The School of Greatness - Why Hitting Rock Bottom Can Unlock Your Greatest Potential w/ Dane Cook EP 1334
Episode Date: October 19, 2022Comedy trailblazer and actor, Dane Cook, is known for his legendary stand-up comedy specials, unapparelled stage presence and observational humor. He has released five comedy specials and in addition ...to stand-up comedy, he is known for his various acting roles in movies. He was the second comedian, after Andrew Dice Clay, to sell out Madison Square Garden. Cook’s upcoming comedy special, “Above It All,” will be released via Moment in October 2022.In this episode you will learn, How to break free of self-doubt and find your voice. How to turn grief into a celebration.How to lift yourself up out of a rock bottom situation. The significance of having hard conversations. For more, go to lewishowes.com/1334How Your Beliefs Are Keeping You From Being A Millionaire w/ Alex Hormozihttps://link.chtbl.com/1324-podEmbrace Your Artistic Passion & Turn It Into A Full-Time Living w/ Harry Mack https://link.chtbl.com/1321-podHealing Past Trauma, Building A Business Empire & Finding Peace w/ Scooter Braun https://link.chtbl.com/1244-pod
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You're going to be real to yourself because oftentimes we're not even allowing ourselves
to show us, this is who I really am.
This is how I truly feel.
When you get to that, I'm telling you.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur, and each week
we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
What was the top two rise from the ashes moments for you
that really took you into a soul searching place
where you felt like, man, this is like cancel culture
before cancel culture, or this thing that I went after
bombed, or I spent all this money on this thing
and it didn't work out, that you then realized
this was one of the most defining moments for you
that made you who you are?
Well, the first thing that I had to acknowledge
was I wasn't alone in this moment of feeling capsized,
right? It really was universal. Sometimes it's real easy to start to feel like you're, um,
you've painted yourself into a corner or, uh, I've always had a little bit of fear of abandonment
issues since I was a kid. So it's real easy to get like, um, lost and feel like, man, there's no,
um, there's no real rhyme or reason for how I proceed forward.
So the first thing is acknowledgement, right? And being able to look around, being grateful for the
people, places, and things that you have learned to love and contemplate with and collaborate with.
But then really, it was almost like, okay, everything's different.
We're going to come out of this era one way or another, um, with new information. It's also a
bit of a reset. I always try to find that like things aren't falling apart. They're falling
together for me. I was like, what do I dispel? What do I delete? And what can I come out of this
moment? Like, uh, really honed in on things that are important to me. Um, and there are a couple of big moments in your life before the last couple of years that
were like, that broke you down. Yeah. Oh yeah. Yeah. The, for like the first 10 years of a
career, it's like you sign up for a one long breakdown. Really? Yeah. Because you know, I,
I jokingly say in my routine, you know, when you sign up for standup comedy, there's no,
there's no dental plan. There's no plan. There's no, any coverage whatsoever. You're constantly
rolling the dice in, in living with hope, dream, pipe dream, maybes. I hope so's, um, you're
oftentimes driving to gigs. This was my experience going to work. Imagine this, you're driving to
gigs hours and hours, little to no money,
realizing I'm going to a place where nobody gives a shit that I'm coming and they don't give a shit
when I'm leaving either. And that's the life until you can figure out the persona, the character,
your reasoning for wanting to see things through. So yeah, early years, constant like
undertow, but give you thick skin, prepares you for a moment of success. And then it prepares
you for some of the, you know, spanking machine moments that we all get. Really? Yeah. Yeah.
What was the hardest part of your career early days, the first 10 years?
Only getting paid in like French fries and burgers.
I started like trying to stay in better shape. Cause you know, you're on the road, you live on the road.
And you were living in LA at the time, right?
No, I was still, okay, so I started out at Arlington,
right outside of Boston.
And it was really like New England gigs, college gigs,
late night New York City gigs.
And like my era switched to like kind of early success, like just about 2000,
but that first 90 to 98 was languishing and having a great time with friends and cohorts.
I came up with guys like Bill Burr. I came up with Gary Goldman. I came up with Patrice O'Neill,
a lot of laughs, but a lot of fear and uncertainty, you know?
And so, yeah, that first like kind of like life lesson, you know, something my dad actually said to me early in my career.
He said, I was like, how do I do this?
How do I build this out?
We're really trying to think it's just like, it's more than just joke to joke or story
to story.
And he was like, remember something, nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd.
story and he was like remember something nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd and you know we would see like people in a faneuil hall where you would go and like shop and there'd be a group of
people performing and they would like hype each other up and then more people would come because
what's about to happen well the key was when something does happen how do you keep people
there how do you keep them attracted to what you're putting out there?
So all those things combined in the first 10 years was like, try to find my little crowd first.
Worry about entertaining them.
Maybe it'll attract a larger crowd, you know, in time.
But be better so that if that big crowd comes.
They stay.
I'm not like, he was okay for the first few minutes.
he was okay for the first few minutes. So it's like the,
the,
the tough years in this industry,
it,
it builds your character and it prepares you for a yes moment to go.
By the way,
I have a few other things that I'd like to share with you.
Yeah.
And do you think if you didn't have those eight years of French fries and
beer as your,
no beer,
just French fries,
I've never had a drink in my life.
Really?
I'm 50.
I've never had a drink or a drug in my entire life.
You know,
it's interesting.
There's another thing in common. I've never, I've never been drunk or high in my life. Really? I'm 50. I've never had a drink or a drug in my entire life. You know what's interesting? There's another thing in common.
I've never been drunk or high in my life.
Are you serious?
No joke.
Never been drunk or high in my life.
That's great.
And playing college football, I went against the grain, right?
And probably being a comedian, you are out late and people are in the green room behind
the scenes.
It's like...
Yeah.
Everybody's imbibing.
And all I'm thinking about...
Well, for a couple of reasons.
I'm thinking about work. I'm thinking about building a platform because people came to see
me. They like me. They're, they're, uh, dispersing. How do I hold onto them? So it was a lot of that
after the show, but it was also like, even though I like to chase girls and I was hanging out and
having good times, the reality was I wanted to wake up early and I wanted to figure out a way
to fill in the other 22 hours of the day with more than just sleeping and hemming and hawing I was like how can I be
proactive in this wow that's powerful you needed the edge I need the edge I needed uh a destination
yes you know you could have short-term goals but you have to have the long term right And I also, lucky for me, I had a dad who, you know, just had like this, man,
he was just old school and he kept that competitive, he was an athlete and he kept that competitive
edge in me, even though I was in the arts, I still wanted to put wins in the win column
and show him because he was like, oh, you're going into the arts and I'm the athlete and
you're my only son and you're, you know, dilly-dallying and, you know, whatever, plays and makeup.
Comedy.
Right?
He didn't quite understand that I could set goals and have my own versions of a Super Bowl or a World Series.
It was just going to be different and yet the mechanics are exactly the same.
Sure.
I mean, you're selling out Madison Square Garden, one of the first comedians to do that, right?
What year was that?
Oh man, that was like, yeah,
that was definitely after the 90s stuff.
That was like 2004, five, six, was doing an arena run.
But that's kind of a Super Bowl,
that's like a big win category, right?
Yes, yeah.
Especially at that time, that was much harder
and unheard of for a comedian.
It was wild.
Who's schlepping DVDs 10 years prior,
you know what I mean?
Like, in the back of a, just like,
hey, please buy my DVD or CD or whatever it is.
It's hard, my brother is a jazz violinist,
and so I grew up watching him in clubs,
like, will you buy my CD?
Will you buy, like, playing for 14 people in a dive bar,
building a community, kind of in a similar arts, if you will, like playing for 14 people in a dive bar, building a community kind of in a similar arts,
if you will, maybe not as big, but.
But those moments matter.
Absolutely.
Equally to the people coming through the turnstile
and walking into Madison Square Garden.
And seeing your name.
When I'm looking out, my perspective, you know,
away from an event moment is all of these individuals have trusted that they're harder and dollar,
I'm gonna come through and deliver in some way.
And I never let myself forget that even 31 years in,
I still look out,
it doesn't matter how big or small the crowd is.
I go, these people came here, they're rooting for me,
they wanna win and they wanna feel good
when they leave here too.
Yeah.
So how did you keep the confidence, you know, in those eight years
to keep going until you started making money? Because there wasn't a lot of big wins. I mean,
okay, 13 people showed up. I get it's a small win, but if you go eight years and there's,
maybe there's little wins here and there, but there wasn't massive wins, it sounds like.
How did you keep the confidence that I am funny or entertaining or I have skill
or value to provide and I can also survive as a human being? I had to, yeah, the surviving as
the human being stuff is, that came with some great therapy a little bit later down the line.
But I was always interested in self-help stuff. Really? Yeah. During those days when you're
filling time, find a local library bookstore
and that's the aisle i'd always like lean against you know the shelf or sit on the floor and
and try to find an early version of the four agreements or whatever i could find that was
that really spoke to me i was desperately looking for symbolism or leadership or i didn't my dad
didn't understand he wasn't in the arts but he understood competing and i didn't my dad didn't understand he wasn't in the arts, but he understood competing and I didn't have really anybody
Around me except for a couple of great comedian mentors in Boston
But even they didn't quite know that I had my sights on setting
myself apart
From an entire generation of comedians. I was coming up with the generation of comedy fans
I was the first comedian a lot
of them were seeing in those early college years, club years. And I was like, I'm not doing this for
halfway. I want to be one of the best of my generation. And the only way I'm ever going to
do that is to dig deep, get to know myself. I had a lot of frailty. I had a lot of, man, a lot. I have a lot of anxiety. Still? Oh, to this day, yeah.
But you're one of the biggest. You've accomplished so much in the space. You continue to innovate.
You're looked up at as a giant in this industry. You sell out arenas. You innovate before people
are doing these things. Why does that still happen today? Well, that's the guy who can
through the mechanics, through the prep, through the 10,000 hours finally can take a stage. And
also I'm a pressure performer. I love it. I'm better when things are starting to like falling
apart. And suddenly you and I are like creating something that really feels even more real and
not in less formula formulaic and more like it's happening right now so pressure
performer that's good for me but everything that leads up to getting to the stage um a lot of social
anxiety a lot of uh i'm an introvert by nature um you know grew up as a kid very self-loathing
it took a lot of years to become more off stage who i could, you know, try to become in those early years.
Didn't always do it, you know, had a lot of bad sets.
Because onstage you come across confident and, you know, connected to the audience.
The guy I wanted to be.
The character you wanted to be in real life.
Truly, yeah.
And it took about 15, not 15 years, 12, 13 years before I could identify that is me.
15, not 15 years, 12, 13 years before I could identify that is me. I'm putting hurdles and obstacles in front of myself in life for reasons that I need to understand. The trauma I experienced
as a kid, something is causing me to feel like I need an obstruction. But when I'm on stage,
I feel like it's just as far as I want to get to that horizon line.
So I had to become more like the guy that already had the edge on stage.
And all that version of myself was telling me was, this is you.
Take this into everything that you do in life.
Be assertive.
Have the timing.
And have a blast.
Bring humor to everybody and anything you can.
Because it's going to alleviate and levitate people
around you what were you like off stage early on have my little you know the squad we had our guys
um a lot of fun but away from that it was uh really difficult for me to even meet fans in
person because i would get like my breathing would you know i'd get like my throat would get
yeah yeah yeah it was very judgmental on myself people that adored you and loved you or
inspired by you didn't feel that way at the time I felt like maybe they just liked a joke or like
I could I'm pretty good at finding uh avenues to go like you know but or maybe they only and I could
kind of down talk myself which I was a professional at. I was good at that from
elementary school on up. Wow. Which has some benefits on stage. Yes. With the downplaying,
the self-deprecating humor. Taking the piss out of yourself. Being able to be, you know,
the Eminem eight mile, like I'll say it before you can hurt me with it. So yeah, totally, man,
you're right on. It's just all that ends up kind of in the guts
of the performance, but.
But when you downgrade yourself in life consistently
every day, whether it be in your own mind
or to friends, family, and fans, what happens?
Everything gets minimalized.
The path gets minimalized,
your opportunities get minimalized.
Even your dreams, you start, what is that,
like haggling with yourself. Well,
maybe if I only do this, you know, I don't need all of that. I can't. And you start to
shrink the world around you. Interesting. And I think that to answer the very beginning of
your question, the other element is, I think it's not just about finding a philosophy that you adopt
and subscribe to. I think it's understanding your philosophy.
And in your DNA, what do you truly believe?
How can you learn to speak on it, stand by it, accentuate it,
and be able to communicate and listen and understand that everybody is different?
And maybe that will be an asset to the differentness that we have.
So personal philosophy. Not just the book that you read that, like I was doing, saying, these are great ideas. Be a an asset to the differentness that we have so personal
Philosophy not just the book that you read that like I was doing saying these are great ideas
But finding your voice in all of that. Let's I'm gonna ask you a question here
When was Madison Square Garden selling out arenas? Yeah, that was like oh four five six was the start of that So those years you're around the world selling out
20,000 plus people in an arena.
Yeah.
Always one guy heckling from like Z section in the back.
I'm like, I don't know how I'm going to handle this one.
Describe yourself.
And then I'm going to say funny things about you interrupting the show.
That's funny.
But always an event, always fun.
Yeah.
I'm curious, before that moment, let's call it 15 years before that moment when you were in the trenches.
Right, open mics.
Yes.
On a scale of 1 to 10, let's call it the self-love scale.
10 being you fully accepted and loved yourself.
Zero being you never loved yourself.
Constantly downgrading internally, externally to everyone.
Where were you before 2004, 5, 6 on that scale?
Yeah, 1990, first time I did an open mic
at Catch Rising Star in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
I would have valued myself, I felt very insignificant.
I was like a two.
Okay, on the self-love scale.
Just self-love, yeah.
I definitely would not be on a scale of anything,
looks or anything wise.
I came out of cystic acne.
I had my head down most of the time or a hoodie.
I did not like myself.
I didn't want to see a mirror.
So no value there.
But as far as just like, could I have a good chat with you somewhere and like maybe just, you know, talk about the Red Sox?
Yeah.
The day I stepped on stage, I left the club that night and I got emotional immediately.
I remember walking through Cambridge and I'm like weeping. And I had a pay phone, called my mom.
And I said, this is the start. I did it. I did it. And she, how did it happen? And I told her
the whole wild story of how I got on stage. And then I would probably have upgraded myself
instantly. Like I'm like five, just because I did it once and I got laughs and I proved to myself when the mic was in my hand, I'm okay.
I'm okay.
So yeah, two to a five in 1990.
Okay.
In 2005 or 2004 at Madison Square Garden, how did you feel after that moment on the scale?
Was it greater?
Was it less than?
I would have thought I was like
eight or nine level. I would have thought that just given the entrepreneurial ideas that I had
in place, feeling multi-hyphenated, feeling like I'm a person that you want on your team.
If you want to have a winning team, you should look at me and go, this is one of the people who brings a lot of great ideas.
What I did not know was when things started to go down a road of hardship, my parents got cancer within the same year.
I went through a terrible theft with my brother business manager.
And there was about a three or four year run at the end of an eight year high that I would
have said, I'm like, I'm an eight or nine level. And then I realized that that was a bit of a
facade. And I was kind of even lying to myself. I identify myself all through success in business
with that number. And I had gotten away from the young version of myself that was so scared and had pain and I did not realize he was still closer
Than ever Wow and when the business is
You know
Done you clock out or maybe you're starting over. It's a new machine to I had a lot of work to do
With the younger version of yourself inside of you Oh totally like right? Yeah. No not not oh
Wow, I distanced myself from that because I had success or I proved it.
No, there was a lot of things that were, again, just the mechanics and putting all the time, effort, and energy.
But I really didn't, at that time, start the work that I was going to do next.
Wow.
So, you know, you went through these.
And that's with professional people and being able to really go, like, what?
What's going on inside?
Yeah, like, when nobody sees me on stage and it's not about even like talking with fans or i i love i
love it i love that is my identity i enjoy i enjoy that whole camaraderie and relationship but like
quiet moments moments of you know silencia who am i who did you feel like you were at that time
when you were at the height but by yourself how did who did you feel like you were at that time when you were at the height? But by yourself, who did you feel like you were still?
I felt like I was a kid that just wanted to be a part of things.
And I built this thing all alone that was very lonely, even though there's 20,000 people around me.
Because everybody goes home and the show's over.
And then I still felt like I didn't have a real genuine love in my life.
And again, I'm not going to, it's like, I was a bit of a cad.
I'm young.
I'm successful.
I was having fun.
Of course.
I was looking to get so serious.
But I also knew at the core of me, like, I'm a pretty simple person.
And I want that.
I want that.
Intimacy and connection.
Intimacy, as my mom used to say, you want a teammate in your life.
You want somebody who really feel like a team.
You're boosting them.
They care about you.
And then together, you've got something that's like your mutual mission.
Right.
And I didn't have that.
And so when my parents were sick, I was like, man, I don't really have a lot of people around me that are here to console.
I had a lot of people that wanted to be a part of my business.
I wanted to take some money.
Or take a little cash or be on the ride.
But then it was like i didn't know boundaries
so you said yes to everyone and yeah a lot of yes of course i felt like i'm popular people
like me and that's what success is they just they automatically we know you now you're great
and it was like okay i have to really dig in and put all these things that uh that i've learned
about myself life around me and I have to put myself in check
and figure out exactly what is my meaning here
and how can I receive that love
that I want to also give to a human being.
Interesting.
So on that scale, one to 10,
where do you think you were once you found out
all these things with family challenges
and parents and brothers?
Oh yeah, like the real number.
It was not an eight or a nine.
What was it at?
Yeah, no, I was really dipping back down to that five or six somebody who was like my
People love me because of something that I'm bringing the success you're bringing success
was even just like yeah, I'm bringing some entertainment but I
Can't say across the board it wasn't all fans i
had a really beautiful early connection with fans that i think understood that unlike most comics i
was available through myspace or early you're big on myspace back in the day yeah it was and it was
i was i was um i was having uh conversations and learning about people and my fans and on both a
business front to go like all right i'm growing with them this audience is changing. I'm changing. I'm evolving my act is evolving
So I was all good for like the data and analytics
But I think that my fans also could see that I was like really desperate to share other sides of myself
I'm just personal size. Yeah funny stuff. Yeah, there's something something just came up for me
I remember listening to one of your CDs back in the day
I think it was a CD or maybe it was itunes back in the day it was a
cassette right cassette maybe but it was really funny because i remember the joke and there's
rarely why i remember comedians jokes right but i remember the joke and i remember it was funny
because it was related to what was happening in that exact moment, and I don't know if you remember it or not the joke
but it was about something like
being in a
parking garage and
The screeching sound you did this hilarious, you know reenactment of like what your car does
When you're turning the corners in a person's in at the Galleria Mall
And I wrote that two days before I recorded it for that album that you're really yeah
I just happen to drive through the in a a rental car, through the mall in Houston.
It sounds like, I can't remember where you were.
Exactly, yeah, man.
Like, even if you're going two miles an hour.
It's just screeching.
I should put that in my show.
I think that's funny.
That was the most memorable thing I remember because I was in a parking garage.
That's right.
And the sound was making it as I was listening to it.
So I was like, oh, this is great timing.
That's kind of humor.
Yeah.
Something that, like, you know, they laugh in the moment. But later, maybe it happens, you know, and they're like, oh. this is great timing. That's kind of humor. Something that like, you know, they laugh in the moment,
but later maybe it happens, you know, and they're like, oh.
You remember this thing, yeah.
So you were still around the five or six in the scale.
Yeah.
But everyone on the outside looking in would probably say,
you've got it all figured out.
Sure.
You're at the height, you know.
I think you were the second comedian ever to like sell out Madison Square Garden
or something in the stats they outlined. But you were the second comedian ever to like sell out Madison Square Garden or something in the stats say online
But you were you were everywhere. I was lights on you were in the movies TV shows selling out arenas
I mean it was like you were the guy right right and you were paving the way innovating
doing these specials on
Your own, you know before the new wave of comedians are doing it now in the last like three
to five years, you were doing this 10, 15 years ago. It wasn't an era where it was really in vogue
to communicate with fans. Exactly. And so you really innovated and paved the way for a lot of
people, which has been inspiring. What was the thing when you started to get, you know, to take
a look inside and you were mentioning, you know, working with professionals, I'm assuming maybe
therapists or someone else. And I've done a lot of healing work on my own.
What was the thing that opened up for you originally
that you felt like was missing
that was keeping you from being a,
not being a perfect 10,
but from the eight, nine range of loving yourself,
accepting yourself?
What do you feel like was missing
either from earlier childhood
or what you were missing in that time?
The ability to be confrontational, whether that means seeking somebody out and telling them,
I'm proud of you and putting ego or whatever aside to congratulate you and find you to do that.
But also being able to go to somebody and say, do you have something you want to say to me?
And let's, you know, this is the moment, you know, calling, being assertive. Assertive was a word
that I wanted to implement absolutely in my life.
Somebody just was talking about me on a podcast the other day and somebody else sent a clip.
I won't say the name.
This guy, oh, dang, used to come in the club.
It was like around 04.
And he'd always pull his hat down.
He just wasn't very approachable.
Almost like I was big-timing people.
But the truth was I was probably having massive anxiety at that time.
And sometimes I'd go into the club and if I didn't put my hat down and kind of just,
you know, I'm feeling it now, thinking of it.
Really?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's right there, man.
It's right.
I'm a visual comedian.
I'm a visual storyteller.
And I feel it when I'm telling it.
That's why I'm, you know, exuberant or whatever.
So when I tell you, like, I heard this person referring to, oh, man, it was like, I almost
wanted to reach out to this person and say, man, if you only understood like how, um, there was no playbook
for success and nobody knew how to walk me through it.
Um, and then there was certainly nobody there to help me to cultivate a team around me of
people that maybe were there to protect me more than just a benefit.
Sure.
Sure.
So I was very confused. I was confused. The shows were the greatest. people that maybe were there to protect me more than just uh benefit sure sure you know so i was
very confused i was put i was confused the shows were the greatest the fans were the greatest but
i was kind of spiraling in my personal life where do you feel like anxiety was coming from and and
have you learned how to overcome managing the anxiety and stress at this stage now sure yeah
there's like the things that you know are probably in good bad comedies where it's like
I put my feet on the floor and you know you're rubbing it's 17 minutes
So I can just tell them the roof of the mall thing
Inhale through the nose and think about the ocean and like I there's a bunch of different things that I know to do
To tell myself. I'm I'm gonna be okay. It's copacetic, but that's kind of more surface level like training right?
Yeah, yeah to not get to that point towards like really
How do you prevent even well? That's a healthy environment and that what does that mean?
That means what you eat that means what your how your discipline is
That means is the hardest part that you are the judge and jury that knows how to look in the mirror and call yourself on
Oh, you know to be able to really call yourself in and were you uh living in the most of your life at that time um i think that i was there yeah yeah
i was pretending after my parents you know they passed away from cancer like quickly they both
had it within the same they both got it and then my dad didn't tell me because he was real old
school about illness and when she passed a week later my dad was like
i have cancer and then he was gone several months later so nine months oh my gosh and i was on top
i was on top of the world professionally i was still in the midst of that like eight year run
where it was like never one spike almost kind of just like a trajectory but i didn't want people to see me sad.
Wow.
I didn't want anybody to see me,
probably for two reasons.
I didn't want to make people feel bad for me,
but I also think there was a part of me that was like,
man, I earned all this acclaim,
and I don't want my peers
and the people that I know are rooting against me,
that they were nipping at your heels.
I kind of was like,
To have something in home again.
I'm not going to show them that I'm'm weak because i was so weak wow um and so the facade and not getting
right with myself to be able to say to you i'm having a very bad day today wow i'm feeling a
little out of sorts and like how you respond to it i you know i don't know relinquishing your power
is something that once i understood that and made it a part
of my daily affirmations, which I do every morning, a lot better.
Like having vulnerability to express your full range of emotions.
Totally.
Every day.
Reminding myself, you know, sometimes in a funny way, sometimes even to me.
Sure.
You know, it's like I say my prayers at night.
Sometimes it's humorous.
Sometimes it's, you know, there's more desperation.
There's fear.
There's loss
anxiety you're going to be real to yourself because oftentimes we're not even allowing
ourselves to show us this is who i really am this is how i truly feel you get to that i'm telling
you it's like uh i don't want to say it's like it's like a magical it's feeling present in a way that you've never ever
Experienced and feeling peace a lot of peace even in turmoil. I think even even in scary moments
You're like Louie. I'm kind of Zen. I'm okay with this. Okay with the outcome of this
It's knowing you can face the adversity and the challenge and the messy emotions. Yeah, no, if you're with me in a funny way
hopefully it you know
I try to make it for the people around me like I'm to say the thing that I hope cracks it open to where, like, this sucks, but there's humor in everything.
And if you can start there, then, you know, you're going to be okay.
I don't know what this is about me.
Whenever someone says something really sad or horrible, like, happens, I somehow, like, just kind of nervous laugh.
It's like, man, my whole family just died. It's like something where it's like,
I'm crying emotional, but I also laugh. I don't know if that's something I need to work on.
Maybe it's because you're thinking for everybody. And how do they feel? And is this person,
he looks older. He's probably closer to death. It's like, you're thinking of mortality.
Yeah. You have to let all that go and understand that what we really love and value about each other is truth.
Even if it's a truth we don't agree with.
Right.
Even if it's the most, you know, the truth is where I think something's in the ether and it bonds us beyond opinion.
Okay, I have two questions for you about this.
I love that you're always a two-question guy.
It's never one or three.
You know.
I see what you're doing here, man.
Okay, the numerology here
is fantastic.
We're in L.A.
We're in L.A.
We do astrology.
We have the numerology
with our dates of our birthdays.
Your parents,
they both pass with it.
Here's the best part
of this interview.
Wait a second.
Before we go to my parents
and I know this again.
This is the best part.
There's nothing on this page.
You've got like one hieroglyphic.
One word, yes.
This is amazing.
You keep referring and I'm like,
is it visible ink?
Where is this coming from?
You're amazing, you're like a phenom.
Well, when you do over a thousand interviews,
hopefully you start to like be present and learn how to do it.
But do you wake up and you open it up
and you're like, questions for Dane,
and then you just kind of fog out for a second?
And no, I mean, this thing is full of notes
from like everyone I've had on.
You see, I have like tons of notes that I've had on.
My page is blank!
Well, I'm so present, man.
I'm so present.
I've got to be more present with you.
But usually people list like educational stuff.
This is a different type of interview.
I know, I know.
But I like that we're yapping.
Absolutely.
I interrupted, so I'm sorry.
No, you're good.
I interrupt a lot.
I interrupt too much.
It's one of the things I have to look in the mirror and say, hey, just listen more. Your parents, I mean,
my father just passed this year. I'm sorry. Thank you. And it was a 17-year journey of him passing.
He had a traumatic brain injury in a car accident 17 years ago, which left him physically here,
but emotionally, mentally not here.
I understand.
You could have a conversation, but every time I'd see him, he'd say, hey, didn't you play
football?
Where did you go to school again?
It was kind of like his memory wasn't there.
His personality wasn't all there.
So it was extremely challenging.
17 years.
It was almost like he was here, but I couldn't fully grieve his emotional death.
I understand.
I do.
And so him passing this year in February allowed me to kind of have a, allow myself to heal and grieve fully, right?
Still extremely emotional and sad.
The whole thing was sad.
Right.
But allow me to have a little bit more peace and connect to him in a different way that
I wasn't able to spiritually, right?
But both parents passing in one year, I can't even imagine what that's like.
Especially at the height, you know, looking for mentorship and support and parenting,
all these different things that you were probably wanting.
Oh, yeah.
I couldn't even imagine.
They were the voices of absolute truth, you know, when I would go to them.
They may not have understood everything in my occupation.
But they were home and they allowed you to come back.
Pure love from two different vantage points.
My dad, old school, very like, you know, just a lot of kind of like that mentality of like,
you know, life is wins and losses.
But then there was my mom who was just so loving and passionate and it was all about
love and beauty.
And so it was a nice, you know, companionship to have with my parents
up until they passed away, which was so confusing. And how old were you then? I was 20,
29. Okay. Still very young in your, your, your development. I felt like when I was,
I feel like the last three years is when I really learned how to become a human, right?
Oh yeah. I was like, I was just getting smart in my eyes. Exactly.
Really understanding more than what I thought I brought to the table.
So the two questions I have are,
what was the biggest lesson your mom and dad taught you before their passing?
Yeah.
And then the biggest lesson that each one of them taught you since them passing?
Man.
You know, for everything i talk about my mom and it's always from
a perspective of hope it's always from a perspective of championing somebody
she also could be extremely blunt about people.
Sure.
And even though she understood that everybody's in their own experience,
and it might mean that they're not quite ready to be a part of your experience.
However, her language and her ability to say, people suck.
People suck.
People can really suck sometimes.
So I know you want to always open your heart and you want to do A, B, and C, but at the same time, be ready to protect yourself. Be ready to-
Create a boundary.
Totally. Again, the word that I didn't really quite experience or have in place until maybe
the last 12 years of my life, but just my mom's ability to have all this great authentic love and hope and whimsy and and yet she could uh you know
straightforward tell me you know it's a brutal world you know so as much as all that stuff does
exist there are pockets of and i'm not saying the exact language my mom would say but she wasn't
afraid to point to me and you know know, protect yourself. Okay. And she also knew that she also knew that I had a pretty exciting career ahead
of me even early in my life. And so she would say things early when I still felt very insignificant,
like, um, people are going to be very jealous of you. People are going to be coming after you
because they know that you're sensitive, but at the same time, nobody sparkles like you. And people want that. And I
remember talking to her once and realizing, I tell this to a lot of people, when I see the sparkle
in somebody, I want to celebrate them. I want to tell you, you're doing something so beautiful and
unique and whatever it might be. But I tell them what my mom said, which is, now protect that.
Protect the sparkle.
Of course. Because I think everybody
has a time in their life when they can have it. I don't think it's something that just like some
people have or just an it factor. I think when you, when you know you're in your lane and you
put in the work and you know passion more than anybody else around you, even if they say they
support you and then you're in your moment and oftentimes I think people snuff themselves out in that moment because
either they feel so isolated and alone or they feel that there's a lot of
animosity when one person breaks away from the you know a mediocre group then
you're a target you know they talk you up and then the moment you're out there
alone it's real easy to look at, oh, I wish that was me.
Or he's not as good as he thinks he is or whatever.
Yeah.
I know him from when he was this way.
Exactly.
So she gave me all that.
That was all like stuff that in hindsight I could look at and realize, oh, man, she gave me like some seeds that were planted that would help me, you know, before she passed.
And then later after I was like, oh, I just got to go to what my mom told me and just find the right people around me to help bring that out help me before she passed and then later after I was like, oh, I just gotta go to what my mom told me
and just find the right people around me
to help bring that out of me
so I can really understand it.
So that was before her passing.
What was the biggest lesson since she's passed
that she's taught you?
Yeah, I mean, I'm in love.
And I met a woman that I feel like
it completely compliments each other in a way that was was so unusual I didn't even know if it
really existed I kind of was unsure if that was just some you know romanced version of
but for now five years and I'm engaged I thought I finally have that person I feel like is it
is a team with me I love her I love her family I'm in love with her as a man to me. I love her. I love her family. I'm in love with her. As a man to say like,
I'm really in love with you. I never said that. I didn't say anything like that, but I say it
because it's everything. It's, I wouldn't be where I am without her. And to love this woman
and her family and to share all these common things that we want to do together, but to support
each other's separate ideas. It's like, mom, I did it.
I finally met that teammate.
So that's what she gave to me since.
I wish she could know her.
Oh, man.
That's beautiful.
Yeah, man.
I feel really fortunate.
A little later than I thought.
You know, I'm 50.
But I was dumb until I was about 38.
So I think the timing is probably, you know, now I'm ready for whatever that next step is.
Absolutely. Absolutely. Okay. And your father, biggest lesson he taught you before passing
and after? A lesson that I didn't even know he taught me, which was, um, don't, don't go down
that road of, um, dependency to alcohol or dependency addiction to disease. I spent a lot
of time with great, uh, friends, mentors in AA. I'll go to AA meetings just because I love it. I
love the truth that's happening in that room. Even if it's sometimes caustic or, you know,
the vulnerability is so real. There's things, yes. And I admire that kind of
communication. I really admire, I get goosebumps now, like thinking of a recent, you know,
conversation that I was privy to and grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot
change, the courage to change the things that I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.
I heard it in 92 or 93 with a friend of mine at a meeting. I locked it into my heart. And I
realized pretty early that my dad had all these abilities, and yet this liquid, when it got into
his body, it brought up a lot of things that I later learned were trauma for him.
There was a lot of reasons that he wanted to kind of stifle.
And numbing the pain.
Yeah.
And I didn't want to numb it.
And I had a lot of pain.
I felt like I was so broken as a kid.
And like I said, self-loathing and you name it.
Like I had every kind of like bad onus I could put on myself.
I thought that liquid, when I saw my dad doing it i thought man what if that stuff just accentuates all of that and i can never find happiness so that was a gift that he didn't even realize he
gave to me which was don't do this but you it's funny as kids we either kind of mirror our parents
and follow in their footsteps or we see what we don't like and we say i'm never going to do this thing my mom would say to me um after rough nights with my dad where
things could get pretty you know sometimes violent or sometimes just you know um as i look at it look
back it's like we lived on a tilt and i didn't know that my life was on a on a skew for years
i just got used to living unbalanced because of alcoholism um it wasn't
until i had my own home and i learned what that is to finally be on a solid ground we learned how
to constantly be at that like in a pivot state it's exhausting though oh totally totally my mom
would actually sleep um i'd sometimes go into her bedroom my dad would be you know somewhere at a
bar or whatever and she'd have one foot on the floor outside of the comforter and one time i said why you sleep like that she said i sleep with one foot ready because
when your dad gets home i need to get up quick and figure out what version of him just came home
really yeah she's sleeping on the bed sleep in the bed with one foot already out because she
wanted to be able to throw that blanket off and get to the door so he wouldn't come in and like
maybe i don't know he's disruptive or you know something that you know he doesn't know where
the bathroom is and he's in our room or like something that's just like gross or you know
unprecedented moment of like um frustration he could bring a lot of different things and by the
way he could also be the most unbelievably kind beautiful believing passionate person. But this other side from his own misery.
So that was like my mom saying,
be the best of your father.
She would say, be the best parts of him,
but don't be that part.
Wow.
What do you feel like was the,
I mean, I've done a lot of healing work
on my own kind of childhood traumas.
And over the last couple of years,
I'll show you my phone. I started a practice where I have a photo of myself on my phone from
when I was younger. And I had an even younger version of myself on there. I was sexually abused
when I was a kid by a man that I didn't know. And for 25 years, I never told anyone. And I've
opened up about it publicly on my show many times. But for 25 years, it was this underlying, unspoken,
shame, guilt, insecurity, trauma that.
And confusion, so much confusion in that.
What's wrong with me?
Am I the only one?
How do I talk about this?
And if anyone knows this, would anyone actually love me?
That was the fear.
Right, right.
What was the biggest.
Or who could hurt me as well.
Or who would use this against me.
Exactly.
No, I understand that.
What was the biggest trauma or pain or wound that you later in life had to realize and start mending and healing that gave you that peace?
Again, I felt like I masked certain things as an athlete and being successful in business to
project power and strength and confidence. But inside there was a hurt little boy.
And it wasn't until I started the healing journey where I started to look myself in the eyes and the
mirror and love myself and accept myself and heal that journey and forgive and all those things.
What was that main wound or trauma that you have been able to heal over the years that
have allowed you to have more acceptance and peace of yourself?
Yeah.
I remember just one feeling that was so enormous in the house was humiliation.
There was a lot of humiliation.
Towards you?
Just, I felt it towards me, but I also felt like there was a feeling just even in the neighborhood.
The police are at the cook house again.
And we were really, my mom, similar to me, like, what do people think of us?
Her own kind of anxiety about her own kind of like image.
She had a lot of insecurity and low self-worth.
And so it was almost like
this moment would be chaotic in the house and scary and then oh the neighbors hear us yelling
or the neighbors know the police are there now everybody's in your business and i just remember
that feeling like that was like the malaise or like almost like we were used to the alcoholism
we we knew the bounce back and we'll be okay and have some Chinese food a couple days later
And ah elephant in the room and thank God brought but the humiliation that always came with it in the neighborhood the community
Yeah, suffocating. School the yeah. Yeah. Yeah exactly who knows in the community and and then how I didn't realize that
What my father had allowed through those episodes
How much it would kind of like haunt me. And then
even later in my own humiliating moment in life through things that happened to my brother and
things that just, even in my career, things that were out of my control, how I immediately went
into that same feeling of like people outside think a certain thing of me and I have no way
of sharing. I'm not those things. You know, what other people think of me and I have no way of sharing I'm not those
things you know what other people think of me as none of my business is a
beautiful quote but it doesn't always work because you're in shambles
sometimes when something gets outside of your you know the the safe haven that
you protected yourself with so humiliation was a major factor in like
probably how I perpetuated certain things or didn't perpetuate
certain things. And when did you start to address that, you know, either with your partner or
therapist or, and start the healing journey of that? Yeah, probably in therapy. You know,
I got into therapy, got a therapist that was great with the grieving stuff that I needed to learn
from parents and other things. Yeah. I didn't know how to grieve i was i was um um the funny guy
let's just go back to humor the night my dad uh had passed away i i had been in vancouver i was
making a film i flew back to see my dad who was like you know hours away from passing away and
one thing about my dad is he loved business he loved love talking about business strategy he was
so proud of me
when I started really teaching him.
This is how I built my business.
He understood.
It's not just,
this is how I'm,
I know data.
I know regions.
I know who lives,
I'm popular.
I build it out.
I do radio tours here.
So, and like,
he loved that information.
So when I said to him,
you know,
he's on his,
you know,
deathbed.
And I said,
dad,
I have to to i have a
contractual obligation one day that i couldn't get out of they let me come back to be here now
i gotta go and then i have to come back and in that time that i left he had finally passed oh no
yeah but i knew i i really understood but you had a cover you get to see him you got to speak with
him man like you know we we won't go there today because it was beautiful. It was a beautiful
Forgiving
Manly
But still boys the boy in him and the boy in me almost felt like met
He'd had a stroke a few months before he couldn't communicate in those last weeks. He could
only say one word. There's a certain stroke that's, forgive me, it's almost like a certain
impact that you get where you say one word. He couldn't communicate except to say like school,
school, school, school, school, school. And yet we had the most beautiful conversations.
Really?
Even though we couldn't say everything exactly with the right vernacular,
we could communicate in a way that I'd always hoped to have with my father so when i left that night i get to la and
my sister courtney is like you know dad dad uh you know he's he's passed away and um i went on
stage two hours later oh my god i didn't know what else to do. Right. And I wasn't in the process of grieving.
No.
All I knew was he raised me to win.
I'll go win tonight.
I'm going to go on stage.
And I told the crowd at the midway point of the show, I said, my dad just died.
Holy cow.
Yeah.
And, of course, one guy was like, there's always one weird laugh.
Yeah.
Right.
And then I'm like, you're laughing, laughing but i know and then i talked about my
dad and i told some stories that i knew the crowd kind of knew from past but it was funny and it was
me you know kind of like an homage to my father but that was also a night that i went home i was
like as much as that felt good to do i'm like i think there's another way I need to, my mom had already passed and then now here's my dad. And I'm like, I don't really know how to be, um, sad. I don't really know how to
really let that come through me in a, in a real meaningful, healthy way. I had to learn that.
Wow. Yeah. Was there, was there a time when you finally allowed yourself to open up and crack
open emotionally and grieve and not turn to humor as the comfort blanket.
Grief turns to celebration.
I find that when you like,
can you round that corner and you can finally realize that
like, yeah, there may be, not everybody has a,
certainly nobody has a quintessential upbringing.
You kind of finally have to realize there's certain things
that are things that you may be perpetuating.
You need to find even maybe forgiveness or closure yourself, you know, admit things to
yourself that maybe you could have done differently or wanted to do.
And then acknowledging the love, the, you know, they brought me into this world.
These are the gifts they gave me.
These are the things that they acknowledge.
These are the things that I got to show my parents.
And then sitting in with a therapist and not only going through what all of
that meant to really you know let it all go in a in a like in one real you know i'm i'm the most in
touch i'm ever going to be with myself emotionally right at this moment and hopefully for years to
to come but then from that being like all right right, that felt good. Now, what else can I be doing
to try to relegate outsiders
to stay outside
and start building up
like my own fortress of solitude
with true, genuine love
for the people who love me
just for me
and not for any other reason.
I'm going to quit comedy.
I want to start over.
I want to do that.
Who really is there for you?
And it's five words
that are now in
My life and in even my routine in above it all you'll hear me say this
Because I love to put a lot of my truth even in comedy beautiful mindful thoughtful compassionate collaborative caring if
People around you don't check those boxes
Go say one more time mindful thoughtful
compassionate collaborative caring
Collaborative.
I think a lot of people in business want to be competitive.
And it sounds like that was kind of like the scene growing up for you in comedy where it was not as like, hey, I want to see you succeed and you succeed and let's collaborate together.
It was more like there's not enough fans for everyone, you know, type of mentality.
Oh, man.
It was like the fatalities in Mortal Kombat.
You were just waiting.
Somebody wanted to come and grab that spot.
And you don't learn until you're a little bit older.
There's plenty of room for everybody on the beam here.
We don't all have to knock each other off.
But in that era, where I was at that young age
and finding self-made success, it was like.
It was competitive.
Just like constantly barraged.
I feel like the only way way it's exhausting living that life
I lived that life in sports and then kind of my first I don't know five six years of business
It was more subconscious like competitive like I want to be the best I want to win. I want to dominate right? Yeah
You're just listen to that karate kid
But then about ten years ago I started realizing like okay, okay, I'm accomplishing, I'm making money, I'm having success externally, but internally I wasn't feeling fulfilled.
And it was right around the time I launched School of Greatness 10 years ago, I was like,
I don't want this to be the Lewis Howe show, although there's nothing wrong with that.
I was like, I want this to be about something bigger than me. And I want to bring on brilliant
people like yourself who've done incredible things in the world and make it about them and lift others up. And whenever we've
put the spotlight on someone else in a unique and inspiring way, usually there's a reflection.
And so I think when I see, you know, comedians today who are collaborating with their friends
and say, we're all going to be on stage and maybe I'm the headliner, but I want to bring you guys
with me. It's cool to see people lifting each other up in the podcast world,
the comedy world, the business world as well. It's really cool. I'm curious what it would,
what lessons has fame taught you? Because you kind of were in the fame world in the company,
not many big comedians really who are like globally known, maybe there was a handful,
but you got into that spotlight.
In LA, the whole scene, what did fame teach you
about yourself and about life?
And for people that think they want to be well known
or have a big audience or have the platform
or have the following, what should people know about fame?
Were you ready for it?
And what do and how do you wish you would have been more prepared for the spotlight?
This is like let's this is like two-hour part two. Oh, yeah
Let me let me boil it down to you know, some of the I guess fundamentals first thing about fame is
At first it's a blast
First thing about fame is at first it's a blast, right?
Because it just facilitates every empty pocket void, you know, every no that you've ever thought like, oh, they wouldn't let me be a part of that club or, you know, I'd be on the team. Every rejection from girls.
Every girl.
All the girls.
I told you I'd be somebody.
So, yeah, like be lying if you didn, like, the dopamine hit of fame at first.
And then, very quickly, almost immediately, you get a little bit of a window of opportunity where it's, like, really just about, like, it's very flowery.
You know, it's part of, like, the talk-up, right?
And then you have to understand that the whole thing is contingent on a narrative that has nothing to do with you
and there's gonna be a version of you that's here and
Then let's use the internet as like the that that that's a show
That's a show that you participate in by posting and stuff as well. But there's a narrative that takes place sometimes several
There's a few versions of Dane Cook. There's a few versions of you name a person there's,
there's hybrid versions. And depending on what kind of person you are, you follow that narrative.
There's a narrative of me in people magazine. That's very like homegrown and, you know,
likes to just, uh, you know, proposing on the side. And people, that's the love narrative.
And people want everything about you.
It's almost overwhelming amount of what they believe your life is in that version.
Then there's another version that's very salacious.
There's a version of your narrative that's been pretty much hijacked is the way I refer to it.
I've had my narrative hijacked to where a story goes
Somebody says something
Everybody goes we want that to be true. He's a bad guy and then they'll talk that up to the point where it
Feels like a real person. It just takes one person to say it to that's the thing is
I sometimes feel like the internet like everybody's like somebody just say it
somebody just say that one can fail to face on that meme or somebody's like, somebody just say it. Somebody just say that one thing based on that meme
or somebody, and we'll all just take it and then.
Amplify it.
Amplify it.
And you gotta sit back and realize it's never going away.
It's always gonna be a version of a conversation
where people are gonna be,
one time I heard about a thing, what the,
and it's imperative to do two things.
I'll keep it on the list of two
since we don't do ones and threes here.
The two things is to always be able to share your narrative, share your truth, even if it's not always easy to do.
If you can in real time be letting people know these are the overwhelming things I deal with or the things through my great marriage that I'm in or something I'm learning from my kids, whatever you can do to truly always keep your narrative front and center,
that's important. And also the greatest thing I've learned in the last 12 years is anything
that you garner, give it to somebody else who needs that support or love.
What do you mean?
That's the whole thing. That means, that means that I identify
myself, right? I jokingly, I'm the old bull. Yeah, I got some wisdom now, but truthfully,
all I want to do is take any of that energy and, uh, you know, even if it's impulsive or if it's,
uh, a version of an idea, that's kind of like my ragtag. I just want to find people and be able to share some form of knowledge with them.
It's not early fame is I got it.
It's about me.
I did it.
I'm here.
And then you go a little further along and say, man, it feels so much better to help somebody else cultivate their dream.
To be a part of what you now know as a famous person.
This is a show.
This is hard.
And it's a lot of people that are there for the wrong
reasons and if you can be one of the people that says i don't need anything from you i don't want
anything from you but i would like to share something with you and where that is for me
where a lot of that lives is is this kind of sentiment statement that i came up with a few
years ago when you're at your rock bottom i've been to a few rock bottoms but when you're at your rock bottom, I've been to a few rock bottoms, but when you're really there, don't be so quick to try to come up for air.
Really?
Don't try to like in an almost panicked way escape it.
Take a beat and acknowledge what's happening around you.
And evaluate.
Evaluate.
Yeah.
a beat and acknowledge what's happening around you and evaluate evaluate understand uh the level of brokenheartedness you feel or whatever got you to that point really take a second to let just let it
all in the same way you want to let the biggest laugh out when you're laughing take a minute when
you're at rock bottom look around because I promise you, I absolutely guarantee which is not something that you would really put on anything.
You will come up with more data that leads to your success.
It's all at that bottom.
Really?
It's everything is at that bottom.
I would even go so far as to say you put yourself, you needed to see that bottom.
Really?
The hurdles I talked about earlier the obstacles all those things
I realized in life like they start to dissipate once you see that they really don't have any power
They the power is I put I put them there to
Put a limit on myself and why do I put a limit on myself because I'm truly scared
And if I only go this far then that makes me go. I'm okay because I went this far
Why don't I want to think further? Why can't I be of value to you, to strangers? So hitting that rock bottom moment
for me, and like I said, I hit a couple that were like really like undertow moments. I could learn
to look around and go, I'm coming up from this. When I finally like take that big breath of air,
I'm going to come with more data and my own personal analytics. And I'm going to use these
things in a way that nobody else would think
To use them which is to further myself as a better
contributing member to my community
Wow, what okay? So if you could go back to the
The the version of you before really things started to take off. Yeah before you got we famous and known
What would you tell yourself though to be ready? No, man. I don't know. It's like, I'm so, I'm so, uh, complete in some ways
and not in, by the way, not fully. I definitely still like I I'm, I'm a, uh, I like to recalibrate.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And that means I took it apart. Now, I don't even know if I know how
to do this a different way or whatever. So I understand that feeling of being like back behind the eight ball in some way, shape or form.
But if I could go back, I guess the one thing you kind of want to like whisper, like, you know, you come up in a hoodie.
It's just something that my mom used to always try to remind me, which is be your best friend.
Be your best friend.
To yourself.
To you.
Because I was not.
I didn't. I didn't, I actually didn't like,
my mom would say that, rubbing my back,
helping me to come down from it.
You have to be your friend, be your own friend.
And I thought it was so weird.
And I didn't like it for so many years.
Mom, I don't want to be, I don't, I want friends.
I want someone else to make me feel good.
And it took so, so long to finally realize
when you can look at yourself in
The mirror and really enjoy your own company
You know your your high watermarks which you need to celebrate and even the rock-bottom moments that you know you came back
From with better data and a better version of yourself moving forward
That's the place that you want to be so I would tell that to myself myself, just be your own friend and, you know, breathe. How many people who have fame, again,
I'm not calling out names or anything, but just in your own opinion, how many people...
Let's call out names. This next segment is names.
How many people do you think who have developed some type of fame truly are their own best friend
and love themselves or are more putting on a mask to try to protect their fears and insecurities?
I know a lot of different kinds of fame.
I know people that are famous and they're very good at it and they're very good at the facade.
And that's their storefront window.
You know, it's for, you know, whatever their pomp and circumstance.
And like fame comes in so many different elements.
Some people are, you know, filling a void. Some people are truly like running away from something
completely. Other people want that because with more fame, there's more power. And that means
controlling people's, you know, every, every version of fame, I feel like I've broken bread
with at some point or another. But I also know that i've had the experience of working
alongside of people that are genuinely some of the most fascinating uh inspiring creative people
kevin costner is an example of i worked with kevin 15 years ago in a film called mr brooks
he trusted me to play a dramatic role even though i was a kid that people knew just from comedy i
was being pigeonholed pretty quick sure and did want that. And he believed in me and he gave me this shot. And I mean, forget about dances with wolves,
forget about the untouchables, forget about like, but then I was like learning about all the charity
work that he was doing and learning about like the crew and the people around him that like
want so desperately to be a part of that next idea and just how he handled himself and treated his
crew. It made me go, I want to
be a better version of myself based on what this gentleman is sharing with me. And oh, by the way,
very funny. Just could be quick with humor in a stressful moment. And I feel like people like him
and I've been fortunate to be surrounded with people that are really like the best version of
fame. The magnifying to where it magnifies their creativity,
but it magnifies their generosity.
That's what people say about money.
The more money you have just magnifies who you are.
It expresses who you are more to people.
If you're a generous and kind person before you have money,
you'll be more generous and kind.
Very true.
If you're narcissistic and angry and scared,
you're going to be more of those things.
Yeah. A lot of the same thing with fame, right? A lot of that. Yeah. Especially like early fame.
Yeah. You really, you, you, you, you are now part of this somewhat considered elite
inner circle that once you're in, there's really nobody else in that circle that truly is like,
here's how we do things here. It's completely discombobulated.
And like I said, there's no playbook for it.
And there's also no real way to protect yourself
from some of the stabs and some of the takes.
And so you have to almost go with whatever gets taken.
You know, I don't want to delve too deep into this today.
Yes.
But, you know, I put my brother in prison because we're actually doing a documentary about that era of my life.
And he went to jail for stealing from me.
He worked with me.
He helped me pay my bills.
He was taking an exorbitant amount of money and he ended up going to prison.
And the one thing I did say in the courtroom, when I read an impact letter, it's called a victim impact letter. I said, the thing you forgot was, forget about how competitive
I am with me. I'm not competitive with, I'm really not, unless we're on war zone or maybe golf,
I'm a competitive person with me. I set a thing for myself and I want to exceed that expectation.
And he knew that and I said you forgot that
These things light my fire. Mm-hmm and you lit a forest fire And I said, but what you really forgot and I read this in the letter
I said you forgot that you could take anything you want from me and maybe people will again
But you'll never take what's in here Wow. That's the most valuable currency
I have and nobody's getting that wow unless watch on the way home
somebody will knock me out i'm in a van and then somebody takes my brain oh no oh no oh man no but
it was a powerful moment to be able to say that to him and acknowledge wow and and pretty quickly
understand um i'm gonna be okay right you know this i'm very different from what he did to me but i'm also it's forming who i'm meant to
be which is a person that you want to have on your life in your life because i don't want anything
from anybody except for you to see value in you and then that's the high i get is being like yes
i knew we all saw that in you and when you you triumph, I get to sit somewhere, you know, eating my popcorn, being like, I saw the sparkle in that
person. My mom would be very proud that I seek that person out and said, I hope that you're
getting a lot of people saying, don't stop because you're, you're good. You're good kids.
That's beautiful, man. How did you learn or have you forgiven the people in your life,
whether it be your brother or others who have hurt you or taken from you or, you forgiven the people in your life, whether it be your brother or others
who have hurt you or taken from you
or backstabbed you or lied to you,
manipulated you?
Have you been able to forgive all these people?
Not all, but yeah, I definitely have.
I've had a lot of hard conversations, as I call it.
You gotta have hard conversations in life.
Which is the first step, at least.
First step.
I mean, sitting, almost similar to,
what you want to do
is take a table
you want to sit knee to knee
with another human being
and you want to open up
and you want to say
can we have a hard conversation.
Wow.
And you allow it.
You know.
Okay.
And then
the best thing you can do
is fall on the sword
and talk about yourself first
and what you think
that you may have done
maybe that was a disservice
or you got to acknowledge first.
Nobody wants to hear
you. A point and a you is like a quick way to somebody needs a bathroom break and then they're
driving away. This is the thing I take responsibility for and how I could have been.
The reason I want to speak to you today is because I don't like how I feel when I think of us.
It hurts me to know that we've hurt each other. And if you can find a way to
ingratiate yourself and we, not you did this to me. Yeah. Yeah. And by the way, maybe, maybe it
isn't, I've had hard conversations where it wasn't necessarily something I did, but I still have to,
you still want to be able to say like, you know, your version, your way of like, I'm searching my
feelings when I think of you or us, it, it, uh, it pings me in a way that like I want to understand.
And will you help me to understand?
And so from having those hard conversations, it has, man, it's like, it's so much further than the simplicity of the answer.
But it's allowed me to always acknowledge that I'm a flawed person.
I can take responsibility and accountability,
but I can also sit with you and acknowledge in a healthy way that if there
was a moment where I had the baton and I was in front, that's, I'm going to,
I'm going to celebrate an accomplishment as well.
And I want people around me to know, you can celebrate your accomplishment with me.
This world we've created
where everything has to be somewhat like,
everybody's at some kind of maintained decorum.
I don't know.
If you have your moment,
it's like you should be up front.
You should be touted.
How many of them do you get in life?
So I say, you don't play those moments down.
You have hard conversations with people and you say like, I want to be able to celebrate my victories with you,
through you. But I also want you to be able to come to me and know like, I'm the real deal.
I'm a straight shooter. And whether it's a big, big win or like you fell on your face,
I'm going to be the first person to be like, this is what I saw from my two cents. Those are the
people you want in your life, man. You're a deep dude, man. I try, man. I love it. I, you know, we got one ticket
on this ride. I love it. You know, one ticket and the energy we create, I do believe that whatever
you believe after it's like, I think we take it with us. Absolutely. You know, so I'm just trying
to entertain people. You know, the new show is about celebrating like, um, 30 years of standup
comedy to do something aesthetically
beautiful it's a beautiful special with an incredible legendary director marty kohler
and to really show people i'm standing on my porch this is the most transparent vulnerable version
and place you could be yeah this is my home you're really in my home but this is that i worked my
off on for years it's ready to go for public consumption,
but I've mixed in something that I've always wanted to have,
which I can now say is introspection.
Right.
And I'm going to keep asking you questions,
but you've got this.
Oh, wait.
So now you've got this.
Oh, wait a second.
Hold on.
The notebook just had a couple of clip notes.
Well, I want to make sure I get it right.
I want to make sure I get it right.
I was seeing the bio up there before.
I haven't even looked at it once, but I want to make sure, because I want to keep asking you some questions I think are going to be really powerful.
Above it all.
But Above It All is out October 4th.
It's pre-order now, but then officially through DaneCook.com.
It's accessible to everybody, which I love.
It's exciting.
So go to DaneCook.com, pre-order it now, or if you're listening after, go get it and watch it. Yeah. I'm curious about forgiveness
because we touched on this for a second. Is there a moment, person, or thing that you have yet to
fully forgive in your life? Yeah. In those hard conversations, sometimes you actually have to
come to terms that like, yeah, listen, we're not ready. It's not just like,
but this is a start. So yeah, no, there's been hard conversations
that we agree to disagree, but that's okay.
Some of the best friendships I have
are from things that I thought were depleted,
but we revisited.
And then there's a new respect that gets formed sometimes
of being like, man, we aired it out.
We said some not so nice things.
But at least we shared our truth.
Yeah, but we both have maybe,
our fathers have passed away. And even least we shared our truth. Yeah, but we both have maybe our fathers have passed away.
And even though we agree on next to nothing,
we can both agree that we love our dads
and we want to be good kids for them for the rest of our life.
Now, if we can't start from there and do something together, right?
You know, or maybe it doesn't mean you're going to be partners
on every business moving forward or close friends, but at least you can resolve
some of the past pain or hurts and say, I accept you from a distance and I wish you the best.
Yeah, it doesn't necessarily mean we're forging a path together, but it means, oh man, I know that if we do bump into each other in some way, shape or form, that there is a respect there because we both understand like a very simple human thing that we both, you know, have gone through that pain
together. Do you feel like you've been able to forgive yourself fully for just everything in
life? It's been a lot. It's been work. Yeah. There was times in my life where I felt like,
you know, I lost my way definitely during like coming to you know be successful
definitely lost my way and probably in my own um failures had tried to create a version of myself
that like i thought um pleased people um and so i didn't always treat my relationships with care
and i think that part of that too, is just feeling maybe that selfish
moment of like the hubris. It's about me right now. You know what I mean? And what I realized
then was, oh man, it's not necessarily just about the women that I was with. It was the women that
I was with were affiliated with alcoholism. And I knew the love of alcoholism okay
the love of alcoholism for me from my dad was there's chaos and then there's
calm mmm really great I'm sorry's in love and so I repeat the cycle yeah so
the outfit is you weren't using alcohol but you're using and not using but you
were experiencing this with women as like it was alcohol yeah yeah and like obviously like these relationships aren't going to be fulfilling
because at the core of them there's um there's a pain there's a bit of a pain or yeah there's
yeah there's like a there's loss involved in this and so um probably where i have the most like i
because of that because of that i would sometimes be like, if I'm with a person who's going to cause me this pain, then I don't care if I cause them pain.
And so it kind of lets you off the hook to say, oh, you know, this is kind of par for the course.
We're both not being great to and for each other.
And I had to realize, you know, wholeheartedly that that was right.
realize wholeheartedly that that was me creating an ability for myself to get away with more of what I wanted for me. And that was going to be a very lonely road going further if I continue to
pull those kinds of people close. How did you learn to break that cycle?
And now you're engaged and it sounds like you have an amazing relationship and you have this
deep connection.
One friend with one great line of advice.
A good friend of mine, Paul, sat down with me and he just said one time, I said, man, this relationship and this.
And then, you know, and then like I'm half in and half out of it.
And I just don't like how it makes me feel.
You know what I mean? It doesn't feel like that's like my personal constitution.
And yet I'm living this way with like and he said easily he said it's because
you know the love of alcoholism that's you the love that you think you deserve is that and I was
like like like a speechless moment when I rarely get like I just sat there in my we're in my living
room and I was like, I need to change
this. I need to change the people that I'm in. I'm surrounding myself with and the women that I'm
meeting. I need to meet somebody who's very different, very healthy. And something that I,
I was maybe afraid to have, you know, which was somebody that really like was all the things that
I'm being honest with you about, like, call me on my, you know, you know, let's, let's have a,
we're equal. I'm not better because of what I do. Like that's all hullabaloo. That's just stuff to
bolster you up. I wanted somebody who just was very human and loving, mindful, thoughtful,
compassionate, collaborative, caring. And I wanted somebody who I could sit with and just feel like
the value is just the love that's here. Not the fame or the success or money or what's happening.
No, because by that point, it has come and gone so many times.
I've had more.
I don't know if it's an ebb or a flow.
It's finicky, a career.
It doesn't matter.
What matters is what you put your creativity into and how you feel in the moment creating it matters so much more than the zeitgeist.
Being in the culture and selling out the arenas.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no.
You know, it would be terrible to say to you that's what I aspire to.
A single destination of an arena or like, yeah, I want to play beautiful places in the world.
I love that my comedy can do that.
But what's more important is me going like,
all right, how can I collaborate
and help some of the people around me that are like,
man, I have an idea for something that I'm excited.
And I'm like, that's where I get really the most kick.
The creative juices, the energy, the strategy.
A new beginning.
Out of the gate people, I love them.
I want to champion those kinds of people. So how did you, when you met your fiance, from that one conversation
with, I think Paul is his name? Paul. From that moment till when did you meet your fiance? Yeah.
And what did you have to overcome? The fears or insecurities that was really, it sounds like
keeping you from true intimacy and allowing people to see you fully is what i'm hearing Yeah, and you to be received by someone with all your in flaws. I was ready to be my
full
complete self
You know
Everything that I am what I bring to the table. I was already before kelsey
Doing that I was doing that with every kind of relationship, an assertiveness, unlike anything
that I'd ever allowed myself to be before. Like probably I'm sure in some people's eyes, like
too assertive. Right. Right. But it's like, I don't let one bit of false, um, you know, I, I,
even if I said, I don't let one bit of false, I'm the first person to be like, I up. You know,
the truth is I actually do, um, you. You know, being just present, staying present.
So when I met her, it was kind of strange because I used to host on a, I'd never had a Friday night off in my entire career.
I'd never had a Friday or a Saturday night off for 24 years.
Machine.
Never.
four years machine never and i finally had a friday night off that at first i was really like wow this is this gonna what do i do so i decided you know what i've always wanted to do i've always
wanted to have like a game night where i can invite creative people to just not do the traditional
hollywood whatever that is like something real east coast and simple like
my porch is open sit up by the fire pit we're gonna play code names or mafia or like running
charades and like real easy in fact of the 30 or 40 people that would show up each week there's
barely anybody would drink there wasn't anything and we all stayed in this like one little living
room we're all like living room kitchen leaners.
You know what I mean?
That's how we grew up.
And so I met Kelsey when I started hosting the game night.
She came.
She came with some other people.
I didn't know her.
But she came with some other friends.
And we had people.
It was a fascinating.
It was kind of like one of the things that you would write about in a book of Hollywood.
The amount of creative, interesting people that were would write about in like a book of hollywood of like
the amount of creative interesting people that were on everybody on every one's life yeah yeah
just people that wanted to be around a nice easy evening maybe a little bit of shop talk but like
truly like not have to be on we're geeks we're star wars fans we all love game of thrones like
it was just like yeah the but some of the best of the best.
I mean, I won't drop names.
But people there were like, man, like, I can't believe I'm now friends with so-and-so.
It opened up my world in a way.
I'm like, man, this Friday night thing that I've been for years just never acknowledging I can have this night, a Friday night to myself.
So anyway, I meet Kelsey and she's there for a while.
And then it was strange.
One night we were all going
to go to karaoke instead of the game night. A bunch of us are going to go do karaoke. And I was
like, I'll pick up a few people. I picked up Kelsey and I was going to pick up two or three other
people. And halfway there, um, the guy that put it together was like, we're not, we're, we can't do
it. The babysitter and the whole thing fell apart. So I already had Kelsey. I said, do you want to
go get something to eat? We asked the other people, They were like, oh, we're going to skip it.
And over two hours, I sat and I realized, like, man, like, this is one of the most, I mean, there's a lot of ways I want to describe it.
It's special.
Just a very special human being.
And we had a lot of similarities, even though there's a pretty good age gap.
But we had so many
things like that we kind of both came from i can't speak for her right now but like we just
had a lot of things that were like we didn't stop talking and we were more and more realizing that
like we had maybe like something stronger than a friend friendship even though the jokes were
flowing because i'm like i'm so much older this you know you're gonna change and i am who i am
and i kind of didn't you know
i don't want to say i like poo-pooed all over it but the joke was like this would never ever work
and then after about six months um actually fewer than that i was like i really would like to meet
your parents so they know i'm a good person because i understand this you know even to this
day people want to say stuff about our our age difference and you know what's the gap the age uh kelsey's 23 i'm 50
but at that point you know we're dating she's like 19 and i'm 40 so understandably like we were
you know being talked about the narration the narrative was becoming something that you know
was not always nice right you know sometimes painful not desirable but anyway i wanted to
get to know her parents and getting to know her mom, getting to know her dad,
and then realizing, like, I love this family.
I'd never had the love of a family
in a relationship like that either,
where it was like, and not only that,
but like the generosity and the genuineness
and the things that I was realizing
through this relationship were more important
than anything career-wise we were already building on.
So I said, this is gonna be cheesy, man, but I said, when I sat here, I was going to like,
I'm not, I wasn't gonna, um, I told a friend of mine, maybe Paul, but I said, we were about a
year and a half in. And I said, I don't know if this is gonna, like, I'm a young 50. I'm heading,
like I'm 20. Oh, I'm energetic. I'm, I'm like love of the game lives in me all the time. I'm heading, like, I'm 20. Oh, I'm energetic. I'm, I'm like, love of the game lives in me all
the time. I just, uh, I'm effervescent. And I said, uh, if it only goes two years, I'm going
to give this woman all my love that I could possibly give to somebody in the most real,
stark, absolute way for two reasons. So I'll always know i did that and that for the rest of her life
maybe she'll know somebody really loved her a man especially in this town the way this town operates
um then it's two years then it's three years and i'm like if it goes three years i'm just gonna
give that same love so when i know that like if it ends and i kind of was like i guess it's gonna end
someday yeah but i was like but we're never not talking and enjoying and building and creating.
We talk about music and politics and art and there's never a dull moment.
So I go three years and I'm putting this into it.
And now that at five years, I'm like, I just love my life.
And I'm saying to her, are you sure you want to be with me?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like, you know, i make the jokes are sometimes they're
very dark man like we kelsey and i have a great sense of humor and like the joke is you know i
would say like i want to start a family too late you know i'm gonna be saying goodbye on my death
bed to my you know yeah no we joke and we get it but also when we hit that five-year point it was
like we don't want anything or anybody else and it was very apparent by her the things
that she wanted aligned with the things that i was hoping and here we are wow yeah man it was a gift
it's i feel like it's like a gift from the universe and it was kind of funny to to be with
somebody too she didn't really know about the success and that she knew she got it she wasn't
born yet she was she was like no no it's like we don't it's in my act. There's a whole routine in the act about Kelsey and I.
So I hope people see that we can have fun with it as well.
But the center point of the whole thing is it's two people that really just care so much about each other.
What's the thing you love about Kelsey the most?
Just her heart.
The way she communicates about how she feels about things.
It's all this, man.
It's all this same kind of, we talk about it.
We say we've always had just such an, everything is so real.
You know, everything.
There's no hidden agendas.
There's no, the things that we both talk about that we want.
It's like, there's no, it's no frills.
It's the most authentic kind of relationship that you'd want with anybody, with anybody.
That's beautiful.
And so it's, yeah, man, it's the best thing that's happened to me.
I appreciate you opening up and taking the time because I think it's really inspiring
to hear your journey and your story.
And I don't think everyone's heard you speak in this way consistently the way you've been
opening up.
So I really appreciate that.
Oh, man, I appreciate it.
This is a great, great chat.
This is fun, man.
I want to ask a little bit about business and strategy and kind of like the business.
Business.
I love it.
Which is a whole four-hour conversation.
Wait, 15 minutes.
We might have to.
I know.
That's what I'm saying.
If we get good ratings on this thing,
we might have to come back.
We'll come back, exactly.
I'll wear a nicer shirt.
Or maybe if you're still doing Friday nights,
maybe I'll come over there and hear something.
Play some Mafia Hall.
Exactly.
It's a blast.
I'm curious, you were like early in the wave of,
you were like leading the way.
You're one of the giants that people are standing
on the shoulders of now, right?
It's like you've created something
that people are trying to innovate with social media now and do their own specials. And Andrew
Schwartz, we're talking about this, doing their own stuff. Andrew Schwartz, yeah, yeah.
He's talking about this. All these other guys are coming up and they're just really taking that
and innovating it, right? Yeah.
Where do you see this going now? Being kind of like, you were calling it what,
Old Guard or something or Old Dog in this world.
But you're-
I'm Old Bull at this point.
Old Bull, sorry, Old Bull.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, but you still got decades of creation.
Oh, man, yeah.
And innovation.
But where do you see it from where you've been, you know, 10, 15, 20 years ago, where the world is now with Streamer opportunities to get specials
But now people are saying I want to be able to not censor myself and just do it on my own
Right, right
I can make more money on my own potentially and where do you see it heading over the next three to five years?
Seeing that it almost seems like every year things are changing very much so with streamers network
Touring specials digital YouTube tick TikTok. Like, what is now?
What do you see is happening in the future for comedians?
Yeah.
And artists in general.
Yeah.
I think anybody who's, you know, in any version of, you know, self-made creativity or, you know, innovation or, you know, even invention.
It all comes down to protecting yourself with paperwork.
I know it's like a little bit of like,
kind of a more modeling type of answer.
But the truth is I learned after so many years
that if you have a great deal with somebody
who truly has like a stake, skin in the game, right?
They wanna benefit with you for whatever those reasons are, right? A, B, and C. Then that's a deal worth making and taking. But for the most part,
it's just about people collecting and sometimes in a half-hearted way, sharing your content in a
way that you don't want it to be received, right? Because you know, as a performer, this is how the
show went. And so now that I've filmed it, I want it to be, you know, shown in that same kind of light. And so
I think where these things and somebody like Andrew Schultz, or CK doing it through his website for
some years, or I used to do things on like a, you know, sites that provide like, you know, for $3,
you can, you can come in PayPal, watch my show, I would set these like, you know, fly by night, you know, evenings up.
And all of that leads to where above it all is now, which is I own the IP. Okay. So I paid for
this. This special came out of my pocket. I was, I was fortunate enough to get with the greatest
comedy director, Marty Cullner. That's beautiful. And put up my, you know, fronted the money
and figured out a way to make this thing
that not only was beautiful,
and I think aesthetically unique
from a lot of the-
A visual perspective.
Cheaper things that sometimes a great comic
gets with a stream or a network
and then they don't want to pay anything.
You know, they'll give you a little cash for your act
and then they'll put even less into the set.
And a set is theme, a set is tone. a great editor is going to accentuate the things if they just throw johnny
the editor who does all the edits like you're going to look like her special and his special
all these things matter all those things are in paperwork you know edit who we're going to hire
i want to write refusal i want to blah blah, blah, blah. So understanding legal
lease, but also being able to create something and then say, where do I want this to live?
And then how do I get paid back in success for it? With this special, with Moment, who's the
presenter of my show, it's a contract that's like a page and it basically says we're going to facilitate almost
like what pay-per-view used to be maybe more so you don't need to subscribe to a year for a streamer
you don't have to pay for something that you you don't want you just want to see this show you can
go right to my site or the moment click on it you can get merch you can be part of the after party
and then that's it that's the rapport and the relationship that I would have at a club a theater and arena and now
online and what that does is if it presents me with the
opportunity to to see where my IP goes to see where the show goes and and
to be able to collect on that in success and and and
To not get screwed over and this is how people are getting screwed over ready. Here we go
We're getting screwed over, and this is how people are getting screwed over. Ready? Here we go.
We're getting screwed over because you signed a contract in 2018,
and the jargon in there refers to streaming.
Well, two years later, streaming is called downloading, or vice versa.
And so now the language doesn't quite protect you because some of your stuff is still considered streaming,
and then, man, there's a new thing now, two years, called hyper-streaming. So now the language doesn't quite protect you because some of your stuff is still considered streaming and some of it.
And then, man, there's a new thing now, two years, called hyper streaming.
Right, right.
Now that person who owns your IP in partnership with you, partnership which, by the way, they don't allow you to look at the books.
They don't allow you to look at the numbers.
Right.
It's not a partnership. It's not a partnership.
Then they take it and they're putting in hyper streaming.
But you're still getting your kickback from streaming or downloading. You will get lost in the shuffle. Somebody called me recently and said, I have a
30 page contract. I said, stop. I said, 30 pages is too much for this thing that you're talking
about at your level. That should be a three page contract. You should be able to sit there and read
that and understand. And no perpetuity is a bad word and then there's
some other things that are that you're going to want to change in there where we are right now
with the success of schultz with the success of some of these other independent artists um i know
even like uh bieber went through the moment route um scooter braun is one of the investors
amazing entrepreneurial guy and wish i could meet him to thank him firsthand because
you never met him he's I don't know no I don't know him but you know now I'm working you play
basketball I do come out and play basketball sometime I'm not gonna say no to that I'll bring
you out sometime when I'm playing with you I may have to wear a knee brace on the left but okay
I bang underneath too but it's really like Scooter and those guys in Moment, Bart Coleman and everybody,
great group of people over there
and what they're providing is the opportunity to say,
not only here's your show that you own and operate,
we want to put you in the best light
but when you leave that experience,
they give you all the analytics.
Nobody bogarts your emails or you get the email list,
you get all the numbers, you get the regions,
you get the, you have all the data you'd want
if you were a comic like I was in 96, you'd pick up that piece of paper where somebody would fill out the comment card, say, we had a good time.
We're from so-and-so.
And you go, now I have an email or a phone number.
Data is the currency.
You own the data.
You own the data.
Not the stream or the network or whatever, right?
I'll be able to pay myself.
I'm going to recoup, very quickly with my investment. And now I have something that looks completely unique,
beautiful piece of art with great Marty Kullner. And the best part is maybe a streamer,
somebody calls and says, now we want it. And then you can go, okay, let's, then let's shrink that
deal down. And hopefully what we're going to see in the next couple of years to answer more
directly is less about these long-term and you're chasing royalties and mechanical royalties and all this. It's like mumbo jumbo
to say, can we put it on our streamer for six months? Why is that better? Because they've got
six months thrown the clock. You want to sell it, sell it, promote it for me. Where's the billboards
for most of these things? I have friends that are huge comedians
Nobody's even knowing their specials out because I splash page. It's it's not even it's not even available
You know look for it search for it. Yeah. Yeah special should be special special should you know and give it a moment?
Yeah, exactly. Like we've created something that I know I mean listen Marty Cullner
I know what I bring to the table that man is such a brilliant director that when I looked at the cut, I said, Marty, this is the best I've ever been.
And it's because I know you knew how to capture my version of storytelling.
I mean, you've had some great stuff.
This is the best you've ever been.
This is the best.
Wow.
This is it.
Because of that, I had some tools in the arsenal in 05, 06, 07.
And then I learned things.
I was like, oh like oh man if i can
implement that into the routine so now i've got an act that i think covers a lot of bases that's
exciting and when you do when you do you know stand up for 30 years or whatever you've been
doing before you've just figured out what works consistently yeah yeah you start to you start to
understand that um that people love not only the musicality that you bring to whatever your tempo and your style, I guess,
but people talking about what we spoke to earlier, people just love the truth.
And if you can share truth, observe and report, or personal truth,
then you've got, for the most part, a fan for life.
They want to check in and go, what's next?
I'm excited to watch this.
I'm going to send you a link.
Above it all.
I've got 10 giveaway links.
You doing a watch party here or no?
What's that?
You doing a watch party here in LA or no?
Oh, we're doing a big premiere at the TCL Chinese Theater, the historic Chinese Theater.
That's the night before.
On the 3rd.
Okay, cool.
On the 4th.
On the 4th.
First comic to ever do screening in theater one
the big famous
Star Wars theater
that's cool
and again man
it's so exciting
it really is
I want people to follow you
you're at Dane Cook
everywhere
you're also
danecook.com
they can go and get the special there
or through the moment
I guess it's
is it moment.com
yeah it's moment.co
but if they go to danecook.com
they'll take them right there swing you around so go to danecook.com, they'll just swing you around.
So go to danecook.com.
I'm excited to watch this.
I want people to watch it.
I think it's going to be really powerful.
If you're saying it's your best stuff, I mean, that's putting it out there.
I'm excited.
That's in the eyes and the ears of your audience.
But at the same time, I've been in the edit bay, and we had a screening, and I liked what I heard.
I'm excited, man.
I'm very excited about this.
I appreciate that.
I've got two final questions for you.
I want to make sure people get this.
Follow you on social media.
What's your social media platform of choice?
I like TikTok.
TikTok.
Yeah, it's like MySpace 2.0.
Yes.
I feel like it's really vibrant.
I feel like the people that are on there are really genuinely creative and excited to be a part of that platform.
So that's where I kind of do most of my lives and stuff.
This question is called the three truths question. Okay it's a hypothetical question. Imagine it's your last
day on earth. You get to live as long as you want to live. You get to have the exact career,
the relationship, the family that you desire, you envision. It all comes true. But for whatever
reason, this is the last day for you. Many years right. And all of your content. I feel like I'm about to audition for a film. Your character is Matt. He owns the rocket ship. The world is ending. No,
I'm just kidding. But for what, in this hypothetical scenario, all of your content
is gone. It goes with you to the next place. So we don't have access to this interview,
anything you've ever written down, social media, comedy specials. We don't have access to your message. But for whatever reason, you get to
leave behind three lessons to the world. And from everything that you've experienced in life,
it can be any topic, anything. And this is all the content we have to remember you by.
Okay. What would those three truths be for you that you would share behind?
you buy okay what would those three truths be for you that you would share behind yeah well okay so maybe unexpectedly but you always have to have a little humor and a little something cutting with
a little humor it's a quote that i heard years ago and i i love it some people brighten a room
by leaving it and i never forget that so you don't want to be that person some people break it wrong by leaving that's good i think the second thing man the second bit of information would be um anything that i ever do
um one time mel brooks the great mel brooks called me up and it was to be in the producers at the
hollywood bowl and he wanted me to come in and play franz in this very famous role and i pulled
i was so nervous talking about brooks that i pulled over on the side of the road and he wanted me to come in and play Franz in this very famous role. And I pulled over, I was so nervous talking to Al Brooks
that I pulled over on the side of the road.
And he was like,
can you do the accent?
I don't care if you can sing.
He wanted to know if I could do this funny German accent.
He wanted me to do it on the phone
and I just,
I didn't want to do it on the phone
because like,
what if I mess it up here?
I just didn't want to.
And so I said to him,
I said,
Mel,
I just won't,
I'm not going to do it.
I couldn't believe I was saying no. I said, I want to do this't, I'm not going to do it. I couldn't believe I was saying no.
I said, I want to do this, but I can't do it on the phone.
But I will tell you this.
I would not say yes to this if I didn't feel I could exceed yours and my expectations.
So exceed your expectations.
Whatever you expect of yourself, push it a little bit further, learn a little bit more
and have a little more heart and guts and see what that does.
And the last thing I would say, and it's comparable to that, is something I just told
myself when I was very young. Kind of almost like a little bit of a soothsaying moment where I saw
the future. Look before you leap, but don't spend your life looking too much or it's all looking and
no leaping. I love that, man.
Got a lot of wisdom here.
I like this.
Try, man, try to share it all.
Before I ask the final question,
I wanna acknowledge you for a moment, Dane,
for everything you've created
and everything you've overcome.
Again, I think, I saw, I wasn't really into comedy
necessarily when you were coming up,
but I think you brought comedy into my life
to make me aware of it.
You know, hearing your comedy,
it was like shared around college campuses and stuff.
And I was like, it got me interested in comedy.
And you being an innovator was really inspiring to watch.
And to see you innovate, even from a place
where you weren't like, where you were struggling
and maybe emotionally wounded or dealing with family challenges and keep innovating and
keep showing up and then continue to do the healing journey.
I think that's really cool because some people will just crash and burn and they never work
on themselves.
Right.
But for you to do what is your truth, to work on that healing journey and in all your relationships and things like that.
I know you're not perfect. I'm not either, but to be on that journey and keep showing up is really
inspiring. So I want to acknowledge you for that, man. It's really cool. Thank you so much. And I
can't wait to, uh, you know, dominate and the paint, uh, against you in a basketball game one
day. Um, my, my final question is what is your definition of greatness? I think that it comes down to regardless of the outcome of what you even think or know
of what you put into that piece, presenting it and standing by it.
Because the very fact that it maybe isn't perfect is exactly why it's perfect.
Thank you. Thank you, man. I appreciate it, man. I really appreciate you, dude it's perfect. Thank you, man.
Thank you, man.
I appreciate it, man.
Really appreciate you, dude.
Thank you.
Powerful, man.
All right.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode
and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description
for a full rundown of today's show
with all the important links.
And also make sure to share this with a friend
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I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter. And now it's time to go
out there and do something great.