THE ED MYLETT SHOW - Why You’re Never 100% Ready and Why That’s Okay Feat. Jeff Foxworthy
Episode Date: September 30, 2025A Legendary Life of Faith, Family, and Laughter with Jeff Foxworthy (Part 2) What if the very things the world tells you will make you happy—fame, wealth, recognition—turn out to be the biggest... illusions of all? In this powerful continuation of my conversation with Jeff Foxworthy, one of the most successful comedians of all time, we go beyond the laughs to uncover the faith, humility, and life lessons that have shaped the man behind the jokes. In Part 1, Jeff opened up about his childhood, the pain of an absent father, and how comedy became both a calling and a gift from God. In Part 2, we go even deeper. Jeff reveals what it felt like to stand terrified behind the curtain of The Tonight Show moments before Johnny Carson called him to the stage—and how that leap of faith launched his career. He shares stories of living as the “underdog,” being mentored by Chick-fil-A founder Truett Cathy, and why he believes encouragement is one of the most powerful forces in the world. But what struck me most is Jeff’s unwavering commitment to living out his faith. From ministering to the homeless community, to teaching his children and grandchildren that kindness and effort matter more than status, Jeff shows us what it means to use your platform for purpose. This conversation is full of wisdom about letting go of control, trusting God’s plan, and remembering that our true identity is not in what we do, but in who we are as children of God. This is one of those rare interviews that’s both deeply moving and practical. Jeff talks about how to discover and honor the gifts you’ve been given, why you don’t need to be 100% ready to take a leap, and how suffering can become the soil where your greatest impact is born. I promise you—this episode will stay with you long after it ends. Key Takeaways: Why you’ll never feel 100% “ready”—and why you need to jump anyway How childhood wounds can become seeds of compassion and service The secret to storytelling and connection that made Jeff a comedy legend Why encouragement is one of the most underrated superpowers you can give away How to let go, surrender control, and live with unshakable faith This conversation isn’t just about comedy—it’s about courage, calling, and living a life of eternal impact. Don’t miss it. Also don't miss out on MAXOUT2026: Once a year, I open my home for an intimate one-day experience unlike anything else I do. This year, I’m making it even smaller—just 12 to 15 people. Together, we’ll dive deep into the exact strategies I use to plan, visualize, and design the best year of my life—and yours. If you’re ready to Max Out your future, join me at Maxout2026.com for a life-changing day you’ll never forget. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, guys, it's Ed. I rarely do this. As you know, 99.9% of my content is free.
But once a year, I do something where I gather a very small group of people in my house.
I've done it for two years in a row now. And I'm going to do it again this year.
If you go to max out 2026.com, I'm going to do an experience in my home where I'm going to take you through how to make 2026 the best year of your life,
all of the tactics and strategies that I use to plan and organize my.
own life in detail. Same time, all of the mental rehearsal and visualization techniques that
people pay me hundreds and millions of dollars a year to teach them. I will be teaching that day as well.
And the other years I've done it, I've had groups of about 25 or 30. I've decided this year I want
to shrink the size of the group so that I can get more one-on-one time with each of you. I'm
to keep the groups to 12 or 15. It's a chance to spend a day with me in my home, lunch, one-on-one-time
and group time. And it's not cheap. So if it's something you can't afford, please don't get
yourself in any financial trouble or debt doing so. But if it's something you can afford to do,
go to max out 2026.com, and I'm looking forward to having you in my home with me very soon for an
amazing day, a life-changing day. God bless you.
This is The Admiral Show.
All right, welcome back to the show, everybody.
So I got to tell you, I get asked often, you know, you've done 800-some-odd shows, you know,
are there some that stand out that are special?
And you would know if that's true, because someone will,
repeat come on the show only about maybe one percent of the guests we have back on not because
everybody's not incredible but just because if you affect me personally like i can't stop thinking about
the episode when it's done and my guest today is one of those episodes and so i'm so honored that
he's back the show that we did together i really haven't stopped thinking about on and off for a
couple years now and he moved me and i in a way that i didn't think he's obviously one of the
funniest people of all time one of the most successful comedians in the history of that industry
but I'm more interested in who this man is behind the scenes than just a bunch of redneck jokes,
even though they're great jokes.
So he's a man of deep faith.
I really believe he's a good man, very successful man.
You know who he is.
He's got a special on Netflix that I've watched probably three times called The Good Old Days.
But I think you're going to be moved by him today and very interested throughout the entire interview.
So really great for you back, brother.
Jeff Foxworthy, welcome back to the show.
Hey, I'm honored to be one of the 1%.
And I know what you mean, because I do a podcast on Sirius.
And every once in a while, somebody just, like you said, you finish it.
And you're like, whoa, that was different.
That was cool.
It was different for me.
There's so many things I want to ask you about.
And actually what we're going to do is we have re-released the first one and maybe a week or two before this.
so people who have been familiar with it.
But I want to just randomly ask you something.
You had all this success, and I get asked this sometimes.
I'm not as successful anywhere near as successful as you are.
But I do get asked this, and I'm curious with you.
Was it all it was cracked up to be?
I mean, like the financial piece of it, like becoming famous, becoming well-known,
going from, you know, obscurity to fame, wealth, all that kind of stuff that comes
with so many people listening to my show are interested in achieving themselves.
I'm curious if it's what you think.
thought it was and whether it was worth it or not truly. I don't think that I ever thought that
I was going to be famous. Nothing prepares you to be famous. No, I grew up in a little blue-collar
town where it never crossed my mind. I could do something creative and make a living. I knew I was
creative. I knew at a young age, I was funny. I could draw really well. Two times in high school,
I got nominated for the governor's honors program in art, actually.
And it was like a six-week thing during the summer,
but I think you had to pay like 200 bucks to go.
And my dad thought art was sissy,
and he wouldn't shell out the money.
I mean, who knows?
You know, I mean, maybe I ended up being an artist instead of comedian.
But that wasn't an option.
You know, you went to work.
So I don't know that I ever, even when I found it, I remember the first night that I did stand up.
And like a minute and a half in, I thought, this is what I want to do.
This is what I want to do.
And I met my wife that night, which was so bizarre.
So I met my wife and I met my career on the same night, same place.
And she was really the only person when we started dating.
She just kept saying to me, you have all this creative stuff inside.
of you. If you don't do something creative, you're going to explode. You're not made to sit in a
cubicle. And she was the only person saying that. So I quit my job at IBM. My mother's first question
was, are you on the dope? Whatever the dope, whatever the dope was. But you know, Ed,
because I was thinking, could I do this? Could I do this?
and it was almost divine.
So one day I'm sitting in the break room at work, sitting by myself,
and there was a table in there with like three guys in their 60s.
And one guy was talking about it because I always wanted to own a hardware store.
I wish I'd owned a hardware store.
I would have a hardware store.
And one of the other guys was like, yeah, I wish I had done.
And I thought, and of course I'm early 20s, but I thought, oh, my word,
I don't want to be sitting in this break room when I'm sick.
going. I wish I'd tried to be a comedian. So I don't know that I thought it would work,
but I thought, hey, worst case, I could come back with my hat in my hands and say, it didn't work.
But I don't want to be sitting here when I'm 60 going. I wish I had tried it. And actually,
the day I went into telling them I was quitting, they were telling me that they were sending me to
management school. And I'm like, uh, you may want to hold those, those plans because I'm
quitting. I'm, I'm going to go try this. How long between that, by the way, everybody
listening to this, those words should ring in your ears. Because I feel kind of similarly,
like, I'm so blessed that certain things worked out. But what I didn't want to have happened was
being old man, you know, laying in my rock and share wondering. Yes. And that's the way I, I never,
I figured I'd get away with it for a couple of years.
but I'd have a cool story to tell my grandkids,
hey, I was a comic for a few years.
And two years has turned into 42, you know, so.
God is so good, and you're so good.
How long did it take?
Like, the stories are always pretty after the fact.
Yeah, I made this decision.
You know, my wife encouraged me.
And then, and then, Pap, it's Jeff Foxworthy.
But there's, I imagine there's all these nights where there's,
you're riddled with self-doubt, you're broke,
your how long was it between that first time on stage and you're like oh i'm on the other side of
this now and what was that time like for you were you navigating doubt in your mind what was it
what was it all like i quit i bm and 84 at the time i think i was making 32 000 a year
which was good money wore suit and title work uh my first full year of comedy and i know this because
I found, remember the little weekly pocket
calendars?
And I would write in every day
and every show. My first
full year of comedy, I did 406
shows. I made
$8,300
for the year.
My gosh. So I was
making a quarter of
what I made
and I
never remember thinking
I can't do this. I need
to go back.
because I was loving it.
I was writing like a banshee.
I was on the road, but we didn't have kids,
so she would go with me.
She'd go with me.
She'd look at my calendar and she'd go,
you go to Toledo by yourself.
I'll go with you to Honolulu and San Francisco.
I'm like, no, I need you in Toledo, you know.
And I mean, it was a slow climb,
but my whole goal, my goal was to be.
be good enough to be on Johnny Carson. And everybody in the business said it took you 10 years to be
that good. And I'm like, I don't think Johnny's going to stay 10 more years. So I'm going to do it
in half that. And I remember a Malcolm Gladwell thing where he said, you do something for 10,000
hours. You become an expert at it. After that first year, I had eight years in a row. I did 500 shows a
year. And I said, if it takes you 10 years to be good enough to be on Carson, I'm going to do it in
five. And it took me five years and two months. I've got a picture over there. So that night,
you know, when you did Carson, and it wasn't like now, you didn't have 8,000 channels on TV. But if
Carson liked you, he was like a kingmaker for a comic. And they said before you go out, at the end of your
six minutes, if he claps, he didn't really care for you. If he gives you the big okay sign,
he liked you. And if he loved you, he'll call you to the couch. Well, you get to the end of your
six minutes. You're scared to look because it's like Caesar, you know, do I love or do I die? And he was
calling me to the couch. And I mean, instantly, like the next week, Vegas is like, do you want to
headline in Vegas because Johnny called you to the couch. It was, he was a career maker.
Wow. And I remember going home that night and lying in bed staring at the ceiling thinking,
I don't have a plan now. That was it. That was all I ever wanted to do was make Johnny laugh.
And I got a picture sitting in the chair talking to Johnny and he's got his mouth wide open
laughing. And I'm like, that was it. That's all I wanted to do. Was it? I didn't think I'd go there
with you, but I'm curious about it because I think people would love to know what's it
feel like to be actually in the moment walking in your dream. Were you terrified that night
walking out or was there like a piece about you like, I've been preparing for this all my
life and I'm ready. I'm like right before you walked out. I'm curious if you can remember what
was that like. Terrified. Terrified to the point that they took you out during the commercial
break and the guy said when the curtain opens about five feet out in front of you, it's going to be a
gold star, just stand on that star. Well, one of the hardest things to do in stand-up is to create
a six-minute TV set because, and they told me, they said not 555 and not 6-0-5, six minutes.
So I'd written the six minutes set, I'd piece together the six-minute set. And I'd gone
around, we were living in that, we had just moved to L.A. because my wife said,
you're never going to know if you could do the Tonight Show
unless you moved to L.A.
And we'd been there for a month.
And I was doing a set at the Improv
and the talent coordinator followed me out
into the lobby and said,
how come you haven't done the Tonight Show?
And I said, because you won't open my tapes.
You keep mailing them back to me.
But I had this six-minute thing down
and had done it 25 times around town.
I knew it was six minutes.
But when they placed me behind the curtain,
I think, I can't do this.
to pass out. I'm just going to walk off and they'll have to figure out how to fill time on
their show. I can't do this. And something kept me in that spot and the band stopped and come
behind the curtain open and I find the star. And I go out there and I do the first three or four
jokes. And then like the fourth joke, not only gets a big laugh, it gets an applause break,
which never happened in the clubs
when I'm working on that six minutes.
So I'm smiling on the outside,
but on the inside, I'm going, oh, no, oh, no, okay.
In two minutes, I've got four jokes about my mother.
The third one is the weakest.
I'm going to cut that joke out.
So this set, I've been rehearsing for two weeks nonstop.
Now I'm editing in my mind.
Three jokes later, another applause break.
I mean, I can hear Johnny laughing.
It's going well, but it ain't helping me.
And I'm like, okay, I can't eliminate another mom joke,
but a minute after that, I do a joke about my dad that has a tag to it.
I'm cutting the tag to that.
So I'm editing ahead of myself as I'm going through this.
And I knew my last joke was 30 seconds.
So I told the camera guy, the guy behind the camera,
I said, when I get to five minutes, hold up five fingers.
And when I get to five and a half, hold up a fist.
And if I'm not on at five, I got 30 seconds to correct that.
And at five, he gave me that.
And I'm like, okay, I'm going to have to cut one other little thing.
I cut something else.
And when he hit the fist, I was going into my last joke.
And it just worked out.
But I was mentally exhausted.
But just that editing process.
And I look over and Johnny's waving me over to the couch.
And I'm like, what in the world are we going to talk about?
We haven't rehearsed this.
We haven't done anything.
And he was so good at what he did.
He just kind of lobbed them up for you.
And he's like, well, this accent, you know, how does that go over in the business?
Because he knew I had jokes about that.
So good.
It's fascinating because I think anyone listen to this, like there's really some validity to it.
Like you can prepare and prepare, but at some point, you just got to get in the room.
And there's some things in life.
I'm just convinced you just don't prepare for.
You just need to be in that moment and you've got to rely on your resiliency,
your ability to pivot, innovate, and in that moment,
your preparation does help you because you've done it.
But nothing's ever,
I think so many people don't go for their dream because their threshold of how prepared
they think they need to be is so high.
They never really pursue anything because they're waiting for 100% preparedness,
which is impossible.
Well, and to your point,
You're never going to be, whether it's to be a parent, whether it's, you know, I told my kids growing up, I said, every full life needs to have a few hold your nose and jump moments where you don't know what's going to happen, but you hold your nose and you jump.
And thank God I held my nose and jumped and went in there and quit IBM.
Thank God I didn't walk off from behind that curtain, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah, you're never going to be 100% prepared.
And even if you were, it doesn't unfold the way you've envisioned it anyway.
So I think you have to be flexible.
But yeah, don't wait for it to be perfect.
It's never going to be perfect.
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learn more at sap dot com slash uncertainty it's such great advice i was this time around i'm like i because
you did you did affect me when we talked the first time i want to know more about him you know i
learned a lot about when we talk but so i'm like what does you know what goes into making of
somebody obviously you and i are both believers so so much of in our life is we just give glory to god
and and we're blessed and but there are seeds that are planted in our life he provides the harvest
but there's seeds that must be planted if certain things are going to happen in life or some things
that are going to happen. And so I went and I went like, what's this guy's background a little bit?
And so this blew my mind. And if I'm wrong, it'll be a bizarre question, but I don't think I am.
Is it true that you knew Truitt, Kathy, is a young boy? And if you all don't know who I'm talking about,
this is the founder of Chick-fil-A. Did you know him actually? Was there like kind of a mentoring relationship?
Imagine this. This man becomes Jeff's very wealthy guy.
unbelievably successful.
You're like, is there anything in his background?
Did he have a mentor?
Did he have something?
Maybe comes from good parents.
But is that accurate?
Did I hear that correctly in my research that the founder of Chick-fil-A was sort of a friend or mentor?
So my dad left early in life.
My dad ended up being married six times and had a thousand affairs in between.
My mom went to church five times a week.
And so I don't care what a parent says.
parent leaves, especially in a situation like that, you feel like you weren't sticking around
for. That's what I felt as a kid. Well, I guess, and to make it worse, Ed, I was away at church camp.
I came home from church camp and half the furniture was gone. My dad had left and moved in with
his girlfriend. And nobody had it had prepped me for it or anything. So in my mind, I thought, okay, I'm
guess I wasn't worth sticking around for, and I went to live with my grandparents for while my
mom kind of sold the house and did. So I live with my grandparents in a little town called
Hapeville, H-A-P-E, right by the airport in Atlanta. And that's, and until I was in high school,
hateful, that was the only Chick-fil-A on the planet Earth was in Hapeville, Georgia. And
And Truitt was a, A, he was a good guy, because Hayfield was kind of the wrong side of the tracks.
You either worked it for Delta or the Ford plant, which was there.
But Trude always had a free Chick-fil-A thing in his pocket.
And when he'd see you as a little kid, he'd hand you one, which was like a Willie Wonka golden ticket, you know.
But he would talk to you and he would tell you things.
And I remember one time he said to me, he said, Jeff, he said, do you know,
who how to tell when somebody needs encouragement and i was like no sir mr kathy he said if they're
breathing he said everybody needs encouragement and it doesn't cost you anything to give it to them
i was a little kid that's stuck it's to this day i walk into a place and i think who needs
encouragement in here is it the bus boy is it the girl working behind the counter is it the cook
you know and he was right it doesn't cost you anything to give it to them and but but what it made me
do was seek out those i call them kind of shadow people who's the who's the person that everybody's
looking through or past and truitt was just a a wise guy and coming from that nothing prepared
truette kathy to be a billionaire you know nothing prepared jeff foxworthy to be a
a millionaire.
And so I just never took, the money was never the goal.
I wanted to be good at what I did.
And I kind of viewed it, even on my podcast, which is called it a comic mind, I start
every comedian with the same question.
I said, are you born funny?
And is it a gift or is it a skill set you can acquire?
and I 100% believe that it was a gift I was given by God.
You could call me and say, hey, Jeff, I need 30 jokes tonight about home security.
And I don't know why it.
I'd pull out a notepad and I would start writing your jokes.
I don't know why I can do that.
So it's a gift.
I can't even be cocky about it because I don't know why I can do it.
just like some people are great taking care of old people
and some people are great with kids
and some people are musicians.
But I think we're all given gifts
and you need to honor the gift.
Wow. Wow.
Use it wisely.
Use it for good.
And if you get successful at it and you get a platform,
you need to leverage that for the person that gave you the gift,
Right. And so it was that combo of things. My dad leaving, man, I wanted a dad. I was like the only kid of divorced parents that I knew. And I really wanted a dad. And I remember being young and I decided, hey, I want, and it was the story of the prodigal son. The dad in that store, it's called the prodigal son, but it's really about the dad. That dad, you couldn't do anything bad enough to make that dad love you any less. And you couldn't perform.
good enough to make that dad love you anymore. He just loved you with all he had. And he was available.
And even when the son wasn't there, I love the part where it said, when the prodigal son decides to
come home, it said, and when he was still a long way away, the father saw him. Well, you don't see
somebody a long way away unless you're actively looking for him. And Jesus told that parable
because he was describing the father. And I just kind of decided, okay, if that's,
what kind of father God is, I'm going to let God be my dad.
I'm going to just let God be my dad because that's what I need.
I need somebody that's here every day.
I need somebody that's going to love me when I screw up.
And even if I do well, they're not going to love me anymore.
They just love me with all that they are.
And when I go speak in a spiritual setting, that's what usually I talk about is the prodigal son.
Yeah. You're doing it to me again. Here we go. Part of your faith, the work that you do, the seeds that you plant is you do minister. You know, we talked a little bit this last time, but I want to unpack this a little bit. You do, you play a father role to some extent. And you do minister to people, particularly in the homeless community, or at least specifically in the homeless community. And I want to talk about that a little bit. Right before we talked, our mutual friend Tim Tebow, we talked for
few minutes of three of us before we went live and Tim always talks about the fact that he was an
MVP in football and he said now I'm an MVP in a much more important way and to your point of what
you just said seeking out the vulnerable person Tim says I want to help our most vulnerable people
yeah and and you I'm serious when I say this when Tim says this just a few people that have been on
the show flash in my mind and you're one of them about when he talks like that and so I'm wondering
if you just share with us like the genesis of that whole thing
of you most people just wouldn't picture i don't think the funny guy on stage has the depth
and i don't mean that is a i don't mean that as a backhanded compliment there's a depth to you
because of the depth of your faith that it's attractive and intriguing to me so could you just
unpack that a little bit why why you do that work and what the work is specifically
it had a heart for the underdog my oldest daughter has it and she certainly didn't grow up an
underdog.
Hateville was kind of, like I said, the wrong side of the tracks.
Like the things you remember as a kid, we always were, we were good at baseball.
We went to play one of the rich schools on the north side of town.
And I remember when we got off the bus, they were making fun of us because our uniforms
were really pretty old and crappy.
They were like the old wool, but they were making fun of us.
And I remember stepping off that bus thinking, you don't know anything about me other
than what kind of shirt I got on.
And you've already judged me.
And we went up there and beat the snod out of them and then got back on the bus.
Well, then you become rich and famous.
And people judge you again because now you got a nicer shirt on.
And I'm like, no, it's the same little boy inside the shirt.
I root for the underdog.
You know, I used to joke.
I wasn't born with a silver spoon to my mouth.
I had a KFC sport, you know, one of those plastic sports.
But my aunt was an oncology nurse, nursing professor at Emory.
My brother played football at Duke on a scholarship.
My wife and I were like the head of fundraising for the Duke Children's Hospital for 18 years.
And they're kind of like St. Jude.
They don't turn a kid away based on ability to pay.
So they have to, man, they have to raise so much money.
But when we would go up there, like the first time we went up there, they had their little promo staff and they said, okay, we're going to go see this kid and this kid and this kid.
And I said, no, no, we're not.
We're not walking.
If I walk past somebody's room, that's going to make them think they weren't worth stopping for.
So we'll go visit them, but we're going to visit every kid.
And it ended up, I mean, it took forever.
It took five or six hours to go say hi to every kid.
and my wife was so good with the parents
and it was just an unspoken thing
I would go to the child
she would go to the parents
and I would tell my kids
I used to take them up there
when they were little
and I said
they're in here
because one morning
they woke up with a sore throat
they didn't do anything
better or worse than you
it's by the grace of God
you're not in here
or I'm not in here
so I don't know
I've just always rooted
for
because maybe I felt like a little bit of an underdog growing up.
I don't know.
But it was kind of the same thing with the homeless thing.
And I don't recall if we went into that whole discussion.
But once you know somebody's name and once you know somebody's story and everybody's got a name and everybody's got a story,
it's hard to look past them, you know.
And what I found from my homeless guys was I think a lot of people,
just tend to think either they're lazy or they're an addiction. And that's what I used to think.
The way I dealt with homeless people was if I'm at a red light and I see one, I reach in my pocket
and pull out 10 bucks and give it to them and like go away. But did I tell you and stop me if I did
about the first guy I ever met at the shelter? Yeah, but I want to talk about it. That's Jason,
isn't it?
Jason, yeah.
Yeah, go ahead.
I want them to hear this.
So the first kid I made at the shelter, he's like 21 years old, healthy.
And I sit down and have lunch with them, and I ask everybody their story.
I said, what's your story, Jason?
And he said, well, it was me, my brother, my mom, and my dad.
And when I was 11, my mom killed herself.
And a couple of years after that, my brother killed himself.
And it was me and my dad and my second year of college, my dad killed.
himself and he said i just i got where i could not hurt anymore and i started smoking crack
and i'm sitting across the table thinking hell dude i want to start smoking crack too who can
who can lose everybody in their immediate family to suicide and all the thoughts that go with that
and so jason wanted a bad guy jason wanted jason that had a hurt that he
He couldn't deal with.
And when I started doing small group Bible studies with these guys,
you start realizing almost every one of them,
something bad had happened to them as a kid.
And they couldn't deal with the hurt.
So they started drinking or they started doing drugs.
And when you do that, you're not employable.
And, you know, then you take from your family and to the point they can't deal with it anymore.
And that's how you end up on the street.
And so I learned through that thing.
It's like, okay, if we can ever identify the hurt,
then maybe you got a shot.
And I mean, I don't know how many times we'd have a prepared lesson
and we'd be doing it and some guy would just start crying.
And I'd like, Pete, what's wrong?
And, you know, Pete would then tell the story about how his uncle would abuse him
in the garage or something.
And I said, okay, that's Pete, this is.
so great because you've had this locked in the basement and now you've finally gone down,
opened that door, drug it up the stairs, pulled it out in the front yard, and let it sit in
the sunlight and call it what it is. It's not a secret anymore. And we love you just the same.
And God loves you just the same. And so if you could ever put salve on that hurt and just say,
this is not your fault. This, you're your love, man. And part of my end,
image, because there's something, I don't know if other people think, like, I'm such a picture guy, but, man, there's so many times I would do it as a kid, and I still do it as a 67-year-old, is I'll go, I'll say to God, Dad, can I crawl up in your lap and you just rub my head for a minute, please, because I'm having a bad day today. And that's the way I view it, man. It's that loving father. It's like, yeah, buddy, crawl up in my lap.
this is such a good conversation i told you guys it's making me a normal one you know uh it's interesting
you help people heal through the bible study stuff you do the ministry stuff you do you heal them
when they laugh and as i've been a speaker the last by my group my dad was an alcoholic and a drug
addict i got sober though so i had two dads i had the dad before that and then had this amazing father
for many years after that.
I was blessed to see him that way, yeah.
I think one lesson I would share with everybody today
just because it just occurred to me saying it,
so I just need to make sure I say it is,
you know, my dad then helped thousands of other people get sober
over his lifetime, and the reason that that is
is you're most qualified in your life to help those that you used to be.
And so a lot of times the adversary will try to get you to believe your sin,
your mistake, your setback, your divorce, your bankruptcy, your sin,
your averagedness, the fact that you've always been average, is disqualifying to do anything
great in your life. And the fact is, I think God's going, no, no, no, no, no, we're going to use
that. And that's my dad's alcoholism and drug addiction was really the catalyst of the great
works that my dad did in his life. And so your most it's it's to be. It's what made people
listen to him is he knew what he was talking about, right? Correct. I always did that with my
comedy. I was lucky. I found a template very early on that worked and that was that if I thought
something or my wife said something or my family did something, I'm going to trust other people
are thinking and saying and doing the same thing no matter where they lived. And even with the
redneck jokes, that came from people because I had this thick accent. I remember the first time
I was up working in New York. I had a New York comic pulled me.
out in the lobby, and he said, you'll do look, I don't want to hurt your feelings and nothing,
right, but you've got to take some voice lessons and lose, you've got to lose that stupid accent
you got.
And I'm like, well, where I come from, you have the stupid accent, you know.
So I was adamant about keeping my accent, and I was blue collar.
I wore jeans and boots.
I drove a pickup truck.
And they were always good nature, but they were.
And kidding me about Foxwood, you're nothing but an old redneck from Georgia, you know.
And one night I was playing in a club right outside Detroit, and it was in November, which was deer season.
And I said something after the show we were sitting around.
I said, man, I wish I was sitting in a tree tomorrow morning.
It's the opening weekend of deer season.
And they were kidding me.
And they were like, Foxworthy, you're just an old redneck from Georgia.
Well, the club we were playing in was attached to a bowling alley that had valet park.
parking. And I said, if you don't think you have rednecks in Michigan, go look out the window.
People are valet parking at the bowling alley. And I went back to the hotel and I wasn't thinking
it was going to be a hook or a book. I was just like, look, I know what I am, but apparently a lot
of people don't know if they're in the, and I wrote 10 ways to tell. And so it wasn't laughing at
somebody was laughing with you know i could go through those jokes and i'm like that's my sister that's my
brother that's my uncle bob you know that's my aunt judy i mean i wasn't doing research it
they were popping out pretty quick yeah i just heard one you did we won't do the joke here but
i was laughing it was the wedding reception you went to at hooters which is just hilarious by the reason
i want to bring it up was that it's such a good joke but you're a great
great storyteller. So I want to do one just kind of tactical thing today. I wonder a lot of times
you have somebody on. I've noticed this with particularly entertainers. I had a lot of comedians on
because I use the show as a weapon to meet people I'm fans of often. And sometimes people
that are great at something can't explain how they do it. They're just great at it. So I'm curious
which way that goes with you. You are one of the great all-time storytellers.
telling a story, writing a story and telling it.
I'm wondering tactically, let's just get granular for a second,
what makes a great storyteller?
Do you know why you're great at it or why somebody's great at it when you see it
as opposed to somebody who's not?
Yeah, I think a lot of people have the thoughts that comedians have,
but they go in one ear and they think it and it goes out the other.
And there's something about a comic that learns to grab it and go,
what is that?
That's, you know.
And if you look like, my background looks pretty cool here, but my desk here in front of you, I write all the time.
Look at that.
They're still in up note cards and papers with notes.
Paper.
And I've always worked at it.
I always had a work ethic.
And I remember when Leno was, when I started, was the King of the Road comics.
and he was very generous with his time with young comics.
And I remember I was still doing amateur nights and working at IBM.
And Leno invited a bunch of people who was working in town to go to the Waffle House.
And he was kind of holding court.
And he said, your goal should be to write one new minute a week.
Well, and I'm thinking in my mind, I can write 20 or 30 minutes a week.
But he was right.
And that's being on stage every night.
night to say something that every time you say it, everybody in the room's going to laugh.
And so on those years where I was doing 500 shows a year, I could grind out a new hour every
year. Well, then you do an album or you do a special and it's gone and you're right back
to the starting block. And no matter how successful you become at it, you don't get to bypass that part.
right back at the starting block on stage with a note card going,
hey, is this funny? Is this funny?
Yep.
And, but I worked at it.
I always had a work ethic.
And I was grinding.
I mean, through the years, I think I did nine albums, which were hours.
I did three blue collar movies.
I did two HBO specials, two Showtime specials, three for Netflix, 50 Tonight shows.
So I'm thinking, if you put that in,
to what how much material is that oh my gosh yeah i think when you say that i think of you and
like and seinfeld because it but the other comedians that i've become friends with because as a
speaker i'm the same way i'm always writing i get stuff next i mean i got mine right here as
well like there's just pages of them of just an idea of thought sometimes it's an entire message
sometimes it's two words i'm like you as well but in that sense in terms of telling stories but
you would i think is different about you about come and you just tell me i'm wrong it's okay like
you're on you can tell me i'm wrong but most of my comedian friends and by the way you might
say no man they're just humans but i would say you know i've had sebastian on i've had whitney
on i've had nicky glazer on i've had dane cook on i mean we've had i've had christina p i've had a lot
of comedians on i love them and not in general not just but i would say in general
a lot of comics privately
I think would even say this
that's why I said those things
they're moving out of some pain
or darkness almost
more than the average person I've met
you tell me if I'm wrong about that
and maybe what's different about you is you do have this light
in you which I know what that light is
in general the comics that you know
would you agree that they're
they've got a little bit more
of a pain or trauma
or dark view type thing in general, or am I off on that?
No, I think you're right.
You know, because I've had people say to me,
well, I've always heard comedians are laughing on the outside crying on the inside.
And I go, well, in a lot of cases, that's true.
It's not true in my case.
But, you know, my wife and I grew up together.
She came from kind of a similar background, and I don't know why it worked, but I smoothed down her rough edges, and she smoothed down my rough edges.
We built each other, and I've learned as grown in this, but I find myself, and I jokingly say, I'm two decisions from drywalling.
That's how famous I am.
If I had to describe myself, I think I'm so thankful.
I'm so grateful that I have had a life where I've done something that I really enjoyed.
I still enjoy it.
I hate the airport and I hate the hotel room.
But that moment when the lights go down and people start clapping, I still get excited.
I'm like, yeah.
And I don't know if I shared this with you.
I don't want to repeat myself.
But doing an interview many years ago, a lady had said,
okay you host game shows you you write books you you do stand up you do sketch which one are you
and I said oh well that's interesting question never been asked that I said what you describe
those are all things I do and I love what I do I wouldn't want to do anything else but who I am
is I'm a husband and a dad and a brother and a son and a husband and a dad and a brother and a son and
a person of this community and a child of God.
So what I do is probably going to change a lot of times in my life,
but that's not my identity.
And I think a lot of people in my business, that becomes their identity.
You know, because what the world tells you is wealth and fame will make you happy.
When I was doing my sitcom in the mid-90s, we filmed between Seinfeld and Roseanne.
At the time, Roseanne was number one show on TV, Jerry was number two.
But Roseanne had the biggest contract in television.
She was making a million dollars in an episode.
So she's super, super famous and making a million dollars every five days.
And she was miserable, miserable.
And everybody that worked on her set was miserable.
And I just would kind of take that in and go, okay, the world's lying to you.
Because if wealth and fame made you happy, she'd be the happiest person on this lot right here, right?
And it's weird.
Like if you pull up to a store, like I know when I get out to go into a store that I'm going to get stopped.
And I'll take pictures.
But people are always nice.
I'm nice to them.
They're nice to me.
Never told anybody no.
But I'm not a big deal.
I mean, I'm just not.
I'm just, I had a gift that.
I don't know why I got it.
I'm very thankful that I did, but how can I have an ego about it if I don't know why I can do it, right?
I mean, it's like having an ego about the color of your skin.
You had no control over that, so why would you have an ego about it?
Or having an ego about where you grew up.
You didn't have any control over that.
Well, we don't have any control over who we were born to either, right?
what kind of family we were born into it's so important what you just said brother like and for
everyone to make it a personal thing it's so easy when someone is famous to see their giftedness you know
Beyonce's ability to sing or dance or lebron's six eight and two 50 and runs a four four and can
windmill dunk foxworthy's ability to tell a story and make you laugh and connect with you but what
you need to know is you have giftedness as well and everybody does everyone
Yeah. And I, and I, and I, yours could be your discernment, your humor, your, your nurturing skills, your intellect, your touch, whatever it might be. And finding that skill, that gift rather, and then finding a way to use it to serve other people. Yeah. You'd be talking just like this guy. I promise you. Whatever that is, is it teaching. Is it ministering? You know, is it making pottery. Whatever it is it, you know, it's, it's whatever that thing is. And that's, that's,
To me, it's like a great formula for happiness is exactly what you're saying.
It's just easy to see yours because it's probably a little bit unique and more rare than certain other ones, right?
Because not everybody can do it on the level that Jeff Foxworthy can, but you all have one.
I'm just curious thinking of it.
Just made me think of it.
I've got a couple things I want to ask you before we run out of time.
These grandbabies of yours, I'm looking forward to the day that I have mine.
I've just got babies, but I want to have grandbabies.
And my dad was a way better granddad than he was a dad.
Like, it was just different.
I'm curious, I don't know, just seemed a little bit different.
Most grandparents listen to this, if there are some, would probably say it's just,
it's just different.
If there was like a lesson, I don't mean to be corny, but I'm curious what your answer would be.
If there was a lesson from your life, you'd want those grandbabies to keep when you're gone of your life
or what you'd want to impart on to them or into them, what would it, do you know what it is?
What would it be?
you know it'd probably be
my daughters would tell you this
but we had a little chalkboard on the door to the garage
and for their entire childhood
the last thing they saw before we got in the car
to go to school was
and I had written it in chalk the first day
be kind and try hard
it's like my oldest daughter
she's pretty amazing
this was my eldest daughter was a homebody
wouldn't go spend the night with her grandmother
that lived
a mile away
And one time, a guy in my church called and he said,
we got a group of guys taking their oldest kid to go to Kenya to work in AIDS
orphanages.
Would Jordan like to go?
And I said, no, Jordan, Kenya, Jordan won't spend the night with her grandmother across the street.
And I said, Jordy, you want to go to Kenya, work in AIDS orphanage?
Yes, yes, yes.
And we get over there and spend a week.
And we're in Cabara, the biggest Sloan in the world.
world. One square mile fenced in with a million people in it, no electricity, no running
water. And compassion had a thing in there. But we come back from the thing and Jordan says on the
way home, she said, Dad, there ought to be something kids could do to help people. And she researched,
she found out more kids who died of malaria than anything in Africa. She found a place where she could
buy malaria nets for 10 bucks apiece. And she started doing bake sales and putting change
jars at school and partnering with restaurants for a, she, she ended up forming a little
company called Byteback. And she, my shy kid would then try, in high school would fly around the
country and go speak to youth groups and say, here's what's going on, but we can make a difference.
And then she'd come home and then two or three months later, that group from Colorado,
would send her a check for 30 grand to buy nets with.
And somebody one time said to her, they said, well, that's got to be weird.
You're in high school, and the other girls are talking about what kind of purse they got
or what kind of shoes.
And you're out here trying to buy malaria nets.
And Jordan said, she said, it's not their fault.
She goes, I've just seen something they haven't seen.
But because I've seen it, I have to respond.
And to the point.
That years later, you two was playing in Atlanta, and I had a lady come get me.
Jordan loved you two, and so did I.
And the lady said, tap me on the shoulder, and she said, could y'all come with me?
I said, what's up?
She said, Bono wants to meet Jordan.
Not Bono wants to meet Jeff.
Bono wants to meet Jordan.
And he had been following our own line.
Oh, that's awesome.
yeah and so now my daughter with two master's works and a homeless mission you know
you got to be so proud brother that's awesome those you that listen on audio you should just see
his face you see his face that's my kid i'm like man how did i end up with a kid like this
well i think it's actually pretty obvious how you ended up with a kid like this i really do um kids
most things with our children are caught not taught and they caught a lot from their daddy for sure
let me ask you this last just because you know what moved me in our last episode is
what i considered to be the depth of your faith and uh those are the things that i look at
in men in my life that i want in my life that i admire men that make me want to walk in my faith
better than i do and just when i left just the conversation with you and i i want to be better
i'd kind of like just leave it open to you for the last question in advance thank you for today really
I've enjoyed it.
I'm so thankful you would have me,
especially to talk about stuff like this.
Yeah,
it's cool.
It's cool.
Yeah,
well,
I'm grateful.
And so if someone's listening and they're like,
you know,
I've been looking for answers in my life too,
been,
you know,
looking,
there's this whisper in my heart is what I call it,
where I'm just,
you know,
they're looking at God.
They're looking at making a change in their life.
And maybe they've got a little bit of doubt
or some fear or whatever it would be.
If someone's,
considering changing their life in that direction.
I'm just wondering what your message would be to somebody who came to you.
They ran up to you in a Starbucks and said,
Mr. Foxworthy, I saw you on my let show.
And you talked a lot about faith in that area of my life.
I want to step into, I think.
What would you say to them if you had a chance to visit with them?
Ed, I don't know if you'll agree or disagree.
I think the secret to life, and for those just listening,
I'm holding my hands clenched in a fist, and I open them up.
It's letting go.
And I will tell myself that if somebody cuts me off in traffic, I'll clinch my fist,
and I'll just sit there in the car and do that.
Just open it, let it go, let it go.
And it's realizing that everything that the world tells you will make you happy, it doesn't.
It, every, it doesn't satisfy.
It might satisfy for a little bit, but it doesn't satisfy for long.
So we get lied to here.
And we all want to be in control of our own life, and we're not good at it.
We're not good at running our own life.
And I tell people, like, if you look around my office, I've got a laptop, I've got this little light here that helps light it up.
Somebody thought this laptop out and created it with a purpose.
somebody thought this light out with a purpose somebody thought that chair out with a purpose
and why how could you not believe in god when you can look around where you're sitting and everything
in there was created with a purpose but if you don't believe in god you think you're an accident
you're the most complicated thing in the entire room and you're an accident there's a bigger
chance to throw in the parts of a 747 down an escalator and them all coming to
together and working, then us being an accident. So if I wasn't an accident, I'm not in control.
I'm the created. I'm not the creator. But if I'm the creative, I have a purpose. Everything in
the body has a purpose. Like you're talking about, I get seen more. I might be the hand.
But trust me, that ligament inside the hand, the hand doesn't work without the ligament. And that's
what I think is we're created. I remember being a little kid, Ed, and, and, and, and, and,
And I gave my life to the Lord when I was seven years old.
But I grew up in a strict Southern Baptist church where everybody walked in a super straight, don't drink, don't smile, don't cuss, don't dance, don't straight line.
And it was a dichotomy to me internally because I said, I'm wired like this.
And for those listening, I'm doing a weaving motion.
And I was like, God, I love you, but I can't do that.
I can't do that.
And it took a long time for him to finally whisper to me.
Who do you think wired you like that?
Because I need that in some places.
Sometimes I need that straight line.
Sometimes I need that wavy line.
And so what I found was that like, because I grew up an outdoor.
bow hunter and a fisherman and all that well i could go do a wild game dinner for guys that would
never ever go to a church they wouldn't go to church to save their life but they would come to
hear me be funny and i could go be funny for 30 or 40 minutes and roll that over into a story about
god and they would and i the response to it was crazy people that like i ain't been to church in
40 years i got i got mad at god but i've never heard it presented
like that. And so I thought, okay, so I've taken the gift that the creator gave me. And I always
thought laughter was the release valve that kept the boiler from exploding, right? It's there,
there's a value to it. But I've used it as a way to point back to the creator, you know. And I think
that's my purpose. You know, everybody's purpose is different.
but I think that's mine.
So good, brother.
My word for the year is surrender.
That was my word for the year.
And that's what you just do with your hands.
And you know what it is?
We think we're going to lose something when we do it.
Right. I know.
You think, oh, my gosh, I'm giving up control.
But the way of God is upside down to the world a lot of times.
And instead of losing something, oh, my word, is it free?
to go, hey, I don't know what's going to happen here, but you do, and you're in control of all
of us, and you say for those that love you, that what you've got for us is good, so I'm just going
to trust you on that. I don't have to have it all figured out, but you do, you know.
Yep. And by the way, go back to the beginning, guys, just thank you, Dad.
Thank you, Daddy.
It's the best, best visual, best example, best concept ever.
heard because it's exactly for me the way that I see my savior. I love you too. He said it
first. He said it first at the cross. So when I when I think about him, I look up in the morning and go,
I love you too because he said it first. Come on, you guys. This is so good. That was a quick hour.
Man, thank you. What do you want him to go look at you? I know you mentioned your podcast.
Where do you want to let's let's let's take everybody who's so darn emotional right now and
in this. This is going to be one of the most shared episodes ever. Where are you on
to find you? Your podcast? You can find me all over the place. I mean, yeah, if you're
interested in comedy, but you know, you can find me talking about other stuff. And I'm not a
genius. I'm blessed, man. I'm grateful and I'm blessed that I've just had such a good life. And
hopefully, you know, and I would kind of learn that through the years. Like when we'd go through
the hospital up there at Duke and a kid didn't know you were coming and you'd walk in the room
and there'd be one of my CDs or there'd be one of my books and I would realize, oh, this,
they're using this as a bomb when I'm not here. There's value to this thing that's laughter. And
that made me look deeper at it. So hopefully there's some value to it, right? And hopefully I've
I use it for for better things, you know, leverage that platform.
Yeah, you are doing that.
Today was just a complete blessing.
I can't wait to see you on the road.
We're speaking together.
Yeah, I hope we get to do this because I was looking so forward to doing it in person with you.
And then my plane sat on the runway for three hours.
By the way, guys, we're supposed to do this in person.
I'll tell you all this last in person.
His plane sat on the runway for three hours, 15 minutes.
from where we were like yes i could almost see you and i couldn't get to you yes he got to the town
he just didn't get to the day so anyway thank you for today it was awesome oh man i look forward to
the next time thank you i actually do too we're going to do it again thank everybody god bless you
share this with somebody that you love and care about max out god bless you