#1334 - Fahim Anwar

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Fahim Anwar

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Fahim Anwar is a stand-up comic, actor, and host of "The Fahim Anwar Dance Hour" podcast. His new special, "Fahim Anwar: House Money," is free to watch on YouTube.www.fahimanwar.comhttps://youtu.be/lbQczAcZb_0?si=z5fxPqxIrRX2G9I6 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Transcript

0:00

What's up, man?

0:01

What's up, man?

0:02

How are you?

0:02

Good to see you.

0:03

Outside the store.

0:04

I know.

0:04

Isn't it weird when you run into a comedian that you don't normally hang out

0:07

with outside

0:07

the store?

0:08

I mean, I would recognize you, but sometimes you'll meet someone that you met

0:10

at a meeting

0:11

and then it's like at a Ralph's and you can't place the context.

0:14

That's bad.

0:15

Especially if it's like an executive and they really like you to remember them.

0:18

Are you good at faking it?

0:19

Nope.

0:19

Terrible.

0:20

What's your tell?

0:21

I just say I don't know.

0:23

I'm sorry.

0:23

Do you do this thing where you go, it's good seeing you instead of nice meeting

0:28

you?

0:28

Nope, I've done nice meeting you and they've go, we've met five times.

0:32

I go, shit.

0:33

I don't think people understand the volume of people that comedians, especially

0:36

at your

0:37

level, like come across every day.

0:38

Yeah.

0:39

Like how many shows we do, people come up to you afterwards and being like, oh,

0:42

great set,

0:43

blah, blah, blah.

0:43

And how many meetings in general?

0:45

Are you aware of Dunbar's number?

0:47

Oh, is that like how many number of people you can, it's like a hundred or

0:50

something you

0:50

can keep in your head?

0:51

I think it's some, I don't think it's an exact science, but I think they think

0:54

it's somewhere

0:54

around 150.

0:55

I believe it.

0:56

You got about 150 people in your head.

0:58

And after that, you fucked.

1:00

Yeah.

1:00

Yeah.

1:01

It's tough.

1:02

It makes sense, right?

1:03

There's no way you can keep them all in there.

1:04

No.

1:05

That doesn't make any sense.

1:06

Yeah.

1:07

It's cool outside the store, you know, having a chat.

1:09

Yes.

1:09

Yeah.

1:10

It's like you feel the most camaraderie with other comedians outside the store

1:14

when you

1:14

run into them at an airport.

1:16

I was just thinking about that.

1:17

Every time I go to LAX, I'll bump into like someone, Joe Coy or last time it

1:22

was Burt Kreischer

1:23

and like Jesus Trejo, we're going to do, I think Utah.

1:26

It's just like a hub for all of us.

1:28

Yes.

1:29

So you'll see so many because we're all just transients.

1:32

We're here for the middle of the week.

1:33

And then when the weekends come for the clubs, we're all going somewhere.

1:37

Yeah.

1:37

Like people that want to come to the store, Tuesday is like probably the best

1:40

night.

1:40

And people don't understand why, like it's so stacked.

1:42

Like, why is it you?

1:43

Why is it Burt?

1:44

Why is it Kreischer?

1:44

Why is it Joey Diaz?

1:46

Yeah.

1:46

Like, well, we're just biding time until the weekend.

1:48

Right.

1:49

And practicing.

1:50

Yeah.

1:50

Yeah.

1:51

It's the, one of the weird art forms that you can't practice, you can't

1:54

practice alone.

1:55

You have to use an audience.

1:57

Yeah.

1:57

Don't you think?

1:59

Oh, for sure.

1:59

And even like, I'll be telling the same joke and I won't really change the

2:03

words, but

2:03

it'll be like an inflection.

2:04

It's almost like, I don't know, when a jazz musician or something like plays a

2:09

note just a little

2:09

differently, you know, you ever notice that like a joke won't work?

2:12

Maybe because I'm, I'm like making a meal out of this word, but if I kind of

2:16

just like

2:17

throw it away.

2:17

Yep.

2:18

Oh, now that fixes it.

2:20

It's interesting to do it long enough where you realize it's like, it's not the

2:23

words.

2:23

Sometimes you, there's like a performance nuance to it to fix the joke.

2:28

Yeah.

2:28

Like it's on paper.

2:29

It's the same joke.

2:30

You know, what's really weird is that none of this shit is written anywhere.

2:33

Like what we're talking about.

2:35

You know what the worst is?

2:36

Like I did, um, like JFL, they're doing a taping out there for TV and they're

2:39

like,

2:39

send us your transcript.

2:40

Ugh.

2:41

So that means you have to sit at a computer and like, it takes, it takes the

2:45

magic, like

2:47

whatever your seven minutes you want to do for the taping, they want you to sit

2:50

on like

2:51

on a Mac and open up word and be like, how you guys doing or whatever.

2:55

Just like type it all out.

2:56

You need a better manager.

2:57

No, but the thing like, I refute, I didn't do it for you.

3:00

I just dodged it.

3:01

I asked Aaliyah cause I used to do it in the past and I was like, yo, they're

3:03

asking me

3:04

to write this out.

3:05

It's taking all the fun and organic.

3:07

Like I feel it would really hurt my performance.

3:09

Yeah.

3:10

If I literally wrote a transcript and I'm like a robot up there and he was like,

3:14

just don't

3:15

do it.

3:15

And I go, what happens?

3:17

He's like, nothing, nothing happens.

3:20

He's like, I've done it a million times that just keep, just be dodgy.

3:23

It's some pencil pusher that doesn't make any sense.

3:26

I think they get, you know, well, they have power over people that don't have a

3:30

name yet.

3:31

I think they have people above them breathing down their neck and then, you

3:34

know, shit rolls

3:34

downhill.

3:35

So then they keep on asking like, where is it?

3:37

Where is it?

3:37

Just change your number.

3:38

Yeah.

3:39

Yeah.

3:39

Well, that's why I had like the reps kind of be a buffer and I was very aloof

3:42

and like

3:42

he's very busy.

3:43

Did they contact you at all?

3:44

Was it direct to you?

3:45

The thing is I would, I would see them throughout the fest and they're lovely

3:47

people.

3:48

I love these people.

3:48

But they'd be like, where's the translation?

3:50

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

3:51

And I'd be like, ah, I'm, no, I just, no, I play the game a little better.

3:55

I go, I'm not there yet.

3:56

I'm not, I'm not in your mother's pussy level yet.

3:59

I still gotta be like, I'm gonna go back to the hotel room.

4:02

It's a funny thing to say.

4:02

It's a funny thing to say.

4:02

In your mother's pussy.

4:03

Yeah.

4:03

Where's the transcript?

4:04

You didn't check your mother's pussy?

4:06

I swore that I, I faxed, your mother's pussy has a fax machine.

4:10

I faxed it to her.

4:11

It should be in there.

4:13

Yeah.

4:13

You should go check.

4:14

Check around the corner.

4:15

Yeah.

4:17

So it's the worst having to type it out.

4:18

It's also like, Just for Laughs is a weird situation.

4:21

It's evolved, right?

4:23

It used, well, yes.

4:25

It's a weird way of looking at it.

4:26

It used to be very valuable for comedians.

4:29

Yeah.

4:29

Now it's very valuable for Just for Laughs.

4:32

Because they have this enormous platform and you go there and everybody knows

4:37

that all these

4:37

great comedians are gonna be there and they make an enormous amount of money

4:41

off the comedians.

4:42

It used to be the comedians would go there because the industry would go there

4:46

and the

4:46

whole key to the whole thing was development deals for sitcoms and they tossed

4:51

out so much

4:51

money.

4:52

I always hear about the gold rush and the heyday of JFL and how deals are

4:55

getting thrown out

4:57

left and right and like lives were made.

4:59

Oh, lives were made.

5:00

I don't know that JFL.

5:01

But fake lives were made too.

5:03

Like they ruined it.

5:05

Like because I have a theory about people who aren't comedians.

5:10

Like they see people laughing at stuff and they see something's fun.

5:14

They think it's funny.

5:15

But a comedian can go, this is just tricks.

5:17

Yeah.

5:18

Yeah.

5:19

Well, because the amount, the volume of comedy that we watch on a regular basis

5:25

is so much.

5:26

So we can discern, like Ian Edwards and I will talk about this.

5:28

We watch, we're students of comedy.

5:30

We watch a lot of comedy.

5:31

People can get like a huge pop out of the room, but like Ian can cut through

5:34

the bullshit

5:35

and know that like, oh, that's a parlor trick or yeah.

5:39

So it's a different type of thing.

5:40

But I think a lot of times, you know, suits and everything, they just hear decibels

5:45

or

5:45

right place, right time.

5:46

And they believe this lightning rod moment or whatever, this great set is

5:52

indicative of

5:53

their entire comedic being instead of like a lucky role.

5:57

Yeah.

5:57

Do you ever hear, what is that guy's name?

5:59

Was his name Chicken?

6:00

Is that what his name was?

6:00

I always hear that as an example.

6:02

Like I heard you blew the roof.

6:03

He was the guy that ended it all.

6:06

Like literally.

6:07

Because I think they gave him a half a million dollars or something crazy like

6:10

that.

6:11

I kind of want to see this chicken set.

6:12

Like what was the set that just blew everyone's mind?

6:15

He was a handsome fella and he was young and he was very energetic and they

6:21

thought he was

6:22

going to be the next Jim Carrey.

6:24

Did you see him around?

6:25

Was he an LA guy?

6:25

No, I don't know where he was from, but I saw him at Just for Laughs.

6:29

I saw him quite a few times and he was a nice guy.

6:33

But he was terrible.

6:34

I mean, in a way that like it was just a bunch of blah, but there was no

6:39

substance to it.

6:41

There was no thought to it.

6:42

So they tried to put it together.

6:44

They tried to make like a development deal and he did a little touring, but it

6:48

all went

6:49

south and it fell apart.

6:50

He eventually committed suicide.

6:52

Do you know how many years he was doing that?

6:54

He hung himself in front of a school.

6:55

A school?

6:57

Yeah.

6:57

Like that's what I had heard.

6:59

Like he hung himself on a tree in front of a school.

7:01

Jeez.

7:02

This is his last piece of performance art.

7:04

I don't know if that's true.

7:05

See, the thing is like, I shouldn't even say it on a podcast and millions of

7:08

people can

7:09

listen to him, but I did.

7:10

But the hanging part is right, right?

7:12

Yes, he definitely committed suicide.

7:13

It's one of those things, man, where like if it didn't work out and he didn't

7:17

develop,

7:18

it didn't, he didn't, he never became like a legit comedian.

7:22

But thing all right over there, Jamie?

7:24

Yeah, I think if, like if that had happened and he actually had, I don't know,

7:29

the equity

7:29

of a standup comedian and been doing it for long enough, that would be like a

7:34

bump in

7:34

the road, but you can come back from that.

7:35

Oh yeah.

7:36

If that's just sort of like your lotto ticket, then that's why it was so

7:40

drastic, I think.

7:41

Well, some people are just not, they're great comics, but they're not really

7:45

into acting.

7:45

They're not the best at acting and they got kind of forced into acting.

7:48

Yeah.

7:48

I love Mitch Hedberg's joke where he's like, he's a great standup, you know,

7:51

and it's like,

7:51

you know, they'll come up to me and they'll be like, can you act?

7:54

He's like, that's like going up to a chef and being like, can you farm?

7:57

Yeah, that's true.

7:58

I mean, I'm butchering it, but yeah, they're such different things.

8:01

But it's, you have an agent, right?

8:04

And the agent wants to make money.

8:05

So it's an avenue for cash.

8:07

Yeah.

8:07

And, you know, you look at Seinfeld and Tim Allen and Roseanne and Brett Butler,

8:12

and

8:12

there was all these comedians in the nineties that made a ass load of money

8:17

doing sitcoms.

8:19

Well, that's the quicker payoff too.

8:21

I even noticed it with my own career, like when I was a younger comedian.

8:24

Like out here in my early twenties, when I moved from Seattle, like when I

8:27

first got

8:28

reps and stuff, I was going out on these auditions for like CW shows or just

8:31

whatever.

8:32

They just throw you against the wall.

8:33

You're an actor.

8:35

Comedy is this thing you do at night.

8:37

Right.

8:37

They don't even really give a shit that you do standup.

8:39

They probably don't even think you're funny.

8:40

You know?

8:42

Yeah.

8:42

It's just a cute thing you do.

8:43

It's like a kid, like a dance recital or something.

8:45

Like they don't care as long as you're going to these auditions in the daytime.

8:48

So they just hope that you hit on what, like a series regular.

8:52

Yeah.

8:53

And then that's some cashflow for the biz.

8:54

Oh yeah.

8:55

But luckily, I mean, I don't know.

8:58

I think your successes are carved by your failures.

9:00

So I'm kind of fortunate that I would get some acting things here and there,

9:05

but never anything

9:06

substantial enough to take me away from standup.

9:08

Well, never anything substantial.

9:09

The worst is when they tell you to stop doing standup because it's messing with

9:12

your acting

9:13

role.

9:13

Like that's what they did to Tim Allen.

9:15

Oh really?

9:15

Yeah.

9:15

Because his acting, he was, you know, he was on home improvement.

9:19

It was a gigantic hit.

9:20

They were making gazillions of dollars, but he was a, I don't want to say he

9:24

was a blue

9:25

comedian, but he, some of it was a little risque.

9:29

So how did Saget deal with it?

9:31

He stopped doing standup.

9:33

Oh, okay.

9:34

So he stopped.

9:34

Dude, Saget stopped doing standup forever, forever.

9:38

He really didn't start doing it again until after that show was done.

9:42

What the fuck was that show again?

9:44

Full House.

9:45

Full House.

9:45

Yeah.

9:46

Yeah.

9:46

He stopped doing it for a long time and then kind of drifted his way back in

9:52

and now he

9:52

does it regularly.

9:53

Yeah.

9:53

Yeah.

9:54

I think that's, you know, maybe they did that at the time, but it's almost

9:57

detrimental

9:58

to let go.

9:59

Cause standup is your car.

10:00

Like it's your business.

10:02

You're in control over it.

10:03

And the TV stuff, it's like one hand washes the other.

10:05

If you let that go, you're letting go of this revenue stream so that when the

10:10

acting gig

10:10

is over, you're kind of fucked.

10:12

Cause this wasn't like building along with it.

10:14

It also was a point of confidence where you understand what's funny and what it

10:18

isn't.

10:18

Like, you know how to be funny because you're funny in front of a live audience

10:21

all the time.

10:23

Yeah, when you're at the store, you have to be there so much.

10:25

Like you're there more than someone at your level, you would expect someone at

10:28

your level

10:29

to be at.

10:29

You have to be there.

10:30

You can't slack off.

10:31

Everyone knows those really famous guys that slacked off and started to suck.

10:36

And the good thing is nowadays, the cycle of comedy, we all do a special

10:40

basically every

10:41

two years.

10:42

Pretty much all of us, Burr, Kreischer, Segura, Ari, everybody kind of does a

10:47

special or tries

10:48

to do a special somewhere around every two years.

10:51

So every two years you throw it all out and you're a beginner again.

10:54

You have no fucking act.

10:56

You're terrified.

10:57

You have to come up with new premises and scramble and that requires a lot of

11:01

performing.

11:02

Yeah.

11:02

I like how Burr was on here talking about, it was cool to hear a guy like him

11:05

even talk

11:06

about just the dilution of specials where he's like, they're not special

11:09

anymore.

11:10

It's just like a flyer or like a brochure, a brochure that I'm still around.

11:13

Yes.

11:14

That's all it is.

11:15

A little bit.

11:15

Yeah.

11:16

Yeah.

11:16

I mean, obviously there's different degrees of polish with some of the specials

11:19

and how great

11:20

some of them are, but there's so many now.

11:22

It's a weird name.

11:23

Special.

11:24

Yeah.

11:24

Well, it's just leftover from yesteryear.

11:26

It's like, why are albums a certain length?

11:28

Because of the...

11:30

Yeah, but at least an album is like a collection of music that is all in one

11:34

thing that you

11:35

get that's kind of been consistent forever.

11:37

A special, it's like, what is it anymore?

11:41

Mm-hmm.

11:42

What is it?

11:42

I guess 45 minutes to an hour of jokes strung together.

11:46

Yeah.

11:46

Yeah.

11:47

To let everybody know.

11:48

But it's also like an album.

11:50

Like if you go to see Fleetwood Mac, I don't know why the fuck I came up with

11:53

Fleetwood

11:53

Mac right there.

11:54

Yeah.

11:54

Like for Fleetwood Mac.

11:55

I do too.

11:55

Yeah.

11:55

But you're expecting the hits.

11:57

Whereas a comic, you're expecting the shit that's not on the special.

12:00

You're expecting all new stuff.

12:02

Yeah.

12:02

Yeah.

12:03

That is interesting.

12:03

Sometimes you'll get them where they're like, do the...

12:06

That's a very rare type of act though.

12:08

That's like Gaffigan gets that for sure because he's got some classic bits.

12:12

And I think that also happens with Russell Peters.

12:15

I think he gets some requests for classic bits.

12:18

Do you ever get that?

12:20

No.

12:20

They do.

12:21

I don't know how to do them anymore.

12:22

Oh, I know.

12:22

I purge them.

12:23

Yeah.

12:23

Like I barely know.

12:24

Yeah.

12:25

Yeah.

12:25

Someone was yelling out Bruce Jenner the other day.

12:27

I was like, I can't do that bit.

12:28

I don't know how to do it.

12:29

I'll fuck it up.

12:30

Yeah.

12:31

I'm like, you don't want it.

12:33

You don't want me to do a sad version.

12:35

Of just like what you could remember.

12:36

Or forget the taglines.

12:38

Oh, let me do it again.

12:39

Let me start again.

12:40

Yeah.

12:40

Redo, guys.

12:40

I fucked up, guys.

12:41

I fucked up.

12:42

Remember how much fun you were having?

12:42

Yeah.

12:43

Let's go back to one.

12:44

So you are one of the rare comedians that doesn't smoke pot.

12:47

Yeah, I guess so.

12:48

We talked about that.

12:49

And it's kind of interesting, especially being in this industry, not taking

12:52

advantage of that

12:53

because it's all...

12:55

Especially the store.

12:55

Like you'll do a show and they're like, hey, do you want these three bags,

12:58

these three pillowcases

12:59

of weed and CBD oil?

13:01

And you're like, no.

13:02

You don't take the CBD oil either?

13:03

I haven't done...

13:04

Like, is it good?

13:05

No, it's great for you.

13:06

What would I use it for?

13:07

It's great for anxiety.

13:08

It's great for...

13:09

It reduces inflammation.

13:11

It's great for...

13:13

A lot of people use it for sleep.

13:16

It's just good for you.

13:18

It's like it's a nutrient.

13:20

You know, it's healthy for you.

13:22

Yeah.

13:23

It's hot right now.

13:23

It's very hot.

13:24

Oh, if I was in the biz, I'd be like, get CBD on the phone.

13:26

Love CBD.

13:27

I love what CBD is doing.

13:28

Love it.

13:29

CBD, how you doing?

13:31

Canola's out.

13:32

CBD is out.

13:33

Yeah.

13:34

Canola is bullshit.

13:35

That stuff's bad for you.

13:37

Can you cook with CBD?

13:38

That's a good question.

13:39

I bet you can't.

13:40

I would imagine it has a low flashpoint.

13:44

Like it would burn quickly.

13:46

Yeah.

13:46

I don't know.

13:47

Let's find out.

13:47

I think it's usually mixed with coconut oil.

13:49

I think the people...

13:50

Coconut oil has a high flashpoint.

13:52

Wait, doesn't grapeseed oil have a low...

13:56

Grapeseed oil, I think, has a high flashpoint, too.

13:58

I think it's good to cook with.

13:59

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

14:00

Okay, so it takes longer for...

14:01

Yeah.

14:01

Okay.

14:01

It's a high temperature flat...

14:03

High before it smokes.

14:04

Some people said they've cooked with it, so...

14:06

Yeah, fucking burnouts.

14:07

Stoners.

14:08

Bunch of losers.

14:09

I bet they stink.

14:10

There's some people that do everything with weed, and they need to just stop.

14:17

Where's the hemp people?

14:18

I feel like you don't hear from them as much anymore.

14:20

Yeah, they're in weight.

14:21

They're laying in weight.

14:22

Yeah, was that like the back door?

14:23

Like, since hemp is cool, like, what about...

14:25

Well, CBD is for grandma.

14:27

That's how you get people to vote for it, because grandma and grandpa use it,

14:30

and it helps their joints.

14:31

Right.

14:31

They're like, well, I'll tell you what.

14:33

This CBD, I mean, it's not doing anything for my brain.

14:36

I'm not getting high, but my joints never felt better.

14:39

I feel amazing with the CBD, and I'm going to vote for it.

14:43

And I really want to get a hold of Trump and let him know.

14:46

That's not bad.

14:47

CBD is...

14:49

It really is the future.

14:50

What is his region from?

14:51

The guy?

14:52

Yeah, he's from...

14:53

It's random, random old guy from the middle of nowhere.

14:57

CBD is what does revolutionize nutrition and really affected my life in a very

15:03

positive way.

15:05

I feel like he's a little south, maybe Maryland, maybe somewhere outskirts of

15:09

Baltimore.

15:09

People don't know you have that gear, or you forget.

15:12

Like, you do voices really well.

15:13

I don't have that many, though.

15:15

I can only do a few.

15:16

Are you the type, though, where if you're doing a bit and you need this person

15:19

to talk

15:20

or whatever, you'll figure it out?

15:21

Yeah, I can get a few...

15:22

There's a few voices I can get out.

15:24

Yeah.

15:25

Yeah, because you're Alex Jones and, like...

15:27

But I know Alex so well.

15:28

I've known Alex for, like, more than 20 years.

15:31

So that's just easy?

15:32

Yeah, I've hung out with that guy.

15:34

We've been hammered together so many times.

15:35

It's like, it's...

15:36

That is the most misunderstood guy on the planet.

15:39

He just needs somebody next to him.

15:41

That's what...

15:42

He needs somebody to go, Alex, let's slow down.

15:43

Like, you had a real good point there.

15:46

You just need a manager who's always with him?

15:48

Yeah, he even agreed with me.

15:49

We talked about it.

15:50

I said, you just need, like, a rational journalist who's next to you to, like...

15:54

He goes, you're right.

15:55

You're right.

15:56

You're right.

15:56

I do need that.

15:57

And I go, just, you need someone who just balances it out.

16:01

Look, he was right about all this Jeffrey Epstein shit.

16:04

That is a fucking fact.

16:05

Alex Jones called this years ago.

16:08

Years ago.

16:09

He was saying that they take a lot of famous people to this island and they

16:14

have all these

16:15

young girls that this guy hooks them up with.

16:17

He was talking about this years ago.

16:19

Now it is mainstream news.

16:21

And this human hybrid experiments going on.

16:25

Yes, yes.

16:25

Which sounds like a complete joke when he says...

16:27

We brought it up.

16:27

We were like, what?

16:28

We were like, what?

16:29

Now it's fucking mainstream news.

16:31

This is a fact, man.

16:32

Like, people want to write that guy off because he'll tell you he's crazy.

16:36

He'll let you know he's crazy.

16:37

I mean, on my show, there was one of the funniest things he ever said.

16:41

He's like, look, I want to be honest with you.

16:43

I'm kind of retarded.

16:45

And I fell to the ground.

16:47

But that's who he really is, man.

16:49

People just have him lumped in, you know.

16:52

It's like some people, they don't represent the best aspects of themselves

16:56

right now.

16:57

Right to people.

16:58

And then other people try to define them.

16:59

Like, people try to define you.

17:01

It's really, one of the things that, it's really kind of weird about the more

17:05

famous you get,

17:06

the more people try to define you in a way that's detrimental or a way that's

17:11

dismissive

17:12

and limiting.

17:13

Like, I've noticed that after this Bernie Sanders thing that I did.

17:16

So, anybody listening to this, if you're saying this, I am not right-wing at

17:21

all.

17:22

So, stop saying that.

17:23

It's silly.

17:24

It's foolish.

17:25

I've interviewed right-wing people.

17:26

I am 100% left-wing.

17:28

The only thing that stops me from, the only things that I disagree with about

17:33

left-wing people

17:34

is support for the military, support for police, and the Second Amendment.

17:38

That's probably it.

17:39

Everything else across the board, I lean way left in terms of, like, Bernie

17:44

Sanders made

17:44

a ton of sense to me and I would 100% vote for him.

17:48

Tulsi Gabbard is my favorite.

17:49

I mean, I'm not a right-wing person.

17:52

So, this nonsense, like, so many people were saying that, you know, that Bernie

17:55

Sanders spent

17:56

this time on a right-wing podcast, like, what?

17:59

What are you saying?

17:59

Sure.

18:00

And don't you think he weighed the pros and cons of, like, it was an

18:02

opportunity for him

18:03

and I think everyone thought it was a win as well.

18:05

I don't think he had any idea who I was.

18:07

Really?

18:07

Yeah.

18:07

I think it was one of his young staff members who's friends with Kyle Kalinske,

18:12

who is a

18:13

really good left-wing progressive talk show guy on YouTube.

18:17

And Kyle hooked it all up.

18:20

And this idea that, you know, it's bad for someone to talk to people, it's just,

18:27

it's

18:27

foolish.

18:28

Yeah.

18:28

There's a weird thing that's going on right now.

18:30

I thought it was a great platform for him to, like, get his ideas out there and

18:33

to be

18:33

heard in something other than just sound bites.

18:35

Yes.

18:35

That could be taken out of context.

18:36

It's a great platform, I think, for anyone who's running for anything to have a

18:40

long-form

18:41

conversation.

18:42

And it's good for us, too, because we get to find out who they really are.

18:45

You really can't hide in a long conversation.

18:48

Oh, yeah.

18:48

Three hours?

18:49

Yeah.

18:49

I only did an hour and ten with Bernie.

18:51

That's all he had, because, you know, the guy's running for, he's legit running

18:55

for, like,

18:55

he could be president.

18:56

Right.

18:56

He's not like, you know, like, there's some people that are running for

18:59

president, they're

19:00

like, all right, bro.

19:00

You know, like, what was that guy, Zoltan, what is his name?

19:04

He was the guy who was running the transhumanist platform, Ishtavan, how did he

19:12

say his last

19:13

name?

19:13

Very nice guy.

19:14

Sorry, I forgot his name.

19:15

Is that this, for this coming?

19:16

No, it was the last one.

19:17

It was 2016, and we had him on.

19:19

You know, it was like one of those guys who were like, all right.

19:21

Sure, why not?

19:21

Like Ben Glebe, you're like, all right, good luck.

19:23

You don't think Ben's going to win?

19:24

Oh, I do.

19:25

Okay.

19:26

Oh, yeah.

19:27

But you got to respect the swing.

19:29

That's what's great about this country, you know?

19:30

The swing?

19:31

The swing.

19:31

What are you talking about?

19:32

You can run for president?

19:34

No, no, not that swing.

19:35

Just like...

19:36

Anybody can run for president?

19:38

Yeah.

19:38

Yeah, I do.

19:39

And it sounds far-fetched, like, yeah, okay.

19:41

Mm-hmm.

19:42

But, I mean, you've got to be crazy enough to think it can be you.

19:45

Well, look, anything can and will happen when it comes to being president.

19:51

Like, people get assassinated.

19:52

People get exposed as being a criminal.

19:55

Like, look, do you remember when Michael Avenatti was the hero of the left?

20:00

Oh, yeah.

20:01

The Democratic Party was like, he's the guy that's going to run against Donald

20:04

Trump,

20:05

and he's going to take him down because he's tough, and he's this, and he's

20:07

that,

20:08

and Michael Avenatti.

20:09

I mean, there's a compilation of left-wing pundits talking about the hero that

20:15

is Michael Avenatti.

20:16

You don't hear a fucking word from that guy anymore.

20:18

So, if you were in a time capsule, right, a year ago, when everyone was Michael

20:22

Avenatti crazy,

20:23

and they just, and then they woke you up.

20:26

Fahim, it's 12 months later, and you'd be, like, looking over the news.

20:29

Hey, where's Avenatti?

20:31

I mean, I was...

20:32

That happens on both sides.

20:33

I went all in.

20:34

They'll have their champion, and then this other shit, you know?

20:36

Yes.

20:37

D or R, there's always, they ascend, and then there's some, like, dark shit

20:39

from the past,

20:40

and then you don't see them anymore.

20:41

But then there's guys that you know.

20:43

Like, one of the things that I was getting at during the Trump campaign when he's

20:47

running

20:47

for president the first time was, like, this guy's not going away.

20:50

Like, this is not going away.

20:52

He knows what he's doing.

20:52

He knows how to fuck with people.

20:53

When did you know?

20:54

Like, how, like, early in the campaign did you kind of realize?

20:58

I don't know, man, but my...

21:00

Also, did you, do you feel like you had a better read on it just doing stand-up

21:04

across the country?

21:05

Because I feel like you could be in a bubble, you could be in New York and L.A.,

21:08

and just

21:08

be like, oh, that's never going to happen.

21:09

This is ridiculous.

21:10

Yes.

21:11

But doing stand-up in some red states, you kind of, you're with the people, you're

21:15

doing

21:15

jokes, and, like, you get the temperature of an audience more so than someone

21:18

who just

21:18

has, like, a desk job.

21:19

For sure.

21:20

But also, I have a lot of right-wing friends, a lot of right-wing friends,

21:23

especially from

21:24

the hunting world.

21:25

I have a lot of friends that live in, like, I have friends that live in Iowa

21:29

and Oregon,

21:30

and they have a lot of right-wing friends, too.

21:32

And there's a whole part of the country that the big cities, New York and Los

21:37

Angeles and

21:38

the big Democratic-leaning cities, they were all dismissing.

21:43

The Democrats thought that Hillary was the most experienced and Trump was a

21:48

buffoon, and

21:49

that that grab her by the pussy tape, that was it.

21:51

We got it.

21:52

It's in the bag.

21:53

They all believed that.

21:54

But the middle of the country did not believe in her.

21:57

They didn't trust her.

21:58

They thought she was some sleazy politician who's been involved in the business

22:04

forever,

22:04

and she licks her finger and figures out which way the wind's blowing, and that's

22:08

what she

22:08

says.

22:09

And that they thought that Trump was a straight shooter, and he's going to

22:13

drain that swamp,

22:14

and he's going to do this and bring jobs back, and he's talking about clean

22:18

coal.

22:19

It's almost like I think he's just so outside of the system that it seemed that

22:24

he could

22:25

have done anything, just like we want someone to throw a wrench into it.

22:28

Yes, that's it.

22:29

There's a lot of people that just wanted a wrench thrown into it, and he

22:31

definitely threw

22:32

a wrench into it.

22:32

And I think ultimately that's going to be good for the left as well, because

22:36

they're going

22:37

to realize that you can't just get away with that same stupid old school

22:42

politician

22:43

style of doing it anymore.

22:45

I think he's just blown up the playbook.

22:48

Even like Bernie calling Trump, was it stupid or an idiot in a post or

22:51

something?

22:52

Amazing.

22:53

This is a new paradigm.

22:54

They're adopting, they're taking pages out of what worked for Trump.

22:58

They're like, look, we've got to take some bully tactics.

23:01

And then even Moscow Mitch, I'm like, oh, they get it.

23:04

Nicknames are the only thing that stick.

23:06

Yelling at the rally like, Moscow Mitch.

23:09

This is part of the playbook now.

23:11

Sleepy Joe Biden.

23:12

Yeah.

23:13

That's my favorite.

23:15

As evolved as we like to think that we get as adults, when it comes to politics,

23:19

it goes

23:20

back to grade school.

23:20

The only thing that seems to be effective is yelling Moscow Mitch, or sleepy

23:25

Joe Biden,

23:26

or Pocahontas.

23:28

Yep.

23:29

These are like stand-up rules.

23:31

It's just like Rickles.

23:33

Yeah, it's so interesting.

23:35

And my favorite about the Pocahontas one was when people were saying that he's

23:39

racist

23:40

for calling Elizabeth Warren Pocahontas.

23:41

It's a Disney movie.

23:43

You can't go that far.

23:46

Yeah, if someone called me Aladdin, I'd be juiced.

23:48

Aladdin's cool.

23:50

He has a pet monkey.

23:51

Yeah, man.

23:52

He eats apples.

23:53

Yes.

23:53

Did you see the most recent one?

23:55

I did.

23:55

It was pretty good.

23:56

Yeah.

23:56

Got bad reviews.

23:57

Really?

23:57

I didn't understand it.

23:58

What I read was that Will Smith modernized it too much.

24:04

What does that mean?

24:05

I don't know.

24:06

I prefer a classic genie.

24:07

They used modern, urban vernacular.

24:10

They just weren't uncomfortable with that.

24:13

You remember how the first photos came out of Will Smith as a genie?

24:17

I love how little it takes to whip this nation into a frenzy.

24:21

I'll wake up and open up Twitter, and then the Will Smith genie, everyone is

24:27

freaking out

24:28

over that, and it's crazy how we put them on the same pedestal, like some sort

24:32

of Trump

24:32

scandal or like Pedophile Island, and then the Blue Genie or Sonic looks weird.

24:38

Right.

24:38

Sonic the Hedgehog looks weird.

24:40

Right.

24:40

They changed Sonic.

24:40

And both take on the same amount of fervor online.

24:44

Yeah.

24:44

Same amount of psychic energy.

24:45

Yeah.

24:46

Yeah.

24:46

One of my, I think one of the biggest gaffes, biggest mistakes ever was Ben Affleck

24:51

thinking

24:51

he could be Batman.

24:52

If Ben Affleck never ran for Batman, he would have 50% less hate.

24:56

You think?

24:57

Yes.

24:57

Aren't there some people who liked, or no?

24:59

There's no one who liked Ben Affleck as Batman.

25:01

Even Ben Affleck didn't like himself as Batman.

25:03

Oh, no.

25:03

When was the last time you heard anybody talk about Ben Affleck as Batman?

25:07

Ready?

25:07

Go.

25:07

Yeah.

25:09

No one.

25:10

Christian Bale's Batman, motherfucker.

25:12

Even Michael Keaton's Batman, but he's old.

25:15

That's so hard, though.

25:16

You know, like, you're not going to hit a home run with Batman every time.

25:19

Right?

25:20

Everybody who does it and fails their career hits a ditch.

25:23

Who do you think?

25:24

All right.

25:24

Do you think, okay, Kilmer, leveled up or no from Batman?

25:27

Well, Kilmer did it once, and he did a good job, but then he decided to get fat.

25:32

He's like, fuck this business.

25:34

What about?

25:34

He went crazy.

25:35

Is he in the Top Gun movie, the new one?

25:37

I hope so.

25:38

I hope so.

25:38

That'd be great.

25:39

But the lady's not in it.

25:40

The girlfriend?

25:41

The really hot blonde?

25:42

What was her name?

25:43

Kelly something or another?

25:44

McGillis.

25:45

McGillis?

25:46

Is that it?

25:46

Yeah.

25:47

She was beautiful back in the day.

25:48

I think she might have gone the Val Kilmer route, if you know what I'm saying.

25:51

What about Clooney?

25:57

Look at that.

25:58

Clooney?

25:59

Clooney was like a comedic.

26:02

He's selling Nespresso and tequila?

26:03

Nespresso.

26:05

His was like a comedic take.

26:07

Arnold Schwarzenegger made way more money than George Clooney in that movie.

26:11

Oh, me and my buddies, we have a thing.

26:14

Because I'm worth it.

26:14

We just say, cool party.

26:16

We just say it to each other, no matter what party we're at.

26:18

What is that?

26:19

Alicia Silverstone?

26:20

Yeah.

26:21

She was in that?

26:21

Yeah.

26:22

And Chris O'Donnell?

26:23

Yeah.

26:23

What?

26:24

Why did I forget about that?

26:25

He was Robin.

26:26

Now he's on a TV show with LL Cool J.

26:28

What is that one?

26:29

Is that like a NCIS or something?

26:31

That is something that the same people who talk like that guy was making fun of,

26:34

that's what they

26:35

DVR that.

26:35

Oh.

26:36

That's a wonderful show.

26:38

Once you get to certain parts of the country, isn't it interesting to find out

26:41

what their

26:41

favorite shows are?

26:42

Yeah.

26:42

Yeah.

26:43

That's where all those NCIS shows, that's where they get all their millions of

26:46

views.

26:47

For sure.

26:47

That's a wonderful show.

26:49

Chris does a great job.

26:51

And he just pairs well with LL Cool J. He's a little aggressive to me.

26:57

I mean, he's all right.

26:58

He's a good fella, I guess.

27:00

But I really love Chris.

27:01

I wish we'd get more work.

27:03

We should bring him back to the movies.

27:05

And I think he'd be an excellent Captain Kirk.

27:08

He could be Captain Kirk.

27:11

Also, like I'll go to my aunt's house and that's just playing all the time.

27:16

Yes.

27:16

Like Burn Notice.

27:17

I mean, that's not even on anymore, but like these USA shows.

27:19

Yeah.

27:19

Jag.

27:20

Remember Jag?

27:20

Oh my God, Jag.

27:21

Yeah.

27:22

Reruns of Jag.

27:23

My brother.

27:23

Oh my, show's on.

27:24

Jag.

27:25

Love it.

27:27

And the thing is, like, we can laugh about these shows, but they're like, 20

27:29

seasons?

27:30

Jag was on for 20 seasons?

27:34

Well, we were just going over Survivor the other day.

27:36

Survivor was on when Fear Factor debuted.

27:39

It was already on the air.

27:40

And that Fear Factor came out in 2001 or 2002, somewhere around right after

27:44

September 11th.

27:45

I remember that.

27:46

Because I remember being asked questions like, was it appropriate to have a

27:49

show about fear after September 11th?

27:51

Oh my God.

27:52

Some guy asked me that.

27:53

I literally wanted to climb through the phone and strangle them.

27:55

I'm like, you fucking bitch.

27:57

What was your answer, though?

27:58

Was it?

27:58

Like, that's nonsense.

27:59

What if you walk it back?

28:00

It's a game show, stupid.

28:01

You're like, I'm sorry, I didn't know that fear would play such a factor.

28:03

For you.

28:04

But, so Survivor's been on, what did we say it was?

28:10

28,000 seasons?

28:11

On the 39th, I believe.

28:13

39th season.

28:14

It's still going?

28:15

Yes.

28:15

You didn't even know.

28:16

No.

28:17

I think The Amazing Race is still going, too.

28:18

Did you remember that show?

28:19

It is, yeah.

28:19

Yeah.

28:20

CBS is killing it.

28:21

Yes.

28:22

That one won the award every year for the Emmy's, like, best show, or best game

28:26

show,

28:26

or whatever, reality.

28:27

I don't know what it is, but yeah.

28:28

Wow.

28:29

12 times in a row or something.

28:31

Crazy.

28:31

Yeah.

28:32

Did you like Fear Factor more than, because I remember I loved news radio.

28:36

Mm-hmm.

28:37

That was one of my favorite shows.

28:38

So, did you enjoy that more, Fear Factor?

28:40

Are there different things?

28:41

They're definitely different things.

28:43

I enjoyed the paycheck from Fear Factor far more.

28:45

Uh-huh.

28:46

I liked working without actors, but I loved news radio way more.

28:51

News radio was just a far better show.

28:53

Oh, yeah.

28:53

So, it was a really good show.

28:54

Well, they're different things.

28:55

They're very different animals.

28:56

It ruined me.

28:57

It would, it would, it's like going from the Comedy Store to Uncle Fuck Stick's

29:02

Chuckle

29:02

Hut.

29:03

Uh-huh.

29:03

And, on a Monday night, you know, it's like every other sitcom that I looked at,

29:09

every

29:09

other sitcom that I read for, or that I got scripts for, rather, I was like, oof,

29:14

this

29:14

is just not good stuff.

29:16

Isn't it interesting when you get sides, like, just sides, or just, like, one

29:19

scene or two

29:20

scenes for a show, and you could tell it's good just from that?

29:22

Oh, yeah.

29:22

That's so rare.

29:23

It is rare.

29:24

Yeah.

29:24

Yeah.

29:24

When someone's a good writer, good sitcom writing is hard to do, man.

29:29

That is a really hard gig.

29:31

I mean, there's a, and then, but then some people have bad sitcom writing, but

29:35

they know

29:36

how to make a bad, successful sitcom.

29:38

Like, there's bad, successful sitcoms that last forever.

29:42

They're just unoffensive enough to stay on the air and keep you watching with

29:47

your mouth

29:48

slack.

29:48

Yeah.

29:48

I mean, formulas exist for a reason.

29:51

Those big bang kids, they're so, they're so clever with their writing.

29:56

That's what keeps me doing.

29:58

I'm waiting for the vocabulary.

29:59

Does this guy ever shut off CBS?

30:01

No.

30:02

Or just keep it on the whole time?

30:04

I tried Fox, but they're too hostile.

30:06

Did you know that your TV has other channels, sir?

30:09

What?

30:09

Yeah.

30:10

There's other channels, other programming you could watch.

30:11

Well, when they took Bill O'Reilly off the air, I said, CBS is my channel.

30:16

That's my channel now.

30:17

Yeah.

30:17

You ever been in the, like, an audition, and it's terrible, but everyone goes

30:21

through the

30:22

motions where everyone's just, like, cracking up like it's the greatest show on

30:26

earth.

30:26

Yeah.

30:27

Like it's Def Jam, like, because the writers and the directors are in the room,

30:30

and it's,

30:30

like...

30:30

The fake laugh to get everybody excited.

30:32

Yeah, they have to, because I think they need this rocket fuel to get this

30:36

project off the

30:36

ground.

30:37

Yes.

30:37

And they need to give the writer confidence.

30:38

They have to give the director confidence.

30:40

Yeah.

30:40

They have to give the studio people confidence that it's all good.

30:42

It's a fake moment.

30:44

The fake laugh.

30:45

It's gross.

30:47

And the thing is, though, like, it's also, not only is it gross, though, but it's

30:51

the

30:51

30th time.

30:52

There's just those, there's 30 people in the waiting room, and they're laughing

30:56

like it's

30:57

the first time.

30:57

They're faking it left and right, up and down.

31:00

And we know fake laughs.

31:01

Oh, we do know fake laughs.

31:02

It's offensive.

31:03

If someone's fake laughing at you, it's almost worse than not laughing.

31:07

It is worse than not laughing at all.

31:08

If you say a joke, and they're like, ha, ha, ha.

31:10

Oh, you're like, get him out of here.

31:11

Get, you get out of here, you bad person.

31:14

Yeah.

31:14

You, you, you, you, you, you.

31:15

It's the quickest way to heckle, though, right?

31:17

Just like, ha, ha, ha.

31:20

Like, no one can say anything.

31:21

When I'm laughing, it's like the Fredo thing.

31:24

No, I thought your name was Fredo.

31:25

That Fredo thing.

31:27

Dude, I was talking to my buddy.

31:28

I thought that you were Fredo.

31:29

Did you see that?

31:30

Yeah, of course.

31:31

Did you see it, Jamie?

31:32

That Chris Cuomo guy, Donald Trump had the best line today.

31:38

Donald Trump won the internet today with this.

31:40

He said, should we red flag Chris Cuomo?

31:43

Because he seemed unhinged.

31:44

He was using terrible language.

31:46

Should not have a gun.

31:47

He basically exposed those red flag laws.

31:51

He was like, you see a guy like that, he's irrational.

31:54

That guy's irrational.

31:55

He goes, I'll wreck your shit.

31:56

I'll throw you down a flight of stairs.

31:57

I like the stairs comment.

31:58

That was, I enjoyed that.

32:00

Like, what is he talking about?

32:01

Because a guy called you Fredo?

32:02

And he was saying that Fredo is the same thing as the N-word?

32:04

I didn't know Fredo was derogatory.

32:07

Or maybe I'm new to it.

32:08

I just, not that I would ever try to call someone Fredo.

32:11

Sometimes, you know.

32:12

It's not.

32:12

It's a fucking character in a movie.

32:15

It's like Aladdin.

32:15

Is it like, there's no, like, I don't know.

32:20

Cultural context?

32:21

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

32:21

I'm Italian.

32:22

There's no cultural context for Fredo where people are like, what the fuck did

32:26

you say?

32:27

It doesn't exist.

32:28

It does not exist.

32:29

Right.

32:29

Well, you could say it for someone who's a traitor.

32:32

But why?

32:32

That doesn't even make sense with Chris Cuomo.

32:34

It's just, it's just a loser in a movie.

32:37

Well, I guess, like, you know what he's trying to do.

32:40

I mean, obviously, he's trying to insult him.

32:42

Yes.

32:42

Even if there is no history of this word existing for, you know, I'm ignorant.

32:47

I don't know if it does exist or not.

32:49

But, like, you know this guy's trying to take shots.

32:51

It's certainly not a compliment.

32:52

Sure.

32:52

Yeah.

32:53

I mean, it's a loser in a movie.

32:54

It's a brother that always fell short.

32:57

And he turned on his own brother, who was the godfather.

33:00

Because he wanted to be the godfather.

33:01

What if he explained this insult to Chris Cuomo?

33:04

That would be great.

33:04

Because Fredo was a weak Italian in the movie.

33:07

And I'm referencing your character.

33:09

Yes.

33:09

You are the son of a great man.

33:12

Because, you know, he's Mario Cuomo's son.

33:14

And you probably, you know, let's be honest about why you're here.

33:19

Yeah.

33:20

You know, the name is familiar.

33:21

And, you know, it helps.

33:24

Yeah.

33:24

But it's that Italian energy that, like, and again, this is my people.

33:32

You're full Italian?

33:33

No.

33:34

Three quarters, though.

33:35

But these people that react that way are common.

33:40

It's like, what?

33:42

What the fuck did you say to me?

33:43

I'll fucking wreck your shit.

33:45

Yeah.

33:45

But you're not supposed to be a respected political pundit and behave like that.

33:51

That is nonsense.

33:52

Yeah.

33:53

That's nonsense.

33:53

That's nonsense.

33:55

It's a silly way to behave.

33:57

It's silly.

33:58

That guy needs to work out more.

34:00

You gotta be extra.

34:00

But he works out a lot.

34:01

It's tough.

34:01

It's tough when not.

34:02

Might be on too much testosterone.

34:04

So I'm gonna need to take him to tell your doctor, just pare you down a little

34:07

bit.

34:08

Take whatever you're at, just drop it by half.

34:10

Settle down, bro.

34:12

Or just work out really hard before you go outside.

34:15

Do some yoga.

34:17

Meditate.

34:17

I like when those, because Ellie's a pretty passive town for the most part.

34:20

You'll get some of those.

34:21

You'll get, like, an East Coast guy.

34:22

You're like, oh, shit.

34:23

Who's this guy?

34:24

You know what I mean?

34:24

Long Island.

34:25

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

34:26

East Coast.

34:26

Visiting from out of town.

34:27

Like, whoa, whoa.

34:27

No one.

34:28

Hey, Fredo.

34:28

Yeah, we don't actually fight here.

34:29

We just talk big.

34:31

Go get my shine box.

34:31

Yeah.

34:33

It was a very embarrassing moment, but I think it's a very important moment.

34:38

Look at him.

34:38

First of all, he is Fredo for life now.

34:42

I hope he understands that.

34:44

He's Fredo for life.

34:47

Unless you want to get tossed down a flight of stairs.

34:48

He ain't tossing anybody down a flight of stairs.

34:50

That's nonsense.

34:51

He doesn't want to get sued.

34:52

He's not going to do that.

34:53

He's not going to touch somebody.

34:54

He'll hire someone.

34:55

He's not going to do that.

34:56

He's not going to do that.

34:56

He's not going to do that.

34:56

He's not going to do that.

34:57

He's not doing shit.

34:58

He's not doing a goddamn thing.

34:59

That's one of the reasons why it's so funny.

35:01

He's not doing nothing.

35:02

That is Fredo.

35:05

You'll never get away from that now.

35:07

Better embrace that shit.

35:09

Better start selling Fredo t-shirts with your face on it.

35:12

Listen, CNN's probably going to fire him.

35:14

I would imagine.

35:15

No, I think they're standing behind him.

35:17

Get the fuck out of here.

35:18

Yeah.

35:18

Are they really?

35:20

For now.

35:21

I think they felt like he was attacked or unprovoked.

35:23

What?

35:24

Yeah.

35:24

By someone calling him Fredo?

35:25

Yeah, man.

35:26

Those are fighting wars, dude.

35:27

Someone call me Fredo.

35:28

I'm not even Italian.

35:29

I'd snap.

35:29

I go, how dare you?

35:30

He's a silly man.

35:33

That's what exposes him is that he's a silly man.

35:36

It wasn't like someone was being equally aggressive to him and he was defending

35:40

himself.

35:41

Sometimes if you're in a situation where someone's very aggressive to you, you

35:45

almost have to be aggressive back just to let them know, hey, I'll go there

35:48

with you.

35:49

We could go to a dark place right now and I'm not going to let you hit me.

35:54

I'm not going to let you do something to me.

35:56

If you think that I'm a pushover, you know, I'm here to defend myself.

35:59

But that wasn't that way.

36:00

Like someone was mocking him and he turned violent.

36:03

I think it was a little bit of a honeypun situation where he just wanted to get

36:06

a rise and he was recording from down low.

36:08

They wanted him to do something.

36:09

Chris Cuomo, this is CNN.

36:12

CNN's lost their fucking mind.

36:14

Chris Cuomo defended himself when he was verbally attacked with the use of an

36:18

ethnic slur in an orchestrated setup, the spokesperson said.

36:22

We completely support him for now.

36:24

Listen to me.

36:25

This is not done.

36:27

This is not done.

36:27

This is just beginning to take on a form of its own.

36:30

You can't, you can't say that's an ethnic slur.

36:33

That is a fucking character in a movie.

36:35

Yeah, there's news to me.

36:36

I was like, oh fuck.

36:37

It's not an ethnic slur.

36:37

And him saying that that's like calling it the N word.

36:39

That is so preposterous.

36:41

That is so offensively stupid.

36:44

Do you ever get that?

36:46

Like people trying to take shots or get you to slip or something?

36:49

Most people are nice.

36:50

Yeah, for the most part.

36:51

I've had guys say goofy shit to me and I try to say goofy shit back to them.

36:55

Like at shows or just on the street or what?

36:56

Just in both things.

36:57

But I'm not in a, I'm not a hostile person.

37:00

Yeah.

37:01

I look hostile.

37:02

Yeah.

37:02

But I'm not hostile.

37:03

Like I'm, I'm nice for the most part.

37:05

I've had people get dicky with me.

37:06

And then what do you do?

37:07

How do you handle it?

37:08

Get dicky back.

37:09

Just like.

37:10

Yeah.

37:10

You say I'll throw you down a flag of stairs.

37:12

I don't say that.

37:13

It's just, it's not, it never escalates to that.

37:17

It's like some people get weird.

37:18

You know what gets weird?

37:18

The fucking autograph people at the airport.

37:21

How do they know, man?

37:22

How do they like, would you be surprised sometimes?

37:24

Somebody tell somebody off.

37:25

Somebody pays somebody off.

37:26

What do you do?

37:26

Do you sign or do you just keep walking?

37:27

Tell them I'll sign one.

37:28

I'll sign one.

37:29

They get mad at me.

37:29

I got a stock in these.

37:31

I go, no, no, I'm not working for you.

37:32

Yeah.

37:33

Not working for you.

37:33

Like there's people that charge people.

37:36

They'll go to those conventions and they'll sit at a booth and they'll charge

37:39

someone X amount

37:40

of dollars.

37:40

Like it's like 20 bucks or more for an autograph photo.

37:43

I don't do that.

37:43

I'm not going to do that ever.

37:45

So I'm not, I'm not, I don't, I don't even want you selling my picture.

37:50

I don't want it to be sold.

37:51

Yeah.

37:52

I don't want my autograph to be valuable.

37:53

But if, if I felt, if I thought someone was a really a fan and they wanted me

37:58

to sign

37:58

something.

37:58

That's different.

37:59

Yes.

37:59

I would sign something for him.

38:00

I'd be happy to.

38:01

Instead of like a four year old guy with a ponytail.

38:02

If you have a stack of fucking photos of me in various, you're selling those.

38:07

Yeah.

38:08

I know you're selling those.

38:09

So some guy, one guy got mad at me and he was like, follow me around LAX.

38:12

I was like, dude, I'm not signing anymore.

38:14

He's like, next time I see you.

38:15

Okay.

38:15

I'm like, I'm not signing.

38:16

But you know, by signing one of them, you're making it very valuable.

38:20

I don't care.

38:21

If you sign the whole stack.

38:22

That's fine.

38:22

I'm not going to be rude.

38:24

I'm not going to be rude.

38:24

So I'm just trying to like, look, I'll sign one.

38:26

And I tell them that.

38:27

Like a bunch of them in Portland this weekend, there was like 10 people met me

38:30

at the airport.

38:31

So I'll sign one.

38:32

I think one is good.

38:33

But I ran into a guy in Philadelphia.

38:34

They got mad.

38:35

He tried to get me to sign another one.

38:36

I go, I'm not signing that.

38:37

And he goes, he goes, you don't fuck, you fucking forget your fans.

38:40

I go, you're not a fan.

38:40

I go, you're selling these.

38:42

He goes, what, you think they're worth a lot?

38:43

I go, if they're, why do you hear that?

38:45

This is like some weird mental gymnastics.

38:46

Like, you think you better?

38:47

He goes, they're like, your fucking autograph's worth about $6.95.

38:51

I go, and you're a mooch.

38:52

I go, you're over here trying to get me to work for you.

38:54

I go, go get a job.

38:55

And so we had this like weird conversation.

38:57

Like, what are you saying?

38:58

You want me to sign these so you could sell them, but you're saying they're not

39:01

worth anything.

39:02

So I'm a loser.

39:02

But you're meeting me at the airport to try to get me to sell things, to sign

39:05

things.

39:05

You looked up my flight.

39:06

It's so silly.

39:08

It's so silly.

39:08

But I just don't like the idea of it because primarily I don't like the idea

39:13

that there's

39:14

some weird loophole where someone can get you to work for them.

39:16

They're just showing up and you're signing these real quick and I'm going to

39:19

sell them.

39:20

Because you're asking someone to work for you, even if it only takes five

39:24

minutes.

39:24

Or they're taking something from you.

39:26

One guy had 30 pictures.

39:28

He had 30.

39:29

I go, how many you got there?

39:30

He goes, 30.

39:30

I go, you out of your fucking mind.

39:32

How long is it going to take?

39:34

If you sat at a Starbucks and you just did them all.

39:36

You're like, hold on family.

39:37

I'm just going to get through these.

39:38

The UFC makes fighters do that.

39:40

They sit down, but they give them out to fans and they do stuff with them.

39:45

They're promotional material.

39:45

It's not one guy.

39:47

And everybody signs them.

39:48

All the fighters in the card sign them.

39:50

They're valuable to fans.

39:51

As a fan, I have a signed poster out there from Efren Reyes that I purchased.

39:58

And Efren Reyes is the world's greatest pool player.

40:01

I love pool.

40:02

And he's this Filipino wizard.

40:05

They call him the wizard.

40:06

He's an amazing pool player.

40:07

So I bought it.

40:09

It was signed by Efren Reyes.

40:10

I got so excited.

40:11

But I would never ask Efren to sign something and then sell it.

40:15

You're not going to track him down to the airport?

40:16

Someone at the promotion for the tournament, they probably got him to sign a

40:20

bunch of them.

40:21

They sell them.

40:22

And it probably helped offset the costs and things along those lines.

40:26

But the autograph collector is a different animal than the autograph seller.

40:31

So if you're a person that is just like, I love Fahim's comedy.

40:35

He's really funny.

40:35

I want to go to the comedy store and see if I get him to sign something for me.

40:38

That's a fan.

40:39

For sure.

40:39

But if you have 30 of them, you're going to go on eBay and you're going to try

40:42

to make

40:43

50 bucks.

40:43

That's what you're doing.

40:44

Well, you're not going to make 50 bucks.

40:45

I'm just going to tell you right now.

40:46

They might.

40:47

If they hold on to it.

40:48

If they sit on it.

40:49

Dude, you're a funny guy.

40:49

Well, that's nice.

40:50

You have a lot of talent.

40:50

What have you seen?

40:51

I'm always surprised.

40:52

Because I came to the store.

40:53

I always see you at the store.

40:54

You know?

40:54

And you're like, oh man, your videos are funny.

40:56

And I don't know what you watch.

40:58

You're just on this other level.

40:59

I don't think it even reaches you.

41:01

No, that's nonsense.

41:02

That other level thing is a complete, total illusion.

41:05

I'm here to tell everybody.

41:07

Yes and no.

41:08

Because you are a rarity, I think, of the comedians at the store who have

41:12

gotten to a certain point

41:13

where you kind of have a relationship with everyone at the comedy store.

41:16

From the door guy to the waitresses to stand-ups like me or Santino or Ian.

41:21

You have a relationship with everyone.

41:23

You come through.

41:24

You spend time at the store.

41:25

You're being pulled by a lot of things like UFC and the family and all this

41:29

stuff, the podcast.

41:30

But you will hang at the store.

41:32

Well, that's a community.

41:34

It's very important to me.

41:35

That community means a lot.

41:38

It means a lot.

41:39

And I like supporting the up-and-coming people.

41:43

I think it's very important.

41:44

I think all the door people, the guys who worked a lot, those guys, we're all

41:50

going to work

41:51

together someday.

41:51

It's very possible.

41:54

I'll be at one theater, they'll be at another theater.

41:56

I'll be at a club over here, they'll be at a club over there.

41:58

We're all the same.

41:59

It's just an illusion.

42:01

It's just time.

42:02

And I think it comes from martial arts.

42:04

Because in martial arts, everybody trains together.

42:07

I'm a black belt in jujitsu, but I'm as friendly to the white belts as I am to

42:11

other black belts.

42:12

We shake hands.

42:14

We hug.

42:14

If I roll, I'll roll with a guy who's new, who's just starting out.

42:18

I'll give him tips.

42:18

I'll help him out.

42:20

We're all in it together.

42:21

And I feel like that's the approach that I take with comedy.

42:25

The same approach.

42:26

I don't believe in this elitist shit.

42:29

I think it's stupid.

42:31

I think it's bad for everybody.

42:33

It's bad for the person who becomes elite, even more so than it's bad for the

42:37

up-and-comers.

42:38

Because the up-and-comers, if you dismiss up-and-comers and you treat them like

42:42

shit, like you treat them like you're better than them, you're above them, you

42:45

don't need to talk to them, you don't make eye contact with them, you ignore

42:48

them when they're trying to talk to you.

42:50

And I've seen that from comics.

42:51

And I think it's bad for you.

42:54

For them, it just makes them angry at you.

42:56

And they can't wait until – and I have been in that position before where

42:59

someone's dismissed me and been shitty to me.

43:01

And then I surpassed them fame-wise and then passed by.

43:06

And then they become friendly and weird with you.

43:08

And you never forget it.

43:09

And they kind of remember.

43:09

Yeah.

43:10

It's very strange when you see the 180.

43:11

Yes.

43:12

And you'll be in comedy long enough to see plenty of 180s.

43:15

And it's not – I mean, you'll –

43:18

I'll give you some names after the show.

43:19

Oh, really?

43:19

Yes.

43:20

Oh, I would love that.

43:20

Yeah, yeah.

43:21

Some names, some good names, some juicy names.

43:23

And then you act however the relationship is now at this point in time.

43:26

Yeah.

43:27

But that's always in the back of your mind.

43:28

You're like, I remember when it was not this.

43:30

But there's also – I want to give someone an opportunity for redemption.

43:35

Like, I want to believe that they've changed.

43:37

Yeah.

43:37

So, it's hard.

43:39

I don't want to be that mean person who's like, fuck that guy for life.

43:42

For sure.

43:42

For sure.

43:43

But I do –

43:44

Like, hopefully that they grow.

43:45

That maybe they've grown as a person.

43:46

Maybe been humbled because the career kind of skid and came to an abrupt halt.

43:54

And they're trying to rebuild.

43:55

Yeah.

43:55

They used to be someone that thought that they could – there was a time.

43:59

Mostly pre-internet where comics looked forward to doing a couple things.

44:05

One thing they looked forward to was bumping people.

44:08

And doing a lot of time or what?

44:10

Yep.

44:10

But the bumping people was the big part.

44:12

It wasn't just doing time.

44:14

So, like, the doing time thing, if you – like, Dave Chappelle calls up and

44:17

says,

44:17

I want to do a half an hour.

44:18

Nobody cares.

44:19

He's really good about it too.

44:20

He'll wait until everyone's gone up and then he'll go up at the end of the

44:23

night.

44:24

He's a beautiful person.

44:25

I love that guy to death.

44:26

He's the exception to the superstar rule because he's a sweetheart of a guy.

44:31

But there are some that wanted that spot of the bumper where they could just

44:37

show up.

44:38

Oh, my God.

44:38

Mike's here.

44:38

Mike's here.

44:39

Fahim.

44:39

I'm sorry.

44:40

Mike's going up.

44:40

Mike has to go up.

44:41

And Mike looks at you like, I'm going up.

44:43

You know, like, there's a few of those guys.

44:45

Like, that fed them.

44:46

Yeah.

44:46

It feeds them.

44:47

It feeds them to let them – let you know that you're not on their level.

44:50

I feel like that happens way less now.

44:54

Oh, yeah.

44:54

Yeah.

44:55

Yeah.

44:55

Yeah.

44:55

Well, first of all, because people like us talk about it on podcasts.

44:59

Like, if there's one guy that was like a super dick to you and you're like, let

45:04

me tell you something, Joe.

45:05

There's a fucking guy.

45:06

You know, it's – we're all comics, man.

45:10

Just like when you go to a jiu-jitsu school, you take a class or two classes,

45:14

you're a fucking martial artist.

45:15

You know, you might suck, but you're a martial artist.

45:18

If you're up on that goddamn stage, you're a comic.

45:21

In my eyes, you're just like me.

45:23

I'm just – I've been doing it for 30 years and you've been doing it for less.

45:28

Yeah.

45:29

Yeah.

45:29

Yeah.

45:29

That's what it is.

45:30

That's the only difference.

45:32

It's just a time in.

45:33

And if you get 30 years down and what you get out of those 30 years is that you're

45:37

better than everybody and that you can act like you're better than everybody

45:40

and you're aloof and you're dismissive, you've missed everything.

45:44

The beauty – like when I come to the store, I like that I get hugs.

45:48

Yeah, yeah.

45:49

I was surprised because when you first started coming back, like I would just

45:53

think like I'd be on the wall or whatever.

45:55

You're like, yo, what's up?

45:56

What's up, Behem?

45:57

Like give me a hug, you know?

45:58

And like we haven't really like talked a ton, but that – something as little

46:03

as that goes so far.

46:04

Well, that's nice.

46:06

Yeah.

46:07

I hope it does go far.

46:08

I want comics to feel good about the community that we have.

46:13

Yeah.

46:13

And I remember – because when I got past the store, it was the dark ages.

46:17

Like I know the stores had various dark ages.

46:19

Bobby talks about like the 90s and stuff.

46:21

But you were at the ice house.

46:22

So like you weren't even really part of the store.

46:25

You were still just like going there a lot.

46:26

Yeah.

46:27

Yeah.

46:27

So it was very cool for you to come back and then Adam take over and then it

46:32

just kind of evolved into what it is now.

46:34

It's crazy now.

46:35

Because I remember when it was not that.

46:36

And there was kind of a beauty in it though.

46:38

I'm like pretty fortunate in hindsight that I got past then.

46:41

What year was this?

46:42

I think it got past in like 2010.

46:44

Yeah.

46:45

That was three years into the dark ages.

46:46

The dark ages started in 2007.

46:48

Oh.

46:49

Yeah.

46:49

Yeah.

46:50

It's also crazy to like know that, you know, in the history and see the video

46:54

and then, oh, I exist on this timeline now.

46:56

Yeah.

46:56

The store was just – you know, when I'm living in Seattle, it's this faraway

47:00

place.

47:00

Even Hollywood and entertainment and all that, it's just this place that exists

47:03

on a box.

47:04

It's not real.

47:05

It is and it isn't.

47:06

Right.

47:06

This isn't a real thing.

47:08

And then you move to L.A. and I'm hanging at the improv.

47:11

I'm a ghost.

47:12

You know, people are walking through me.

47:13

You know, when you first come to town?

47:15

Yeah, man.

47:16

I swear to God.

47:16

Like I'm literally – I'm like, guys, I do comedy.

47:19

And they're walking through me and I'm just like my hands aren't.

47:21

And I would just hang out and that's part of the deal.

47:24

You just have – you realize leaving your apartment is a win in itself.

47:28

Like you may not be getting up as much as you want to, but even just like being

47:32

out, it's a win.

47:33

Because someone will be like, oh, you should do my – you know, because out of

47:36

sight, out of mind.

47:37

So I would just loiter at the improv.

47:39

I was nobody.

47:39

And then I would – it was like Sandler.

47:43

And someone – and like maybe Kevin James.

47:44

I think Sandler and Kevin James.

47:45

And that was like – I'm sure that's very standard.

47:48

I mean, I've been here so long.

47:49

It's very standard now.

47:50

You see a million people.

47:51

Like I very – I don't get starstruck at all.

47:52

But it's just kind of like, oh, fuck.

47:55

Those are people in a box.

47:57

Those are people in the box that I watch.

47:59

Right.

47:59

And they just walked in.

48:00

Yeah.

48:01

So that was kind of like a little mind fucking adjustment, you know?

48:04

Well, when I was in Boston in 1988 when I started, Mecca was the store.

48:10

That was where Pryor performed.

48:13

And Sam Kinison and Hicks started out there.

48:17

And Hicks used to do – he was a doorman there.

48:19

And, you know, Letterman was there.

48:21

And Robin Williams was there.

48:22

It was just – it was Mecca.

48:24

Yeah, and I thought when I first started doing comedy, when I realized like,

48:29

okay, this is what I want to do.

48:31

Like after the first set I ever did, I was like, okay, this is what I'm doing.

48:34

I'm doing this now.

48:35

I'm all in.

48:36

You know, it took me a while to get funny.

48:40

But, I mean, I had it in my head that I was going to get to the comedy store.

48:44

Oh, yeah.

48:44

And then when I finally got there, I remember thinking how surreal it was.

48:48

Because I was like – I guess I was 26, 25.

48:51

No, 25 or 26, I think, the first time I stepped foot in the store.

48:55

And I remember sitting in the back of the room going, holy shit, I can't

48:58

fucking believe I'm here.

49:00

Isn't it odd?

49:00

It's just a place.

49:02

Yeah.

49:03

But it isn't.

49:04

It's not.

49:05

It's not just a place.

49:06

It's not.

49:06

I know.

49:07

But like when you – I guess the manifestation of the place.

49:09

Like, okay, it's a stage.

49:10

There's chairs.

49:11

There's a table.

49:12

You ever see it in the daytime?

49:12

Yeah.

49:13

You're like, all right, this is just a space.

49:15

I like going there in the daytime.

49:16

It's odd.

49:16

It feels like it's waiting.

49:18

Yeah.

49:19

Like it's waiting.

49:20

But it doesn't come alive until nighttime.

49:21

Yeah, it's like a bedded animal, like a hibernating bear.

49:24

Yeah.

49:25

And at nighttime, man, the drinks start clinking and, you know, the comedy

49:29

starts flowing and Jeff starts playing the piano.

49:32

It's an interesting room, too.

49:33

When you first started doing it, was it difficult?

49:36

Because it's not a net.

49:37

It's not an easy room.

49:39

The OR is not an easy room.

49:40

Yeah, the OR.

49:41

I consider the OR the comedy store.

49:43

Yes.

49:44

People will come through and be like, oh, yeah, I've been to the store.

49:46

I go, what room?

49:48

They're like, we're going to the main room.

49:49

Okay, cool.

49:51

Main room is cool.

49:52

But it's not the heart and soul of the comedy store.

49:55

The OR is intimate.

49:56

Nothing gets lost.

49:58

Right.

49:59

The main room, you kind of have to be – it's so big and there's that second

50:02

tier, you know, how the step goes up to, like, be able to have that laugh wave

50:07

hit that back row.

50:08

Yeah.

50:10

You're really working.

50:11

You're performing.

50:11

And the stage is so big, you have to be more theatrical to kind of do a serviceable

50:16

job in that room.

50:17

But in the OR, it's, like, literally, you're just watching a man gather his

50:21

thought or woman, you know, just, like, you can be real.

50:24

You can be – you don't have to be, like –

50:27

Right.

50:27

You don't have to predict as much.

50:28

Yeah.

50:29

Well, there's different kinds of comedy, right?

50:33

Mm-hmm.

50:33

What's the largest crowd you've ever done?

50:35

I've been watching your stories and stuff, and that's fucking insane.

50:39

Like, even when you're in the green room and you just hear these murmurs, it

50:42

sounds like, you know, like an angry mom is going to kill you or something.

50:45

It's crazy.

50:47

But they're all just, like, filtering into this giant theater.

50:49

Maybe 3,000 or 4,000.

50:52

And that was a trip for me.

50:54

That's big.

50:54

But you notice when you do 3,000 or 4,000 that there's, like – you have to

50:58

give them more pause.

50:59

Oh, yeah.

51:00

More time for the set – the joke, the punchline to settle, the laughs to

51:04

settle before you move on to another –

51:07

But what's great about doing it so long is stand-up is this conversation with

51:12

the audience so you know to wait.

51:15

Yeah.

51:15

Like, you have inherent timing.

51:17

Yeah.

51:18

Another comic would just kind of know the timing of the club and just, like, plow

51:21

into the next joke while they're still getting laughs from a theater.

51:24

Yeah, you can't do that – but I took – I was talking about this yesterday

51:28

with Tom Papa that one of the reasons – one of the best lessons that I ever

51:33

had was actually sitting in the audience at one of Richard – not Richard –

51:37

Louis Blacks.

51:38

Not Richard Louis.

51:39

I don't know why I confused you guys.

51:40

I mean, I would confuse it, yeah.

51:41

Sure.

51:42

The word Louis.

51:42

A Louis Black show in New Jersey.

51:44

He was there the night before me, and Joey Diaz and I sat in the audience, and

51:48

he would hit a punchline, and people would laugh, and then he would hit the tag,

51:52

and I couldn't hear the tag because all the other people were laughing around

51:56

us.

51:57

And I was like, oh, like, you've got to be, like, a little more selective.

52:01

Yeah.

52:02

Yeah.

52:02

You can't just hammer them.

52:04

Like, in the store at the OR, you can hammer them.

52:06

Yeah.

52:06

Punchline, punchline, punchline, punchline, punchline.

52:08

And you could beat the fucking shit out of them that way, and it's a different

52:11

kind of comedy.

52:12

If you have that style of comedy, you might struggle a little bit with a

52:17

theater, and you'll definitely struggle in an arena.

52:21

Arenas and amphitheaters are another animal.

52:24

I feel like just having no ceiling.

52:25

It's crazy.

52:26

How does that work?

52:27

Is that good?

52:27

I did it Saturday night.

52:28

That's more for music, huh?

52:29

I had a great time.

52:31

We had a great time.

52:32

Allie Mikofsky killed.

52:34

She had a great time.

52:35

Ian killed.

52:35

It was fun.

52:36

It was fun, but it's definitely different.

52:38

I think, yeah, I think it's different because I think there's such fans, and

52:41

obviously, like, they're going to be tuned in.

52:43

Yeah, that helps.

52:44

It's different when you're, like, I'll do some festivals sometimes, or, I mean,

52:48

back in the day, you would do a college or something, and it's just outside.

52:51

And if they don't know who the fuck you are, and it's daytime, and it's outside,

52:55

you flew down.

52:57

You're going to pick up a check.

52:57

All you got to do is not lose your mind on stage, and you can collect your

53:01

check.

53:02

If you're like, shut the fuck out, then you're not getting your money.

53:05

Well, it's a matter of whether or not you're having fun.

53:08

If you're having fun, and you enjoy performing, and your material's good, so

53:12

you know it's good.

53:14

You can have fun.

53:15

Sure.

53:15

And whoever's tuning in can have a good time, and the absurdity of the

53:18

situation is funny, but obviously, it's not going to be like a regular club set

53:23

or something.

53:24

Yeah.

53:24

Dude, I'll take you if you want to come.

53:26

I'll take you.

53:27

I'll take you to one of the crazy places.

53:27

I don't, I mean, that just seems like such a mind trip.

53:29

That would be like a stand-up float tank.

53:31

Well, Allie, you know, Allie's only 22.

53:34

Yeah, she's so young.

53:35

Yeah, she's great.

53:35

And I've been taking her with me.

53:37

Her and Ian came this weekend.

53:40

Ian's one of my favorites.

53:40

And the first arena she ever did.

53:43

Well, here's Allie, right?

53:44

She's done clubs with me.

53:45

She does improv with me all the time.

53:47

She has a store with me all the time.

53:49

And she works the door at the store.

53:50

She works the door.

53:51

That's the beauty of the system at the store.

53:52

It's like one of the last places like that, where there's a system in place.

53:57

Yeah.

53:57

She works the door at the store, and she performed in front of 10,000 people on

54:01

Friday nights.

54:02

And then went back to checking IDs?

54:03

Yes.

54:03

That's the mind fuck of being a young comic?

54:06

Yeah.

54:06

You'll do these crazy things, and then you're back at your job.

54:08

But she's wild and hungry, and she's so-

54:10

I don't worry about Allie.

54:12

She's fine.

54:12

She's great.

54:13

She's really talented, too.

54:15

But, you know, so the first big show she had done before that was the Mirage in

54:21

Vegas.

54:21

I love that club.

54:22

I love that club.

54:24

I love that club.

54:25

I started doing that club, and then I went to bigger arenas, and I came back to

54:29

that club

54:29

because it was so much fun.

54:30

Because most of the time when I do Vegas, I do it the night before UFC, like on

54:34

Friday night.

54:35

And I was doing these big, giant places, like the Kaa Theater, which is like

54:39

100 foot tall,

54:40

more than 100 feet tall ceiling.

54:42

It's a Cirque du Soleil place.

54:43

Wow.

54:43

But it was too weird.

54:45

It wasn't the right setup for comedy.

54:47

And the Mirage is so perfect.

54:49

Is that the Terry Fedor Theater?

54:51

Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.

54:52

So I went back to this.

54:54

So that was the first time she'd ever done anything big.

54:56

And she walked out there like she fucking owned the place.

55:00

She owned it.

55:01

She had the best set I ever saw her have there.

55:06

And then I said, okay, you want to do arenas?

55:08

She's like, ah!

55:10

So we did this crazy place in Portland.

55:15

Portland was insane, man.

55:17

God damn.

55:18

I was off the charts.

55:19

Almost too big.

55:21

Almost too powerful.

55:22

Not almost too big, but almost too powerful.

55:24

Do they do concerts in there normally?

55:26

Or what is that space?

55:27

Basketball.

55:27

Oh shit, that's where the Blazers play?

55:29

Yeah.

55:29

For real?

55:30

Yeah.

55:30

Whoa.

55:31

It would be great if you just have a t-shirt cannon before your set.

55:35

Yeah, I had my buddy Cam Haynes, who lives in Eugene, which is real close there,

55:40

was in that

55:41

same place a couple weeks before that for a game.

55:44

And he's like, dude, I can't fucking believe you're coming here to do comedy.

55:47

Like, what is this?

55:48

Yeah.

55:48

It was nuts.

55:49

You would almost think as like a consumer of comedy, what is that experience

55:53

like?

55:53

And is it still like the beats have got to be so different than like a club?

55:57

I don't know.

55:58

It was fun, man.

55:59

I was watching Ian on stage and he was murdering and I was laughing my ass off.

56:03

It was great.

56:03

It's all in the acoustics of the building and the Moda Center in Portland is a

56:07

really

56:08

new theater or a new arena.

56:10

It's really well made.

56:12

So the acoustics are excellent.

56:14

So nothing is lost because that's my worry in a space that big that no one can

56:17

hear what

56:18

you're saying and it's muddled.

56:19

I've done some big places where it's not the best.

56:22

I've done some big places where you hear a little echo and you're like, ooh,

56:25

this could

56:25

be a problem.

56:26

So you have to be a little clearer with what you say.

56:29

Like you almost got to take some of the spice out of your joke, you know, a

56:33

spice out of

56:34

your delivery because it's a little echoey.

56:38

The best though, the best is the ice house or the store or the improv.

56:43

Like 200 people, 300 people, bam, bam, bam.

56:48

Well, that's why comedy clubs are a certain size.

56:50

If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

56:52

It's also because that's all they could see.

56:54

You know, I mean, it's hard to sell like, like, like Joe Rogan comedy clubs and

57:00

they're

57:00

all like 20,000 seats.

57:01

They're like, yeah, I mean, it's also when Joe comes around, but we're having a

57:04

tough

57:05

time getting people to come out.

57:06

It's, I mean, how many, there's not that many people that are doing those

57:10

places.

57:11

It's like Kevin Hart, Dave.

57:12

Oh, that's so crazy too.

57:14

Like you guys teaming up to do a tour.

57:16

Oh my God.

57:16

If you're a comedy fan, how great is that?

57:18

Dude, we did 25,000 people in Tacoma.

57:22

We broke the all time.

57:24

Oh, you got my brother in.

57:24

I think he hit up Ian and Ian was like, cause I think I was, I was in London.

57:28

So I was sleeping.

57:29

Like the time was off.

57:30

So then he just DMed Ian and he was like, Hey, I'm his brother.

57:33

Can I come to the show?

57:35

The Dave things are crazy though, because he brings a DJ and Donnell Rollins

57:39

gets out

57:40

there and gets everybody hyped up and it's the fucking DJs in between the sets.

57:43

It's like, Oh, it's so next level.

57:48

It's like a concert.

57:49

Yeah.

57:49

Plus it's just, you feel crazy.

57:51

Like, is this really hot?

57:52

Like even Dave, he was like, this is fucking crazy, man.

57:56

Like we were all like, this is crazy.

57:57

To get him to say this is crazy.

57:58

Yeah.

57:58

We were all like, this was crazy.

58:00

We all realized this is something.

58:01

Cause people were so pumped that we're doing it together.

58:04

Yeah.

58:04

It was mad.

58:05

It's like, uh, like the watch the throne tour of Kanye and Jay-Z.

58:09

Yeah.

58:10

Yeah.

58:11

We're going to do more.

58:12

We're trying to figure out where and how, but we had a great fucking time.

58:15

Yeah.

58:15

Why not?

58:16

It's just so rockstar shit.

58:17

They, they show up at places and have IVs ready.

58:20

They do intravenous vitamin infusions with glutathione and get B12 shots.

58:26

How did you feel after?

58:27

Like I could run through a fucking wall.

58:28

Yeah.

58:29

So how did you feel before?

58:30

How did you feel before and then after?

58:33

Were you just like out of it?

58:34

I was a little tired.

58:35

You know, we're traveling and we're up late the night before and then you get

58:39

juiced up

58:39

with, uh, vitamins and you just, you're like, where's that tree?

58:43

Yeah.

58:43

You feel fucking excellent.

58:45

This, I guess, you know, they don't rock stars know what they're doing.

58:52

Yeah.

58:52

And I'm sure you're only doing a fraction of what they do.

58:56

They're doing coke.

58:56

Yeah.

58:57

We're not doing coke.

58:58

And they have something different than IV.

59:00

They probably have some other bag we don't even know about.

59:02

Probably.

59:03

Yeah.

59:03

It's probably some illegal shit.

59:04

Yeah.

59:05

Like they're probably doing NAD.

59:07

They're probably doing a lot of different things.

59:08

Yeah.

59:09

Yeah.

59:10

But it looks insane.

59:11

At the end of the day though, back to the grind.

59:15

Like tonight, I'm doing the belly room, you know?

59:17

That's so funny.

59:17

You're just back in the belly.

59:18

Yeah.

59:18

Back in the belly room.

59:19

Doing the belly room.

59:19

Then I'm doing improv.

59:20

I got a 1030 at the improv.

59:22

Oh dang.

59:22

Double dip?

59:22

Yes.

59:23

Always.

59:23

You ever do, you don't do factory really, huh?

59:25

I don't do the factory.

59:26

You don't do the factory.

59:27

Is that because they tape?

59:28

Yes.

59:28

Okay.

59:29

Yeah, they taped me.

59:30

They tape everybody.

59:31

They put your shit online.

59:32

But like-

59:33

They say, we're not going to do it anymore.

59:34

But they still have the camera up.

59:35

Do you just not trust them?

59:37

Because like they'll send it to me with the clips and I'll be like, I don't, it's

59:40

not

59:40

ready or I don't want to put it out there.

59:42

And then they respect it.

59:43

That's what Bill Burr said.

59:45

Yeah.

59:45

And then I found the shit online.

59:47

I'm like, yeah, look at that.

59:48

He's like, what the fuck?

59:49

I was like, yeah, man.

59:50

There's somebody working there that's not listening to this, you know?

59:54

And maybe they don't do that anymore and I hope they don't.

59:56

But-

59:57

But why chance it?

59:57

It just doesn't feel good.

59:59

It's just that-

1:00:01

Especially a bit in progress.

1:00:01

The way it was handled was very poor.

1:00:03

The way it was handled was like, you should be happy that we're putting it

1:00:06

online.

1:00:06

It was not good.

1:00:07

I'll tell you all about it later.

1:00:09

Okay.

1:00:09

But it's just, there's plenty of room at the improv and the store.

1:00:13

Yeah.

1:00:13

I don't need to go there.

1:00:14

Yeah.

1:00:14

I don't wish it-

1:00:15

Yeah, I know.

1:00:15

I mean, I hope it does well.

1:00:16

It's a great club.

1:00:17

It's fun to work at.

1:00:17

Sure.

1:00:18

You know?

1:00:18

I know what you mean though.

1:00:19

It's like, I'm in Tarzana now and like, someone will be like, hey, do you want

1:00:22

to do this

1:00:23

show in Irvine?

1:00:24

And that's just like saying, my show's on Mars.

1:00:27

Irvine at eight o'clock, you might as well leave your house yesterday.

1:00:31

Yeah.

1:00:32

Like, Burr, can you chopper me to Irvine?

1:00:35

Have you been in a chopper with Burr?

1:00:36

No.

1:00:37

You gotta go.

1:00:37

When I was working at Boeing, I had a coworker who was learning, well, he had

1:00:41

his hours up

1:00:42

and everything.

1:00:42

So he flew choppers and during our lunch break, he's like, do you want to go in

1:00:46

the chopper?

1:00:46

Jesus.

1:00:47

I was like, sure.

1:00:48

So then he's like, let's take the doors off.

1:00:50

What?

1:00:51

Oh, this guy's trying to kill you.

1:00:52

Nah, but like, it was fine.

1:00:53

It was crazy.

1:00:54

I figured, when else am I going to go in a chopper?

1:00:56

That's true.

1:00:56

So for my lunch break, I went in a chopper with this guy.

1:00:59

I recorded it.

1:01:00

Wow.

1:01:00

And then my mom saw it and she just like flipped out.

1:01:03

She's like, what are you doing for him?

1:01:05

I love you.

1:01:06

Don't die.

1:01:08

It was fun.

1:01:09

Yeah.

1:01:10

If I had a son and I was a woman and my little boy was in a plane flying around

1:01:15

with the doors

1:01:17

off.

1:01:17

Yeah.

1:01:17

Maybe then I shouldn't have told her that it was my coworker.

1:01:21

Yeah.

1:01:21

Yeah.

1:01:22

You should have said it was like a super experienced fighter pilot.

1:01:24

He's a military guy.

1:01:26

Yeah.

1:01:26

He's had 20 years experience.

1:01:27

Yeah.

1:01:27

Yeah.

1:01:28

It's weird when you go up in a bird with like someone you know though so well.

1:01:33

I did it first in high school.

1:01:34

When I was in high school.

1:01:37

My friend Mike, Mike Warbell, he was taking small plane lessons and we flew

1:01:43

around this

1:01:44

little small plane.

1:01:45

He was like fucking, he was my age.

1:01:47

Maybe he was older than me.

1:01:49

Yeah.

1:01:49

Like one year.

1:01:49

I think I was 16.

1:01:50

He was 17 maybe.

1:01:51

Maybe, but no more than that.

1:01:53

You just got to trust him.

1:01:54

And he was flying in a fucking plane.

1:01:56

He had a co-pilot who was like an instructor.

1:01:59

Oh, that's better than.

1:02:00

Yeah.

1:02:00

He was taking lessons.

1:02:01

Instead of just you and him.

1:02:01

But that was the first time I was ever in a little tiny ass plane.

1:02:04

I was in high school.

1:02:05

You ever want to do that?

1:02:06

I have no desire to do that.

1:02:07

It seems like a rough way to die.

1:02:10

I just don't, like even with all the training and all that, just like I'll

1:02:13

leave it to the

1:02:14

pros, like if JFK couldn't do it.

1:02:16

Well, I think the JFK story was more complicated.

1:02:21

I think he was involved with, I think that that flight was like no visibility.

1:02:27

I think you ran into fog.

1:02:29

Like a more experienced pilot would have known the weather conditions aren't

1:02:32

the best to be

1:02:33

going up.

1:02:33

Yes.

1:02:34

And also you, you have to understand how to read the gauges because you got to

1:02:39

know what

1:02:39

altitude you're at and the gauges have to be a hundred percent functional.

1:02:43

I don't know what the whole story was with his death, but I believe, Google

1:02:48

whether or

1:02:49

not JFK's body had cocaine in it.

1:02:51

Google that.

1:02:53

No, RFK.

1:02:54

What's his name?

1:02:54

JFK Jr.

1:02:55

JFK Jr.

1:02:56

Not RFK.

1:02:57

JFK Jr.'s body had cocaine in it because I think there was some cocaine

1:03:02

involved, if I'm

1:03:03

not mistaken.

1:03:04

It's like, fuck, I can fly in the clouds.

1:03:06

I'm in the clouds, bitch.

1:03:08

He doesn't even have any like lessons.

1:03:09

He's just like, it's getting a plane.

1:03:11

I think he knew how to fly and I think he was, I think he was unprepared for no,

1:03:16

it's,

1:03:16

you know how it is.

1:03:17

Like he was off the Cape, right?

1:03:19

It wasn't somewhere near Massachusetts.

1:03:20

That fucking, those clouds get thick, bro.

1:03:24

I mean, you don't see jack shit.

1:03:26

So you're flying around in that.

1:03:27

Like, imagine just flying, right?

1:03:30

You're on 500 miles an hour and right in front of you is white.

1:03:33

That's all you see.

1:03:34

500 miles an hour through the white.

1:03:36

And just knowing, kind of just knowing this isn't a good situation.

1:03:40

Yeah, you're fucked.

1:03:41

And you kind of know.

1:03:42

Yeah.

1:03:42

Yeah.

1:03:43

Well, when I lived in Colorado, I remember there was a time that I was driving

1:03:47

up this

1:03:47

hill.

1:03:47

We were pretty high up.

1:03:48

We were about 8,000 feet above sea levels, 3,000 feet above Boulder.

1:03:52

And as we're driving through the hills up to the house, the fucking clouds were

1:03:57

so thick,

1:03:58

you couldn't see five feet in front of the car.

1:04:00

So you're driving on a mountain road that sometimes has no railings to the left

1:04:05

or to

1:04:05

the right.

1:04:05

And it's just death to the left.

1:04:07

And you're driving up this mountain road and you can't see jack shit.

1:04:11

So you literally have to turn the fog lights on.

1:04:13

So the regular headlights are no good.

1:04:15

You got to shut those off.

1:04:16

And you have to have fog lights on because fog lights just kind of light the

1:04:19

ground.

1:04:19

Yeah.

1:04:20

And that's why they exist.

1:04:21

Yeah.

1:04:21

Like people don't even think what a fog light is because most of the time you

1:04:25

don't

1:04:25

really have to deal with fog.

1:04:26

Fog light is a little light down below.

1:04:28

So you can see a little bit.

1:04:29

Yeah.

1:04:29

Instead of blinding it just with the light.

1:04:30

Yeah.

1:04:30

Otherwise, you just see bright white.

1:04:32

Did he?

1:04:33

I don't see anything about that.

1:04:34

But they were...

1:04:35

You got to check infowars.com.

1:04:36

Yeah.

1:04:37

You're going to the wrong source, dude.

1:04:38

Did you use Google?

1:04:38

Bing it.

1:04:39

Bing it, Jamie.

1:04:40

8.30, 9 at night.

1:04:42

And they were flying over water that had no features.

1:04:45

So they were over water.

1:04:46

It was dark and foggy.

1:04:47

Yeah.

1:04:48

So it was basically pitch black.

1:04:49

Yeah.

1:04:49

And he didn't have a flight plan either.

1:04:51

And he told an instructor that offered to go with him.

1:04:54

He wanted to do it alone.

1:04:55

Oh.

1:04:57

But you didn't find anything about cocaine?

1:04:58

I Googled that.

1:04:59

Nothing popped up.

1:05:00

Something popped up that they might have had a past of that.

1:05:04

But nothing said that.

1:05:04

Can you put a drug test?

1:05:06

I know I read...

1:05:07

Autopsy.

1:05:07

Nothing said that.

1:05:08

Okay.

1:05:08

Maybe I made it up.

1:05:10

It's possible.

1:05:11

Let's put it in the Wikipedia page, just in case.

1:05:13

My memory varies so wildly.

1:05:16

It's confusing.

1:05:17

And I'm wondering if it's old age or if it's just an overwhelming amount of

1:05:22

data in my brain

1:05:23

and my hard drive has just completely run out of space.

1:05:26

Maybe there's some overlap, like a similar story.

1:05:28

For sure there is because I'll have conversations with someone sometimes and

1:05:32

they'll ask me...

1:05:33

We'll be just talking about something.

1:05:34

I go, well, that's not exactly how it happened.

1:05:36

This is what happened.

1:05:38

And because of this, because as they evolved, they developed the ability to do

1:05:41

this and that.

1:05:41

And I'm like, I just know this.

1:05:43

I'm like, why do I know?

1:05:43

And someone goes, what are you, a fucking biologist?

1:05:45

I'm like, no, I'm an idiot.

1:05:46

Yeah.

1:05:46

You retain a lot.

1:05:47

I do remember things.

1:05:48

I'm like bad at that.

1:05:48

But I don't retain some things.

1:05:50

Sometimes I forget who I was talking to or who said what or where this idea

1:05:54

came from.

1:05:55

It's weird.

1:05:56

Yeah.

1:05:56

It's not...

1:05:57

It's not selective.

1:05:57

Yeah.

1:05:58

It's not that good.

1:05:59

It's like...

1:05:59

But it helps when I'm taking nootropics, which I didn't today.

1:06:03

Today I didn't take any alpha brain.

1:06:04

Why don't we have any here?

1:06:06

How come we don't have any here?

1:06:07

Oh, give me that.

1:06:08

Oh.

1:06:08

Thank you.

1:06:11

Oh, man.

1:06:12

How does this work?

1:06:13

Well, your brain's going to grow.

1:06:15

I hope your head can...

1:06:16

Really?

1:06:16

Your head's flexible.

1:06:16

Just like...

1:06:17

You got a flexible head.

1:06:18

The headphones break.

1:06:18

You swell from the head a lot.

1:06:19

You used to use...

1:06:21

You used to rather...

1:06:21

Should I throw this in here?

1:06:22

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:06:22

Used to work at Boeing.

1:06:23

Is this like an Elon Musk moment, guys?

1:06:25

No.

1:06:26

Am I going to be a mural?

1:06:27

I know, right?

1:06:29

Isn't that crazy?

1:06:29

Yeah.

1:06:30

It's a mural.

1:06:30

Crazy for me, too, man.

1:06:33

I mean...

1:06:34

I didn't even think twice about giving him weed.

1:06:35

Really?

1:06:36

You didn't think like, oh, this will be a moment?

1:06:37

It was just...

1:06:38

No.

1:06:41

Elon, smoking a little weed, like normal.

1:06:43

The stockholders are like, no!

1:06:45

All the time.

1:06:45

Did you see the Ross Baines painting in the green room, where in the cloud it

1:06:50

says 6%?

1:06:51

Oh, no.

1:06:51

Yeah, go look at the smoke cloud again, because he lost 6% of the stock.

1:06:56

Jeez.

1:06:56

But he got it back.

1:06:58

It was up to 9% the next day.

1:07:00

It went up 3%.

1:07:01

But his street cred went fucking through the roof, dude.

1:07:03

Through the roof, bitch.

1:07:04

I drove his car here.

1:07:06

That guy deserves everything he gets.

1:07:07

That car is a goddamn time machine.

1:07:09

I'm still a Mazda 3 2007 man myself.

1:07:12

Ooh, nice.

1:07:13

Yeah, I'm a purist.

1:07:14

Nice.

1:07:15

Sometimes I'll get a brochure in the mail, like, get the 2019 Mazda 3.

1:07:19

No chance.

1:07:19

I'm going to put a bullet in my head if I get two Mazda 3s in a row.

1:07:23

Don't get a Mazda 3, but get a Miata.

1:07:25

A Miata?

1:07:26

Those are dope.

1:07:26

Those are dope cars.

1:07:27

Isn't that like a punchline?

1:07:28

I don't give a fuck who's making that joke.

1:07:30

They don't know what they're talking about.

1:07:31

All right, I'm going to do it.

1:07:32

I'm going to get a Miata.

1:07:33

Everyone's making fun of me.

1:07:34

No bullshit, man.

1:07:35

Joe Rogan said.

1:07:36

Dude, the Miata is a fucking fantastic car.

1:07:38

I'm not bullshitting.

1:07:39

It has very low horsepower, but it's super lightweight.

1:07:42

This is good.

1:07:42

This will be my, like, defense when people make fun of me.

1:07:44

They have a lot of horsepower.

1:07:46

It's really lightweight.

1:07:47

It doesn't have a lot of horsepower.

1:07:48

It's very low.

1:07:49

I think it's less than 200 horsepower.

1:07:51

181.

1:07:52

Yeah.

1:07:52

But Miatas are amazing cars.

1:07:55

But as a comedian, how many times do you hear it as a punchline?

1:07:58

Those are hacks.

1:07:59

Sure.

1:07:59

Those comedians are hacks.

1:08:01

Isn't that funny?

1:08:01

There's certain words that are just, like, go-to.

1:08:03

Yeah.

1:08:04

Like, Chipotle's a great punchline word.

1:08:07

They still make them in standard, with a standard transmission.

1:08:12

I just want to say thank you, Mazda, or you're welcome, Mazda, for...

1:08:15

It's a fucking great car, man.

1:08:17

I'm not kidding.

1:08:17

They're really fun to drive.

1:08:19

They handle really well.

1:08:20

I like mine.

1:08:21

I like my Mazda 3.

1:08:22

They're very tactile.

1:08:22

But a Mazda 3 is different than a Miata, right?

1:08:25

How much different is it?

1:08:25

I mean, probably pretty different.

1:08:26

What is that one right there?

1:08:28

2019 Mazda MX-5?

1:08:30

MX-5 Miata?

1:08:31

What about the RX-8?

1:08:32

You see that red one?

1:08:33

That cool red color?

1:08:34

Yeah.

1:08:35

But the one above that, please?

1:08:36

Look at that, with the removable roof.

1:08:39

Ooh.

1:08:39

That's like a Targa.

1:08:40

I could be on the beach with that.

1:08:42

Bro, that is a dope car.

1:08:43

People are crazy.

1:08:45

They just want higher horsepower.

1:08:47

If that was, instead of a Miata, if that was a Tesla, if Tesla made an electric

1:08:53

Miata that

1:08:54

goes zero to 60 in one second, everybody would want that car.

1:08:58

Yeah.

1:08:58

Dude, it's a great car.

1:09:00

Yeah.

1:09:00

Drive one.

1:09:01

All right.

1:09:01

You know, I'm going to do that after this.

1:09:02

I'm going to test drive a Mazda Miata.

1:09:04

Go to...

1:09:04

And it's cheap.

1:09:05

How much is a Miata?

1:09:06

It's like 28 grand.

1:09:07

Dude.

1:09:08

Come on.

1:09:08

Come on, man.

1:09:09

That's it?

1:09:10

I'm not bullshitting.

1:09:10

For 28 grand, you get a great car.

1:09:12

I'm not kidding.

1:09:13

I would drive a fucking Miata.

1:09:14

I believe you.

1:09:15

I just would never think that you would have this much passion about the Mazda

1:09:18

Miata, and

1:09:19

it's really refreshing.

1:09:19

I am an automobile enthusiast.

1:09:22

Yeah.

1:09:23

I love cars.

1:09:23

I saw the cars here.

1:09:24

I love engineering.

1:09:26

I'm a fan of...

1:09:27

I used to do that.

1:09:27

I know you.

1:09:28

Oh, yeah.

1:09:29

But I love mechanical things.

1:09:30

I love how people design things.

1:09:33

And what they've done with the Miata is they've made a car that always has a

1:09:38

loyal fan base

1:09:40

that continues to buy them because they don't break the bank.

1:09:43

It's not something that you pull up to the club and everybody thinks you're

1:09:46

like some super

1:09:47

baller, but it's a fun car to drive.

1:09:49

They're a really fun car to drive.

1:09:51

They're super lightweight.

1:09:52

They're very agile.

1:09:53

They handle great.

1:09:54

They still make them with a manual transmission.

1:09:57

Yeah.

1:09:57

Mind stick.

1:09:58

Yeah.

1:09:58

They're fun, man.

1:09:59

It's a fun car to drive.

1:10:00

Don't be hating on me, honestly.

1:10:02

All right.

1:10:03

But how do you feel about Mazda 3?

1:10:04

I want the same love for the Mazda 3.

1:10:05

It's not that good.

1:10:06

God, motherfucker.

1:10:07

It's kind of boring.

1:10:08

It's like you might as well get a Prius.

1:10:09

Yeah.

1:10:10

You're in the Prius category.

1:10:11

You know, what's happened with Tesla, it's interesting because when you, for a

1:10:15

while, you could

1:10:16

be driving a Prius and no one knew if you were rich or poor.

1:10:18

It was the great equalizer.

1:10:19

Still to this day, Larry David drives a fucking Prius.

1:10:22

Sure, sure.

1:10:22

But Tesla came along and they're like, yo, now you can stunt and save the earth.

1:10:27

Now people know you're rich and pious.

1:10:29

Before, you didn't know if this guy's poor or DiCaprio.

1:10:33

Yeah.

1:10:34

But now it's like, so all the poor guys who want to go green are kind of fucked.

1:10:38

But a Prius is different because it's a hybrid.

1:10:40

But that was the only option back in the day.

1:10:43

That was the only option.

1:10:44

Mercedes has an S-Class Mercedes, top of the food chain Mercedes, that's also a

1:10:53

plug-in hybrid.

1:10:54

It's just a new one that they just released.

1:10:56

Like Jeremy Clarkson was raving about it.

1:10:58

It's supposed to be this incredible car.

1:11:00

So Mercedes is actually making like plug-in hybrids for their top of the food

1:11:05

chain vehicles.

1:11:06

That's pretty cool.

1:11:07

It's pretty fucking cool.

1:11:07

Seems like that's new.

1:11:08

It is.

1:11:09

It is new.

1:11:09

But it's also, it's like a little bit of a step back because it has gasoline.

1:11:13

But the step up is going to be a car that charges and it charges in a normal

1:11:20

amount of time,

1:11:22

like an hour or two.

1:11:23

How long does yours take?

1:11:24

Forever.

1:11:24

Oh, how long?

1:11:25

We have a supercharger here.

1:11:26

We have a supercharger installed here.

1:11:28

And it still takes, I don't know, probably like five hours.

1:11:32

Five hours?

1:11:33

If it's dead.

1:11:33

Yeah, if it's dead, it'll probably take five hours, maybe six.

1:11:36

You know, but like if I come here and it, like full charge is, what does it get?

1:11:44

Three hundred and fucking ninety miles or something like that.

1:11:52

Somewhere around that range.

1:11:53

But not really.

1:11:54

Are you having to be a little better with your planning?

1:11:56

Like, all right, I'm going to put it in here.

1:11:58

I'm not going anywhere with it.

1:11:59

I go to LA.

1:12:00

I go to the comedy store.

1:12:01

Like, I have, like this weekend, I'm in Anaheim for the UFC.

1:12:04

I'm not driving that fucking thorough.

1:12:05

Are you crazy?

1:12:07

I'm not getting stranded.

1:12:08

What happens if you get stranded?

1:12:09

Are you like, does anybody have a battery?

1:12:10

Does anybody have electricity back in siphon?

1:12:12

Anybody can sit here with me for eight hours.

1:12:13

Yeah, there's not a goddamn thing you can do.

1:12:15

You have to call a tow truck and they have to bring it to a charging station.

1:12:19

And then you have to sit there like an asshole.

1:12:21

Yeah.

1:12:21

It's for six hours.

1:12:22

It's, uh, but the technology, if you get, you can't, look, obviously I'm

1:12:27

kidding in

1:12:27

some way because it's super simple.

1:12:29

It's got, you've seen one on the inside, right?

1:12:31

The giant screen.

1:12:32

I've only seen from the outside.

1:12:33

Bro, there's one right here.

1:12:35

Go sit in it.

1:12:36

Cause the comedy store has turned into a Tesla dealership.

1:12:38

It's kind of how, you know, that's how you know the store is in a renaissance

1:12:45

where it's

1:12:46

like just so many Teslas coming in and out of that place.

1:12:49

Not just Tesla.

1:12:50

It's like Russell Peters pulls up in a Ferrari SUV.

1:12:53

And like a Bentley too.

1:12:54

He's got a Bentley.

1:12:55

Yeah.

1:12:55

A Ferrari.

1:12:57

Oh no, a Lamborghini.

1:12:58

Lamborghini SUV.

1:12:59

Dude, like now must be the most trying time to be a lot guy at the comedy store.

1:13:03

Just imagine the bullets they sweat having to move.

1:13:06

Cause that parking lot in the comedy store is like Tetris.

1:13:09

Yeah.

1:13:10

There's a finite amount of space and they've got to fit all the paid regulars

1:13:13

cars in there.

1:13:14

And the price tag, the price tag on all these are insane.

1:13:17

Now the problem is they're letting these promoters park there.

1:13:20

Oh, aren't they being better about, about saying like you can't park in a lot.

1:13:24

They should detonate their cars.

1:13:26

They should, they should have like instead of a tow truck, it's just like a

1:13:29

stick of dynamite.

1:13:30

It's just a giant like Kevlar tarp that they throw over those cars and just

1:13:34

detonate them.

1:13:35

Just during your set, you just hear a promoter.

1:13:39

Because there's so many people that park back there.

1:13:42

Like you're not even a comic.

1:13:44

Like what are you doing back here?

1:13:44

Not only that though, like the back bar and then also the back patio area.

1:13:49

They get weird.

1:13:50

Cause that's like our home.

1:13:51

That's kind of where we hang out before we have to go on stage.

1:13:53

Like we want to see guys like you or Santino and just like chop it up before we

1:13:56

have to go on stage.

1:13:57

And then it's like, who's this?

1:13:59

And they talk to you and they interrupt conversations.

1:14:02

And not in a snooty way, but it is a bit of a, it's like a dugout.

1:14:06

It's like a baseball dugout.

1:14:07

Adderall people go back there.

1:14:08

Yeah.

1:14:09

They talk too much to you.

1:14:10

Yeah.

1:14:10

You don't need that in your life.

1:14:12

Right.

1:14:14

But they have more confidence than me back there.

1:14:16

I'm like, should I?

1:14:17

They have Adderall confidence.

1:14:18

I've never done Adderall.

1:14:19

Good for you.

1:14:20

Have you done it?

1:14:20

Isn't it big now?

1:14:21

Like every student has taken it?

1:14:22

A lot of people are taking it.

1:14:24

It's a big thing amongst journalists.

1:14:25

Journalists and writers.

1:14:27

Because they get more work done.

1:14:28

Because you're on speed.

1:14:29

Like there was a guy that I had in here that was writing a book on, he wrote

1:14:33

that book on Hunter S. Thompson.

1:14:35

What is that?

1:14:36

What is his book?

1:14:40

Something Gonzo something.

1:14:44

Anyway, he was talking about how he needs it to write.

1:14:48

He can't write without it.

1:14:49

Is it just the deadlines and the workload is insane and that's a way to kind of

1:14:52

cope with it?

1:14:53

You don't need it to write.

1:14:54

Can you move your fingers?

1:14:55

You move your fingers?

1:14:56

Yes.

1:14:56

But there's a mental fatigue.

1:14:58

Yes.

1:14:59

Okay.

1:15:00

Take a break.

1:15:00

Go for a walk.

1:15:01

Yeah.

1:15:01

That's the natural thing to do.

1:15:03

But some people want the quick fix.

1:15:04

Well, it's not necessarily the quick fix.

1:15:06

It's like you can get a good Timothy Denevy.

1:15:09

Nice guy.

1:15:09

Very nice guy.

1:15:10

Isn't there like a mental debt if you keep on taking it?

1:15:12

What's the name of his book?

1:15:14

What's the name of the book?

1:15:16

Yeah.

1:15:16

Mental debt.

1:15:17

Yeah.

1:15:17

It's called you become a crackhead.

1:15:19

Freak kingdom.

1:15:20

Freak kingdom.

1:15:21

Yeah.

1:15:21

You become someone who is on stimulants all the time.

1:15:26

And I know several people that have an issue.

1:15:29

I know one guy has completely lost his fucking mind.

1:15:31

Thinks everybody's against him.

1:15:32

Thinks that everyone's done him wrong.

1:15:35

And he's just out there cracked out in the middle of nowhere on fucking Adderall

1:15:38

every day and making YouTube videos.

1:15:41

And there's a lot of people like that, man.

1:15:42

There's a lot of people like that.

1:15:43

It is a meth-like drug.

1:15:46

It's very, very, very, very similar to meth.

1:15:49

Yeah.

1:15:49

It's just a different release in terms of like how quickly your body processes

1:15:53

it.

1:15:54

It's crazy how widespread it is for something like that then.

1:15:56

It's fucking stimulants, man.

1:15:57

It gets people.

1:15:58

If you can effectively do your job and you don't commit any crimes and they can

1:16:03

sell you that stuff and make a profit and then you actually are more profitable

1:16:07

when you're on that stuff than not, then fucking have at it.

1:16:11

That's how people look at things.

1:16:13

And then, look, when pot was sort of legal, when it was medically legal, I had

1:16:18

a bullshit prescription.

1:16:20

Your back hurt?

1:16:21

Oh, yeah, everything, bro.

1:16:22

Yeah, yeah.

1:16:23

What was your excuse?

1:16:23

Did you actually...

1:16:24

I don't remember.

1:16:24

I used a bunch of different ones.

1:16:25

Did you go to the hot doctor?

1:16:27

You know, like you would see on Sunset Boulevard, it's like this Persian chick

1:16:30

who's like...

1:16:31

No.

1:16:31

I wouldn't describe you.

1:16:32

No, I went to a black dude with dreadlocks.

1:16:34

He was awesome.

1:16:35

This is how he looked at me when I went in there.

1:16:37

I feel like that's the best weed doctor.

1:16:38

The black guy would be like, oh, this guy's good.

1:16:40

The best.

1:16:41

He had a...

1:16:42

Do you remember those vaporizers that are...

1:16:44

They're a bag.

1:16:45

They're called a volcano.

1:16:45

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:16:46

I remember when I stayed with Ari Shaffir in New York and he had those.

1:16:50

And I had never seen that before.

1:16:51

It just seemed like such an odd contraption.

1:16:54

Some of the early podcasts, we vaporized with that bag and they're the dumbest

1:16:58

conversations

1:16:59

because we had no idea what we're talking about.

1:17:01

I would correct myself halfway into a sentence because I forgot what I was

1:17:05

saying and then

1:17:06

I would forget what the original correction was and then I'd be like, no, that's

1:17:09

not what

1:17:10

I'm saying.

1:17:10

What am I saying?

1:17:11

I was so fucked up and it would take like an hour into the podcast before like

1:17:15

the fog would

1:17:16

settle.

1:17:17

So was that just the medical marijuana delivery system?

1:17:21

Well, no, it's just a delivery system.

1:17:23

It's not...

1:17:23

You can use it right now.

1:17:24

You don't have to...

1:17:25

I feel like, do a lot of people use it that way?

1:17:27

Yes.

1:17:27

A lot of people vaporize with those bags.

1:17:29

What's the, I don't know, upside of that?

1:17:31

No, smoke.

1:17:31

You're just getting mist.

1:17:33

You're basically getting the THC crystals.

1:17:36

It's turning into mist.

1:17:37

When you vaporize, you're not getting the burnt plant material.

1:17:41

It's almost like coffee connoisseurs.

1:17:43

Yes.

1:17:43

There's a million ways to get what you need.

1:17:46

Yeah.

1:17:46

Or wine dorks.

1:17:47

Yeah.

1:17:47

Or cigar dorks.

1:17:49

It's like real similar.

1:17:50

But anyway, I walk into this guy's office and he's just the fucking coolest.

1:17:55

I wish I kept in touch with this dude.

1:17:56

It was somewhere in Hollywood.

1:17:58

I forget where it was.

1:17:59

But the dude looked at me and goes, you look sick.

1:18:03

You look sick.

1:18:04

He goes, you need some medicine.

1:18:06

You need some medicine.

1:18:08

And he had this big smile on my face.

1:18:09

I said, thank you, sir.

1:18:10

I feel sick.

1:18:11

And I feel like I need some medicine.

1:18:12

He goes, what are you here for, brother?

1:18:14

And I said, it helps you sleep.

1:18:17

He goes, good enough for me.

1:18:18

And he runs.

1:18:19

He's writing a prescription.

1:18:21

He gives me a prescription.

1:18:22

Then he pulls out the biggest bag.

1:18:24

He had a custom vaporizer bag for the volcano.

1:18:27

And I'm telling you, I'm not exaggerating.

1:18:29

It was four feet long.

1:18:30

It's this four feet long bag.

1:18:32

He puts it on this.

1:18:33

It pumps up like a kid's bouncy house.

1:18:36

Fills up with weed.

1:18:38

He does it there?

1:18:39

Oh, yeah.

1:18:39

We were blasted.

1:18:40

We got blasted at his place.

1:18:42

The doctor's office was connected to a grow-up.

1:18:46

So we smoke.

1:18:48

We smoke.

1:18:49

We vaporized.

1:18:49

And then we go into the back where they're growing the weed.

1:18:52

And we're barbecued.

1:18:53

I'm barely in this dimension.

1:18:55

I go in there and I see all these plants.

1:18:57

And I get a feeling from these things like they're alive.

1:19:00

Like they're conscious.

1:19:01

It felt so weird.

1:19:03

To this day, I miss that feeling.

1:19:05

I go, what was that?

1:19:06

Was I so high?

1:19:07

I was hallucinating.

1:19:08

Is it possible that if you get really high on pot and then you go around the

1:19:14

pot leaves,

1:19:15

you pick up their frequency.

1:19:16

And you understand that they're a living organism.

1:19:19

And that's one of the reasons why they make you feel so good when you get high.

1:19:22

Like one of the reasons why you're interacting with whatever they are, with the

1:19:28

molecules,

1:19:28

the THC and the cannabinoids.

1:19:30

You're interacting with it.

1:19:31

And then when you go around the actual potted plants and they're all super

1:19:35

healthy because

1:19:36

they got this crazy hydroponic setup and they're all the right nutrients and

1:19:39

these lush green

1:19:41

plants in this perfect environment for growing because, you know, they're

1:19:44

experts.

1:19:46

And I'm like, these things are alive, man.

1:19:48

These things, they know you're there.

1:19:50

They're like, hi.

1:19:51

That's what it felt like.

1:19:53

So it was a successful trip.

1:19:54

Oh, yeah, man.

1:19:55

It took me hours before I knew what I was doing afterwards.

1:20:00

Yeah.

1:20:01

It's like hours later trying to figure it out.

1:20:03

I just love how he took the onus of an excuse off of you.

1:20:06

Oh, yeah.

1:20:06

You look sick.

1:20:07

That's the moment I walked in.

1:20:08

Like, I don't like this doctor.

1:20:09

You look sick.

1:20:10

Yeah.

1:20:10

You look sick.

1:20:11

You need some medicine.

1:20:12

And crazy dreadlocks and circular glasses.

1:20:15

He was amazing.

1:20:16

God, I wish I kept in touch with that guy.

1:20:18

He's a good doctor.

1:20:18

He was a great doctor.

1:20:20

I've had a bunch of good weed doctors.

1:20:22

I had one of them, though.

1:20:23

I had to stop going.

1:20:24

He went crazy 9-11 on me.

1:20:27

What does that mean?

1:20:27

He went, he was trying to tell me that the towers were brought down by Tesla

1:20:32

technology.

1:20:34

Whoa.

1:20:34

And I was like, what?

1:20:35

He's like, concrete doesn't vaporize.

1:20:37

You know.

1:20:37

I was like, what do you mean vaporize?

1:20:39

I used to try to do a bit about like how, you know, you hear about white

1:20:42

privilege and everything.

1:20:42

I go, one of the things about white privilege people don't really think about

1:20:44

that much is you're allowed to have any conspiracy theory you want.

1:20:48

I can't be like, 9-11 was an inside job.

1:20:51

You know, like, jet fuel can't melt steel beams.

1:20:54

They're like, whatever, Ahmed.

1:20:55

Sure thing, Aladdin.

1:20:56

No, you don't understand.

1:20:58

Right.

1:20:59

That's different.

1:21:00

Yeah.

1:21:00

Yeah.

1:21:01

If you looked at the pie chart of people that are really into conspiracies and

1:21:04

like looked at race, white would be overwhelming.

1:21:07

What would it be, like the pie chart of conspiracy theorists?

1:21:11

Yeah, I don't know.

1:21:11

Like three quarters of the pie chart, white people.

1:21:14

Yeah, it would sound absurd coming from me.

1:21:16

Like, I don't believe that.

1:21:17

But imagine if I'm like, 9-11 was a brown guy.

1:21:19

Like, they're like, sure thing.

1:21:21

You're not getting off that easy.

1:21:22

Yeah.

1:21:22

Inside job.

1:21:24

Yeah.

1:21:25

Yeah, it's, you, you worked for Boeing.

1:21:27

Is that what you did?

1:21:27

Yeah.

1:21:27

What did you do over there?

1:21:29

I was an aerospace engineer in Long Beach.

1:21:31

Were you involved at all in 9-11?

1:21:32

Did you have anything to do?

1:21:33

This is a hatchet job.

1:21:34

I'm out of here.

1:21:35

You can tell us.

1:21:36

You were lulling me into a false sense of security with like the comedy in the

1:21:39

comedy store.

1:21:40

For years I've been your friend.

1:21:41

So anyways, you were involved with 9-11, right?

1:21:43

What, did you train those pilots?

1:21:45

You gave me, yeah.

1:21:46

What did you do?

1:21:47

What'd you do at Boeing?

1:21:48

I did stress analysis for the floor beam.

1:21:51

It's a very unglamorous.

1:21:52

It's kind of cool, though.

1:21:54

I guess so.

1:21:55

It means you're bona fide smart.

1:21:58

Yeah.

1:21:58

I mean, I'm able to jump through hoops with a goal in mind.

1:22:02

Like, I have a high threshold for academic pain.

1:22:05

So I took a lot of math.

1:22:06

I took a lot of, it wasn't that hard for me.

1:22:08

It was like, I mean, it's difficult to get the degree.

1:22:10

But, all right, they do these steps.

1:22:13

You get this number.

1:22:14

There's this formula.

1:22:15

You have the tools.

1:22:15

Right.

1:22:16

They show you how to do it.

1:22:17

Monkey see, monkey do.

1:22:18

Interesting way of describing it.

1:22:20

You have a high threshold for academic pain.

1:22:22

Because it is, like, a little painful, right?

1:22:23

I think just, it seems so daunting to the average person.

1:22:27

And they just don't want to be bothered with that.

1:22:29

To even get over the hump of learning something like that.

1:22:31

They're just like, I could never.

1:22:32

Right.

1:22:33

That's for brainiacs.

1:22:34

Right.

1:22:35

But the thing is, engineering was a means to an end for me to do stand-up

1:22:39

comedy.

1:22:39

Like, my parents were going to pay for my college.

1:22:42

But only certain degrees.

1:22:44

So at first, because I knew I wanted to do stand-up when I was, like, 17.

1:22:47

Really?

1:22:47

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:22:48

How'd you know?

1:22:49

I think two things happened.

1:22:52

So I didn't grow up with stand-up.

1:22:54

I didn't really know it was a thing.

1:22:56

It wasn't on my radar.

1:22:56

I grew up with The Simpsons, SNL, and, like, Conan.

1:23:00

Late Night Conan.

1:23:01

Those were my jams.

1:23:02

I feel like that's my comedy DNA.

1:23:06

But then I was 17, like, on my 17th birthday, we rented Delirious.

1:23:09

So we watched Delirious, Eddie Murphy's Delirious, you know?

1:23:13

It was, like, the greatest thing in the world.

1:23:16

And that just planted the seed of comedy.

1:23:18

So that coupled with my love for SNL.

1:23:21

And I'm like, how do I, like, I don't know if Google was around even.

1:23:25

Or maybe, I don't know.

1:23:25

I just researched how do people get on SNL.

1:23:27

Maybe Google wasn't around.

1:23:29

So I saw they came from two camps.

1:23:31

They were either stand-ups or they came from improv.

1:23:35

So, like, Second City, UCB, Groundlings.

1:23:39

This was, like, the pedigree.

1:23:41

These are the schools they picked from.

1:23:42

And then I researched those schools.

1:23:44

They were in Chicago, L.A., New York.

1:23:46

You had to pay money to take these classes.

1:23:48

You may not pass.

1:23:50

You have to go back to 101 or whatever.

1:23:52

So it's like a school.

1:23:53

And stand-up is just you.

1:23:55

It's just you out there with, like, a sword, you know?

1:23:58

So I like, I'm like, oh, I could do that.

1:24:01

And there's comedy clubs in Seattle.

1:24:03

I can count on me.

1:24:04

Like, I don't have to rely on other people to, like, zip-zap-zoop with each

1:24:08

other.

1:24:08

Improv is a great thing, you know?

1:24:10

I'm not, like, knocking it or anything.

1:24:11

It's just, it's such a different, you have to dedicate your life to, like, one

1:24:14

or the other.

1:24:14

I think it's very hard to be great at both.

1:24:16

And there's not a lot of career paths for improv.

1:24:19

It's like you get to a certain spot and that's it.

1:24:22

Like, there's some people who are very, very talented in Groundlings, in, like,

1:24:25

UCB.

1:24:25

And then how do they monetize that?

1:24:28

If they book a commercial, they're still beholden to a lot of other people.

1:24:31

They have to be the right guy or girl, the right look.

1:24:34

There are so many variables that are outside of your control as a talented

1:24:38

improv performer.

1:24:39

But as a stand-up, you could do a weekend.

1:24:42

We can always make money.

1:24:43

Yeah.

1:24:43

Once you get to a certain level.

1:24:45

Are they famous, like, in terms of going on the road as an improv guy?

1:24:49

I guess whose line is it anyway, guys?

1:24:50

Do it.

1:24:51

Yeah, but you'll have to, maybe they'll start doing stand-up.

1:24:55

Because they've built some, you'll see that, right?

1:24:57

They'll build some credibility, like, and notoriety.

1:24:59

And they come from the improv background.

1:25:01

But if they want to start making some money on the road, they start doing stand-up.

1:25:05

But they're no better off than someone like a 22-year-old doing stand-up now.

1:25:09

Because you've got to put the hours in.

1:25:11

Just because you're good at this other thing, you still have to start over.

1:25:15

Right.

1:25:15

It's like the farm.

1:25:17

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:25:18

Exactly.

1:25:18

You can't, the beauty of stand-up is you can't skip steps.

1:25:22

It's so, when you see a comic on stage, it's like when you cut a tree open and

1:25:25

you see all the rings.

1:25:26

You can just tell, like, oh, this guy's been doing it 20 years.

1:25:29

Yes.

1:25:30

You can't fake that.

1:25:31

Yeah.

1:25:32

So I chose to do stand-up because it was just me out there.

1:25:35

And I could rely on me.

1:25:36

And I could do it while I do engineering school.

1:25:39

So I chose engineering because, like, I knew I wanted to do this stuff.

1:25:43

So I thought I needed a theater degree.

1:25:45

So I was like, can I do theater?

1:25:46

And my dad was like, no, you can't do theater.

1:25:49

And then it kept on getting more and more watered down.

1:25:50

I was like, can I do, like, directing?

1:25:53

They're like, no, you can't do directing.

1:25:55

They told you what you can and can't do.

1:25:57

Yeah, yeah.

1:25:57

And I love it.

1:25:58

In hindsight, I'm so grateful.

1:25:59

Why is that?

1:26:00

Dude, if I had a theater degree right now, I'd be fucked.

1:26:04

If anyone's watching and you have a theater degree or you're thinking about

1:26:09

getting a theater degree, don't do it.

1:26:11

You don't need it.

1:26:12

You're not going to be Jude Law because you have a theater degree.

1:26:16

You could do it on the side.

1:26:17

Think of how many people have come to L.A. or New York.

1:26:19

It's a different thing.

1:26:20

OK, like if you're at Juilliard and you're this instrument or whatever, and it's

1:26:24

like a top, top, top theater school and it's a feeder to like that world.

1:26:29

OK.

1:26:30

Or if you're the son of like a huge actor or daughter, sure.

1:26:34

But if you're like in, I don't know, Ohio and you're going to theater school,

1:26:39

you're just lighting your parents' money on fire.

1:26:44

That's all you're doing.

1:26:45

They're letting you like go in a 20-year-old jungle gym for four years.

1:26:49

What the thing is, like you see sometimes like an actor, like or rather like an

1:26:54

athlete or someone will be an actor in a movie and they'll do a fucking amazing

1:26:58

job.

1:26:58

Here's an example.

1:26:59

Like Oprah.

1:27:00

Here's an example.

1:27:01

The color of purple.

1:27:02

The highest paid actor is The Rock.

1:27:05

What theater school did Dwayne The Rock Johnson go to?

1:27:08

The theater of hard knocks.

1:27:10

Thank you.

1:27:10

So you might as well do wrestling as opposed to – so it doesn't – theater

1:27:14

degree does not equal acting job.

1:27:16

Right, but that's a different kind of acting than say like Jake Gyllenhaal or

1:27:21

–

1:27:21

Sure.

1:27:22

You know what I mean?

1:27:22

Yeah.

1:27:24

Do you think you're learning that at all?

1:27:26

Here's the other thing too that I always thought was so interesting because I

1:27:29

did acting class for like two months when I was here in L.A.

1:27:32

You know, just to try it out and stuff.

1:27:34

It wasn't for me.

1:27:34

And what's funny is like they'll be teaching these techniques and like Meisner

1:27:39

and tapping in and blah, blah, blah.

1:27:41

And then at the end of the class, they'll be like, all right, does anybody have

1:27:45

any sides?

1:27:46

They want any auditions they want to go over and it's all just CSI interrogation

1:27:49

jobs?

1:27:49

Like, I don't know the guy.

1:27:51

So you're like – you're teaching Shakespeare in class and anything anyone's

1:27:54

ever going out for is like, oh, yeah, I used to come around here like two times

1:27:58

a week.

1:27:58

Like how is iambic pentameter helping you with – that's what you're –

1:28:05

Right.

1:28:06

And you're chomping at the bit to get this –

1:28:08

Law and order, SUV.

1:28:09

CSI delivery guy number two.

1:28:11

Why are you learning Meisner?

1:28:13

Right.

1:28:14

And I know there are no bit parts, only bit actors and all that.

1:28:17

Was it true?

1:28:17

No, that's what actors – that's what acting teachers love to tell you when

1:28:21

you complain about getting a bit part.

1:28:23

They go, there are no bit parts, only bit actors.

1:28:28

And then you go, oh, I don't want to be a bit actor.

1:28:30

I'm happy to be a tree.

1:28:35

Well, there's certain comics that will tell you there are no bad crowds.

1:28:38

Those people are assholes.

1:28:40

Sure.

1:28:41

I think we've been – the thing is if you're a younger comic and you're like,

1:28:45

that crowd sucked, you don't have the bandwidth to know what's good and bad yet.

1:28:49

Not yet.

1:28:50

So, you can say that.

1:28:52

I can say that.

1:28:54

We've all seen bad crowds.

1:28:56

Sure.

1:28:56

They exist.

1:28:57

And we can chalk it up for what it is.

1:28:58

But if you're a year in or two years in, it was probably you not audibling or

1:29:04

just adjusting on the fly.

1:29:06

Or you're not very good.

1:29:08

Yeah, maybe that too.

1:29:10

Sure.

1:29:11

There's a weird thing about comics where there's certain comics where you know

1:29:15

there's no way they're going to figure it out.

1:29:18

I don't know, though.

1:29:19

I mean, as a whole, yes.

1:29:21

But there are – I hear there's anomalies to that.

1:29:24

Because I would hear stories about Sebastian, which is so crazy.

1:29:26

Because I wasn't there for that timeline of when – but he's killing it.

1:29:30

He's so funny.

1:29:31

And he's like the guy now.

1:29:33

Well, he was never terrible.

1:29:35

Okay.

1:29:36

So, you're talking about like –

1:29:37

No, I remember Sebastian in the beginning.

1:29:38

He was never terrible.

1:29:39

He was learning.

1:29:41

I see.

1:29:42

But he was – he showed up all the time.

1:29:45

And he was always a nice guy.

1:29:46

And he's like – he wasn't terrible.

1:29:49

He just didn't do great in the beginning.

1:29:51

I think people just take liberties with that story then.

1:29:54

And they make it sound like –

1:29:55

No, he was never offensively unfunny.

1:29:58

There's certain people that are offensively unfunny where you're like, there's

1:30:01

not a chance.

1:30:01

You're missing the DNA.

1:30:03

Like, you just can't – you're colorblind.

1:30:06

You're missing it.

1:30:07

Whatever it is, you don't have it.

1:30:09

Yeah.

1:30:09

You can't breathe underwater.

1:30:11

I mean, that's the beauty.

1:30:12

I would hear Mitzi stories of her just telling people.

1:30:14

You're terrible.

1:30:16

You never met her, huh?

1:30:17

No.

1:30:18

I got there when Tommy was around.

1:30:20

And it was kind of – so, she was still – she was like sick, you know?

1:30:23

And he would say, Mitzi saw your tape.

1:30:26

And I don't know.

1:30:27

She's lying.

1:30:28

I know, I know, I know.

1:30:29

Yeah, yeah.

1:30:29

So, he would always just like have this buffer between like Mitzi and myself.

1:30:34

And I would just pretend that –

1:30:35

Mitzi was – she became like – what's the guy's name from Psycho?

1:30:39

Norman Bates when his mom was in the fucking shower, but it was really him, you

1:30:45

know?

1:30:45

Yeah.

1:30:46

Like, his mom's dead and he would put the wig on.

1:30:48

Yeah.

1:30:48

That was Tommy.

1:30:49

Tommy put the Mitzi wig on.

1:30:50

And then he would always like do her voice and stuff.

1:30:53

And like when giving –

1:30:54

Oh, fame.

1:30:55

Yeah, man.

1:30:56

Dude, like because he would expunge wisdom and –

1:30:59

Because I remember I would drive up from Boeing.

1:31:00

That was my – so, I was working in Long Beach.

1:31:02

So, oh, yeah.

1:31:04

So, I got the engineering degree, right?

1:31:05

And then I just applied to jobs.

1:31:06

I did mechanical engineering because my best friend was doing mechanical.

1:31:08

And I was like, I don't care what engineering I do.

1:31:10

I just – I'll be close to my friend.

1:31:12

And you were just doing that so you could have a job.

1:31:15

Just to support myself.

1:31:17

It was such a long con.

1:31:18

It's like, all right, I knew I wanted to do stand-up.

1:31:21

In the meantime, I got to go to college.

1:31:25

Right?

1:31:25

I've got to be able to support so I can get good in Seattle.

1:31:28

That's really funny, man.

1:31:30

I guess people don't –

1:31:31

Do that?

1:31:32

Life's a long time if you're lucky, you know.

1:31:35

Yeah.

1:31:35

And it's okay to have – to plan this far out.

1:31:39

It sounds far-fetched maybe if I told it to someone at the time.

1:31:41

But in hindsight, it was the most beautifully executed plan.

1:31:44

It worked out great.

1:31:45

Yeah.

1:31:46

So, I did stand-up while I was going to college.

1:31:48

My life was just school by day, stand-up at night.

1:31:53

It would actually be stand-up on the weekends because I was living at home and

1:31:56

it's 40 minutes

1:31:57

of the club.

1:31:58

So, I would just do a lot of time on Friday and Saturday.

1:32:00

Did your parents know?

1:32:01

Yeah, they knew.

1:32:01

And it was bad.

1:32:02

It was like I was doing heroin.

1:32:03

Like, they were against it.

1:32:05

Wow.

1:32:05

How do they feel now?

1:32:08

My mom has – I took her to the premiere.

1:32:11

I had a small role in Whiskey Tango Foxrot, this Tina Fey movie.

1:32:14

So, I took her to the premiere in New York.

1:32:16

And so, she got to be on the red carpet and, like, take pictures with Tina Fey.

1:32:20

And, like – and so, she was in.

1:32:23

She was in after that.

1:32:24

And she keeps on asking me.

1:32:25

She's like, when's the next premiere?

1:32:29

When's the next premiere?

1:32:31

That is a hilarious thing to ask.

1:32:33

Yeah, yeah.

1:32:33

Because there was an after party and everyone's milling about.

1:32:36

And then my mom's like, there's Tina.

1:32:38

Tina's at the – like, introduce me.

1:32:40

I'm like, yeah, okay.

1:32:41

Okay, mom.

1:32:41

Because I'm – like, my mom's a sweetheart.

1:32:43

But I'm still caught in this showbiz thing.

1:32:46

Like, I'm, what, number 15 on the call sheet?

1:32:49

Or I'm very – you know, I don't even know if she remembers me, even though I'm

1:32:51

in the movie, you know?

1:32:52

So, I'm like, I got to pick my spot.

1:32:54

And then she just kind of, like, nudges me.

1:32:56

Your mom, please?

1:32:57

Like, a linebacker.

1:32:58

She just, like, pushes me into Tina.

1:32:59

And I'm like, oh.

1:33:00

But it was great to have the out of my mom be like, my mom is such a huge fan.

1:33:03

And she's like, oh, yeah, of course.

1:33:05

And she was a sweetheart.

1:33:05

So, now she's in.

1:33:06

She's in.

1:33:07

She's like, you made it.

1:33:08

You're actually successful.

1:33:09

Yeah, or she could see the light at the end of the tunnel.

1:33:10

Like, okay.

1:33:11

What about your dad?

1:33:12

My dad is kind of more nuts and bolts.

1:33:16

He doesn't, like, get fooled by the glitz and the glam or anything like that.

1:33:20

He just understands money and things.

1:33:23

Like, I've had a nice car.

1:33:25

That Mazda agree.

1:33:26

Like, if I had a Mazda Miata, I mean, he'd be fucking sold.

1:33:29

Like, you did okay.

1:33:30

But, no.

1:33:31

Get a Tesla.

1:33:32

Yeah, I guess so.

1:33:34

I think what has softened him a little bit, because I just got this place in

1:33:37

Tarzana, like a house.

1:33:39

And that's, like, real adult shit.

1:33:41

So, I didn't realize that would kind of soften him a bit, because.

1:33:45

How old are you now?

1:33:45

35.

1:33:46

So, you're like, wow, he's a real adult.

1:33:49

I guess so.

1:33:50

Yeah.

1:33:50

Do you have a girlfriend?

1:33:51

No.

1:33:52

So, when you get married.

1:33:53

You think, I don't know if he cares about that.

1:33:55

Like, I think it's more.

1:33:56

Oh, sure.

1:33:56

Sure.

1:33:56

That's what an adult does.

1:33:57

I think my dad cares more about the security.

1:33:59

Like, a real career.

1:34:01

Right.

1:34:02

Income.

1:34:03

And a house and stability.

1:34:05

And comedy was never.

1:34:06

And then, also, aside from just those things, you know, they're from

1:34:09

Afghanistan.

1:34:10

So, it's a low.

1:34:12

In my dad's opinion, it's kind of a low thing.

1:34:14

Comedy is, like, a low thing for someone to be doing.

1:34:18

Low?

1:34:19

Yeah.

1:34:19

Like, low.

1:34:20

Like, subhuman.

1:34:25

Because he would always say.

1:34:26

But what if he saw you at, like, a giant sold-out theater or something?

1:34:29

I don't know.

1:34:29

Maybe.

1:34:29

Yeah.

1:34:30

Who knows?

1:34:30

But.

1:34:31

Big line of people waiting to see you?

1:34:32

I guess.

1:34:33

I don't know what that thing will be.

1:34:34

But he would always say, because we would, you know, be in shouting matches

1:34:37

when we were

1:34:37

younger.

1:34:38

Oh, yeah.

1:34:38

When we were both younger.

1:34:39

Yeah.

1:34:40

I mean, look, I love my parents and I know what it was grounded in.

1:34:42

I think they just, they didn't want me to be eating out of a dumpster.

1:34:46

So, they were just, they were there.

1:34:50

I mean, most of my dad, his frustration and lashing out or just like, and not

1:34:54

like physical

1:34:55

or anything, just like, you know, like, you're throwing your life away, blah,

1:34:57

blah, blah.

1:34:58

It was because he wanted that security for me.

1:35:00

Yeah.

1:35:01

I understand it for what it is.

1:35:02

When I was like 17 or 18.

1:35:03

Yeah.

1:35:04

You don't get me.

1:35:05

Right.

1:35:05

I hate you.

1:35:06

Like, it just feels so.

1:35:08

Sure.

1:35:08

Now that I'm older, I get it.

1:35:09

I get where he was coming from.

1:35:10

Right.

1:35:11

Yeah.

1:35:12

So, I don't know what the point was, but I think now that I have a little more

1:35:16

stability.

1:35:16

When did they accept you?

1:35:17

Oh, yeah.

1:35:17

He would always say, he's like, you're out there every night with the pimps and

1:35:23

the prostitutes.

1:35:28

I don't think my dad's ever been to a comedy club.

1:35:30

I've never seen a pimp.

1:35:31

Most of the time you've seen a pimp at the comedy store.

1:35:34

Yeah.

1:35:34

I might have seen one or two prostitutes over the last 20 years.

1:35:37

You're out there every night with the pimps and the prostitutes.

1:35:42

That was his line.

1:35:45

Dude, you should talk about this on stage.

1:35:47

I did it in, like, my last special.

1:35:49

I tell that story.

1:35:50

I talk about this story with my dad, and he would always trot that out there.

1:35:53

Oh, my God.

1:35:54

That's so funny.

1:35:55

The pimps and the prostitutes.

1:35:58

I mean, he's not half wrong.

1:36:00

He's half wrong.

1:36:02

He's half wrong.

1:36:03

I've seen a couple prostitutes.

1:36:04

Yeah, yeah, yeah, sure.

1:36:04

But that's over.

1:36:05

He's like, oh, as long as there are no pimps.

1:36:06

30 years, I've seen maybe two or three prostitutes.

1:36:09

I've seen the whole front row, just like fur coats.

1:36:11

Oh, pimps.

1:36:12

And, like, pimp canes.

1:36:13

Oh, pimp canes.

1:36:14

Oh, greased hair.

1:36:16

Oh, big diamond rings.

1:36:18

But he would say, people should be entertaining you.

1:36:22

That would be the thing.

1:36:23

Like, I should be the one entertained.

1:36:24

Oh, because you're special.

1:36:26

Not being the entertainer.

1:36:27

Because you're intelligent.

1:36:28

I guess so.

1:36:28

You're a serious person.

1:36:30

Yeah.

1:36:30

I just found, like, if you want to make broad strokes, I think in the Middle

1:36:34

Eastern community,

1:36:35

it's, like, they love art, but their kids shouldn't be doing it.

1:36:41

Like, they should be consumers of art.

1:36:43

But what, oh, interesting.

1:36:44

But what if you were, like, a famous painter?

1:36:46

Classical painter.

1:36:48

I guess no one, no parent really thinks best case scenario for their kid.

1:36:53

Like, eh, but what if a bunch of people buy his art?

1:36:55

It's always, like, it's a pipe dream.

1:36:56

What are the odds?

1:36:58

Blah, blah, blah.

1:36:58

Yes.

1:36:59

You're throwing your life away.

1:37:01

And I guess there is some, because statistically, sure.

1:37:03

Oh, yeah.

1:37:04

Statistically.

1:37:04

Sure.

1:37:04

But I think, like, what I would do different when I have kids or whatever, I

1:37:08

would explain

1:37:09

the realities of how, you know, the whole theater degree thing.

1:37:13

I'm so glad they made me do a degree with teeth, because that allowed me to

1:37:16

have a legitimate

1:37:17

job to get me out here.

1:37:18

Like, I'm not a trust fund kid.

1:37:20

How else would I be close to where I needed to be?

1:37:22

I needed to be here.

1:37:23

Where does your family live?

1:37:23

They're in Seattle.

1:37:24

Oh, so they're still up there.

1:37:25

They're still there, yeah.

1:37:26

Yeah.

1:37:26

So, I would have some practicality.

1:37:29

I'd be, like, I'll pay for your college, get a legitimate degree where there's

1:37:33

an actual

1:37:33

job outlook at the end.

1:37:35

Like, I'm not paying you to find yourself.

1:37:37

When did you quit the job?

1:37:38

Like, 2010, 2010, 2009.

1:37:42

So, right when you came to the store?

1:37:43

Right around.

1:37:44

So, some things happened.

1:37:45

Like, I was working at Boeing for three and a half years, and I would just work

1:37:49

by day,

1:37:49

and I would drive up to Hollywood in, like, the valley by night.

1:37:53

I was burning the candle at both ends.

1:37:55

Ooh, you must have been tired all the time.

1:37:56

I was.

1:37:57

Well, especially at first, because I didn't know the lay of the comedy land.

1:38:00

I was just going, I thought everything was worth my time.

1:38:02

Or you don't know until you do it.

1:38:03

So, I would do some, like, shitty open mic, drive all the way.

1:38:07

Did you do any backyard shows?

1:38:08

That wasn't a thing.

1:38:10

Really?

1:38:12

Yet, as of late, you know what's so funny is, like, the progression of the alt

1:38:15

scene is

1:38:16

that first it was in weird spots, like, a washing or, like, a laundromat, and

1:38:20

then

1:38:20

it was, like, a meltdown.

1:38:21

And then living rooms were a big thing.

1:38:23

Living room shows.

1:38:24

And then backyards were hot.

1:38:26

That's why I remember living room shows.

1:38:28

Oh, yeah.

1:38:29

I want to do a sketch.

1:38:29

Like, 15 people in a living room.

1:38:30

Where it's, like, the hottest alt show.

1:38:32

It's called Crawl Space.

1:38:32

Well, let me tell you.

1:38:33

And everyone's just on their belly.

1:38:34

You do really funny one-on-one sketches that you do.

1:38:38

Like, you play more than one role.

1:38:40

Oh, thanks, man.

1:38:41

And you do them on your Instagram.

1:38:42

Like, are you just super bored during the day?

1:38:45

And you, like...

1:38:45

No.

1:38:46

I always wanted to ask you this.

1:38:47

Oh, why I do them and stuff?

1:38:47

Yeah.

1:38:48

All right, so it's almost just...

1:38:51

Some of the stuff I do is just a byproduct of, I don't know, being creatively

1:38:56

backlogged.

1:38:56

So I love stand-up and I love sketch.

1:38:59

Those come to me naturally.

1:39:01

Sometimes people will be like, do you have a movie script?

1:39:03

Or, like, you know, what's your sitcom?

1:39:05

And that's just more work.

1:39:07

There's a scaffolding there that if I was teamed up with someone who

1:39:10

understands that world,

1:39:11

maybe it'd be a little more easy.

1:39:12

But I don't want to bang my head against a wall to understand a format where

1:39:15

stand-up and sketch just, like, come to me.

1:39:18

All right.

1:39:18

So that's why I lean into that.

1:39:20

So stand-up has been a thing I've been doing for, like, 17 years.

1:39:23

I feel like I've developed...

1:39:24

I'm good at that.

1:39:25

Sketch, I started doing...

1:39:27

I did it, like, I think...

1:39:29

I grew up through it.

1:39:30

Like, I would do funny videos in school, like, video productions.

1:39:34

Back in the day when you had two VCRs.

1:39:36

This is before, like, Avid.

1:39:37

So you'd, like, jog shuttle.

1:39:39

You'd have two tapes, your mix-down tape and your raw tape.

1:39:42

So you would actually, like, make sketches on a VHS cassette.

1:39:44

So I was always into that because I loved SNL, you know?

1:39:48

So...

1:39:48

And then, you know, you stop doing it.

1:39:50

I'm doing stand-up.

1:39:51

And then I moved to L.A.

1:39:52

And I'm not getting on stage that much because it's so saturated here.

1:39:56

It's so...

1:39:57

It's the biggest market here in New York.

1:39:59

Although I think it's easier to get on stage as a stand-up in New York.

1:40:03

Here, you have to deal with actors.

1:40:04

And there's a real bottleneck.

1:40:06

So I wasn't getting up a lot.

1:40:08

But I'm a creative guy.

1:40:09

I have all these ideas.

1:40:10

And I had this idea for this video on, like, how to attend an Afghan wedding or

1:40:15

whatever.

1:40:16

So...

1:40:17

And I was trying to get people to help me out and shoot it.

1:40:20

And then you were a runt.

1:40:22

No one really gives a fuck.

1:40:23

Like, if you can't do anything for anybody when you first come out here, it's

1:40:26

just sort of like...

1:40:26

And not in a mean way.

1:40:27

It's just the nature of the wilderness.

1:40:30

Like, why am I gonna...

1:40:31

You're not a proven thing.

1:40:32

There's really no upside.

1:40:32

So you get a lot of, like, yeah, I'll help you.

1:40:34

And then flake.

1:40:35

So I rewrote it to just do it all in my apartment.

1:40:38

So I just filmed this video, this YouTube video.

1:40:40

I wasn't even on YouTube yet, though.

1:40:42

It was...

1:40:43

I did this video called How to Attend an Afghan Wedding or something.

1:40:45

It was just called Afghan Wedding.

1:40:46

I put it on MySpace.

1:40:48

And it kind of does well.

1:40:49

It kind of takes off a little bit.

1:40:50

And then my brother was like, oh, you should put it on YouTube.

1:40:52

Like, it wasn't ubiquitous to put stuff on YouTube yet.

1:40:55

I was like, oh, yeah, okay, I'll put it on YouTube, too.

1:40:57

Put it on YouTube.

1:40:59

It kind of makes the rounds on there, too.

1:41:00

And that was just kind of like the nudge I needed.

1:41:03

Like, oh, I'm good.

1:41:05

I could do this.

1:41:06

And I could do this while I'm waiting to get stage time.

1:41:09

So this was another avenue for me.

1:41:11

I do stand-up.

1:41:13

And then I do sketches.

1:41:14

And this was in the heyday of YouTube when there was an appetite for YouTube

1:41:18

sketch.

1:41:18

Like, indie YouTube sketch.

1:41:20

Just funny guys.

1:41:22

And there's different sketch groups and everything.

1:41:24

You don't think there's an appetite for that now?

1:41:25

Not anymore, no.

1:41:26

Why not?

1:41:27

It's become bite-sized.

1:41:28

No one wants to watch sketch on, like, stand-alone.

1:41:30

People want to watch makeup blogs.

1:41:32

They want to watch pranks.

1:41:32

But how do you know?

1:41:33

I know.

1:41:34

How do you know?

1:41:35

Because I've uploaded.

1:41:36

You see the downturn.

1:41:37

There was a time.

1:41:38

Right, but is it because?

1:41:39

Now it's Instagram.

1:41:39

Everything's more bite-sized.

1:41:41

Oh, okay.

1:41:41

So I'm a sketch guy.

1:41:43

I love fully-formed sketch and really taking my time.

1:41:46

Like, and me and my buddy Aristotle, like, he's a really talented filmmaker and

1:41:51

director.

1:41:51

I think I just left Boeing.

1:41:53

And I had this idea for this American History X type sketch.

1:41:56

It's Domino.

1:41:57

It's called Dominoes.

1:41:59

And he and I did it.

1:42:01

And we put it out there.

1:42:01

And it was beautiful.

1:42:03

Like, it's just one of my favorite sketches we've done.

1:42:05

And so I just kept on doing sketch.

1:42:08

And there was an appetite for it.

1:42:10

And then it started to drop off.

1:42:12

Like, there wasn't a lot of viewership.

1:42:14

Now, YouTube sketch will only work if it was on TV the night before.

1:42:17

Like, if it's a Key and Peele sketch that made it.

1:42:19

Or like an Inside Amy.

1:42:20

Or like a Tonight Show sketch.

1:42:21

Or the only way it'll make the rounds is if the sketch was on TV.

1:42:25

And then it has the potential to do well on the internet.

1:42:29

Just a born and bred sketch on the internet doesn't take off anymore.

1:42:33

Instagram does.

1:42:34

So I just have all these ideas.

1:42:36

And I always write them down on my phone.

1:42:38

And Instagram, those like little one-on-ones, is a way to get those ideas out.

1:42:42

In a very not-precious way.

1:42:44

And it's just idea-driven.

1:42:46

And people respond to it, you know.

1:42:48

So it's just more of like, well, let me get this idea out of my head.

1:42:50

So when you write, do you sit down and force yourself in front of a notepad or

1:42:55

a computer?

1:42:56

Back in the day, like when I was first doing stand-up, I had two methods.

1:43:01

I would have the jokes that would just come to me.

1:43:02

And then I would like sit down and try to manufacture jokes.

1:43:07

You know, like, all right.

1:43:08

All right, brain.

1:43:09

What's funny?

1:43:10

What's funny about the world?

1:43:12

Right.

1:43:12

And I would come up with some stuff.

1:43:14

But I always found the things that always worked the best were the stuff that

1:43:18

just like came out of the ether.

1:43:19

It just came to me.

1:43:20

And then eventually I got to the point where enough, I would get enough of

1:43:24

those ideas where I didn't have to sit down and write.

1:43:28

So all I had to do was just be good about capturing what I'm receiving.

1:43:31

So I have my phone with me all the time.

1:43:34

Back in the day, I had a marble notebook and all that.

1:43:36

But like phones have advanced so much.

1:43:37

I have Evernote.

1:43:37

Me too.

1:43:39

Yeah.

1:43:39

So whenever I get an idea, regardless of what the proper medium for it is, like

1:43:42

I'll get an Instagram video idea.

1:43:44

I'll get a fully, fully formed sketch idea where I need like production value,

1:43:49

a sitcom idea or a stand-up idea.

1:43:51

I have different notes for each of them.

1:43:53

And I've just trained myself.

1:43:54

My brain is wired a certain way where I just catch the butterflies or just put

1:43:58

the bucket under the faucet.

1:44:00

So you don't sit down?

1:44:00

No.

1:44:01

I just, I'll get the idea.

1:44:03

I'll jot down as many words as I need to capture it.

1:44:06

Maybe, I don't know, say something happens.

1:44:08

We go to, I don't know.

1:44:10

I don't know.

1:44:11

We go to the lake or something.

1:44:12

And then like I get, or we go hunting.

1:44:13

I get three ideas about hunting.

1:44:15

This many words to capture this thought, this many words to capture, like

1:44:17

separated by commas.

1:44:18

So I have it.

1:44:20

Do you record your sets?

1:44:21

Yeah.

1:44:22

I'll record them.

1:44:22

Do you listen to the recordings?

1:44:24

I do.

1:44:24

Well, it depends.

1:44:25

Like if I'm doing a hot night at the store, that's kind of like the hits.

1:44:29

And I'm not going to learn a lot from the hits.

1:44:31

Right.

1:44:31

When I want to work on stuff, I'll tell Adam at the store, when I call in my veils,

1:44:36

I go up late on Tuesday or Wednesday.

1:44:39

Whichever one I get, I specifically ask to go late so that there's hardly, yeah,

1:44:43

there's no pressure.

1:44:44

There's like 10 people trying to sober up.

1:44:46

I'm on my phone.

1:44:48

Right.

1:44:48

And it's not like this, because when it's a packed OR, it's kind of like a,

1:44:52

what do you got?

1:44:53

Right.

1:44:54

Like I paid this much money.

1:44:55

I got a hot date with me, blah, blah, blah.

1:44:56

It's a different show.

1:44:58

Joey Diaz started getting angry about it.

1:45:00

About what?

1:45:01

But you can't practice.

1:45:03

Well, you can.

1:45:04

You just have to choose different time slots or choose different shows to do it

1:45:08

on.

1:45:08

There's new material nights.

1:45:10

I love those.

1:45:10

Like Neil Brennan has one at Westside.

1:45:12

That's one of my favorite shows to do.

1:45:13

JF Harris has one.

1:45:15

So you have those new material shows.

1:45:16

But I'll just, if you choose to do a later time slot, it might be different for

1:45:20

you because you're such a draw.

1:45:21

But I'm nobody.

1:45:23

You know, like I'm a cusper right now.

1:45:25

So I can just do late night.

1:45:27

But I just think you just sandwich those new bits in between old bits.

1:45:31

You can.

1:45:31

But if you just want the total mental freedom of just like throw spaghetti

1:45:34

against the wall.

1:45:35

Right.

1:45:36

And in a professional way.

1:45:38

Because if I'm doing like a hot show and I'm trying to do a sandwich, it can

1:45:42

still put the brakes a little bit.

1:45:44

Oh, yeah.

1:45:44

And I don't need that.

1:45:46

I'm not Joe Rogan yet.

1:45:47

Yeah, but that's where it's at.

1:45:50

That's how you find a way out of it by putting, when it hits the brakes, you

1:45:54

panic and then you find a way out.

1:45:56

And sometimes that's where you find a punchline.

1:45:58

Yeah.

1:45:58

Sometimes not.

1:45:59

Sure.

1:46:00

You have to deal with the five out of ten.

1:46:01

Five out of ten are going to eat shit.

1:46:03

Five out of ten are going to make it through.

1:46:05

It's almost like being a baseball manager.

1:46:06

I have my A string, my B string.

1:46:09

So, if I'm doing like a hot show and I want to work on a B, so there's

1:46:12

different levels of bits that I can polish.

1:46:15

I'm not going to throw a D in there.

1:46:17

It's the prime time, baby.

1:46:18

Yeah, right.

1:46:19

D is for 1 a.m.

1:46:20

D is for 1.40 a.m.

1:46:22

Right, right, right.

1:46:23

D's got no pressure.

1:46:23

D's got a lot of potential.

1:46:24

Do you do Jeremiah's show?

1:46:26

I love that show, yeah.

1:46:27

Yeah.

1:46:27

I'm doing that tonight.

1:46:28

Dude, that's the best.

1:46:29

I love shows where the audience knows the expectation.

1:46:33

It's like you're a fly on the wall in the process.

1:46:34

Yeah, and there's no pre-recorded or pre-planned material.

1:46:38

Yeah.

1:46:39

There's so much goodwill.

1:46:40

Yeah.

1:46:41

Yeah.

1:46:41

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:46:42

Because you don't get that when it's just like a show show.

1:46:44

I've come up with four or five legitimate bits that have wound up on specials

1:46:48

because of the Jeremiah show.

1:46:49

Yeah.

1:46:50

Yeah.

1:46:50

It's almost like a stand-up float tank.

1:46:53

Yeah.

1:46:54

It's a great little workshop.

1:46:56

All right, what's this idea?

1:46:56

What's that?

1:46:57

And it's also because everybody knows that you're doing that, so it's kind of

1:47:00

more fun.

1:47:00

And also, if you hit a dead end, that's funny.

1:47:03

Right.

1:47:03

Because they know the theme of the show.

1:47:06

Yeah.

1:47:07

I just wish he would do it more often.

1:47:09

He's only doing it like once a month.

1:47:10

Yeah.

1:47:10

Like, do it once a week, man.

1:47:11

I don't know.

1:47:11

Maybe they know what their sweet spot is.

1:47:13

Yeah, I don't think they do.

1:47:15

I think the sweet spot's once a week.

1:47:17

Yeah, yeah.

1:47:17

I think it's totally possible to do that show once a week.

1:47:20

Yeah.

1:47:20

Yeah, I love those shows.

1:47:22

When was the first time your parents saw you on stage?

1:47:24

Oh, you know what?

1:47:27

This is so funny.

1:47:27

This is kind of, so this is like the last bit on my special.

1:47:30

I talk about it like they've seen you once.

1:47:32

Once ever?

1:47:33

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:47:34

Really?

1:47:34

Yeah.

1:47:35

Did you bomb?

1:47:35

Oh, yeah.

1:47:36

Oh!

1:47:36

Oh, in the biggest way.

1:47:38

Oh!

1:47:39

Oh, my God.

1:47:39

Oh, no!

1:47:41

Yeah, do you want to hear the story?

1:47:43

Fuck, yeah, I do.

1:47:44

Okay, so this is just a rehash of like the last thing.

1:47:47

So the last thing I said, I closed my special with this.

1:47:50

So I'm like 17.

1:47:51

I'm like 17 or 18.

1:47:52

I'm at college.

1:47:54

There's a bulletin board and it says like Apollo Amateur Night on tour, right?

1:48:01

So there's a flyer like the Apollo's going on tour and you can audition.

1:48:05

The Apollo Theater in Harlem?

1:48:07

Yeah, the Apollo Theater.

1:48:08

Yeah, yeah.

1:48:08

So they're going to all these major cities, right?

1:48:10

So I'm like, interesting.

1:48:13

Especially I'm just getting maybe a year in or a few months into stand-up.

1:48:16

This is going to be a great opportunity.

1:48:18

Isn't it funny the level of delusion you have as a young comic?

1:48:22

Yeah.

1:48:22

Yeah.

1:48:23

Where you're like, I'm ready.

1:48:24

Yeah.

1:48:25

They got to hear what I got to say.

1:48:26

I've been doing this for a few months.

1:48:28

So I take the, you know, take the little tab.

1:48:33

I have it.

1:48:34

I get all the info.

1:48:36

I go there.

1:48:36

It's in Seattle.

1:48:37

So I go there to audition.

1:48:39

I forget where they're holding the audition.

1:48:41

It's this like theater or whatever.

1:48:42

So I'm sitting, there's 342 people just like, wait, it's like American Idol

1:48:46

pretty much.

1:48:46

And there's like a bunch of like older black ladies singing, I believe I can

1:48:51

fly under their breath.

1:48:53

Like just because they're mostly singers.

1:48:56

So you just hear like, and I'm just standing there like, wait and do my jokes

1:49:02

later.

1:49:04

Oh my God.

1:49:04

And everyone's like, do re mi-ing.

1:49:06

So finally it's my time to go.

1:49:08

So I go out there, I do my standup set and it does well.

1:49:12

Like it does genuinely well.

1:49:13

It wasn't like a, oh fuck, let's feed them to the sharks.

1:49:17

Like I did well.

1:49:18

Like I made them laugh, you know?

1:49:19

So I find out I get selected.

1:49:21

I think I'm one of 11, one of 11 who gets selected.

1:49:24

So I'm like, sweet.

1:49:26

And then I invite everyone.

1:49:28

I'm like, mom, dad, everyone from school and shit.

1:49:32

Oh yeah, everyone.

1:49:33

It's at, it's at the Paramount Theater in Seattle.

1:49:36

Have you been there?

1:49:37

Yeah.

1:49:37

What is that?

1:49:38

4,000?

1:49:38

It's a big place.

1:49:39

4,000, 5,000 people, something like that?

1:49:40

Something like that.

1:49:40

Maybe 3,000, whatever.

1:49:42

Big place.

1:49:42

It's in the thousands of people.

1:49:43

It's a big place.

1:49:44

Yeah.

1:49:44

It's one of our nicest theaters.

1:49:45

Beautiful.

1:49:46

Yeah.

1:49:46

So, so I invite everyone.

1:49:49

And then.

1:49:52

It's packed.

1:49:52

Oh, it's packed.

1:49:53

Oh.

1:49:54

Come on.

1:49:55

Oh my God.

1:49:56

So, so I do the dress rehearsal.

1:49:59

I do the dress rehearsal of a blog with the motions.

1:50:02

Lady comes up to me and she's like, oh, the producer, that's great.

1:50:05

The producer of the show thinks like you should do this bit before instead of

1:50:09

your hip hop

1:50:09

stuff, like do this bit first.

1:50:11

And it was like this bit where I was talking about being Afghan or something,

1:50:15

you know?

1:50:15

Yeah.

1:50:16

So I'm like, oh, okay, whatever.

1:50:17

Like I'm so new.

1:50:18

I just trust the producer.

1:50:20

I'm like, I guess they know.

1:50:20

So I rearranged my set just based on the producer's request.

1:50:24

Comes night of the show.

1:50:25

Everyone's there.

1:50:26

Blah, blah, blah.

1:50:26

It's my time to like, they introduced me.

1:50:29

Blah, blah, blah, blah.

1:50:29

You know, please welcome to He-Man where I come out.

1:50:32

I'm like, hey guys.

1:50:33

I'm like, man, my name is Fahim.

1:50:35

It's like an Afghan name or like Middle Eastern and Afghan to be exact.

1:50:39

And he's like, boo, boo, boo.

1:50:41

I'm out there for maybe 20 seconds.

1:50:43

They just start booing you?

1:50:44

Just boo, boo, boo.

1:50:45

It's such an interesting sensation to be booed by that many people.

1:50:49

So it's just like, it starts cascading like, boo, boo, boo, boo.

1:50:52

And I've seen Apollo.

1:50:53

I know how it works.

1:50:54

And you hear like the, boo, boo, and I'm like, all right, I don't need to get

1:50:59

swept off.

1:50:59

Like, I know how this works.

1:51:01

So I get booed off.

1:51:02

You get booed off just from talking about being Afghan?

1:51:05

Maybe.

1:51:05

I don't know.

1:51:06

Maybe it just really sucked.

1:51:07

Maybe it was because it was like close to 9-11 and I talked about being Afghan.

1:51:10

Whatever.

1:51:11

I get booed, you know?

1:51:12

I mean, I'm sure it sucked balls too.

1:51:14

Whatever I was about to say was going to like be so bad.

1:51:16

So I was going to get booed regardless.

1:51:18

But I lasted maybe 15 seconds, 15, 20 seconds.

1:51:21

So I'm just like shell-shocked.

1:51:23

And then I'm just chilling in the hallway.

1:51:25

There was a desk.

1:51:26

There was like a, you know, like an old school student desk where it's like L-shaped

1:51:29

and they have the basket.

1:51:30

It's just in the stairwell for some reason.

1:51:31

So I just sit.

1:51:33

I just sit in that chair.

1:51:35

I felt like I was in a video game or something.

1:51:37

Because that's not a human experience really that many people get to go through.

1:51:42

So I'm just trying to make sense of what happened and the world and my life

1:51:46

moving forward.

1:51:48

But it's a lot going on.

1:51:49

It's a lot going on, you know?

1:51:51

And then, you know, I get up.

1:51:54

I gather myself.

1:51:55

I go up the stairwell.

1:51:56

I get my things from, you know, I have to see everyone else in the green.

1:52:00

Ugh, the worst.

1:52:01

See everyone in the green room area.

1:52:03

Get my shit.

1:52:05

I get my car.

1:52:06

And I think I drive home.

1:52:07

My parents, they take a separate car, right?

1:52:09

And then I hear the rest of the story from my brother.

1:52:11

So they're all in the Dodge Caravan.

1:52:13

My cousin Nilo.

1:52:14

My brother.

1:52:16

My dad.

1:52:16

My mom.

1:52:18

It's just silent on the car ride home.

1:52:20

Like no one's talking.

1:52:21

Because, I mean, you know, they saw what they saw.

1:52:24

So no one's saying anything.

1:52:25

And then obviously my dad's like was never thrilled about me doing stand-up to

1:52:29

begin with.

1:52:29

Right?

1:52:29

So he breaks the silence.

1:52:31

He goes, well, there's no business like show business.

1:52:41

And in hindsight, like, I think that's why when I want them to come out, I want

1:52:45

it to be like such a polar opposite experience.

1:52:48

And obviously I've come a long way from then.

1:52:51

But I'm almost grateful that it did happen because, you know, when comics trade

1:52:55

bomb stories, I fucking win every time.

1:52:58

And to me, for me to be so young, like 17, and come back from that, that means

1:53:02

like there's really something like a fire in me.

1:53:05

Like I was meant to do this or I really love stand-up.

1:53:07

Because that's not a pleasurable experience to potentially think that could

1:53:10

happen again, you know?

1:53:12

Now, they've seen you on television?

1:53:14

Did they watch your special?

1:53:15

Yeah, they've seen me.

1:53:15

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:53:16

Did they think your special was good?

1:53:17

Yeah, I think so.

1:53:17

I never know.

1:53:18

Like my mom will tell me, but I never know what my dad catches.

1:53:21

When was the last time you worked in Seattle?

1:53:23

Did you do the parlor?

1:53:26

Is that all bad anymore?

1:53:27

Is that going under?

1:53:27

When did it go under?

1:53:28

Like a few months ago, I think.

1:53:29

Fucking A.

1:53:30

Yeah.

1:53:31

So the pool hall part's gone too?

1:53:32

I think so.

1:53:33

Fuck.

1:53:34

Yeah.

1:53:34

You like to play there?

1:53:35

Yeah.

1:53:35

It was a great gig.

1:53:36

Yeah.

1:53:37

You like to play pool and do comedy.

1:53:38

Oh, yeah.

1:53:38

At the same time for me?

1:53:40

That's your jam.

1:53:41

Oh, my God.

1:53:41

It's like you designed the club.

1:53:43

Yeah.

1:53:43

That's how I would design a club.

1:53:44

Uh-huh.

1:53:45

Yeah.

1:53:46

Yeah, so it's weird.

1:53:47

I mean, I could have them come out to another show.

1:53:49

What do they have there now?

1:53:50

What's the club?

1:53:51

I don't know.

1:53:52

I think it's mostly Seattle.

1:53:53

No, they have Giggles or whatever in the University District.

1:53:56

Or maybe it's called Laughs.

1:53:58

It's called Laughs.

1:53:58

It's where Giggles used to be.

1:54:00

So they only have like one comedy club in all of Seattle?

1:54:03

They have Tacoma.

1:54:03

They have Tacoma, you know?

1:54:04

That's crazy.

1:54:06

People can.

1:54:07

But these aren't Seattle.

1:54:08

Fuck, man.

1:54:09

Seattle used to be a scene.

1:54:11

Yeah.

1:54:11

That fucking parlor live was a great club.

1:54:14

How did it go under?

1:54:15

Yeah.

1:54:16

Probably Brian Callen.

1:54:17

You think?

1:54:18

Yeah.

1:54:19

No.

1:54:19

Just throw it.

1:54:21

I don't know.

1:54:22

What if that became true?

1:54:23

It's like the man who broke the parlor.

1:54:25

You fucking ruined it, bro.

1:54:26

Yeah.

1:54:27

Yeah.

1:54:27

So when your parents come to see you, will they come to see you in L.A. or are

1:54:31

they coming

1:54:31

to see you?

1:54:31

I don't know.

1:54:31

I haven't.

1:54:32

You haven't decided when?

1:54:33

I've put it on the back burner for, I mean, I guess if I do the Tonight Show.

1:54:36

I mean, I've done two late nights already.

1:54:37

Dude, it's almost 20 years later.

1:54:38

I know.

1:54:39

Yeah.

1:54:39

They've got to come see you live.

1:54:41

Oh, yeah.

1:54:42

Yeah.

1:54:42

What should I do?

1:54:42

I don't know.

1:54:43

Invite them to a show.

1:54:44

Yeah.

1:54:45

I don't know what show.

1:54:46

And then pretend they're at the first show and then bring them to the second

1:54:48

show.

1:54:49

Yeah, just to mentally prepare.

1:54:50

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:54:51

You obviously have a little bit of a block if you're thinking about it.

1:54:55

Yeah.

1:54:56

Not a block, but it's a thing.

1:54:58

Oh, for sure.

1:54:59

Yeah.

1:54:59

I mean, they saw you eat shit.

1:55:00

Yeah.

1:55:01

And especially when they were so anti that.

1:55:03

Yes.

1:55:03

And then.

1:55:04

But you were right and they were wrong.

1:55:05

This is how it works.

1:55:06

I mean, my parents never yelled at me that I can't do comedy or I was wasting

1:55:11

my life or that

1:55:12

I'd be there with pimps and prostitutes.

1:55:14

I mean, I love my parents.

1:55:15

We have a great relationship.

1:55:16

This was just kind of like one one thing that was incongruent in the

1:55:20

relationship.

1:55:21

Almost no parents think their child is going to make it as a community.

1:55:24

It is the most is the most impossible to imagine success business that you

1:55:30

could ever think

1:55:31

your kid's going to go into.

1:55:32

No, there's no like we were talking about stand up that none of this is written

1:55:37

down.

1:55:37

Right.

1:55:38

We're talking about the principles of stand up.

1:55:39

There's no course you can take.

1:55:40

It doesn't exist.

1:55:41

Yeah.

1:55:41

Any class is usually taken by someone who's not very successful at stand up for

1:55:45

the most

1:55:46

part.

1:55:46

Yeah.

1:55:46

I don't know of any successful.

1:55:48

It can give you.

1:55:49

Chris Rock's not out there teaching comedy classes.

1:55:51

It can give you the confidence to like jump off the cliff.

1:55:53

Yes.

1:55:54

But outside of that, you're not going to learn.

1:55:56

But here's the thing.

1:55:57

All these principles that we're talking.

1:55:59

I mean, think about.

1:56:00

Look, comedy is obviously a viable art form in a large scale venue.

1:56:07

I mean, I just got done doing two arenas this weekend.

1:56:10

Right.

1:56:10

So we're talking about something that is right up there with music or even with

1:56:15

sports.

1:56:16

I mean, it's large scale, enormous people.

1:56:18

Yet there's no real like pathway that's written down.

1:56:25

There's no real principles of it that are universally assumed by all people who

1:56:31

participate in the

1:56:33

art form.

1:56:33

Yeah.

1:56:33

Whereas almost like if you learn music, you learn chords and chord progression.

1:56:37

You learn, you learn how to use your diaphragm.

1:56:40

You learn how to sing and learn how to play instruments and you learn how to

1:56:43

make a chorus.

1:56:44

Listen, there's none of that for us.

1:56:46

I think it was just such a foreign.

1:56:48

I can understand where they're coming from because it's such a foreign concept.

1:56:50

If you get an engineering degree or you're a doctor, you do A, B, you get C.

1:56:54

There's a blueprint for it.

1:56:56

Yeah.

1:56:56

Stand up is just so nebulous or just like the arts in general is just sort of

1:56:59

like you

1:57:00

can't tell someone what like your path to success is going to be different than

1:57:03

Ian's

1:57:03

path to mine.

1:57:04

Sure.

1:57:05

And you kind of learn that as a comic as well early on because I think there's

1:57:08

a little

1:57:09

bit of imposter syndrome like, oh, like somebody else gets something.

1:57:12

You feel like it's an attack on you, but you do it long enough.

1:57:14

You realize like, oh, everyone's journey is so different.

1:57:17

Well, not in a hippy dippy way.

1:57:18

Yeah.

1:57:19

But like your relationships are different than mine.

1:57:22

They're different.

1:57:22

So everyone hits at different times.

1:57:24

Yep.

1:57:24

And it's not right or wrong.

1:57:25

It's just life and nature, you know?

1:57:28

Yeah.

1:57:28

And you're, you're different than everybody else.

1:57:30

You just got to concentrate on doing your best and figure out what you can

1:57:33

learn from other

1:57:34

people's success and failures, but don't think of it as your own success or

1:57:37

failure.

1:57:38

Yeah.

1:57:38

And eyes on your own paper.

1:57:39

Yeah.

1:57:40

I wouldn't want my kids to do comedy.

1:57:42

If my kids look, it would be hilariously hypocritical.

1:57:45

If one of my kids was like, I want to be a comedian.

1:57:47

I'm like, listen, you're not going to be a fucking comedian.

1:57:50

Stop.

1:57:50

Yeah.

1:57:51

I think where I differ with me and my parents is if they want to do something

1:57:53

in the arts,

1:57:53

I'd be like, have at it.

1:57:55

Like I support you.

1:57:56

I want it to work out.

1:57:57

Yeah.

1:57:57

But kind of have a foundation.

1:57:59

Work on that.

1:58:00

I don't want to send you to do communications for four years.

1:58:02

Yeah.

1:58:04

But there's no school for it.

1:58:05

Yeah.

1:58:05

Stand-up school.

1:58:06

Here's the school.

1:58:07

Have a shitty childhood.

1:58:08

That's the best school.

1:58:10

But the thing is, I had a good child.

1:58:11

Yeah.

1:58:12

I was well adjusted.

1:58:13

Maybe that's why it hurts so much.

1:58:15

Maybe.

1:58:15

Like I gave him everything.

1:58:16

Yes.

1:58:17

He still did it.

1:58:18

Yeah.

1:58:18

That's funny.

1:58:19

You might be one of the rare guys.

1:58:20

No, I think there's a new breed where there's people, obviously, you know,

1:58:24

there is that.

1:58:25

Maybe two more.

1:58:25

What?

1:58:26

Just well adjusted?

1:58:26

Yeah.

1:58:27

I don't know.

1:58:28

Is Pete Holmes like an even level-headed guy?

1:58:30

What about the-

1:58:31

Please.

1:58:32

Do you know him well?

1:58:32

I don't know.

1:58:33

The fuck out of here.

1:58:34

Well adjusted.

1:58:35

Everyone is fucked up to some degree.

1:58:37

Yes.

1:58:37

Yeah.

1:58:38

Yeah.

1:58:39

That's why they're comics.

1:58:40

Sure.

1:58:41

Yeah.

1:58:42

But no matter who, anybody you pluck off of Earth is fucked up.

1:58:46

Is fucked up.

1:58:46

Yeah.

1:58:46

Yes.

1:58:47

So this is a universal truth.

1:58:49

But usually some kind of fucked up childhood is a prerequisite.

1:58:53

It helps.

1:58:54

It's like the whole-

1:58:55

It's fuel.

1:58:55

It's fuel.

1:58:57

It's like there's fighters that come from good childhoods too.

1:59:00

Yeah.

1:59:00

You know, I would have this, it's a dumb thought, but I would have it as a kid

1:59:03

trying to do stand

1:59:04

up and not have to face this wall of, I don't know, you know, my parents not

1:59:10

wanting

1:59:10

me to do it.

1:59:11

I'm like, oh man, I kind of wish I had like a, like a worse childhood or like

1:59:16

not middle

1:59:16

class because then it wouldn't, it wouldn't be questioned.

1:59:19

It would just be like, yeah, of course.

1:59:20

What else are you going to do?

1:59:21

Well, I was really healthy when I was young because I was a martial artist.

1:59:25

I was competing all the time and I always worked out and I always thought, man,

1:59:28

if I was a drug

1:59:29

addict, I'd probably be funnier.

1:59:30

I really used to think that way because like the guys who did drugs like Kinnison

1:59:33

and Pryor,

1:59:34

they had drug problems.

1:59:35

Yeah.

1:59:36

They were so funny.

1:59:37

I feel like, I mean, you've been doing it for a long time, so maybe you have a

1:59:39

better perspective

1:59:40

on this.

1:59:40

I think like back in the day with the doing drugs and all that, part of that,

1:59:45

did that help?

1:59:46

Like, was it image, like how, in terms of just seeing the comedy for what it is,

1:59:50

was it part,

1:59:51

it being new, rockstar stuff, drugs, so you didn't have to be as tight as say

1:59:55

like nowadays

1:59:56

because there's so many more comedians?

1:59:57

No.

2:00:00

Or was it still airtight?

2:00:01

I think there's wildness to it.

2:00:03

There's wildness to it.

2:00:05

Like, I think the funniest guy of all time is Joey Diaz.

2:00:07

And one of the reasons why he's the funniest guy of all time is the wildness.

2:00:12

Like, he's truly wild.

2:00:14

You know what's great is watching him like in the OR, especially in 2019?

2:00:19

Yes.

2:00:20

He's got fun.

2:00:22

The climate we're in.

2:00:23

Yeah, yeah, he don't give a fuck.

2:00:25

You can't tell.

2:00:25

He doesn't know.

2:00:26

It's like he came out of a time machine.

2:00:28

He's like Encino man.

2:00:29

I know.

2:00:30

They just thawed him out and they just threw him on the OR.

2:00:32

And people, they're horrified and so happy at the same time.

2:00:36

Yes, I think even the wokest people, when they're watching Joey,

2:00:39

and there's just this energy and people are laughing so hard,

2:00:43

like your altruism can't break through that.

2:00:46

You can't deny what's happening right now.

2:00:48

Right.

2:00:48

So it kind of makes you, I guess, reassess what you're supposed to.

2:00:52

Like, I shouldn't be laughing at this.

2:00:53

It's a weird time for comedy.

2:00:57

But in that weird time, you're going to get some of the best stuff

2:01:02

because it's like supercharged.

2:01:03

Yeah.

2:01:04

And it's like, when it does get through,

2:01:07

if you can cover all the bases and make your argument soundly and logically

2:01:13

and also have it be funny.

2:01:15

I'll see Burr do that all the time too.

2:01:16

Yes.

2:01:16

And like Joey's just such a force of nature.

2:01:18

Yeah.

2:01:20

It's, you don't have time to like, think about, is this woke or is this knee

2:01:23

jerk?

2:01:24

You're just rolling.

2:01:25

Burr will kind of just like throw out this crazy premise that no one, no sane

2:01:31

person

2:01:32

would be on board.

2:01:33

Like, especially guys on dates.

2:01:34

Like you just hear some of these arguments or whatever.

2:01:37

Yeah.

2:01:38

He'll just throw it out there and he won't steamroll over it.

2:01:41

He'll just let it simmer.

2:01:42

And that's my favorite because like he's methodically, surgically taking his

2:01:47

time

2:01:48

to proving the point of this argument.

2:01:49

Well, a lot of these arguments, I would suspect that he's having at home with

2:01:53

his wife.

2:01:54

His wife's a very powerful woman.

2:01:56

Yeah.

2:01:56

And she's feminist.

2:01:57

I mean, what a cool woman too.

2:01:59

You know what I mean?

2:02:00

And just like, yeah.

2:02:01

So he has to formulate really well thought out arguments, I would imagine.

2:02:06

I mean, maybe he would, but you know, he's obviously thinking these through.

2:02:12

Like this is not, he's not flippant about these points of view, these

2:02:16

perspectives.

2:02:17

Yeah.

2:02:18

Yeah.

2:02:19

So I just love how he just throws like a piece of baloney on the kitchen.

2:02:21

But when he nails it, man, it's like so much more satisfying even in the past.

2:02:28

Because it's like, you're making your way through the rockiest stretch of the

2:02:33

river.

2:02:34

And I think those are the most rewarding bits as comedians, the longer you've

2:02:37

been doing it.

2:02:38

Like I could be silly and get a joke and sure that's fun, but it's not that

2:02:43

rewarding

2:02:44

as if you have an argument like Burr or something where it's just countered

2:02:49

culture.

2:02:49

And you can methodically, it's like going through the laser field.

2:02:54

That's way more rewarding than just walking down the hallway.

2:02:57

Right, like Mission Impossible when all those lasers are protecting the diamond.

2:03:01

Yeah.

2:03:01

Like fucking limbo through these things.

2:03:03

What kind of movie is that?

2:03:04

It just walks up as an apple and goes.

2:03:05

Right, exactly.

2:03:07

In the credits.

2:03:07

Yeah.

2:03:08

It's an interesting time to get these ideas out there.

2:03:13

But you see by the reaction at the comedy store that people are looking forward

2:03:17

to it because

2:03:18

I think they feel the same way.

2:03:20

Like, God damn it, everything's going so far.

2:03:21

And so many people are so goddamn sensitive about so many different things.

2:03:25

It's not about intent.

2:03:26

They're just looking at magic words and buzz words and topics that are off

2:03:31

limits.

2:03:32

There's no such thing as context anymore or intention.

2:03:34

Yeah.

2:03:35

And you get that at the comedy store.

2:03:36

And I think it's the last place people are talking this freely.

2:03:40

Yes.

2:03:40

Because I used to think, all right, we've been in a bit of a resurgence with

2:03:44

stand-up and

2:03:44

like all the specials and all that.

2:03:46

I'm like, when's it going to burst?

2:03:47

I'm like, oh, cool.

2:03:47

I'm going to get to miss two comedy bubbles.

2:03:49

Sweet.

2:03:51

I don't think so.

2:03:52

Yeah.

2:03:53

But then it's proven wrong.

2:03:54

Like, it's getting bigger and bigger.

2:03:55

Yeah.

2:03:56

It's good.

2:03:57

Yeah.

2:03:57

That's why.

2:03:58

It was a bubble when it sucked.

2:03:59

Let me tell you about the bubble of the 1980s.

2:04:01

There was a bunch of people that had a kind of way of talking about things.

2:04:05

So I got a cat in my room and the mouse was like Wild Kingdom in my house.

2:04:10

It was a way of talking.

2:04:13

There was a comedy way of talking that these guys did.

2:04:17

There were some guys that just were not insightful and they just did comedy in

2:04:24

a way that they

2:04:25

had heard people do comedy.

2:04:27

So they kind of just like mimic the sounds.

2:04:29

It's like, you ever heard a band that sounds exactly like maybe Stone Temple

2:04:34

Pilots or something

2:04:35

like that, but they're not really.

2:04:36

Like, they're close, but like, what's so weird?

2:04:39

They sound so much like Stone Temple Pilots.

2:04:41

I don't know if you remember Gorilla Black.

2:04:43

No.

2:04:43

What's that?

2:04:44

He sounded exactly like Notorious B.I.G.

2:04:45

No way.

2:04:46

Oh, yeah.

2:04:47

It was insane.

2:04:48

Who the fuck is that?

2:04:48

Gorilla Black.

2:04:49

Yeah.

2:04:49

Really?

2:04:50

Like, when I heard it, I'm like, are we doing this?

2:04:52

This is so crazy.

2:04:54

Oh, yeah.

2:04:55

Wow.

2:04:55

It was insane.

2:04:56

Yeah.

2:04:57

I watched a comic one night in 1993 or something like that on stage in Montreal

2:05:06

at Just for Laughs.

2:05:07

And he was basically doing a Richard Pryor impression.

2:05:11

And I was like, what in the fuck am I seeing?

2:05:15

It's like, this guy was doing Pryor.

2:05:17

I mean, everything about his set, he was doing Pryor.

2:05:20

I'm like, this is so strange to see that people do that.

2:05:24

Well, that was a part of the bubble.

2:05:26

In the bubble, there was these guys who would wear the clothes they thought a

2:05:31

comedian would

2:05:32

wear and say the things.

2:05:33

And there was so much work.

2:05:35

And there were so many clubs.

2:05:37

And there were so many evening at the improvs and all these different little

2:05:40

shows.

2:05:41

So anyone could get a piece.

2:05:42

Yeah.

2:05:42

People got a piece.

2:05:43

If you just mimic the part.

2:05:44

Dude, there was a lot of people back then that were arrogant, that were working.

2:05:49

And they were headliners and they were arrogant and they were fucking terrible.

2:05:51

And I really enjoyed watching them fall off the face of the earth.

2:05:54

You know, and I'll tell you some names afterwards with the other names I was

2:05:57

going to tell you.

2:05:58

But these people were doing comedy in a – they weren't participating in an

2:06:04

art form.

2:06:05

They were mimicking.

2:06:06

They were mimicking the people that were participating in the art form.

2:06:09

Like love him or hate him, Jerry Seinfeld's an artist.

2:06:12

Oh, I love Seinfeld, yeah.

2:06:13

I do too.

2:06:13

But he's an artist.

2:06:15

His style, whether you – I've heard criticisms that he's not deep enough, he

2:06:19

doesn't talk about sex or anything dangerous, whatever.

2:06:22

He likes what he likes.

2:06:24

He likes to talk about – he likes a certain style of comedy and he's a master

2:06:28

at that style.

2:06:29

But he spawned so many babies, what Patrice O'Neill would call babies.

2:06:34

Like Patrice O'Neill would say, like, hey, man, you got a lot of babies out

2:06:38

there.

2:06:39

There's a lot of people that are imitating you.

2:06:41

You got babies.

2:06:42

And there was a lot of like – Dave Attell, a perfect example.

2:06:45

Oh, yeah.

2:06:46

Got a shitload of babies.

2:06:47

There's a lot of –

2:06:48

Dane had a lot of babies, right?

2:06:50

Yes, Dane had a –

2:06:50

Mitch Hedberg, I remember Mitch had a lot of babies.

2:06:52

Yes, he had a ton of babies.

2:06:54

Yeah, there's a few people that mimic.

2:06:56

But during the 80s, it was – there was a few innovative people and a lot of

2:07:02

babies.

2:07:03

It was like – there was 10 babies to every one innovator.

2:07:06

And you had these like fake headliners and they would show up in town.

2:07:11

But they had those premises that everybody had.

2:07:14

They had those beats that everybody had.

2:07:16

They talked in the same – they didn't take any chances.

2:07:19

They were shooting straight down the middle.

2:07:21

And that was the bubble.

2:07:23

And that all went away.

2:07:24

That all went away.

2:07:25

And when that went away, those guys died off and there was people that were

2:07:29

left over.

2:07:29

The people that were left over were the actual comics.

2:07:34

The actual people that were good enough where people would repeatedly go to see

2:07:37

them at clubs.

2:07:38

They wrote a lot.

2:07:39

They practiced.

2:07:40

They were interested in the actual art form itself.

2:07:44

And I was really fortunate that I started out in Boston where Boston had a very

2:07:49

high standard – due to Barry Crimmins, really, in particular.

2:07:53

Oh, that documentary was great.

2:07:54

He's a brilliant – he was a brilliant guy.

2:07:56

Rest in peace, Barry.

2:07:57

I loved that guy.

2:07:59

But he – that guy – he was one of those guys when he was nice to me as I

2:08:05

got older and, you know, I was terrified of him.

2:08:08

Terrified of him.

2:08:09

Like him seeing me when I sucked.

2:08:10

Oh, really?

2:08:11

Because I knew it was terrible.

2:08:12

Just because he meant – like he meant so much to you?

2:08:13

Well, I knew what a high standard he had for comedy.

2:08:17

And he was one of the main reasons why there was no hacks that were tolerated

2:08:22

in Boston.

2:08:23

And that you want – everybody had to be original.

2:08:26

Everybody had to do good material.

2:08:28

And everybody sort of policed each other, you know.

2:08:30

And when – when you have a community like that, you get to see the art form

2:08:37

flourish in a very good way.

2:08:39

And we had a lot of like different people.

2:08:42

They were different, but they were all like really high level.

2:08:45

So we would get these guys that would come in from out of town, road guys, that

2:08:49

were babies.

2:08:49

They were Seinfeld babies or different – and you would see how poor they

2:08:54

looked when they were surrounded by these original murderers.

2:08:58

So you'd have like guys like Steve Sweeney and Lenny Clark would go on stage.

2:09:02

And then one of these babies would go up after them and just eat plates of shit.

2:09:06

Why are they going after?

2:09:07

They had a terrible system in Boston that was really mean.

2:09:10

And it was designed to make new – designed to make national headliners bomb.

2:09:15

Really?

2:09:16

Yes, yes.

2:09:17

They would pay them a lot of money to book them at a club.

2:09:19

And they would book them on a show with three local headliners.

2:09:24

And these local headliners would just fucking straight up murder.

2:09:27

And they would do all this local Boston stuff that made everybody excited.

2:09:31

And then they would have one of these guys who was used to going to Cleveland.

2:09:34

Hey, I was just in Indianapolis.

2:09:36

Had a great time.

2:09:37

Did a little comedy.

2:09:39

That's what I do.

2:09:40

I'm a comedian.

2:09:41

And they would go up there and just eat plates of shit and get booed off the

2:09:46

stage.

2:09:47

And people would leave.

2:09:48

And they would do it on purpose.

2:09:50

Just to teach them a lesson or something?

2:09:51

No.

2:09:52

They were just mean.

2:09:52

Those guys never – first of all, those comics never left Boston.

2:09:57

Okay?

2:09:58

And they would murder almost every night.

2:10:00

And they were all animals.

2:10:01

They were doing coke.

2:10:02

And they were drinking.

2:10:03

They were fucking savages.

2:10:04

They'd pay them in coke.

2:10:05

Really?

2:10:06

No bullshit.

2:10:06

Yeah.

2:10:07

Nick's Comedy Stopped used to pay people in coke.

2:10:09

Yes.

2:10:10

Didn't pay me in coke.

2:10:11

I never did coke.

2:10:12

But I knew the whole deal.

2:10:14

Everybody knew the deal.

2:10:15

And so when these guys would come in from out of town, they would be angry at

2:10:19

these guys.

2:10:20

And they're like, who is this fucking guy?

2:10:21

He's got Evening at the Improv.

2:10:22

I don't have that show.

2:10:23

He's on a fucking movie with Billy Crystal.

2:10:26

Fuck him.

2:10:26

And they would go on in front of those guys and light them on fire.

2:10:30

Light them on fire.

2:10:32

So who's dictating this line at the club or the comics?

2:10:34

Club.

2:10:34

They're all on coke.

2:10:35

Everyone's on coke.

2:10:36

So it was just fun for them?

2:10:37

No, it was just fun.

2:10:38

Light them up.

2:10:39

And they would do it on purpose.

2:10:41

It's kind of cool.

2:10:42

But some guys would survive.

2:10:44

Like I saw Dom Herrera in that environment.

2:10:46

But Dom murdered.

2:10:47

That was the thing.

2:10:48

Dom murdered.

2:10:49

So he would go there and he would talk about how strong the lineup was.

2:10:52

You know, he's like, it's amazing.

2:10:54

This is great.

2:10:55

But he would go up and murder.

2:10:56

Because he was a real comic.

2:10:57

So Dom was there pre-bubble, during the bubble, post-bubble.

2:11:02

He's a comic.

2:11:04

I mean, those are the best guys.

2:11:05

Yes.

2:11:05

Funny guys who take funny guys on the road with them.

2:11:07

Yes.

2:11:08

Because not everyone does that.

2:11:09

But, you know.

2:11:10

People panic.

2:11:11

Yeah.

2:11:11

They want to.

2:11:12

Like the best comics are like, I want someone funny too.

2:11:14

Yes.

2:11:15

I want a great show.

2:11:16

You know, the reason why I take Ian or Santino or.

2:11:19

I always took Joey Diaz before he got too big.

2:11:22

You know, Joey Diaz is selling out the Chicago theater.

2:11:25

He's fucking murdering it.

2:11:27

But all those guys, Ari and Duncan, I want to have fun.

2:11:31

I want to be with comics.

2:11:32

I want the show to be great.

2:11:34

I don't want to be the only one who's funny.

2:11:36

That's gross.

2:11:36

Right.

2:11:36

And I think it's a way to discover new comics as well.

2:11:40

Because, like, I was opening for Neil for a bit, for his tour, for most of the

2:11:44

dates.

2:11:44

And it was so fun for me.

2:11:46

Because, like, I'll headline and stuff.

2:11:47

But I'm not a draw yet, so I need to have a walk-up for whatever the club I'm

2:11:51

doing.

2:11:51

Like, they need to have a comedy on states.

2:11:53

Great.

2:11:53

You know, in Madison, Wisconsin.

2:11:54

They have a walk-up.

2:11:55

They just have a trust with the community.

2:11:57

They all just come to shows.

2:11:58

Oh, really?

2:11:58

Yeah, it's great.

2:11:59

Or, like, Comedy Works in Denver.

2:12:01

I've never done comedy on state.

2:12:03

I heard it's great.

2:12:04

Yeah, it's really good.

2:12:04

There's a theater right next door.

2:12:06

You'd probably be doing that.

2:12:07

Like, it's such a great comedy town.

2:12:08

I did the theater last time I was there.

2:12:09

There's actually a poster for that theater in the bathroom out here.

2:12:12

So, it's fun to do that when they have a walk-up audience.

2:12:16

Like the Comedy Works, like you said.

2:12:17

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:12:18

Comedy Works in Denver.

2:12:18

They have a reputation.

2:12:19

But if it's a Miranda club, like, I'm not a draw yet.

2:12:22

I'm, like, in purgatory.

2:12:23

But the Neil thing was cool because they're all coming for Neil.

2:12:25

They're theaters.

2:12:26

I'm just doing 20 minutes, which is, like, I can shit that out.

2:12:30

It's nothing, you know?

2:12:30

Right.

2:12:31

Because I'm, like, headlining.

2:12:32

So, there's no pressure.

2:12:33

They're there for Neil.

2:12:34

I have a great set.

2:12:35

And they're, like, yo, you were funny.

2:12:36

So, you get, like, fans from his fans, too.

2:12:38

It's the best, and it's a great show as a whole.

2:12:41

Yeah.

2:12:42

And it's, like, we compliment each other, so.

2:12:43

Yeah, you get to introduce, and he gets to introduce people to a funny comic.

2:12:46

Yeah.

2:12:47

And I'm so grateful that he gets to do that, like, pull a guy up and sort of

2:12:51

take a little

2:12:51

credit for, like, I don't know.

2:12:53

Yeah.

2:12:53

No, it's great.

2:12:54

That's where it's at, you know?

2:12:55

But I don't think this bubble's popping.

2:12:58

It's too fun.

2:12:59

Yeah.

2:12:59

It's too good.

2:13:00

I mean, there's too many good people.

2:13:01

As long as the art form is good.

2:13:03

The bubble only exists and pops when it's a fake thing.

2:13:08

Like, it's a Ponzi scheme.

2:13:09

That's not really the case right now.

2:13:11

Yeah, there's so many good comedians right now.

2:13:13

And everybody's working hard.

2:13:14

Yeah.

2:13:14

You know, everybody realizes that there's a lot of pressure on you, so they're

2:13:17

all, like,

2:13:17

that's, like, you were saying, like, how many sets I do.

2:13:20

That's why I do so many sets.

2:13:21

Yeah.

2:13:22

That's the only way to do it.

2:13:23

I do two sets a night, three sets a night, all the time.

2:13:26

And there's so many outlets now, too, which is kind of what's helping it not

2:13:26

pop.

2:13:30

Yes.

2:13:30

You have Netflix.

2:13:31

You have these new streaming, like HBO Max and Amazon and Apple Plus.

2:13:36

Gaffigan's on here in a couple days, and he's got one of the first.

2:13:39

He has an Amazon special.

2:13:39

Yeah.

2:13:40

And so does Alonzo Bowden.

2:13:43

Oh, cool.

2:13:44

His Amazon special's coming out soon.

2:13:45

And then there's a bunch of other people that have Amazon specials.

2:13:49

I'm seeing people advertise them on their Instagram.

2:13:52

So Amazon is putting together a bunch of specials now, which, to me, is very,

2:13:57

very exciting

2:13:58

because they have The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, which is one of my favorite shows.

2:14:01

So I'm just psyched that there's a lot of new venues and then there's new

2:14:06

streaming things.

2:14:07

Like, who knows?

2:14:07

Maybe Hulu will get into stand-up.

2:14:09

You know, maybe some of these other streaming services will get into stand-up.

2:14:12

It's great for everybody, man.

2:14:14

It really is.

2:14:14

There's plenty.

2:14:15

Or there's guys like Andrew Schultz.

2:14:18

He just went straight to YouTube.

2:14:20

As a performer and another comedian, and I think everyone has varying degrees

2:14:25

of, I think,

2:14:26

angst that he had coming up.

2:14:27

And I kind of felt that way as well.

2:14:29

Like, people have varying degrees of how much the industry fucks with you.

2:14:32

Sometimes I feel in.

2:14:33

Sometimes I don't feel in.

2:14:35

I do for certain things.

2:14:36

And that was just really refreshing just to take the power back.

2:14:40

Yeah.

2:14:40

And even seeing it happen with—I have so many peers in the game.

2:14:42

Like, I've known Theo forever.

2:14:44

Yeah.

2:14:44

We've been puttering around town and doing shows and just, you know, obscurity.

2:14:48

And then doing the podcast and just seeing him take his own fan base and power

2:14:55

back.

2:14:56

And everyone wanted to fuck with him now.

2:14:58

Mm-hmm.

2:14:59

And, like, they weren't launching that guy.

2:15:02

You kind of learn, too, that it's just monkeys picking stocks.

2:15:04

Well, in all fairness, Theo turned a corner, like, two years ago.

2:15:10

Uh-huh.

2:15:10

Where I remember watching him before.

2:15:12

And I'm like, this guy's kind of funny.

2:15:14

He's unique.

2:15:14

But then two years ago, me and Adam were in the back of the room.

2:15:18

I'm like, this motherfucker's turned a corner.

2:15:19

Like, he was just killing it.

2:15:21

Yeah.

2:15:21

He was just really funny.

2:15:22

But, like, funny in a new way.

2:15:25

Like, he had hit some new gear.

2:15:26

Yeah, like, some of the words he uses to describe his—

2:15:29

But he hit that gear, and then everything took off from there.

2:15:32

It was—a lot of it was just hard work.

2:15:34

Yeah.

2:15:34

Persistence, hard work, and just eventually it really clicked.

2:15:39

I think it was, like, a one-two punch.

2:15:40

I think it was turning that corner.

2:15:41

Mm-hmm.

2:15:41

And then also just the word to the people.

2:15:45

Democratically, just his podcast and reaching people.

2:15:47

And him doing other people's podcasts, too.

2:15:49

For sure.

2:15:49

Because he's really good on podcasts.

2:15:51

He's just fucking silly and funny.

2:15:54

And then his own podcast, where he just looks right at the camera and rants and

2:15:58

talks about shit.

2:15:59

Yeah.

2:16:00

And you realize, like, how his fucking unusual brain works.

2:16:03

Isn't it funny?

2:16:03

Sometimes you just want to, like, figure out what this algorithm is or what he's

2:16:06

doing.

2:16:07

And you go, no, that's just him.

2:16:09

You ain't figuring that out.

2:16:10

I can't—yeah.

2:16:11

No, you're never going to figure that out.

2:16:13

How would you think to call it that?

2:16:14

Never.

2:16:14

Yeah.

2:16:15

He's got Theo comedy.

2:16:17

For sure.

2:16:17

But it's like what we were talking about earlier, where no one can really teach

2:16:20

you how to do comedy.

2:16:21

Like, you're—you've got to figure it out.

2:16:23

And no one—no classically trained comedian, if there ever really was one,

2:16:28

would ever teach you—

2:16:29

That would be terrible, too.

2:16:30

How to do Theo.

2:16:31

A classically trained comedian?

2:16:32

Yeah.

2:16:32

It would be so—

2:16:33

It would be like those babies.

2:16:34

Yeah.

2:16:34

It would be like those guys that are, like, fake Seinfelds or fake Gaffigans or

2:16:37

whatever the fuck they are.

2:16:38

They would—

2:16:40

Yeah, the Schultz thing was really cool to see because he just did it on his

2:16:43

own.

2:16:43

Yep.

2:16:43

And it's great.

2:16:44

But here's the thing, and I wanted to bring this up with you, Jamie.

2:16:46

Is he shadow banned on Instagram?

2:16:48

Tell me what you think is going on because—

2:16:51

I texted him when that happened because I looked it up.

2:16:53

Yes.

2:16:54

And his name showed up right at the top of my list.

2:16:57

But—

2:16:58

But he said the other people were getting—

2:17:00

Me?

2:17:00

Yeah, he said you didn't show up on mine.

2:17:01

Really?

2:17:02

Yes.

2:17:02

I think they changed the algorithm because I've noticed views—

2:17:05

Hold on, but hold on.

2:17:06

It could be what?

2:17:07

It could be, but there—you'll have to take it like a case-by-case scenario.

2:17:11

Was the person that first sent it to him, are they already following him?

2:17:14

Do they search his name a lot?

2:17:15

Did they block anything he's ever done?

2:17:17

Well, people have told him, hey, man, I'm having a hard time finding your

2:17:19

Instagram page.

2:17:20

And so he asked me about it, and I said, what do you mean?

2:17:23

And I go, I see you right now.

2:17:26

You're on my feed.

2:17:26

And he goes, no, no, no, if you go to search me.

2:17:28

So I go, okay, let me search you.

2:17:30

I go, whoa.

2:17:31

I searched Andrew Schultz.

2:17:33

Nothing.

2:17:34

I mean, a bunch of other people, but not him.

2:17:37

And he's got a lot of followers.

2:17:39

Like, let's do it right now.

2:17:40

Put it up on the screen.

2:17:42

Put it up on the screen.

2:17:43

Let's just do it in real time.

2:17:45

Well, that's part of what I was saying is I follow him.

2:17:48

So if you're not already following him, you might show up in a different way.

2:17:50

But I do follow him.

2:17:51

Look at this, Fahim.

2:17:52

Hi.

2:17:53

Hello.

2:17:53

Now, just write Andrew and give him some space.

2:17:56

Write space.

2:17:58

I haven't gotten to Andrew yet.

2:18:00

Space.

2:18:00

Well, it should have shown up already.

2:18:03

Right.

2:18:03

But just space and then type in his name.

2:18:06

I am.

2:18:06

See, it's not coming up.

2:18:08

Right.

2:18:09

Oh, that's so weird.

2:18:10

Now hit search.

2:18:11

I don't think you can't search on the web.

2:18:14

Oh, on the web.

2:18:15

But look, it's not showing up.

2:18:17

You see Andrew Schultz fans.

2:18:20

Even when I typed in his actual account name, it didn't show up.

2:18:23

Oh, but hold on a second.

2:18:23

What is that Andrew Schultz fans?

2:18:25

What is that?

2:18:25

Click on that.

2:18:26

Right there.

2:18:28

Below it.

2:18:28

Below it.

2:18:29

Below it.

2:18:29

Below it.

2:18:30

Keep going.

2:18:30

Keep going.

2:18:31

Are you blind?

2:18:31

There it is.

2:18:32

That's right.

2:18:32

Click on that.

2:18:33

I know, but it's not.

2:18:34

So it's his fans.

2:18:35

It's just a fan.

2:18:36

Oh, 165 followers.

2:18:38

That's not him.

2:18:38

That's crazy.

2:18:39

Right.

2:18:39

No, I know it's not him.

2:18:40

I'm just trying to figure out what it is.

2:18:42

So just in that search, it's not showing up.

2:18:45

And it wouldn't show up for me on my phone either.

2:18:48

Now, it doesn't make any sense.

2:18:49

Because what does he have?

2:18:50

Like a half a million followers?

2:18:51

How many followers does he have?

2:18:52

I can't find him.

2:18:53

Hold on.

2:18:53

Isn't that interesting?

2:18:55

Yeah.

2:18:55

Like he thinks he's being shadow banned.

2:18:58

What's the, are they trying to like get some money out of?

2:19:00

No.

2:19:01

282,000.

2:19:03

82,000 people.

2:19:04

And he can't find his page on Instagram.

2:19:08

Is it Schultz with a T or no?

2:19:09

Just, no.

2:19:10

Oh.

2:19:10

No.

2:19:11

U-L-Z.

2:19:12

But it's not showing up.

2:19:14

It's not showing up on mine either.

2:19:15

Now, we might be being paranoid here.

2:19:18

And it might be just something in the search algorithm that for whatever reason,

2:19:23

his thing isn't showing up.

2:19:25

And he used to say Andrew Hezzy Schultz.

2:19:28

I don't know why Hezzy.

2:19:29

What does that mean?

2:19:30

Nickname of his.

2:19:30

I don't know.

2:19:31

Okay.

2:19:32

And maybe he thought that Hezzy was fucking him up.

2:19:35

So he took Hezzy out of his name in the, on his Instagram page.

2:19:40

So it just says Andrew Schultz now.

2:19:42

But even though, still, you can't find it.

2:19:45

Yeah, that's weird.

2:19:46

You have to type in Andrew Schultz all together with no space.

2:19:50

And then you'll find him.

2:19:51

That's what I just did.

2:19:52

It didn't come up.

2:19:53

With no space?

2:19:53

Yeah, that's what I was just doing in front while you were asking me to type

2:19:56

stuff.

2:19:57

And I was typing it in and it wasn't coming up.

2:19:58

Oh, so you did it with space and no space?

2:20:00

Yeah, that's when I did it to him.

2:20:01

I was like, if you're typing in no space, that's where the issue is.

2:20:04

If I type in all the way, it's showing up right away.

2:20:08

And he said, well, I'm seeing that from people both ways.

2:20:11

So I go, well, if that's what you're seeing, then I'll go out on a limb and

2:20:15

sort of say.

2:20:16

Does he show up?

2:20:16

Someone is manipulating that search result because you can manipulate search

2:20:19

results.

2:20:19

Well, here's the thing.

2:20:20

They do shadow ban people.

2:20:23

On certain social media platforms.

2:20:26

This has been revealed through hidden camera conversations with people who are

2:20:30

whatever,

2:20:31

moderators or engineers or people that work behind the scenes on Twitter or

2:20:36

Facebook.

2:20:37

And they do manipulate algorithms, manipulate searches and shadow ban people.

2:20:43

And there's a lot of people, particularly conservative people, which he's not

2:20:46

conservative.

2:20:47

But what he is, is, you know, he's a raunchy comedian.

2:20:50

And he might have done something that someone felt was not woke or what have

2:20:56

you.

2:20:56

And they want to slow down the broadcasting of his signal.

2:21:00

That's entirely possible.

2:21:02

I don't know if it's true, though.

2:21:03

I would love to have a logical explanation that.

2:21:07

That's still why he's not showing up.

2:21:08

Yes.

2:21:09

But he's, you know, he's complaining about it, that it's a shadow ban.

2:21:13

Anyway, go follow Andrew.

2:21:15

Andrew Schultz.

2:21:16

Yeah.

2:21:17

S-H-U-L-Z.

2:21:21

S-H-U-L-Z.

2:21:22

Go follow him.

2:21:23

Yeah, I saw him in Montreal.

2:21:24

Just to tell Instagram shadow bans we can get around you, bitch.

2:21:28

He's a marketing genius.

2:21:29

It's just great to hear him talk about, you know, what he's doing and how to

2:21:32

get around it.

2:21:33

And it's exciting because you forget as an artist that you have a lot of power.

2:21:37

You're everything.

2:21:38

You're the product.

2:21:40

And sometimes, especially in the old models, you just kind of waited to be anointed.

2:21:44

Well, he's got millions and millions of views on his special on YouTube.

2:21:49

And if you stop and think about if that was on Comedy Central, which Comedy

2:21:53

Central did want

2:21:54

to give him a special, he probably would get like maybe a million people would

2:22:00

watch it

2:22:01

when it came out and that would be the end of it.

2:22:02

I have a special and I don't think people are watching it.

2:22:04

Just YouTube is accessible.

2:22:05

It can be in comedy jail.

2:22:08

You could do a great special and no one can find it.

2:22:10

Right.

2:22:10

Yeah.

2:22:10

Yeah.

2:22:11

And everyone has YouTube.

2:22:12

Everyone can click on a link.

2:22:13

Everyone has YouTube.

2:22:13

Yeah.

2:22:14

And this was his logic.

2:22:15

He was like, you know what?

2:22:16

I'm just going to release the whole thing on YouTube.

2:22:18

And look, he went straight from not selling out clubs to selling out theaters

2:22:23

like that.

2:22:24

And now he sells out everywhere internationally.

2:22:27

And it's amazing.

2:22:28

From afar to watch the industry change.

2:22:31

Mm-hmm.

2:22:32

Yeah.

2:22:32

Because you just realize, because I think early on you, so much of your self-worth

2:22:37

is put in

2:22:38

these people and you don't realize until later that, oh, they're just heat-seeking

2:22:42

missiles.

2:22:42

Yep.

2:22:42

Yeah.

2:22:43

They don't, you know, a majority of them don't have taste.

2:22:46

Taste is just, it's revenue.

2:22:47

Yeah.

2:22:48

Whatever's hot.

2:22:48

Can I get a pie of whatever this is?

2:22:50

Yeah.

2:22:50

Yeah.

2:22:50

I mean, including hacks.

2:22:51

I mean, there's a long history of them supporting hacks and thieves.

2:22:55

It's just a thing where what they're trying to do is make money.

2:22:58

Mm-hmm.

2:22:58

You know, if you're an agent or a producer, I mean, there's no benefit in you

2:23:02

supporting

2:23:03

an artist that is not going to be commercially viable.

2:23:05

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:23:06

You have to find out, like, who's going to pop?

2:23:09

Mm-hmm.

2:23:10

Who's going to be the next movie star?

2:23:11

Who's going to be in the movies?

2:23:13

You know, you have to figure that person out.

2:23:14

And what was it like when, you know, let me see a thing went down.

2:23:17

What was the climate like for you, say, professionally after that went down?

2:23:22

Because he was at a different level at that time, right?

2:23:25

Yeah.

2:23:26

Yeah.

2:23:26

He was more popular than me with comedy for sure.

2:23:29

Mm-hmm.

2:23:29

You know, I was doing Fear Factor back then, and I wasn't really working on the

2:23:33

road that

2:23:34

much.

2:23:34

I really couldn't.

2:23:36

You know, I was doing, you know, 30 episodes a year plus, so 30 weeks a year of

2:23:42

work.

2:23:43

And I wasn't really enthusiastic about traveling when I was doing that.

2:23:45

Yeah.

2:23:46

I just wanted to, I was exhausted.

2:23:48

And then I was doing the store, too.

2:23:49

So I was mostly just working on my act and just doing stand-up.

2:23:53

And they supported him because he was the one who was making the money.

2:23:58

I mean, in fact, I left my agency because they wanted me to apologize to him.

2:24:01

And then Louis wound up leaving them, and Attal wound up leaving them, and Swartzen

2:24:05

wound

2:24:06

up leaving them.

2:24:06

Everybody left them right after that because they found out that they wanted me

2:24:10

to apologize

2:24:10

to them.

2:24:11

Everybody in the industry knew what was going on.

2:24:14

Right.

2:24:14

But they wanted to turn a blind eye and make money.

2:24:17

So did it hurt my career?

2:24:20

Well, I stopped going to the store, but that didn't hurt me as much as it hurt

2:24:24

them.

2:24:24

It hurt the store because I told everybody.

2:24:27

And then that place was a ghost town.

2:24:29

I mean, it went from being packed when I was there because I would let them put

2:24:32

my name

2:24:33

up on the marquee, and I was working for free.

2:24:34

That's how fucking stupid Tommy was.

2:24:36

Oh, that fucking dummy.

2:24:39

But then when he got fired and I came back, it made it all worth it.

2:24:44

You know, the whole thing was, it was interesting because it could show you

2:24:48

that if there was

2:24:50

someone who was doing what Mencia was doing, that you can get away with it.

2:24:55

And even with someone who was successful like me, I got another agent like that.

2:25:00

I mean, but my agent literally said I was going to have to apologize to him.

2:25:05

I'm like, you're out of your fucking mind.

2:25:07

I go, listen, not only am I not doing this, we're never going to work this out.

2:25:11

I'll never work with you again because you're asking me to apologize to someone

2:25:14

who is literally

2:25:15

a vampire, someone who's stealing from the work of other artists.

2:25:18

It's all he does.

2:25:19

And you guys know it, and you guys are profiting off of this.

2:25:23

Like, you're making a giant mistake.

2:25:26

And I turned out it was correct.

2:25:28

But it was interesting because even though it didn't hurt me financially, I got

2:25:31

to see

2:25:32

that they were trying to because, you know, he wanted an apology.

2:25:36

And I was like, you're out of your fucking mind.

2:25:38

I'm not apologizing to you.

2:25:39

And as he kept getting, people became more and more aware.

2:25:43

Other people started finding other bits that he had, like, the real thing that

2:25:47

sunk him

2:25:48

was Cosby, really funny now when you think about it now.

2:25:52

But he had this, like, such obvious theft of a Cosby bit.

2:25:55

I mean, he stole all the inflections, and he switched it around a little bit.

2:25:59

But people who worked with him were trying to tell him to stop doing that bit

2:26:03

because

2:26:03

it was a giant, famous Cosby bit.

2:26:06

And he just insisted that he was going to do it.

2:26:09

And when that bit got on YouTube, that and Mexican folks finding out he wasn't

2:26:14

really

2:26:14

Mexican, that was a fucking knife in the heart.

2:26:18

When they were like, what?

2:26:19

Like, what?

2:26:20

When they found out what his real name was, they're like, you got to be fucking

2:26:23

kidding

2:26:23

me.

2:26:24

There was so much going on then, though.

2:26:26

That was, you know, he was really popular.

2:26:30

Oh, yeah.

2:26:31

He went from selling out these giant places and, you know, kicking ass all over

2:26:36

the country.

2:26:36

And people knew him from the television show, and they thought he was hilarious.

2:26:40

I guess what's kind of cool about stand-up is that of all the art forms, stand-up

2:26:44

has the

2:26:44

most justice in it.

2:26:45

Now it does.

2:26:47

Now it does, I guess.

2:26:47

But there's a lot of people who made it through the net back in the day that

2:26:50

were just criminals.

2:26:51

I guess it was harder to know back then.

2:26:53

There was no internet.

2:26:54

Yeah.

2:26:54

It was just sort of like word of mouth, or you would hear stories.

2:26:57

Look, we all know that there's parallel thinking.

2:26:59

And then there's even cases where you forget you heard something.

2:27:02

I've done it.

2:27:03

Usually we hash it out, like a comic or something, and we'll be like, okay,

2:27:05

yeah, you can have

2:27:06

it.

2:27:06

Or we're all pals, and it's bound to happen.

2:27:09

It's going to happen.

2:27:10

And you just have the conversation.

2:27:11

If you're a pro, you're like, all right, I don't need that bit.

2:27:12

It's okay.

2:27:13

Yeah, exactly.

2:27:14

And then there's also people that are like, you know, like you said that word,

2:27:17

and that's

2:27:17

the word that I say in my bit.

2:27:18

And you're like, what?

2:27:19

Like some people are delusional.

2:27:20

Oh, some people are hypersensitive.

2:27:21

It's almost like...

2:27:22

Delusional.

2:27:23

Yes.

2:27:23

Yeah.

2:27:23

Some people get delusional.

2:27:24

That's...

2:27:25

Like I talk about being in a relationship, so...

2:27:27

Oh, yeah.

2:27:27

If you could stop doing that, I really appreciate it.

2:27:29

That's hilarious.

2:27:30

I broke up with my girlfriend recently, too, so...

2:27:31

Yeah.

2:27:32

I own that.

2:27:33

Well, especially things that are current events, right?

2:27:36

If they're like something like...

2:27:37

That's fair game.

2:27:37

I can't believe you're talking about Trump.

2:27:39

You know I do that whole Trump bit.

2:27:40

Yeah.

2:27:40

I'm like, what?

2:27:41

Are you crazy?

2:27:42

I've seen these conversations before.

2:27:43

I have a Fredo bit.

2:27:44

Yeah.

2:27:44

Ah, Fredo.

2:27:45

Can you please not?

2:27:46

That guy's never going to live that down.

2:27:50

I'm telling you.

2:27:51

Yeah.

2:27:51

This is just brewing.

2:27:52

This is just starting.

2:27:54

He's never living that down.

2:27:55

That's one...

2:27:57

You know, I'll wreck your shit.

2:27:58

I'll wreck your shit.

2:27:58

I'm going to throw you down a flyer's stairs.

2:27:59

Yeah.

2:28:00

Was there stairs nearby?

2:28:03

Or would they have to go up them?

2:28:04

They'd have to go find some stairs.

2:28:05

You're not going to trip down?

2:28:08

That's a weird thing to say to someone.

2:28:09

I'm going to throw you down a flyer's stairs.

2:28:11

It's like you want to hurt them, but you want the gravity to do all the work.

2:28:14

Yeah, that's true.

2:28:14

So it's not that tough.

2:28:15

It's lazy.

2:28:16

He has all that potential energy once he gets up there.

2:28:18

Yeah.

2:28:18

And you just knock him over.

2:28:19

Right.

2:28:19

That's funny.

2:28:20

You're looking at it like an engineer.

2:28:21

Yeah.

2:28:22

I've got to use it somehow.

2:28:24

My dad's so proud that I pulled that out of the bag.

2:28:26

Do you use your engineer training at all in your stand-up?

2:28:29

Is there anything that you say?

2:28:30

I think one quality I can take away from all the engineering schooling, like I'm

2:28:37

not doing

2:28:37

formulas and equations and all that, but I think it's just a manner of which I

2:28:41

approach

2:28:41

things and time management.

2:28:43

I'm wired a certain way where I can be studious on my own.

2:28:47

I don't, I'm not like smoking weed on the couch and like I'm a muse or I'm a

2:28:51

vessel.

2:28:52

God's for you.

2:28:53

Like I'm, okay, what do I got?

2:28:55

What's, what I want to do?

2:28:56

What are my goals for this year?

2:28:57

Let's say, or how many sets do I have?

2:28:59

What am I working on for this set?

2:29:00

So I'm just a little industrious.

2:29:03

It's taught me.

2:29:03

And also when it comes to bits, like I see them in a certain way.

2:29:07

Like the way I get the bits is very organic and that's what I like about it is

2:29:11

that it's

2:29:11

not clinical or anything.

2:29:13

It's just magical how I think of something and I'm grateful for that.

2:29:17

Do you give yourself time to think?

2:29:19

Do you like specifically do things like go on walks or anything where you can

2:29:23

think?

2:29:24

Not specifically, but what I found is one of my favorite things to do is to go

2:29:29

to a diner,

2:29:29

sit in a booth, have breakfast, have coffee, and then you keep on refilling it.

2:29:34

And I'm on my phone and I'm on Twitter and Instagram and my mind's just kind of,

2:29:38

and I'm listening

2:29:38

to music.

2:29:39

I love music.

2:29:40

So I'm just scouring Spotify and Hype Machine just for new music.

2:29:43

Hype Machine.

2:29:44

I don't know what that is.

2:29:45

So I love, so that's how I find music, like Hype Machine and also Spotify.

2:29:49

Hype Machine is this blog aggregate.

2:29:52

So there's music blogs, right?

2:29:54

There's one called like Acid Stag that I like a lot.

2:29:56

So you can follow a blog and they'll post songs every day.

2:30:00

Maybe they'll post six songs a day.

2:30:02

This website, you can follow different blogs and it's like following someone on

2:30:06

Instagram

2:30:06

or something.

2:30:07

So you look at your feed and you get to hear all the songs your favorite blogs

2:30:12

have posted

2:30:13

within the website.

2:30:14

And there's an app on your phone too.

2:30:15

And these are kind of underground songs.

2:30:18

These aren't top 40.

2:30:19

So it's a way to hear great music that you wouldn't hear on the radio and they're

2:30:23

not

2:30:23

any less great.

2:30:25

There's this whole subculture and genre of music that is magnificent, but it's

2:30:29

not on

2:30:30

top 40.

2:30:30

So people don't really know about it.

2:30:31

So Hype Machine is a great way to get some cool tracks off the beaten path.

2:30:35

That's cool.

2:30:36

I've never heard of that before.

2:30:37

That's interesting.

2:30:38

Hype Machine.

2:30:38

So music plays a big part with my comedy.

2:30:40

Yeah.

2:30:41

Hype Machine.

2:30:42

What's popular now?

2:30:44

Paco Versailles.

2:30:45

This is like their top 40.

2:30:46

So even this is a little poppy for me.

2:30:49

Ah.

2:30:49

I'll have certain blogs.

2:30:50

That's poppy?

2:30:51

I like finding.

2:30:51

Yeah, it's like.

2:30:52

Munya, Dove.

2:30:53

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:30:54

That's poppy?

2:30:54

I mean, for this type of music.

2:30:56

Yeah.

2:30:56

Whatever makes the popular list.

2:30:58

Durante?

2:30:58

Hold on.

2:30:59

Stop.

2:30:59

Yeah, you're not going to know.

2:31:00

Scroll back up, please.

2:31:01

Durante Maya.

2:31:02

That's poppy?

2:31:03

Who the fuck knows any of this music?

2:31:06

Oh, there's Childish Gambino.

2:31:07

I know who that guy is.

2:31:08

If you're like a teen or early 20s, you'll know this stuff.

2:31:11

Really?

2:31:12

Yeah.

2:31:12

So I just love listening to music, drinking coffee, and on my phone, and I'll

2:31:16

just

2:31:17

get these ideas.

2:31:18

But also just living life.

2:31:19

I'll be walking around, and I'll get an idea, jot it down.

2:31:22

Well, you don't have a day job, which helps.

2:31:23

No.

2:31:24

For sure.

2:31:25

That really helps collect material, believe it or not.

2:31:27

Yeah.

2:31:27

I buy that.

2:31:28

I think comics have to be amused, and you have to be experiencing just life-life.

2:31:32

If you're working all the time, like.

2:31:34

It was harder when I was working at Boeing, because I had that mental fatigue

2:31:39

of just working

2:31:40

on parts and all that.

2:31:41

Yeah.

2:31:42

And computational stuff.

2:31:43

So I'm not thinking about bits when I'm calculating.

2:31:44

Sitcoms suck it out of you, too.

2:31:46

I can see that.

2:31:47

Believe it or not.

2:31:47

Because you think that, oh, it's just like, you know, I didn't really work on

2:31:51

my act that

2:31:52

much during the day anyway.

2:31:53

Now I have a job doing acting.

2:31:56

I'll probably get just as much material.

2:31:58

Uh-uh.

2:31:58

No.

2:31:59

No, you won't.

2:32:00

You're going to be wrapped up in whatever the fuck you're doing, and then when

2:32:02

you go

2:32:03

to do stand-up, you'll be like, oh, yeah, time to do stand-up.

2:32:05

Now I'll think about it.

2:32:07

Yeah.

2:32:07

But you really need that time to be just free to think.

2:32:10

Yeah.

2:32:11

It's kind of crucial to the creative process.

2:32:13

I didn't think about that, but that's true.

2:32:14

Because those other jobs, you have mental focus that you're not dedicating to

2:32:18

writing bits.

2:32:20

Right, yeah.

2:32:20

Where I'm at a diner, and my mind's just floating around.

2:32:23

It seems like you're not working, like someone on the outside would be like, pfft,

2:32:27

you're

2:32:28

not even working.

2:32:28

I might come up with a gem that might be my next closing bit.

2:32:32

Yeah.

2:32:32

That is working.

2:32:33

Just randomly.

2:32:34

Yeah.

2:32:34

Because you gave yourself that time.

2:32:36

Yeah, like you just are watering the grass, and a mushroom pops up.

2:32:39

Even with me, I think there was a big breakthrough in just accepting that I'm

2:32:43

an artist, because

2:32:45

my parents didn't want me to do it for so long, and it was this dirty thing,

2:32:49

and it was always-

2:32:50

Pimps and prostitutes.

2:32:51

Yeah, pimps and prostitutes go to the club.

2:32:53

So stand-up and comedy was, I was like a vampire feeding.

2:32:56

It was just this thing that I do over here, and I want to do it, but it was

2:33:01

always different

2:33:02

than what I was supposed to be doing.

2:33:04

It was always on the side.

2:33:05

It was like a hobby type, or I would, there was a division within my mind.

2:33:08

But once I left Boeing, and I was doing it full-time-

2:33:12

What was the impetus?

2:33:13

Like, how did you make the decision?

2:33:16

Ideally, I always had this pie-in-the-sky scenario that would happen for me to

2:33:20

leave Boeing.

2:33:21

I would think, all right, if I got to the point where I'm doing engineering and

2:33:26

stand-up, I want to get to a point where it's glaringly obvious that

2:33:29

engineering is holding me back from this other path, and I have to make the

2:33:33

jump.

2:33:34

So, I needed that to happen.

2:33:36

And then I think enough things happened where I kind of had that situation.

2:33:39

I had, I booked this acting thing.

2:33:42

I booked a role on Chuck, NBC's Chuck.

2:33:44

I was still working at Boeing.

2:33:45

It was like this huge guest star.

2:33:46

I forgot about Chuck.

2:33:47

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:33:48

So, I, and I would do these things towards the end of my tenure at Boeing.

2:33:51

I would, I had a manager, and I would get auditions.

2:33:53

So, I would duck out for lunch.

2:33:55

And I'm in Long Beach, and I would drive up to Hollywood and do an audition.

2:33:59

Wow.

2:33:59

How long would you be gone for?

2:34:00

That one, I would, like, do a combo.

2:34:03

I'd say lunch and doctor's appointment.

2:34:04

Ah!

2:34:05

Yeah.

2:34:06

And then I would do, or I would take off.

2:34:09

I would come in early and leave early if I had an audition.

2:34:11

But I had to be very strategic about what audition.

2:34:13

I can't be.

2:34:13

Right.

2:34:14

So, this one, I went out for Chuck.

2:34:17

And then I auditioned, and then I got it.

2:34:19

It was this huge guest star.

2:34:20

And I'm still working at Boeing.

2:34:21

And they need me for eight days.

2:34:24

I have a day job.

2:34:25

So, I said I had a family emergency in Seattle.

2:34:28

I have to go back home.

2:34:29

And they're like, oh, okay.

2:34:31

But I was just in Burbank shooting Chuck.

2:34:33

Ah!

2:34:34

So, I'm just shooting.

2:34:35

And then I go back to work.

2:34:36

And people see you on TV?

2:34:38

No.

2:34:38

Luckily, there was enough of a lead time where that wasn't coming out for a

2:34:42

long time.

2:34:43

So, you quit?

2:34:43

No, not yet.

2:34:45

So, I just thought, like, okay, cool.

2:34:46

Like, I still keep on, I can keep on being an engineer.

2:34:48

And then a couple things happened.

2:34:50

Did anybody notice you on Chuck at work?

2:34:53

But the thing is, that happened when I left Boeing.

2:34:55

Oh, you already left.

2:34:57

So, it aired after I had left.

2:34:58

Oh, how much lead time was there?

2:34:59

Quite a bit.

2:35:00

Maybe, like, six months.

2:35:02

Oh, wow.

2:35:02

It was towards the end.

2:35:03

Okay.

2:35:03

And so, no one knew I did stand-up.

2:35:06

And the beauty of it was when I entered the workforce of engineering, everyone

2:35:09

was substantially

2:35:10

older than me.

2:35:11

They were, like, in their 30s.

2:35:13

They don't know about Hype Machine.

2:35:15

Yeah, they don't know about Hype Machine.

2:35:16

So, it wasn't second nature to be, like, what's your MySpace?

2:35:19

Right.

2:35:19

Or, because Jig would have been up immediately.

2:35:21

Yeah.

2:35:22

So, there was no, social media was not second nature with coworkers.

2:35:25

So, there was a big enough generational gap.

2:35:27

So, I was able to, for three years, just no one know anything.

2:35:29

So, I do the Chuck thing.

2:35:31

And then, I also, I got really far in stand-up.

2:35:36

NBC has this Stand-Up for Diversity initiative every year.

2:35:40

You do, like, a stand-up competition thing from different cities.

2:35:43

And then, they have a final showcase.

2:35:44

So, I got, like, second on that.

2:35:48

So, I got some college gigs out of it.

2:35:49

I got quite a few college gigs.

2:35:51

And then, I booked this show on MTV called Disaster Date, which was, like,

2:35:55

boiling points for dating.

2:35:57

They had a cast.

2:35:59

And I was one of the cast members.

2:36:00

And you would just go on dates with, friends would set up their friends with

2:36:02

dates.

2:36:02

And they would be, like, this is the things that she hates.

2:36:05

And you would just be the worst date ever.

2:36:06

And you see how long they last on the date.

2:36:08

So, they needed me for eight months.

2:36:10

Or, no, three months.

2:36:11

Three months?

2:36:12

Fuck, what do I do?

2:36:13

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:36:14

Three months.

2:36:14

So, this was kind of that situation where I'm, like, fuck, all right.

2:36:17

I just did Chuck.

2:36:19

I have some college gigs lined up.

2:36:20

This MTV show needs me for three months.

2:36:22

I got to do this.

2:36:25

Oh, well, I didn't do that yet.

2:36:27

I tried to take a leave of absence.

2:36:28

Because I planned on coming back.

2:36:30

I was, like, can I, I need, something came up.

2:36:32

Can I be gone for three months?

2:36:33

And they're, like, no, you can't do that.

2:36:35

I'm, like, um, are you sure?

2:36:38

I just kept on trying to finesse it.

2:36:39

And they wouldn't let me.

2:36:40

And then I was reading about unemployment and stuff.

2:36:43

And I read that you couldn't quit.

2:36:45

You had to get fired.

2:36:46

Right.

2:36:47

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

2:36:48

So, I'm, like, all right.

2:36:49

Here's what I'm going to do.

2:36:50

So, on my last day there, I wrote an email.

2:36:52

Just, like, hey, guys.

2:36:54

I'll be gone for three months.

2:36:56

I plan on returning on this day.

2:36:58

And then I just went incommunicado.

2:37:00

Like, I didn't pick up any phone calls.

2:37:03

If I was going to get fired, I wanted to get fired by them.

2:37:05

Right.

2:37:05

Because I didn't want them.

2:37:06

I didn't want to be on the books that I quit.

2:37:08

Right.

2:37:08

For some reason, my engineering brain is, like, this is great.

2:37:10

I'll get them on a technicality.

2:37:12

They'll fire me and I'll get my unemployment if I need to.

2:37:14

So, I leave Boeing.

2:37:16

I'm shooting the show for three months.

2:37:17

And then eventually I get, like, a termination letter in the mail from Boeing.

2:37:20

And I'm, like, yes.

2:37:21

Yes.

2:37:22

But then it turns out, I mean, I could have collected unemployment from the MTV

2:37:26

show.

2:37:26

So, I didn't even have to go out that way.

2:37:28

Oh, really?

2:37:29

Yeah.

2:37:29

I mean, it was fine.

2:37:30

Like, it wasn't.

2:37:31

Yeah.

2:37:31

Ari used to collect unemployment for.

2:37:33

Dude, he was, he was, like, my guiding light in that regard.

2:37:36

Because early on, especially when I left Boeing and the MTV thing comes and

2:37:40

goes.

2:37:40

I do two seasons of it.

2:37:42

And then, but that's not like a fucking, it's not like a rock solid thing.

2:37:46

And Ari would show me the ropes.

2:37:48

He'd be, like, no, you just collect unemployment from an acting job.

2:37:50

You get an acting job, then you get unemployment.

2:37:52

That's how it fucking works.

2:37:54

Yeah.

2:37:54

And he taught me how to do it and all that.

2:37:55

I've never heard of anybody getting unemployment from acting gigs.

2:37:58

Yeah.

2:37:58

Ari would do a commercial.

2:37:59

That's how it works.

2:38:00

And then he would get unemployment.

2:38:01

It's like, because you pay into it and all that.

2:38:02

It's all on the up and up.

2:38:03

It's just part of an actor's, I guess, requirement or necessity of an actor is

2:38:09

being available.

2:38:10

Yes.

2:38:11

So, if you book a commercial, like a Toyota commercial, let's say, you make 30

2:38:14

grand or 20 grand,

2:38:15

whatever, in that chunk, you've made enough money in that quarter to apply,

2:38:21

because you're

2:38:22

paying into it with your thing.

2:38:23

You have to hit a certain amount.

2:38:24

And then you're eligible.

2:38:25

There's tiers of how much money you get for unemployment.

2:38:28

Then you're eligible for X amount of dollars every two weeks or whatever.

2:38:32

And that helped me keep a float for like a year.

2:38:35

And then I got to the point where I didn't need it.

2:38:37

I had enough steady work coming in.

2:38:38

But that was the moment.

2:38:40

When did you tell your parents?

2:38:42

I thought that they would take it worse than they did.

2:38:45

But I think we had been at odds for so long that what I've noticed is you can't

2:38:50

stay at an 11 your whole life.

2:38:52

Right.

2:38:53

Yeah.

2:38:53

So, I think they had to know this day was going to come eventually, because I

2:38:57

would talk about it.

2:38:59

That was the plan the whole time.

2:39:00

I guess they just never thought that it would come to fruition.

2:39:01

Now, when you quit, how long did you wait?

2:39:04

Or when you got fired?

2:39:05

How long did you wait before you told them?

2:39:08

So, you don't have a day job anymore and your degree is useless.

2:39:10

It was around Christmas.

2:39:11

It was around the holidays.

2:39:12

So, we were at my aunt's house.

2:39:13

And then I told them.

2:39:15

But I was surprised.

2:39:16

Like, it went over better than I thought.

2:39:18

Yeah.

2:39:18

I was surprised.

2:39:19

Did you say all the good things you're getting?

2:39:21

Yeah.

2:39:21

Yeah.

2:39:21

Yeah.

2:39:21

Obviously.

2:39:22

Come on.

2:39:22

I'm not going to be like, I quit.

2:39:23

And I'm going to figure it out.

2:39:25

I'll figure it out.

2:39:25

But I like having-

2:39:27

Might come to you guys for money later.

2:39:28

But I'm really proud of that.

2:39:29

In this whole adventure, I've never asked my parents for money.

2:39:33

And I think that's a win.

2:39:34

Yes.

2:39:35

That's a huge win.

2:39:36

That's a huge win.

2:39:37

Yeah.

2:39:37

And I hope that they kind of notice that through the tough times.

2:39:40

That's a sign it's going well.

2:39:43

They should figure that out.

2:39:44

That's a giant win.

2:39:45

Yeah.

2:39:46

But, I mean, I just want to tell people if they have a similar path that you

2:39:50

don't-

2:39:50

There's this romanticized version of being an artist where you just pack up all

2:39:53

your things.

2:39:54

Coming to L.A.

2:39:56

Yeah, man.

2:39:56

And like, no, I got to be 100% of my art.

2:39:59

Yeah.

2:40:00

You can have a plan.

2:40:02

Do you want to set yourself up for success?

2:40:04

Or are you trying to-

2:40:06

Bro, are you an artist or are you an engineer?

2:40:08

Got to choose.

2:40:09

Be both.

2:40:10

No, no, no.

2:40:10

There's a lot of hours in the day.

2:40:12

Fuck that.

2:40:13

You're a prime example of that.

2:40:14

It's amazing all the things you do.

2:40:16

There are so many hours in a day.

2:40:18

And it's such a cop-out to be like, I've got to be all in it.

2:40:22

I've got to live and breathe my art.

2:40:23

Otherwise, I'm going to be a hack.

2:40:25

No, be methodical.

2:40:26

Set yourself up for success.

2:40:27

Well, I think you have to be disciplined.

2:40:29

Disciplined, for sure.

2:40:30

I think it's very important.

2:40:32

You can still be artistic and disciplined, contrary to popular opinion.

2:40:35

You can.

2:40:36

Yeah.

2:40:36

And you have to be careful not to lose yourself.

2:40:39

Once you come to LA, how many people do you know who come out here with a

2:40:42

particular plan

2:40:43

to be an artist or a writer and they're at fucking birthday parties every day?

2:40:48

When you come to LA, you can go to someone's birthday party at a bar every day.

2:40:51

Really?

2:40:52

Oh, yeah.

2:40:53

Yeah.

2:40:54

There's so many.

2:40:54

It's everyone's birthday every day.

2:40:56

Dude, this town's so big.

2:40:58

Yeah, that's true.

2:40:59

So you get sucked up in the partying life.

2:41:01

You'll see it too.

2:41:02

Some artists just go down this networking rabbit hole and they have no tangible.

2:41:07

And they never want to do a bad show.

2:41:10

They just want to do the best shows.

2:41:12

And they don't just focus on getting good at stand-up comedy.

2:41:14

It's just, I'm going to this party, so-and-so's here.

2:41:17

And they have nothing.

2:41:18

Do you ever envision a time where one of us or maybe a collection of us writes

2:41:23

down all

2:41:24

these things?

2:41:24

What do you mean?

2:41:25

It makes some sort of a guidebook to stand-up comedy.

2:41:28

I really think someone could benefit from it.

2:41:31

I mean, it really is the only art form that, as we were saying before, is a

2:41:35

viable art form

2:41:36

on large scale that doesn't have any-

2:41:40

A handbook or-

2:41:41

Nothing.

2:41:41

Yeah.

2:41:41

I mean, every fucking book about comedy, like how to do comedy, is terrible.

2:41:45

It's the worst, yeah.

2:41:46

You know what's weird?

2:41:48

You know what's scary?

2:41:50

There's all these formulas.

2:41:52

I think podcasting has taken some of the mystique out of it.

2:41:55

Yes.

2:41:55

I think-

2:41:57

It's also created a bunch of fans of the process, too.

2:41:59

Sure.

2:41:59

Like, I've talked to people that have, like, come up to me at the comedy store

2:42:02

and said,

2:42:02

hey, I saw you first do that bit a year ago, and then I watched it change, and

2:42:07

then when

2:42:08

it came on your Netflix special, I was like, holy shit.

2:42:10

Like, look at it.

2:42:11

It's kind of cool to see it grow and become viable.

2:42:14

Yeah.

2:42:14

I think it's cool that there's an audience for that, or that they value that,

2:42:18

because

2:42:19

I think it's easy to assume the end consumer just wants to see the finished

2:42:23

product, but

2:42:24

comedy fans are so savvy now, they want to see that process, and they feel like

2:42:29

they're

2:42:29

let in.

2:42:30

Like, oh, cool.

2:42:30

Like, it's not a magic trick anymore.

2:42:32

No, no, no.

2:42:33

It's different.

2:42:34

Yeah, no, I agree.

2:42:35

Listen, man, I'm glad I got you in here.

2:42:38

Thanks for having me, dude.

2:42:39

My pleasure, brother.

2:42:40

My pleasure.

2:42:40

And it's always cool seeing you at the store.

2:42:43

You're a funny motherfucker.

2:42:44

Thanks, man.

2:42:45

And I wish you all the best.

2:42:46

So tell everybody your Instagram.

2:42:48

What is the...

2:42:50

It's Fahim Anwar.

2:42:51

So just my name.

2:42:52

Twitter, same.

2:42:54

Fahim Anwar.

2:42:54

And then I'm a special on Amazon called There's No Business Like Show Business,

2:42:58

so I want

2:42:59

people to watch that.

2:42:59

Oh, your special's on Amazon?

2:43:01

Yeah, but it was acquired, so it wasn't like an original.

2:43:04

I did it for CISO back in the day.

2:43:06

Everyone knew that was going down.

2:43:07

That's right.

2:43:09

Yeah.

2:43:09

All right, brother.

2:43:10

Thank you very much, bro.

2:43:10

This was fun.

2:43:11

Thank you, dude.

2:43:11

Bye, everybody.