so you don't have to keep coming up.
Because you're not going to lie to me, Doug.
It's rough driving.
It's rough driving when there's no money.
I would give money for gas and stuff,
and I try to be, you know, taking a lunch when she'd come up.
But after like six weeks, she just stopped.
I stopped hearing from her.
if you changed the numbers.
She would come to the house
and hang out with me and Mercy
and it just went out the window one day.
And she kept everything she worked out.
I think she sent it to Terry or something.
She goes, I got a movie or something.
That was it.
And nobody wanted to go to full distance.
You know, everybody could do it,
but once they saw the meat and potatoes,
they couldn't go to full distance.
Two years later, I moved to New Jersey,
and I'm in a family reunion
with the Florentine crime family
who has many different weapons,
like I've told you guys for years, they have different weapons.
And one of the weapons is they have a writer.
That's a niece, and we started talking.
And at first I'm like, she's too sweet for me to tell all these stories.
This is not going to fucking work.
She comes from great stock on mom and dad or sweetheart.
I mean, this might not work.
But I was like, wait a second.
Our fucking uncles are crazy.
And then Uncle Jim told the story on this podcast about the wrestler,
the wrestling photographer
that grandpa was friends with
and they brought him over
and he tried to molest Jimmy in the middle of the night
Jimmy woke up in the middle of night
and his fly was open
the guy said hold on I'll make it better
I got these restaurant pictures
you can have them for free
and Jimmy's like okay
but Jimmy told his uncle Bob
and Joe your dad
and they went and beat the wrestler up
and they dropped them off
on the way up the nine
that bus station right there
he goes he still remembers them
with the fucking newspaper
from the box where you take the corner.
And I'm like, if she could listen to that story,
she could hear some of my stories.
We're okay here.
So it was like we started talking.
And I tell you, the thing I remember the most is coming back from surgery
and being, fucking going to PT,
and they'd be twisting my knee and shit.
And finally the guy would say to me,
I don't know, are you taking pain medication before you come here?
And I'm like, no.
And he's like, you should.
should with twisting your neck.
No wonder you're fucking yelling and screaming.
So I would take the pain pill before I went to the PT,
and then I would come here half hour later,
and hour and a half later, and I'd be fucked up.
Fucked up on those oxycodons, whatever the fuck they give you.
And I remember being on the phone with her,
and between my gum being swollen and the pills, I couldn't speak.
I'd be like fucking slurring.
I'm like, how's this girl?
Catching all this fucking info.
No.
Yeah, I would record them and I would take notes and then transcribe them as kind of my process when I'm doing books with people.
And I never even noticed, you know?
Like, I didn't even know that was going on.
And at the same time, which I'm always so grateful for this book in particular.
And I've told you this because when we started working on this, I was going through a really,
difficult time personally.
And I just needed something funny and positive as a project.
And it came at the exact right time.
I think it was like a month into me going through a pretty bad time.
You had called me.
And I, well, first of all, I was freaking out because I mean, so many people are fans of
yours, obviously.
And I have so many friends who are obsessed with you.
And they cannot believe it.
I was playing your voicemail when you called to ask if I would write the book.
to my friends, everyone was screaming.
So we were all super pumped, obviously I was too, but every day, even if I was having a really,
really bad day, I knew you and I would talk and we would talk about some funny story from
your childhood.
We would laugh our asses off.
I do remember that.
And I would just, it would change my day around because it's different, right?
Like if I'm writing a book for so many and it's about financial planning, let's say,
you know, going through a tough time personally and writing a financial planning book,
there's no change in mood, right?
I'm just writing their book, still feeling kind of cranky.
But with yours, it was like not only what I get to hear the story and crack up,
then I would play it again because we had it record it and I would go through the transcripts
and I'm writing and still laughing.
It just brought me a really good sense of joy in a time that I really needed it.
And for me, the process was, first off, I was withdrawing on the Xanax.
So my body was not well.
My anxiety level was not well.
I couldn't focus.
It was like a beginning of depression.
I couldn't make eye contact.
You know, I still tell people, I remember my best friend in the world coming here.
And I went to eat lunch and I couldn't wait for him to leave.
Like, you got to go.
Yeah.
I can't do this.
I can't make eye contact.
I don't want to hear what you're saying.
Ari.
Ari, one of my brothers.
I just couldn't have them around.
I was like, when Mike would come up,
we just did the podcast.
Mike, you got to go.
Like, I just could not.
So I still remember,
and I don't want to admit this in public,
but I have to,
because I like to tell all my fucking dirty secrets.
There were days where, you know,
until two weeks ago when I did the audio book,
I didn't know what the first couple chapters were about.
I was so done with anxiety.
I would get off the phone and go,
what did I just tell Erica?
I hope I told us something pretty fucking good.
Between the pain pills and what I was going through and the weed
and there was something I didn't know.
But my process for the book was I would sit here for two or three nights
and just made notes and then put them all together.
And it was good for me at the time from what I was going through.
It was scaring me too because this all happened in Jersey.
So I'm like, holy fuck, I forgot about this.
What if these people come looking for me now?
I'm a Marlborough.
So I still remember going out at night and smoking pot and going,
am I going to get fucking shot when I'm out of here?
Is there going to be somebody out there?
Like, that's how insane the stories were, the Gabby story.
And then it started, but we always,
then it got to a point where we were telling stories with a huge payoff at the end.
Like a laughing or like we couldn't believe it happened or something.
And that was overwhelming.
That was really overwhelming to go, wow, that story here for years,
I thought that was a shitty story.
But look how it ended.
The ending makes up for what happened.
So it was a fucking great process for me for what I was going through.
Yeah.
It was making me remember, you know, it was making me,
it was holding me accountable for the first time.
And I had nothing going on.
I wasn't doing stand-up.
I told Vinnie's at Dino's and Uncle Vinny's,
I can't even focus on stand-up.
Let me just do this fucking book.
So it was like, it was perfect for us.
It was like two people meeting at the same time.
I didn't realize that until I actually read the book
until I did the audio book.
Yeah.
I didn't remember what I said on that book.
I had no fucking idea.
It was two years ago.
It was a long time ago.
Yeah.
So for a year and a half, I've been excited about the book.
Like, we were saying, no, we wrote the book.
Now we got away because, yeah, we handled it in.
A long time ago.
We handed the book in January of 2022.
Yep.
So like March last year, I was already like,
I might as well get a copy of that book
because I really don't know what I was saying on that.
You know, I don't know if we went off the deep end,
if I told like crazier stories.
And when I got the audio version, I was like, okay.
Yeah.
This is everything I wanted to be in here.
I got to be honest to you.
It's got everything I wanted.
There's a few stories that I think we cut out because they're already on YouTube or something like that.
Yeah.
But it's got everything in there.
Yeah.
And there were a couple of things, I think, through the editing process with the editor that they said maybe don't include this part.
I know there were some legal things.
Right.
Stuff like that.
But I agree.
I think any story.
Gabby is a great example.
Any story that you're like, oh, you know, that was kind of going bad.
It closes up, nice.
It's kind of, yeah, we'll say, we'll say.
No, well, the Gabby story ended up with him threatened to kill me next time he saw him.
Yeah, and then you're out.
And then I'm out.
And then I never saw him again.
And then maybe seven years ago, my ex-family doctor called me.
We were talking, and he goes, I bumped into your godfather.
And now it's like,
Like, how did it really end?
You know, he's dead.
And I miss him lately.
Like, I went to the movies with my daughter Monday
because there was no school last week.
And while we were at the movies,
because we used to take me to the movies all the time.
Yeah.
I was telling him, like, oh, you know, I took her to see air.
And that's kind of an adult movie, you know, for a child.
Yeah.
And in the middle of the movie, she was like, Dad.
Was Michael Jordanette?
Yeah.
You know, Michael Jordan's not going to shoot.
Why have we come here for, you know what I'm saying?
And I was like, you know, Mercy, it's a story about air or whatever.
But on the way home, I said to her, when I was your age, I had somebody who took me to the movies.
And I remember how powerful it was for me.
You know, so Gabby lives in my heart still today.
And I told about Gabby.
I would pick me up.
I didn't tell him about the briefer and the fucking guns and the best was when he took me to see a live sex show.
Oh, I didn't even know that.
He knew, like, he knew like three Spanish chicks.
How funny.
We went to an apartment.
It wasn't like at a club.
It was like an apartment in Manhattan,
and a nice apartment.
In Midtown Manhattan,
I walked in as three chicks eating each other out in 60-90.
And he's smoking pop giggling,
and I'm like six playing with my G.
Fucking.
It was so fucking awkward for you.
Awkling?
My whole life was awkward at that age.
You know,
you didn't even learn how to focus like a mother.
Dog, I don't want to see that shit.
people eating each other out.
I didn't even know what she was eating.
I'm like, what she is looking at it for?
What is that?
It's not good.
And that was the other thing that you can handle a lot of those stories
because that I also found was very rough on people.
When you have to tell the honest, like,
I wasn't trying to make myself good in this story, in this book.
Yeah.
I never been trying to, I never tried to listen to kidnapping.
You can't ever make good.
It's funny.
We giggle about it.
You know, last night somebody sent me a Club Nouveau album.
Club Nouveau is this band.
It's TimeX.
Look at all these rumors.
Oh, yeah.
Take it no more.
It was like the early TimeX whatever club.
Yeah.
Club Nouveau was an album, a band,
and they had one particular song for The Love of Francis.
And I was dying this morning when I saw the album cover
because it was my impression.
prison, it was Domino
Night music.
Like, you know, like, who can even
say that they went to poker night in prison?
Like, think of that word
and how funny that is.
Like, that song reminds me
of Domino Night in prison.
Like, people are like,
Domino Night. What the fuck is Domino Night?
I went, oh, whoa,
I never even been to a Domino Night
that was on a regular day.
Never mind in prison. I go, Tuesday nights
was Domino Night. Thursday, it was
movie night and Saturday was poker
in the daytime, but they called
it poker night. But who the fuck
goes to Domino night
on Tuesday nights?
And they would be sitting there
doing, there was that song
they only had like three cassettes.
So, you know, it's jail.
It's not like you have DJ Funkin'Willie
up there slamming the 60s
and 70s. They had three songs.
They had Bobby Brown's New Al, which is my
prerogative. And then there's
another song on their
I give you fancy shoes, whatever.
Don't be cruel.
How will be that song.
And they would slam the dominoes to the beat.
Like, hold on, hold on.
Bam!
And they would slam the dominoes to the beat
and then sing to each other.
How will be that cruel to you?
And it was Domino Night, you know?
That would fucking go there and just die with the music.
Who could live their life and say that they went to Domino Night in prison?
Just a couple of guys.
You know, so.
These shits, you just can't tell this to people.
You know, like with the kidnapping, if I look at somebody and go, listen,
I got to tell you something on top of this kidnapping.
That for a minute, after the kidnapping occurred when I was getting out of there,
I took my gun out, and I took two steps,
and I was going to go in there and shoot both people.
I know for a fact, if I'm a female,
and I'm sitting with a gorilla like me,
and some guy says that to me, after he goes, okay, we'll meet up tomorrow.
Sure, we will.
You were going to kill somebody.
You were going to fucking kill somebody.
Now you want me to meet you?
So I had all these issues like going into this.
When is Erica just going to hang up on me?
No.
And you know what?
It's funny because I, it takes a lot for me to be shocked.
And I say that because I started going to Uncle Jim's shows when I was five.
I don't know.
I'm curious.
I want to ask my dad, they used to bring me to all the shows, me and Joey.
and I mean we would just I'll always remember being maybe sixth grade, fifth grade, something like that.
We went to one of the shows and Jim Norton is telling some story about how he pays hookers to come and shit on a table, a glass table above him and he lays underneath it.
And for me as a little kid, like I could not believe this.
But I still, I wasn't even really shocked.
I was just like, I can't wait to tell everybody.
I went back to school and I told all the guys, you know, my classmates, wait until you guys get older.
This is the stinky stuff you guys are going to have to deal with.
I thought maybe every guy is going to like that.
So, you know, we would hear these stories and then I would just go back and tell people at school.
But nothing really ever shocked me.
And it would take a lot for me to hear a story that I would be very offended by.
A lot.
I could tell.
Yeah, a lot.
You can call it.
It would take a lot.
It's just really crazy that I had a hard time.
It took me a hard time to tell these stories.
It took me 30 years to tell, like, I would tell Rogan or somebody, Ralphie Mae,
or a comic I was on the road with.
We'd be telling, I'd tell them a North Bergen story.
But I would always, like, go back to my room, like, I don't know if I should have told them that.
So then when I started saying them on the podcast, the fucking funniest thing,
happened this week. I saw an old thing. You know, like when people get old memories?
Yeah. I never saw this before in my life. A friend of mine hit me a message on Facebook and he goes,
hey man, did you see that kid that reviewed your podcast? I didn't know what that meant. I didn't see it
when he sent me the thing. He just said, did you see it? Later on that afternoon, on Facebook, I saw an
old church thing with me sitting like this and it was from 2014 and it said under it,
Growing up in Seacawks, New Jersey,
people always told me that people from North Bergen
were kind of crazy and to stay out of there.
After listening to three episodes of this podcast,
I will agree that people from North Bergen
are basically fucking animals.
He wrote that.
He wrote that.
And you see a bunch of people with my friends growing up,
tell him to go, fuck himself,
fuck you in Seacorpers, it's a fucking pig farm,
you know.
And it's like,
All those little things always made me ashamed.
Like I was like, oh.
But after I read this book as a whole, I'm like,
no matter what happened in my life,
no matter what happened, prison, whatever,
one thing you can't deny is I got my money's worth.
Yeah.
I got my money's worth.
And that's made me feel,
ever since I read this book and I've looked at it
from that perspective,
it's really changed me in a way.
Like, you know what?
I was feeling really bad about myself for years.
Never mind the comedy.
I still feel bad about the daughter's shit
and losing my parents.
If I told you know, I'd be lying to you.
Yeah.
But that whole thing, after reading that,
it took me like four days to summarize it going,
you know, I got a friend that thinks he's fucking Johnny's successful.
And the truth of the matter is,
He lived in his mother's house where he was 40,
and then one day when he decided to grow up at 42,
he bought a house two doors down from his mother, you know.
And we're tight, I love him to death.
But what a sad life that he never left the block.
I'm not being funny about this.
I'm not trying to be cute.
I just want you to really think about this.
This guy worked hard his whole life and never left the block.
and he had moms and he had a dad
and he had uncles and cousins and nieces and nephews
and here I had none of that
but I had a full fucking life
I got my money's worth
some of it wasn't to be proud of
getting arrested is not to be proud of
but I tell you what's made me happy
chasing James Coburn
with Joe Rogan in the fucking car
on Sunset Boulevard when he was in an
accurate NSX
We saw James Coburn in the light, me and Joe Rogan.
We're like two young kids.
It's 98.
I'm like, Rogan, tell me that's not James Colburn.
You better fucking follow him.
And Rogan's like, I can't drive that fast.
You better stay on him.
And we're chasing this guy.
Who does that?
Who could say they ever chase James Coburn down
because they were that retarded about you?
It's like, you say to me, dog, you're not going to believe this.
When Nirvana came to Philly, I chased Kirk Cobain for an hour in the car.
You're like, who does that?
You had a full life, brother.
People don't even think of doing that.
And that's what it made me realize.
What a shitty way to find out that your life wasn't that bad after all.
And that's why a great friend of mine told me this a great man.
I think everybody should do this.
Write about your life one time.
You're going to be really surprised what you learned.
I'll never forget getting to L.A. and talking to this guy and him going,
first thing you should do is write your life.
everybody right your life
so you can really see
what you didn't do
and what you did do
and you'll put a tag on it
whatever feelings I had
I used to be ashamed about being
mercy's father
that she's going to have to live with
the things I did
and again I'll tell her
someday guess what I did do
I got my money's worth
out of this motherfucker
I got left back
I went to prison
you know I got an ingrown toenail
you know I got my money's worth
motherfuckers you know
So that's the biggest thing, I think, that I've gotten from this book.
And I, you've said this from early on.
It's a redemption story.
Every, even the little stories, I love those little funny things.
Even just you running through the mall with them.
People will see this in the book, but going through the mall with the Bruce Springsteen.
The records.
And throwing them in a cop chasing you.
I mean, there's just like so many funny things.
want to give away too much about that story because it's really good but there's these are just tiny pieces
of the book and to me that would be like the standout thing I did in my life but like that was just one
of your stories and it doesn't like it's not even bad it's just so funny and I think I mean there are
so many laughs in this book so many and you know I by the third part of it the comedy part
really start to see someone who is turned his life around.
Yeah, it's not.
Yeah.
It's everything else. The comedy part isn't funny.
It's not.
Yeah.
It's when you start working.
It's, it's been fucking, it's crazy.
Yeah.
I think the story that got me from the book was,
and I tell this on the podcast, people know that when I smoke crack with the,
when I smoked the angel dust with the pregnant chick.
Yeah.
You know, come on, man.
Every time I think of that story, even today I go, come on, Joe.
Come on, man.
That is fucking crazy.
What do you want to see happen for this book?
I'm really proud of you.
I hope the world opens up for you, Erica.
I really hope that, you know, I think I got another book in me.
Yeah.
Maybe in three months we'll start hashing out.
I would love to do that.
I see a lot of great things happening before you.
You did a really great job on this book.
I'm happy I got to get it out there.
I mean, I'm grateful to you.
Thank you.
Of course.
And I think, I mean, it's just when people do a memoir, it's just a really brave thing to do.
Like, you put your heart and soul into all of this, putting the notes together, working with me, your willingness to share this with so many people because it's a lot.
And, I mean, people, I always think I would love to write my own memoir one day.
I just don't even know.
It takes bravery to really put your stuff out there.
So kudos to you for that.
I would say for me with ghost writing, memoirs are just my thing.
Like I just, I've written self-help books.
I've mentioned I've done a financial planning.
I've done business books.
But memoirs are just what I love to do.
I would ghost write memoirs for the rest of my life.
I find it amazing.
I find it fun.
It's work that I wake up and want to do every day.
So I can't beat it.
I feel like I find it.
finally found a profession that I'm like, this is it.
This is exactly what I want to be doing.
And a lot of people don't get that.
So it's an opportunity to be creative.
A lot of people don't get what they really want to do.
Yeah.
So that's the number one thing.
Scratching the surface to know what,
I take what you said, you grow up thinking, I want to be a cop.
Can't wait.
My mother was a cop.
My father was a cop.
My grandfather was a cop.
Everybody was a cop.
My uncle Tony before he went to prison, he was a cop.
You know, everybody was a fucking country.
And one day you get up and you're like, I wanted to help people, arrest people.
Mm-hmm.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
That's exactly what it is.
I didn't want to help people.
I didn't want to arrest people.
I didn't want to arrest people.
Okay.
You're a cop now.
But it's just maybe you should have been a social worker.
It's nailing down.
And that is so fucking hard.
And I feel the same way.
There's no way I could have done anything else except for stand-up coming.
I don't.
Yeah.
I'm worthless.
I'm like tits on a boar.
But, you know, it's, it's, yeah, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it.
just keep going back to this, but what a perfect time for that book to come into my life and to
your life. We just had those few months that we were initially working on it. It just helped me get
from kind of a dark place to starting to feel like myself again. And I'm very appreciated.
How can people find you? Ericaflorentine.com.
Really?
Yeah. Ericaflorentine.com has some info on some of the writing things that I'm working on now and how to work
with me in the future. Like I said, I'm, I'm really interested in doing more memoirs. That would be,
if I could just go straight memoirs, that would be the most ideal life for me. Fun, happy,
my true calling, I think. So, I'm very proud of you. Thank you. I love you all my heart. I love you.
I can't wait for a little party on Cinco de Mayo. I know. It's going to be so funny. Now you got a
picture to hang. Yes. Sinko de Mayo thing. And hopefully we'll get mic up. If you can make
up on a Friday night.
Huh?
I thought it was the Rudy show.
What is Rudy's show?
I thought it was like that weekend.
Like the eighth, like the seventh or something.
Oh, okay.
This is a Friday night, so I don't think it's a Friday night.
I think there's more of a seven.
Yeah.
I love you.
Thank you again.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Anytime.
This is a fucking my pleasure.
I love you, motherfucker.
It's all my heart.
Thank you for being part of the joint on Monday the 17th.
Have a great and happy 420
And remember I'm telling you this right now
I got a gift for you motherfuckers on 420
It's a surprise
Get ready to rock I love you
And now for a word from my motherfucking sponsors
All right
I want to thank Eric O'Florantine
At Erica Florentine.com
And I want to thank you guys for the support
For always having my back
The join is brought to you by
Listen guys it's 420 week
It's time to smoke
after your fucking toenails turn purple.
Get ready to smoke with the freeze pipe.
The best!
You smoke with no throat burn.
For the coldest, smoothest fucking hit
from a freezable pipe,
bubble or bong with freeze pipe.
The secret is the glycerin chamber.
Pop that baby in the freezer for an hour
and watch as your smoke is cooled by a 300 degrees.
You know me, guys.
I like all their fucking bongs,
but this new tornado, oh my God.
listen, this is your opportunity
to go to freezepipe
the freezepipe.com
for the biggest sale of the year
and I'm not fucking around
and what I'm gonna do is this
either you take the Joey
the Diaz code
at 10% off
or you get your own pipe
with discounts
of up to 40% on select pipes
bubblers, bongs and more
so visit the freezepipe.com
and find your favorite piece
you follow me
use something like you
like I don't know
If you want something that's on sale, you got that.
If you want to use the D.S code to get 10% off your entire order, go there.
But remember, that's the freezepipe.com.
Use code Diaz for 10% off or shop the 420 sale.
And it ends 420.
The joint is also brought to you by Liquid IV.
Listen, festival season's coming.
Filthy people with herpes jumping up and down, stinking of booze and God knows what.
else. If they breathe on your neck
you're going to need to refuel. That's
what liquid IV has your cupboard.
One stick in that desert,
you get five essential vitamins and
two times faster hydration
than water alone when you're thirsty for
more than ecstasy. And MDMA, you're fucking
taken. Even if you
has three times the electrolytes
of traditional sports drinks that comes
in 12 flavors, like strawberry
lemonade, sea berry is
fucking tremendous. And the pinia colada, oh my
God, you think you're hanging out with fucking
Jimmy Buffett.
Anyway, my personal favorite, come on now, is the cherry and the Concord grape is fucking
tremendous.
Liquid IV has five essential vitamins.
B3, B5, B6, B12, and vitamin C.
They got all the Bs covered.
It's also non-GMO and gluten, dairy, and soy free.
Who's better than you?
Liquid IV.
Listen, you get your liquid IV in bulk nationwide at Costco, or you get 20% off when you
go to Liquidiv.com.
Code Joey at checkout.
That's Liquidiv.com.
Use code Joey at checkout.
And that's 20% off anything you order
when you shop better hydration today.
Use promo code Joey at Liquidiv.com.
I want to thank Liquidiv.
I want to thank Draft Kings.
And I want to thank the freeze pipe
on this beautiful, glorious week.
And you motherfuckers have a great week.
Stay black.
And I love you.
I'll see you next Sunday, Monday.
Whatever the fuck.
Tip Top.
Magoo.
