The Tim Dillon Show - 217: 217 - Cuties
Episode Date: September 13, 2020This week Duncan the Bulldog absolutely trashes the studio and shows no respect for 9/11, Tim talks the Netflix show Cuties, his interactions with influencers at Whitney Cummings's party, and the endi...ng of Keeping Up With The Kardashians. Bonus Episodes every week: ▶▶ https://www.patreon.com/thetimdillonshow OFFICIAL MERCHANDISE ▶▶ https://www.bonfire.com/store/the-tim-dillon-show/ ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS: Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Tim Dillon show.
We are here Saturday night for you every week,
Saturday night or Sunday morning,
whenever you are coming across this broadcast.
I'm watching my friend's bulldog.
My friend got, he had a baby.
He had a baby and he texted me and said,
are you in LA?
And I was, because I was performing at Whitney Cummings
stand up show that she hadn't heard driveway.
We'll talk about that in a moment.
And I had said I would do it.
I said, I'd take the dog when you had a baby.
I said, when the baby comes, I'll take the dog.
You don't think anyone's gonna actually
remember these things you say,
but you say them in the hopes
that people will forget about them
and then disappear from your life.
But because that didn't happen,
I had to honor my commitment.
So he is here and we will bring him,
we'll get him on screen eventually, but we're gonna just,
so we may have to just,
you may see us our eyes darting around the room
because these bulldogs is like a little hippopotamus.
It's like a little pig and it just destroys everything.
I mean, they can't procreate.
They can barely breathe.
They can't walk.
I mean, it's amazing.
And I was on the phone with Ray Cump.
Ray Cump's like, that's a pig.
Like what?
Lots of things disgusting, put it down.
What do you think people say about you?
By the way, I want to say, and I don't always,
people sometimes notice something.
I'm in that's not the show and I appreciate that.
I don't announce all of my projects
and the things I do here,
but sometimes there are fans of me
that will recognize me and go, hey, you were in that.
You know, I was on the Danny,
that show with the rapper.
Why am I blanking?
I played Danny Brown.
Danny Brown, I played Peeper the Telescope
on the Danny, get off the bed.
Don't fuck with the book.
And just get him.
Yeah, he's gonna rip it open.
Just move the book, please.
I mean, just relax.
Just stop doing everything you're doing.
Just let him on the bed.
Ben, just let him on the bed.
Let him sleep.
Danny Brown, I played Peeper the Telescope
and it was a great honor to do that.
I liked Danny Brown a lot and it was a funny show.
The dialogue was funny.
And now people have noticed me
in the new Netflix film, Cuties.
And it's been an honor to be in that.
And it's just such a real treat.
I am one of the Cuties
and I play a young woman who is being exploited sexually
and people are in arms about it.
They're up in arms about it.
I've not seen this.
Kurt Metzger, my friend, I was talking to him last night
and he said, this is an intersectional car crash
because you have a woman of color director
who's trying to, I guess, shed light on the idea
that young girls are being exploited sexually.
But how did they shed light on the idea
that young girls were being exploited sexually
by sexually exploiting young girls?
So supposedly the last scene in this film is so disturbing
and such clear like bait for pedophiles
that it's so absurd that there's nationwide campaigns
cancel Netflix.
People are canceling Netflix,
which I thought canceled Netflix.
I just have to do a Jenny Slate.
But no, it's Cuties.
I'm kidding.
Love Jenny and the whole squad.
But Cuties, have you seen Cuties?
I've not seen it yet.
You're lying.
You've been watching Cuties.
That's a real sick.
By the way, how sick is it?
Like that's the real fucking somebody calls you
and they're like, hey, I found a movie on Netflix.
It's great.
You might want to check it out.
What's it called?
Cuties.
By the way, the name sounds like a dark web CP website.
Cuties.
And the marketing for the thing is not good.
Like the marketing for it is not like
we're shedding light on the issue of exploitation of minors.
The marketing for it is like, look at these bitches twerk.
That's the problem.
The problem is the marketing is like,
it's female empowerment.
Yas queen.
I'm 11 years old and here's my pussy.
And it's like, whoa, whoa.
I mean, the marketing for this is out of control.
Why does that girl in the back
kind of look like Val Kilmer?
The point is this, terrifying.
This is not appropriate.
Get it off the screen.
We just showed for a minute.
We don't want to have this.
Let's not have that be the backdrop, please.
God only knows.
The point is that people are angry justifiably at Cuties.
Shapiro, Ben Shapiro had a good take on it
where he was like, the message is getting lost
kind of in the marketing of the film.
Cause I think the marketing of the film,
you have so many different, you know,
buzz words here going on.
It's like female empowerment.
And then also like exploit.
So it's like, you have these young scantily clared minors
in doing very sexually suggestive dances on Netflix.
This is, the set is about to come down.
The set is about to come down.
Are you, hold on.
I'm going to get them.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
This is the producer of Cuties.
This is why he's trying to destroy the show.
Stand up.
Now sit.
Sit.
Please sit.
Sit down.
Sit.
Have you seen Cuties?
Is this why you're trying to destroy the show?
Do you have any respect for anything?
When he first met Oscar,
Oscar really tried to fuck him up.
And Duncan didn't understand
because Duncan didn't understand,
he didn't understand that there was evil in the world
until he met Oscar.
And Oscar just tried to attack him for absolutely no reason.
And Duncan's just trying to,
Duncan, Duncan, it's a podcast.
I mean, what is the history of this dog?
Like these dog, how do they even come about?
It's so crazy.
But what, the point here is that Cuties
is really getting people angry.
I've not seen it.
I don't really plan on seeing it.
I don't plan on seeing Cuties.
Duncan, you're a Cutie, are you?
Now he's fucking up the sound.
You can't do this, Duncan.
9-Eleven just came and passed.
Duncan, what do you think about 9-Eleven?
All right, you have to get down now.
Have to get down.
Oh God, he's such a monster.
Hold on, hold on.
Get him down.
Say goodbye to everyone, Duncan.
We gotta talk about 9-Eleven now, Duncan.
He's so heavy.
He's so incredibly heavy.
Everybody, you know, this girl on Facebook,
she put a photo with Donald Trump up holding a flag
and she goes, two days after 9-Eleven,
she goes, he'll always get my vote.
He's always put America first.
And you're like, well, if that's all we need to do
to secure your vote is to hold up a flag
on the roof of a building,
two days after a national tragedy, well, then that's,
he'll never not get my vote.
Even if he serves two terms
and he wants to serve another one,
he'll get my vote because he held a flag up after 9-Eleven.
By the way, one of the funniest things ever
that I've ever seen, there was this tour guide
who was like this old, bitter guy
and he was just an angry guy
when I was a tour guide in New York City
on those double-decker buses.
And it was the anniversary of 9-Eleven
and he got on the bus and like a British couple
had asked about the heroism of the firefighters.
Like they went, it must have been an amazing day.
Maybe they were Australian.
I'll never get these rocks.
Some are British and then some come out Australian.
But let's say they were from the land down under
and he was like, well, it was real heroes that day.
And the guy's response was the best I've ever heard.
He goes, he goes, that's all a lie.
He goes, I was downtown.
I saw those buildings fall and the cops in a fireman.
He goes, they ran the other way.
He goes, no one ran into those buildings.
He goes, I watched it.
He goes, so you can believe whatever lie you want.
He goes, nobody was running into those burning buildings.
They were running away.
They were cowards.
The whole bus was just frozen.
They didn't know what to do.
The guy goes, they were cowards.
They were running away.
And they go, I was like, oh,
you just stay like some Australian guy
was just staring at him.
I'm like, oh, whoa, whoa, whoa.
I'd never heard that.
And then he said to me, this guy, I was training
and he on his bus, you know, and then he said to me,
he goes, he goes, he goes, I'm not lying.
He goes, they ran away.
And I'm like, wasn't there.
I was in Ms. Rice's history class
in Holy Trinity Diocesan High School in Hicksville, New York.
I was sitting there next to a woman named Kate Butler
who now has another name.
She was, and I had asked her for a pen or a pencil
because I always didn't bring a pen or a pencil to school.
That was my thing.
I never, I always said for four years, I said,
do you have a pen?
Do you have a pencil?
Do you have the homework?
You know, what book are we supposed to read?
I could never handle it.
I just was never prepared.
I did not go to school prepared.
Okay.
Unlike this show, which has so much preparation,
so much show prep.
I mean, hours and hours and days and days
of preparation for this program.
But I turned around to Kate and they said,
do you have a pen?
And before I knew it,
and the teacher was called out of the room,
she was brought back in and then there was,
she said there was an attack on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon.
And back then we didn't,
the World Trade Center had been bombed already.
So we didn't even put it together
that that was a huge deal.
And then the Pentagon was the one that made me go,
wow, this is war.
Because the Pentagon, you knew.
It's like, you know,
this is the civilian command center,
the military's civilian.
This is the big one.
They're hitting the Pentagon.
So I was sitting there
and I was in Ms. Rice's history class
and I heard that.
And the first thing I screamed out in the class,
I said, inside job.
They said, what?
I said, it's an inside job.
Don't you see that?
I didn't even know what happened.
But I just instinctually said, it's an inside job.
And then I just started screaming, there are no planes.
And what was strange is I didn't even know
that there were planes.
He's trying to fuck the chair.
Do you see what he's trying to do?
He's trying to fuck the chair.
Right now, he's just trying to,
he's trying to fuck the chair.
Does 9-Eleven get you horny, Duncan?
I screamed, there were no planes.
It was sad, you know,
one of the kids I knew in school is dad died.
Really, a lot of people's parents,
I called my dad so quick, I'm like,
are you at windows of the world?
He's like, no, what?
I'm home.
I'm like, all right, see you later.
How great would that, how great would it be
to lose a parent in 9-Eleven?
Let's stop pretending that wouldn't have been
the greatest moment of your fucking life.
Hey, how's Pete Davidson doing?
Pretty fucking good.
He's not sitting here trying to keep a bulldog off his set.
I stuck, I strapped both of my parents
into the seats of United 93
if I could have a tent of his career.
So let's cut the shit.
Candlelight Vigils, where'd mommy go?
I don't know, Bin Laden took her, where's my movie?
I'm sitting here for years, week after week, brilliance.
Brilliance, but I, cause I don't have a parent that died.
I'll melt my parents right fuck now.
Judd Apatow, email me.
Stop, he agrees.
He's barking at the box of Magic Spoon.
He's barking at the Magic Spoon.
Why, because you realize it's a keto cereal?
Is that why?
Because it simulates the experience
of the sugar cereals you liked as a child?
Is that why you're barking?
Enough with the 9-11 porn memorabilia.
Can we stop?
That day we were all Americans.
Okay.
Thanks, thanks a lot.
You know, that day we were all Americans.
That day we were all Americans.
That yes, and the day before that too.
And the day after that.
But thank you for making that brilliant point.
There was a lot of unity in the early periods after 9-11.
I've discussed it on this show.
There was a lot of unity in the early periods
after 9-11 in this country,
but that evaporated pretty quickly.
And we wanted it too.
You don't want a country, you don't want a cult.
You don't want to live in a cult.
How are you doing?
How weird would that be?
Shut up.
How weird would it be if you just
walked around and everybody was in,
get him out of the room, get him out of the room now.
Now you're out, now you're out.
Because you can't handle the responsibility.
Send him out please.
You leave now, we're discussing 9-11.
You have a little respect.
Put him in the kitchen please.
My problem is that I'm not allowed to do that.
My point is that you don't want to live
in a constant funeral.
And all these people that are just glorifying
the immediate aftermath of 9-11,
as if it's the goal.
As if that's the goal.
To walk around with your head bowed,
thinking about your own mortality every minute of every day.
It's not the goal, by the way.
And it was nice for a few days.
A couple of vigils are nice,
but you don't want to live in a vigil.
So can we stop, please, romanticizing this idea?
I don't like where we are now, clearly.
We've gone off the rails quite a bit,
culturally in this country.
But this idea that everything has to be right after 9-11,
when it was so nice,
it was nice for a few days.
I'm just sick of all these people on Facebook
being like, well,
we were all Americans that day.
People love talking about other heroic people.
People love that.
They think it makes them heroic,
by talking about other people that were heroic.
You know?
Remember the heroes, you know?
I'm just saying,
I would have been willing to sacrifice more
than I sacrificed in 9-11, which was very little.
I would have been willing to sacrifice more.
And I think it's important that we all remember that.
You know?
So that's my little commentary on 9-11.
It changed New York dramatically.
And I put something up on Instagram about this.
If you knew about New York City before 9-11,
it changed New York dramatically.
It made New York a victim.
It made New York vulnerable.
And then, you know, New York was this tough city
that it was not nearly as criminal as it had been.
It was getting safer, but it was a tough city.
And then it became, you know,
about Midwestern tourists coming to save New York City.
That's when you had the Disney on Broadway start.
Tourists were coddled and catered to.
And it became a city that was very specific.
It made it into a very general city
where everybody can enjoy it.
It is what it is.
Eventually, it, you know,
all the restaurants in New York City,
a lot of them were French.
And a lot of fine dining or luxury
was very opulent in the 90s.
It was very frilly.
There was a lot of lace and big tablecloths and banquets.
And I mean, it looked very like you were eating in Versailles.
And then after 9-11, that felt inappropriate.
That felt wrong.
And then the green market movement started.
And, you know, all these restaurants
kind of made themselves look half done.
There was exposed brick and steel and pipes.
And it just, you're more connected to your environment
than you had been.
You wanted to eat on a wooden table and things were real.
And it really changed New York City.
If you knew New York City pre-9-11, many of you don't.
But it really did change New York City.
You could take that down.
But you could read that if you have any interest in it.
But it was very interesting in the aftermath of 9-11.
And I'm starting to see a lot of overlap
between that and Corona a little bit.
A little overlap between that.
The constant terrorizing of the public
has become unfortunate.
But it was called by me and other people on the show
who said, this is real.
This did happen.
9-11 happened.
And it will be used as a way to constantly terrify people
and to achieve aims that possibly were being planned
long before that event, like Corona, like COVID.
So when you have Dr. Fauci, who cannot throw a baseball,
go out and tell everybody that we have to hunker down
for the winter.
We have to hunker down for the winter.
Let's listen to this guy.
We should hunker down.
We could see a very deadly December.
We need to hunker down this fall and winter.
It's not going to be easy, says Dr. Fauci.
I'm telling you right now, folks,
we're getting to a point now where you're gonna start,
you're gonna have to start making your own decisions
about your own life, your own ability to earn money.
And the experts are so all in the pocket of somebody.
Everybody is in the pocket of somebody
and they have an interest in you believing certain things
and they have an interest in you walking around
and not questioning them.
And I'm not saying that you should go out there
and be willy-nilly and start, you know,
taking all kinds of chances with your health,
but I am telling you that I don't know
how many young people this is killing.
I don't know that.
I don't know.
I believe that this is still the vast majority of people
that are dying from this disease are elderly
and many of them may have other conditions.
That is still what people are able to treat this disease
a lot better now.
And I just don't know if we should constantly be,
you know, hunkered out.
We hunkered down for four months.
And then as Roseanne said,
people left their house when they were ready to kill.
The great Roseanne, I did a podcast with the great Roseanne,
an epic meeting of the minds.
A legend such as herself and myself having a conversation
or something that would get close to that.
And I was very honored that she spoke to me.
She's so funny.
She's effortlessly funny.
And she makes some very good points.
And then she's kind of in and out of it as well.
She's getting older.
She said she was close to 80.
She's 67.
I mean, she's not, she's nowhere near 80.
But what did you think?
Did you enjoy the Roseanne?
She's such a legend.
She's so, I was crying off to the side, just laughing.
She's very, very funny, man.
She's incredibly funny.
And it's well worth a watch.
Hey, do you take some DMT before that?
You're sure.
Before that interview?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You take, you drink some ayahuasca
before you watch me and her?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's a good primer for that conversation.
You might put a little tab acid under the tongue
before you hit play on that one.
Because it is a little wild,
but it is well worth a watch.
Very honored to do that with the great Roseanne.
What is an appropriate gift, by the way,
now that my friend had this kid?
What's an appropriate gift?
Should I get him what I got you and Katie for the wedding?
Ben is angry at me.
But Ben is, he doesn't believe
that I sent him and his wife a beautiful wedding present
that was lost in the mail because of COVID-19.
It was lost in the mail because of COVID-19.
I won't even tell him what it was like
because I don't want him to be so upset.
And because if I told him when I got him,
he would be so sad for doubting me.
He would then like, you know, who knows,
offer to just work on the show for free
for the rest of his life.
Because he would be so indebted to me
just because of what I got him
that was lost in the mail due to coronavirus.
We cannot find it, we don't know where it is.
So, but I don't know, do you get a savings bond?
Can you get that?
What do you get?
Oh, you could do that, like a mutual fund.
Do you invest in this country, though, for the kid
or do you buy him something from China?
Because we're on the way out.
What's the savings bond in this country gonna be worth soon?
Do you really give a kid a bond and say cash it in
right when you're about to go to college
when you can't breathe anymore?
I'm ready to no longer leave the house, aren't you?
See, in California, we've been getting ready
to just not leave anymore.
Because when you leave, there's ash and embers
of dead trees in your throat, so you can't go anywhere.
And the outside has now just become a hindrance
for the inside activities you want.
Like you just can't get on the wifi
because the fucking everything outside's burning
and you're getting angry.
And cell phone towers are up in flames.
So the outside now, it's just annoying.
The outside world's annoying.
The outside world's annoying.
And that's why we're all going digital.
We're all going to go into the void eventually.
And we're going to communicate with each other digitally.
We're not gonna leave our homes.
We're gonna get, you're gonna get Amazon food deliveries.
You're gonna have a pedophile Netflix.
And you're gonna have, you know, whatever you want.
And you're gonna be okay.
You're not gonna wanna leave.
You're gonna go, this is fine.
This is fine because, you know, what's the other option?
You're gonna go outside in a full hazmat suit.
Doesn't make any sense.
I'm so ready for that.
I'm so ready to just be in a good quadrant.
I hope I'm in a good quadrant
when they divide the country up into quadrants
based on resources, which will happen soon.
Like district nine, remember that movie?
Yeah, I just hope I'm in the good district.
I forget which one that is.
But that's all coming through the Hunger Games
and district nine.
All those teeny bopper movies will come through eventually.
And, you know, AOC will be one of the queens
and she'll walk around, you know, with a scepter.
And, you know, you'll be like, oh, she's from the, you know,
she's district 12 or whatever.
I mean, that's all happening.
That's all gonna happen.
Just embrace it, you know?
It's really bad in California, man.
I've never seen it this bad when you go out now.
Never have, never have.
You're just breathing in.
It's like a campfire in your car.
You're breathing in this air.
It's really, truly a problem.
And then, of course, everybody needs to virtue signal
on social media with all their photos of like the red skies.
And they're like, I guess we should have listened
to that climate change.
I was like, yeah, I guess so.
But maybe it's too late now.
So maybe a shut up.
It's too late.
It's too late.
It's too late.
You're literally on fire.
So what does it matter?
I'm glad you scored that point.
Glad you scored that point.
Well, I guess we should, oh!
It's not the last thing you wanna do before you check out
is to score a point.
Score a political point.
Like the last breath of fucking unsafe oxygen
you breathe on this earth should be used
to get the better of somebody.
Who, hell, I guess I'm.
What an American way to go.
Just trying to best somebody in a pointless online argument.
Right before you go.
I did stand up for the second time at Whitney Cummings' house.
Whitney Cummings had a stand up comedy show
in her driveway or her basketball court,
really her driveway area.
And it was a lot of fun.
You know, Whitney knows all these influencers
like these Instagram, is the proper term hoes?
Probably not.
I'm kidding, ladies.
But these Instagram info, well, the teets are out.
I mean, they're not influencing people to go to school.
They're not doing a lot of adult literacy programs
from my understanding.
I'm sure they have many philanthropic endeavors.
But, you know, a lot of it is the teets are out
and they all have like deals, you know,
they're hawking body oil for millions and millions of dollars
on Instagram.
It's not my demo, really.
I like a working class family from outside of Philly.
I like a working class family from outside of Philly
that begrudgingly has to sit in a car together
for 25 minutes.
Everyone's smoking cigarettes,
including the dog on the way to the show.
Angry people, people that feel like they've been slighted.
My audience is people that feel like they've been slighted,
like me, because both of my parents survived 9-11.
That's who my audience is.
So when I look at these hot Instagram Black Lives Matter
and, you know, all of these politically correct teets
in the front row, I was like, will I do well?
I don't know.
But Spade was there and Whitney was there
and Booker of the Comedy Store was there.
And some people were bombin', by the way.
You never really wanna bomb
when you have people that you respect there,
but some people just, I mean, wow.
But most people doing great.
Annie Letterman murdered, killed it, very funny.
But Annie's like that.
She can kind of fucking bobbin' weave and really,
you know, when you're in a weird,
me and Annie came up in New York
when we were in a lot of weird situations.
And you had to give yourself over to that as a comedian
and just go, we're in this fucked up situation,
we're gonna call it out.
And then a lot of other comedians get up there
and they're like,
yeah, that, that, that day,
that day have, have you ever been to,
have you ever been?
And the crowd's like, hey, we're Instagram influencers,
we think with our tits.
What are you doing here?
Can you fucking talk to us?
Can you fucking, I don't know who these, Olivia Munn,
I don't even know who these people are.
Kesha, who, what's that?
What's a Kesha?
I don't even know what that is.
Is that like Shakshuka?
Is that a dish?
Who is this Kesha?
She said hello, she goes, I'm Kesha,
like I'm gonna turn around and I'm a huge fan.
She said that to me, I had a peach in my hand and I go,
do you think this is ripe?
I was hitting it on the counter.
She's a singer apparently.
She did that song, TikTok, TikTok.
That was a song of every fat, freckled Irish beast woman
who will still put it on Facebook and be like,
remember Fridays and college at SUNY New Pulse,
that's my girl, TikTok, you know.
It was every fat slob's theme song
who was trying to get a cocky,
their ass at 3 a.m. at a SUNY school in New York.
Freckled Irish beast women would listen to that song.
That is what you've inspired Kesha, yes or yes.
That is what you have done.
That is what you're, yes you want hot people
dancing to your music, but it ain't, that's not the case.
You know who loves that song?
Me and a wig, me and a wig.
And they'll still sing.
And they'll still put it up on Facebook.
And they go, hey, this was a song from me and my girls.
Remember girls?
And they tag all the other fucking hot air balloons
that they went to a SUNY school with.
These fucking boats that they went to school with.
I'm tagging all my girls.
And then you just, you just, you click on the women
that they've tagged and it's just someone's face
is like, you know the fat woman Instagram shot?
I've done it many times.
It's from up here, up here tilted head.
That's fat woman Instagram up here tilted head.
You don't know what's going on beneath my head.
I bet it's hot though.
I bet it's a cauldron of pussy juice.
That's what she did, Tecca.
There's a place downtown where the.
Tick tock.
Tick tock.
That's your heart.
Ladies.
Kesha.
And then a Miranda Cosgrove who's on the I Carly.
I don't want it a pedophile.
What is this?
I don't watch these things.
Nickelodeon.
Drake and Josh.
What are we nuts?
Where are the adults?
Where's Candice Owens?
Where is the exhumed corpse of William F. Buckley?
I want to perform.
What is I car?
Did you watch this horse shit when you were growing up?
You did, didn't you?
Rugrats.
I didn't have cable.
I didn't have cable.
I come from the mean streets.
My parents survived 9 11.
I didn't get the good shit.
I didn't get the Jetapita movies in the cable.
My parents didn't have their skin fucking melted.
I like pita.
I don't know pita at all.
I'm not throwing any shade of pita.
I know it's sad to have your dad killed in 9 11.
But let's be very honest.
It's not worked out horribly for him.
And this is the fact.
So I'm willing to kill my parents.
But this is what,
and Kesha seemed like a lovely woman.
They all were lovely women.
None of this.
I just, this world is,
I don't understand this world.
What is I Carly about?
Oh man.
It was a spinoff of Drake and Josh
and she lived in an apartment
and she had a friend and a brother
and they just got into weird shit at school.
That was kind of it.
Dude, Nickelodeon sucked.
The only good things were Doug and Daria.
They were fucking good.
They were fucking good.
Rugrats, fine.
I would go to my friend's houses.
They had cable.
They had Nickelodeon.
We didn't have cable.
When I was a kid, I watched Melrose Place.
I watched Sidney and Michael carry on
a learned affair
and Michael had a beach house in Malibu
and then Sidney blew up the whole apartment complex
and I learned words like blackmail and abortion.
So I'm sorry I wasn't watching cartoon children.
You fucking pussies.
Shout out to Aaron Spelling and Darren Star.
Melrose Place was fucking iconic.
Shout out to Heather Locker.
I hope you're okay wherever you are.
You're probably parked on an off-ramp somewhere
but anyway, I hope you're good.
Well, she's had issues is what I'm saying.
I don't know.
She has.
She's probably parked somewhere on an off-ramp
trying to figure out where she is.
Well, we're with you in spirit, Heather.
Fuck these kids.
I watched Beverly Hills 90210
and NYPD Blue.
Great show.
Dennis Frans out there.
Great show.
Dennis Frans out there.
Fat racist.
What a genius.
What an actor.
And they all have this attitude.
You see these hot Instagram people have this attitude.
That's how they talk.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
I had to leave Amanda Cerny, who I don't know
who's got like a trillion followers,
she's got 25 million followers,
went up and starts reading Whitney's Act
out of a book.
And I said, and she's a sweet girl.
You know, I'm not shitting at anybody here
but I said that was my time.
I looked at Tom Papa.
I said, I think it's time to go.
Tom Papa brought a loaf of bread,
which I just ate with my bare hands
in Whitney's kitchen.
Whitney's,
Whitney got some great pizza from Big Mama's Pizza
and I'd never had that.
And it was just kind of like,
I don't know, it's pretty good.
Big Mama and Papa's Pizza Recipe.
Yeah, it's pretty good, man.
She got cheese sticks, mozzarella sticks.
You don't find a lot of mozzarella sticks in LA.
But Whitney got them.
And what's great is I got to have pretty much all of the food
because they don't eat.
The Instagram influencers don't eat.
Okay?
They don't eat.
They don't eat food.
It's not allowed.
They take a picture with an avocado once a month
and that's all the protein they need.
So I was eating, I was filling up,
but of course some of the female comics are filling up too.
You know, they're not exactly small.
But it was a lot of fun.
It was an interesting time.
Kesha didn't show up, sadly,
but she was there the other day.
I kid Kesha, what do I know?
She's, you know, so far, she seems like such a mature,
like, almost dark, brooding type of person.
But then the music is like,
It's like an alarm clock or songs.
Right?
It's kind of like an alarm clock, but they're good.
But it's like a fun alarm clock.
It's like, I'm waking up.
Tick tock.
My life means something.
That's what her music is.
It's just fat women in state schools gone.
We're making the memories.
Someone kidnap me, please.
They want to get kidnapped, those women.
Someone take me away.
Someone bury me under a lake.
Show me that I'm special.
But I did well.
I had fun.
In the middle of my set, I said,
Oh, good.
Crystal Lee just got here.
I said, he'll go next.
That didn't get a big chuckle.
That was a vet.
That was not a warmly received joke.
There was a little chill in the air,
but it was a good thing.
Whitney really loves to end up comedy.
And I think all these other women really like her.
Because Whitney's a real deal comic,
kind of in that boys club of being able to really throw down,
Whitney writes her ass off.
You know what I mean?
And she just fucking really does well.
And her new jokes are very funny.
You know what I mean?
But now when she's like,
all right, now we're going to have the Instagram influencers
come up and do my material.
And they're like,
kids don't get injured anymore.
Have you heard that?
And Whitney's has to explain to them.
She's like, well, there's the premise comes first.
Honey, the premise comes first.
And then the punchline.
Don't, no, no, no, no, no.
Don't snort the microphone.
We talk into it.
No, we talk into it.
But I was, I was really glad that I was included.
And now I'm sure I won't be again.
But content is king.
If I've learned one thing, it's content is king.
But it was very nice.
And she got a lot of pizza.
I didn't even know Whitney knew what food was.
Because every time on there,
she was always trying to give me like plant based popsicles.
She's like, this is a chocolate kale pop.
I'm like, what?
She's like, how about some raspberry dust?
I'm like, wait, what?
She never has regular butter.
She always has some weird butter.
She's like, this is butter from a cactus, this pussy.
And I'm like, well, how about, how about a cow?
How about a cow's butter?
I didn't even know she knew what fuck dude.
If you had said to me,
Whitney's having a comedy show and she's getting food.
I would have never thought that we were going to be fucking doing
pizza, cheese sticks, garlic bread.
How fucking cool was that?
How unexpected was that?
I thought we're going to be all eating like, you know,
like taking one bite of a leaf and then handing it
to the next person to bite it.
You know?
But it was good, man.
We hope the comedy story opens.
We're back out on the road having a little bit of fun.
We are on the road.
We're going to be in Palm Beach.
We're going to be in Texas.
Get get TimberlakeComedy.com up.
Let's see where we're going to be.
I'm excited to be in some of these places.
Some of them not so much.
So late September, the 26th,
we're going to be at Hyena's Comedy Club in Dallas.
October 1st through the 3rd, Zanies and Nashville,
Salt Lake City, Wise Guys, October 6th and 7th.
Phoenix, Arizona, stand up live the 9th through the 11th of
October, Tampa, Florida, Side Splitters.
Really, I love that place.
October 20th through Wednesday the 21st,
West Palm Beach, Florida.
We're going to be there October 22nd through the 24th.
So if you are in Dallas, Nashville, Salt Lake City,
Phoenix, Tampa, West Palm, please grab your tickets.
They do go fast.
These clubs are at reduced capacity.
We also have some other dates coming up,
maybe Colorado and places like that.
Those are places I'm very excited to go.
Those are places where I believe,
I don't know about the COVID numbers.
I just turned out an offer for Portland just because the
money wasn't right.
I'm really not excited to go to.
I know Portland is a great comedy town,
but it's like, can you just get it together a little bit
over there?
Can you just get it together?
I don't really need to fucking, you know,
what do we, what do we, we were riding every night now?
So 12 days of Christmas, like the 60 days of looting,
60 days of riding, just clean it up over there,
Portland, please.
I really don't like the Pacific Northwest.
I don't jive with it at all.
I'll perform there, but it's not for me.
It's not for me.
Those fucking gray forests and everything.
Oh, fuck off.
It's not for me.
And if you live there, bless your heart.
And I know you deserve comedy.
Maybe you're a fan of the show, but I'll tell you right now,
I don't, I do not connect with your area at all.
I went to Spokane once, which is essentially a white
supremacist.
I mean, it's like, they're literally like a few miles away
from this town in Idaho where everybody's like, you know,
real proud of their heritage.
Got a lot of interest in European culture.
And, you know, I was like, wow, real white crowd.
As soon as I walked onto the stage of Spokane and then
everybody went, yeah.
The local races I was reading, they were like,
Governor Butch Otter is running against.
And I'm like, what are we doing here, folks?
I was going nuts.
I was following around a groundhog for two days.
It's groundhog.
I kept following around.
I would FaceTime Ben and show them the groundhog.
And then I realized that a groundhog is the same thing
as a woodchuck.
Isn't that what I realized?
Yeah.
Or maybe they're not the same or they are the same.
Well, why don't you look it up?
This is why you're here, to look things up,
to be our link to reality.
A groundhog are also woodchucks or a whistle pig
or a land beaver.
Now that's what I learned being in Spokane.
I learned that.
I learned that a groundhog is also a woodchuck.
Okay?
I also learned several other things about genetics.
But I'll leave them out.
I'm also unsure of the scientific basis of much of what I was told.
Much of what I learned.
But I will get back to Pacific Northwest.
I'm just not excited to go.
I'm not really pumped up to go to the Pacific Northwest.
Those pale goth weirdos.
Get the fuck out of here.
I'm excited to go to London.
I want to go to London.
Let's sell out to Soho Theater.
I want to go to the UK.
I want to do that True Geordi podcast.
That guy.
I want to eat meat pies.
I want to eat good chicken tikka masala,
which is the cuisine of London.
Because what is it going to be?
Boiled meat?
They have that Sunday roast in England.
They're all talking about how good it is with Yorkshire pudding
and the roast.
So they're like, British people would come over here
and they'd be like, there's nothing better than the Sunday roast.
It's just not bad.
I'm like, yeah, you know what's better than that?
A chicken finger in my country.
A mall chicken finger is better than your national dish.
Shut the fuck up.
You gave us a lot of great gifts like civilization, racism,
but you don't have anything going on with the food.
We don't need your fucking Yorkshire pudding.
And yeah, it's just gray roast beef.
It's fine.
Good damn good if it's done right.
But they're so invested that it's the best.
It's the best thing ever.
It's not better than a Sunday roast.
Yeah, I'm going to say combos are.
I'm going to say combos from a truck stop
that you eat on the way to a national park
you're going to get kidnapped in,
are better than your Sunday roast.
Your gray pussy lip roast beef
and your Yorkshire fucking pudding
and your mashed peas grow the fuck up.
And your somebody was talking to me about this
and I forgot who was talking to me about it,
but somebody made a great point.
They were like, that had been on another show.
They were saying like, isn't it weird that Britain's
big fish and chips dish is served in like newspaper
and they serve with like malt vinegar.
Very strange.
You know, but they come over here.
They are impressed by our food over here.
That's the one thing in America really impresses people.
I mean, we don't have much else going on except spectacle.
We're very good at spectacle.
Is that Kim Kardashian?
You know, like they're all into that.
Like, oh my God, that's a person from TV in there.
They're real and they're actually here.
That we can do really well, you know,
but food is just, you know,
there's no more sinful food than America.
Nobody lays a meal on you like America.
Even Italy, you feel light and fine after you eat,
but America, we poison people truly with everything we give them.
Just a little bit of poison, you know,
and the people from the UK are like stunned.
You go have a milkshake in another country from McDonald's.
You're like, this is like not sweet.
And then you realize that part of what makes our milkshake sweet
is the amount of syrup that goes into them.
And that's why you're drinking them.
You get a pounding headache about 30 minutes after you have this milkshake
because you're coming down.
After you have the milkshake, you're in the car, you're like,
my life's gonna work out.
Everything's gonna be okay.
Frappuccino, milkshake, any of it.
I'm gonna be, I'm doing well.
When you have a Frappuccino, when you're halfway down,
a Starbucks Frappuccino, when you're in the front of your car
and you got the air conditioning blasting on your face
and you got that Frappuccino down
and you got the caffeine in there and then the sugar,
you're going, okay, I can do this.
Whatever this is, whatever this life is, I can do it.
And then 30 minutes later, you have a pounding headache
because you're coming down from the sugar
and you need something else.
So you stuff a thing of gum in.
You take a fucking energy drink.
I mean, it's just a never ending, you know?
So I want to get over there.
I want to get over there to Australia, to the UK
and do some of those markets.
I'm very excited about going to those markets
and I've never done stand-up,
I've done stand-up comedy in Scotland, which was great.
I went over with a mixed race comic and an Indian woman
and then I walked out and like all the Scottish people
were like, oh, is he American?
Like, they were like, oh, here's the,
here's the reason Trump got elected, you know?
Because like the two comedians I went with were fairly woke.
So they went out and they did like their woke bits
and I was like, okay, this, is this the American showcase?
And then I went out and I was like, hey, fuck you.
And they were like, yeah, we just connected.
I love that room, the stand in Glasgow, great.
I don't know what's happening to UK comedy.
I imagine like American comedy is being pulverized
into the ground by, you know, non-binary fat witches
running around telling people,
casting spells on people and telling them
what words they're allowed to utter.
I'm unsure. God, I just want to go,
can we just go back to a fucking nice time
of private kind of puritanical set?
Like sex should be private.
Sex is by its nature better if it's private.
You know what I mean?
And I know what you're saying, that's what Epstein thought.
But I don't mean it like that.
What I mean is that by making sex just mass marketing
and vulgar and nasty,
what you're doing is you're taking all the interesting
kind of cool stuff about it away
and you're making it this transactional fucking,
you know, experience that, you know,
people are having less sex. Isn't it amazing?
Think about that.
Wet-ass pussy is one of the biggest songs in the country.
People are actually coming in contact with less
wet-ass pussies in real life.
They're having less sex.
They're furiously masturbating the porn.
They're not having a lot of sex because everything's been
digital and everything's been made very sterile.
Sex feels very...
Have you ever met a sex addict and heard them talk about sex?
When they talk about it, it sounds gross
because they talk about it the way that you talk
about anything you do all the time that is relatively
kind of somewhat meaningless to you.
And it's very perfunctory.
The mechanization of it, the mechanics of it,
the way they talk about it, they talk about it in a way
where you go, ugh, it just sounds kind of gross
because instinctually we know that sex should have some level of...
It doesn't always have to be this special, amazing,
whatever thing, but it should have something about it
that is more than pissing.
Sex should be more than pissing and shitting.
We know that.
But when a sex addict talks to you about sex,
it sounds like somebody's talking about taking a piss.
Does.
And then I stopped behind the rest stop
and the bathroom was out,
so I just took a piss around the building.
Then I got back in my car and I drank some more water.
Fuck, I had to piss again.
So I pissed in a bottle.
Then I kept driving in the hotel room and I pissed all over.
I was so drunk, I pissed all over the fucking bed.
Piss, piss, piss.
I pissed in the ocean, I pissed in the pool.
All right, why are you telling me?
But there's something kind of antiseptic, sterile,
medical gross about that.
And I feel like our society's heading to that place with sex.
It is disturbing when you see young kids,
young girls and boys sexualized before they are mature enough
to handle the emotional psychological ramifications
of their behavior and what they're doing.
So when you have these girls dancing like this,
they don't know who finds that attractive.
They're not ready to handle that.
They're not ready to handle what they're doing.
And it's just to me, I'm deeply conservative
kind of when it comes to, I want to live in Meet Me in St. Louis.
Meet Me in St. Louis was a musical with Judy Garland.
Respect, pills and booze, respect.
And Meet Me in St. Louis, look at the house they lived in.
I like these outfits that the people are in.
That's the way people should dress.
And they took trolleys.
And the women, look at these women.
That's not unattractive and look at the men.
And the women look a little trans and that's fine.
That was nice back then.
Gender was more fluid then than it is now.
You keep injecting collagen into your pussy lips to make yourself look,
these people were cut.
Look at that one on the left.
She's kind of like, who knows what's going on there?
But it's fun.
And they dance.
Look at the people used to dance with top hats and canes.
Go up there to the left.
Look at the way people used to live.
What year was this?
1944.
1944.
Not everything going on in 1944 is spectacular.
It's an unfortunate year for this to have been made.
I'm in a little bit of a hole now.
Okay.
What I'm saying is that I don't like anything about 1944 except this film.
I didn't know when it was made when I went into this.
I don't prepare for this fucking show.
There was a lot going on in 1944 that I have a big problem with.
But people taking trolleys in St. Louis and dancing with hats is not one of them.
It's a piece of cake.
It had to be made in 1944.
Now it sounds like a dog whistle.
I'm going to have to deal with that daily show writer again.
She did have yourself, you know, have yourself a merry little Christmas.
This was the famous song that came from Meet Me in St. Louis.
My grandmother used to watch this.
And then Clang Clang Clang went to trolley.
Did you ever listen to that?
No, I didn't.
Clang Clang Clang went to trolley.
Ding, ding, ding went to bell.
Whatever's going on in Germany is their business.
Now that lyric was changed.
Clang Clang Clang went to trolley.
Ding, ding, ding went to bell.
Let's not ask too many questions.
Stocks are up.
Things are going well.
But this was a fun, I mean this was fun here.
Did you see this?
Did you watch the classics?
I've never seen this.
Never seen this.
This was a great fucking man.
Have yourself a merry little.
Have yourself a merry little Christmas.
Take the Vicodin.
Booze and pills and love.
That was Judy Garland.
Towards the end it was rough.
But she was a fucking icon.
She had that voice.
She was in the Wizard of Oz.
And she had that voice.
She had that amazing voice that nobody had.
Remember that?
Keeping up with the Kardashians is ending.
Let's pull that up.
Keeping up with the Kardashians is ending, folks.
And it is one of the most influential shows
of the last 25 years.
It is the blueprint for modern American fame.
100%, okay?
It replaced talent with access.
And this point is something that we've seen
over and over again.
Access.
Caitlyn Jenner, nobody called you bitch.
No one's calling you.
Caitlyn.
Caitlyn is like the most hilarious
problematic trans woman ever.
She's so great.
She's like, nobody called me.
I was in a Trump rally.
I had service.
It's like, Caitlyn, no one's calling.
You're out of control, Caitlyn.
Caitlyn's like, I'm on tour with Candace Owens.
And no one called me.
I don't get it.
I heard it on the news.
Well, I can't one of the kids that I have
might be O.J. Simpsons call me.
But this is what American fame has become.
It's access.
You sell access to yourself.
And the cooler life you have, the more people want access to it, right?
So if you live in Calabasas and you're rich
and you have celebrity friends, people really want access to that.
Or if you're a tiktoker and you live in one of those houses,
people want access to that.
But they don't care about talent.
You do.
You care about talent.
But the others don't.
We're talking about mass marketing here and the way that it's done.
People want in.
They want in.
They want to see behind the curtain, behind the veil.
They want to feel like they're sitting in your living room.
They want to watch you eat Cheerios.
This is what has been happening over the last two decades in this country.
We have replaced talent, the things that Judy Garland had,
which is just one in a million voice that was really never replicated,
that just rolled out of her mouth like this crazy fucking,
you know, when you hear her do somewhere over the rainbow,
or you hear her do, have yourself a merry little Christmas.
It wasn't, it was, it wasn't even remarkably powerful.
She wasn't really, you know, she didn't belt, she belted out a little,
but nothing compared to like Whitney Houston or somebody like that.
But it was just this voice that it wasn't from training.
It wasn't really from, it was just there.
It was this thing inside of her that just came out.
It was this gift, whatever you want to call it.
It was like from some other fucking celestial realm,
when she was really hitting that.
We're not interested in that anymore.
And this, in fact, we think that's weird.
We kind of don't like that.
We kind of don't like when someone has an unexplainable, amazing talent,
because we don't know how we're going to do it.
We don't know how we fit into that.
Well, I got a wacky family and maybe one day, you know,
there's always this weird idea that you're vicariously living
through all these people that you watch on TV
and you think there's a possibility that you might become them.
And there's just no way to do that when you have somebody
that has this incredibly rare talent that really isn't.
I'm sure Judy Garland worked hard, but let's be very honest.
That's a very natural kind of talent.
Kind of masculine, husky voice.
Like what, go to, can we even play any of this?
You want to play music?
I want to play Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.
Yeah, probably get pulled.
Get pulled, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, Spotify, your move.
Write the check.
Daddy'll dance right over.
You write that check.
But what I'm saying is that the Kardashians are the blueprint
for being famous now.
So with AOC is a Kardashian.
Yeah.
The Hype House and the Sway House are Kardashians.
All the major political figures now will be Kardashians.
Donald Trump's a Kardashian.
Don't get it twisted.
Everything that's succeeding right now in a very big way are Kardashians.
Those are people that give you, it's an all-access pass
to their thoughts and their lives.
No matter how humdrum and unimportant something they may be doing is,
they'll do it and they'll let you in on it.
And you get the access pass.
You all access pass all day, every day.
You can sit there and have a ringside seat for their life.
And again, the cooler the life is or the more sensational it is,
the more people want in.
And that's what the Kardashians did.
That's really what the Kardashians did.
It's really amazing to watch a show like this coming to an end.
Because you don't know what's next.
You know?
One of the kids from, one of the guys from Chappatrap has to Trump won.
I think he said, but the really scary thing is you get like, what is next?
You can't imagine what's next.
I can't imagine what is next after the Kardashians, you know?
I can't imagine how it could get less talent focused.
Truly.
And I like them, by the way.
I've defended them.
I like them.
I think they're hard workers.
Kim Kardashian's a beast and a business person.
And there's no, I have nothing negative to say about them other than the celebration.
Of that particular type of show.
And that particular type of root to fame is, says a lot about the wholesale destruction of the American culture.
That, but that's the only negative thing I'd say.
Truly.
And if you know me, you know, I could say a lot of negative things.
The only negative thing that I would say is that it's the wholesale destruction of any beauty in American culture.
But other than that, truly, truly other than that, I kind of respect the hustle.
Here's what America is.
I said this on the cigar pot, but it's not coming out to the week before the election.
So here's what it is.
If I had to explain America to somebody, America is hearing a song on the radio.
And then somebody tells you that song is bad baby.
And you go, who's bad baby?
And they go, it's the woman who said that catch me outside.
How about that?
The woman who's threatening to fight the audience and her own mother on Dr. Phil.
And there's a moment of rage that builds up in you that this woman is now a star.
But then a split second later, you start bobbing your head to the beat and you go, this isn't that bad.
This isn't that bad.
America is the moment between the rage and going.
This is pretty good.
That's where America lives.
Never forget that.
So as angry as I may seem or as hateful as some of my rhetoric appears a minute later, I'll just go pretty good.
Because I'm a survivor and that's how you survive in America.
That's how you don't go insane.
That's how you don't go insane because otherwise you just go insane.
You bang your head against a wall until you see blood.
You know, just that moment of, I can't believe this fucking bitch.
I don't know about these house.
It's a moment.
This she's a fuck as a white Porsche.
Why Jays.
Why.
Oh.
Well, this isn't that bad at all.
That's America.
That's where I feel about the cardiac for cause for a moment.
I get a little angry that the beauty of American culture.
Any of it has been completely and totally destroyed to never return.
That bothers me a little bit, but it's not the worst show.
Goodbye.