The Tim Dillon Show - 182: 182 - Beware The Villas
Episode Date: January 12, 2020Live from a Holiday Inn in Maryland, Tim talks about people who don't get ahead because they live in fear, why a lot of his friends should die in war, the time he was a juror on a murder trial, and hi...s most recent move to the hills. For weekly Bonus Episodes: https://www.patreon.com/thetimdillonshow Tim Dillon Live Dates: http://timdilloncomedy.com/#shows Please Support Our Sponsors: BlueChew! Visit www.BlueChew.com and get your first order FREE when use our special promo code TIM -- Just pay $5 s Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Timmy the Trash Cam, and I love trash. Popcorn boxes, pops, and candy wrappers.
They all taste so good. Instead of throwing your trash on the floor, won't you please
give it to me? Thank you for considering your fellow patrons.
So, we are live here from the Maryland Holiday Inn in Timonium, Maryland. A rest stop,
essentially, a truck stop where they have, it's like a woman described it to me. She
goes, it's like a rest stop that they built a town around. That's kind of the vibe here.
I'm playing at Mugubi's Comedy Club all weekend and staying in the Holiday Inn. And I figured
I would release this episode. We were going to re-release an old episode. And then just stuff
ads in that and something you people haven't heard. But one of the reasons I'm not more
successful is I don't have utter contempt for my fan base. I'm trying to acquire that.
That is such an ingredient to success. You look at the people that are really successful
and they walk off stage and you can tell they're disgusted by the people that they just had
to entertain. And I don't really feel that way. So, I try to do the right thing by you
people, which will lead me down a road to poverty. Because it just doesn't, I need to just
literally bash you over the head every chance I get. Rob you, you know, if I was a tow truck
guy, I would shoot your tires out and then, you know, drive by, pretend I didn't see you,
be like, oh, did you have a problem here? That's what successful people do. So, I'm
learning how to do that. I'm trying to do that. But I'm staying in the beautiful Holiday Inn,
which is what you think it is, you know, towels it when you use them to wash your face, take
a layer of skin off your face. You know, soap industrial soap. Like if you've ever felt
like what I would imagine prison soap feels like I've never been to prison. I've never really
been to jail because I'm white. I should have gone many, many times, but I have not. But I
imagine that prison soap has a feel like the Holiday Inn soap where it smells like soap.
Like they've done nothing to disguise the smell of soap. Like it's not, there's no lavender.
There's nothing in it that makes you feel it's soap. It's straight up old school hand soap
that you would use after painting class in kindergarten in the 90s when they didn't know
any better. And they would just like, yeah, wash your hands with this. We also wash the floor
with it. That's what Holiday Inns are using to, so you can wash yourself. Just industrial
strength, ammonia laden soap. And it's nice. And then you look around Baltimore, you'll
actually get out of here. Should I spend more money on a hotel? And why? Why? To get shot
in a better area of town, to get shot walking to a nicer hotel. It doesn't matter. The area
has a lot of problems, you know? I'm not even in Baltimore. I'm 20 minutes out, 25 minutes
out in Timonium, which sounds like ammonia. Like the name of the place sounds like a chemical
that they found, like a toxic chemical that they found a company dumping in a river. That's
what it sounds like. It's like, oh yeah, well the babies were born with real, real issues
because they were dumping Timonium in that river for so long and nobody knew. That's what
it feels like. And then you look at the people and you're like, yeah, that may be what it
is because it's got a real interesting feel here. What did you say? Josh? Josh is a local
comic. He's, uh, he's helping me record this podcast. What did you say? Another comic set
about these people? We won't say who the comic is, but he said, uh, he's like, I feel like
I'm performing for people that work at Home Depot. And I was like, no, no, you're performing
for people that aspire to work at Home Depot. Yeah, it's a, this is love to have that orange
apron and be like, yeah, I did it. I did it. It's a, it's a rough road out here. It just
seems to be, you know, cause they're, they're kind of well outside the realm of that defense
industrial complex money. They want that, that, you know, when I performed at the Bethesda
Maryland country club for, you know, people that were literally dripping in blood, uh,
it was a very different vibe. You know, when you drove through Bethesda Maryland, you're
driving, you're looking at these beautiful English tutor style homes, these brick castles,
stone castles set back far from the road, really nice. And then, and you're like, oh,
this is all built with blood money, all of it, you know, but this area, you're like, man,
this could use some blood money. This could really use something like these people were
disappointed when they, they couldn't go to Iran. I think half of these people were excited
as fuck about the draft. They were like, I'm psyched. I get to go to Tehran and maybe get
killed. Fuck yeah.
You're at Tehran. It's pretty nice.
Yeah. They were so happy and then we averted war and they were so upset and they're just
sitting there like, fuck, I was so close. So many of my friends, nobody really wants to admit
this. We need, we need like six wars right now with the amount of people we have selling
CBD oil. We need war, a lot of war. And I mean, this is unpopular to say people won't
like this. I'm against war as like in the sense that I'm principled and I don't want people
to die.
However, however, let's look at the numbers. We got to get rid of it. A few of my friends
need to go to the desert and get shot. That's the way it is. And that's an uncomfortable
thing to say, especially to them. And I've said this to them when they've asked me for
advice. I'm like, the reality is you need to get shot in the desert because with so many
people that I know, the best version of them is a flag on a mantle. Like they're just dead
and they can inspire future generations of people.
Yeah.
I remember going over to my grandfather's house, they just point to a flag on the mantle
and go, Uncle Jirad gave it all. And as a little kid, you just kind of remember that
it makes an impact on you. It's so, I mean, now we're going to be like Uncle Jirad sells
CBD. It's much better that he's a hero. Who knows what he did there. Probably committed
rampant sexual assault and then fucking got killed in friendly fire, but it doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter that he killed himself or his friend shot him in the night because
who knows?
Yeah, you still get a flag.
You still inspire generations of people that are, and that's the thing that nobody wants
to talk about. Nobody wants to admit that we need a war. We need a war. We need to shave
some numbers off. We've got too many people wandering around that really have no clue as
to what they're going to do. And there's people listening to this show right now that say,
I'm one of those people. And the reality is I'm saying to you very nicely and very reasonably
the best thing you can do, the best thing you can do for your friends and your family is
go get killed in Iraq or Afghanistan or Iran.
Don't go by the way, don't go and then come back with PTSD and get a pit bull and be homeless
and set up a tent and then I'm supposed to contribute to you. I don't want that either.
We're not looking for that. What we're looking for is you got to go and you got to not come
back. That's your reality. A lot of my friends, you have to go and not come back.
Well, you come back as a flag. That's what you come back as. You come back as a flag.
You come back as somebody that's, you know, or you just come back and you're happy and
it's fine. I'm not trying to deal with people that are like scarred. My friend was a Marine.
He went there. He probably killed a bunch of people and he's really a nice guy. He's fine
and he's a cool dude. And I'm not into the flashbacks and the like dark persona and I'm
not saying it's not needed, but just it is what it is. You know what we're doing over
there. There's nobody that should join the military now and shocked about what it really
is. You know what it really is. You know, you're not handing out candy to the townspeople.
It is what it is. You're putting a gun in a toddler's face and saying, where's daddy?
You know what it is. And if you're going to do that, no hate for me, but just don't come
back all shocked and with PTSD because it wasn't what you thought. You thought you were going
to be helping people in Iraq find your lost dogs.
I'm just picturing you as a recruiter, like an army recruiter in a high school just yelling.
It's 17 year old. I'd recruit a lot more people because I'd be honest. I'd be like,
who wants to shoot up this school? Do you want to shoot form a line? How about we just put
you, keep that thought, hold that thought, get on a plane. You know, where else there's schools?
We're going to put you on a plane and we're just going to have you shoot up other schools.
There's bullies there too. They won't like you either. See, I like that. You're taking
their talents and then guiding it somewhere else.
Yeah. I mean, listen, at the end of the day, I know that there's a lot of heroic people
in the military that are great people that are doing something that I do not have the
balls to do and that's great. But then there's also a lot of my personal friends that need
to get killed and are living in safe areas and they're never going to be killed. And
because they live in the suburbs, they're never going to be caught in the crossfire of a bad
drug deal for the most part, at least not for a few years till things really start heating
up out there. But for right now, it's just bacon, egg and cheeses and nothing. So what
they need is to be heroes. All of my friends need to be heroes. That's all. And who's to
say what a hero is? I mean, you know, one guy's hero is another person's. You literally shot
my baby. So I don't, I'm not saying what it is. I just know that if you're joining the
military now, you, they understand what it is. And a lot of it is good. Listen, we've
done a lot of great things with the military. We've done a lot of not so great things. I
don't know which one of them you're going to do. And neither do you. That's the fun of
it. You don't really know which end you're going to be on. You could get there and go,
well, this doesn't seem great, but you're in now and it is what it is. I thought comedy
is going to be different. It ain't, it's not, but you know, it's not like PTSD where I'm
like being like, fuck, I thought it was going to be, you know, I'm, you know, I'm not going
to hang myself. I'm not going to, you know, yet. And if I do, I'll do it quietly, you
know? And I do think we should provide better mental health care for the soldiers that
come back. But I also think a way to avoid some of it is to be very honest about kind
of what it might be. Like we might be like, you might be helping people and killing terrorists.
You also might be the terrorist. We don't know yet. We don't know which mission you're going
to be on. We don't, we don't know.
Kind of makes it fun. Choose your own adventure.
What makes it fun? So just understand, but the larger point here is that, that so many
people in this country need to be heroes and they, we need to give them a way for them
to be heroes. And if they continue along their path of not getting shot in a foreign
country, it will help no one. So that's just my point. So I'm telling all of my friends,
maybe it's time to enlist. I don't know. Maybe it's not, but at the end of the day, it's
something to think, Hey, it's something to think about. I just moved. I just moved. I
got a new apartment. I'm in the Hollywood Hills, but I'm not up in the Hills Hills.
I'm on like a hill on the way to the Hills. And it's nice. It's fine. And the parking
situation is very, very bad there. And they, they tow, I don't know if you guys have ever
been in an area where they tow people all the time. They just tow. And, and, and one
of, and the reason I think that they're, they tow people all the time on this block is
because this is a block of predominantly apartments and people that live in apartments and
specifically nice apartments like condos or as they call them on my block, villas. They're
certainly not villas, but they call them villas.
What a rebrand.
People, yeah, people that live in villas are, are, are rats. Like they'll pick up the
phone or call the car. People that live in big estates and mansions don't, they're not
paying attention. They're barely home. They're relying on their staff to really inform on
the poor fuck who parked his car where he shouldn't have, but people in a pretend villa
or a high end department that they can't afford a house. And maybe they don't have it
because they don't have any children. And they're just angry. They're angry because they're above
the people that don't have the money to live in the villa, but they're far below the people
who live in an actual home with an actual family and have an, so these people pick up the phone
every chance they get to call the management company or the police, they are rats. This
is, they're just angry. They'll do it. And I, I, I could see them. They looked through
their little windows with their BDIs, they're all little near due wells and they, you know,
they probably, you know, they make a decent income compared to fucking Timonium, but compared
to LA, they're constantly in the shadow of real wealth and it makes them angry.
Literally in the shadow.
There's, there's houses on the hills that literally just look, look down on them. People
in Maserati's cutting them off every day, 15 year olds with YouTube channels, grossing
more money than they'll see in their life, you know, hot chicks, just walking around,
taking selfies, you know, selling their pussy on the street for millions of dollars. And
these people in villas, these stupid little villas just waiting to call the cops on somebody
because it's 701 and it's time to tow this fucking car. And they, they, I'm sure they
look out their window and enjoy it. They enjoy it. They enjoy watching it get towed. They
like it. They like rules.
Is that their only ownership? They're just like, that's my parking lot at the villa.
Yeah. I think they just are in love with rules because the middle like people that get to
the villa level in life are rule followers for the most part, you know, unless they started
at zero and then, you know, the apartment villa level is like, whoa, good for you.
Like if you start in a closet getting burned by cigarettes by your foster mother,
you want to be in the villa and then you're passed around all the uncles and then then
but getting to the villa is a fucking good for you.
But a lot of people that get to the villa level and I don't mean real villa. We're talking
about fake apartment villa, you know, mustard yellow stuck out like it, whatever, like, you
know, those people are rule followers. They went to stay played by all the rules and they
got nothing and you can hear it. You'll hear it when you talk to them. There's an anger
under their voice. There's a biting anger because they went, they got the good grades
and they got into the good school and they maybe even went to grad school and they got
the internship and they did the right thing and they just forgot that they weren't particularly
talented and they didn't particularly matter at all. They weren't unique and they didn't have
any perspective or point of view that was interesting or important and they couldn't think
outside the box or they didn't bring anything special to whatever institution they were
working in. And they just basically died on the vine. They were a person, they were a
paper pusher. They were just sitting there. Everything was about health insurance. I just
need to get the right health insurance because they were always googling diseases they didn't
have waiting to die.
Open season is in November.
This is a certain type of person that's just waiting to die. They're waiting to get a terminal
illness their entire life and they just Google and Google and every job they take is about
what health plan will help when I finally get this thing I'm convinced I have because I have a
headache sometimes Tuesday mornings. And this is, I have ants like this. I know people like this
and they're not bad people, but they're careful people. They've had rules beaten into their head
since they were a little kid. And then you meet really successful people and they don't give a
fuck about the rules. And you wonder, you're like, oh, there's maybe a correlation here. They're
really successful people. A lot of times take now sometimes. Yes, it's because they were born rich
and they have a lot of money and it's easy to not care about the rules when your fucking dad owns
fucking, you know, paramount. I get that. But then you meet a lot of people that were successful
and got successful by not giving a fuck that went on the outside that didn't care that weren't
living every day like they were going to die tomorrow. Don't prepare for your own death. I know
that many people out there like fetishize that they love it. They love it. They love telling you stories
about people who are fucked. They're like car accident, lost everything, medical day. You know, my
aunt will do that. She'll go never going to walk again, medical dad, medical dad, bankruptcy.
And then like invariably, you know, sometimes I'll meet some of these people from my town that like
are being talked about and they're fine. They're like, yeah, I declare bankruptcy. I'm fine.
Like, but it's just this horror story that keeps everyone in line, you know, and my aunt would do
that. She would be a collection of tales, depressing stories, depressing stories that were
supposed to teach you to follow the fucking rules. And if you didn't, somebody somewhere was going
to kill you, you were going to die, or you were going to live in agony and pain. You didn't follow
the fucking rules. That car is supposed to be out of here at 7pm. And it's just like these are the
rule followers. And the rule followers are they're shocked that they don't get further, because
they've done all the things that they should do. They've checked all the boxes. They've dotted the
eyes. They've crossed the T's. And in that process, they've forgotten to bring anything new or
particularly valuable to the table. They just don't.
Just status quo through and through status quo. They're doing the job that a lot of other people
can do. They'll even tell you this sometimes. They'll pride themselves on it. Like it's a
mark of achievement. They're like, a lot of people can do this job. And I'm doing it. It's like,
well, no, that's not the move is it. But they love rules. And that's why they love school. They
love college. And they love health care. They love having health care. And they love that. And
they're like, other people don't. They're just like, I'm just waiting to die. They're like, I'm
just waiting to get in this car and have a semi wipe me off the fuck because I just meanwhile,
health care doesn't even cover that. By the way, if you do get any of those things, they won't
even cover it. So it's kind of, I mean, the health care industry is like, it's organized crime.
Like no matter what kind of health care you have, you're probably fucked or something really horrendous
happens. But these are the same people that live in the little villas. They live in the apartments
and they peer out and they, and you're like, move the fucking, you know, thing.
Yeah. You see that Toyota Prius at 701 and you're like, no, no, no cancer. You must know some of
these people because you work in the social security office, right? Absolutely. The shit the
shit that people care about is insane, right? You know, it's like, I don't know. Like, you
know, we can park. There is a reserve parking lot and that's for people that are grades
GS 14 and above. But after 2 p.m., you're allowed to park there. I'm like, who cares, right?
Park wherever you're walking to work either way. These are people that need cancer. Like they need
the best thing to happen to them would to shit their liver out, like to give them some
perspective on how much of life for these people is figuring out parking. They're on planet Earth
for a certain amount of time. So much of life for people is figuring out that I get my parking
validated. Am I in the right slip? Am I any careful rule following people just are and God
love them. You need them, but they're, they're always kind of surprised that they didn't go
further in life, right? And especially when they see somebody that didn't go by the rules,
gets further. Like what, you know, yeah, they're shocked. They're shocked. They're shocked at
somebody that went on the outside of the system, figured out a way to crash land into
something successful, you know? And I think a lot of it has to do with how you raised
and that because we, I was raised by Boomer parents who took, they took the 18 years of
raising me. They took, they took off. They took a vacation for raising their children as
most Boomer parents did. I mean, they were there, but they weren't there. They were, and
I get a lot of flack from this, from older people that message me, hey, hey, hey, hey,
fuck off. But the Boomer generation in, in, in a lot of cases was a generation driven by
self-interest, greed, self-actualization, not in any real way, by the way, just constantly
trying to please themselves at the expense of their children. They didn't really care
about their kids. This isn't like a new thing. I'm not saying it was a generation of fast
food, stuffing food in your kid's face, you know, giving them activities to do so you didn't
have to raise them. You're in dance, you're at sports, you're here, hey, go get molested
at this camp. I got to go and have dinner with Aunt Sue. Go get molested and don't bother
me. I'm going to dinner with Sue. It was a group of people that, for the most part, it
was about them. Their children were about them. And, and, and, and so, and you know,
the food you ate when you grew up was poison. I mean, McDonald's at two. You were being
poisoned from the jump with, with these, and then I think subsequent generations maybe
overcorrected to now where they, the helicopter parent and like the kid, but it's better, that's
better than the alternative. Right. Like my dad, mom were like, yeah, you should go to
college, but that was their end. That was the end of their commitment to it. Just, just
suggesting it. They, they lightly suggested it a few times. Like, yeah, you should probably
go to college. Now there are parents that they start a middle school and they, and during
high school, they're taking their kids on college trips and they're going to see colleges
together and they're really taking an interest in their children. My fucking parents were
like, yeah, you should go to college. I never went and I regret it. You should go.
Yeah. It's not like, here's how you do it. We're going to help you apply. Here's your
extracurricular activities.
This is a great story about my father. I was standing on the school bus stop up the block
from my house on the corner. There were two schools in my town right before I got on the
bus. I was a little kid. It was my first day of school. I was somewhat nervous. They said,
dad, which school am I going to? He goes, Oh, I don't know. Get on the bus. You know,
somebody did that today. They would be arrested. Right? Who knows? Hey, get on the bus. What
do you want from me? I'm only your guardian. I'm only your father guardian and I know there's
two options and I should know which one the little kids go to and what's one the bigger
kids go to, but I don't have the time for that. So why don't you just get on this fucking
bus, which by the way, could have been taking me to Epstein's aunt. Like nobody knew where
that bus was going. He didn't even know if it was to the school I was supposed to go
to. He's like, just get on the bus and figure it out son. You know, what's the worst thing
that happens to get sold into sex slavery and we never see you again. And we have to fucking
have a nice charity dinner and get a bunch of money. Hey, is that what we got to do?
Is this what's going on here? But, you know, and then you look at like certain really successful
people when the kids in the womb, they're planning the school that that kid's going to
like to, right? You're like, they're like, Oh, I know the kindergarten that this kid's
going to go to while this kid is in my womb, right? It's just a different level of commitment.
That's why I love my parents. I actually thought about this the other day because I'm, you know,
last night I was here and you know, there weren't a lot of older people, which is nice,
but sometimes you go into like local scenes and there is older and I love older people,
but here's what I don't love is older people that are think they have a shot in comedy.
That is the proudest I have ever been of my dad. My dad was a musician when I was younger
and he was good. He was like, you know, he played guitar, he sang, he wrote songs.
He had a band, he, you know, traveled around, but you know, when I was born, he had to get
serious. By the way, like many comics don't, they just say, Oh, well, we'll raise the kids
in squalor, but he got a job. He got a job and instead of, you know, not making money
at being a musician, he got a job and he didn't make money at that. You know, he was just a bad
sales person, which I appreciate because at least you have the optics of trying.
Sure. And, and, and he gave it a shot and I had what I had food and everything like that.
You know, clearly, but you know, I didn't have emotional, you know, you know, but I had the
food. We had Wendy's when we wanted, you know, there was some type of school bus taking you somewhere.
Yeah, I was on a bus going somewhere. I had a Monterey Ranch chicken sandwich from Wendy's.
You're in there. No big deal.
Everything was fine. Yeah.
And, but one of the proudest moments I've ever been at my dad was when he said to me, he started
to play music again in like the local scene in Long Island where he lives. And he did this.
Maybe this was like four years ago. And he said to me, he goes, I was playing out.
I was going around doing these open mics. And then he goes, some of the younger guys were
like, you really fucking good. You should do this gig with us like upstate.
And he goes, okay. And it was like a few hours away from his house.
And he goes, yeah, I just, I took a ride with them. We did this gig.
And then, then they were like, you're so good. We're planning like this little tour.
And then he said, he goes, what am I insane?
He's like, I'm in my fucking mid sixties. I need to go to go back.
And I was never more proud of him.
Then when he said this, he goes, I need to go home and watch television with my wife.
And I was so proud of him, so proud of him.
And I speak for all of us. If you're an older person and you're following your dream, stop.
Literally, if you were an older person and you are indulging a passion or following a dream,
please for the love of God, stop it because it's over. Yeah.
And it's, it's not the move. It's not the course. I was so proud of my dad when he's like,
what the fuck do I think is going to happen? Good for him.
What do I think is going to fucking happen? I'm going to go be on the voice.
Can you imagine him telling his wife like, I'm going to be out of town for the next couple of weeks.
The boys are hitting the road. Me and the boys are hitting the road.
We think we're going to do it this time. I'm 67. It's time to get serious.
It's time to really buckle down. It's like, listen, guys, he had that time.
He played the music. It was great. He probably fucked some chicks that were, you know, good looking or whatever.
Whatever, whatever you get out of that, you know what I mean?
You certainly don't get a windfall of money. No, but at least it was good.
And at the end of the day, you got to realize that like everybody's like, but Rodney Danger, stop it, stop it.
Stop using that one example. I'm not saying if you're like, if you're an old person,
you always wanted to do stand up comedy, go give it a shot. Go try it once.
Don't be sitting somewhere at an open mic talking to somebody about how you plan them on making it.
Cut that out. Cause there are older people. These guys in their fifties are like, you know, I don't know how to play this.
Here's how to play it. Go home. This is how to play it. Get in the car and go to your home.
Go to your villa and make sure people don't park past seven p.m.
You know the thing that kept you from doing this for 30 years, that one, that thing one, the fear that kept you from doing this.
By the way, a very rational fear that knew you better than you did, that knew you weren't going to make it,
that kept you fucking married with kids in a job, that rational fear that keeps people alive one.
Go acquaint yourself with that fear again. Snuggle with it. Cuddle with it.
That fear is not meant to be conquered. This whole thing about conquering fear has got to go. Indulge it.
Fuck the fear. The fear is what loves you. The fear is what wants you to have a home and food.
This whole thing you got to conquer the fear. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
The fear is your friend. And that's what people don't realize. The fear is your friend.
Like, I was talking to this guy once. He's in his mid-50s. He's like, I was just always afraid.
Yes, yes, you should still be afraid.
Follow that fear.
Follow the fear back to your home. The fear is why you have a home. You weren't going to make it 30 years ago.
But here's what you would have done. You would have ruined your life. You would have been broke.
I know that all these guys, Bill Burr and all these amazing, brilliant comedians that I have a ton of respect for,
give people speeches like, follow your dream. It's not that bad to be living on a couch.
You know, that quote that a lot of people use so they don't have to raise their children.
People that are broke.
Yeah. People that use that quote, they use that Bill Burr quote as a way to not raise their kids, by the way.
They're like, it's not bad living on a couch when you're third. Hey, shut up in there. Daddy's doing a podcast, you know?
By the way, you say something like that to try to inspire people.
Then you realize there's a lot of dirtbags using it as an excuse to take food out of their children's mouth.
Absolutely.
So that they can do new talent night.
Where they pay to do it.
Right.
It's like, I feel, I feel, you know, listen, we all get, listen, you don't want to tell people, you don't want to ever close the door behind you.
Like you don't want to be like, we're the last generation of people to ever do this.
And obviously no one is saying that.
There's a lot of people that are going to far exceed my success and career and be better at it and everything.
But not when you're 50.
You don't start when you're 50.
You just don't.
Also, you don't mortgage your children's future to do this.
That's immoral.
That's a bad, you're a bad person.
You're a bad person.
There's no other way around it.
You're a bad person for doing that.
Yeah.
And it's, it's, it's very, very sad when that happens.
Yeah.
Child protective services should come in.
Yeah.
You're at open mics five nights a week.
Interesting.
You can't have a child that is asking you, mommy, where are you going or daddy?
Where are you going?
And you're going to an unpaid bar show.
It's immoral and you have to stop it.
And you're a bad person.
If you're doing that, you're not good.
I'm not saying if you have a day job and you're providing for the kids,
do anything you want as a hobby.
Do it.
And by the way, still not this, do something else and make more money for
the college fund.
You fucking scale.
You're a scale, but I'm not, I'm not shitting on how you spend your free time.
Just I meet certain people and they're like, well, I'd better figure it out.
I got kids.
It's like, whoa.
Yeah.
You should have figured it out a long time ago, but that's the thing.
There's just this idea of like that fear is always bad and we always have to
conquer it.
And I don't think so.
I think we have to lean into it and appreciate it a little bit and understand
that that fear is what's the only reason that you have.
Now, obviously people will say, well, now you're contradicting yourself
because the rule followers are also motivated by fear.
Untrue.
The rule followers are actually not motivated by fear.
They're motivated by the desire to control, which is different.
Now maybe that's motivated by fear or whatever if you unpack it, but the rule followers
are actually people that are, they want control and they actually want to seem, they just
want to be better than other people.
They want to look down on someone, even if it's someone that should just be, you should
just pity.
They want to look down on, they look down on the guy that didn't get health insurance
and then a car hit them.
They were like, well, that wasn't smart.
Was it?
This poor guy's laying there in a coma and they have to be like, well, well, see, you
see what happens when you break the rules, when you break the rules, this poor guy, he's
flat lining.
You get t-boned by a bus.
Yeah.
And these people, they just want to feel a little better than him.
That's what it is.
It's not so much that rational fear because they, in their minds, they should be the king
of the castle.
They don't realize the rules.
They played the game.
They played the game.
Yeah.
So when you meet people like that, you just have to say to yourself, all right, I get
where you are.
There's nothing inherently evil about you, but I know where you are and I know that you're
going to call the police if this car is here at 705 because that's what you're built to
do.
You're built to do that because you believe if you rat on the guy that parked his car
in the wrong spot, then that means that everything is right with the world.
And you're above them.
You're above them and that you're going to move up the ladder because you think that's
how people move up the ladder by being rats, by being rats and informants.
And these are the first people, by the way, that in a tyrannical government would inform
on their neighbors and get them dragged away to a reeducation camp.
These are the first people.
They're in Nazi Germany.
There they go.
Just follow the rules.
Just follow them.
They're the first people to dime on their friends and family and have them dragged
away.
It's just who they are, you know, but that's different than rational fear.
Rational fear has got to be linked into right because rational fear, even if you decide
to do something outside of the box, rational fear makes you work hard.
I'm afraid I'm doing a podcast right now in a hotel room in Timonium, Maryland, because
I don't want to re-release an old podcast because I have respect for my fan base because
I fear that if I don't do things all the time that are funny or interesting or good, people
will tell me to go fuck myself as they should, as they should, you know?
But there are people that just have, you know, no fear at all.
And those are the people that seem insane because children have no fear.
Children are insane if you speak to them.
They believe things that aren't true.
They believe in Santa Claus.
Children are they're insane.
And if you don't become an adult, like I had somebody last night ask me, sweet woman,
but she goes, how do I become a feature?
And it's like, I, there is no answer that I can give you.
There is no answer that I can give you.
There are no answers to those questions because you either are going to become a feature,
which doesn't matter if you were a featuring friend, no one cares, but you're either going
to become that or you're not going to become that.
And it's either going to take you two years or five years or no years.
And I have nothing to say about it.
And it doesn't, it not, does it make me a dick?
There's no secret I can share with you that I'm not.
There's no investment advice I can give you.
What about investment advice?
That's what it, whenever like a comedian asks like somebody for not specific advice about
a situation, which I do all the time to people like Rogan, people that I respect, I'm like,
what should I do here?
But like very vague general advice like, Hey, how do I lose out tickets?
How do I got people to like me?
I want a headline.
I want to be a headliner.
How do I, how do I make a million dollars?
Hey, how do I make a million dollars?
How do I do that?
How do I make one million dollars?
It's like, I don't know, man, but I feel like if I gave you the advice that I really want
to give you, it would involve you getting a gun.
It would involve you purchasing a weapon to probably using yourself because there are
some people in comedy that you meet and you go, if you got it together, you wouldn't do this.
Like if I could tell you the skills that you needed to get better at this, you would
actually, if you were the type of person who would succeed at this, you wouldn't do it.
And that's the crazy thing.
And that's what people don't want to hear.
Like if you had any of the dedication or self-awareness or, or, or talent or whatever
that was needed, you'd be on the outside doing fine.
Yeah.
You would take that drive and channel it somewhere else.
Yeah.
You'd be doing something.
It's a rare group of people that can do that fucking like, and I'm one of them that just
fucking hit the wall everywhere else and come into this.
And they're like, okay, so I can figure out how to maneuver and navigate and I can work
hard and I can be dedicated and I can do what I need to do.
But there's a lot of people that if they had those skills, they would never have done this
in the first place.
There's a lot of people here that just want to get high.
They want to get high and go out with their buddies and that's fine too.
Right.
But then you can't ask why you're not, you know, why you're not doing well.
Well, you're not doing well.
Should I get fucked up more or yeah?
I don't know.
Go, go, go watch it.
Gary van your chalk.
Maybe pick a motivational speaker to fill you with nothing.
Yeah.
I'm going to pick, pick somebody to tell you why you're not whole.
Do you think what you're missing?
Do you think that's why he's so big because it is general advice?
Like for a question like, how come I'm not better?
It's like, cause you got to be better.
You're like, right?
It's because he, the hard truth of, of what it is and that he can't
tell people and I understand why.
By the way, I don't hate him.
Like when I'd make fun of him, it's because he does ridiculous things.
Yeah.
So they're funny, but I don't like, I have no hatred for him.
I don't, I don't think he's ruining the world or anything.
I think if you like to sit, dude, if you think the Long Island medium
is talking to your daughter, you deserve to get your money stolen.
Right.
They're hustlers.
You deserve to get your money.
Take, if you're in the back of an Italian restaurant in Long Island and
you've paid $300 to sit there with a bunch of other meatballs and this
woman walks out and she pretends like she's talking to your daughter, Nicole,
who died in a boating accident.
And you believe that and it makes you feel better or whatever.
If this is a transactional thing, you know, you know, or maybe you don't know,
but I know that you should get robbed.
You should have your money taken from you because it'll just go to something else.
Stupid.
Right.
You're not going to invest in the next thing that becomes Uber.
It's just going to go to a fad diet or some no cash down real estate scam.
Or some of you would buy that miracle spring water that idiot sells at 2am.
Like there's nothing that you people won't open.
My mother took money and bought beanie babies, you know, at McDonald's and
tried to retire on them, like, like collecting them.
Would her money have been any worse giving it to Gary Vaynerchuk or the Long
Island medium?
No.
And I had my mother flip those beanie babies in a reasonable amount of time.
We'd have a little bit more money, but she waited too long.
She kept waiting for like, well, one day there'll be the price of diamonds.
It's like, no, they're not.
No, it's people are going to be like, who gives a fuck.
They'll be the price of moon rocks eventually.
I'm like, no, this isn't a currency that continues to appreciate.
Just get rid of them now.
Unload them now for the love of God.
You know, after 9 11, it seemed a little weird to be playing with beanie babies.
No one really cared.
You know, we have to come together as a country.
Remember the princess Diana bear?
How fucking dark that was.
Here's the princess Diana bear.
My mother had that.
That was like the big, one of the big beanie babies was the commemorative
princess Diana beanie baby.
Want to talk about dark, you know, but the whole fucking thing is like, yeah,
would her money have been better spent with the Long Island medium or Gary
or any of these hoxters?
Sure.
So what Gary is unable to tell people when he's unable to tell people because
it's not a terribly inspirational message is you have to look at people
and go, the majority of you are not going to derive any pleasure from what
you do from or from your job.
It's just not, it's not going to happen.
That's not the way the world is set up.
It's not the way the world is set up for you to, I'm not saying you have to be
miserable.
I'm not saying you have to hate what you do.
You shouldn't.
But the idea that you're going to be your own boss and it's going to be
interesting and exhilarating and exciting.
And you're going to wake up Monday and you're like, I love it.
It's Monday.
I'm so excited.
It's Monday.
Let's get it.
Let's get it.
Hustle.
Grunt.
It's not going to fucking happen.
And if you're looking for that, get ready for whatever comes with that,
which is hard drinking or whatever, or, or, or, or you're watching spikes get
driven through people's hands on the dark web to come.
Let's get it.
Whatever it is, like understand that what makes most people happy is their
family, their friends, their community, hobbies, which we've gotten rid of.
Nobody has hobbies anymore.
Like people, just everything they do, they try to monetize.
Like the things that are going to make you happy or not.
Now there's a specific group of people that are going to be entrepreneurs.
But I'm not an entrepreneur.
I'm a comedian that has to do it on my own.
Who's learning about business.
I'm not an entrepreneur.
I don't get off on the numbers to business.
I don't get up every day and I'm like, I just, where does our business at?
What are my analytics?
We got to grow.
Like, I don't think I like to perform and make funny shit.
And then you have to figure out how to have a career doing that.
But I don't get hard at the fucking business.
Like there are a group of people that just do, they're into it.
You know, entrepreneurs is a certain group of people that are going to go
that direction and be great at it.
And whether they know who Gary V is or not, Gary V is not making
the difference between you having a business or not.
None of these people are none of these, none of these Tai Lopez,
any of these people don't decide whether you have a business or not.
They can tell their 10 point plan, the videos they sent.
None of it is going to matter.
You're either a person who wants to work.
If you're out on a Saturday night and everybody else is getting drunk
around you and having fun and hanging out and you want to be working,
which I never did.
I was very fine to be drunk.
If you want, and I wanted to tell stories and have people laugh at me,
but if you want to be building a business while everyone else is getting fucked up,
then you know, okay, maybe I'm one of these people.
If you're at the beach and you're like getting antsy and you're like,
you know, I'd rather not be here.
I want to be in an office right now, figuring out how to make money.
I don't want to be at the beach.
I'm getting antsy.
I don't want to be in a backyard with my friends having fun.
I'm done with that.
I did that enough of it.
And by the way, that was what I felt like when I was 25 and I got into comedy.
I was like, I've done, I've been in enough backyards and I've been hammered
enough. I've gotten drunk enough.
I've been to enough bars.
I've gone out to dinner enough.
I got to do something else now.
Otherwise I'm going to have a completely wasted fucking life.
But that was because I had that internal realization.
It wasn't because I watched Ty Lopez tell me and then I fucking spent three grand
on his 10 point plan.
And he was like, and here's my Ferrari.
Do you want a Ferrari?
Yeah.
No, you fucking.
So it doesn't mean that you're not suited for that, but there's a lot of
people like I have friends and aren't suited.
My friends are are right now want to be in it.
And they think I'm crazy and they're probably not wrong.
They're not wrong.
It is insane.
The people that are like, what do you do?
Just have fun.
Like I have friends that are on a beach right now that I spoke to that are on a
beach that are like, who care?
They are not trying to light the world on fire at all.
They're not trying like they just want to enjoy their fucking life.
That's what people should aspire to is like enjoy.
But then there's people that are not I'm not in built to like enjoy life.
Some people aren't built to enjoy life.
We're built to like to do things that are good or great or whatever.
We want to be great at something.
If you want to be great at something, you're the baseline will not be enjoyment.
She's not going to be right.
It's going to be fulfillment and it'll you'll never be fulfilled.
That's very long term.
It's a very long term and it's a different set of, you know,
qualifiers, the whole thing is different, right?
I have friends that just want to enjoy and that's great.
Because as long as they have like a coconut shrimp in their mouth
and a shot of rum and somebody's banging a steel drum
and they don't have to work the next day and they're on some beat, they're good.
And you know, but Gary Vaynerchuk can't tell people he can't walk out and go,
guys, here's your biggest issue.
You're built to enjoy life.
That's why you're not succeeding in the way that you want.
Because when you're around other people and they love you, that's enough.
It can't be enough, guys.
It wasn't enough for a lot of Carnegie Rockefeller.
It wasn't enough for any of those people.
It's not enough for me.
If Gary Vaynerchuk said it's not enough for me, the love of my wife and kid
doesn't get me off enough.
I need more, but that's the honest, what it is.
And there's nothing wrong.
I don't think there's anything wrong with it.
You need the guy that needs more because civilization has to go forward.
Right.
My friends aren't driving civilization forward.
No.
They're, they're driving illegally a car and they're hammered and they
shouldn't even be driving a car, but they're certainly not driving
civilization forward.
It's just what it is, you know?
Right, right.
And you're just either that person or you're not.
This whole idea that you're going to like flip and sweat and like, oh,
you turn over newly.
It's like, yeah, that every person innately has that in them.
I was always an entertainer and I found a way to be an entertainer
since I was a little kid.
Right.
I'm not a business person.
I'm not an entrepreneur.
I'm not a deal maker.
I'm not a hustler.
I'm not a grinder.
I'm, I'm very happy.
Like I am now.
I work very hard at what I do now, but I'm very happy to not hustle.
Like I fight my own nature.
Right.
Now why I'm able to hustle is because I genuinely enjoy making people laugh.
I like making stupid shit and having fun, right?
I like doing this.
And even the parts of it I don't like, I can get through to get to the
parts of it that I like, but by no stretch of the imagination, am I like
some fucking, so you got to be honest about what your nature is.
I'm not like a business person.
I would never like, let's say I make a lot of money at this.
I'm making decent money.
Now I would never call myself a business person.
I've seen your hotel room.
You're doing great.
I mean, yeah, this is a, this is the Holiday Inn in Timonium, but there's no
in my head, there's no like, oh, I'm a business guy.
I'm a CEO.
I'm a Titan.
I know comics that are like that.
Good for them.
I'm a boss.
I'm a boss.
I'm the boss.
I have no, I don't want to be, I don't care.
Right.
I don't want to be, I don't want people working for me.
I mean, I want, I want people that are working for me to like, enjoy what we're doing.
Yeah.
But none of it's like me being like, oh, you better fuck it.
Like that doesn't come naturally to me.
I'm a loner.
I want to be alone.
I want to breeze through the country doing comedy clubs.
I don't care.
I don't want to be in a writer's room.
I don't want to like, I don't have, I don't, I would love to having a show on TV.
Or I'd love to do something like that.
But like the idea of being in like a structure and being like, I work for like, I don't care.
Well, that corporate shit just doesn't matter.
And it doesn't mean that it is like the wrong way to go.
It's just for me.
I don't, none of it matters.
Hey, everybody, the bachelor kicked off this week on ABC and everyone's very excited.
And you know me, I've never said a bad word about the bachelor.
I think it's great.
And I think we should spend more time not only watching it, but discussing it.
If you watch ABC's The Bachelor, you should be listening to a companion podcast.
It's what's done.
You're not getting the most out of the show otherwise.
The problem is most of the companion shows are absolute shit.
The one you should be listening to is called another bachelor podcast.
That's the name.
Another bachelor podcast.
These guys are fucking hilarious.
There are three cis white males with a lot of perspective on what girls are going through.
One of the hosts, Nick, really funny story.
He's from La Crosse, Wisconsin, which funny enough is where the smiley face
killer did a good amount of work, but sadly not to Nick.
That's why he's producing podcasts, but it would be much better if he was at the bottom of a lake.
Anyway, Nick was raised by his grandmother.
Both of his parents were diagnosed schizophrenics, which is a bad role of the
dice, but he's a good kid.
If Nick was a schizophrenic, he'd be funnier.
Anyway, I'm kidding.
I like Nick.
I've met Nick once.
Another guy on there, Dylan, really funny, Jewish from Studio City.
Moms from Queens.
Dad's a Trump loving Vietnam vet from the backwoods of Virginia.
By the way, all they're doing with this ad is describing how much better their
parents' podcast would be.
Give me the Trump loving Vietnam vet in the Skizos.
A child of divorce to state the obvious.
And then there's a producer, Pat, from Lumberg, Massachusetts, a heroin ravaged land.
He was raised by his mother and stepfather, Jimmy Dell, who has a contentious
relationship with Pat's 15.
He dies his hair often every week.
These guys take the piss out of one of the best shows on television, The Bachelor.
Take out the latest episode breaking down the limo exits and shocking return of
Adam Brown.
Subscribe to another Bachelor podcast on Apple podcast, Spotify, YouTube,
wherever you listen to podcasts and get ready to laugh your dick off.
Nick produces this past weekend with Theo Vaughn.
Nick is a good guy.
Nick has bought ads on the show, so we're plugging his Bachelor podcast.
I have not listened to the podcast, but I'm going to.
And Nick is like funny when you talk to him.
So it's probably not the worst bet.
Like if you listen to The Bachelor, it's not the worst, you know what I mean?
Like, so if you if you live, if you watch The Bachelor religiously
and like people like these bachelor companion podcasts, I don't know why.
I think it's because the empire is over and we we're beginning our
our transition to AI and humanity as a race has failed.
And and and we're just sucking up the last little bit of resources on the planet
before a stronger, more durable intelligence comes and takes us over.
That's what I believe is happening.
So I believe that in this weird interim time, the bachelor is like fun.
You know, it's like a fun way to kind of just like circle the drain as humanity,
you know, so they're doing this bachelor kickoff podcast.
And I guess it's really good.
You know, Nick's from La Crosse, Wisconsin.
He's a podcast producer and he's got his buddies with him.
He's got Dylan.
Why did they put into these Jewish really funny Jewish from Studio City?
What's that about?
Moms from Queens, dad's a Trump loving Vietnam fan.
So that's why they so that's why they're giving you the backstory, guys.
So it's not only that they're talking about the bachelor,
their comedic perspectives are informed by these very interesting lives
like Nick's, both of his parents were schizophrenics and he was raised by his
grandma. So that makes him hilarious.
And then Pat's moms from Queens are not Pat.
I'm sorry.
Duh, who else here?
Dylan's mothers from Queens.
So he's a fucking rip.
This guy's a rip.
His dad supports Trump, like 60, 5% of men in the country.
But so it gives Dylan this unique perspective, like what's it like to be
Jewish and live in Studio City?
And then Pat is a 50 year old who God only knows why he's doing this.
He's probably on the edge of killing himself.
Listen to the show.
So Pat doesn't kill himself.
He was raised by his mother and stepfather.
He's 15.
He dies here often.
50 is an interesting age.
It's not an age where like this is a cute, fun thing to do.
He thinks this is going to like become a thing.
I don't know.
Hopefully Pat's independently wealthy.
I'm skeptical.
But it's another bachelor podcast and you can get it.
Let's tell you where you can get it, folks, because, you know, you don't know
how to fucking, you don't know where podcasts are.
How do you get a podcast nowadays?
How would I even get it if I wanted to listen?
So you could subscribe to it on Apple podcast, Spotify, YouTube or wherever
you listen to podcasts and get ready to laugh your dick off.
Again, it's called another bachelor podcast.
Another bachelor podcast with Nick, who's parents are nuts.
Dylan, who's Jewish and Pat, who dies his hair.
And I'll tell you right now, it's a good lineup of people.
Give it a shot.
If you're into the bachelor, there's some women listening to my program, seven
or eight. If you, I'm kidding.
There's, there's more than that.
It, and men, men like the bachelor to men are idiots.
The point is this.
If you watch the bachelor, this is a good thing to check out.
Thank you very much.
Goodbye.
So when did you figure it out?
Like that you wanted to channel all this into comedy then.
Well, I was 25 and I was 25 and I had the bottom out first, which is
another thing Gary Vee.
I don't know that Gary, now Gary Vee may say this to people.
I think Gary Vee does.
Oh, I'd love to go on this podcast and kind of talk to him about this
and be, and be like, because he would open my eyes up to some things too.
And he'd be like, if, if, you know, he'd be like, if my thing only helps
like 20 people, then who's to say they're not going to start Disney and like,
I'm like, whatever.
And then I'm like, yeah, that's right.
I mean, Disney does fuck a lot of kids, but I mean,
Splash Mountain's fun.
So I get it, you know, the Mickey waffles, but I get what he's saying.
I had to bottom out.
I guess he does.
I think he does do this.
I think he does go on the route of like, you're not failing enough.
I think a lot of these guys do that, tell people they're not failing enough.
Well, that's a good way to have people buy into like, I fail all the time.
Yeah, I'm on the right.
It's great.
But I think what you got to tell people is just like kind of got to
bottom out or you got to hit a wall and then you got like, I hit a wall.
When I was 25 years old, I hit a wall where I was drinking every night.
I was working at a job that really no longer existed.
I was trying to sell like mortgages in 2009 after the financial crisis.
Like post crisis.
I was trying to sell mortgage.
It's insane, right?
It made no sense.
And I was with a group of people who were, we were all sitting in an office.
It was decrepit and there were fruit flies and leaks from the ceiling.
And it was a windowless office in Long Island.
I'm broad hollow road and all of the mortgage guys had left.
Like it was like life after people.
Like essentially, like it was like almost tumbleweeds blowing through the parking lot
because all the Porsches and Maserati's and BMWs, they'd all either been
repossessed or they drove them somewhere else.
You know, these people were all gone.
And it was like my friends, old Chevy and like me with my suburban
that I couldn't afford to put gas in.
And I was in the bad job and I was drinking a lot.
And then I got a summons to be a juror on a, on a, on a trial.
And I looked at the summons and I was like, OK, this might be interesting.
I knew immediately that it might be like a weirdly pivotal event.
I can't explain how I just looked at the thing.
And I'm like, this might be fucking weird.
And I got to the courthouse and my friend, by the way, my friend, Ryan,
who I love to death was driving me to the thing.
And we both had no direct, we were directionless, 25 years old Long Island
directionals, which meant we're having a great time.
We're having a great time being white and directionless in Long Island.
It's fun. Smoking weed, booze in, eating at a corporate steakhouse,
whenever we wanted, he would steal money from his parents and just we would go.
I would steal, like we were thieves.
We would just take things, cares. You don't need it.
It's mine now.
And not even like we were heroin addicts, like he would just take
a hundred dollars off the mantle and we'd go have a ribeye with his mother.
It'd be like, I left a hundred on the mantle.
We'd be like, what?
And I would just have whatever money that I had because I was my,
I had bought a house when I was 22.
Oh, right. Everybody that's listened to the show knows this.
And a lot of people know this, but I had stopped making mortgage payments
because not only couldn't I make them, but it didn't even make sense.
Like the house had lost 50% of its value in the last two years.
So it would be crazy to keep making them.
But so here's the deal, right?
I'm living rent free.
So I'm not making mortgage payments.
So I'm living rent free on my buddy.
So we're just, we're just eating at Vince's clam bar.
Things are okay.
And I don't mean okay.
I mean, we're, we're, we're, we're, we're life is beating the shit out of us,
but you'd never know.
You'd never know.
We just, and that's why I think I was able to do comedy because like
for a while when comedy is throwing dirt in your face,
you have to just kind of walk around like, hey, things are good.
It's good.
Good.
Things are good.
How are things?
They're good.
They're good.
Oh, this dirt.
Oh, nothing.
I love dirt.
I love dirt.
I'm sleeping in a fucking, you know, in a garbage pile as a bit.
But we, when he dropped me off, he goes, good luck.
It was the craziest thing because he knew I wanted to get jury duty because I'm
like, I was like, I think this might be fun to do.
He's like, yeah, dude, because again, you have to understand what being
directionless means.
We had no direction.
We didn't know where we were going.
Nobody knew which way we were going.
So like the idea of jury duty is like, this is new.
Most people dread it.
They want to get out of it.
We're like, eh, could be fun.
New experience.
Could be fun.
I show up and I see like there's news vans outside of the courthouse.
Yes.
And I'm like, this is interesting.
I thought it was going to be like some guy, like Long Island jury duty is usually
like some old Jewish woman fell in a Wendy's.
She wants 150K.
Wendy's wants to give her 80 because she was drunk.
Something like that to give and take.
Yeah.
Something in that realm of, you know, I get there and they're like, this is a
trial for murder, torture, rape.
Immediately, I'm excited.
I'm excited immediately because you're like, this number one, cool.
Like, let's be very honest.
Cool.
It's a cool thing that someone was murdered and tortured and, and.
But by the way, I didn't get a conviction of right.
Allegedly, right?
Allegedly.
But here's what's cool about it.
Here's what's cool about it.
Not that it happened.
Not that it happened.
What's cool about it is I get to now go undercover and figure it all out.
I'm the detective now if I get selected.
So I walked in and I, I found out later that I was like a defense pick, like the
defense wanted me, which means they looked at me and we're like, he'll
understand torture.
That's literally.
Hell, he's probably done it.
Yeah.
They look at me and they're like, look at that guy's face.
He understands extenuating circumstances.
He gets that sometimes things need to be done and they weren't wrong.
At that point in my life, I was a 25 year old degenerate alcoholic with a
foreclosed house in Long Island.
I knew that sometimes you had to carve a bitch up.
I was in the closet.
I hadn't come out of the closet yet.
I was still occasionally trying to date like Long Island women.
Like, like, you know, like, like that were men.
I mean, Long Island women, a certain level of Long Island Italian woman is a
dude.
It's like literally a guy.
It just becomes a guy.
Like, it's like, oh, yeah, they go from like here to like here and then it
drops a little, it's like God.
But so I was like, I was so, so I knew going in, I'm like my license and this
is how great Long Island is.
My license is currently suspended.
It's like currently suspended.
It's been suspended like over 20 times.
I legally couldn't even drive to the court.
That's why I had my friend drop me off because I'm like, I can't get pulled
over driving to the court.
So I'm a criminal who's coming in for jury duty to decide the fate of
someone else, decide the fate of this of this guy.
And so they say to me, so I'm like, I got number one.
I can't look too eager because then they're not going to want me.
So I got, by the way, this is advice to any of you that maybe want jury duty.
This is advice as to how to get it and only get it if it's something good,
like torture, you know?
So jury duty, you can't look too eager.
You have to roll your eyes.
You have to be like, fuck, I can't believe this, whatever.
So the prosecutor said to me, she goes, Mr.
Dylan, your license has been suspended a bunch.
I'm sure you hate the police.
Don't like them.
And I said, no, I hate myself for being irresponsible, not paying those tickets.
Wow.
Boom.
Great answer.
She sits down.
The defense attorney gets up, this lady who wore like, you know,
Ms. Frizzle and the magic school bus.
She wore those outfits and crazy jewelry.
And later someone said, that's to distract the jury.
And I was like, that's kind of brilliant.
Like sometimes like she's like where like that.
She just wears crazy shit to court because like they said one lawyer back
old school when you could still smoke in courtrooms would smoke a cigar
and he had a wire going to the ash never fell off.
So the jury would look at his cigar as we smoking it down, wondering when
the ash was going to fall off and fucking they wouldn't hear anything.
The other guy said, so it's like, this is brilliant.
So maybe this bitch is doing this on purpose because she's dressed like a
literal clown, right?
She gets up.
She's like, Mr. Dylan, murder, torture, rape.
How can you be impartial when you hear words like this?
And I was like, because and she gave me a pretty easy one because she wanted
me, I think to be a juror, but I was like, they're just words.
They're literally just words.
I have not seen one shred of evidence.
They're only words.
And I was like, words mean nothing.
And she was like, oh, and I knew when I said words mean nothing.
I knew I'm like, oh, he probably threatened this bitch a million times.
And she's going to love that I said words mean nothing because the
defense is going to be like, oh, great.
If he believes words mean nothing, he's going to be able to excuse all of these
threats, verbal assaults, all of these verbal assaults that have been
documented by countless witnesses.
When you're saying this stuff, is it like having a good set?
Do you know, you're like, damn, I'm crushing.
Yeah.
I knew I'm do.
I know I'm doing good.
And I know I need to get this.
And I don't know why this is what Gary Vee can't tell you.
Gary Vee can't be like, wait till someone's tortured.
Get on jury, dude.
Like this is how I had, you know, so you have these moments in life organically.
You can't plan them out.
You don't get them if Tai Lopez tells you to.
Now I'm not saying you have to get them through a murder, torture, rape trial,
but there's worse ways to do it.
And it certainly helps.
It certainly helps.
Um, you know, and then I was, we did old, and when my friend picked me up,
he's like, I was like, I got it, man.
He's like, I knew you would.
It was like an audition.
He's like, I knew you would guess who's going to jury, and that trial was just
his two week intense week and a half intense, like, um, uh, meditation on
mortality, like the idea that every day you were hearing about somebody whose
life was taken and somebody whose life we convicted them, life plus 50 years,
no brawl, cause he was literally guilty.
So I mean, really guilty.
You know, I don't, I don't really know.
I mean, I didn't listen that much, but it seemed bad.
He had weird eyes.
No, he was seriously, I listened to everything I was into it.
He was, I, he was so guilty.
I thought the next, I thought the next thing was going to be like, um, and,
and now here's the YouTube clip of the crime.
Like that's how bad it was.
But during this whole thing, I was, I was like looking at the, the ADA who's
now like the DA or the Congress, why forget what she is now, but she was
really good at her job, so good at her fucking job that, you know, you were
like, this is exactly what she's meant to do.
She's meant to do this, you know, um, she's had a special victims unit.
And I was like, I'm not meant to sell mortgages in a strip mall and long night.
Like I'm just not meant to be.
It was not a strip mall, it was an office building, whatever.
I was like, I got to not do that.
You know, I got to figure out a way not to do that.
And I think I started comedy in that was in the spring, that trial.
And I started comedy in the fall, late August, late August.
And I had one more summer of drinking in me.
I had one more summer.
Still didn't get it.
Had to like my friend's father and me had to get into boning accidents that summer.
I mean, I still was being beaten into my head, but by the time, by the time
that summer, right, the rape trial, wasn't enough.
Yeah.
I mean, this, this guy was a cool guy.
It was so cool.
When you get into two boating accidents with someone, they're fun.
They're to get back on a boat with someone you got into an accident with means
they, they're fun.
Um, but at the end of that, I was like, okay, it's time to change because
sometimes you just got to get something out of your system.
You got to get being a loser out of your system.
And being a loser is fun.
No one will admit like that being a loser has its benefits.
And, and, and, and actually starting to not be a loser is, is can suck.
And then you have to worry about like, oh God, now I got to stay, not a loser.
Right.
Right.
Obviously you don't want to be a loser, but like, and then people, people would
look back and be like, oh, you would never lose.
I'm like, yeah, I was, I was an absolute look like I had lost everything.
And I was like, I was the definition of loose.
Like, right.
But sometimes you just got to get that shit out of your system before you can
go and some, unfortunately, sometimes that kills you.
Right.
Sometimes that kills you.
Sometimes the things you have to do to get being a loser out of your system,
kill you.
So it's unfortunate.
And then sometimes you'll never get being a loser out of your system, which
is why you need to get killed in Iran.
You need to get shot in Iran.
Sometimes it will never work.
It's, you're never going to see the light.
So you just need to go to Iran and get shot.
And it's not, it says nothing negative about you.
It's just an observation I have from 30,000 feet, looking at your life.
And I'm going, you need to be a flag on a mantle that someone points to.
That is your moment.
That's your pivot.
And they point to it with pride.
I would give Gary Vee all of my money.
If he started his next lecture by grabbing the mic and going,
half of you in this room need to be in Iran, getting shot at right now.
You need to be getting shot at in Tehran right now.
And 10% of you should have your own companies.
All right.
Thank you guys for listening.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you for coming on.
Yeah, thanks for having me.
You're the best.
Josh, plug your social media.
If anyone's around Baltimore, do you run a show or does Umar run that show?
Umar runs his show, Gin and Jokes at Joe squared in Baltimore, the first
Thursday of every month, Matt, Josh, Katerina on all a great show.
And he gets some really funny comics.
Yeah, it's a great show.
Matt, Josh, Katerina on all social media stuff.
And Umar and I have a podcast called the digression session.
So check that out.
Well, thank you so much.
You and I appreciate this.
You're the best.
Thanks a lot, buddy.