The Megyn Kelly Show - Jim Breuer on the Downsides of Fame and Vanity, SNL in the 90s, and Canceling Chappelle | Ep. 202
Episode Date: November 12, 2021Megyn Kelly is joined by Jim Breuer, stand-up comedian, to talk about the downsides of fame and vanity, the power of healing through comedy and human connection, his relationship with his wife, his ki...ds, and his parents, SNL in the 90s and his Chris Farley story, the attempts to cancel Dave Chappelle, touring with Metallica, honoring the elderly, the media "circus," COVID vaccine mandates, and more. Also lawyer Mark Eiglarsh joins the show to discuss the latest on the Kyle Rittenhouse trial, to talk about the prosecution's "smoking gun" new evidence, the media coverage of the case, and more.Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show and happy Friday.
Coming up later this show, we are going to end this week with some much-needed laughs and a heartfelt conversation
with stand-up comedian Jim Brewer, former Saturday Night Live alum.
He is such a thoughtful guy.
It's been a pleasure preparing for this interview with him.
I think you're going to love him.
Not only is he very funny, he's not afraid of a little controversy.
My kind of guy.
This is a guy who refused to do stand-up routines
in venues that wouldn't allow you in if you were unvaccinated
because he didn't think it
was fair. He's not afraid to take a stand and he will be here in just a little bit. But first,
we're going to start today with the latest developments in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial.
Late yesterday, the prosecution submitted into evidence a new photo of Kyle Rittenhouse. This
is what they believe is, pardon the term, their smoking gun from the night of the
shootings. They actually just got their hands on this evidence and are trying to make a big deal
out of it. Lawyer Andrew Branca, who's been really such a smart commentator on this case,
I read him over at Legal Insurrection, he specializes in self-defense. He's been following
every single development in this thing from the beginning. He called the photo the prosecution's
last desperate lunge for evidence of guilt. And speaking of desperate lunges,
we're going to get into the media's latest smearing of Rittenhouse. My God, they've been
terrible. I mean, especially terrible on this case. Plus, Kyle Rittenhouse's mom has a new
message for President Biden about a tweet he sent out last year about her son.
Talk about rushing to judgment. The now president of the United States,
then a candidate, labeled her son a white supremacist. This is where we are, right? Like,
no need for a trial. I'll just tell you who he is. What does he know? He doesn't know anything.
Joining me now to discuss all of it, former prosecutor, current criminal defense attorney, a longtime friend and guest of Kelly's court, Mark Eichlar. Mark, good to see you. So
this, the trial appears to be, I mean, they both rested, the defense rested, it's over. And now
they're instructing, they're coming up with the jury instructions, which are going to be super
important given all the self-defense issues going on here. Let's just start with that because Kyle Rittenhouse's whole defense is not that he didn't do it. It's that he did it in self-defense. And I wonder how, like, what goes into those jury instructions is going to make or break this case because it's the prosecution's burden to prove that he didn't do it in self-defense. It's not his burden
to prove that he did. Right. All right. So I've tried over 150 jury trials and I always look at
the jurors when the instructions are being read. They barely are listening. It's legal mumbo
jumbo. It's not written for them. They go back to basics. Was he justified in shooting? Are we going to convict this teenager
by finding that it wasn't reasonable for him to shoot? And the answer is no. I think this case
ended, quite frankly, once the state said, judge, we rest our case. I didn't think the defense
needed to call the defendant. But when they did and they took that extraordinary risk, they crushed the prosecutor.
Right, exactly. The prosecution, it was already floundering. He hadn't won. I think he knows he's losing. So he rests his case and the defense decided to put Kyle on the stand. And you tell me, but I feel like the case only got better for the defense at that point forward. It did. And look, I've been at that situation so many times,
like we're ahead, but you would be so good on the stand, but you don't know what's going to happen.
And it's so difficult. And I err on the side of not having my clients take the witness stand
because dopey things can come out of their mouth innocently enough, like owning an AR-15 is cool.
Like you just don't want that stuff to come out.
And that was probably the worst thing
that came out of his mouth.
But the truth of the matter is he did wonderfully.
I thought he absolutely was well-prepared.
He seemed intelligent.
And by the way, I'm no fan of what he did.
If this is my kid, I sit him down and I say,
what were you thinking?
I mean, obviously I wouldn't let him have a gun like this
and I wouldn't let him go to the scene. I'm not a fan of him going there. I think that at
a minimum, had he not brought this serious weapon with him and been that predicament,
he wouldn't be in the current predicament that he's in. So I'm not a fan of what he did,
but legally I will not only defend him, but say, hey, prosecutor, don't you know this case?
If you know this case, why are you bringing it?
You wrote a column in the Daily Mail that was particularly strong worded, I thought,
for you because, you know, now you're you've been a prosecutor, but you said this prosecution reeks of desperation and bad faith.
Why do you think it's bad faith?
OK, so first I will say the following,
and I really do say this with love. I think this prosecutor's ego is not his amigo.
I strongly believe that if he prepared his case properly and spoke to all of the witnesses,
he would have known that he does not have a likelihood of prevailing, meaning that he cannot show that
the defendant's actions were not justified under the law. Therefore, putting politics aside, which
is so hard to do in these high profile cases, you then take a bullet. You announced, pardon the pun,
you announced to the world, I do not have a provable case I will lose. Instead, he went forward, driven,
I think, by ego and politics. And now you can see his acts are filled with desperation.
Because can you explain to the audience, we were talking about this a little yesterday,
the job of the prosecutor is very different from the job of the defense attorney. And by that,
I don't just mean one's job is to put somebody in jail and one's job is not. That's not the prosecution's job. He has a higher calling
and people need to remember that while watching him. Can you explain?
That's correct. When I was a prosecutor, my job was to seek the truth. I could not go forward
on cases, even though I'd have victims, families yelling at me, the pressure is there, the media
is there. Sorry, I do not have proof beyond a reasonable doubt. That's the prosecutor's role.
Defense lawyer's role is quite different. We work within the rules. You can't go outside the rules,
although sometimes I stick my toes outside the rule for the benefit of my clients. But your job
is to acquit the defendant. It's not a seeking of truth. It's not about that. OJ is still, you know, not innocent. He just wasn way and you realize now this is not a just trial, then you're supposed to dismiss the charges. You're not
supposed to just take your chances with the jury. You're supposed to recognize as you have this
higher duty. You especially do not admit evidence that you know should not be admitted, commenting
on his right to remain silent. And worse, when there is a
pretrial order after extensive litigation on a motion to keep certain evidence out, and the judge
says that will not come into evidence, how dare this prosecutor in the middle of trial, because
I take this stuff very seriously, then on his own, introduce evidence that the judge previously dismissed.
And his argument is, well, they opened up the door. No, you go sidebar and you tell the judge,
I think they opened up the door. I now would like to get this evidence in, even though I know the
court's ruling was it should not commit. And Mark, you and I have both practiced before judges for
many years. Before I did this job, I did it for 10 years. I was I was a lawyer and tried cases and was before appellate courts
and so on. If you ever crossed a judge like that, you would expect to get your ass handed to you.
So this judge was angry. And now you have people on the Internet saying that he's some sort of a
racist, that he's unfair, that he's putting his thumb on the scale,
you know, against the prosecution. It's like, do you understand how disrespectful and what a
violation the prosecution committed the other day? It's huge. Let me tell you why it's huge.
I've been there. Okay. Prosecutor knows the ship is sinking. He didn't prove this case. Maybe he
counted on certain things. I'll give him the benefit of the doubt. Maybe he thought things would go a certain way and he was caught off
guard. I don't think that's the case. I think he knew that this case couldn't be won and that he
had a huge problem. For him then, after you've invested all this time and energy and money and
emotion, you get all the way into the trial. The defense has to move for a mistrial because then
this issue is not preserved on appeal. So they have to move for a mistrial because then this issue is not preserved on
appeal. So they have to move for a mistrial, but they don't really want the trial to end.
They know they're ahead. So he's put them in that predicament. He doesn't care if this trial ends
because he knows that's the best outcome for him. He knows he's not winning it. How dare he violate
the court's order? I take it so personally because I've been there. How dare you put me in a position?
Now I
have to move for a mistrial. The only thing that's going to make me happy is if it's with
prejudice and it should be because your actions were deliberate and you know what you did.
And the judge, I guess he's holding off ruling. I think he probably wants to see what the jury's
going to do. If they acquit him, then there's no issue. He doesn't have to grant it with prejudice
because they're done. So if the jury comes back with a verdict finding Kyle Rittenhouse guilty,
can the judge at that point say, no, I'm overruling you. I'm throwing this case out
with prejudice? Yes. So he's still got that tool in his arsenal. Of course, we're going to see
riots in this case if Kyle Rittenhouse is acquitted. And certainly if he's found guilty
and the judge overrules the guilty verdict. I mean, I just don't even think that even this judge who's
been very strong has the guts for that. I am totally OK with people voicing their opinion.
I'm totally OK with people who feel because I'm telling you, I feel this way that he didn't do
everything right. And the decisions that he made were not smart ones. I don't love what he did leading up to
the moment that he pulled the trigger. I zealously defend his right to pull the trigger when he was
in that predicament, when he reasonably feared death or great bodily harm. So it's okay to say,
I'm not a full fan of what he did, but legally what he did was justified.
That's right. That's right. That's exactly right.
So today, the so-called, I said, smoking gun evidence is apparently there's drone footage
of the night in question. The prosecution just got its hands on it last Friday. This is the first
time yesterday that we've seen the image, sort of. You can barely make out what they are trying
to show us as their sort of Perry Mason
moment. I mean, I think it's a Hail Mary by this desperate prosecutor. But basically,
he put on a guy who enhances pictures for a living. And we're showing this now for folks
who want to see it later, go to youtube.com slash Megyn Kelly, you can see this part of the
discussion. And the small image is the one that they started with. The big image is their blown
up version of it. They claim
it shows Kyle Rittenhouse. The first shooting was of a guy named Rosenbaum. The reason Kyle shot him
is among others, he was being chased by Rosenbaum. And then another party shot a gun into the air.
So Kyle turned around to see who was shooting at him. He sees Rosenbaum lunging for his gun
and yelling F you. And we know that
from Richie McGinnis, a third party witness, as well as from Kyle. And now the prosecution's
trying to show us these pictures to say, they claim, I can't see anything. But what they claim
is it shows Kyle with this AR-15 up against his shoulder, pointing at the man who was firing the gun whose name escapes me at the moment.
And it apparently because people have looked at this much closer than I have say that the
butt of the gun of the rifle is in Kyle's left shoulder, Kyle's right handed.
We can show you another picture of Kyle earlier, just in a calm moment posing with his AR-15,
in which indeed the gun shows that it's to a right handed man.
He's got the butt of the gun against his right shoulder there.
And so it doesn't even make sense that in the moment he would be shooting,
he would put the butt of the rifle up against his left shoulder.
But that's what the prosecution wants to show in an effort to try to prove he somehow
fired against Rosenbaum or his buddy moments before they fired on him.
What do you make of it?
Okay, comedians and their set with their best stuff.
They want to leave the best impression. Similarly, that's what I did as a prosecutor and that's what
prosecutors should do. This is your best stuff. Really? This is what you're ending with versus
the defense who had drew Hernandez calmly and intelligently explain that Rittenhouse
defuse the situation. It was being attacked. This was
the perfect ending. It was exactly what this case was about. And it was very articulate and very
clear and very credible. And I think that this is, again, the act of a desperate prosecutor
who I don't blame for putting that in. If your goal is to do everything you possibly can to get your outcome, then sure,
throw it in, but it's weak. And they had a big argument about whether enlarging a small picture
that much, because what happens is like the computer fills in the pixelation around when
you try to take everybody knows when you've got, you're looking at a picture on your phone and
you're like, what is that on my face? And you zoom in and then everything gets sort of blurry. And so the defense objected to this.
The judge in the end said, you can argue that to the jury. It's coming in. But to your point
about Drew Hernandez, who's works for a conservative news site, who was there
and an eyewitness, listen to soundbite four of him. Your contact withyle that evening was just in terms of what you observed i'm asking did you
observe him acting in an aggressive manner to anyone that you observed in no way shape or form
the first time i saw kyle he actually de-escalated a situation did you observe him at any time
that evening pointing his firearm at anybody or threatening anybody with that firearm. No.
Yeah. So and they basically try to discredit him, Mark, by saying he works for a conservative news
site and this is like political for him. Well, that's reasonable. I took his testimony and I
kind of reduced it a little bit because of that. I mean, there's no question he's not an unbiased witness. That does matter. But his testimony looked strong, right on all fours on the issue that they're
trying to decide. And he was an unbelievably powerful witness for the defense. And there's
no evidence he's making that up. I mean, it's like, OK, maybe he's rooting for Kyle Rittenhouse,
but he's he saw where's the evidence that he's making that up. Let's talk for a minute about the media, the disgusting coverage of this.
So before I get to them, I want to start with the coverage of this by our president.
When he was running for president, he did something really egregious and he tweeted out a video that talked about white supremacy in America.
And he showed a picture of Kyle Rittenhouse.
Here it is.
If you can see it.
That's his tweet.
And he's showing this kid who was 17 years old at the time of this photo.
I'm telling you, this is deeply irresponsible of Joe Biden, candidate or president.
And Kyle Rittenhouse's mom gave her first interview on cam last night to Sean Hannity and spoke to that very photo. Here she is. This is
soundbite two. When I saw that, I wasn't shocked. I was angry. President Biden don't know my son
whatsoever. And he's not a white supremacist. He's not a racist. And he did that for the votes.
And I was so angry for a while at him.
And what he did to my son, he defamed him.
You know, Mark, there was a time when we didn't have politicians at that level do that kind of thing.
Because they realized, don't mess with the criminal justice system and somebody who's on trial for his life.
And the prosecution tried to put this kid away for life.
I miss those days.
Yeah, I'm going to say something that's kind of controversial and it relates to a case of mine.
I've got to get this off my chest. Same thing kind of happened when one of my clients, Scott Peterson, who's what they call
here the alleged coward of Broward, who during the Marjorie Soman Douglas shooting was the
only armed guard and they claimed that he cowered in the corner and didn't go in to
kill the killer.
In the interest of time, we could talk about it another time, all the details.
I'm telling you, he's Snow White innocent.
And after the press conference-
Just to clarify, just to clarify, we're talking about the school shooting down in Florida,
not Scott Peterson of the Lacey Peterson case
out in California.
We're talking about that,
the high school shooting that happened.
And he's the guard who got killed,
I almost forget, I mean that wrong term,
but just pilloried by the press for not running in.
Correct.
He's got one T in Scott.
The other one has two.
Okay.
Again, we'll have another discussion at some point,
if you'd like about that case, but I'm telling you, not just because I'm his lawyer. I thought
he was guilty too, before I ever met with him. I thought that the press made it very clear that he
was a coward and did nothing. It's just the opposite. Okay. So my client's innocent. What
killed me was that it went all the way up to Trump, who then, hearing from the media, all this stuff,
then said things about my client that he's a coward, he doesn't care about kids. I see a direct
corollary in this case. Not only did Biden say those things, but everybody was saying things
about Rittenhouse because everybody's just passing around information that may or may not be true.
And that's what we live with today.
So does it affect Rittenhouse?
Of course it does.
Does it affect his mother?
Of course it does.
Does it affect me and my client?
Yes.
It's fundamentally gross and unfair.
The lesson is, folks, don't listen and believe don't listen to everything and don't believe
everything you hear.
And even now, in the face of a trial that I mean mean, you, there's a left-wing commentator who's
made news on Twitter today. He, he said, I was against Rittenhouse. I followed the coverage. I,
I didn't like what he did one bit, but I've watched this case and I, I don't think you can
convict this guy. I think this was self-defense. And he posted today about how members of the
media are calling him saying, was your account hacked? Did somebody hack you? They can't
understand how somebody, especially somebody left leaning, would would come to an opposite conclusion of the one the
media has in their heads. That was reflected somewhat. I mean, just here's one example.
This is The View yesterday. And Joy Behar, who knows absolutely nothing about the law,
giving her two cents on it, among others. Listen.
You say I'm trying to get to the police. Why were you trying to get
to the police? I didn't do anything wrong. I defended myself. Oh, baloney. From what I'm
gleaning from this case, the guy goes across state lines with an AR-15 with his mother and
some other idiot in the car to defend himself against what? They're having a protest in another
state and he takes it upon himself to go there, you know
And then he says it's self-defense. No and that that acting job of the crying
I can't even look at it and obviously they put him on it's understand to emote and to do this Kyle Rittenhouse
Shot three people two were murdered one was was injured
So I wonder if he is convicted of this, he now becomes a right wing martyr.
If he is freed, it's a message to others like him that prison won't be in their future.
Well, those crocodile tears are going to get him off, I bet.
Crocodile tears. Keith Olbermann yesterday tweeting out that this is a crisis actor.
Even Merriam-Webster, do you see this? Merriam-Webster sent out a tweet
with the definition of crocodile tears, which, you know, OK, that that sorry, definition of the
crocodile tears. Well, you might think, OK, maybe they're just trying to help people because that
term's all over Twitter. But Miriam Webster has constantly been weighing in on sort of the
liberal side of these public disputes. It's insane. How are you how are you fighting Miriam
Webster now as the defense attorney? I'm totally fine with all these people giving their opinions. I really do believe that's
what makes our country great. It makes me feel like, wait a second, I'm alone in my thoughts
sometime because, wow, all those people feel very differently. I like that they're saying those
things. The problem is it's so obvious to me, but not everyone who's watching that they're not
really watching the case very closely, that they don't really, really know what the facts are and apply it to the law.
And that is fairly dangerous.
It is because it influenced the jury and it influences, you know, public opinion, which could cause rioting and everything.
That's that's irresponsible.
So here's a question for you.
Speaking of the terrible, awful Olbermann.
And by the way, I mean, it's pretty egregious when you have CBS tweeting out that he admitted, Kyle Rittenhouse admitted to two murders. That's not okay. They had to take it down. That's factually inaccurate. And it's the kind of thing that gets in people's heads who aren't paying close attention. And then they find out, wait, why did he get acquitted? CBS, who I trust, told me that he admitted to committing two murders. He did nothing of the sort. That's not true. That's a term of art, a legal term of
art. And they had to take it down after the mistake was made. Anyway, Olbermann, among others
now already switching to Mark, the federal DOJ needs to step in. Here's just an example from this
horrible man. He writes, quote, after the prearranged
acquittal, you're such a moron. Go back to sports. The Justice Department needs to pursue federal
charges against the vigilante murderer Kyle Rittenhouse and this utterly compromised, quote,
Judge Bruce Schrader. Hashtag prosecute Judge Schrader. There's so much nonsense in there. I don't know where to begin,
but that's what people are going to go to if and when this jury acquits, that we now need
the DOJ to step in. That is so problematic on so many levels. The evidence doesn't change
whether it goes from state court to federal court. Okay. And even if you bring in a judge who
leans on the defense as much as he's leaned on the prosecutor, if that's really your perspective, the evidence doesn't change.
The facts are the same. The feds will never pick this up for many reasons.
But the number one reason is because they see what the evidence is and they cannot convict them. And it's not like the prosecution lost some crucial pretrial motion that would
have completely changed the course of this trial. OK, they weren't allowed to get in the fact that
a couple of weeks earlier, Kyle Rittenhouse sat at a CVS saying he wished he could have gone after
people who were committing crimes with his gun that he didn't even have. Like, that's pretty
much what they lost. The judge followed his longstanding policy of not allowing the prosecution to refer to the people who were killed as victims.
He thinks that's a term of art for the jury to decide. That's it. That's it. Those are not big
game changers the feds could turn the case on. I'll add in one thing, having been the victim
of this many, many times in court. I don't like when judges are leaning on me too hard
and then the jurors can see that. The only one they trust in the courtroom is that elevated
person wearing the polyester black robe, right? So when the judge is showing some type of, you know,
lack of favor towards me, and I don't like when jurors see that. Okay. I think, however,
it's earned in this case. The prosecutor earned it. That guy's ego is running his life. And when
he defies court orders, I don't mind the judge getting pissed off in front of the jury to some
extent. He tells them to go away, but before they are removed, they see the disdain in his eyes for
that prosecutor. I don't love that.
But I think the prosecutor brought it on himself. You got to stay one foot away from that happening.
And so you don't comment on on things that have been ruled inadmissible or on the defendant's right to remain silent. You just don't do that for that reason, because I don't want the judge,
you know, showing any ire towards me. I don't like that.
That's right. A lot of it has been outside the presence of the jury,
but some has been in front of the jury. And I will say this, you know, the natural dynamic of the trial and a criminal trial, and you can speak to this better than I can, having played both
roles, prosecutor and defense attorney, is the state too comes in there with an air of authority
that after the judge, no one else equals them with, right? Like you have the state of Wisconsin
behind you and you sort of start with the jury ahead of where the defense counsel starts. Like
they know, like the guy got arrested. The cops think he did it. This DA thinks he did it. Like,
okay. And you know, this is like a big, important prosecutor that other guy's just getting paid,
you know, to get a guy off. So it's almost a little
uneven to start with. So that's another reason why I don't really mind the prosecutor getting
beaten up a little. I'll give you the last word. Okay. The only thing that I didn't agree with was
little. It's more than a little uneven. It's a lot uneven. When I asked jurors in jury selection,
have you ever driven by the scene of a crime and seen
someone in handcuffs? Let me guess. You think, why did they arrest that innocent person?
Well, I mean, give me a break. And then I say, how then can you really presume or believe that
my client is innocent when the judge hasn't waved his magic gavel and set my client free?
And I watch their eyes and their eyes tell me so much. The
ones who could respond right away and say, well, we don't know that he did it and we don't know
that they can prove it. They're my jurors. The rest are gone. So yes, prosecutors start off at
a very unfair advantage. That's good. That's a really good question. I'll tell you something
funny. Back in the day, this is when I was doing my first morning show with Hemmer at 9 a.m., I took a two-week period off because I got selected to be on a jury.
And we tried a case to verdict.
And I was sitting there.
I'm like, there's no way that they're going to allow me in.
It was a criminal case.
It was a drug case.
I'm like, there is no way the defense lawyer is going to allow me on.
Right?
I was with Jones Day for all these years.
I was openly more prosecution-minded.
I'd been on the air talking about that for
a long time, much more law and order type. And I admitted that, you know, when he was doing
voir dire of the prospective jurors. And the prosecution was like, she's good, right? And
the defense lawyer gets up, starts asking me a question. I'm like, okay, he's definitely gonna
balance me. And you know what he said, Mark? He goes, Miss Kelly, I have a question for you. If I put you on this jury, will you put me on TV?
Oh, no, no.
Swear to God.
No, no.
And I was like, doubtful. And he still chose me.
And we did wind up convicting his client. So there you have it.
Yeah, Okay. All right, Mark, to be continued in another day.
I'd love to do the Scott Peterson case.
Scott with one T or Scott with two Ts because he's back in the news, too.
Always love talking to you.
Same here.
Thank you.
All right.
Up next, comedian Jim Brewer is here.
So looking forward to this discussion.
I've always thought he was hilarious.
I didn't know what a deep, thoughtful, kind, well-perspective guy he is. I mean,
I learned reading the prior things he said, and I'm excited to bring him to you.
It has been a jam-packed week, and we feel like everyone could use a chuckle,
and maybe just a heartfelt conversation about something not incredibly divisive. Joining me now is comedian Jim Brewer. He's just the man for this.
Jim has been making us laugh out loud since his time on Saturday Night Live back in the 90s,
and we will revisit his time at SNL, how comedy heals if you allow it to, his powerful stance
against the vaccine mandates, and so much more. Welcome, Jim.
How you doing, Megan?
It's a pleasure to meet you. Oh my God, the pleasure's all mine. Thanks for being here.
I, of course, was your fan back in the 90s. I feel like we both grew up in the 80s. I could totally relate to your love of that timeframe and your feeling of luckiness that that's when
you came of age, right? I think about that all the time, by the way.
It was definitely a different time.
You either dressed like you were in Duran Duran,
or you dressed like you were in the band Police,
or you dressed like you were an ACDC guy.
Yeah, Madonna.
There was a lot of Madonna going on. Why does that chick got a sock in her hair?
She's into Madonna.
Why is she wearing stockings on her arm?
She's into Madonna.
So yeah, I had a denim jacket.
I was that guy.
I had a denim jacket painted with the band Judas Priest,
which probably scared you to death and a lot of people.
Which the reason why I got into that band, I remember being in English class,
and my English teacher said, what are you doing?
I said, I'm drawing Judas Priest.
And he goes, we're reading the book 1984.
And I went, if you listen to the first song called Electric Eye, it's all about 1984.
I just learned differently than you do.
And it really was.
It was about cameras everywhere.
Is that right?
Yes, it's brilliant.
So I would say back then I was not doing Judas Priest type dressing.
I did do v-neck sweater, tree thorns, the palmetto jeans that were like
striped on the front and
striped on the back and
solid on the front.
That was hot. The forensic v-neck
sweater, it was all about that. You could get them
in every color. I was intimidated by you.
I was intimidated. I was like,
she's way out of my league. She's got the pants.
She's got the pants.
They're never going to settle for me.
And the hair.
I have to tell you, Jim.
So now, my hair is straight today.
My hair is naturally straight.
This is how God made it.
But back in the 80s, that was not acceptable, right?
It had to be permed and it had to be big.
It had to be really big.
It had to be permed.
I had a dangling cross earring, which was already a major threat.
Dangling cross in the left ear just to let everyone know how cool I was.
And I also had, I must admit, a little bit of a mullet.
Hot.
That's back.
The mullet is back.
Did you know that?
I did not know that, but I can tell you this.
I'm not revisiting.
You refuse. No, I'm too old now. I'm not revisiting. You refuse.
No, I'm too old now.
I'm 50.
I get it.
The gray and the size.
I'm going to go naturally.
I'm not going to take testosterone.
I'm not going to inject myself with steroids.
I'm not going to get liposuction because at the end of the day, when I'm 80 and I don't know where I'm at, I got dementia and maybe I drop a deuce in my pants.
None of that matters. I just look good and I'm a mess I don't know where I'm at, I get dementia and maybe I drop a deuce in my pants. None of that matters.
I just look good and I'm a mess confused.
No, I'm going gracefully as I get older.
I like that.
I think that's a good plan.
That's like, you know, my mom too.
She says she used to be, I don't know how she put it.
She's like, I used to be a 42 C and now I'm a 44 long.
How old is she now?
She's 80, but she's still 17 at heart. She's just a kid.
Oh, that's awesome. I'm glad that you had her that long and you still do and you still have
that time with her. A lot of people are not blessed with that. I was able to get my parents
all the way into their 90s and I couldn't thank God enough for having that in my life, man.
I know.
Enjoy it while you can.
I've read, I love, love, love this piece of your story.
And I'll round back to it as well.
But when I heard that you took in, so your dad, I think, was 92 and died in your arms.
Yeah.
It was, and I encourage everyone. This was part of the thing that kind of drove me nuts during the whole and still does where it's like, don't go near the elderly.
You may murder them.
You may kill them if they're in nursing homes.
I watched both my parents grow old.
And the last thing an elderly person wants, they're already scared to death.
They know they're going. They know they're going, which is something we don't think about
and put ourselves in their shoes. But the last thing you want to do in life is be alone,
without a hug, without a touch. That's the human spirit. That's what we all need. I would go on the road
and I'd watch my dad get older and I tried to take him out as much as possible. I was like,
I don't want this guy to die alone. He was a World War II vet. Never complained.
Grew up with 10 brothers and sisters during the Depression.
His mom died when he was three years old.
Never, ever complained.
Came out of the war.
He's a garbage man.
He's sanitation.
He's bartending.
Whatever he can to support me and my mom.
And he taught me so much in life about the heartaches and hardships to watch another man die, to watch another human die in your arms, to get killed and have to kill, and then come home and never, ever complained.
And I learned so much about that man.
I said, I don't want him to go down alone.
That's all I begged God my whole life.
Please don't let this man.
God, I'll do anything.
Just let me be there for him.
And I have to say, if anyone has that opportunity, and there's a lot of people that fear it,
they fear it, don't fear it. It's the most powerful, beautiful human spirit thing you could
do. It gives you closure. I mean, a lot of us aren't able to have that, but to hold him,
and I'll be honest with you, i towards the very end you know i was
playing his music i was probably driving him nuts um and i had my youngest daughter was there and
my nephews and his grandkids and i was in there and everyone said jim you gotta you gotta go
shower you haven't showered for three days because i didn't want to miss it. I knew it was coming to the end. You stink, you smell, you're the reason why you're
still alive. You got to go clean yourself. You stay in a life and you're funk. I went to the
shower and I told my dad, as he's just sitting there, he was unconscious. I said, don't you leave. Don't try to sneak out.
Well, I'm going to be away for five minutes.
Don't even think about it.
And I went upstairs and right in the middle of that shower, my daughter came running up.
She's like, dad, dad, grandpa's waking up.
I'm like, what?
But I knew someone told me towards the end, you start like your, your body's your soul's leaving or whatever you want to call it.
And I went down, I said, Oh, you sneak, you sneak.
You really tried to put, you really tried to pull this off.
And I got on top of him and I'm holding him and it's funny and not funny,
but I'll tell everyone now,
when you hear that last,
it comes from here.
You're like,
mouth opens,
your face.
But I will warn you and everyone else.
It's not the last breath.
He's got like four or five more,
which is the part that was freaked out.
I'm sitting there going,
and he goes,
I'm
sorry. I triggered everyone.
You thought he was gone?
That sounded like the last
breath. He did that like three or
four more times before I was like, I can't.
I can't take this anymore.
We got to get the pillow assigned. I can't do this. It was at least four more times for us. Like, I can't, I can't take this anymore. We got to get the pillow assigned.
I can't do this.
But it was at least four more breasts,
all kidding aside,
but it was the most beautiful,
beautiful thing in the world.
And I have a friend right now that's on tour with me.
And we talked last night for about two hours.
Cause he knows his dad's 80.
He's like,
Jim,
I don't know.
I don't know if I can.
I'm not waiting for that.
It's going to be bad.
It's going to be bad.
I don't know if I can keep going.
I said, listen to me.
The most powerful thing that happens when we lose people is you go through the healing.
You have to go through that.
You have to go through the mourning.
The mourning, the triggers triggers and you cry. But the minute you let it
go, which is what I did with my dad, I did a crazy story with a, with a card. It's, it's,
it's some people be like, it all depends how you think and how you want to see things.
But at the end of the day, I let him go. And the minute I let him go, which was a good
year and a half later, where I said, I'm not going to cry anymore. From now on,
I'm just going to laugh every time because he was funny. He was really funny.
It changed. The same thing with my mother. They is when you can, they become part of your life, the people that pass on.
Almost more powerful when they were here.
The only way I can explain is almost like Star Wars.
Where Luke is like, how am I going to do this?
And Obi-Wan's like, use the force, Luke.
Dude, I told you.
And it's just like he's there.
It's the same loop. Dude, I told you. It's just like he's there. It's the same thing. As crazy as it sounds, the other
night I was crying and laughing listening to Sinatra's
New York, New York, because
every time that song would come on, my mom would go
in a full-blown animated, act the whole
thing out. And if I can going full-blown animated at the whole thing.
I'll burn if I can.
Make it.
All four foot eight of her.
And I just started laughing so hard.
It's part of life.
It's part of life. And I always thought they should teach that in school or in universities.
Well, you pay lots of money to be educated by a professor when you come home dumber than you left to get in there.
In every way, because I've heard you.
First of all, that was totally profound.
And I loved it.
It reminded me just last night I was tucking in.
I have three kids, 12, 10 and 8.
And I was tucking in my eight year old.
And I don't know what made me think of it. But do you ever read that book, I'll Love You Forever?
I mean, if you haven't, don't.
Because it's like, it's such a tearjerker.
You can't get through it.
It's like the mom who rocks the baby in the rocking chair and she sings to him.
I've added my own tune.
But it's basically, I love you forever.
I'll like you for always.
As long as you're living, my baby, you'll be.
And then he gets older.
And then he has a little kid with the baseball cap on still at night in the rocking chair.
Then he goes to teenage years still at night.
You know, she's got him in the rocking chair.
College.
He gets married. She gets old. And know she's got him in the rocking chair college he gets married she gets old
and then she's very old and i can't even get it out but at the end he sneaks over to her house
and he holds his mom in his arms i know abby's trying to it's just like this is the most emotional
saddest book ever but it's kind of what you're talking. It's like, that's, you lived that you,
you were a little boy holding your parent when he needed you was old.
I mean like, Oh my God, profound.
It's it's you know, I don't know where we turned in society. What,
what year I try to study that all the time.
Cause I remember growing up in Long Island and it was all about, it was still a village mentality.
Humanity was a, you either lived, you lived in the basement and the main floor was, you know, whoever, the mom, dad with kids. Downstairs was either a grandma or somebody.
Upstairs was an aunt or an uncle.
And then one would pass away and they'd shift.
Like, okay, you go in the attic and you'll bring this one in.
They're not going to ask for this one.
And everyone looked after each other.
It was a village mentality.
It was all for one, one for all.
You may not have liked everyone, but everyone looked after each other.
Hey, watch the way you do.
That one's trouble.
I'd be careful of that one.
And people would discipline you even though they weren't your parent.
And that somewhere along the line, I'm going to have to say maybe it was the 80s, I don't know, where this new propaganda,
be all you can be, the smartest, brilliant CEO, millionaire, you're better than your brother,
you're better than your neighbor. And they started separating the family and take your elderly. We, the government, will take care of them.
We have this new facility where you can stick the elderly.
And I go, and somewhere in our minds,
the more that it's been dehumanizing us for a long time,
and it continues to dehumanize us,
where we take our elderly and we put them in homes.
Now, a lot of us, we don't want to stop working. And I understand the circumstances,
but I always go, go visit nursing homes before you think about doing that. The sacrifice is huge some of us can't make that sacrifice um but i you know not not that it's
funny but if you go to a nursing home that's a rough visit no it's not good the retirement
communities are damn nice though have you i'm like my mom's considering that right now she doesn't
want to live with us she wants to i'm like we went to look at one it was like it was like an
that movie cocoon you know what i mean it was like the people are frolicking
they're playing bingo they're doing karaoke they've got happy hours i'm like how soon can i
get in i i agree how do i get in this wait i don't have to mow my lawn i'll do nothing you
bring me here there's a tram that breaks me away i got a golf cart i'll take the golf cart
golf cart you smash into the bushes.
Like the villages right down in Florida?
My God.
You know it's a good place when the STDs are running rampant.
That is very true.
And you know what?
I can't wait.
I already got my spot ready for the villages.
I just moved to Florida.
And technically, my friends are going, did you move in one of those communities?
I said, well, I'll tell you this. I am definitely the youngest one. So clearly,
I'm going to be the king of the block because I can take anyone.
That's a good point. You'll be the funniest, the most robust. You don't need testosterone.
You got more than anything.
I don't need testosterone. I'm already there. The community, it's beautiful.
Every time I go out, they're all playing pickleball.
Yeah, pickle's amazing.
Pickleball.
Yes.
Pickleball.
They're over here doing something.
These guys are doing water aerobics.
Yes, they've got water aerobics.
They've got a spa.
I'm like, this place is amazing. You
have to be 55 or up. So I got a few more years, but I agree with you at the end, you know, there
there'll be no nursing home. And I realized it's very tough for people. Not everybody has the
option, but if you, not everyone has that means, yeah. If you can make that happen, that's yeah.
My mom always says, she goes, I don't care. She goes, I, all I, she goes, I don't want to be
forced food or forced anything. She goes, you just drug me up.
I want to be completely, I want to go out high as a kite.
I'm like, I got you, mom.
Now, on that lovely note, because I know she's listening, let me pause you so we can pay
the bills.
We'll do a quick ad and we'll come right back with Jim Brewer, the one and only.
So enjoying this.
And don't forget, folks, you can find The Megyn Kelly Show live on SiriusXM Triumph
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And the full video show and clips by subscribing to our YouTube channel.
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And then you'll find all of our full archives.
By the way, if you like our interview with Jim, you can check out episode 60 with Tim Dillon, which is hilarious, or episode 74 with
the brilliant Andrew Schultz. We're joined today by comedian Jim Brewer. Before I get back to him,
I just want to give you this quick clip of what made all of us fall in love with him in the first place.
SNL 1996. Watch.
So, Bradley, why don't you tell us about 12 Monkeys? Come on.
Well, 12 Monkeys, I play a lunatic. Not as well as you could, Joe.
I mean, everyone knows you're the king of the lunatics. You're the best.
Luna what? Did he just say what I think he just said?
I think he did.
Did I offend him?
Did I offend him?
You offended him a little bit, Brian, a little bit.
Not too far.
Let me just get this straight over here.
All right?
You're the leading man, right?
And I'm just some lunatic macaroni munchkin with my gurgats in my hand.
Is that it?
No, that's not what it is.
I'm the one back in Notre Dago, huh?
I'm Quasimipo, and he is the sexiest man alive.
Is that what's going on here?
No, Joe, Joe.
I was just saying that I think. Hey, Joe, Joe, Joe. Oh, he's handsome and skinny, and I'm the sexiest man alive? Is that what's going on here? No, Joe, Joe, I was just saying that I think...
Hey, Joe, Joe, Joe, oh, he's handsome and skinny
and I'm the crazy little guinea.
I'll show you crazy.
I'll show you crazy.
Hey, hey, hey.
Now that there, that's a legend of a fall, huh?
Jim Brewer is Joe Pesci and he's here live. Stick around.
The SNL clip is just one example of your brilliance, that Joe Pesci thing.
Just I remember it. I watched that stuff live and was such a fan of yours.
That was a lot of people think the glory days of SNL were in the 70s.
And I remember that, too. But I really thought it snl were in the 70s and i remember that too um but i i really
thought it was that era the 90s it was amazing and watching you next to colin quinn and you know
the guest stars you had like it was that was a magical few years i'm sure in your life
100 that was um you know i didn't i didn't watch the show growing up. And when arc,
I,
I was aware of it because there were auditions,
you know,
once I was doing standup in New York city,
they would do auditions.
And when I,
when they,
when they first,
when they first came to me and they said,
Hey,
would you audition for SNL?
I said,
no,
because I,
yes, because I knew the cast before me
they just destroyed destroyed them and the media was crushing them and I also knew some people on
there and they became really miserable human beings like oh my god how can you be so miserable on a television show
and so I didn't want to be in that environment because I had a friend or two that was in there
and I just went here all they do is complain and this and that so I did not want to be on and then
they are they asked me to I finally got talked into auditioning.
And then when I,
when the third time they were coming to see me, it was at a comedy club.
And I remember I met Sherry O'Terry and Will Ferrell and they all came there and I met them and they were like, man, we hope you get, you know,
you were really funny, but, and they were just, they were like man we hope you get you know you were really funny but and
they were just they were just so nice and I went oh shoot maybe maybe they are they they recook
they get all new writers all new cast with the exception of Norm and I think Tim Meadows and and Spade was still there. And I have to say,
the minute I was there in the first table read,
when you're reading the sketches,
and Will Ferrell,
no matter what he read,
you're just going,
oh no, I can't.
This guy just eats a sandwich and he's making,
how does he do that?
How does he? Sherry O'terry every week was like here's another new character but oh no i can't i can't compete with these
animals you know molly it was it was such a good talented cast it was just home run after home run
after home run.
And I think
I knew
I was getting fired.
I knew I was done.
And the only
thing that saved me
was I was a big
Goodfellas fan and a big
Raging Bull fan, so I was big Pesci and De Niro fan, but mostly Pesci.
And I was in a writer's room.
And I already gave up.
But I said, hey, you know what?
Why don't we just order some sandwiches?
Who wants a sandwich?
Want a sandwich?
Let's get a sandwich.
I was sitting here like a bunch of animals and that was
the guy goes oh my god you gotta do joe pesci i was like what do you mean he's a coma and that led
to doing the joe pesci show which then pretty much secured my contract but i can honestly say I would watch the first explosion was Molly Shannon.
And she did the schoolgirl that would sniff her arms.
Sometimes when I get nervous, I put my hands under my arms like this.
And then I smell them.
I still do that.
And I was in that sketch, the first one,
and I was on the side of the stage and I heard the,
I just looked and went, oh my, I've never heard a crowd react.
That's the type of reaction I want.
I don't want laughs.
I want that.
And it seems like every cast member from you know katan will everyone got that
everyone had a character it was a great cast we got along really well um it was uh it was good
it was uh i don't so but so what what happened because i've read you say before and i was like
i read it and i was like i can relate to this just based on my time in cable. You were at the top of your game. You said you were peaking, you're getting movie deals offered to you, you were killing it on SNL, but that you felt it was toxic, that it was your time there you felt was toxic and looking around. I don't know if it was those people you mentioned, but people in that industry seemed awful and not like people
you wanted to be like. Well, it turned into, again, going back to the way I grew up with
strong morals, strong family values, do the right thing, do the right thing. And we're in an industry where it's like, no,
cheat, kill, steal, lie to get to the top, to's a very disturbing uh mentality and it exists it's
real and it's not just in hollywood it's every big money situation a big star situation i mean i i
bring it down to i joke and i say you know when i worked at sears uh long island you remember i'd
work in paint department with this other person and then the other person got upgraded to a red
badge you're like whoa what's the red badge well now i have the power to avoid things and you need
me to override things and then that person with the little red badge would...
Now they're on a power trip.
And you're like, dude,
what are you talking about?
You're still the same meathead.
And now you're taking advantage because you've got a red badge.
So imagine that.
So I would see things
behind the
curtain that the public
had no clue about.
And I was shocked that the general public
does not have any clue of how certain things go.
Now, people's business is people's business.
But what would
drive me nuts is like you know people magazine couple of the year like they're not a couple
he doesn't even like women what do you what what a share what what oh you know this this one
just you would see things certain people would come in and they'd be – it was disturbing.
And if it was my brother or a friend of mine with some of the people, I'd go, is there something wrong with you?
Like there's something really disturbing wrong with you.
But no one would say anything because, oh, well, this one's a star.
This one's on a this one's on the you know a big tv show on abc it's um
and even holly you know when snl would would just empower and in that world of vanity you will you
will sell yourself you will sell your soul you will do anything to get to the top. And it happens
like that. People go, wow, how can that happen? I remember meeting some of the biggest
people that I looked up to in my life. And what you don't imagine, you know, you imagine being a
little kid thinking about, but when they're in front of you and they're like, Hey man, you want
to, and you're going, Oh my God, I can't believe I'm hanging out with so-and-so.
And they go, hey, man, have a little bit of this.
And you like doing this and this and this.
I mean, this is the way I roll. And you're like, wow.
Yeah.
Yes.
Let me cheat my wife and do drugs that I've never did and do.
Wow.
You're into that.
Okay.
That's how fast it happens.
And I remember I give credit to my wife.
Towards the end of SNL, I just filmed Half Baked and, you know,
getting movie offers, blah, blah, blah.
And the last year of SNL was really rough for me.
The people that supported me left and the new people were not big fans.
That's just the way business goes.
And I look back on it.
But they really went out of their way to make my what I felt make life miserable.
And I started getting really in my wife said this to me I'll
never forget she goes you know all you do is come home you complain you're
you're smoking weed all the time and numb yourself what would why are you
there why don't you quit oh I see you seriously there's some wrong with you
you don't wait like seriously there's something wrong with you? You don't quit. Like, seriously, is there something wrong with you?
She's like, no, is there something wrong with you?
You said you would never stay at a job that sucked the life out of you.
You would never do it.
No money in the world can do that.
And that's it.
You say that and you feel it,
but you're like,
well,
I'm going to start a live movie coming out.
Another movie deal.
You don't understand.
I'm this close.
But then I would see,
you know,
I remember when Farley came on to host and,
um,
he was there that week and and um long story short they were like listen he's uh
don't don't he's going to ask you to go out we've got a serious situation with him he's got there's
a lot of a lot of problems he was walking around with a 24-hour nurse. Chris Rock was walking around the hallways, and I said, what are you doing here?
He's like, I'm here just in case.
And I'm not blaming anyone, but I could not believe that not one human being, if that was my sibling, if that was my best friend, I'd go, hey, man,
I don't care what movie you're promoting. I don't care how much you're... Your life is in danger,
bro. Your life is in danger. And was it for the ratings? Was it to promote something? And he clearly had drug issues, which we all saw that
were very serious. And I'll never forget the phone call I got from him on a Thursday night.
I think it was a Wednesday night after the table read. And I had a friend over there
and my wife answered the phone and she goes, jim it's it's chris chris farley
how do you get my number she goes i don't know and i pick up the phone now here's a guy
whose soul is beautiful but vanity's just eat him alive and making 1010 million now a picture, $10 million.
Anyone would die to have that.
And he asked me, Jim, am I funny?
I went, what?
He goes, am I funny?
Am I just the stupid fat guy?
I can't get girls i'm like and you know it was it was two months later when he was
gone but i remember going no one cares about your life they just care about the rating and we're
just a product yes we're a product Doesn't matter how many people die.
You know,
how many people die from this product?
That's new by,
uh,
this line.
I mean,
you know,
put this in your,
this is not like sugar.
It doesn't get,
you know,
a couple of people have cancer.
Don't worry about it,
but we made trillions of dollars and,
you know,
the lawyers will,
we'll take care of the people.
And this drug is new.
A couple of people died.
But you know what?
Shut them up.
Vanity, power, money, the love of it is soulless.
And it will kill you.
And it will disregard you.
And you better have a moral grounding before it all comes.
And I knew this environment was going to destroy me and my wife,
God bless her soul.
At the end of the day, she was right. And I took destiny in my own hands.
And we went through a lot of different struggles. I, I,
I went through a situation where someone clearly took something of mine and made $10 to $20 million.
An idea.
My hand to God on my kids' lives.
And I remember I was like, I'm going to get that.
And my wife, again, she was like, Jim, Jim, let them have it.
Why are you?
It's just something wrong with you.
She went, Jim, you left because you wanted to be with your children.
You're working at a radio station because you want to be home every day to watch your children.
You just brought your parents from Florida. You wanted to be with your parents to watch them be elderly.
That is always going to be there. It's always going to be there, Jim. Let them have it because
if they need to steal it, if they need to lie about it, it will destroy them eventually. And I'll tell you what.
I will never forget years later watching certain individuals and their life deteriorate and after taking and making big fame and money and this and that and watching the amazing grace of it all was to see them years later come up to me and go and not knowing i i knew like what you were about years ago and all that money and they said
i'll never forget this they said hey man i don't know what you're doing here but i i wanted to tell
you i really admire the path you took in life.
I wish I did that because I didn't get to see my parents die.
I was chasing stars and your kids.
I really admire what you do.
Sometimes life is decisions and it's not easy to stick to your morals.
It's not easy to always do your morals. It's not easy to
always do the right thing because the wrong thing is so tempting. Sometimes worth so much more money.
And so reinforced by society.
So yeah, lefty.
I love everything you just said. I can so relate to all of this. I've spoken before about, you know,
in my own life, I was at the
top of the cable news industry and I had a job forever at Fox News. That's not a place that
would fire you. You know, once you were big there, like they don't fire you. And they wanted me to
stay. They offered me a huge, huge deal to stay. And I would have been queen bee and I couldn't
have cared less. I couldn't have cared less. I needed to see my own children grow
up. I wanted to raise them and not to have somebody else raise them. And prior to making
my decision, I had just done a book tour where I had the benefit of sitting next to a really
successful finance guy. He was like a hedge fund guy. And he's like, you got kids? I'm like, yeah.
He goes, how old are they? I said, all right. Now there's seven, five and three. He said, you're so lucky. You're so lucky. He goes, I missed it all. He goes, I've made hundreds of millions of dollars and I missed it all. He goes, I would give anything to go back and make a different choice. I read you say, this is another interview, people come up to you who haven't seen you,
right?
Because you're not on SNL anymore, right?
It's not necessarily you're on the big movie screen, same as I'm not.
And I'm not on cable news every night.
And they say, hey, what happened?
What happened to you?
And tell us what you say.
It's so profound.
It's so exactly right on.
I'll tell you what happened to me.
Well, I started living my life.
I was there for my children.
I was there for my wife.
I was there for my family.
And I always, when I was, when I was, I came to terms where, and I know this is kind of silly.
I might not even put this out there before.
When I saw the movie Pulp Fiction, this is, I went, what happened to John Travolta?
I went, holy crow, his career is resurrected.
And what that taught me was that world is always there.
It never turns its back on you.
All they care about is can you make money?
Can you make money? Can you make money?
Can you still get someone to pay to want to see you?
That's it.
As long as you have that talent, you will always exist.
So you can leave, come back, leave, come back, leave, come back.
And I also said, Hollywood's there forever.
My children and family are not.
And when I die, I can tell you who's not going to be there.
The TV show, the billions of dollars, none of that's going to be there.
God willing, it'll be my wife, my kids, and the closest friends that I grew up with that gave me those great moments in time, which is what we try to gather in life. I made more profound choices in my life that maybe
didn't pay me as much or make me as big a star, but I held my parents while they died. I raised
my three daughters in your case and my two boys and my girl. I was with my spouse who I love.
I know you guys call yourself marriage warriors and we'll get to D and that that that's everything.
And that wisdom is not bestowed on everyone.
No, no.
And you know what?
It's not that it's I'm not here to preach.
Hey, that's the way to go.
I just sleep better at night.
I sleep better at night.
And, you know, you know, I'm not going to lie to you. I was called the leather pants and kangaroo syndrome because when I knew I wanted to go into the entertainment world, which I was young, I think I was 16 when I said this is what I'm doing.
I knew I had a talent.
I knew it was a God-given talent and it felt good to heal people and make them laugh and watch them pain and laugh. And we get through things that way.
But at the same time, I was like, I'm going to get so big.
I went, I'm going to get leather pants and I'm going to get a kangaroo.
And I'm going to walk through the mall.
This is crazy.
I control kangaroo.
And people are like, yes.
And so it's always, are you chasing the leather pants and kangaroo
are you chasing what's going to fulfill your life and it's not always easy to do that because
this side's so loud and tempting um but once in a while once in a while but then i think of this
too you know as a kid i would go back then growing up went
man I want to my favorite actors were Jack Nicholson, Pesci, De Niro that's I if I get I
want to do stuff with them man if I can if I can hang out the Metallica I want to be a Metallica
Judas Priest and I love the Mets and I literally had to take a couple steps back and one moment in time.
And whatever you call it, God, whatever, whatever, how you reflection.
And I remember reflecting going, what more do you want?
You worked with Pesci.
You worked with De Niro.
You did some of the best scenes ever to be remembered.
With Nicholson, all three of these guys in SNL. You were in a cult movie that people still talk about today. You toured with the
band Metallica. You're friends. You throw out the first pitch at the Mets game. What do you want?
Did you see it differently? You asked, you got it. What more do you want? Did you see it differently? You asked, you got it.
What more do you want?
What you want is at home with your friends, lifting each other.
It's already there.
Sometimes we perceive things and chase things, but the visual up here is never quite.
This could be a dangerous visual.
It could be.
And it's an imbalance that i've been
trying my whole life and i have to say i thank god my wife has been around to help me with i'd
probably be a complete maniac if she wasn't around i mean i think your your book like your memoir is
gonna have to be titled hashtag nailed it uh wait pause there quick ad uh more with jim on what's happening lately with
respect to his uh his covet stance and uh also his long-standing friendship with dave chapelle
and what he thinks of what's happened to him there's actually breaking news on the dave chapelle
situation which i'll bring to you in a minute you heard jim mention it um he was the star he is remains the star of one of the most popular
movies um half-baked and in that movie which is totally beloved and a cult favorite now too
he starred across from a guy who had become his friend and an acting partner in a few projects
named dave chapelle so let's just take those of you who have not seen Half-Baked
back to just a little flavor of that movie.
You can guess what it's about if you haven't seen it.
And you can see Jim and Dave and others watch this.
What do you guys want?
Get some sour cream and onion chips with some dip, man.
Some beef jerky, some peanut butter.
Get some Haagen-Dazs ice cream bars.
A whole lot of hot.
Make sure chocolate.
Gotta have chocolate, man.
Some popcorn, red popcorn.
Graham crackers.
Graham crackers.
Just the marshmallows, little marshmallows, and little chocolate bars.
And we'll make some s'mores, man.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying, y'all.
Also celery, grape jelly, Captain Crunch with the little Crunch Berries,
pizzas. We need two big pizzas, man. Everything on them with water, a whole lot of water and
onions.
That's it?
Yeah.
Anyone want anything else?
Oh, yeah.
Give me a box of condoms and, um, what's that stuff?
I used to eat it all the time back in the day.
Pussy.
That's right.
You got it.
Thanks, man.
And, hey!
If I'm not back in 10 minutes, call the police.
If he ain't back in 10 minutes, we calling dominoes.
What do you guys want?
I love your enthusiasm in that clip, Jim.
Yeah!
Funyun, sour cream and onion.
I have never been baked, not half or otherwise,
but it's inspiring.
You're actually making me want to try it.
Yeah, can you believe that?
Yeah.
So Dave Chappelle, let me bring you the breaking news on him. The backlash to his Netflix special where, you know, he calls himself a TERF and he's gotten on the wrong side of these transgender activists. I continue to maintain not normal transgender people. Honestly, like the activists are just the worst. His alma mater, his high school in Washington, D.C., just canceled a planned fundraiser with him after some moronic students threatened to stage a walkout because they were uncomfortable with his remarks. where he went and the article points out,
Chappelle, who has given back to his alma mater
in a number of ways over the years,
listen, he donated $100,000 to this school.
He gave it one of his Emmy Awards in 2017.
He delivered a commencement address there.
He held a masterclass for students.
He regularly visits campus with other notable celebrities
from Bradley Cooper to Chris Tucker and so on and so forth.
And because he did that Netflix special, they're basically saying, no, we're not doing a fundraiser
with you. And by the way, the fundraiser was for a new theater named after him. No word on whether
that's going to go forward now as planned. What do you make of what's happening to him
and the blowback to that special?
Well, I'll say this.
Whoever it is, and when you decide to cancel someone,
give them all their money back.
If you're really serious, give them all their money back if you're really serious give him back the hundred thousand dollars give him back all the money everything he's ever given
if you're that serious about a couple people that are paid and or whatever their agenda is
and you're going to let them control the narrative, then you are just as part of
the problem because it is a problem.
It's a serious problem when you allow, you know, if you were going to start defining
what is offensive, you better get in line. My wife has had battle cancer for
over 12, 13 years. And I won't say it's from certain things, but maybe we should look at
how many women have gotten breast cancer ever since they came out with birth control.
I'm not saying birth control is the cause of it, but it's quite interesting, the numbers.
Maybe I find that offensive.
I find offensive how we sold wars to murder people
and kill and genocide our own children
to go to a place that we had no right being
and come back and not only just blow their limbs off,
but now you destroyed their mothers,
their brothers, their brothers,
their children, and generations. I find that offensive. And when you start making remarks
just the way you want, you're allowed to say racist. You're allowed to say white supremacist.
You're allowed to say whatever word you can. But when the mirror is
turned on you, you don't get a right to demand and control the narrative. So to that, I, you know,
in my special, I mentor gender and I go after college pretty hard. And I was a little nervous.
I say words that we used to say in the 80s and compared to today.
And then when Dave came out
and he said what he had to say,
I didn't, first of all, it's like a TV show.
Let's look at half the TV shows.
There's no offensive television. We call it acting
and then you want to cancel it. It's moronic, but it's dangerous. It's demonic and it's evil.
It's well-funded and it's meant to mind terrorize and, and destroy.
And it's just another method of pulling people apart.
And quite frankly,
I have no respect for,
for that way whatsoever.
I have no respect for anyone that tries to cancel things to me.
You're the problem.
You're the issue.
You're the division.
You're the one that needs to find love
that you lost somewhere. You're the one that needs to heal from a wound that you took. And it's not
up to you to lash it out on an entire society and pull it in. It's like watching a three-year-old
jump up and down on a carpet screaming and yelling and no one's the why you know the kid's drawing all
the attention but at the end of the day the kid is doing something that um quite frankly the parents
don't want them to do and their words gonna harm them or whatever whatever the scenario what i'm
saying is it it looks like a three-year-old jumping up and down and the fact that uh corporate media or whoever the press
allows this to be in the forefront i call corporate media nothing short of terrorists
they're a mind evil demonic terrorist all of them they put out agendas to create a circus. Hey, you know, here's the Aaron Rodgers.
I can't believe Aaron Rodgers is a liar.
I don't.
Well, I think he should.
This side says this.
Let's talk to that side.
Let's see this side.
If you can see through all that.
It's so obvious and it becomes comical after a while.
Dave is a brilliant human being from what I remember.
I haven't talked to him in at least five years, if not more.
I've emailed him.
I haven't heard much from him in the last couple of years.
But I will say he was one of the most deepest, spiritual, smartest human beings.
And he taught me a lot when we were doing half bait i remember him going his exact words were jim be careful
i see the way they're looking at you man and i'm like what do you what do you talk he's like man
you don't understand there's some evil things out out here in Hollywood. And I didn't really understand what he was talking about.
And we would have long, long discussions about a lot of things that are probably too heavy for a lot of people to listen to.
So at the end of the day, Dave is always going to say how he feels.
He comes from somewhere that he feels strong about it.
I've always admired him i will always admire him um and for those people that want to cancel them i have no respect for them
i have no regard for them because they're weak um they're they're they're weak they're weak they are part of the problem in our society
i'm sorry i don't think he said i don't think he said anything that was uh pure malicious intent
at the end of the day he's a comic if they don't like the megan kelly show you don't watch it
right that's what he said watch. That's what he said.
If you don't watch it.
That's what he said in the Sticks and Stones special.
He's like, hey, you clicked on my face.
Nobody made you come to Netflix and watch this show.
So you're out.
It doesn't matter.
You could scream and yell. why they're doing this. Maybe they're scared. Maybe they're scared of perhaps looking into their own life, their own decisions, their own parade. And maybe that it's always been,
always be careful of the biggest mouths. It's because they don't want to be looked at.
Well, what about, by the way, I should, I should update my reporting.
My team is telling me that Politico, which broke this story,
just updated their report to say the school now says we're going to reschedule it.
We're it's postponed, but it's rescheduled.
So that's better than canceled. So we'll see.
But let me ask you about that.
Cause I know my team tells me that when we were doing the top of the show on Rittenhouse, you were doing a Facebook post on that.
And I think that's interesting because it's it's suffering.
That case is suffering from the same problem, right?
That the media rushed to judgment.
It's just the pure sire.
How do we keep the masses divided?
Oh, just constantly create new scenarios.
We'll keep them barking at one another.
It's quite genius, sire.
And it's exactly what it is.
It's boop, boop, boop.
Here comes the Rittenhouse.
Oh, clearly it was self-defense.
I think he's a murderer.
Well, have you seen the people that he killed?
They were a bunch of animals.
What was he doing there being a 16-year he killed? They were a bunch of animals. What was
he doing there being a 16 year old? Shite deserves to be hung. I think they should take away everyone's
guns because of him. I think it's quite the opposite. We should have more guns.
It's, it's a genius, a genius platform to confuse you and to look in all different.
Hey,
Aaron Rogers,
he's a liar to hear Terry Bradshaw go on national TV going,
let's just face it.
He took a horse pill.
Are you really,
really?
Did you just say that?
A drug that's been around for so long i've been on it yes they have for animals but they also have the human version the the the mindless
it's it is it's almost comical how how how mindless and the gene pool just drops and people are going, you know, he should be a team player.
I don't think he should get the shot.
Why didn't he get it?
If he got the shot, he would play.
Oh, my God.
I think he shouldn't have a choice.
Well, I think we're trying to say, you're a grandma killer.
You're selfish.
I am.
It's my freedom.
Back to the Rittenhouse.
Left, right, facts, not facts, anti-facts, gay, not gay, transvestite, not a transvestite.
We don't say that anymore.
Wait, that wasn't in Rittenhouse.
What?
That last piece wasn't in Rittenhouse.
That's the only thing that didn't make it into that trial.
Transvestite, not transvestite.
But I understand your point. It's it's everyone gets very tribal on these things
and resorts to their sort of native team. I would I would like to exclude my exclude myself. And I
would say I didn't say much about Rittenhouse because I wanted to see what happened. I wanted
to see the evidence. And now as a lawyer, I've seen it. And this kid, he was he was acting in
self-defense. And I don't think there's any other conclusion now having seen the actual testimony that was presented before the jury
and you mark my words when he is acquitted um it will not be accepted by the media they will not
it doesn't matter who steps in to tell them that it was self-defense they won't accept it and i do
believe that there sadly will be riots as a result of it and the jury has that weighing on them which
is unfair, too.
I stole the last word on that.
Go ahead.
You can have it.
Yeah, no, it's.
I don't get involved.
The whole thing is tragic.
And what people don't look at is is so many other people were murdered innocently
murdered and the brainwashing and mind control propaganda that went on and continues to go on
it's been going on for the longest time you know i remember my daughter at one point i sit and she's
like you know we need to we need to be writing. I said, let me,
let me ask you something. Are you okay with grandma and papa driving to dinner that know
nothing about anything? They just sit there and they watch reruns of their car and beat to death for something that happened in a state they've never been to, happened in a situation that they're completely innocent of.
You're okay with that?
You don't see the madness in this all you don't see the mind terrorism and
how the media created murder they created fires they created hate they created lying you don't
see how corporate media did that you know more peaceful protests if someone's playing soccer with some old lady's head. You know, there's nothing to see here.
You may have a lot of people fooled, but at the end of the day, that is the pure demon.
That's the monster that has to end.
That's the monster that has to be exposed.
You know, whatever the circumstances with this kid, at the end of the day, they were destroying lives, burning buildings, killing innocent people.
You don't get to react like that for something that you have nothing to do with.
Period. with period if a comedian uh gets killed by a club owner and we know that club owners have been
stealing from comedians for a long time and we know that they've been keeping us down and and
not doing it do we start burning all the comedy clubs have we lost our common sense
i think we might have, don't forget on your
program. Show them lots of lights and big headlines. It'll
just be like a child. They love it. Put in more colors and make
it very loud so they can keep it and make sure you have something
on the bottom. It's like, hey, listen, listen, listen, this
read the bottom read the bottom. This is this list. This read the
bottom read the next on corny wherever this is the bottom. Listen to this. Listen to this. Read the bottom. Read the bottom. Next. Don't call me wherever. This is the latest. It's madness. Well, I mean, I said before, if you don't think
that the media was manipulating you in blowing up cases like the Jacob Blake shooting and the
George Floyd shooting because we were in an election year, then you haven't been paying
attention because they do it every four years, especially in advance of a presidential election.
They pick a case. If it can make police look bad, so much the better.
And they blow it up.
And the manipulation is then forgotten.
And people forget because then we get whatever, Joe Biden, a Democrat in office, whomever it is.
And something similarly bad looking on tape will happen.
And they ignore it.
If it doesn't help their agenda, they won't put it on television, right?
It's like people forget. You've been unafraid to take a stand on many issues.
But the latest is the covid vaccine mandates saying you're not going to you're not going to perform in a venue.
Make sure I have it right. Not going to perform in a venue that mandates the little vaccine card.
Why was that important to you?
Well, when we've reached it, listen.
Well, first of all,
what I don't like is the ignorance of humanity where everyone now has become a doctor
and they know all the facts and figures.
You know, at the end of the day,'s just your the cockatoo in you a cockatoo bird where you just
stare at the screen and go that's where you get your information you didn't sit there and think of So with that said, I have three very dear friends.
One, I do a benefit for every year.
We do it Super Cooper.
That's the name of the.
And when the swine flu came out, they gave their daughter a shot.
And she woke up next day paralyzed.
And the trauma, not only from the child, but from the parents and the audacity and the inhuman thought process of people going,
you know, that's one in a million.
That's, yeah, until it's your child.
Until it's your mother.
And I also have a friend now who runs a very successful comedy club.
And he just said my hand to God three weeks ago.
Jim, my daughter, she's in college, and she got the thing because she wanted to do this, and she started complaining.
And long story short, she went from one specialist to the next specialist all the way to Sloan Kettering, where they had to cancel out because they start growing little tumors.
They had to cancel out that it was cancer.
But they did say, and as God is my witness, yeah, that's from the, but if we, you know.
So to force people to be entertained i just want to entertain
when you start forcing people just to have a laugh you got to get injected
now whatever your stance is i don't care anymore i really don't i didn't you can scream to you
well it's for the benefit of other people.
I've never heard of a medicine that doesn't work once you have it unless everyone else takes it.
Here, this is going to help me from going blind.
Well, it doesn't work unless everyone takes it.
The thought process of that is mind-boggling. I would get it if it was a thousand percent pure, no problems. I get it.
But I had COVID. My wife with stage four cancer had COVID. My daughter had COVID.
They told us to take vitamins and this and that. The exact quote from an infectious disease doctor said, just tell me if it gets worse. What kind of protocol is that from a doctor?
Since when do we say, hang in there, let me know if it gets worse. Give me something that might work until
it gets worse. Well, we're getting a little better on the therapeutics. I mean, I'll say that.
Jim's going to stay with us and we're going to continue our conversation because it's just too
good. So one of the callers just asked that I ask you about a story when you were touring with
metallica a dream come true for you i know um about someone who had suffered brain damage
who spoke with you and it became a life-changing event he was a veteran he went back and he actually survived that and then got in a bad motorcycle accident.
He took a motorcycle accident.
And long story short, he had brain damage, had trouble walking, and he lived in a hospital bed.
Didn't want to live.
Got seriously depressed for a long time
and his wife here's wife sarah sarah and pete is the couple and um i'm hesitant to put their
i'd love to like you can follow them i follow them anyway i'm not gonna do it
so because i don't want to invade their privacy, but long story short, they would go to every single show and I would see them in every show,
you know, bands like Metallica,
they have people that follow them everywhere and they were such a,
to watch him in the beginning, he was always very quiet. Pete was quiet.
You know, beer, there's always, always um didn't really say a lot and and
long story short i remember sarah telling me his story and it was so heartfelt and she cries while
she says it and she says you know the reason i started following the band was because um i took
he wanted to die i was losing my husband i was losing the person
the love of my life and one day i came home and he said metallic is coming i want to i want to
see metallic and i never saw him with so much like enthusiasm since since the accident and all that
and um she goes okay well we'll figure out you know how to get you
in a wheelchair and how to get you to show and long story short they go to show and they're
waiting in line to buy tickets and now other people like oh what happened to you oh i'm a
vet blah blah blah you know people talking then they started going to every show and every month
he has to go for exams and they check you know they check his brain and every single one was like yeah
still you know it's it's gone until i believe it was towards the end of the 2018 tour i'm gonna
say lighten up tour for metallica and she said i have the email when you which Jim you're not gonna believe what happened today so she's like
oh my god is this a miracle of god long story short for the first time ever his brain started
healing itself it was a part of his brain that started healing and the doctors were convinced that it was from not just going to the metallica and seeing
the band the music it was about the community the thrive to live the threat the inspiration
the unity the the village the family and that somehow started and so they wanted to, Metallica then was going to go on a European tour.
And this was all before COVID hit and all that jazz.
They want to send him out with a monitor to see how it's working when he's at the shows, how much it changes.
And if they're on to a new way to start healing people, not only with brain damage, with all these other things. So it's a pretty powerful and amazing story, especially when you listen to his wife, Sarah, talk about it. And they come see me all the time. They're a beautiful couple. But yeah, it's a pretty amazing story. It's the power of the human connection, sort of, you know, the thing we talked about earlier, the thing that you recognized, I also have recognized is the thing we're here for, not money, not quote success, not necessarily fancy degrees, not fame, that human connection.
And it can be at church.
It can be at a concert. It was the thing
I liked best when I went to the Today Show about being in front of a live audience there. You get
that all the time as a stand-up comedian, but I don't get it that often. It was so wonderful to
spend time with a couple hundred human beings every morning and see their faces and being with
their energy and bounce off of them, your ideas, your emotions. That was my
favorite thing about the whole thing. A lot of people don't get that. And it is, it's soul
nurturing. It is. It's interaction. That's energy, the energy. We're talking and you spark something
in me. It's a light. It's a power. It's an energy. It's beautiful. It's a spirit. That's
the way we move and groove. It's very essential. It's very powerful. It's beautiful. It's a spirit. That's the way we move and groove.
It's very essential. It's very powerful. It's very underrated.
Well, so let's talk about the star of your life, and that is Dee, your wife.
Yeah.
She's some sort of badass. I love the way you talk about her because you've been open about the cancer diagnosis, and yet, God forbid I ever get cancer. I want my husband to talk about me the way you talk about Dee, which is like, she's still hot.
She's gorgeous. Her body, her, her mind, like everything. It's like most of us, I'm lucky,
but most of us would love to have our spouse talk like that about us on our best day. Nevermind if
we're going through a massive health challenge. So take me back to the beginning because it sounds
like you and Dean met
like sort of at the,
was it at the peak of your career?
Was it in the 90s?
No, no.
It was prior.
So we were really good.
All right, so I grew up in Long Island
and then my parents did the law.
They retire, they move to Florida.
Yeah, right.
I grew up on the same street my whole life. So I
was pretty angry at them. So now I think I was 19 years old and we moved to Florida and I was pissed.
I didn't want to withstand Florida. And then long story short, I moved back to Long Island
and I realized I couldn't make it, so I moved back to Florida.
So when I committed to Florida, there was a girl that lived next door to me, and we were really close friends.
And long story short, I started dating a girl, and Dee, my wife, was her best friend.
Oh, really?
Never thought, never, Megan.
Again, extremely mortal.
I grew up with a lot of girls around me.
I have a lot of nieces close to my age.
So I have this deeper respect.
I know it sounds corny, but for girls, women, the way men look at them,
because I would see, you know, I'd go out with my nieces,
and I'd see the way a guy would be like, oh, whoa, easy. That's my niece. Like she's like a sister to me. So I, whatever the reason, um,
she was way off limits, but she had this glow about her and she was funny. Now, after we broke
up, she still would hang out because we were, we were like best friends. I knew everyone. She was dating.
She knew everyone.
I was dating.
She'd call me up to make her laugh.
Can you come over?
Tim's being a jerk.
I just need to laugh.
I'd come over and make her laugh and be on my way.
Then she moved.
She left.
Then I started doing standup comedy. and while I was doing stand-up
comedy we kept the time we're talking late 80s 90s there's no texting there's
no computer if you if you once watch you write a letter as you get a letter and
you're not dating a girl yeah yeah okay yeah not writing a letter back.
So I decide I'm going to move to New York to chase television and, and movies and standup career. I'm ready to go.
I'm doing clubs in Florida and the South and ready to go. And,
before I went, one of my best friends my best friend who was in
love with me um i didn't realize how much she she tragically passed away in a car crash and i went
to her grave site and i was like kristen i know i know this, but this is God's honest truth. I said, I know this sounds, I know you, you would always look out for me and you wanted
the best for me.
And I'm going to beg your spirit to look after me because I'm going to make it.
You said it and I feel it.
I'm going to make it.
And I pray to God that that woman comes in my life before it happens because I'll never
know if they really love me.
Yeah. comes in my life before it happens because i'll never know if they really love me yeah and so i go up to long island and i got i'm staying with my friend phil's mom yeah i grew up with her and
phil's mom is a little italian lady and she's as soon as i get in the door she's like this girl
d keeps calling and she's got a flower and I don't like her. She's asking too many questions.
I don't like it, Jimmy.
I'm going, D?
D from Florida?
Why would she be?
That doesn't make sense.
I only know one D and she had a Long Island number.
So sure enough, it was her and I blew her off for a good two weeks because I'm here.
I don't want to date.
I just wanted to work. I don't want to date. I just
wanted to work. I want to do comedy
clubs. I want to get on television.
I'm chasing a career. That's why I'm here.
This is my college. This is my
university.
She finally says,
I don't know anyone here.
Dating a guy
and I'm stuck in Long Island.
We agree and we're going to meet at in Long Island. We agree.
And we're going to meet at a gas station.
Nice.
Real romantic.
Cause she said,
you'll never figure out where I am.
I'm on like,
I'm in this cove in this.
It's we didn't,
there were no ways and all that.
Exactly.
You'll never figure it out.
I'll meet you.
I'll meet you at this gas station.
I go,
she's not there. I'm pissed. at this gas station. I go, she's not there.
I'm pissed.
I wait 15 minutes.
I go to leave.
I realize I got no gas.
I go pulling back in.
I start pumping my gas.
I'm ready to leave again.
She's not there.
The owner of the gas station comes out.
He goes, Jim Brewer?
I said, dude.
He goes, we went to,
we went to Nass to nasa community college
i was gonna play with you dude you were the best actor what have you been doing i'm going oh no i
don't want to have time to talk to this guy he's gonna remember he used to do batman do the batman
do the batman oh my god he goes come inside you gotta take my number like i what are you doing
here i was supposed to meet some girl she never and of a sudden, it's like a movie, Megan.
My hand got...
I heard
Jim, and I looked in the
doorway of a gas station.
And he
turned, and I turned,
and he goes, is that the girl you're supposed
to meet?
It wasn't that she was the sexiest
thing in the
I cannot explain it my feeling was oh my god this is my wife this is gonna be my wife and
we hung out as best friends when I say best friends we laid everything on the line for for a while and we were too scared to break that
wall this was it felt so good being such a close friend telling your skeleton she's telling it
and then we broke the wall and then six months later we're engaged and everyone said you guys crazy you're too young i think i was just
about to turn 26 she was 22 we had 200 between the two of us and she was there we didn't have a squad
and we grew together we went from living in an attic of someone's house, paying 700 bucks rent for the heat.
We'd leave the gas stove open,
the heat up the top.
And from that all the way until today,
that is the woman who I,
I mean,
when it comes to a wife,
this woman is so powerful.
She takes arrows from every direction.
Like, I'm going to be a mom.
Oh, you don't want a career?
Oh, God, we eat bonbons all day.
You know, while some of us work, she hears snarky comments.
Some of us don't have a husband that does.
She would always take a beating from family
members that would degrade her, take her. And she always stood by me, no matter what, no matter what.
I said, Dee, I think if I go in this direction, she's like, Jim, if you go in that direction,
just do it. I've got the kid. I got this. You go do what you got to do.
And that is such a powerful partner to have.
And I, you know, I, I understand of people,
you know, they, they don't last and things happen,
but you really have to put your ego, you know, it's not, it hasn't been easy.
There's been times where we're at our wits end i'm not gonna pretend it's been absolutely amazing
our whole lives we still constantly have to work at it we still constantly have to help things and
you know i just had this conversation with my friend last night he went through divorce and
he's like you know my girlfriend leaves little notes for me all over the place.
I go, me and Dee still do that.
We need a little oomph.
I know she's going to be – I know she's going to get up and go on our computer.
So I'll leave on the computer.
Hey, I hope you feel beautiful today because God – I love you.
And here's a flower for you and I'm thinking of you.
Boom. Thanks for all you do. Those are just little, and she does the same. And it's,
you got to grow together, but I tell you, it's, I thank God I asked for it. He's, he gave it to me.
And I have to tell you, if I saw a little note like that from Doug on the computer, I'd be like, he's trying to get some.
He's laying the foundation for later.
I'm going to have to encourage him to use his writing skills more often.
Well, send him a Scud missile first.
I call it Scud love missiles.
Send him one where he doesn't expect.
You know what a man loves?
You know what a man loves? what a man loves even though the woman loves it i'm telling you one of the game changers when my wife started going she sent me a text going can i just tell you i appreciate all you do for
our family and all the hard work you put into it and i know know that it's so simple. Yeah. But I was just reading that.
I was like,
Oh,
wow.
That made me,
I'm like,
Oh,
I'm going to up this Annie.
And then it made me think I heard more.
You got to give and take.
And once in a while,
the other side isn't doing it.
You feel like you need it.
Just put the pride and ego aside.
Just send a little love scut missile.
Yes. I like like that that's actually
speaking of dr laura that's what she says she says every man wants to feel like he's the hero
of his family of his wife you know her life and and it's better to remind him of that that's
you're only going to get good goodness back from him if you reinforce that message as opposed to
like why aren't you doing more and i'm doing doing too much. If you actually think that, the way forward is also to send the scud missile love muffin message. These three little teenage terrorists with her, just mind manipulating her, trying to divide and conquer us.
And she's had it with them.
And then I just send her a little, hey, man, I know you're in pure chaos right now.
And what those kids are doing to you, I can only imagine as I sit here in a hotel room just going, gee, I just want to let you know i thank god i have you
right that little oopsie up just got me a little you know you know what that's that's amazing i'm
definitely gonna do with this or that or just send them like a picture of a boob
what i think they're both to work out just as I hope.
So we'll see.
I'll get back to you.
It doesn't hurt.
It doesn't hurt.
No, I mean, men are very visual, as you know.
It doesn't work the other way around, though.
Don't send pictures of your junk
because women do not.
No, you're the same.
You are a thousand percent correct.
And I'm glad you know that
because I know my wife knows that too,
because once in a while she will,
she will set,
she won't go,
she won't go actual boob.
Yeah.
She'll just be like,
and FaceTime.
They're like,
you know what you're doing right now.
Wait until you get home,
stupid.
Don't,
don't like,
I will, I will i will exactly especially with your
job i see the point you're out there on the road now you're a big celebrity and all these women
are like i would like to meet some jim brewer um so what what what how do we talk about d and her
health because i don't want to bring the room down for you or anybody but i also care about her and reading
up on you your marriage your family i'm like i want i want d to do well i want her to be okay
i know i've heard you in interviews say it's terminal but then years go by and she's she's
she's doing okay and i'm like maybe this is maybe this is okay maybe they found a way to live with
this and some therapeutics. I
don't know what it is, but I just feel like I'm rooting for her. I want her to be well.
Well, this is, so do I. Um, so what are we? 2021, 2000. Wow. Um, six, it'll damn, five years. So it was a couple of years ago. First she had breast cancer. She's the Brocker gene.
Yeah.
Brocker.
Okay.
That's a rough one. and then she refused to do chemo she's she's she's missed only want good stuff in my body
second go around went into a lymph nodes she does the chemo um
which even during that time was one of the most powerful
moments in our lives too i I mean, I became popular again
for making these Mets videos
and watching Mets games.
And that was all because of her.
It was all because of her.
She literally was at,
she's finished doing chemo.
She's laying there.
She's watching me watch
the first game of the Mets that year,
acting like a lunatic.
Why would you,
why would you bring him in
and stop him getting it?
Stupid! First of all, you gotta have
some... She just started going...
She's like, Jim,
Jim, like what?
She's like, why don't you make videos
like this of you watching the
game and doing a recap? Don't
act. Just be yourself.
Oh my God, the whole world should see
this. And and boom every freaking
game and it was like two million people and they made the world series that year i'm like who would
have thought so even that dark moment something beautiful and light and we were able to do so
much and live together but so then after that it went away. And then I remember coming home and I saw this doctor's, she was hiding from me.
I saw this thing in the kitchen.
I'm like, what is this?
What is this biopsy for?
She was, oh, it's probably scar tissue.
The numbers were going up.
I don't have these answers.
And when we went there,
they were like, listen,
it's over.
What do you mean it's over?
It's in her lungs,
her liver, bone.
It's metastasized. It's everywhere
but the brain.
We're like,
well, how long are we, like, what can we do?
There's nothing we can do.
We can maybe get you in a trial if you're up for that.
Otherwise, we can get you drugs that can help you through the pain.
Like how long?
Nine months.
Wow.
And I remember as a joke, cause me and D are funny together.
I looked at the doctor and went, is there any way I can get some of these drugs to deal with this?
And she belly laughed.
I laughed.
The doctor did not think that was funny.
The doctor's like, you you sick I'll never forget that
and she's like no no no he's
a comedian trust me this is not
abusive
trust me
he's not a
narcissist trust me
but she
we had a friend
and the friend was like give me the blood work look the blood work
said you gotta fly to houston we went to houston the houston doctor said you need to be in
philadelphia right now they have a trial for you and this is the biggest best trial for anyone with the Brocker gene. It's worldwide. This is the place.
UPenn, Philadelphia.
And she went there and so far,
they're not all gone,
but half of them have disappeared
and every other one is pretty much shrunk
and it's sustained.
So terminal meaning it'll never, in their words, it'll never just go away.
However, it's not killing you.
And we're keeping it at bay, if not even, like I said, a bunch have shrunk and, and the others have disappeared.
And so that is, uh, she's going on five years and it's almost just like you said, I'm always,
it's like, yeah, she's got terminal, even though we're going on to five years and which
I shouldn't feel guilty saying that, but it's just the God's honest truth.
And I remember three years ago they said listen you're
the um you're the last one on the trial and like whoa but you're doing amazing and i do think a lot
of it has to do a with her faith she got a very strong faith and her outlook and faith. And the other thing has to deal with,
she's extremely healthy.
She doesn't drink.
She doesn't smoke.
Um,
she doesn't do caffeine.
She's,
she does shakes.
She tries to eat well,
you know,
she has ice cream here and there.
She's not militant,
but she tries to stay away from gluten.
Anything that,
anything that,
um,
uh, what do they call it?
Gluten, like, I don't know.
Inflammatory?
Anything inflammatory?
Yes, inflammatory.
So, and, you know, she looks smoking.
She's beautiful.
It's like she gets better looking each year.
I'm not complaining.
It's mind bogoggling and beautiful so this is this is the thing i listen to you among other places um on um the the name
is escaping me right now but it was a it's a podcast on fatherhood right you did this oh yeah
yeah and it was so good you were talking all about about her about your daughters your three
daughters one of whom's still in the house the other two off to college and getting older now but um it brought me back hearing about this
right this issue and i know you've been dealing with some stuff with your youngest daughter and
so on not to mention your parents it's it's right back to we we heard why you made the choices you
made right like why it wasn't going to work for you to just put all of your energy into
becoming a bigger star and having more money and raising to the top of your game. And this is the
payout, right? Like this is the moment, one of them, where you look back and you say,
my kids are doing well. I've been with my wife for this whole struggle. She didn't have to go
through this alone and she's doing better than expected.
This is it. It's not often you get to say, I'm at the moment where I'd have all the regrets
and I don't have them. Well, that's my Oscar. That's my Emmy.
That's the comedian of the year.
Any award that I ever thrived for in the past, that's 10 times better.
And I'm okay with that.
That is the, you know, I used to say, I would talk about my daughter when my dad passed away.
And I'm not into dates.
I'm not into dates i'm not into dates whatsoever like i can tell you you know when my mom passed away when my mom i don't i don't get into dates i think it boggles
you dead for me boggles you down you're like oh my god she died oh my god i don't so um
but it was about a year after my dad passed and at the same time my sister passed about a month and a half later
it was very tragic and it was it was brutal so with that said um we we were upstate new york my
wife was done with chemo and her hair was really short which i thought she looked sexy shit like
her hair was gray but it was just the color was beautiful i thought she looked sexy. She had my kind of hair was gray, but it was just, the color was beautiful.
I thought she looked vibrant.
She was a little embarrassed to go around public.
And we rented a place up near Woodstock,
New York.
And my daughter,
one night we were at a fire pit with my friends and she's like,
dad,
can I borrow your phone?
I went,
Dory,
it is 10 o'clock.
Go to bed.
We need my phone for sure. I just need, it's really important. I went, Dory, it is 10 o'clock. Go to bed. We need my phone for her.
She went, I just need it.
It's really important.
I went, Dory, go to bed.
Let the grownups talk.
And no, you're not going on the phone as a nine-year-old at this age.
Go to bed.
She's like, Dad, please.
I just want it.
So long story short, she leaves.
She's a little aggravated, but she's not pissed.
And I said, why does she need a phone?
I'm ready to go to bed and I see I got a
message it's about 11 30 at night and I don't know how she did it she it was from my daughter
and if I had my phone in front of me I would read it but you'd probably start bawling
which is what I did she like a year, a year ago today, God took Grandpa.
He was my best friend.
I bet you he's up there at the Elks Lodge making spaghetti with Aunt Patty.
If you look to the sky tonight, you'll see the biggest beautiful star.
I think that's Grandpa's angel.
And I was like at the end of the day i was like that's my oscar that's the emmy
that's the ultimate reward i may not be on the cover magazine i may not be on the pedestal like we gotta say the old time lights
that is such a bigger reward that the everyday normal human don't ever take that for granted
that's a beautiful but you did you're doing your job that is powerful now you know she may be
kicking my ass right now as a 60 year old, but at that time.
I remember. I remember. I haven't forgotten.
Jim Brewer, you are, you're brilliant. You're, you're more than brilliant. You're wise.
Thank you for sharing so much of yourself with us. I'm truly honored. I've never done this before.
I kept somebody since we started the live radio show, kept somebody past the end of it.
I could go for another three
hours. I hope you'll come back. Anytime, Megan, I wish you and your family all the best. I thank
you for having me on here. And I thank you for allowing me just to share with everyone else
experiences that I'm hoping will eventually inspire or help them or make them laugh or
whatever.
Anyway, thank you very much.
And thanks to all of you for joining us.
I want to tell you that on Monday,
we're going to take a deep dive into the Steele dossier,
which is completely imploded
and is generating media corrections now.
A little late.
Go ahead, especially today,
to download The Megyn Kelly Show,
Apple, Pandora, Spotify, Stitcher,
youtube.com slash Megyn Kelly.
Thanks for listening.
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