The Joe Rogan Experience - #2407 - Billy Bob Thornton

Episode Date: November 7, 2025

Billy Bob Thornton is an Academy Award–winning actor, filmmaker, and musician. He currently stars as Tommy Norris in the Paramount+ series “Landman” and is the lead singer of The Boxmasters. Sea...son two of “Landman” premieres on November 16. “Pepper Tree Hill,” the latest album from The Boxmasters, is available now.www.paramountplus.com/shows/landman/www.theboxmasters.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Get a free welcome kit with your first subscription of AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/joerogan Take 50% off a SimpliSafe system at https://simplisafe.com/ROGAN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Joe Rogan podcast, check it out. The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. It's working so far. Right? Right? I told my wife the other day, I said, if I live to 85, I'm going to go to Long John Silver's every day for lunch. I'm just going to eat shit that's like everything that I dream of.
Starting point is 00:00:30 right now that I can't eat. I'm going to eat all of it. I'm going to drink whiskey all day long and just eat everything I want. Yeah, fuck it. You're at the end of the ride. Yeah. Unless, that's the problem.
Starting point is 00:00:40 It's like on your deathbed, they come up with some new shit that fixes everything. Oh, I know, right? That'll be my luck. New stem cell stuff that regenerates every cell in your body to a 25-year-old.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Like, oh. Exactly. I know. That'd be a real problem. Like a 70-year-old brain and a 25-year-old body. Like, you would have a lot of knowledge. you'd have a giant advantage oh yeah I fantasize about stuff like I I fantasize about being able to like like I imagine you know like my version of heaven it would be like if I could go back to when I'm 12 years old live through junior high and high school again oh you'd be the king and have the knowledge I have now and just I would know exactly how to navigate everything yeah I mean yeah yeah
Starting point is 00:01:29 it's but that's the fun of growing up and the not so fun of growing up sure because you don't know what the fuck is going on and you're so confused and then you get older you go man if I could just go back I'd fucking kill it I think about it all the time you know your lovely coma host uh co-star rather to me more that movie that she did the substance right is fucking crazy that's a great piece on this whole like fear of aging thing Right. That movie is wild. Oh, yeah. It's so crazy. But it's like, you know how many women would agree to that deal if it was a real? It was realistic enough where you're watching like, I know a lot of ladies who would agree to that. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:02:16 I know a lot of ladies. Have you seen that South Park episode where they, it was about that type of thing, but it was about how they have all these apps that you can make yourself look better in. You know, I mean, it's like filters that make you look younger and all this kind of stuff. And they had this episode about that where like all these girls who aren't like the hot girls,
Starting point is 00:02:45 but their Instagram stuff, they are. And they actually start to think. And so all the guys start going for these girls, even though when they're in front of them, they're not like that. But that's what they look like on there. And, yeah, it's pretty crazy. It's probably accurate, too.
Starting point is 00:03:03 As long as a couple people start doing it, a couple of guys start going for those girls, then everybody else will as well. Yeah. Which is most of our world. Yeah. Most of our world is some fucking idiot decides bell bottoms look good. And we're all like, shit. I got to get bell bottoms.
Starting point is 00:03:22 I want to get laid. I want to be cool. I had bell bottoms when I, you know, because I was playing in bands and stuff. So whatever was trendy, you know, we wore that stuff. I can remember those bell bottoms that were so big you couldn't see your shoes. It just looked like a pair of jeans walking down the street. It was so dumb looking. It's a crazy thing that lasted for a little while.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Like regular jeans. Somebody invented that shit in like the 1800s. And everybody's like, yeah. You nailed it. Yeah. And it's like a Jeep. A Jeep still looks like a Jeep. They made a Jeep in like the 1950s.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Right. You could see the difference. It's like it's a little bit more advanced, but that's a Jeep. Yeah. Jeans, they nailed it. Bell bottoms are like, yeah, yeah, yeah. What the fuck were we doing? Right.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Oh, I mean, I had shirts with like bell sleeves with like pictures of sailboats and stuff on it. It's like, are you kidding me? I mean, you know, like lime. green and orange and shit like that. Remember the Elvis-style collars? Oh, for sure. Oh, yeah. Like, what happened?
Starting point is 00:04:30 I know. I have a theory because all that stuff happened after they passed the sweeping psychedelic Schedule I act in 1970. And I think they cut everybody off from mushrooms and acid and anything that makes you think. And then they started giving them Coke. And no one knew what to do. And they were all just like, and it was disco and the music kind of.
Starting point is 00:04:54 of sucked and everybody got real weird. Wow. I think that's what happened. Yeah, I don't doubt that at all. That's when the clothes get really fucked up. Yeah, it is. It's the exact time. Because before, like, there was like a hippie style, you know, like Hendricks and, you know,
Starting point is 00:05:13 a lot of clapped in, a lot of guys. It was like a flowy hippie. But it looked good. It was kind of cool. Sure. But something happened in the 70s, we just lost all perspective. Oh, I know. I mean, when you look at some of the 70s, like especially like sort of late 70s, you know, the disco era and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:05:30 And you look back at some of these TV shows they had and you see a lot of these bands and stuff on there. And it's like, who thought that looked good? I mean, who said this is the thing now? It looked like shit. I mean, horrible, horrible stuff. I talk about this all the time, but it's the cars too, man. I love 1960s muscle cars, but I check out around 71, and I only allow a 71 barracuda and a challenger in that group. Everything else, after 71, is useless to me.
Starting point is 00:06:03 Except Corvette. Corvette still stayed cool-looking. Oh, yeah. They stayed cool-looking deep into the 80s. Yeah, that's true. I'm a muscle car guy. I've got a 67 Chevelle 396. Oh, nice.
Starting point is 00:06:14 And muscle cars are my thing. I have a 70. Oh, do you really? Yeah. I would like to get a 64 GTO, the first year they were made. That's what I'm looking for. But to get one that's perfect, they're pretty pricey. They're very pricey.
Starting point is 00:06:29 And I grew up poor, so I don't like to buy stuff for myself. I buy my kids stuff all the time. And I don't mind how much money I spend on my family. But for me, I just don't spend money on myself. Old habits die hard. Yeah, they really do. When I was a kid, my sister's boyfriend's brother, The older brother was the cool guy in the neighborhood.
Starting point is 00:06:51 He had a 65 GTO convertible. Oh, yeah. And he would, I worked at a gas station, and he would drive at the gas station. We'd all go like this. Like, oh. Oh, yeah. Can't believe he owns that. That's really his car?
Starting point is 00:07:04 He was the coolest guy in the world. Oh, yeah. We had those. Terry Red. Yeah. Oh, that was. There was a guy named Mike Page in our town. He was older than my group.
Starting point is 00:07:16 You know, when we were seniors, he was probably all. already 25, 26, something like that. And you never really, because, you know, cruising was a thing. And you'd cruise through Sonic or whatever it was, you know, and see who was there and all that crap. And everybody parks on the bank parking lot. And you drink beer, and then the cops would come by and you'd hide all your shit, you know. And, I mean, it was literally like the American graffiti days, you know. And so this guy, Mike, he had a 65 candy apple red.
Starting point is 00:07:48 vet and he had a mustache remember chuck nagron singer in the three dog night and what got the one with the mustache yes he looked like chuck nagron so we would see him pass by and he was like harrison ford was in uh american graffiti it's like you never he would just you just see him in his car you know and uh so he was it was like seeing Elvis Presley go by and everybody go like wow and uh That's actually how the boxmaster's name came about. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:24 How? Well, in the South, in those days, there was a, there are two stories how the boxmaster's name came about. There's a, there's the politically correct one, and there's the one that's not. And the one that's not is if somebody was a playboy type, you know, it was called a boxmaster. And so, and we had a... I would have never guessed that. Yeah. That's hilarious.
Starting point is 00:08:55 And then the old days, people would say, oh, look, there goes the boxmaster when Mike would pass by because he just knew. But you only saw him driving his Corvette up and down cruising. You never saw him, you know, actually doing stuff, and you never got out and drank beer with us or anything. He was just making an appearance. Yeah, yeah. Just letting everybody know. Look at this. Second generation Corvette.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Yeah. 65. I have a 65 convertible. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah, I love them. Awesome cars. I mean, yeah, muscle cars are the thing to me. Do you remember there are two sort of car times that confused me?
Starting point is 00:09:34 I mean, first of all, how can a Mustang ever not be cool? But remember in the late 70s, early 80s, there were, it may as well have been a Ford Fiesta. I mean, it was like, what was that? It was the gas guzzler, the gas prices. The gas prices, crisis. Oh, okay. That's what it was. So they had to make all these cars gas efficient.
Starting point is 00:09:52 So they got rid of V8s. They started having these, like, very economical on gas, V6s and, like, really shitty engines. And they made the cars plastic and lighter and cheaper. And, yeah, they fucked everything up. They fucked everything up. Like, the fact, whoever, imagine working at Ford, 1969. You know, you got the Mach 1, which is like, you just look at that and you go, God, dang.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Every time you see to this day, I see one of those on you. God, he just nailed it. Yeah. Like, you can just stare at that car, just walk around it for hours, just looking at it. And then 10 years later, they got something that you would never want to own. No. Like, this is a hook of shit. This is a fucking box.
Starting point is 00:10:35 This is a, it's like a, literally like a box that a washing machine comes in. Oh, yeah. Garbage. People didn't even want to steal them. Yeah. Crazy. Imagine being the CEO of that company going, what did we do? What the fuck happened?
Starting point is 00:10:47 happened. We had it. We had magic. Right. Like, legit magic. Remember the tornado and the Riviera? Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. I mean, you're talking about different looking. Yeah, but they're cool. They're very cool. Very cool. Weird and huge. And huge. Yeah. And the opposite in the spectrum was AMC. What were they thinking? They were weird. That was a weird car to own, too. Weird. All of those. Yeah. They had one that looked kind of okay, but, you know, they had the pacer and the, what was that other weird-looking little, the Gremlin. Yeah, the Gremlin. All those kind of things. I mean, it was like, what in the hell is this?
Starting point is 00:11:30 It was a strange company. It was almost like a fake company. Yeah. Like it didn't make any sense. It didn't make any sense at all. It was like an Australian. Remember like Mad Max? He drove that Australian muscle car.
Starting point is 00:11:40 I remember watching him. What the fuck is that thing? Yeah. It was an Australian muscle. car i don't know what it was still to this day don't know what it was but that's like what those amcs were oh yeah weird looking oh yeah just off yes strange strange from a different timeline or something like yeah there was a movie called uh it had uh raquel welch was in it and donald pleasant so these people called uh uh fantastic voyage or some politician uh or
Starting point is 00:12:11 scientist or something he'd he'd he'd I guess it was an assassination attempt but it was there's a brain thing so they shrink all these scientists down on a little you know glass thing whatever those things are called for chemistry or whatever they shrink the cats down and their little submarine thing and they shoot them into the guy and yeah that that well see that's a pacer I used to watch it I go, it's a damn pacer That's hilarious And so they go through the guy
Starting point is 00:12:48 All through his veins and arteries and stuff And get to the place where they need to fix it And all this kind of stuff But antibodies kept attacking him And all this kind of stuff It was weird, I saw it in the theater And I was pretty impressed, actually I remember that movie
Starting point is 00:13:01 That's hilarious That's hilarious Shrinking people to What's wild is how many ideas were burned up in movies by the time, like, the 90s rolled around. If you just stop and think about the fact that movies really were only, like, movies, I think, are the absolute best mirror into the culture that's like a time machine. Like, you could read a history book and you can kind of get a rough understanding of how people
Starting point is 00:13:31 behaved back then, but you still think of them in a current context. You think of them like today. But you watch a film, you know, watch like a James Cack. And you're like, whoa, man, this is a different world. Yeah. Nobody knew shit. Right. Nobody had any idea what was going on in the world.
Starting point is 00:13:49 You got all your news from the newspaper. So these dudes who own the newspapers essentially control the narrative for the entire world. Absolutely. And it's people behave strange. Yeah. Open domestic violence. Oh, for sure. Normal.
Starting point is 00:14:05 Yeah. Shut up. Oh, yeah. And she would kiss them and like it was crazy. All right. Nuts. Well, my wife, who was raised in the Bay Area, you know, around San Francisco, in Marin County there, when I first told her what my dad did to me, she was like, oh, my God,
Starting point is 00:14:22 that's like, and honestly, that's what everybody's dad did. It was like, you know, if he was working graveyard shift and you started making a much of damn noise at noon, you got your ass beat with a belt. And she was just, she couldn't believe it. I said, oh, no, it was like every day. almost, you know. And, you know, not that it was good, but it was just part of our life. We didn't know any better. We really didn't. No, no one knew any better and we're only figuring it out now. Yeah. It was like, like, canceling people retroactively for stuff they did in the 80s.
Starting point is 00:14:58 Like, okay, that's a different world. You weren't even alive then. That's a different world. Yeah. When people came, like, you got to realize, like, your parents, like, think about it this way. People were coming over on a boat from other countries with no knowledge of what was over here. They just got told, oh, there's jobs in America, you know, and you got on a boat from fucking Europe. Like, my grandparents came over here in the 1920s. Like, they had no idea. They come over here, and there's a bunch of people that also did the same thing and everything. They're basically just savages.
Starting point is 00:15:35 They're basically, like, one or two steps above, like, absolute savages. You know, they're savages with metal. You know, they've got metal and rubber. Right. And, you know, and they're raising kids. And, of course, they're going to raise kids in a rough way because the world is rough. Yeah. It's like everybody got beat up.
Starting point is 00:15:52 It was normal. Like, bullying was not, there was no anti-bullying campaigns. God, no. You just had to fight for yourself. Like, that's just how it is. This is life. This prepares you for life. It sucks, but this is life.
Starting point is 00:16:05 Absolutely. We have guys in our town that you just stayed away from. Yeah. I mean, guys who were, you know, relatively the same age. And I lucked out because, you know, I was a skinny, long-haired little hippie and playing in bands and stuff. And for some reason, I always liked hanging out with, you know, the guys who are a few years older than me. They had more fun than we did. And so I remember the first time I ever, well, the first time I ever had a drink of beer, my uncle Don.
Starting point is 00:16:40 and he drank slits. And this was back when you had to have a church key and you opened both sides of it. And he would pour it in a, you know, our glasses, you know, like I said, we were pretty poor. We all lived at my grandmother's house. And it was the jelly jars. When you finish the jelly, that became the glasses we drank out of.
Starting point is 00:16:56 And he would have a jelly jar, glass of beer. And it just looked like apple juice to me. And I would always ask him, you know, I'm six years old. I'd say, hey, can I have some of that? And he goes, you don't need any of this. Well, finally one day he goes, yeah, here, have a drink. It tastes like apple juice. And I'm like, oh, God, mighty.
Starting point is 00:17:15 And, but the first time I got drunk in my life was on Boone's Farm wine, apple wine. And these two guys, Gary and Eddie were their names, and they were just trouble. And Gary had a 64 GTO. That's probably where I got that thing from. But, I mean, we rolled it one night. night. No seat belts. I mean, we never even thought about a seatbelt. And so they took me to the Dairy Queen and we were going to, you know, get a hamburger or whatever it was. Well, they ended up like hanging me out the window just puking all over the Dairy Queen parking lot, you know,
Starting point is 00:17:58 because I drank an entire bottle of this and never been drunk in my life. I was 12, 13. And so these guys, I just, I was fascinated by them. They were all. James Dean and Elvis Presley to me, right? And there were a few guys in town that everybody knew not to mess with at all. It's like they will literally pull your eyeballs out of the sockets. They kind of consider me a mascot. And they all protected me. So the other guys who were, you know, pricks or whatever, you know,
Starting point is 00:18:37 if one of them messed with me there was a guy named Calvin a guy named Billy Bob actually who was probably 10 years older than me and a guy named Harry and whose family came over from somewhere they were like
Starting point is 00:18:53 you know from the Czech Republic or somewhere but they grew up they grew up here you know so they didn't sound like they were from someplace else Harry was about 5, 6 and stocky you know And there was this dude who was just mean to everybody.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Excuse me. But somewhere in between our age, you know, when we're teenagers, 17, 18, and Harry and Billy Bob and Calvin and those guys, they were like 30. And there were these other guys who were the mean guys in town who were in between those ages. and they were the real problem because they were just assholes they weren't the other guys were cool as long as you didn't mess with them one night uh this guy uh two of them were both names steve who were the real pricks and uh one of the steves uh got me by my hair and drug me around beat me up a little bit you know and i was a fighter you know i wasn't bad you know i've fought a lot of guys i quit for fighting my early 20s but back then you know it was just a way of life and uh this cat roughed me up a lot bigger than me and harry found out about it well we had a bonfire party out of the guy's trailer home that night and so this cat that had beat me up showed up and harry had heard about it
Starting point is 00:20:25 and harry's you know i'm like harry's little mascot guy right so the guy gets out of his car and comes over there. No, we got a big bonfire going on, right? The guy comes over. Harry didn't say a word to him. He walked up to him. This guy's like a foot taller than Harry. Harry got him, reached up, got him by the hair, hit him one time, broke his jaw, and threw him in the bonfire. Whoa. And a bunch of people had to put him out. I mean, this was just like a Friday night in Arkansas. All right. How's your schedule looking? Feeling busy? Got a lot on the horizon? Well, yeah, it's that time of year when life gets crazy and demands more of your energy, more work, more plans, holiday travel, all while it's getting darker and colder.
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Starting point is 00:21:56 Subscribe today to get this clinically back formula in the flavor of your choice. tropical, citrus, berry, or original to help you stay one scoop ahead. If you use my link, you'll also get a free bottle of AGD3, K2, an AG1 welcome kit, plus a few bonus AG1 travel packs. Just head to drinkag1.com slash Joe Rogan or visit the link in the description to get started. That's drinkag1.com slash Joe Rogan. God. That's a rough part of the world, man, especially back then. Yeah. You know, Malcolm McDowell, he wrote a book about, like, where he was talking about why certain populations, like certain parts of the world are rougher. And he was talking about
Starting point is 00:22:49 certain parts of America where they were settled initially by people that came from a herding community. Like, so they were like sheep herders in other countries. And they, when they came over to America, when you have a flock of sheep, someone could steal all your food in the middle of the night. They can just take all your sheep. If you're growing corn, you know, it's hard to pick all that fucking corn. You got to throw it in a truck, drag it out. You can just steal someone's sheep.
Starting point is 00:23:18 So they're accustomed to extreme violence to protect their sheep. And they're accustomed to acting fast and doing things quickly and violently. And so that's how you got the Hatfields and the McCoys. That's what that shit's about. People are like, why are those people such fucking psychos? They came from a psycho community in Europe, and then when they made it over to America, they just kept that tradition going. Oh, for sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:43 I mean, you know, people talk about, you know, the Irish and the Scots. Did I say Michael McDowell? Do I say Malcolm Gladwell? That's what I meant. Oh, okay. Malcolm Gladwell. Sorry, Malcolm. Malcolm Gladwell.
Starting point is 00:23:57 It's early. Yeah. But that's, you know, we still, to this day, we talk. about, oh yeah, those Irish cats and the Scottish guys, the English guys, if you're in the, you know, like, say, South London or whatever, some rough guys over there, where do you think we came from? Yeah. I mean, you know, I did one of those tests about my genealogy and all that kind of stuff. And, you know, you hear stuff from your family growing up that I grew up thinking I was part Italian and Native American and all these different things, right? and then I do this thing
Starting point is 00:24:28 it's like I'm a full-on English Scottish guy you know it's Irish English Scottish almost all of me except for as my daughter says she goes Daddy why aren't we randomly Swiss I got a little bit of French Swiss you know it's like 11%
Starting point is 00:24:44 something like that and the rest of it's just that stuff so all those people come over here and North Carolina or Tennessee Arkansas you know all these places there are words that we use, you know, which we call the hillbilly language, which actually wasn't considered a hillbilly language in England, you know, but that language was left over.
Starting point is 00:25:11 Like we say, reckon you want to go do something? Reckon, over there, they still use it. Yeah. Aaron, meaning one, it's like if you said to me, hey, can I have a beer and I say, I ain't got Aaron. You know, it's A-I-R-I-R-I-I-N-G-A-N. And all that stuff came from England and Ireland and Scotland. Well, that's the idea of the Southern accent, right? The Southern accent is an English accent that's just morphed. Yes. In a new place. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And morphed particularly, probably because of the climate. Like, the climate changed a lot.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Right. You know, one of the weirder things about these stereotypes about the South is the hookworm thing. Do you know that thing? No, tell me about that. Okay. This is crazy. So for a long time, a giant percentage of people that lived in the South had hookworm. And hookworm is a parasite that you get in your feet from walking around barefoot. Okay. And hookworm affects your cognitive function in a massive way. It makes you slow and stupid. And so this myth of the southern person being slow. and lazy and stupid was all because they were infected with hookworm. Wow.
Starting point is 00:26:30 Like a giant percentage of these people had hookworm. Like throw that into our sponsor perplexity and tell me how much hookworm was in the South. I'm going to cancel my therapist. The phrase hookworm southern draw refers to historical connection between hookworm infections in the American South and certain stereotypes about Southerners, including the way they spoke and behaved in the late 19th and early 20th century hookworm infestation. were rampant with estimates suggesting that up to 40% of the people in the region were infected.
Starting point is 00:27:01 So hookworm causes symptoms like severe fatigue, anemia, and mental fog, which led to slowness in speech and thought. This contributed to the stereotype of Southerners being lazy or slow-witted, often associated with the Southern drawl. How did they fix that? Like, what medication did they use to fix that? Some sort of a dewormer? health campaigns.
Starting point is 00:27:31 I mean, I've heard of hookworm, but I had no idea that it had any association with this. Yeah, I didn't either. When I found that out, I was like, oh, that makes sense. Right. That makes sense. Rockefeller Sanitation Commission surveyed infection rates, 40 percent, mobile dispensaries, traveled throughout the region, free deworming medications and educating local doctors. Okay, so they use some sort of an anti-parasitic. All measures including latrines to improve sanitation, educating communities about the risk of soil contamination, and encouraging the routine of wearing shoes.
Starting point is 00:28:03 Isn't that nuts? Shoes probably fixed it more than anything. People wearing shoes. Probably so, yeah. Yeah. So that's where it all came from. That's the hookworm thing. That's why.
Starting point is 00:28:13 Isn't that nuts? It is nuts. Because when I was a kid, I mean, this to this day when someone talks, like if someone wants to make a stereotype about someone being stupid, they use a southern accent. Yeah, it's true. All the time. I grew up with that. I mean, there was a prejudice in Hollywood when I first got out there. There still kind of is.
Starting point is 00:28:32 I can't, I mean, especially coming up. Now, I mean, you know, once you reach a certain level, you know, you can walk into Universal Studios and say, I want to play Betty Davis. They're all, hey, that's a great idea. But, you know, but when you're coming up, you know, I was. The first thing I ever auditioned for in L.A. was a student film. It was like one of those USC student films. And I go in there, and the part was some guy that just got off the turn-up truck from Alabama.
Starting point is 00:29:08 And I thought, well, I've probably got this. And so, and I was broke and everything, and it wasn't going to pay anything. But I didn't care. It was like, well, maybe I get my foot in the door, because I didn't go to be an actor anyway. I just thought, well, try this stuff. And I go in there and I think the casting person and the director were both East Coast people like New York or somewhere. And I did my little audition and they said, can you do it more southern? And I'm like, are you shitting me?
Starting point is 00:29:45 It's like you got to be shitting me. I said, well, what you have to understand is I actually did just get off the turn of the truck from back there, and this is how you talk, you know. And, of course, my accent is not as thick as it was then, but they just said I wasn't southern enough. And it was like, oh, I see what they're getting at. Yeah. So they wanted the foghorn, leghorn, you know, now over here, what we have is, like, and I never heard anybody taught. I grew up down there. I never heard that.
Starting point is 00:30:15 And so that's what they would do. there are a lot of performances over the years where people who are not from the South played the part that actually use that accent and they win Academy Awards and stuff and I'm like, wow. So anyway, I didn't get this part
Starting point is 00:30:30 and the guy who got the part literally sounded like he was in the Bronx. Everybody was doing that thing, you know? I thought, wow, this is going to be tough out here, you know? But Southerners don't often get picked or even noticed for things like, let's say you're doing a gangster movie in the 30s in New York, you know, even if you can do the accents, you know, whatever.
Starting point is 00:30:59 But people from New York can get parts playing Southerners. That still goes on. That's so weird. It's such a weird stereotype. You know, it exists in music, too, doesn't it? For sure. Like, Southern bands, until Skinner came along, Southern bands got no respect. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Skinnerd fucked that up just because they were so good. They were so good. Everybody was like, all right, man. You got to let it free bird is free bird. That guitar solo, you're like, God, damn. It's ridiculous. I've known those guys a long time, those guys in Skinner. Yeah, it's, you're right.
Starting point is 00:31:36 And also, anybody that was from the South got lumped into the Southern rock thing. Right. You know, and they weren't all just people that sounded like Charlie Daniels. I mean, there were very, very different types of bands. The Allman Brothers combined jazz and blues and rock and pop and everything and their music. They were literally masters, the Almond Brothers. Almond Brothers live at the Film War East, probably the best live album ever made. But they just say they're all Southern rock bands.
Starting point is 00:32:09 It's like, man, it wasn't really like that, you know. Very different style. Very different styles. The Allman Brothers were masters. They were. Midnight Rider is still one of my all-time favorite songs. Oh, it's awesome. If I used to have to do radio when I lived in L.A.,
Starting point is 00:32:22 I'd do morning radio. I'd smoke a joint before I left the house. You know, it was like 5.30 a.m. I'd listen to Midnight Rider. Oh, yeah. In the dark. Oh, yeah. On the way they're like, oh.
Starting point is 00:32:32 Oh, it's a brilliant song. Oh, it's so good. It just gets you in the mood. And country guys, you know, back in those days, when country was actual country music, they would hear some of these songs. by those kind of guys like the Allman Brothers or Marshall Tucker, whoever it was, and cut them, you know, for country albums like Waylon Jennings did Midnight Rider. Oh, yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:32:55 Great version of that, you know. But, yeah, it's kind of odd, you know, being raised in the area of the country that people look at as the armpit. And then you have, you know, and like I said, once you overcome that within the business, and it's not like they like you any better, you know. It's just that they can use you to make money with. And once, you know, that happens, then, you know, you can go in and play Betty Davis. That's the stereotype of the coastal cities, right? It's the stereotype that comes out of New York and L.A. where it's like everything else is stupid.
Starting point is 00:33:29 Yes. Like you're in New York or you're in L.A. And all these retards in the middle, that's the flyover states. Right. I literally would call it the flyover states. And when you're in control of casting all the great films and all the great television, shows and you decide what the great albums are, you
Starting point is 00:33:48 dismiss, like, those people that are, it takes like a Stevie rave on. It was like an undeniable talent where they go, okay, I don't give a fuck where that guy's from. Let that guy fucking play. Like, that guy's got voodoo in his hands. Like, whatever he's doing,
Starting point is 00:34:04 I don't care where he's from. But other than that, you would, like, they would look at these places like they were less than, you know, or that the people were not as bright. And that stereotype still exists today. I remember one of the good things about traveling and doing the road a lot as a stand-up is you get to perform all over the country and meet all these different people. And, you know, when I would talk to people about Texas in particular, I'd be like, dude, I fucking love it there.
Starting point is 00:34:31 They're the most fun people. It's like, it's so fun. And they're normal. They're normal people. They're not Hollywood people angling to try to get some sort of a social relationship with you so that can progress their career. They're just cool people, just regular fucking people. And the problem is that these people in these coastal cities are the ones who don't know that. And they're dictating the narrative for the entire country based on some very weird prejudices.
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Starting point is 00:36:26 And people ask me, there was a very famous singer-movie star person. This was a long time ago. It was when I first started getting invited to the parties, you know, and I didn't know anything about this stuff. And I... When was this around? Well, it was around the time of Slingblade, you know. I mean, I was working and had done some stuff that had been noticed, like one false move and, you know, done a few things. But this was around that time. And it wasn't even out yet, I don't think, but screenings that started happening and there's a buzz about it, right?
Starting point is 00:36:59 So I get invited to a party, and it was out at David Foster's house. It was always real nice to me. And at the time he was married to Linda Thompson, who was, you know, Memphis girl. And she always made Southern food. And she kind of took a liking to me and said, hey, I want to invite you because, you know, you're from the South. And we always have the Southern food at our parties and stuff. So I go out there, and there were a lot of big people there. And I found myself outside having a smoke.
Starting point is 00:37:31 And I was standing there in a little group of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Mel Gibson and I think maybe Dan Aykroyd was there. And I remember Lionel Richie was in there playing piano in the living room. And I'm just like, wow, wait, this is crazy. And, but I felt it's like that poor kid from the South Syndrome. Like, I don't really belong here, so I was real shy and, you know, that kind of thing. Well, this, I went into the kitchen to get another drink. And this, like I said, I won't name her name, but a very famous singer and actress from
Starting point is 00:38:07 you know, back in the 60s and 70s. And she very seriously said to me, she said, so this sling blade, so sorry, she goes, it's fascinating to me. A lot of people who didn't know me before that thought that I was actually that guy. It's like this mentally challenged guy made a movie and everything like to,
Starting point is 00:38:36 And they would meet me, and they'd go, you're the guy in that? And I'm going, yeah. So anyway, but she said it was fascinating to me. And she goes, and you came out here from, what is it, Alabama or something like that? And I said, Arkansas. And she goes, Arkansas. And with a straight face said to me, what do you people do down there? I was like, wow.
Starting point is 00:39:01 And I said, thinking she'd get the joke, I said, We mostly lay around on the porch with our hound dog and swat flies. She goes, oh, interesting, interesting. It's like, babe, I was fucking with you there. But that was one of the moments where I realized that I really was an outsider out there. And people ask me about my longevity in this business. And I always say, it's because I stay out of it. and I tell people
Starting point is 00:39:36 do your acting on the red carpet not in the movie they said well you're so natural this stuff it's like that's from ignorance
Starting point is 00:39:43 I don't know anything about acting I didn't go to Shakespeare school and stuff I look at the thing I'm playing Tommy Norris and Landman
Starting point is 00:39:50 or I'm playing the guy in Goliath or Fargo or Slingblade or monstrous ball whatever I was in I just go out there and do what it says
Starting point is 00:39:57 you know and be myself in whatever role it is and And because, you know, people want to think there's a trick to everything, that you can learn everything. And it's kind of just not true. I mean, I believe artists, whether they're musicians, novelists, actors, whatever they are, I truly believe that you're born with most of it.
Starting point is 00:40:24 I'm not saying that you can't learn and that you can't progress. You can't get better. I mean, just repetition makes you better. I mean, you know, just the more you do something, the more comfortable you get with it. But, you know, if you say, like if you were to ask me, what is my process? Hell, I wouldn't know what to tell you. I don't know what my process is. It's like my process started when I was born.
Starting point is 00:40:50 I used my life experience and I do this stuff. I had lived a very eclectic life. And I just remember all this stuff. I don't need to go in the hallway before a scene and think about when my dad ran over my cat or something. Oh, right, right. And, you know, start, you know, gobbling like a turkey and, you know, yelling and screaming and punching the walls
Starting point is 00:41:12 still like that and trying to get all this sense memory. My sense memory is here on the edge of my skin every fucking minute. And, I mean, if you were raised where I was, it was like, you know, I don't forget any of that stuff. And I've lived 50 different lives. So plenty of dreams. on and I just believe that people want it sounds like you're smarter if you say well here's how I learn lines I take this and then I have this mathematical formula and I imagine these letters
Starting point is 00:41:47 as numbers and I start like that and it's like because see the press loves that because it's like what a genius you know they don't quote they don't respect the hell I don't I just go out there and do it as much because people People want to believe that anyone can do this if you get in the right school, if you get the right, you know, teaching from someone, if you go study Shakespeare or whatever it is. Yeah. And, you know, I just don't believe that's true. I believe you either have it or you don't have it. Like in music, you can learn to play guitar. You can learn to play piano. You can learn to play drums. no I'll take that back
Starting point is 00:42:32 you can get better at playing drums but if you're not born a drummer you're not going to be able to do it my brother god rest his soul who passed away at 30 Jimmy he was a brilliant musician played every instrument in the world except when he got on my drums
Starting point is 00:42:46 and he looked like he had some muscular disorder it was like he was just like he goes how do you do this you use both legs and both arms that's crazy he can play everything else everything And he just couldn't play drums.
Starting point is 00:43:02 Drummers can get better and they get to be experts. But the thing in music that you can't teach is feel. You can't teach a vibe or a feel to people. Eric Clapton could play a lick on a guitar, give it to another guy. He plays the same exact lick. It's going to sound different just because of their feel. Yeah, that sounds like that, Miles Davis quote, about, hitting notes, so that everybody can hit the same notes, but it's the attitude of the motherfucker
Starting point is 00:43:36 that's the important thing. The attitude of the person singing the notes is everything. That's most of it. And you either have that or you do not. No doubt about it. And some of it's genetic and some of it's just learned experience in your environment and how you grew up. But yeah, you don't got it.
Starting point is 00:43:53 You don't got it. I mean, Leavon Helm, who was a friend of mine, you know, played drums with the band. He and Richie Hayward, who was with Little Feet, Frank Beard and Zizi Top, you know, especially on their earlier records, and, you know, Charlie Watts and Ringo and those guys, they all had feel. They had a thing, and then there are these other drummers and these sort of, you know, I call them science bands, you know, where the drummer has like 75 drums. and they can do shit that seems humanly impossible but what happens after the song's over
Starting point is 00:44:36 it doesn't stick right you know what I mean but LeVon just playing on a little four-piece kit just had that feel and he played the song so anytime musicians
Starting point is 00:44:49 start thinking it's all about their thing like if you're doing movies to prop people think you need 11 watches on each arm It's like about your department, everything. Five briefcases and watches everywhere and shit. And it's like, no, I'll just take an old time X with a round face. I'm good, you know.
Starting point is 00:45:09 But it's when musicians start thinking that they have to make their part cut through and be noticed. The best drummers, you don't really notice them. You hear the song. If you go in there and dig deep and listen to them, if you isolate them, you know, and just listen to that, you're like, oh, okay, listen to that cat. But in a perfect world, all you hear is the singer's singing and telling you what they're trying to say, and the music is so good behind it that it's just part of it. Yeah, you don't really notice it. Yeah, yeah, and you can't teach that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:51 It's the field thing, yeah. and you know it when you hear it when a song just oh yeah it just gets in there you're like you guys nailed it you put it together you fucking nailed it
Starting point is 00:46:04 and the amazing thing about bands and how long of the box match has been around now you've been around for 20 years the most amazing thing is that people get together and they stay friends
Starting point is 00:46:17 for that long and with all the conflicts and all the ego and all the bullshit and you imagine you know you hang out and like that to me when someone makes great music it's the most impressive thing is not just that you make great music but you make great music with people that all get along together with all these different creative minds and egos and weirdness everybody's weird
Starting point is 00:46:39 every fucking creative person ever met's out of their fucking mind oh yeah and you get all together and then you show up a practice at the same time you know and you rehearse together you actually do it and you show up for gigs and you perform you hit your notes on stage you can all all stay friends. Like, that's the most important thing and the most rare thing and the most impressive thing. Absolutely. And with our band in particular, I mean, before that, I, you know, played in a million bands and had a solo band that did four major label solo records. And that's where I met some of the guys that were rolled over into the boxmasters. J.D. Andrew, specifically, who's still, he and I are the longest running members. We started the band together
Starting point is 00:47:21 and he and I still run it. You know, we're the opposite of what normally happens. Normally, a band when they're younger, they hit it for a while, three or four years, maybe have a couple of hits or at least some things that people know about. And then as the years go on, you start to dwindle a bit, you know, I mean, unless you're the Rolling Stones or the Who. We just opened for The Who on our last tour, which was awesome, yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:53 Wow. And so this band has started as, you know, it's like, you know, I got this crap about. It's always an actor who wants to be a musician just like this guy and that guy. And it's like, no, no, I was a musician who came to L.A. to play music. Accidentally became an actor. The next thing you know, I made $381 on an episode of Matlock with five lines. And I'm like, I'm broke. I better do this.
Starting point is 00:48:19 That's how it became an actor. That's crazy. And so one way or the other, we started out fighting that stigma for, you know, 10, 12 years. And then all of a sudden it started to go away because we got more and more fans and became a big underground band. And in the last five or six years got really popular. So here we are old guys who are still making it, who are still on their way up at our age. Right. So it kind of went the other way around with us.
Starting point is 00:48:49 And you're right. I mean, to stick around that long, especially when it took us a while to get success, to make any money at it and to get the fan base we have now. Is there a weird thing, too, about people like critics or people that are paying attention to the music that don't just listen to the music and see you guys perform? Instead, they think, oh, that's Billy Bob, the movie star who's trying to be a musician. So this is, like, stigma to it. So instead of, like, looking at you and go, oh, it's a cool band. Oh, I like them. This is great.
Starting point is 00:49:23 They're like, oh, that's that fucking Slingblade guy. Right. Yeah. Billy Bob's trying to do something different. He wants to be a rock star. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's what we put up with for about half of our career with the boxmasters.
Starting point is 00:49:35 Not as much anymore. That kind of goes away. It goes away with the public, with the audience. With some of the critics, it's still there because they want to say that about. It has nothing to do with your music. It has to do with, here's my angle for this article. Yes. My angle in this.
Starting point is 00:49:56 I mean, I did an article with, you know, a magazine one time that was kind of more of a men's magazine, you know. Talked about music the whole time and talked about sex for about three minutes. The whole article's about sex. You know what I mean? So, I mean, that's just that's what they did because that's their vibe, you know? Yeah. So anyway, when they say. this stuff, they're saying it because they want to dig at you.
Starting point is 00:50:24 Right. And if musicians, you know, famous musicians are at one of our shows, unless it's, you know, ones who are friends of ours, if they want to come back and meet us after the show and say hello, they'll come back there and most people wouldn't take this as an insult, but it is. They'll come back and they'll say, hey, it looks like you're really having fun up there. Which means, oh, isn't it cute, you got a little hobby, and you're having fun up there, and you get to be a rock star. That's what they mean by it. And I just kick them the fuck out of the dressing room.
Starting point is 00:50:58 I mean, I'm not joking. There was a very famous guy who came back to see us in Dallas one time, and he came back, and he goes, you know, it's really nice you get to do this. I said, get to do what? And he said, you know, get to go out on the road and stuff and, you know, get this part of you and get to have fun up there. And so like that. I said, well, you know, I have some songs about suicide. So you think that's fun? I said, it's not fun.
Starting point is 00:51:22 I'm writing about shit from my soul that I grew up in. I'm also writing things that are hopeful songs. I'm writing a lot of stuff here. We write original music and perform it, and people love this band. I said, so don't ever fucking come near me again. Don't ever come to one of our shows again. If all you want to do is come back here because you're pissed that we just had a record on the radio.
Starting point is 00:51:48 Right, right. You know what I mean? And then you were in a band from, you know, 30 years ago, and now you're playing, you know, places that are smaller than where we are. So don't come back there to start that shit with me. And I actually, he said, oh, no, no, dude, I'm just saying it really looked like. I said, get the fuck out of here. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:52:05 I don't care who you are. Wow. And so. Well, you know when someone's digging at you. Absolutely. Yeah, you know when someone's saying, that was a great show. Looks like you guys are having fun. They're smiling and laughing.
Starting point is 00:52:16 And that was fucking great. I loved it. I loved it. And then you know, oh, it looks like you're having fun up there. Yeah, right. Oh, you're a cunt. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:52:23 Oh, okay. Okay, cut. Yeah. Some people just love to do that. They just want to dismiss. And fans think you're so dumb and you have no memory that some of the people who come to your shows to get stuff signed, which, you know, a lot of them, they're not even, well, they're selling them, you know what I mean? Right.
Starting point is 00:52:42 And in certain cities, like, in Kansas City, we're like the Beatles. I mean, there are just certain cities where we sell out the second it goes on sale and stuff. You've got good places and places that aren't as good, you know. No rhyme or reason to it sometimes. But there are people who come up to me that I've seen it shows before. And, I mean, if it's a guy that's just this average-looking guy, you may not remember them. But if it's a guy who's 6-11 and has red hair with like this giant nose and two teeth,
Starting point is 00:53:17 you remember that guy. I saw this guy last year, you know. And so I've actually had them come up to me and say, one of our favorite things to say is, oh, it's so funny. And we can't wait to come see your show tonight. We didn't even know you had a band. They loved to say that. It's like, well, you obviously didn't see every TV show we've done.
Starting point is 00:53:37 and you didn't see, you know, me talking about it on the Today Show or whatever I'm on, you know, this has been going on a long time. Yeah, you knew that. But they want to say that to you. Right, to dismiss you. And so I've actually had guys, on this tour, a guy came up to me who's been to three of our shows. I know he was there. And he's always in the front.
Starting point is 00:54:00 On the third time, he comes up to me and he goes, yeah, man, this is really cool and everything. Will you sign these bunch of pictures from Bad Santa? I don't even know you had a band. It's like, well, the first time you came, maybe you didn't. But then the second time you came, I think you probably remembered. And then last year when you were here, and now you're here today. So I think you probably do by today that we have a band, you know. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:25 But people love, we're in a society now where nobody wants to, it's a get me society. They're going to get you. Yeah. And however they can get you, they want to get you. Yeah. And nobody likes to see people succeed. Like when I was playing the Carl and Slingblade, every critic in the world loved me. And then all the other ones, a simple plan.
Starting point is 00:54:55 I'm playing this poor pathetic wretch and all this kind of stuff. You know, the second I got to, you know, have a love scene with somebody. Yeah. I was a leading man all of a sudden. It's like, wait a minute, you're not one of us. Where did the hump on your back go and all that shit? You know, it's like, you actually look better in this movie than you did that. You know, what did you have plastic surgery or whatever it is?
Starting point is 00:55:18 Right, right, right. And so once you start to succeed, that's when they start to want to say shit to you. Yeah. People love watching people fail things. Yeah. Because it takes away the pressure that they have in their own life, their lack of success. If they could watch a great man fall What's a funny thing is like
Starting point is 00:55:40 The dismissal of your music Like they can't dismiss you as an actor Your accomplishments So they try to dismiss you as like Oh like this is a thing you're kind of doing You wish you were a rock star Right It's a thing you can't possibly be also a musician
Starting point is 00:55:59 Oh yeah You're just an artist and you do things that are cool That you enjoy doing No that's not possible Why is this ugly fuck married to Angelina? You know, that kind of stuff, you know what I mean? It's like, yeah, I mean, and, you know, not that I disagree, but. It's normal.
Starting point is 00:56:17 I get it. I would be thinking that way, too, if I was 16, you know, if I was a kid. I'd be like, fuck that guy. Yeah. You know what I mean? Yeah, it's crazy. I remember when I first saw pictures of you with Angelina Jolie. I didn't think that, though.
Starting point is 00:56:30 I was like, fuck, yeah, dude. Yeah, we're supposed to root for each other. Yeah. You can look at something and be like, oh, fuck that guy. Or you can look at the same thing and go, fuck yeah, way to go, dude. That's awesome. And then you feel good and he feels good and everybody feels good and maybe you're inspired to do better for yourself. Like, you know what?
Starting point is 00:56:55 I wish I was a little bit more like that guy. I got to maybe discipline myself a little more, get my shit together, get something going. You know, but instead of fucking that guy. He's fucking overrated. That guy fucking sucks. He's a joke. Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:10 Fucking Slingblade. Oh, you played a retard. You're all right. Exactly. The beautiful thing about Slingblade is you did that on your own. Like you, you did that and you broke out. Like, you're like, look, nobody's giving me a chance. I was going to do something.
Starting point is 00:57:25 And then everybody's like, oh, my God, we love you. We love you. You did this on your own. Yeah. But even then, you try to do something. different. Like, you try to, like, just be a normal human. No, no, no, no, no. You got to be a retard. We like you as a retard. Absolutely. You're getting a little too big. I liked it when you were underground. I liked it when nobody knew about you. I bet the boxmasters get that
Starting point is 00:57:52 too, right? Like, I liked you in the beginning before you guys made it. Yeah, we have people who like the first two or three albums back, you know, when we first started, which were kind of experimental albums and but yeah it's it's a that's a thing it just is and it's a human thing yeah yeah and we do like more than ever to see people fail i think i mean there was a time when we rooted for people i think there's also too much exposure now i think um for instance um when we were growing up especially in my era uh if we were going to see jimmy stewart we were only going to see him in movie and it was on film and it had literally a film over it that made it look like you were watching something magical now you got digital where you can see every fucking mole on your face and shit you
Starting point is 00:58:45 know and uh and everything is a behind the scenes oh and you know the studios doing this and now this group wants to come over and they're going to do a whole thing and they want to see you on the set and so but if i see mel gibson sitting in a director's chair dressed up like he was in Braveheart talking about the movie, it's like it takes away something from that. It's like we've had too much of a peek behind the curtain, I believe. And I think we're too exposed, there's too much access to people. When I was growing up in this business, I wouldn't have dared. If I'd seen Bob Dylan or Jack Lemon or whoever it was on the sidewalk, I wouldn't walk up to him to say Jack Lemon,
Starting point is 00:59:30 punch him in the shoulder, say, hey, dude, let's get a picture. I mean, in a million years, I wouldn't have done that. There's a respect. These are my elders. They're my heroes. And probably wouldn't have approached them at all. But if I did, I would be, you know, very apologetic and say, I'm so sorry, but I'm such a huge fan of yours. And you still get that every now and then from decent people. But now, cats will come up to me literally and just, you know, just come up and like, grab me by the arm and say, dude, let's see. get a picture. The worst ones are, this is usually guys, usually more guys than women. They come up and they'll say, hey, man, you're supposed to be famous or some shit. And my wife said,
Starting point is 01:00:12 you know, you're like some famous dude. You know, so I don't really give a shit about that stuff, but can we get a picture? And it's like, I've put up with it for 30 years. In the last couple of years, I started saying, how about when you do give a shit, come back and we'll get a picture? you know, because, you know, after a while you just can't take it. And I'm kind of a codependent guy, so I'm nice to everybody that can be, you know. And it's just every now and then you get a ringer and you get drunk people, men and women, who just come over, they'll come to the bus when we're on tour and just start banging on the door and say, hey, you know, come out here, we got some whiskey, take a shot with us.
Starting point is 01:00:55 And you're just like, can you imagine doing that to Jimmy Stewart? Right. You know, first of all, back then, you would have just thrown you in jail, you know. But there's something about having heroes that are unattainable for you. That way they can stay in that magic spot. So I think we've lost magic and mystery and all these things. Well, it certainly happens when you hear actors talk about politics. When actors become activists, it's like, okay.
Starting point is 01:01:22 Yeah. Oye. I donate to a lot of charities, mainly children's stuff, But nobody knows it. I don't go to the award show and talk about it when I'm getting my award. It's like Ricky Jervais said in that skit of his, you know, he said, he said, look, you know, come up here, accept your little award and fuck off. Yeah. You know, I think, first of all, unless you have really studied stuff and really know about a subject fully, who the hell would want to listen to an actor or an actor or an.
Starting point is 01:01:58 musician talk about politics you know what I mean it's like are we supposed to follow this I mean if we are what if they lead you down the wrong road and you know and politically I'm not a I call myself a radical moderate I'm like very strong in my opinions but my opinions don't belong to any political party and you know I just look at what makes sense and I think we need a common sense party in this country. That's actually what I think we need. It's just figure it out. It's pretty easy to figure out what this is all about.
Starting point is 01:02:36 A non-ideologically captured party. Yes. Yeah. That just is like, okay, what do we need to do here? Instead of it's us versus them, you know? Like, you're seeing this a lot right now because Mom Donnie won in New York City and people
Starting point is 01:02:51 are screaming, we're winning now, where are winning? Like, what is this we shit? It's supposed to be we are all Americans. You are all New Yorkers. You're all we. You decided who's going to run your city. Now, we should all root for this guy to do a great job. And this idea that now, fuck all these other people that didn't vote for him. It's not a tribe. It's not a gang war, okay? It's an election to see who governs your city. And once someone wins, everybody else should be like, okay, well, let's hope this guy's got some good fucking plans and it works out great for everybody.
Starting point is 01:03:27 If you don't think like that, you're a part of the problem. Absolutely. I mean, people are pitted against each other so much these days that it's gotten kind of ridiculous. And you're right. It is almost like gang warfare, you know, and here's the other thing. It's like we could also say, let's all get along. Well, that's never going to happen because not everybody's going to get along with everybody. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:51 I mean, even on a personal basis, I mean, you could pick any, you know, 20 people, put them in. a room and let's all hang out together for a week and all live in the same house, you're not going to get along with everybody. But at the end of the day, our basic principles as humans, those should all be the same with all those people. Yes. You know, which that, to me, that's getting along. That's attainable.
Starting point is 01:04:16 It is attainable. And I think that we, like even somebody that maybe you don't agree with their principles, if it's just two of you sitting at a bus stop talking, it's hard to not, just in a one-on-one basis with people, it's hard to dislike someone that you're stuck with for a couple hours. You know what I mean? You start talking, then you find out, oh, this cat doesn't believe anything, I believe, but then all of a sudden you say something like, you know, remember when we used to drink Tang, you know, and then the guy goes, yeah, right, and then the guy goes, yeah, we used to drink
Starting point is 01:04:55 Tang, the next thing you know, you're having a conversation because you grew up as just kids and humans, you know? Right, right, right. Yeah. I think it's all because of social media is a big part of it. Yes, I totally agree. It's because the division when I was a kid, you know, I remember like the Reagan days. Like, there was a lot of people didn't like Reagan, but it was never evil.
Starting point is 01:05:18 It was never like this vile hatred of someone that you see today for different political parties and different politics. and and just the way we looked at one side of the country versus the other side of the country, it wasn't divided like that. No. Like I always had relatives that were, some of them were conservative and some of them were liberal and real liberal and everybody was, like, you disagreed, but they didn't fucking disavow each other because you voted for the wrong person. Like this is bizarre, and I think that sort of insanity is just accentuated by these weird little echo chambers that people exist in that are also, you know, infiltrated by bots, so they're not even real people, half of them. Right, right. So this one FBI analyst, he estimated that it might be as high as 80% of the people
Starting point is 01:06:06 that are communicating online are bots on Twitter, which is fucking insane. Well, yeah. Because it's 80% of the people getting all these other people riled up aren't even people. It's either AI chat bots that are run by China or Russia or even our own government. And then there's actual farms of people that are being told to do these things. Oh, for sure. I mean, now people get jobs in the entertainment business because they're in charge of, I mean, at studios and things, you know, some 22-year-old who's in charge of seeing who has the most followers. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:44 And they take someone and make them into a star because they got all these followers. And it's like, but they can't do jack shit. It's like, you know, the talent comes. the talent is created as opposed to someone was talented and given the opportunity, you know. And I think you're right. I mean, social media has really, I mean, it sounds like the old guy chasing kids off their lawn, but it's just the truth. I told my wife when the Internet first became a thing, way back when it first started.
Starting point is 01:07:16 I said, watch and see. I said, this is going to ruin people's view of each other. it's going to ruin our society. I promise you. You really thought that way back then? Totally. What made you feel that way? Once you start opening it up to, well, it's like, well, now everyone has an opportunity.
Starting point is 01:07:39 They look at that as equality, as an opportunity for everyone, that everyone can get on the Internet, and now everyone can do something. That's great for the people that actually had something to say or do. But then you got another 80 percent, you know, have an opportunity. And all of a sudden there's someone because they decided to, you know, like take pictures themselves at the bathroom or something, you know. And but I swear to God I saw it all coming. And it was, I mean, it gets out of control. And then AI, for Christ's sakes, yeah, it's fun to watch me in a sling blade talking
Starting point is 01:08:23 And like Carl, but it's a little baby trying to order french fries. You know, it's funny. But if it's used for that or if there's some medical ways that they can use it, that's awesome. But once you start taking jobs away from people, I mean, the workforce is going to be destroyed because of that stuff. Yeah. And that's, to me, not cool unless you're going to find a way to take care of people because it's going to ruin the work. I mean, pretty soon you won't need it. For sure.
Starting point is 01:08:56 Yeah, it's going to be interesting to see how we navigate that. But I just, I'm shocked that you picked that out early on because I looked at it the other way. I said, this is going to give people that were outside the system, sort of like you were when you created Slingblade, this is going to give people an opportunity to show their talent that maybe would have never gotten an opportunity to be hired by somebody, that they'll be able to create something completely on their own. And I read all these blogs by people that were really interesting. I was like, okay, I would have never read this guy's book if I just saw it in a bookstore. I wouldn't buy it and pick it up, but I'm reading this guy's, and he's got very interesting insights, and he's just some guy who's a computer coder who lives in Missouri, and somehow or another, he's just smart enough to figure out how to say things in a way that resonates
Starting point is 01:09:42 with me, and I would have never seen this guy's words before. And I was like, oh, this is like good, because it would make it much more of a meritocracy. It's like, if you have good stuff, if you have good things, good ideas. ideas, those ideas will get out. Yeah, I agree with that still to this day. That too. That's true. So it's that, yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:01 And in the beginning, I felt that too. I felt this is great. What I was afraid of was it becoming a runaway train. Well, clearly you were right. You know. Yeah. And so it was, I did love the opportunity to discover people I wouldn't have otherwise. And I still feel that way.
Starting point is 01:10:18 I still discover people on the Internet all the time that it's like, wow, I would have never known that so that does exist but out of those you know 20% like I said there's another 80% that well for instance when I was coming up as an actor we had like 30 critics to worry about you know it was you know Rex Reed and Siskel and Ebert and Jeffrey Lyons and all these people and but you know there was a not a finite number but semi-finite number of critics you know you know You know, I mean, you had the local ones, you know, and all the states, but, and internationally, but now some guy named Daryl, who doesn't like you, you know, can just write a bunch of shit about you and people believe it. Right, right. You know, I've been on lists before.
Starting point is 01:11:12 I mean, you can ask people I work with on a set. Like I said, I'm codependent. I'm probably nicer to the crew, even than I am, you know, the director and the president. producers and stuff. I mean, not that I'm not nice to them too, but I love, like the Landman crew, best crew I ever worked with. And I go out of my way to make sure that they're okay every day. And they'll tell you that. I mean, I've always been, you know, a decent guy on set to people. I've blown up maybe two or three times ever, and that was always when I was directing. But somehow, you look at something on the Internet. You could be.
Starting point is 01:11:53 looking up, how do you make blueberry muffins? And some fucking way, I'll eventually get to something that says, what an asshole I am. You know, and when you see that thing pop up, and it's like, oh, he eats blueberries every day. And that was related to blueberry muffin thing, and which I do eat blueberries every day. And it's been said publicly. But then the blueberries turns into, oh, and he's also weird because he's afraid of antiques. And then it's this and that and the other. Next thing, You know, I'm on a list of the top 10 actors, and I've seen this a couple of times, who are the most difficult to work with on set. And I'm like, how the hell did this even happen? I mean, that's not true, but somehow somebody said something that then became widespread.
Starting point is 01:12:42 And then all of a sudden I end up when he's list and the people I work with would say, God, that could be further from the truth. Let's again, people love to find out that someone's secretly an asshole. Yeah, right. Yeah, they want that. They don't want, like, oh, he's the sweetest guy. They want, oh, he's a piece of shit behind the scenes. Like, the Ellen thing. Like, you know, like Ellen was all, like, laughing and smiley.
Starting point is 01:13:04 And then when everybody found out, she's actually kind of mean. They were like, oh, good. Yeah, fuck her. You know, it's like they wanted that to be true. They were excited that it was true. Absolutely. Yeah. People love to see that.
Starting point is 01:13:18 And, yeah, I mean, I don't have a problem. It's also rumors can just get, they just light fire. And remember the Richard Geer gerbil rumor? Oh, yeah. I grew up in Massachusetts and my buddy grew up in L.A. And I was like, when did you hear that record? And he was like, and it was the same time. I'm like, so this fucking rumor burned across the entire country.
Starting point is 01:13:39 Probably no basis whatsoever in truth. That Richard Geer had to go to the hospital, get a gerbo removed from his ass. And everybody talked about it. And poor Richard Gere is probably at home going, what the fuck? Right. How did that happen? Yeah, it's like I haven't, I've never even been near a gerbil. I mean, it's like, but.
Starting point is 01:13:57 And every time everybody would see Richard Gere, you would go, oh, that's the guy with the gerbil up his house. And they're stamped that way forever. Yeah. Nobody ever forgets it. And now with the Internet, it doesn't go away. No. And if I want something taken down off the Internet, I have to prove it's me, but the person who put it up there doesn't have to prove who they are.
Starting point is 01:14:20 Right. You know what I mean? Right, right, right. It seems kind of odd to me. But, yeah, that whole thing with Richard Gear, they want it to be true so badly that everybody you talk to who's got the news, you know, who said, hey, guess what happened with Richard gear, you know, and then he went to so-and-so hospital and, you know, whatever it was. And then you say, nah, come on.
Starting point is 01:14:46 I mean, seriously, really and truly. And they go, no, no, no, my neighbors, cousins and nurse. You know how many fucking nurses were working there that night? Thousands. Thousands of nurses were on duty. And I know somebody who knows one of them all across the country, you know. Well, they want it to be true. They want it to be true because he was too handsome.
Starting point is 01:15:08 Yeah, exactly. Too handsome, doing too well, too good of an actor. You know, like, fuck that guy. Oh, he like gerbils up his ass. Makes sense. Yeah. And then the idea is that like you get so much pussy, you just like, you get bored. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:23 You start sucking dicks, putting things up your ass. Oh, for sure. Going to the hospital, the G.I. Joe stuffed up there. Oh, yeah. It's just some kind of a fucking rumor. Always. Yeah. It's, you know, it's unfortunate.
Starting point is 01:15:36 It's unfortunate that people think like that. They want, they want failure. And the thing with me is I like people. I really do. and people tell me they I sign a lot of things and take a lot of pictures of people and my friends will say I have friends who won't even look at them you know in the entertainment business they're just like fuck these guys just walk right by them and I'll go through these press lines I'll sign stuff all day and people ask me they say why do you do that I say hey they put my kids through school that's why you know I owe them you know some attention you know and uh The other thing is, it's like to them it means something. You know, 50 years from now, somebody's grandkid is going to have an autographed by somebody that means something to them. I mean, it's different than the people selling them.
Starting point is 01:16:27 I'm talking about, you know, actual fans who want you to write it out to Uncle Albert or whoever it is. Right, right, right. And it means something to them. And I love my fans. I mean, I always have, and I cherish them. I feel blessed every day. and I don't, it's, I mean, it's emotionally exhausting sometimes, you know, because, you know, everybody wants to talk to you for a half hour apiece and you can't do it.
Starting point is 01:16:54 But I try anyway to talk to. It's a weird position to be in. It is, yeah. It's a very weird position to be in where they know you and you don't know them. And everywhere you go, that's the case. You walk, any restaurant you walk into, oh, Billy Bob's here. It's like every, people want to say hi, they want to come over to your tape. and shake your hand and talk to you where I got a mouthful of food and it's like well
Starting point is 01:17:17 you know they always want to buy your stuff when I was broke starving to death most of my life until the last 35 years nobody ever bought me shit no you know now everybody wants to buy me a drink and I'm like well no let me buy you guys a drink it's like I don't need you to buy me a drink now but then I kind of figured out that what it really is it's a connection. Yeah. It's not really about buying the drink. It's an offering.
Starting point is 01:17:45 It's an offering. It's a friendship offering. Exactly. Yeah. And that's why, you know, you take it, you know, you take the drink and you appreciate it. And occasionally you meet really cool people that way. Absolutely. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:57 I meet cool people all the time. All the time. Yeah. All the time. Yeah. It's like the problem is it's just like social media comments. Like if you read 10 great things about you, but then you read one, like that guy's a piece of shit, he yolt the crew.
Starting point is 01:18:10 like oh fuck you man and then that ruins your whole day like 10 people saying you're the nicest guy they've ever met we love them so so talented and so authentic and then one fucking person and that person gets stuck in your head that's the same with meeting people you know you can meet 10 amazing people this is great and one guy is like yeah i don't give a shit but my wife says you're somebody like oh fuck you and that's what you think about the yeah you're sitting in your hotel room smoking cigarettes like fuck that guy right oh it's amazing how people can get under your skin. It is. You know? That's why they do it. Yeah. Yeah. That's why I always tell comedians, post and ghost. Post something, then get the fuck out of there. Don't read anything about
Starting point is 01:18:50 yourself. Don't read the good and don't read the bad. Don't read any of it. You don't want to know. Let them talk. Let them yap. Who cares? I quit reading it, you know, several years ago. I don't do it anymore. And, you know, I just don't even, I don't care about awards anymore. Good for you. I got plenty of them. And because I kind of got in under the wire when awards were kind of real still, you know. Right. And I've won a couple recently. But these days I just look at it as like, oh, okay, we're going to go over here and, you know, have some, you know, dry chicken breast and green beans.
Starting point is 01:19:30 You know, listen to. The cane reeks are so whack. And we'll listen to people, get up there, and pontificate about how awesome they are. And, you know, but see, those are the ones that get me. It's like, how about if you're going to get one of these things and you truly are honored by it? Well, you honor the people who gave it to you. Yeah. Just them.
Starting point is 01:19:54 And don't go up there and talk about saving, you know, the badgers in Wisconsin or something. You know what I'm saying? It's like, you know, there's a time and place for that, I believe. And, you know, you should just. stick to what it is, and people would argue and say, well, no, because I have a voice and because everybody knows me, this is a great platform for me to put this out there. Well, how about this? If you have a billion dollars and you want to save the badgers, fucking save them.
Starting point is 01:20:26 I mean, you got plenty of money to save the badgers. Trust me, that's barely going to cut into your budget. Right, right, right, right. If that's really your cause, talking about it is just going to. annoy people. And everybody knows what you're really doing. You're saying how awesome you are because you care about things. That's exactly right. You're saying how special you are because you're really concerned about people in Sudan or whatever the fuck it is. And it's like a flag that you carry with you to let everybody know that you're an amazing person. Yeah, if you're going to
Starting point is 01:20:53 do it, just do it. Yeah, I've always felt like, I mean, it's easy to say someone was never won an award. But I always felt like awards for art are stupid. Stupid. Because I don't. The concept is stupid. If people enjoy it, that's the reward. That's the award. You got it. You won. People enjoyed it. You did something.
Starting point is 01:21:12 They enjoyed it. Congratulations. Yes. And everything else is just jerking off. Yeah. Like it's... Well, they've become shows. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:20 Now it's just about the show. And it's... You may as well be watching... What's the one where all the, you know, pretty people live in an apartment together and that kind of stuff? Right, right. Yeah. And I'm like, my buddy Rick Overton. You know, Rick?
Starting point is 01:21:33 Sure. Overton, I know very well. I go way back with Rick. And Rick did a thing, a voiceover thing, for an album of ours years ago. And he said, we were here's talking about, he goes, when did, when did a dude, a regular dude sitting in a hot tub with six models become fucking reality? But anyway, it's just. Big brother, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:01 Yeah. But they're all shows now. And if you, they also look you in the eye, the ones I don't dig, or like if you didn't like, let's say you hated landman and you tell me that. You say, you know what, I don't get it. I just don't get it. I can accept that. You know, I go, okay, sorry you don't dig a jump. We're having a great time on it.
Starting point is 01:22:23 And, you know, a lot of people like it. But, you know, I respect that. It's the ones who say, hey, I love your, you know, this is with journalists mostly. they'll say it's the best show on TV then you read their article in their paper wherever it is in Sweden or whatever the fact it is and they just rip you a new asshole yeah and it's like that's what I don't respect it's like if you don't like it tell me you don't like it right now don't get me to say a bunch of shit about it exactly and then take the piss out of it you know that's what's wrong and I'll tell you here's one
Starting point is 01:22:59 Screen Actors Guild. I've been in the Screen Actress Guild since the mid-80s. I mean, a long time. I've done so many Q&A's for SAG audiences out of all this. And these are your peers. Now, maybe if there's an organization that gives out an award, maybe it's political, maybe I don't get it because they don't like me or whatever it is. Okay, I get it.
Starting point is 01:23:27 All the actors at a SAG thing. will come up to me or any other actor-based or entertainer-based award where it's actually your peers voting for you. If you go to the cocktail party after the Q&A, they couldn't be further up your ass. Then, guess how many SAG awards I have? How old is yours? I think one. and it was like a group, an ensemble deal,
Starting point is 01:24:00 and I think I've been nominated twice, maybe three times, in a 40-something year, a career in this. They have given me the least notice, my own cats, who want to be in the movie with me. Hey, see if you can get me in Landman. You know, who you're voting for,
Starting point is 01:24:20 Adrian Brody, you know, whoever it is, whoever they voted for, it wasn't me. Now I don't give a shit. I really don't care. When I do these Q&As now, I do it because I like talking to actors and kind of giving them some information about what we do, hearing what their questions are and what they want to know about. That's why I do it now. It has nothing to do. I actually have, I told an audience in Boston last year, I said, do me a favor.
Starting point is 01:24:45 Please don't vote for me. I said, I'm not here to beg you for an award. So if you don't want to vote for me, don't let me change your mind today. because this is just I'm just talking to you guys right now and I mean that well that's a healthy perspective that's a good way to look for it
Starting point is 01:25:03 yeah the award thing is a weird thing I think one of my favorite award show moments was Marlon Brando when he didn't want to accept his Academy Award so he brought up this Native American woman talked about the plight of Native Americans and American and then it turned out
Starting point is 01:25:18 that wasn't really a Native American woman and she was a crazy person right her sister out in her she wasn't at all Native American And she was just fucking nuts. Oh, my gosh. She came up with a completely fake name.
Starting point is 01:25:29 Oh, God. Just went up there and just, like, just was a nut and just got all this attention. And she tricked Marlon Brando and she tricked all those people. And everybody's like, you're amazing. She's amazing. And to me, that's Hollywood. That moment is what it's really about. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:45 That and when they gave Will Smith a standing ovation after he smacked Chris Rock. Yeah. Like, okay, this is you guys. This is your, you're fucking insane. You guys are nuts. You have no idea which way is north. Someone says it's that way. You're like, it's that way.
Starting point is 01:26:00 And everybody runs in that direction. People have been given awards that didn't actually win because they fucked something up, you know. And they can't go back and say, well, actually, you know. And, you know, it was on the show. It's got a stick, you know, and that kind of thing. But you reminded me of something that I thought was hilarious with the woman being a nut on this thing. remember when there was a cat who was I think it's happened more than once now but the original guy I saw I think I don't remember exactly it might have been somewhere in Africa but some politician or somebody was giving a speech and there was a cat acting like the sign language sign language guy yeah yeah yeah he was doing stuff that looked like he was dancing like James Brown it was like it was like it was like it had nothing to do with sign language I mean he would literally flip around and do things like this it's like I don't no sign language. I know that wasn't fucking sign language, you know. Well, sign language is
Starting point is 01:26:59 also different everywhere you go. You know, there's American sign language, there's English sign language. It's a completely different language. Yeah. Which is really weird. Yeah. Yeah. It's very strange. Yeah. My buddy Moshe Kashar, his parents were deaf. So he can sign. And he explained to me the whole thing and how unique it is. Yeah. And, you know, he can have full conversations with sign language, both alphabetically and with words. And he can do anything. But it's, you know, but it's American sign language. So if he went and tried to talk to someone in, you know, some other country, even if they speak English, like they have a totally different kind of sign language. So it's just like actual language where if you know I go to China, we're not, you know,
Starting point is 01:27:36 what the fuck to say. Exactly. So sign language, yeah. Sign language is an important thing. That's one, that's a good thing that's happened over the last couple decades is they actually do, when there's important information, they always have a signer there, you know. I think there's a lawsuit right now to make the Trump administration bring sign language people back to those White House press briefings. Really? Yeah, I read something, see if you can find that. I've read something about that today. I'm like, why would they take that out?
Starting point is 01:28:07 Why would you remove sign language thing? Yeah. I've had them on comedy shows sometimes. Like, if you perform at some theater and, like, there's some sort of a mandatory requirement for a sign language person. And so there's someone that has to keep up with the jokes and explain. sarcasm while you're in the middle. Wow. Like, it's very weird.
Starting point is 01:28:27 That's a hard job. Well, I always fuck with the person, too. Because I was like, this is so crazy. You have to try to decipher that. Here it is. Judge orders White House to use American Sign Language interpreters at briefings. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:40 So were there not ones ever before? No, it says they stopped when... They stopped during the Trump administration? They stopped in January. Oh, that's crazy. Wow. Well, that's not. smart. I don't remember it much when I was growing up. I don't remember it at all. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:59 I don't remember it at all. I knew it was a thing, but I never saw it like at speeches or anything like that. But yeah, it's important. So can I ask you a comedy question? Sure. Because it's always fascinated me. I mean, people have said to me before, like especially if I get on a roll and I've had a few beers yeah they say you ought to do it just you know just for one night just do a stand-up in LA or New York or somewhere or Texas wherever and I'm like it's the scariest thing in the world to me like I if you and I are just hanging out you know all of us you know having a beer right you know maybe I can be kind of funny sometimes but I to get on a stage and here's the reason I'm afraid of it is because if you're doing a play
Starting point is 01:29:48 If you're doing a, you know, cat on a hot tin roof or wherever the hell it is, you don't really know the reaction from the audience. I mean, it's like they either love the shit out of this or they don't get it or whatever, but you don't know in the moment. If you're a stand-up comic, you have one reason to be up there, and that's to make them laugh. So if you don't make them laugh pretty soon, you're fucked. And, I mean, I can't imagine bombing as a comic. And I think about different, you know, people over the years that had a very different type of comedy, you know. And like Stephen Wright, for instance. Yeah, perfect example.
Starting point is 01:30:33 Stephen Wright, who walks out there, doesn't say shit to the audience for a minute, takes a drink of water, and then it goes. So last night I accidentally put my car key into my door at my house and started my house up I drove it around the block cop pulled me over and said where do you live I said right here
Starting point is 01:30:56 you know or he goes he says I bought some powdered water only I don't know what to mix it with I mean you know that kind of stuff so this is very sort of like nobody ever did that before until he did that.
Starting point is 01:31:11 And I'm like, what was it like in the beginning for that guy where people just going, what the fuck are you talking about? Well, you know, it's interesting with him. He existed in, there's a great documentary on comedy in Boston called When Stand Up Stood Out. This guy, Fran Salamita, who was a comic in Boston, created it.
Starting point is 01:31:28 And it's all about, there's a very, Boston was a very unique environment in stand-up where all these comedians were just doing stand-up for Boston audiences. They just, they didn't travel, they just stayed there, and they were some of the best guys that have ever done stand-up, ever. But a lot of it was regional, and a lot of it didn't translate when they left Boston. Right. But they were so fucking good.
Starting point is 01:31:54 And there was just a giant group of them. And some of them, like Lenny Clark broke through and Jay Leno, of course, and Louis C.K. came out of there, Bill Burr. A lot of guys broke through, right? but there was a core group of guys that were a part of this, there was a group that would perform at this Chinese restaurant that was also a comedy club called the Ding Ho. And the Dingho, but I started in 88, and it was already closed. It had closed by, I think, 84, 85 or something like that.
Starting point is 01:32:22 The guy was a gambler, lost all the money, lost his fucking Chinese restaurant, the place went under. But the scene still stayed, and everybody was just about the art. There was no way to be famous. It was impossible. You were locally known, you know, so you could perform at a club and people go, oh, Steve Sweeney's going to be there. We'll go see him. But when Stephen Wright got on the Tonight Show, it fucked it up for everybody.
Starting point is 01:32:50 Because everybody's like, why him? Why not me? And they got mad. Because Stephen Wright had this very bizarre, absurdist act that translated perfectly to like a seven-minute late-night, you know, Johnny Carson said. and it he he was the guy that broke out he was the guy
Starting point is 01:33:10 that broke out where all these fucking killers man and this one guy who's just like weird and absurd was fucking crazy hair and all fucked up
Starting point is 01:33:18 and looked a little strange I used to work at a fire hydrant factory you couldn't park anywhere near the place it was like those kind of jokes
Starting point is 01:33:28 right exactly and in a lot he created like a lot of resentment where these guys like were upset that this guy who didn't do as good as them on stage was on the tonight show what about me and it like changed the thing that they were doing wow yeah it's amazing it's like when steve martin first came out i worked uh as a roadie you know for a lot of bands
Starting point is 01:33:52 when i was a kid and uh so you know george carlin richard prior those guys they created a thing we hadn't seen before you know uh from anybody i mean richard doing his as like stories. They weren't jokes. They were just, he would just start talking about these people he knew and then, you know, go through the stories. And Carlin, you know, coming up with all the,
Starting point is 01:34:15 that witty stuff, you know, here's some partial baseball scores. One, three, seven, you know, so like that. And so I was privileged as a kid to watch new brands of humor come out on TV that we could see. and I was roeying a couple of shows for the nitty-gritty dirt band, who I still kind of keep in touch with. And their opening act was Steve Barton because he plays banjo. So he played banjo before the dirt band came out.
Starting point is 01:34:46 This is when I'm a teenager. And he did the arrow through the hit, the whole thing. But he had kind of longer curly hair, and he wore buckskin clothes and played a banjo. And there was a front-of-house guy named Danny Smith, who I worked for, you know, with this sound company. And I was back there at the front-of-house console with him. I see this guy come out, and I lost my mind.
Starting point is 01:35:12 I was screaming, crying, laughing, you know, with some of the shit he did because he just came out and just said, I'm going to do the stupidest shit you've ever seen in your life, and people are going to laugh. Yeah. And it's like, you know, and what he would just do, the whole excuse me or whatever, you know. And so here's a guy coming out being over the top and putting arrows through his head shit, and people couldn't get enough of it. And before he did that, nobody else had ever done that.
Starting point is 01:35:43 Right. And all of a sudden, here you got a guy that, you know, is doing it. And that became more the norm for a while. You know, it's like it spawned a lot of other people. You know, it's like when we did Bad Santa, there hadn't been anything like that. Right. And the next thing you know, after Bad Santa, there's bad moms, bad teachers, bad grandpas, bad next door neighbors, you know, bad guy who works as the dry cleaners, you know. And so, and those will last for several years, you know, where people are kind of getting that in their heads and naturally they're influenced by it and that brand lasts for a while.
Starting point is 01:36:21 Like Yellowstone. There's probably a lot of Yellowstone type ideas that get pitched after that. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah, Steve Martin got so big that he decided to quit. So he was doing stand-up and he was like, I lost all touch with the audience because anything I said was funny. I lost like what's real and what's not real. He was too big.
Starting point is 01:36:43 And so he decided to not do it anymore, which is insane. Right. Because you really think about it like this, the thing that he loved and he was at the time, like one of the only acts that was doing arenas. I mean, he was probably one of the first comedians of all time. to do these huge places. And people would come to see him as this variety act. It was part, you know, King Tut, do, do, do, do. You know, the King Tut song.
Starting point is 01:37:07 Oh, for sure. Let's get small. Like, it was like, it was just so unique. And he just decided to step away from it and just do movies. And it's so wild because, you know, when you mention that thing about the big arenas of stuff, another thing that's scary to me about comedy is like if you're not in a room where everybody gets, every nuance that would scare me. I mean, to be, you know, of course, he was that big, and he had, and it was a big thing
Starting point is 01:37:35 where people could see the big movements and stuff, but, you know, Lewis Black, right? Sure. Lewis Black was, we played, this is probably, you know, at least a decade ago, probably more, and we played it in Milwaukee at County Stadium. And it was a biker rally deal we were playing at. We came on before a kid rock. So we play our set. There are 250,000 people at this thing.
Starting point is 01:38:06 Wow. And it was like, you know, half a woodstock. And so we went out there and, you know, had a great show. We come off and everything. Well, Lewis was there. So aside from the main giant stage where the concerts are going on, they have one of those blow-up tents, you know, the ones where the sound's never good in there. Right, right.
Starting point is 01:38:26 And it looks like, you know, the Dallas Cowboys Training Facility tent or whatever it is like that. So Lewis comes by the bus to say, hey, we talked for a few minutes. And I knew him from the Sunset Marquis. He would be in the bar there sometimes in L.A. And so we're talking, and I said, yeah, man, there's a huge crowd out there. He goes, no, you guys were awesome. You don't have anything to worry about out here. They loved you.
Starting point is 01:38:53 He goes, try doing comedy in a blow-up tent with people. in folding chairs. He goes, that's not fun, you know. And especially with a guy like him whose whole thing is about anger and, you know, that kind of stuff. And you've got people in their little folding chairs in the below tent, you know, with probably some shitty microphone, you know. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:39:13 Those shows are always hell. There's like festival shows. Right. Or shows where they have like a bunch of different things going on simultaneously. There's a band over there and there's a comedy tent over here. I've done a few of those. It's horrible. They're always hell.
Starting point is 01:39:26 Yeah. You always do it. You've got different stages. So you've got like five bands and you can hear every one of them and you're trying to, you know, be funny. Yeah. That's not a good environment for comedy. Yeah. I mean, I've done a lot of different kinds of comedy like arenas, theaters, comedy clubs is really where it's supposed to.
Starting point is 01:39:46 Everybody agrees with that. Oh, yeah. Because I think what comedy is is you're performing, you're doing it, but you're also hypnotizing people. Right. What you're doing is you're getting them to. think the way you think. You're putting people into your mindset. When I watch a comic that's really good when they're on stage, I let them think for me. I'm like, go ahead, think for me. Take me on a trip. Take me on a trip to the way you think of things. And you lock in with
Starting point is 01:40:08 these. And it's much easier to do that. It feels like as an audience member, it's much easier to get locked in if there's only a hundred other people in the room with you or 200 other people in the room. But as soon as you get to like 16,000, it starts getting weird. It starts It's a different thing. Now it's a show. It's a big show. For sure. You're not like, really.
Starting point is 01:40:30 The only exception is the round. The round is weird because the stage is like this little circle and everyone's around you. And it's oddly intimate. Even if there's like, even if I've done the round in Madison Square Garden. So there's like 16,000 people in there. But because they're all looking at each other, everyone sees everybody's face. It's intimate now. Now it's not a separation between the crowd and the performer who's on the stage.
Starting point is 01:40:58 Now we're all in this together. It's like a big hug. It's very weird. That's an interesting point. We've played shows with a band like that in certain theaters where, of course, for a loud-ass band like we are, sometimes we're a little big for the room. But, you know, but that's an interesting point, especially the thing about people being able to see each other because then you don't want to be the dick that everybody is going to. I wish that guy would shut the fuck up. Right, right, right.
Starting point is 01:41:26 It's like they're right there. Because, you know, in the Coliseum, these cats in the back, just hooting and hollering and shit and not paying any attention. You know, it's a different thing. Can I pee? Yeah, yeah, yeah. We'll pause right here. We'll be right back, ladies and gentlemen.
Starting point is 01:41:40 I can throw this in a cup. It doesn't matter. Unless you want to. Oh, I don't care. No, it doesn't matter. Yeah, but light's cool. They sponsor the UFC, so. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:52 And we're back. where were we what were we talking about well we were on comedy and then i just talked about louis black and yeah we're talking about fear you know fear of performing yeah and hypnosis yeah so we're it's a weird art form but yeah the bombing is horrible but it's also the the killing is the greatest feeling of all time so it's like the only way you get one is with the possibility of the other right you know the only reason why you're willing to go through the bombing because you know how great it feels when you're not bombing right you know and killing is so great because you know that it it doesn't have to work out it could equal it could be terrible
Starting point is 01:42:32 yeah but it's a it's a weird art form and it's a very new one that's the really I think in my opinion real modern stand-up you could trace back to one guy it's Lenny Bruce yeah without him I don't think there is I mean it probably would have been invented eventually right but he's the guy Like, that's, like, we have one person, and we have film of him. It's not like the first guy to pick up a guitar. Like, who's that guy? Yeah. Try finding him.
Starting point is 01:43:01 Like, who invented the fucking drums? Like, good luck. Because they didn't really, like you said, before him, that wasn't. I mean, he made comedy performers stand-up comedians like rock stars, you know. I mean, it was before that, and all the controversy and all that kind of thing. Because before then, it was like variety shows. If you have Bob Hope and those guys, they're always on some TV show. It was usually them and someone else.
Starting point is 01:43:29 Yes. You know, and, yeah. Did you ever know Rodney Dangerfield? Yes. I didn't know him well, but I did meet him. And funny enough, I worked, when I was 19, I worked as a security guard at Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts. It's like this amphitheater in Massachusetts. And Rodney was performing there.
Starting point is 01:43:50 and it was at the stage of Rodney's life where he only wore a bathrobe on stage Buck naked with slippers in a bathrobe and I saw Rodney when I was working there I was like by the backstage area and I saw Rodney walking in the hallway pacing with his fucking bathrobe
Starting point is 01:44:08 on like this is the greatest thing of all time this guy's just gonna go out there at a bathrobe this was 1986 Wow yeah and so he went out there with his fucking bathrobe and just murder I mean murder
Starting point is 01:44:23 the point of people were falling out of their chairs dying laughing and I was like this is the greatest thing I've ever seen in my life this guy's in a fucking you want to talk about
Starting point is 01:44:33 not giving a fuck he really didn't give a fuck anymore and there was I wish I had known him where I could have asked him why the bathrobe like what was it about that
Starting point is 01:44:42 but I've got to think that it was like the ultimate not caring the ultimate relaxing when are you ever more relaxed than when you get out of the shower, he just put it on a fucking bathrobe, your dick swinging out there in the wind, and he just walked out in front of the whole
Starting point is 01:44:58 crowd like that. Yeah. 15,000 people watching Rodney in a bathrobe, just murder it. Nick Nolte used to do that. Did he really? Nolte would do press junkets and interviews with his pajamas on and a robe. Wow. I did it for years, yeah. And Nolte just was like, I just want to be comfortable, you know.
Starting point is 01:45:17 Nolte had one of the greatest sayings for when somebody would come up to him who was a fan or whatever, you know, and he was just messing with him. He wasn't serious, but somebody had come and say, Mr. Nolte, I don't want to bother you, and he'd go too late. I met Nick Noltee in the 90s because I was on a show called Newsreve. radio and one of the stars of the show was Vicki Lewis and Vicki Lewis was dating Nick Nolte at the time. So he was always hanging around. I knew Vicki. And I got to know him. He was a really fucking nice guy and the one time I'm in Fry's Electronics going to get a motherboard. That was back in the days where I would make my own computers. I would like build my own computers and play video games on them. So I would like get great motherboards and a really good video card and all that
Starting point is 01:46:14 chest and uh i see this dude with glasses on who's like going over this box and uh i go i go hey man what's up he goes oh hey joe and it was like to me he's the coolest thing in the world that nick nulte knew who i was right outside of the set like outside of the set it was normal inside the set rather it was normal he's there with vicky like he says to hide everybody so you know but like to meet him in an electronic store i was like this is the craziest thing of all time oh yeah i'm like 27 at the time i'm like this is just so nuts i know nick nolte is this fucking insane that's amazing i knew vicky too she skinny little red-haired yeah crazy voice oh my god could she sing yeah oh my god powerful voice yeah to like a talent like wow
Starting point is 01:47:02 that's that to me is one of the most impressive things when someone could just sing their fucking ass off like because i can't sing at all so when i hear someone sing like that i'm like god what can you do with your voice. That is insane. The beauty of a good song is like, man, it's one of the most misunderstood things that we love. Because I think it's an art form that creates a response in people that's just like a drug. Like, if there's a drug that you could take that made you feel like when Midnight Rider comes on the radio and it's just the right time to hear it
Starting point is 01:47:45 like maybe you just had a shot you know and your buddy tells you something you're like oh yeah man that was fucking great and then all said do do do do do do you know what I mean it's just it's like oh yeah and everybody's like woooo it's a drug
Starting point is 01:48:02 it really is a drug and some songs are made for the car and that other songs are made for at home just laying around like especially back in my hippie days you know it's like you weren't going to listen to king crimson or pink Floyd in the car right you'd run off the road
Starting point is 01:48:19 you know right but midnight rider oh midnight rider is the car song that is the car that and radar love oh yeah radar love that's another one I saw those cats live really golden ear ring they opened for
Starting point is 01:48:33 Frank Zappa and the mother's invention oh wow wow A Dutch band, yeah. Oh, wow. That's wild. That was a song I used to listen to when I go to visit my girlfriend. She was in western Massachusetts.
Starting point is 01:48:47 It was like an hour and a half drive. I listened to Radar Love. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Been driving on that man, the way on the wheel. It's one of those songs that make you think you are the guy in the song. Oh, yeah. You're the star of the song.
Starting point is 01:49:02 Yeah. Yeah. There's songs like that, like Shooting Star by Bad Company. You know, everybody wants to be that guy. Yeah. Everybody, you're like, yeah, that's me, man. Oh, yeah. I'm going to be a superstar.
Starting point is 01:49:14 Then I'm going to die young and everyone's going to miss me. Yeah, right. It was like in the John Lennon documentary where that cat, that homeless hippie cat comes up to his door, you know, and he's kind of starving and stuff. And he says, I don't know if you ever saw it, but he's obviously been living in the bushes, you know. And he thinks that one of Lennon's songs was about him. Oh, no. I think he probably had a little schizophrenia or something, you know. And he was, and Lennon answered the door, you know, and was talking to him.
Starting point is 01:49:43 It's in the documentary. And he, he says, well, when you were singing that, I mean, it was like, I felt that, you know, you're singing about me. And it's like my, and Lennon just said, no, he goes, I only write songs about me. He said, I don't know about your life. He goes, I just, all I write about is my experience with stuff. So it's not about you, but he said, are you hungry? And the guy goes, yeah, next thing you know, he invites a man and they eat and stuff like that at his house. But sometimes, you know, some art form can influence people so much that they identify with it so much that it becomes that to them.
Starting point is 01:50:22 Especially people who have some mental issues or something like that can really speak to them. Yeah. I mean, you know, sometimes in a negative way, I mean, once again, John Lennon that can, you know. I mean, read Catcher in the Rye. Mm-hmm. Catcher in the Rye, he thought he was that cat in there, you know? Yeah. Well, people are very malleable.
Starting point is 01:50:46 And some people, mentally ill people, extremely. And something, one song, one book, one movie can, I mean, how many people went nuts after they watched taxi driver? Oh, yeah. I'd like to know that. Like, how many people thought they were Travis, you know? For sure, yeah. That was a fucking intense performance. De Niro in the early days, God damn that guy.
Starting point is 01:51:11 Yeah, he was great. Really great. You know, it's funny how many comedies he does now playing a dad or a grandpa. Yeah, angry, grumpy grandpa. Yeah, meet the fuckers. Yeah, that kind of stuff. Yeah. That's so funny.
Starting point is 01:51:31 You know, Duval, My mentors, you know, were Deval and Bruce Dern. Oh, wow. And guys like that. And the fact that not only did I get to meet them, but work with them several times apiece. And once you know everybody, you start to, sometimes you hate to hear yourself talk because I'll be talking to some younger actor, you know, it's like 25 or 30. and they'll say, oh, yeah, I really love that movie so-and-so with, you know, with Robert DeVall. I go, yeah, well, he's my mentor.
Starting point is 01:52:12 He brought me up. And it's like, yeah, look at it. I watched some of the old movies, too. You know, like, I always thought Lauren Bacall was so hot. Yeah, I knew Lauren Bacall. And it's like, then you start to sound like an asshole. But it's just a fact. You do know them.
Starting point is 01:52:27 But it's a different reality, though, for you. It is a different reality. And you get used to it to the point where you just look at all of these legends who you know. Yeah. I mean, I knew Gregory Peck very well, Elizabeth Taylor, all of them. And Roddy McDowell. And I got so used to it that I would forget most of the time, you know. And then every now and then you go, I'm talking to fucking Lauren Bacall.
Starting point is 01:53:00 Right. You know, it's Bogart's wife. Yeah. I mean, are you shitting me? And so I still pinch myself sometimes. I mean, I've been really blessed to have met a lot of great heroes of mine, you know, and become friends. Well, right now I'm working with Sam Elliott. Sam and I have known each other since, I'm probably in late 80s somewhere in there.
Starting point is 01:53:25 Worked together twice before, but a couple of scenes at a time, Tombstone and then 1883. but kept up with each other over the years. And he was another guy who was more of a mentor from a distance. I just always admired Sam. And now I work with him every day. That's wild. And it's amazing. It's got to be weird, right?
Starting point is 01:53:44 It's so wild that he's such a sweet man, such a great actor. But when he and I do scenes together, it's literally like you and I talking right now. Right. It's that natural just to, we're, We've essentially talked to each other off, you know, when they cut, it's no different than the scene we just did. Yeah. You know what I mean? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:10 Well, that's when he's been doing it so long and he's so good. It's just he's so relaxed that even though you know it's Sam Elliott, you believe he's whoever the fuck he's playing. Because there's a naturalness to it. Like you're talking about with yourself, there's a naturalness to it. And that translates when people are willing. watching a film or watching a television show with that which television shows aren't even really television shows anymore like i don't think land man's a television show it's a long movie it's a 10-hour movie yeah it's just it's like what is which is the beautiful thing about
Starting point is 01:54:44 streaming you know that's really when you got shows like ozark and stranger things and it really started with the sopranos where you're doing it's essentially like a really long film it's not i mean it's on television but it's what does that mean anymore fucking everything's on television most people watch movies on television like what does that mean anymore it's just a distribution device for whatever art you're doing yeah and on those kind of shows like it's so important for you to buy it you know it's you get this you've got this character it's not just one guy in a film like oh i'm not buying that guy right is something but he sounds like an actor right you know versus 9 10 11
Starting point is 01:55:30 episodes in, second season. Like, I got to believe that guy. Yeah. I got to be, yeah. And the naturalness is the thing. You know, like, there's a great scene in Landman where you're explaining, which I loved, you're explaining windmills and what green energy and how much fucking horseshit this all is for you to feel good about yourself.
Starting point is 01:55:55 I fucking love that scene. but I know you're Billy Bob Thornton, but in that scene, you're that fucking dude who works for an oil company who's like, shut the fuck up. Do you know what the fuck you're even talking about? It's because of that naturalness that that works. Yeah, it was, that scene was, I mean, it became huge. I mean, it was all over the internet, that scene. And, I mean, when I run into an oil guy wherever,
Starting point is 01:56:27 it is. I mean, you know, mainly Texas, but wherever I am, they always bring that scene up and thank me and, you know, thanks for showing people what this is. And, you know, I do get questions, you know, obviously because of the nature of the show. People try to politicize everything. And the fact of the matter is, is that Taylor, with that show, is not taking a side. He's just saying, here's a look behind the curtain at how this works. And it's about how are the people who work in that industry, whether you're on the suit side or you're out there in the fields. And if you're the family of, like I have the family in the show, it's just this is how it works and this is how it affects the people who work in it. This is how dangerous it is.
Starting point is 01:57:22 Here's how much of a gamble it is. and here are all the other crazy people circling your world, in my case, the family, you know? And it's, when I did that scene, I was committed to it, you know, because when I read it, and Taylor's very good about writing gigantic monologues for me. And when something makes sense to you dialogue-wise, it's easy to do a long monologue. if you don't know what it means, it's harder to learn the dialogue. If you understand what the person is written,
Starting point is 01:58:02 I'm not saying if you agree with or disagree with it, but if you understand what they're saying, it's actually easier to do a monologue than it is to do a back-and-forth scene with people sometimes. I bone more lines on a back-and-forth conversation than I do when I'm just sitting there telling somebody something. Right. Like Jerry Jones' scene in there.
Starting point is 01:58:22 You know, Jerry was telling his life story. Right. I mean, it wasn't, Taylor wrote something there for him, you know, because he'd heard the story before from Jerry. But if it had been written and Taylor said, you got to write, you know, you got to say these words, Jerry probably wouldn't have done it, been able to do it. But the fact that Taylor said, just tell that story you told me. Yeah. It's his story. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:47 It'd be like if I ask you, tell me your life story. Right. You can do that. Right. And if you get a person who's not an actor to be themselves, they're better than actors. You know, I've always found that. I've cast people in movies that have never been in one before. I just don't tell them we're rolling.
Starting point is 01:59:06 I really don't. In Slingblade, the guy Rick Dial, who played the guy at Ran the Fix It Shop, the kind of big guy. I went to school with him since the third grade. And I always thought, this guy could be an actor, you know. And when we did the first scene with him there in his shop, when Jimmy Hampton brought me over there and said, this is Carl, he's going to work, all that stuff, you know. I just went to Rick, and I said, dude,
Starting point is 01:59:32 and Brent Briscoe, who played Scooter, the guy could never fix anything. And I said, look, Rick, the camera crew, they don't have their shit together. You know, I said, they're going to have to get some marks and do a bunch of stuff, so this is not on us. So we're going to run the scene, but we're not really filming it. Just say the dialogue. If you fuck something up, don't worry about it.
Starting point is 01:59:52 He was letter perfect. Once we started saying action and shit, then all of a sudden it got a little different. Most stuff in Slingblade was the first take. Wow. Because he's relaxed. Yeah. The pressure of the moment.
Starting point is 02:00:09 Action is a crazy word. I hate it. I don't even, usually, when I'm direct, I don't direct much anymore. But when I do, I just kind of say, you know, you guys go whenever you're ready, you know. But then you have ADs and PAs out there on their radios and shit, and they're all screaming shit. And it's like, you know, don't disrupt the flow here. Just let the cats do it, you know.
Starting point is 02:00:36 I mean, Clint Eastwood has been known to say, you know, jokingly, but instead of cut, sometimes an actor I know worked with Clint. And he said, when Clint was satisfied with the scene, he just goes, okay, that's enough of that shit instead of cut. But what was the process of, like, deciding to do Slingblade? Like, how did, like, you know, you're obviously trying to find a vehicle for yourself, and they're not offering it to use you create it yourself. But, like, what was the process? Like, how did you decide to do that guy? Like, what was it?
Starting point is 02:01:15 It's a story that nobody believes. I've told it a couple of times. And nobody believes it, and it's the absolute truth. I was doing one scene. I think there were two scenes, but it was one of them was cut out of the thing. I think it was an HBO movie or something. It starred Val Kilmer. And I was playing a railroad conductor in the 1920s.
Starting point is 02:01:44 It was based on an old movie with Paul Muni called I'm a fugitive from a chain gang, old movie from, I guess, the 30s. And they remade it and called it The Manor Broke a Thousand Chains. I played a railroad conductor who had like a wool fucking thing out of the 20s, and they had the, you know, the whole 20s haircut with the side's pretty much shaved off, you know, and that's kind of stuff. And we're shooting in Riverside, California, at this old railroad museum. And an old director named Daniel Mann, who directed Teahouse the August Moon with Brando and some other movies. He'd come out of retirement to do this. He was an old cat. As a matter of fact, he was so old school that when I went to read for him,
Starting point is 02:02:34 there was a casting director named Kathy Henderson, who was always good to me. So she had always get me in to see the director. and he was sitting there behind the desk he had a little gray goatee and glasses and I just talked to him for a few minutes and then I read a couple of lines with him it's just being him and he literally said
Starting point is 02:02:52 a kid I got a pot for you in this picture and it was like what am I what is that Louis mayor who the fuck was I just talking to you know and so he put me in the thing and this was in the 80s And I'm burning up, you know, Riverside, California, it's hotter shit out there. It was in the summer.
Starting point is 02:03:16 So I'm in a wool suit with a conductor hat on and just sweating my ass off. And I go in, and this was in the days when I was still in a honey wagon. So there's just a little tiny room, you know, a little bathroom and a little couch. It's like that wide. And at lunch I went in and I put the air conditioner on. I took that conductor hat off, and I looked at myself in the mirror, and I thought, you're sorry, son of a bitch, you're never going to make it doing any of this shit. Music, movies, nothing.
Starting point is 02:03:49 You're just, you know, why are you out here, you know, to make, you know, three or four hundred bucks for a day? And Val Kilmer is a big star, and you're just some idiot with a couple of lines, you know. And I literally made that face in the mirror at myself. Wow. Made the face, and I started talking in that voice because I was so in a moment of self-loathing that I literally started going at myself in the mirror. I did that monologue to the girl that's the college student who comes to interview me in the beginning of the movie. It's like a nine-minute monologue. I did that monologue in the mirror to myself right there and never wrote it down.
Starting point is 02:04:36 And I can remember it to this day. Because I have all these weird afflictions. You know, I have terrible anxiety and have obsessive compulsive disorder really bad. And I grew up dyslexic and, you know, kind of an edge of the spectrum kind of guy. And I always had the ability to remember stuff. I have a photographic memory. I'm dumb as a bag of hair in every other aspect of life. But I have a photographic memory.
Starting point is 02:05:06 And even if it's not something I read on a page, it's up here. And so I remembered that monologue. And then I realized that I was talking about certain things that were actually in my life. The idea of him living out back in a shed, just sleeping in a hole back there and the family would bring him his food and stuff like he was a creature and stuff like that. That was based on a guy in Alpine, Arkansas, that lived. there. The story was that his mother was scared by a snake when she was pregnant. You know, old, you know, southern lore shit. Or the father was drunk when he was conceived. But actually, he had polio and was what the real deal was. He walked funny. He talked funny
Starting point is 02:05:58 and everything. So Carl is largely based on a combination of this guy, Ed, in our town. and Frankenstein you know Frankenstein and the kid and the you know the sort of not knowing any better you know
Starting point is 02:06:16 yeah and you know it's like the well I was told by the parents in the Bible it says you know if you see some you know like sex is bad or whatever it was he sees his mother with his cat
Starting point is 02:06:29 Jesse Dixon and he kills her she told him to do that you know So that's where it all came from. And I started doing it as part of a one-man show in the theater back in the late 80s. And from that one-man show, that whole character was born. And then I wrote a short film and we did that.
Starting point is 02:06:55 And that's why I got best adapted to screenplay Oscar was from that. It wasn't, I mean, it was my original screenplay, but it was adapted. from my own thing. And so that's how that came about. So when you went to do a one-man show, did you ever think that you want to make it into a film? Or was it just like, I want to put this on its legs and just whatever this idea I have in my head,
Starting point is 02:07:17 I want to make something out of it? At that time, when I was doing in the theater, I didn't think much beyond that. A couple of years later, I started thinking about it. And I thought that's the story. I knew the story if I ever wrote it. I wrote it in nine days. And my oldest son, Willie, was actually on my lap most of the time
Starting point is 02:07:42 while I was writing on paper because I don't know how to type. And so I just wrote it on, you know, paper like a tablet like that, you know. And eventually, you know, we made that little short. And then these guys that made the short wanted to make it into a feature. but they had this whole other idea about it, about they wanted to show what happened when I was a kid and show me murdering the mother. I said, yeah, that's the wrong thing to do. So I made it myself. And I directed a documentary on widespread panic, the band out of Athens, Georgia, and Colonel Bruce Hampton.
Starting point is 02:08:21 But that's the only directing experience I'd had, and I didn't know shit about it. But I knew the story, you know, and I got Barry Markowitz, my DP, and, you know, got some. guys and asked John Ritter, who I was working with at the time, you want to play a gay guy from St. Louis who moves to a little town in Millsburg? And he goes, yeah, I'll do it. None of us thought this thing was going to do what it did. I thought my mom and my brothers and people like that would see it, and that was it. And it became iconic. How weird was that? Very weird. Very weird. Yeah. I mean, when they say overnight success, Yes, that literally was the moment.
Starting point is 02:09:03 I mean, I had a name within the movie business from this movie called One False Move that we did in 90 or so, 89 or 90. But so people were, you already had made deals to write screenplays for various studios and stuff. And I was getting acting work here and there. But when I did Slingblade, it literally, I woke up one morning and I was not only a millionaire,
Starting point is 02:09:29 but hugely popular. And it freaked me out. I mean, I appreciated every moment of it. But really, when you're going through those times, it's such a blur, you know, how quickly it happened and everything that, I mean, to this day, I think back on it, you know. How the fuck? Get here. And I don't think you could get that movie made now. I think a lot of movies that I've done, you couldn't get them made now.
Starting point is 02:10:04 I don't think there's an audience that would either tolerate it or be interested in it, you know, because most of my writing is based on novelists and not screenwriters. I've stayed out of Hollywood my whole career pretty much, you know, other than the high-profile relationships, maybe. You know, other than that, I haven't associated with Hollywood much. And it was just, you know, thinking back and going, how did I become a movie star? Shit. I think you could do it today because I don't think anybody had ever done it when you did it.
Starting point is 02:10:41 No, that's true. You know what I mean? That's true. But I think because maybe, well, see, Slingblade, first of all, it's not a comedy. There's funny stuff. in it. But a lot of people come up to me and they say, man, that Carl, he's funnier and shit. And it's like, well, if you think about what it's really about, it's not that funny. But I just think because of the climate, you know, it's like, well, is he making fun of a mentally challenged guy, you know, bad Santa? I mean, it's like you can't be that crass anymore or whatever. And I think you still can. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:11:27 Yeah. I think if you do, people will go to see it. It's just you'll get a lot more pushback now because people think that they can and that they can stop things and cancel you and all that jazz. But the reality is if it's entertaining, if it resonates with people, they want to see it. It's just nobody wants to find it. That's like comedies have died. Like, once the last time it was a really good comedy movie.
Starting point is 02:11:50 It's hard to make because of all this pushback, all these people that freak out about things. things. If you don't like it, don't go see it. That's my opinion. You don't like rap music. You don't like people talking about that. Don't listen to it. You don't like this. Don't go see it. Absolutely. That's exactly what I believe. I actually think that critics maybe should only do reviews on things they like. I mean, because what good.
Starting point is 02:12:21 Right. What are you trying to do? What are you trying to do with the terrible review? So they claim that they're trying to protect the public from this atrocity. And I don't understand why they think that they are the savior of everybody's 15 bucks or whatever else. That it's like, you know, I can't believe I, you know, saw this movie, like, wasted two hours of my life. I'll never get back. It's like, you know, when people storm out of a theater. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:12:54 I stormed out of the theater, you know. It's like, because of a fucking movie, I mean, seriously? I mean, just go in there. And if you don't dig it, you don't dig it. Don't worry about it, you know. Just tell the public, hey, you know, I'm nobody, but I saw this movie recently that's pretty fucking good. You might want to go see it.
Starting point is 02:13:13 As opposed to this vile piece of shit, blah, blah, blah, you know. It's like to have that type of arrogance to think that you. you are informing them that they should stay away from something. Like you know shit, you know, so I don't get that part. I mean... Well, because you're not gross. It's a gross profession. I mean, do you remember when Siskel and Ebert were like the...
Starting point is 02:13:42 If you didn't get two thumbs up, you were fucked. Fucked. Those two guys had so much goddamn power. And now we know they're both twats. They both hated each other. And you ever see the videos, the two guys just bitching out. each other talking about don't fuck this up like you fucked up the last one oh you just fucked that up and like like these are the guys well you have the worst fucking personalities
Starting point is 02:14:04 and you're telling everybody what's a good film what's not a good film but fortunately they liked me but there's certain things that are undeniable but it's like that one of the things I think is great today is audience score like audience score of a film versus critic score and they're oftentimes completely lopsided I pay attention to the audience score. Like, do people like that movie? If critics like the movie and people hate it, maybe they're not getting it. Maybe it's just esoteric.
Starting point is 02:14:35 Maybe it's weird. Maybe I'll really like it then. But generally speaking, like the critic score is not as interesting to me as was the audience score. Right. That's what's made for. Absolutely. And that's who I pay attention to. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:14:49 I want the fans. I want the audience, you know, because critics, like I said earlier, You know, there are so many critics now that, I mean, critics to begin with are generally not, no human is qualified to judge any piece of art, I mean, to start with. I mean, it's like if you don't like something or it doesn't strike you or you see some really silly shit that's kind of not made well or whatever, that's fine. But how can you have a profession where individual. can tell everybody in the world what they should think about something is a bizarre world to me. And like you said earlier, like with awards, it's not like sports. You know, how can you win an award that is an intangible thing?
Starting point is 02:15:45 Yeah. I mean, if you run a hundred-meter dash in the Olympics and you're the first son of a bitch that breaks the tape, you won. Yeah. How in the hell do you know if I won? Right. You know what I mean? A movie.
Starting point is 02:16:01 Oh, a movie. A movie. Versus that movie versus this movie. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And God forbid you're in a year where there's some sort of socially conscious film that has to win. Like, if it doesn't win, then who are these monsters that are voting? You didn't vote for the socially conscious film?
Starting point is 02:16:20 Like, how dare you? And, yeah, the socially conscious film. and also the one with the music that tells you exactly what you're supposed to feel every moment. Yes, that's the weirdest thing that we've all accepted about films. There's music and scenes.
Starting point is 02:16:34 That is a weird thing. Yeah, it is. It just happens and it's normal because we've been around it. You know, Darth Vader comes out. Oh, yeah, it's always been like that. It's like, here comes the shark. We see the fucking shark, dude.
Starting point is 02:16:50 It's like the shark is about to eat Robert Shaw. Yeah. We're scared already. There's something eerie about a film that doesn't have music now. There is. This seems too real. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 02:17:02 Like, at least when there's music playing and psycho, yeah, yeah, yeah, down, da, you know, it makes it like a little more palatable. Yeah. The other issue with critics is that they don't want to be critics. I don't think anybody wants to criticize other people's art. They just don't have anything to contribute. Like, if they did, they would probably stop being. critics and be novelists or be screenwriters or whatever it is they just so generally speaking the
Starting point is 02:17:29 people that gravitate towards that don't have something to contribute to art so they're just professional haters yeah so most of that's why they love to write bad reviews yeah and they write the most vicious i'm going to destroy his career the way he portrayed that role you know they just trying to find the most biting way to dismiss you and just shut you look down. But it's the individual, like the type of human that's doing that for a living. It's not necessarily anybody you want to aspire to be. Well, no. And that's why, like you said, it's the audience.
Starting point is 02:18:08 Yes. That's who you're doing this for. Yeah. You're not doing this for organizations or award shows or critics or whoever it is. You're doing this for the audience. Those are the people that go pay a ticket price or sign up for Paramount Plus or whatever it is, you know, to watch these things. And that's who you want to please. I mean, I don't particularly give a shit if, you know, the actor guys I've run across in my lifetime like my shit or not.
Starting point is 02:18:39 I mean, it's like, you know, I'm not really doing it for them unless you love movies, unless you love good work, you know. then, you know, those cats are, you know, viable, but I just don't, I'm in a good place right now. And so I think, because, you know, my daughter Bella is going to Cal Poly up there and she's doing great. She's 21 years old. My sons both have jobs in their own places that are doing well. I love my wife. I'm doing a show I love with a crew and a bunch of kids. cats and actors that I love I'm touring you know once or twice a year making a couple
Starting point is 02:19:24 albums a year I I just don't let that shit bother me anymore good for you it's like I don't honestly don't give a fuck and you know people say that sometimes as a reverse psychology kind of idea you know it's like oh I'm never gonna win this because and I tell my wife every time I'm gonna win an award or lose one win or lose you know Right. Because I know. I've gotten used to it, and I can follow the trend, and I go, huh. And she'll go, oh, my God, you're going to get the Golden Globe or the Academy Award, whatever it is.
Starting point is 02:19:59 I go, no, no, no. That guy right there is going to get it. She goes, how do you know? I said, trust me, watch and see. I was nominated for a Golden Globe for the first season of Landman. We went over there, and I knew instantly it wasn't going to happen because they had us, if you were in a stadium at a concert hall and your seat was
Starting point is 02:20:21 here's the stage your seat's right here it's going to take you 30 fucking minutes to get to the stage we walked in there and saw our table I'm like Jesus fucking Christ I said we're sitting back here by like the staff
Starting point is 02:20:35 I said we're not you know the people bringing out the fucking food you know and I said it's not going to happen and she said who's going to win then and I've been telling her this and she didn't believe me she goes you still believe that i goes i said the guy from shogun i said i promise you that guy wins i mouthed it to her as it was happening uh they announced i couldn't
Starting point is 02:21:00 pronounce this name but i said the japanese guy from shogun literally said it when you know they have panels of each one of you when they're announced it and shit because they want to see the other guys i you know what i want to see one day i want to see somebody like Let's say the three of us are nominated for something and it shows you and it shows me and it shows you and you're trying to launch a lot like you don't give a fuck. One day I want to see somebody just go, fuck! You know what I mean? In one of those things. That would be awesome.
Starting point is 02:21:35 I've only been to the Emmys once and it was when Phil Hartman died and he was nominated. So we all, as a cast, went and I'll never forget this because he didn't win. and Dave Foley looks over at me and he goes, what the fuck does he have to do to win? Right. Right. Exactly. But it was so funny in the moment.
Starting point is 02:21:58 The guy had just gotten fucking beloved guy got murdered, this big giant horrible thing. His wife kills herself afterwards. Yeah. And we're all sitting there and he just looks at me and goes, what the fuck does the guy have to do to win? I'm like, I'm out. I'm out forever.
Starting point is 02:22:12 I don't want to come back. Leave me alone. It's like, it'll keep me out of this fucking chaos. And the worst thing you could ever do is get sucked into it and then play to that and then do stuff specifically to try to win awards. Like, ew. Like, ew, what have you become? Ew.
Starting point is 02:22:31 I know. They got you. Yeah. They got you. And they can get you. They can get any of us. Just like crack. Crack can get anybody.
Starting point is 02:22:38 I have to do a smoke it a few times. Yeah. It'll get you. Oh, for sure. The thing, I think. it's kind of crazy with you because you're one of the most legitimate overnight successes ever like a lot of people were overnight successes but it was kind of like a slow drip and then something kicked and oh wow now it's something big it's like man slingblade came out and all of a sudden
Starting point is 02:23:02 you were all over the fucking news it was like everywhere it's like and that's the wildest ride that anybody can be on because also this is the ride before the internet right So there were not nearly as many famous people. Sure. That's the thing. If you think about a movie star back then was so different than a famous person today. Right. Because there's TikTok celebrities and reality TV celebrities.
Starting point is 02:23:30 And it's just there's so many famous people. It's like an unprecedented number of people clamoring for attention. Yeah. So to be a Billy Bob Thornton when Slingblade came out was a crazy, spot in life because there's only like 20 you motherfuckers out there yeah there's like 20 famous actors yeah like maybe 50 oh yeah that anybody that you could get people to name and you're one of the 50 like holy shit back then if you're at number 18 on the top 20 list of actors you're pretty far down the fucking row right yeah right it's crazy right if you think about it oh yeah because being
Starting point is 02:24:09 famous then was a very different thing than being famous now it was it was very famous I mean, now people are famous because they're socialites. They go to parties and stuff. Or they're the Kardashians. It's famous for being famous. And no one can explain it. Yeah. Yeah, but it's like that bizarre world, there's no class you can take to navigate that.
Starting point is 02:24:32 No. No one can help you. No one can tell you like what to do and what not to do. First of all, it's a new thing, like literally new. Right. You know, by the time, sling blade, what year was sling blade? Like, made at 95, came out in 96. So, films are much less than 100 years old.
Starting point is 02:24:54 So films are really, like, real films where people know who the actor is. You know, what is the first film to Buster Keaton, is silent, then you got Charlie Chaplin. Right. It's real fucking recent, man. Yeah. It's real recent in the zeitgeist of the world. Yeah. And then you're one of them.
Starting point is 02:25:15 And knowing what the fuck is this? Yeah. It's unbelievable. I mean, when I would work on sets early on with people that I grew up watching, you know, and I'm just like, wow, you know, I'm standing next to Andy Griffith or whoever it was, Robert Redford, you know. And now you start to realize that you're in a group in an eight, group of actors who are looked at by 20-year-olds or 30-year-olds like I looked at those guys because they say this stuff to me.
Starting point is 02:25:55 I've been watching you since you. I was a little kid, you know, and all this kind of stuff. And it's an odd feeling. The only thing is, and maybe I'm off base here, but I think because, and once again, social media has a lot to do with it, I believe. I don't think that because of our lack of younger generations' lack of history, their knowledge, how far history goes back to them, I don't think, you know, a hundred years from now, generations will look at us the way we looked at Humphrey Bogart and Frederick March and all these different people, Spencer Tracy, Betty Day. Davis, you know, whoever it was, I don't think it's as important, goes back to the X, too much access, too much exposure. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:26:52 And I just don't believe that in the history books, you know, 30 years from now, let's say, they'll look at me or Quaid or Costner or whoever it is as the Bogart's and the Tracy's that we, that we review. only because society's changed so much. But is that a bad thing? Because they still, like, people love you, and they still love Costner, and they still love Quaid, and they still love all these people. It's just you know them more that they're human beings now. Right.
Starting point is 02:27:30 Yeah, I don't think that's a bad thing. It's a different thing. It's a different thing. It's a very different thing. A movie star back then, like Clint Eastwood in his prime, you know, like, that's a different thing. Like, you never saw that guy outside is, like, Like, it wasn't like he was, you know, doing YouTube videos and sitting down talking to people.
Starting point is 02:27:49 Well, I think the difference is with Eastwood or any of those guys, Duval, or, but you'd be surprised how many people, if I named Robert DeVall or Gene Hackman, how many people I talked to who don't know who they are. That's crazy. I worked with a 35-year-old costumer, and I said, we were doing a photo shoot at the time we had four guys who made the records who were in the band. And I said, hey, there's four of us here doing the photo shoot. Which one of us would be Ringo? And this girl, she's 35 years old. And this is not that long ago, 10, 12 years ago. And I said, Ringo?
Starting point is 02:28:31 She goes, what's that? I said, the Beatles. She goes, oh, I've heard of the Beatles. And I'm like, yeah. Yeah, it's like hearing of joy. George Washington, you know, but anyway, so, and I said, can you name any of the Beatles? And she goes, no, but weren't they like some kind of, and I said, they were a band who started every fucking thing we do nowadays.
Starting point is 02:28:56 And I couldn't believe it. And she was like a hip girl with like orange hair and fucking nose rings and cheek rings and everything else. But it just seems to me that people's history is, it's kind of, it's become different. Like our history, when I was, you know, listening to, you know, whoever, Cream or Jimmy Hendricks or traffic or whatever, I still knew who Billy Holiday and Jimmy Rogers is singing Breakman were, you know. Now people, a lot of people think Ozzy Osbram is just a guy on a reality show. It's like, no, he was in a band called Black Sabbath way back in the late 60s. And I think history is important for us, you know.
Starting point is 02:29:37 I think if you don't know where shit comes from, you know, I think it's part of what you put into your art or your influences and also to see what they went through to get where they were. You know, I just think it's important. I mean, with anybody, politicians, how many people know that Benjamin Franklin, you know, Benjamin Franklin, oh, he's a guy who flew a kite and, you know, discovered how don't make electricity come to some other place or whatever? But, you know, they're fighting over states, you know, when there weren't that many states. And it's like, well, wait a minute, we're in New York. We got way more people than you do in, you know, Virginia or whatever it was. And so we get more representatives and senators, you know, that they do. You know, they only get one or whatever.
Starting point is 02:30:28 Well, Benjamin Franklin comes in, who's one of my heroes, he made sense about shit. But he comes in and he says, tell you what, how about you have more state representatives than they do? Because you've got more people in your state. But how about in terms of the Senate, everybody gets two? And then you get more representatives. And they're all like, oh, okay. You know, makes sense. I mean, those are the kind of guys I like, you know?
Starting point is 02:30:55 Yeah. Well, history is important. But I think one of the problems with people today is like there's so much information. coming at you that everybody has TikTok brain and young people in particular like it's it's very difficult for them to get a sense of history when they're being inundated by very short attention span content all day long they're just getting fed nonsense so it's hard for them to actually read something or sit down and have the attention to get into something and really get fascinated by watch a good documentary on somebody or read a book on somebody it's they they're just checking their
Starting point is 02:31:31 phone all the time. They're always checking their goddamn phone. They're addicted to these fucking things. And they can't have and growing up that way like you and I grew up without it so you get to see it and how it's affecting the way people view the world and it's not good
Starting point is 02:31:47 it's not good. It's certainly not good for creating future versions of Ringo Stars and John Lennon's because it's like what do you have to say if you don't have any understanding of what's going on and what's ever gone on And it's addictive, like you said earlier, because, you know, I put these things down, and yet I've got the fucking thing with me all the time, you know.
Starting point is 02:32:10 And if I get out in the middle of, you know, the desert in California someplace and nowhere the fuck I am, you know, I'm like trying to call home and shit, you know, whatever. But, I mean, I lived most of my life without that and having to see if you had any fucking change left to, you know, because you had to call somebody to pay phone. We had a thing in L.A. called the Thomas Guide. I had that. You had the Thomas Guide where you had to look up shit and had all of L.A. County, San Bernardino County. All of it was in there. It's a book, big old book in your car.
Starting point is 02:32:46 A big old book. And you had to look on these maps which are confusing and shit. And if you took a GPS away now from people, nobody would ever get to work on time. Nobody would find the fucking place they were supposed to have a meeting. because you also can't stop at a gas station anymore. I mean, you know, remember when you would, didn't know where the fuck you were
Starting point is 02:33:07 and you'd stop over at the gas station and you'd go, yeah, I'm trying to get to 1625 Wilson Street. You know, you know where that is? It's supposed to be by like the sawmill. You know, some guy would go, yeah, okay, yeah, what's you going to want to do? People would take pride in being able to give you directions. Right, absolutely.
Starting point is 02:33:28 Yeah, it was a big thing. Like a guy who could give you directions to place, that's a cool guy. Yeah, absolutely. I'm going to tell you how to get there. Yeah. This is what you get. Get on the 405. Right.
Starting point is 02:33:38 And you get on Exit 16. Right. Yeah, they knew that shit. Yeah. I mean, now, I mean, I know L.A. inside and out. I could be a cab driver there, but, or I should say Uber driver now, I guess. Yeah, so cabs anymore. But one way or the other, you know, if you're someplace else, I mean, you know, I use it too.
Starting point is 02:33:58 It's like, but if you took GPS away, it would run people bad shit crazy. Yep. Yeah. And if you took away the ability to just press someone's name on your phone to call them, if you had to remember their number. Oh, yeah. We had to remember numbers. I still remember numbers. Well, you have a great memory.
Starting point is 02:34:19 From my hometown. I mean, I still to this day, I rarely, in other words, I can take my, phone and I can type in the people that I call on a regular basis I can type in their numbers I know their numbers but it is true that if like my wife she'll she'll say well I don't have so-and-so in my contacts or whatever you know it'd be somebody we know really well and like learn the down number I told my daughter I said look when you're at college you need to have my number and your head all the time and your mothers you know yeah know that you know the numbers. Especially if you get arrested.
Starting point is 02:35:00 You're right. You know? For sure. You got to be a... Nobody knows how to do that anymore. I know, right? Who am I got to call? I have fucking no idea.
Starting point is 02:35:10 I know like three people's numbers. Yeah, it's like being an overweight person that's addicted to food because you have to eat to stay alive. So you're going to have to do some of the thing you're addicted to no matter what. It's not like gambling.
Starting point is 02:35:26 You're a gambling addict. Stay out of the casino, you're going to be okay. Right. You know what I mean? But like if you had to still go to the casino every day and gamble a little, yeah. But you're a gambling addict, that's a crazy fucking problem to have. And that's a problem that every young person has with their phone. They're all addicted to their phone. Yeah, completely addicted. And, you know, all of us, too, I'm addicted to my phone. Yeah. And you're, you're using it every day because you have to get places. You have to call people. You have to text. You have to check your email. So it's always there. And you just have to develop some sort of a relationship with it that's not crazy.
Starting point is 02:36:03 Yeah, that's true. And people, it goes from mild addiction to severe addiction to Internet creating this environment where people actually kill themselves. Yeah, yeah. I mean, it's that big a spectrum, you know what I mean? Mm-hmm. And, you know, people talk about getting canceled all the time on this stuff. And it's like, how about if you don't give a shit? You know, if you do, I'm not on social media.
Starting point is 02:36:36 I don't deal with it. I mean, you know, the band has an Instagram, you know, but I don't run it. You know, they put pictures of me taking the garbage out. That's what, that's what people want to see. They don't want to see your picture on stage, you know. They want to see that you're just. this regular dude with your ass crack showing taking the garbage down the hill to the thing. Normal shit, eating chicken fried steak.
Starting point is 02:37:01 They love that. Yeah, they love that. Yeah, that's true. Well, they want to know that you're fucking normal. Like everybody. Oh, I'm subnormal. But there's also the problem where people are putting up stuff to make themselves look cool. Like, everybody's trying to look cool online.
Starting point is 02:37:17 Oh, yeah. You know, it's just a, what a weird thing to try to do all the time. And they got liquefy. That's one thing. What's liquefy? skinny oh boy that's a problem yeah that's a problem too with a lot of young ladies because they see that and then they think that that's attainable right and then what's wrong with me i look normal and you realize like well she looks normal too she's got some crazy fucking program turning
Starting point is 02:37:42 her into this bizarre form of human that doesn't exist in the wild absolutely yeah yeah it's uh jonathan hate wrote about that where you see as the in the beginning of social media you see automatic almost instantly rather a giant amount of young ladies that experience self-harm cutting depression suicidal ideation actual suicide it all ramps up at the same time that social media does because you're comparing yourself to someone's life that's a very distorted version of reality distorted like rose-colored glasses propaganda version of reality that this person wants you to know how cool they are. Look at me.
Starting point is 02:38:25 I'm with a girl in a bikini and I'm sitting on a Ferrari. The stack of hundreds. Fuck you. I'm like, wow. How am I not that guy? I'm just the loser. I should jump in front of a fucking train.
Starting point is 02:38:38 And there's a face. You know, when you're feeding a baby, there's something, I guess it's from our, you know, it's in our DNA or something, but you feed a baby and you go, you open your mouth. And they say that probably came from, you're showing the baby what, do. Right. Right. But it's, it's, you know, somebody yawns, you yawn, right? And you feed the baby
Starting point is 02:39:00 like this. There's a thing with these selfies that people take on the internet that they can't not go. You know what? It's that face. Yeah. It's that face. Yeah. It's very bizarre. I did a bit about that my act about imagine seeing a photo from like the early 1900s where girls like this right like what is she's a fucking time traveler this is so strange like the invention of the selfie exactly my daughters are on Snapchat and they snap each they snap all their friends so they this is how they communicate they rarely text they just make snapchats and they just have like in front of the camera right and then they take a picture and like oh my god so bored right you know whatever whatever it is
Starting point is 02:39:52 this is how they're communicating with each other through selfies it is very weird yeah everything everything is in snippets and the fact that you know if you have a TV service that has you know 1,800 channels
Starting point is 02:40:07 and I find myself doing it I sit at home yeah I got it on the you know Cincinnati you know Pittsburgh game I watch a few minutes and it's like, okay, you know, it's first down there on their 18, you know, flip it over the Chargers game, you know what I mean, and just go back and forth. And I grew up with three fucking channels, you know.
Starting point is 02:40:35 And so you had to watch everything all the way through. And I'm convinced that that's the reason that trivia is easier for people that grew up with, very little because you remember every fucking bit of it right now now you're only you're only you've only got like a few seconds on each thing and it's like I mean now it's like you're watching even if it's your team something else happens did somebody text you to start doing that next thing you know like you know I'm a Colts fan you know doing this and everything next thing you know oh the game was oh yeah that's right there were only three and a half minutes I didn't see the end of the game yeah you know and uh
Starting point is 02:41:18 Or I changed it over to, you know, raw hide on the old guy channel or whatever for a few minutes, you know what I was thinking about that once about podcasts. The podcasts are one of the only times where I'm never distracted by anything but the conversation. Right. And I think it's one of the reasons why I like it so much. Yeah. And the same thing is when I do commentary for the UFC. I'm talking about the fight, so I can't be looking at my phone. I'm not answering text.
Starting point is 02:41:47 I'm not like checking emails. I'm not looking at TikTok. I'm just locked in on what is happening for six hours. And so those, if you could find a thing where you can have a break, escape from the clutches of all the information that's in the rest of the world coming at you all the fucking bad news and all the guns and tits and everything that's coming at you from all over the world. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:42:15 It's very beneficial. It's awesome. It's awesome. And I love the fact that your show has, it's, you sit for a few hours. Yeah. I mean, when do you get a chance to do this? I mean, and that's, you know, I came late to podcasts, but I remember doing, God, I can't remember who. I did Norm McDonald's podcast.
Starting point is 02:42:39 And I did one other guy to do his podcast. And then those were the first ones I did. Kevin Pollock, I did Kevin's. I didn't even know what meant at the time. And since then, you know, I've done a few, but I like them too. It's literally like the only place you are where the interviewer doesn't check their fucking phone. Yeah. I mean, I literally, I do interviews with people who, while I'm answering what they just asked me, they text somebody back or look at it for a second.
Starting point is 02:43:14 And it's like, hang a second. It's like, how important is this to you that it's more important to let Mitzie know that you'd rather have spaghetti tonight? You know, I'm in it fucking hell. Well, it's also you're completely breaking whatever bond that you have in the conversation. It's not a, it's two people exchanging information talking to each other. And you have to look at each other in the eye. You've got to feel with this person. It's a dance.
Starting point is 02:43:41 And if you stop in the middle of the dance. yeah like if you were on a date with someone you were telling them some crazy story and this really important to you and they're just like yeah wow amazing well that's good for your ego right this is over this is there's no sense in continuing any further with this relationship right you know it's like honey um were you serious when you said you love me more than anyone yeah hold on yeah what we say oh yeah oh absolutely I love you more than anybody I ever loved I just barely love anybody. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 02:44:15 And I'm kind of mildly interested in everybody. And that's sort of what's happening today. We're mildly interested in everybody. And we love almost nobody. Right. It's weird. That is weird. It's a weird time.
Starting point is 02:44:30 But the only way we're going to get through it that makes any sense is you've got to say things like that. We have to figure out how to navigate it. It's new. You know, just like I was saying that when you were a, movie star the first time you became a movie star through Slingblade that's a new experience just period in human civilization becoming a movie star is very recent yeah it's hard and this is this thing of everything being online this thing of everybody having access to all this fucking information coming at you all this media all this all these opinions and all this stuff to
Starting point is 02:45:09 watch and car accidents and animal attacks and you This is new. This is a completely, so almost like the shit that you had to go through when you became famous through Slingblade, the whole world's got to go through this new type of thing with phones and with social media and with the internet in general. And we're not ready for, we don't know what, we don't know how to do it yet. And people are giving classes on how to manage it. And there's apps that can limit your time on certain things. You can cut yourself off. right we don't know what we're doing it's just fucking new as shit yeah and just like fame a lot of
Starting point is 02:45:48 people are going to get wrecked by it yes totally it's a completely alien way of being like a person that becomes especially I was friends at Ricky Schroeder known Ricky for like 25 30 years and there is no way anybody becomes famous at like six and and makes it out okay. Right. It's not possible. Right. Like, the way I, I liken it to making cement, but you don't put enough water in.
Starting point is 02:46:20 Like, you, so it's always going to be fucked. Sure. There's a part that's never a normal, you had a normal life and then, or semi-normal, whatever, whatever normal means. It wasn't normal, but I wasn't a movie star. You weren't famous. And then became famous. But if you're famous from the time you're a fucking baby. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:46:38 And your whole life. You're in the public eye growing up. That's insane. It is insane. Whether it's Miley Cyrus or, you know, you look at it, poor Britney Spears losing her fucking marbles. All that stuff. What do you expect? Nobody gets through that.
Starting point is 02:46:54 Okay. What happened to those? Remember the kids that did that show? Was it different strokes? And like a couple of them. Yep. Like one girl, she, you know, robbed a liquor store or something and then became a dope at him. And then, you know, dies.
Starting point is 02:47:10 young and one of the guys on there also you know I think he got on drugs and then eventually died some of them kill themselves I'm I'm really happy that my success in terms of being famous anyway came at a later age I actually really relish that you know that I did not become famous when I was 19 or 16 or whatever it was because at that point with my state of mind in those days and just just doing everything I wanted you know I would have been dead by now right there's no doubt about it I would have never made it to 30 yeah and if you did you'd have so much regret oh yeah right what did I do why did I do oh yeah because you lost your mind yeah because you're famous at eight years old.
Starting point is 02:48:10 Yeah. Yeah. If you've, you know, I, it's kind of an old guy thing to say, but, you know, everything I got, I earned it, and I'm glad I did. You know, I'm glad I didn't have a hell of a lot of help along the way that I just persevered and did this stuff. But I think that knowing what work is before you get famous really helps you out in your life. I mean, you know, I worked at a sawmill, a machine shop.
Starting point is 02:48:38 heavy equipment, hauled hay when I was 13. Yeah, I did all that shit. And, I mean, stuff that looking back on it, it's like, I don't even know how I did it half the time. We worked as a carpenter's helper. And so if I hadn't done all that stuff, if all I had known was the entertainment business, I think that would drive any fucking body crazy. You know, I don't think I would have made it through. that if you know like looking at the the real world out there from a place where you never experienced the
Starting point is 02:49:16 real world right right like you're talking about ricky and all that stuff it's like if your only experience has been people getting your fucking juice box for you you know or whatever it is then and you get used to that shit too i'm telling you these days my wife thinks i i'm the most son of a bitch in the world, and in some ways I am. I mean, I get into an airport, and I used to go to fucking airports before I was famous. I knew where to go. I knew where to put my shit, you know. Now I'll go in there, and I look like I'm, it's like Logan's run.
Starting point is 02:49:53 I get out and I'm looking, where the fuck are we now, you know? And I'll ask, you know, my assistant or publicist or somebody, I'm like, well, can I take this bag on there? Or is this one, where's the thing we go through? Do I need to do this? Do I need to do that? You know? And it's like, I know fucking well what I have to do. But you're used to people doing things for you.
Starting point is 02:50:16 You get used to it. Yeah. I mean, you get used to somebody driving you someplace. I'm a driver. I grew up. I raised fucking cars. I'm a muscle car guy. Now, we go someplace to I ask my wife to drive.
Starting point is 02:50:29 It's like, well, you know, maybe it's because I'm old. Maybe because when I walk up and downstairs now, it's a cycle. thing. Physically, I'm very fit. I mean, I can do shit whatever I want to. If I got a run and a singing or whatever, I'm fine. Something psychological happens to you when you get like 68 or 69. And Tom Mayhew, our tour manager for the band, he and I were talking about it. We're talking about how now when we get in a shower, you know, like we're in a hotel, and you get in a shower, you grab the fucking handicat rail, and you go, really? slow. I don't have to, but I do because something up here tells me, here's my age now. If
Starting point is 02:51:14 I fall, I'll be dead in six weeks because I'll break my hip and then I'll get pneumonia and I'm done. And I'm like, I don't, I feel 19. But for some reason, going downstairs now, I don't just hop down the stairs anymore. I take it one stair at a time, you know. It's not real. And it's not real that I don't know how to get around a fucking airport. None of that shit's real. And yet, something happened to me where I think now I'm just this helpless fucking old man who, you know, is going to have to have my caretaker fucking, you know, get me to the gig, you know. And then I go on stage and I'm just like, you know, it's like, wait a fucking minute.
Starting point is 02:51:59 You know, walking up the steps to the stage, I'm just like, you know, and I get up there and fucking go out to the edge of the stage. and slap hands and shit, if I fell off that fucking thing, it'd kill me instantly, but I'd do it. So, none of that shit's real. It's weird.
Starting point is 02:52:14 Right? Well, it's weird when people defy it, right? Like, I saw the Rolling Stones when they came to Austin a couple years ago at Coda, so it's like 100,000 people or something out there. It was nuts. And I swear to God, it was like an out-of-body experience because you can't believe you're actually seeing Mick Jagger.
Starting point is 02:52:29 Right. You're like, that's him? That's really him. He's really up to, but he's fucking, he's a thousand years old. Bucking your little baby. He's dancing and moving around. He's got two fucking trailers, two trailers that he brings to them everywhere he goes.
Starting point is 02:52:45 It's just workout equipment. Yeah. That motherfucker gets after it every day, they say. Absolutely. He's like, this is the only way. If you don't do that, it'll fall apart and then you got nothing. For sure. But he's out there like he's 30 years old.
Starting point is 02:52:58 Oh, yeah. It's nuts. It's really amazing to watch. I mean, like I said, we just opened for the Who. Yeah, right? And Roger and Pete are, you know, they're 80, 81, whatever. Crazy. You know, and they're the fucking who.
Starting point is 02:53:13 Still up there singing their ass off, playing their ass off, you know. That's another new thing. Like when we were kids, there was no old rock stars. No. They all died. Most of them were dead by 29. Right, 27. Hendrix, Jim Morrison, Janice Joplin.
Starting point is 02:53:31 They all died at like 27. Yeah. Yeah. Wow. Kirk Cobain? Oh, yeah. Yeah, they all died young. So when we were kids, there was no touring bands that were like 70 years old out there on the road.
Starting point is 02:53:43 Fuck, no. Killing it. And we're more popular than we've ever been. Yeah. You know, and so. It's all bullshit. It's all, it's all in your head. It's all in your head.
Starting point is 02:53:54 Yeah. But, you know, and not only were they're not rock stars when we were growing up that were even many over 40. Right. Aside from the ones who died, age has changed a little bit. I mean, like, you know, if you look at my dad's high school yearbook, these motherfuckers, when they were 17, they looked like they were 55. You know what I mean? Hard living. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:54:21 And like a man in those days, my dad died at 44 years of age. I thought he was an old man, you know? And when I think of 44 now, it's like, are you shitting me? That's like babies. But 50 and 60 and 70 meant something different when I was growing up. Now 70 is kind of like, I mean, you know, a guy like Sam or Deval, they look at me and I'm still like a kid to him and shit, you know. That's crazy. And 70-year-olds, and, you know, I think it's a lot of it is, you know, I eat real healthy.
Starting point is 02:54:55 and I actually had a holistic doctor tell me that, because I'm allergic to a lot of shit. It's not like I got something against eating cows. I'd love to, but I have type A-B-negative blood means you don't have many digestive enzymes. And so I just get fucking, you know, indigestion and get all fucked up and bloated. I just grew up, because I eat everything growing up.
Starting point is 02:55:18 I mean, shit in Arkansas, Texas. And I just grew up thinking that that when you eat, you feel like shit. I just thought that's the way it was. I thought, you know, this thing's overrated. Fuck, I feel like hell, you know. But now I eat really healthy and I eat fish and turkey and, you know, vegetables and fruit and beans and rice and stuff.
Starting point is 02:55:39 So it's a red meat issue with you? I can't have a beef or pork. Oh, wow. So I can have turkey and fish. They digest easier. But I think, you know, people are. and especially if you're in the entertainment business, you kind of keep a younger mind and also eating healthy. But this holistic doctor I was talking about, I was talking about the, and this is really unpopular to say, but not my words, I was actually told this.
Starting point is 02:56:14 And I was saying, look, I don't smoke a pack of cigarettes a day. I smoke probably three quarters of a pack, you know, unless, you know, we're on the road and I'm on the bus with the guys, you know, and I smoke like an old Buick sometimes. But, you know, I drink light beer. I don't drink hard alcohol and stuff like this. And this holistic doctor said, you know, stress is one of the worst things in the world for you. If smoking a few cigarettes a day
Starting point is 02:56:42 that don't have chemicals in them, you're drinking light beer, which like I said in Landman, you know, has less alcohol than fucking orange juice, you know. You have a few of those days a day and have a few smokes. And if that alleviates your stress, especially me being high anxiety, he says probably healthier for you to just keep doing that. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:57:06 They say that's one of the worst things ever. You're rising cortisol, stress, anxiety. It wears on your nerves, your nervous system. And then loneliness. They say loneliness is worse than smoking for your overall health. If you smoked a pack and a half a day, you'd be way better off just doing that than being lonely. Look how many spouses die a few months after their husband or wife died. My grandfather, that's what happened when his wife died.
Starting point is 02:57:37 When my grandmother died, he died like within a year. He was gone. He was fine before that. He was actually her caretick. He was taken care of her. And then when she's gone, he was dead in the year. Yeah, died of grief. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:57:49 Yeah. Yeah, that old saying you could die for a broken heart, I believe it. That's real. That's real. That's real. It's a real sadness. And also it's like, why am I still here? She's gone. I'm 90. Like, what is this? What are we doing here? Yeah. You know, let's call to quit. Call it a show. Listen, man, we just did three hours. So, I think. That was a lot of fun. I really appreciate you. Thank you for doing this. I mean, I hope I didn't fuck anything up. No, it was great, man. great it was awesome i love your show i love everything you've done man so it was a pleasure
Starting point is 02:58:24 what's a pleasure to be here thank you very much all right bye everybody

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