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Jeff Ross is a comic, actor, director, and producer. His new special, “Take a Banana for the Ride,” is streaming on Netflix. www.netflix.com/title/81969837 www.roastmastergeneral.com
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Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day.
What's up, dog?
Joe.
Good to see you, my friend.
Same here, man.
What's cracka-wacka?
Life is good.
Happy to be in Austin, Texas.
Happy to have you.
Are you doing Kill Tony tonight?
I'll show up at Kill Tony tonight.
Nice.
Of course.
My guy, so happy for him.
Yeah, he's killing it.
He always talks about us as his early supporters.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
I love that guy.
He's the best.
I mean, that show is on fire.
It's a fucking runaway train right now.
Everywhere I go, Kill Tony, Kill Tony, Kill Tony.
Love you on Kill Tony.
It's such a fun show.
You know, what a great idea.
Kind of amazing.
Nobody thought it up.
Well, he just kind of put his open mics and his roasts and his personality and
his friends
and his built a community.
It's kind of amazing.
Oh, it's incredible.
He's the new Johnny Carson.
I mean, think about how many, like, Adam Ray's killing it, selling out giant
theaters.
All these guys that, you know, came through that show are fucking destroying
now.
This is our tribe, Joe.
I know.
I love it.
It's amazing.
It's a good time for comedy.
Did I hear that you have a German Shepherd?
No.
No, I have a Golden Retriever and I have a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.
Oh, okay.
A little tiny fella.
Somebody told me something different.
No.
I love German Shepherds, but I don't have them.
I have a German Shepherd.
They're the best.
You have to exercise the shit out of them, though.
Yeah.
They need work.
She loves to run around and dig and climb and adventures.
They need tasks.
They're not like my Golden.
He's just cool, just chilling, laying on his back, getting his belly rub.
Oh, I follow him on Instagram, don't worry.
He's the best.
I look for my mornings with him.
I mean, they're a very low-maintenance dog, and he's trained.
You could train him very easily, but as far as like a guard dog and that kind
of, useless.
My dog can like sit, stay, and run around frantically.
I'll be like, run around frantically, and she'll just run around.
Well, they have so much energy.
Those dogs are just designed to work.
I put her to work for two months this summer on Broadway.
She came out at the end of my show and howled with me in the audience.
She can howl on cue?
We taught her.
I had the same trainer that did Sandy from the show Annie, like from when I was
a kid.
Bill Bertoloni, and he's like, I could teach her.
She's like a wild, rescued German Shepherd from the desert, and there she was,
like, came out,
jumped on a couch, hit her mark, turned to the audience, and we, like, sang.
Oh, that's awesome.
She had her own dressing room.
Nipsey.
Her name's Nipsey.
And, you know, and then when the job was, you know, when the run was over, she
was like,
no more work?
I need something else to do.
Yeah, they need things to do.
Like, people that just have them and have them in an apartment and don't go
anywhere,
like, that's a crazy thing to do to a dog like that.
Yeah.
Aw, look at her.
Oh, my God.
Wow.
Look how sweet.
So she's a rescue dog?
She is.
Where'd you find her?
They found her in a bummy breeder in Reno during the pandemic.
I had an old dog.
I had an old senior dog that my ex found on the street, and we took care of her
at the beginning
of the pandemic, and the ex left, left the dog.
So it was just me and this old, beat-up street dog for a few months, and the
vet was like,
I got another, a puppy, German Shepherd.
Oh, she was a puppy?
This one was, yeah.
Oh, that's great.
So now, it was like five years ago already, so she's my bestie, and we do
everything.
I mean, I just love her to pieces.
Like, I can't, even getting on the plane to come here yesterday, as a part of
me was like,
should I bring her, let her run around the four seas for a couple days and
whatever,
but, yeah, it's hard leaving them.
It's like I have a kid.
I know.
She looks at me, looking for the buzzwords.
Are we going?
Are we staying?
Are we eating?
I know.
They get separation anxiety, big time.
And they get very attached to one person.
Right.
Yeah.
Like, you're her daddy.
Oh, she's just so sweet.
She just, she'll lay in bed, wait.
She never wakes me, rolls over, arms up, ready to get, she can't start the day
without a full
belly rub.
Like, I almost, like, hold her legs and play her like a guitar.
And she just, you know, tongues out, just complete euphoria.
Once a week, I take all her collars off and just rub the neck and just her eyes
start
watering.
That's so cute.
Highly right.
I never was into dogs.
I'm slightly allergic.
My sister got snapped on by a Doberman when we were little, so I was always a
little afraid.
And then it was just kind of forced on me during the pandemic because all these
dogs needed
homes.
So now here I am.
I'm a freaking doggy daddy.
Oh, I love dogs.
I've always had dogs.
I will never not have dogs.
I love them.
I love them.
What do you think it is?
It's just like, they're just these amazing creatures that just love the shit
out of you.
And especially if you train them from the time they're puppies and you give
them nothing
but love.
Yeah.
Like, they're so connected to you.
And then, you know, it's just awesome.
You wake up in the morning and it's always positive.
It's always, hello, hello.
I wake up with Marshall and he starts whining and whimpering.
And he, like, I do this thing in the morning.
I go, good morning, sir.
Good morning, sir.
He's wagging his tail and he's rolling around on his back and I'm rubbing his
belly and he's
giving me kisses.
He loves it.
He loves it.
He gets so excited to see me in the morning.
It's like his ritual.
He knows the ritual's coming.
He's going to get all this love.
Does he sleep in your room?
No.
No.
My wife is a little bit allergic, so he sleeps outside the room.
Right.
But he is, he's just a giant love sponge.
That's what he is.
It's like he loves everybody.
Everybody who comes in the house, like, he meet you for the first time.
He's like, I can't believe you're here.
He's just so excited to meet everybody.
My dog checks everybody.
She's got to, like, check them out first.
Of course.
German Shepherd.
It's different.
And if somebody has, like, chemical imbalances or a little off, she lets me
know.
Oh, yeah.
You got screwball friends.
Well, every now and then, you know, comics will be off their meds and they'll
come up and be like, I used to know that person.
I don't know that person anymore.
The dog just, like, alerts me.
Oh, that's interesting.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're very watchful.
You know, they're shepherds.
They're protecting you.
They're protecting their daddy.
She's funny on the plane.
Like, I've only flown with her twice, but once, you know, once to New York and
then once back after we were done on Broadway.
And she's like, it was nine months later.
She literally knew how to walk on the plane, where to go, where her seat was.
Like, remembers everything like a person.
They're very smart dogs.
Very smart dogs.
It's one of the reasons why they need someone to exercise.
Like, the dumbest dogs can just lay around and do nothing.
Yeah.
But really smart dogs.
They need a lot of activity.
Especially shepherds because they're working dogs.
If I leave her alone too long, she'll dig up the backyard.
She needs something to do.
Yeah, they get crazy.
They're like an athlete.
Yeah.
You know, they just, they need work.
They need to go.
And they don't need a lot of food.
They don't need a lot.
She's, she's like.
What do you feed her?
You know, I used to overfeed her and give her a lot of table scraps and spoiler.
And then I learned more recently that if I keep her to like a cup and a half of
kibble a day, the vet recommended.
You should get her on raw food.
So raw food or fresh food.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
I used to feed my dogs kibble too.
I had one dog that got cancer.
And I read about all these dogs getting cancer.
And, you know, they get fat so easy when you give them kibble.
And it's just because that stuff can sit on a shelf forever.
Yeah.
It's like you wouldn't eat it.
Why are they eating it?
Right.
It's not healthy for them.
Sometimes I put a little turkey in the.
Turkey's great.
Real food is great.
Real, real food for your dog is the way to go.
I feed my dog farmer's dog.
It comes frozen.
It has to be frozen.
Right.
And the way they attack it versus the way they attack kibble.
Like kibble's like, okay, they're eating.
No big deal.
Yeah.
But they just can't wait to eat this stuff.
Like they get excited.
Like the little guy, little Charlie, he literally leaps up in the air trying to
get to the counter
where when I'm putting the food in his bowl, he gets nuts.
They love it.
It's real food.
It's human grade food for dogs.
I have to check that out.
Oh, yeah.
It comes frozen.
And also they give it to you the right portions for your dog so you don't have
to think about
it.
Like you put in your dog's weight, what breed your dog is, and, you know,
whether your dog's
overweight or not.
And they measure it out calorie-wise.
So it's specific to your dog.
My dog's weight is good, but I got to get her to stop smoking.
She's just got to stop.
You know what?
It's funny.
She used to really hate when I light up a joint and she'd run.
When she was little, she'd run in the other room.
But now she's just like, oh, that's daddy.
Well, she'd probably get a little paranoid.
I used to have a pit bull that she would get paranoid if she was in the room
when we got
high.
And I was realizing, oh, this poor dog, she's getting high too.
She was a rescue dog too.
I found her.
She was covered in mange.
It was so sad.
She was eating out of garbage cans.
That's heartbreaking.
Yeah.
A friend of mine found her and they took her in for it.
And then they called me and they said, do you want another dog?
I had one dog already.
I said, absolutely.
And as soon as I saw her, I was like, oh, yeah, they're good together.
Yeah.
It was so horrible.
She was covered in mange.
She had little scabs on her and everything.
It all went away within like two months of food.
But that dog, because of living on the street, she could never get enough food.
She was always like raiding garbage cans and stuff.
You'd have to lock up the garbage cans, strap it down with a bungee cord.
She would tip them over and she was never full.
Even though she would like get fat, she was never full.
Just in case.
It was just, you know, she was starving when I found her.
I had the old dog first and then the young German shepherd.
So the old one had all these street habits like that.
And she taught him to the young dog.
Like the young dog walks down the stairs as if she has a broken back hip.
Oh, no.
And she learned how to get in the car from an old dog.
So two legs.
She could leap right in.
She's a kid.
But she still goes two paws up and I have to pick her up.
Yeah, that's how Marshall does it.
Over protective like the old dog.
Yeah, Marshall, I think he probably could jump in my car.
But it's like he knows I'll just lift him up because I've done it since he was
a puppy.
So we do this little thing.
I go, you ready?
He puts his paws like a one, two, three.
It's always one, two, three up.
So he gets ready.
Do they talk to you?
My dog howls with me in the morning.
No, Marshall only talks when he wants to come inside.
Like if he's outside, he'll just bark once at the door just to let you know.
He's really good.
He's the best dog.
What does his bark sound like?
Let me in.
It's like, hey, I'm out here.
Come on.
You know, he's out until he's not.
You know, he's out until he's bored.
And then he just lets you know.
If he's not annoying.
The old dog, if I had to put her like, if like a guy came over to work on the
house or something, I had to put her like in a bedroom or a bathroom.
She was, you know, a big, big dog.
She would gnaw on the handles.
So I have a house full of like chrome door handles that all have like bite
marks in it.
The bite is amazing.
Yeah, you got to give him things to chew on all the time.
You know, there's chew toys all over my house.
Yeah.
Everywhere.
My dog has, uh, Marshall has like a big box filled with toys.
Yeah.
And it was like, and he just goes in and picks one out.
Yeah.
Randomly.
Yeah.
Depends who it is.
I go, what are you going to get?
Which toy?
And he's like looking around, picks one out.
And then him and the little dog, they play tug of war.
It's adorable.
They get a toy.
So they get a lot.
Oh my God.
You knew they'd get along before you got the cycle.
He's the easiest dog to get along with.
He gets along with everything and everybody.
Jamie's got a psycho dog.
Jamie's got this little French bulldog that's like a little, a little meat
missile.
Yeah.
He's a nut.
He's great.
He's awesome.
Oh yeah.
He's nuts.
He's just, he's three.
Carl.
Almost three.
He's two and a half.
He's a little psycho.
He's jacked.
He's super jacked.
Really?
He's like this little French bulldog.
He's a fucking jack.
And him and Marshall just play insane.
They, it's insane.
Like Carl throws himself through the air at Marshall.
Cause he knows that Marshall's like super gentle and they just play back and
forth.
But it's adorable.
If a dog is small enough, like a little chihuahua type dog, they can put their
head inside.
My dog will just open her mouth and let another dog just roll her head inside
her mouth.
No instincts.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
It just wants it to play.
It's just nuts that they, those used to be wolves.
They've turned wolves into these little tiny things you could carry around.
I mean, in a thousand years, they'll be, are they getting smarter the way
humans are evolving?
I wonder.
That's a good question.
I wonder.
I mean, I think there would have to be a reason for them to get smarter.
You know, some dogs are like the dogs that are trained, like a Belgian Malinois.
Those are really smart dogs.
You know, those are dog military dogs.
Yeah.
Those dogs, you cannot just leave that dog alone.
No.
Like it's like a shepherd times 10.
Yeah.
They look like shepherd sort of, but those dogs, they're so intelligent.
Yeah.
You know, they, they are constantly scanning everything and looking for
everything.
They know when you're weird, they know everything.
Right.
Yeah.
So those dogs have to be smart because they have jobs, you know, they use them.
Like those are the dogs they sicked on like Osama bin Laden's crew.
Right.
You know, they open the door and they breach dogs run in.
Incredible.
Yeah.
My dog's such a limb compared to all that.
So is mine.
She just wants to play.
Yeah.
These are the only dogs that, well, I've had a couple of dogs before.
Like I had a, a dog that was a Shibu Inu mix and he was kind of a pussy.
Um, but, and I had a, a Mastiff before that, but mostly I've had like big,
guard dogs.
Right.
You know, and this, these are the dogs of first dogs I've had that are,
they're not guarding shit.
Marshall's not guarding.
They guard your emotions, buddy.
Well, they're just sweet.
They're just sweet.
They're just awesome to have.
It's like, you just have love around you all the time and they're never in a
bad mood.
There's never a day where he's never had a bad day in his life.
Every day is a great day.
Every day he's happy.
Even if you're not there?
Well, he gets sad if I'm not there for sure.
But like, I pull out the ball.
It's always the same thing.
It's never like, one day I'm like, maybe he's going to get bored of this
fucking ball.
Nope.
I pull out that ball.
Oh, oh, the ball, the ball's out.
Let's go.
Bouncing around, wagging his tail, jumping up.
I got a ball, it's got like the stick, like it's like a long curved stick so
you can throw
the ball further.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course.
And, you know, he just starts leaping up towards the stick.
He gets so pumped.
I'm like, one day he's going to get bored of this.
Nope.
He's nine years old.
He's never getting bored of it.
When I come up the stairs, if she sees that I have my sneakers on, she starts
stretching
like an Olympian.
Let's go.
Time to go.
Yeah, dogs are awesome.
People that don't have them, I feel bad for them.
Like you're missing a lot of love in your life, especially like people that
live alone.
You know, it's like you always have a friend.
You always have somebody.
I talk to my dog.
Like I have conversations with them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know?
And does Marshall look you in the eyes when you're talking?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It's a real friend.
Oh, he's like the most loving creature I've ever encountered.
Do you tell the dog stuff you wouldn't tell your family or your friends?
No.
Sometimes I'm like, hey, Nipsey, man, I probably shouldn't have said that to
her.
She has emotional, like she knows when I'm happy, sad, nervous, sick.
Mostly it's baby talk.
Mostly he's like, oh, he's my buddy.
He watches TV with me.
He climbs up on the couch and sits on my lap.
He puts his head on my lap.
The best.
Yeah.
And when there's animals on TV, he parks his head up.
Yeah.
You know, because it's a big TV.
And so he's like, what the fuck is that?
Is that real?
He has to.
When Nipsey first came out from the desert, she was, you know, like six, seven
month old,
you know, puppy, but still a sizable dog.
German Shepherd at six months is already like a dog.
And the old dog, which was old, you know, on her deathbed, but wise, street
wise, she was on the floor and the puppy was up on my bed.
It was her first night in a home.
And I put on TV, I put on House of Cards and it was this daunting kind of scary
music and the dog's just watching.
And it's like a shadowy figure.
It was Kevin Spacey coming down the hall, his character coming down the hall.
And as this like man was revealed full screen on a big screen, Nipsey did a
backflip, fell off the bed and ran and hid in the closet.
And the old dog, Nana was like, oh boy, she had to like pull herself up at her
bad legs and go in the closet and tell her to come back out.
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House of Cards, what a fucking show that was.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, what a fucking show.
They never should have done that last season.
Once Kevin Spacey got canceled, they should have just canceled it.
It was done.
Or, you know, not.
Right.
Such a good fucking show.
That was a great show.
It's crazy.
I saw him.
He was in Israel doing some weird thing where he was, like, doing, like, a song
and dance routine in a small club recently.
Like, he's been kind of reduced to doing that for money.
Is that reduced or is that part of the comeback?
You got to start.
I don't know.
I mean, it's something.
I mean, I guess he's just making money.
You know, he is completely bankrupt.
He lost everything.
It's crazy.
Show business, it's out.
Well, it's not just show business, right?
It's also, what did you do?
You know, what did you get caught for?
He got, you know, he was an old school dick grabber.
A lot of those old school guys.
No one really likes that, getting their dick grabbed like that.
Some gay guys do, I think.
I think what he did probably worked on some guys.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
Like, gay guys have a whole different way of interacting with each other that
we don't have.
But I think with Spacey, it was like, some of those fellows were young.
And that's the problem.
Power.
It's power.
It's like, in the gay community, there's a lot of guys that think it's okay for
young gay guys who are underage to hook up with older gay guys.
It's like, Milo Yiannopoulos, remember him?
He actually talked about that on my show.
He was talking about when he was 14, he hooked up with this older guy.
And he's like, trust me, I was the predator.
He was like saying that he was going after the guy.
I was like, all right.
But it's different.
In their eyes, I mean, I'm just speaking for gay guys that I've talked to.
It's different in their eyes than, you know, an adult male and a young female.
Right.
You know.
But Kevin Spacey is a fucking unbelievable actor.
That fucking House of Cards was so good.
It was so good.
Such a good show.
I'm glad it's still out there.
It was so good, it made me miss and re-watch West Wing.
That's how good it was.
I never watched that.
I think I maybe watched one or two episodes.
It's like an idealistic version of what politics could be.
Right.
Martin Sheen is like the president we wish we had.
Like a really solid.
It was a long time ago.
But he's also controversial.
He's hiding a medical thing.
It like got way ahead of a lot of the modern day stories.
Like Biden.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And his wife's a doctor, so she's helping him.
Well, we always have these idealistic ideas of who we want to be our leader.
And the thing about the Kevin Spacey character was like, that's probably more
realistic.
Like that guy is more realistic.
Well, as we get older, we understand you got to be cutthroat to make it.
There's got to be a certain killer instinct in a president.
You're also most likely deeply compromised by the time you get into office,
which is the
only way you navigate those worlds.
Like everybody's compromised.
Everybody's gone to that eyes wide shut party.
Right.
I couldn't get in, just for the record.
Yeah.
Me neither.
I don't want to get in.
I know.
That's a good thing.
A dog can kind of save your career because like you get invited to some wild
sex party.
You'll be like, my dog's been waiting for me for five hours.
Sorry.
I can't go.
Meanwhile, it's better to just hang out with your dog.
You'll have a better time and you won't feel gross in the morning, I guess.
But I think a lot of those people are sociopaths.
They probably don't even feel gross ever.
I was out all weekend for the Fanatics football stuff with Travis Scott's DJing
at three in
the morning.
What is the Fanatics football stuff?
They had a flag football tournament in L.A.
It was supposed to be in Riyadh and they had to move it to L.A.
Tom Brady and the Fanatics.
What's the Fanatics?
It's like, I guess it's a branding company.
They do all the jerseys.
Michael Rubin and Michael Ratner, two friends of mine, did this flag football
game and I
was just partying.
I just took the weekend off and I'm like seeing all the football players and it
was just so
much fun.
And then just as the party's really getting hot, I'm like, I miss my dog.
I'm going home.
Yeah, there's always this thing in the back of your head like, I got to get
home.
He's been home alone for five hours.
He's been home alone for six hours.
I'm thinking about him.
He has to pee.
He's a good boy.
He's not going to pee in the house, but he's probably holding it in upset.
Yeah.
Isn't it nuts?
Like people think, especially comics, you know, we want to be up late, getting
drunk,
fucking off, being retarded, doing drugs.
You just want to get home.
Yeah.
Want to get home, chill out, relax, watch TV.
I feel like if I had a dog when I was starting out in comedy, I would have been
more disciplined.
I would have been coming home instead of staying out all night.
Yeah.
I kind of regret that a little bit.
You regret staying out all night?
Well, I mean, you know, you know how it is.
You do your set, you start hanging out in the club, in the comedy club and
drinking or eating
or whatever, but there's a certain, I don't know, you go home and you're up
earlier, you get
more done the next day.
Oh, absolutely.
Well, it's just you feel better.
It's hard to leave when you're having fun.
You know, it's also you feel like you're a part of a different society, society
of people
who don't have a regular job, you got freedom, you're your own boss.
I grew up, I lost my parents as a teenager.
So I live every day like I could die tomorrow.
So I never want to leave.
I have ultimate FOMO all the time.
I never want to miss an event, a party.
I went to the Super Bowl.
I went to All-Star Weekend.
I want to go to the Grammys.
I love life.
I want to make the most out of it all the time.
It works against me sometimes, I think.
That's interesting, right?
It's the plus side of experiencing loss when you're young.
You really want, you really relish life.
You want to make the most out of it.
You want to enjoy it while it's here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of the things I say on my show is I learned early on human beings were made
to mourn
and move on.
You can't mourn forever or a part of you dies.
And that's not fair.
So it gave me this sort of zest for living.
You take that loss as a young person.
You're afraid at any second.
It's hard to make long-term plans.
Are your parents still alive?
Yeah.
It's an amazing, amazing blessing.
And sometimes when you lose people young, you're afraid.
You live in the constant fear that it's all going to fall apart.
Yeah.
I've lost a lot of friends.
Like sometimes I look at my contact list when I get a new phone, you know, and
you're swapping
over contacts.
And I'm like, oh, fuck.
You know, I've got like 20 dead people in my contact list.
Some of them I just keep in there.
You know, I got old phones where like Bourdain was texting me.
I just kept the phone.
I'm like, I'm never throwing this phone away.
You know, it's a bunch of friends who are just gone.
I look at Bob Saget's texts all the time.
I listen to Gilbert Gottfried's voicemails.
Yeah, I know what you mean.
Yeah.
It just brings me right back to them.
Those two guys, those are two tough ones.
Those are two really tough ones.
Well, there's that famous picture of me, Norm, Gilbert, and Bob that Adam Egott
took at
Jones Restaurant in Hollywood.
And I show that in my special, and I talk about each one, do like a tribute to
Norm.
I do a tribute to Gilbert, whose family is a big part of my family now.
His kids are great kids.
His daughter goes to school here in Texas, in Austin.
And there it is.
There it is.
And Bob, who just became a grandfather.
So they left quite a legacy, those guys.
And I really loved them.
And they would make me laugh.
You know, I would just set them up, and they would go, and I would laugh.
Until I was dying laughing.
Fucking Norm.
What a legend.
The king.
He's such a great guy, too.
Yeah.
He's so funny, too.
And his clips.
I don't know if it's my algorithm or what, but you would think Norm is making
comedy content
every day if you looked at my algorithm.
Well, mine, too.
I think a lot of people.
So, like, people just share them, because, you know, he had so many funny
things to say
about everything.
And such a unique perspective.
Just an unusual state of mind.
Hmm.
Canadians.
Canadians.
I have a theory that Canadians.
I'm from New Jersey.
So I feel like New Jersey, I grew up as an outsider to New York.
We had a root for New York sports teams.
We had to listen to New York radio stations as a kid, TV stations.
And Canada has that with America.
Right.
So I think they always feel like, comedians feel like outsiders a little bit.
I feel like Canadians kind of have that.
Harland.
He's Canadian.
I mean, Canadian comedians, you could go all day.
Tom Green.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jim Carrey.
Jim Carrey.
A lot of Canadians.
Caroline Ray.
And a lot more.
John Candy, right?
Yeah.
John Candy was a Canadian.
Yeah.
Martin Short.
Was he?
Is he?
He is.
I think so.
He's still with us.
Those SCTV people.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Martin Short is, he had a rough month.
He lost somebody very close to him.
But he's still one of the funniest people in the world.
Oh, he was brilliant.
All his fucking crazy characters.
Oh, my God.
I was at a birthday party once.
It was like Paul Rudd's 50th birthday party years ago.
And I remember, everybody was like, let's do karaoke.
And everybody wanted to start.
Everybody was too, like, shy to, like, do karaoke first.
And Martin Short walked up to the mic, belted out, like, a Sinatra song,
dropped the mic,
and walked out to the valet and left.
And he just, like, kicked it off and went.
Fly me to the moon.
And he was gone.
It's weird when you get older and you realize how many guys have passed.
Like, Patrice comes up in my algorithm all the time.
And, you know, you just watch old clips.
I went on a binge a few months back of him on Opie and Anthony.
Yeah.
Just, fuck.
Ruthless.
He would have been the number one podcast in the world if he was alive today.
Patrice?
Yeah.
If he had a podcast?
Because he probably would have.
He probably would have.
I mean, it's a perfect normal transition from Opie and Anthony to podcasting.
Right.
He would have probably had the best podcast in the world.
Except the guests would never get to talk at all.
Yeah.
It wouldn't matter.
He would be dressing them down.
Patrice's greatness at the Charlie Sheen roast I always talk about is.
Oh, yeah.
He went on last and he was like, we booked him late.
He never wanted to do a roast.
And he said, I don't know this one.
I don't know that one.
And finally I called him one day.
I go, we're roasting Charlie Sheen.
He goes, oh.
He goes, I don't know Charlie Sheen, but I think I could do that.
I go, you know him.
You don't know him, but you know what he, you know.
And he goes, all right, I'm coming.
He dresses total rock star, like a leather suit, like this whole fantasy Patrice
in his head.
And then the day of the show, he's like complaining about his material.
He's like, I don't know all these writers.
They don't know me.
This isn't me.
I go, Patrice, fuck all that.
Pay attention and roast the roast.
Just roast the roast.
Make mental notes, clock it all, let them see you taking it in, and then just
go on and talk about what you just saw.
And that's what he did.
No, it was brilliant.
Did you see Charlie Sheen's Netflix documentary?
I haven't.
It's fucking great, man.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
Like he talks about everything.
He talks about the first time he smoked crack.
A girl's giving him a blowjob when he smoked crack.
How else are you supposed to do it?
He said it's the best experience he's ever had.
He says he's never topped it.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Makes you want to try it.
Makes you like think, maybe.
He was a fascinating guest too, having him in here.
It's like, that guy's been through so much shit and he's okay.
You know, it's like, how is he alive?
Some people are just different, right?
Tiger Blood?
I was on tour with him that whole time.
That's right.
That's right.
You were doing that thing with him.
So what happened was when he got kicked off of Two and a Half Men and he went
kind of kooky,
he decided to do this whirlwind tour.
And the first one he did, he tried to go and just wing it.
Parpedo of truth.
Yeah.
That's what he called it.
The wing in it one did not work.
No.
But then when he started doing it with you and he did it with Russell, Russell
Peters did
a bunch of them with him.
Uh-huh.
With comics, it actually worked because like he would have someone to bounce
stuff off
of and they knew how to be entertaining and keep the flow going.
Right.
Yeah.
And then you got into those stories and it was amazing.
Yeah.
It totally turned around.
The first one I did was in Atlantic City and he called me the night before and
I was in LA
at a party and everyone's like, yeah, yeah, go do it, go do it.
So I caught a like 6 a.m.
He called you the night before.
What did he say?
He's like, my shows aren't going good.
I didn't know him.
He goes, you know, like all these different people keep telling me, Simon Rex,
you know,
other friends of his kept saying, Jeff Ross could come out and roast you and
save this.
So I just wrote jokes all night, you know, left the party, wrote jokes, caught
a 6 a.m.
Flew.
I walk into his dressing room like an hour before.
Chuck Zito is literally staring me down going, don't be too mean to my guy.
You know, like they're just trying to scare me.
And I'm like, I'm here to like, I'm a comedian, you know.
And Charlie was really cool and I told his road manager, he goes, what do you
need?
I go, I need a podium to roll out, big arenas.
I want to make it like a show and I need a hazmat suit because he'd been
bombing for like a week every single night.
I'm going to come out.
I go, I heard there's a bomb scare.
I roll out.
It's Jersey.
So it's my crowd.
And I just start roasting him.
And it went well.
And I was like, if you're winning, because he's always like, winning, winning.
I'm like, if you're winning, something's wrong with the fucking scoreboard.
Old Jeff with hair, duh, winning.
Look at that.
Boy, he looks so skinny.
Oh, yeah.
That's a look of a guy who does coke.
Look how ripped he is.
Jesus.
Oh, man.
He was, he was up all night.
We had, he was like.
So he was still partying hard back then.
You know, it's hard to say.
Had to be.
He didn't let me see that side of it.
I'm sure he was.
There's no chance he was clean.
Warlock.
Oh, that's right.
He was a warlock.
A warlock with tiger blood.
Right.
Violent torpedo of truth tour.
Kicks off in Detroit.
TV star is booed off stage.
Yeah.
So then after that, they kept calling and going,
you do this date and he'd do that date.
It was like more money than I'd ever made it for a one nighter.
So I just started getting on the bus and the plane with him.
How many dates did you guys do?
I wound up, I wound up doing eight.
And Russell, how many did he do?
I don't know.
I don't know.
So he just had different comics.
Who else did it?
I don't remember anyone else but me.
So that's news to me that Russell did.
Yeah, Russell did a few.
At least one I know of.
Maybe, there might have been some in Canada I didn't do.
Well, Russell's really good off the cuff.
You know, Russell's great working the crowd.
I think Russell interviewed him.
I think Russell, like you said.
That's how he did it?
Yeah, I think that's how he did it.
Because now it occurs to me that he had interviewers on some of them.
And he had a radio guy.
And I think maybe Russell might have done a Canadian date.
That's a smart way to do it.
Have someone who's smart and quick just interview.
Because the stories are so bananas.
All you need is the stories.
And he was so open about stuff.
Talking about how much crack he would smoke.
Oh, yeah.
It was just so insane.
And everybody was so happy that someone was, instead of hiding from the fact
that they fucked
their life up, they were like celebrating that they were off the rails.
And everyone was like, yeah, tiger blood.
I remember even Diego Sanchez, who was fighting in the UFC, was saying he had
tiger blood.
That's how popular it was getting.
Yeah, he was a thing.
Yeah, it was a thing.
But it was a new thing, right?
It was a movie star who had gone off the rails and was like celebrating it and
being open
and honest in interviews about prostitutes, cocaine, chaos, everything.
All of the above.
Yeah.
It was a totally new experience for the general public.
Because before, if someone had an addiction problem, it was like, oh, so sad.
Right.
He was doing coke and, you know, I was, my life had fallen apart and then I
found Jesus.
Right.
You know, it's like always one of those things.
He wasn't on an apology tour.
He went on a fuck you tour.
Yeah, 100%.
And no one had ever done that before.
No one had ever done a fuck you tour before.
I mean, it was a little ill-advised, the first ones, you know, when he went on
by himself.
Like, that was a terrible idea.
Right.
You can't just wing it.
And when you're on coke, you think you could do anything, you know?
Or he would take questions, but there's 15,000 people yelling at him.
Right.
If you're going to take questions, it would have to be a person who's a
moderator.
Right.
Who has a microphone and talks to another person and is there so they can keep
it from going
off the rails.
And a line of people.
You can't just have people yelling out things in the audience.
One night, somebody wanted his money back, and he brought the guy up and gave
him his money
back.
And then, of course, like 400 people stood up, like, I want my money back.
Oh, no.
He would get in.
He would hear the audience too much.
Yeah.
Well, no experience with that kind of stuff.
Right.
If you think you could just do live audience and deal with 15,000 people's
different personalities,
then you don't know what that's like.
Right.
Good luck.
We wound up doing eight shows, and I would always roast him, so by the eighth
show, I
had 20 minutes of Charlie Sheen material.
Every city, I'd add jokes.
So that's when I was like, why don't we just do this on TV?
I mean, we have the roast, and then we did the Comedy Central roast.
Nice.
Patrice and all that.
And Mike Tyson was at that one.
It's a really interesting career arc.
Well, if you know his story, he was on the set of Apocalypse Now with his
father when he
was 10.
Right.
And then 10 years later, he was doing, what was the fucking movie?
His fucking big war movie.
Jesus Christ.
Platoon.
Platoon.
He was doing Platoon when he was 20.
Yeah.
Which is nuts.
10 years later.
Yeah.
I mean, he's doing the next iconic war movie.
Right.
And he's a 20-year-old kid, and then all of a sudden, he's a fucking superstar.
Right.
He was great in that movie.
And he's just off the rails, just like no restrictions.
He's rich.
He's young.
He's handsome.
He's just going crazy.
Yeah.
Doing drugs.
But he made it through it all.
That's what's nuts.
I got to check that doc out.
It's great.
He's a great interview, too.
Like, having him on the podcast was fucking great.
Like, he's a really nice guy.
He's very cool and honest about it all.
Oh, yeah.
You know, and he's also like, hey, you know, I can still act.
Like, how about I fucking paid my dues.
I've been sober for seven years.
Like, give me a shot.
Yeah.
He can still act.
He's a good actor.
I hope someone does do something like that.
Because I feel like if one big movie came along, like, maybe Tarantino could
put him in.
Because he's the master at, like, reviving careers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, what he did with Travolta and Pulp Fiction.
Pulp Fiction, like, Travolta was dead on the operating table in his career
before Pulp Fiction.
Pulp Fiction came along and, boom, he's back.
Because they realized, like, oh, shit, John Travolta can fucking act.
And that role was perfect for him.
Vince, he played this crazy hitman with Samuel Jackson.
The best.
Fucking, what a movie.
I watch it all the time.
Yeah, it completely revived his career.
Yeah, he's the, like, Quentin Tarantino is, like, the master of seeing things
that other people don't see.
You know, he's like, that guy's still great.
Yeah.
And I think that's, like, the case with Charlie.
Like, someone's got to come along and see and just go, I just need to get him a
role where he just can really sink his teeth into it and he'll fucking kill it.
Especially now at this stage of his life where he knows how important it is.
He'll throw himself into it.
Right.
It'd be fucking amazing.
Well, like, some people don't act for a long time.
And then look what Sean Penn just did.
He just, and he came back after God knows how long and just did this totally
iconic, unrecognizable, strange character.
I didn't see that movie.
I've heard all these mixed reviews.
Whatever.
It's interesting to see Sean's take on this soldier.
Look, Sean Penn's out of his fucking mind, but that's the kind of guy that
makes a great actor.
He's a great actor.
Ditch the Oscars to go see.
Yeah.
Go to Ukraine.
So cool.
Go hang out.
Go hang out with my boy Zelensky and do coke.
To that pure Russian coke.
I like how you think that's what they were doing.
I'm just guessing.
I'm just taking a wild guess.
But that guy, I mean, how about him?
Like, goes and fucking meets the drug lord.
What's his name?
What's wrong with my brain today, Jamie?
What the fuck's his name?
The dude he met in Mexico.
The guy who got arrested?
El Chapo.
El Chapo.
Thank you.
Went down and met El Chapo, and that's how El Chapo wound up getting arrested.
Right.
He wanted to meet Sean Penn.
Sean Penn's like, all right, I'll go meet.
He wrote an article for, like, Rolling Stone.
He, like, was a journalist.
Right.
I remember.
I mean, like, what fucking movie star goes down and meets El Chapo?
By the way, that shirt, Conor McGregor bought a shirt that's, like, exactly
like that shirt
and recreated that pose with, I forget who he shook hands with,
but it was, like, this, like, funny inside joke that a lot of people didn't
catch.
It's like, why is he wearing that shirt?
And people realize, oh, my God, he's wearing an El Chapo shirt.
Oh, my God.
He bought a similar shirt.
He's, like, literally doing that.
Oh, my gosh.
So silly.
He dressed as gangster, El Chapo.
He's literally doing the thing.
But he did it on purpose.
Nuts.
I mean, it takes insane balls to be a world-famous actor
and decide, I'm going to go meet a drug lord in Mexico
and write an article for Rolling Stone.
He's an adventurer.
I guess.
Acting's a part of him.
Not all of him.
I mean, he must be.
He's in fucking Ukraine.
Like, what does he do?
I remember being at a party, Eddie Vedder's birthday party,
and Sean Penn walked in with Stormy Daniels.
Like, he has friends from the most diverse places.
That's funny.
Zelensky, Stormy.
Have you seen Kyle Dunagan's face swap things with Trump and Stormy Daniels?
So funny.
Oh, my God.
They're so funny.
So funny.
Kyle Dunagan.
He's another guy that got revived by Kill Tony.
Or, like, really got, the world got to see him.
Like, we did, we covered his face swap videos a bunch of times on the podcast
and blew them up.
But to see him as these characters, like, when he plays RFK Jr., when he plays
Elon, like,
that is what really, like, kicked off Kyle's career.
You know?
Dude, his RFK is so fun.
His Elon's so good.
That's when he first started doing the face swap.
This is the best.
My text chain's always sharing his stuff.
His Bill Maher.
His Bill Maher's amazing.
Because his jokes are funny about it.
I tried to play the Bill Maher impression with Bill Maher when he was in here.
He goes, if you play it, I'll leave.
Why does he care?
I don't know.
Because he doesn't hang out with comics enough.
He's out there doing his show, hanging out with political people, being all
serious.
It's like, you kind of forget.
He just wants to be a, what do you call it, a contrarian.
I was on his podcast and, like, he literally, he just wanted to fight about
anything.
I go, the Ramones are great.
He's like, no, they're not.
I'm like, all right, man.
How did you say rock and roll high school's not great?
Come on, son.
The look, the crazy hair.
All of it.
The Ramones is one of the greatest.
The Ramones ruled.
They were ruled.
Never had a song over two minutes and five seconds.
How could you say they're not great?
It's nice to go see them in college, man.
You don't have to like it, but you got to admit, there's a reason why people
love them.
Right.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, man.
People are so weird when they want to say something sucks.
Like, I was having an argument with someone, there's, like, Taylor Swift's all
dumb music.
I go, no, it's not.
It's not.
She's got some great songs.
No Body, No Crime, a great fucking song.
By the way, I respect anybody who writes their own music.
Fuck yeah.
This is their own music.
Also, it's like, do you think you're smarter than everybody who loves her?
Like, she's literally got more fans than anybody alive.
And you think they're all wrong?
That's kind of crazy.
Like, you just, you don't have to like it.
You don't have to like it.
But there's, there's, like, people have closed minds.
I met her at an Oscars party last weekend, and she introduced herself.
I was talking to Travis.
She was, I was talking to Travis for a few minutes, and she said, hi, I'm
Taylor.
And, you know, I was a little starstruck, because, I don't know, musicians are
the last thing for me.
Like, I really respect, and she was super cool, man, and she was really cool,
actually.
And I told her that I went to her Eris show, and she-
Did you really?
She said she watches the roasts, and-
Oh, that's funny.
It was pretty cool, actually.
That's awesome.
I wonder when they make love, if they wear helmets, those two, and what's going
on.
Why do you think they wear helmets?
Just saying.
It's gotta be wild.
You think so?
Travis and Taylor.
I mean, it's all sweet and passionate.
Maybe.
I hope so.
That's what I think.
You have your fantasies, I have mine.
No.
Shoulder pads, cleats.
Yeah.
Going for it.
On AstroTurf.
He's a nice guy.
Is he?
Has he been in here?
No, never met him.
He'd be a good-
Good dude?
Yeah.
It's interesting when people are public, like, a public relationship, like,
they're two super
famous people.
It's like, that's a lot of pressure.
And then you're putting it all out there in the world, and, like, everybody's
judging
you, like, ruff.
It's hard enough to keep a relationship together, but keep a relationship
together when you have
to field everyone's opinions of you.
Especially, like, Taylor Swift, because how many fucking songs does she have
about ex-boyfriends?
Right.
It's like, jeez.
If you break up with her, the fucking diss track of the universe is coming your
way.
Yeah, right.
Kendrick Drake?
Fuck that.
Just don't break up with Taylor.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But it's just like, you're doing it in front of the world, and you're inviting
all of the
shittiest people in the world to have their opinions about you.
It's like, blech.
It's a lot of pressure.
Look at frickin' Timberlake this weekend.
That really pissed me off.
What happened?
They released a two- or three-year-old video of him getting a DUI.
Yeah.
Oh, I did see that.
Why does that need to be out there?
Why do they-
What is the-
How is that a legal thing, to take, like, a video of someone being arrested?
Like, why is that?
Because he's a public figure?
Why isn't that private?
I don't understand.
It makes no-
And there was nothing outrageous about it.
They're just hassling this guy and bringing up old news.
It really bugged me.
I mean, there was nothing outrageous about it.
I mean, he was very calm and relaxed, and, you know, they arrested him for DUI.
They, you know, they asked him a few questions.
There was nothing about it that was, you know, like, oh, look at Justin Timberlake.
He's off the rails.
He's acting crazy.
It was like he had a few drinks.
Yeah.
Probably shouldn't have drove.
Drove.
Got caught.
That's it.
Right.
It happens to a lot of people.
Yeah.
And whatever.
Just because he's famous or whatever.
He wasn't acting like an asshole.
He didn't do anything terrible.
And, you know, and everybody wants, like, ew, look at him.
He got caught.
Right.
You have so much money, and you still got caught.
Right.
You know, obviously, get a driver, dude.
You know, you got to get drunk.
Right.
It's not that hard.
He was fooling around the Hamptons.
They thought he was fine.
Yeah.
That's probably it, right?
That's where all the rich people drink and drive.
Well, I don't get having to torture somebody by releasing the video.
Well, I mean, all he has to do is just not be online for a few days, and it'll
go away.
But it's like, why is it okay to release that?
Why is that a public record thing?
Unless there's, like, some, even if there's a case, that should be something
that gets released
in court.
No, they release it as a public information, but.
What?
Right.
Why?
I don't know.
Why?
Because he sings?
Because we live in a cruel fucking world.
That's why.
Yeah.
We live in a place where people enjoy cruelty.
They enjoy, well, it's like, you look at him, you know, he's, like, super
famous, married
to, what's her name?
What was he married to?
Jessica Biel.
Jessica Biel.
He's a beautiful woman.
Yeah.
Right?
He's got this perfect life.
He's rich.
He's famous.
He can dance.
He can sing.
He's tall.
He's handsome.
He's a star when he was young.
Fuck that guy.
You know, that's how everybody is.
Like, oh, look, he was drunk.
Yeah, yeah.
Bitch, you've been drunk before, too.
Shut the fuck up.
Right.
And if you haven't, fuck you.
If you've never been drunk, fuck you.
Unless, like, your dad was an alcoholic and, you know, understanding
circumstances.
But it's like, why is that something that people are into?
I saw it, it came across my news feed, and I looked at it for a few seconds.
I was like, there's nothing outrageous about this.
Did you see Alan Richman, though?
No.
The guy who plays Reacher?
He beat the fuck out of some guy in front of some kids today?
Oof.
Yeah.
Or yesterday?
It was crazy.
That guy's a giant dude.
You know that show Reacher?
Yeah, I heard of it.
He's fucking huge and jacked, and he was riding dirt bikes, and he got in some
altercation
with his neighbor, and someone filmed it, and, you know, he's this hulking guy,
and I don't
know what the circumstances were.
Maybe the guy deserved it.
Maybe the guy was a piece of shit.
Maybe the guy came after him first.
But all you see in the video is him beating this guy up, and, you know, he's
fucking this
tank of a man.
He's huge.
He's like 250 pounds.
And he's beating some guy's ass, and then he gets back on his motorcycle, and
he's doing
it in front of kids, too, which is kind of crazy.
Violence.
Well, it's also, it's like, why you, I don't know what happened, so I don't
really want to
comment on the extenuating circumstances.
According to the TMZ article.
Right.
He was pushed off the bike by the man.
Oh, the guy pushed him off the bike.
Okay.
Well, then that guy's just trying to get it.
You want to see the video?
Let's watch the video.
So watch the video.
Like, so this is after he already beat the guy's ass.
I don't, I'm not going to show it.
So he's punching the dude.
Well, that other guy's a big guy, too.
He might have just had a dicky neighbor.
Boy, neighbors, and like, especially if you've got a homeowners association,
there's some
fucking shitheads.
So this guy, so if the guy pushed him off the bike, I kind of understand.
The guy pushed him off the bike, he's lucky.
That's all he did to him.
This could be eight-year-olds.
Yeah, those little kids.
Like, you can replace this with tricycles.
But those little kids that are there, too, and he's yelling at them and
pointing at them.
But if you really did push him off the bike, that guy's a piece of shit, and he's
lucky.
And he, look, he's an idiot.
Because, like, even after he beat his ass, he's still getting in his face.
And he's still talking shit.
Okay.
Well, that's a different story.
Well, that's good.
That's good to know.
Yeah, fuck that guy.
You don't push someone off a bike.
And it's like, because the dirt bikes were loud, and they were in the
neighborhood.
You know, turn your TV up.
Shut the fuck up.
Yeah, right.
People are just so into everybody's business.
I've watched so many videos of homeowners associations yelling at people for
doing whatever.
Parking an old car in your driveway.
I'm not.
Or just, like, people always love to tell people what they can and can't do.
Right.
I've had homeowners associations before.
I don't know if you've ever dealt with that.
It is a fucking nightmare.
You have to sit down and talk to these dorks who tell you what you should and
shouldn't do with your fence.
Yeah.
How high are your hedges?
Dude, I had a situation once where there was all these wrought iron fences in
my neighborhood.
And I repaired my fence, and I replaced it with a different wrought iron fence.
And they said, you can't have wrought iron fences.
We have a new rule.
It has to be a questering fence.
I said, but there's no consistency.
I said, the entire neighborhood has wrought iron fences.
They said, it doesn't matter.
I said, well, let's go to court.
I go, I don't give a fuck.
I go, I'll sue you.
I go, I have money.
I go, let's go to court.
I go, I'm not taking my fucking fence down.
And they're like, you're going to take your fence down.
I go, you're not going to tell me anything.
You're not going to tell me what to do.
Just because, I go, it looks great.
It's not like it's a blight on the neighborhood.
The house is beautiful.
Shut the fuck up.
And eventually I won.
Did you have to sue?
Well, I threatened to sue, and they backed off because they were afraid of suing.
They were afraid of lawsuits because then they would have to use the homeowners
association funds to do this.
And it didn't make any sense.
I talked to a lawyer about it.
I said, does this make any sense?
He goes, no, there's a precedent in the neighborhood.
Like, every third house had wrought iron fencing.
And it wasn't like, it wasn't good looking.
Like, it was beautiful.
It was new.
It was clean.
I had a reputable company build it.
There's nothing wrong with it.
And I was replacing wrought iron fence with more wrought iron fence.
It was just better.
It was like the fence was broken.
It looked shitty.
It was like, you know, they get rusty where they connect.
And I had to get it replaced.
So what on earth was their problem?
Just cunts.
Cunts.
This is how cunty they are.
I had a neighbor who lived across the street.
He told me that I had to trim my trees and thin them out so that he could see
the view in the distance.
And I said, what are you talking about?
And he said, we have a regulation that says you can't obstruct the view.
I go, these trees have been here for 50 years.
And then I talked to the guy who sold me the house.
He's like, that asshole was trying to do that with me too.
Just tell him to fuck himself.
He's just a weird guy.
He built an observation deck at the top of his hill in his backyard so he could
see, like, the lights of the city in the distance.
And he wanted you to cut your trees down so you're obstructing the view.
I go, your house is obstructing my view of this hill.
I like to look at hills.
Is that what we're going to do?
Take your house down.
You take your house down, I'll trim these trees.
Fuck you, man.
Tell him to lift his house up.
He's like, oh, so it's going to be like that.
I go, going to be like what?
You want me to cut trees down so you can see, like, you don't have a view, man.
You're not on the edge of the hill.
You're back set.
This is what the view looks like from where you are.
Right.
This house has been here before your house was there.
Yeah, yeah.
Go eat shit.
But you could have asked nice and maybe you would have done something.
I wouldn't have done a fucking thing.
It didn't make any sense.
It's just people want to tell people what to do.
Like I was reading this article where this homeowners association hired a tow
company to go around the neighborhood and tow all the cars that had expired
tags.
Can you imagine?
Like, you know, your tags expired?
Like, ah, fuck, I'll get to it.
I'm busy.
I'll get to it next week.
You know, you just run it around.
And then all of a sudden they tow your car.
Like, fuck you, man.
Like, fuck you.
It's just people love to tell other people what to do.
And homeowners associations, when they get power, they become like the little
hall monitors of the neighborhood.
You know, your grass is unruly.
You, it's supposed to be two inches.
It's four.
Like, ugh.
Just people.
People love to do that.
They love to tell people what to do and what not to do.
I have one neighbor who kind of runs the whole block, and she puts everyone on
an email chain, and she's pretty, she leads with love, but she looks out for
everybody.
Well, as long as I'm looking out, it's not bad.
It's just, like, nonsense.
Like, the guy wanted me to trim the trees.
He wanted me to thin out my, you want me to chop the trees down?
He goes, no, I just want you to thin them out.
You can thin them out.
I go, what?
What are you talking about?
Chop all the leaves off so that you could see lights in the distance?
It was, like, the dumbest conversation, and he realized, while we're in the
middle of the conversation, how dumb this is.
Right.
And then we never talked again, and I would see him occasionally.
Isn't there a safety issue with trimming your trees, like, thinning them out?
A safety?
Well, I mean, where we were, there was, the real issue is brush.
The real issue is the ground, you know, dried brush on the ground.
We were evacuated from where I lived three times from fires.
Down here?
No, this is in California.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And when I lived in California, the last big fire in 2018, we lost three houses
in front of our house, and my neighbor's house caught on fire.
But I had one, my crazy friend, Bud, would not leave the neighborhood.
They evacuated the whole neighborhood.
He wouldn't leave.
He's like, I'm staying.
He's like, I'm staying.
I'm going to save my house.
I'm going to save other people's houses.
And he fucking did.
He saved his house.
He saved my neighbor's house.
He checked my neighbor's house.
My roof, the roof was on fire.
He got water on it.
He called the fire department.
There was fire departments that were, like, trying to put out fires in the
neighborhood the moment they started.
And they hosed his roof down because embers will fly and they land.
No, I had it in L.A.
and I had to evacuate for one day.
It's spooky, man.
The fires in California are no joke, man.
It's really weird to see when it happens because you realize, like, how nature
is completely in control when that happens.
It's just this storm of flames that comes over the hills.
It's wild.
It's wild and it cannot be controlled.
And once it starts, it's just a matter of trying to contain it.
And a certain amount of houses are just going to go no matter what, depending
on which way the wind blows.
But that wasn't what the problem was.
Well, this guy was just a cunt.
Just ish.
It's a homeowners association thing.
It's just, like, people that think they, like, there was a, we, I'm still a
part of this email group that, you know, I'm still on the email of the
homeowners association.
One of the guys poisoned one of the people in the homeowners association's dogs.
Yeah.
Like, they got in some sort of a dispute about something.
This guy poisoned his fucking dogs.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's so sad.
You evil cocksucker.
Wow.
But it's like that kind of thing.
It's these people that just want to control their neighbors, man.
It's so weird.
Like, one of my neighbors.
What's the punishment for that?
He should be shot.
You fucking piece of shit.
That's like killing a family member.
You should have to eat whatever he gave those dogs.
You should go to jail.
For sure.
I don't know what happened.
I don't know if they caught the guy.
They don't, I don't think they know exactly who did it.
They were, they had no, no video evidence.
The person who lived there apparently didn't have good security cameras.
But there's just, it's so weird.
Like, they would get mad at someone for the way they designed their house.
And I was like, what do you give a fuck?
And he's like, this is like, one of my neighbors built a house.
And my other neighbor, what do you think about his house?
I go, the house.
Like, I don't care.
And he's like, I think it's ugly.
And this, this house is going to lower our property values.
I go, what, what are you fucking talking about?
Your house looks great.
You have a beautiful house.
You think people are going to pay less for your house?
Because this house is boring.
Like, this doesn't make any sense.
But it's just people, they nitpick.
And when they have control, when people have control over other people's
situation,
like, they don't have control over their own life.
And their life is just a sloppy mess.
They always like to look at other people's lives.
And I don't like where he puts his dumpsters.
It's a hater.
Yeah.
We all confront that all the time.
It's not just a hater.
It's a hater with power because of homeowners associations.
And from that moment on, I decided I will never buy a home with a homeowners
association.
Never.
No fucking chance.
I don't care how cool they are because someone not cool could move in.
And then it becomes a nightmare.
I will never have conversations with those kind of people where they tell you
what you could do with your lawn.
Like, fuck you.
Yeah.
Fuck you.
When I was a young comic, I lived with my grandfather in the house that I grew
up in.
And we would never, ever, ever mow the lawn.
We just didn't have any money.
We didn't care.
And everyone in our neighborhood just hated us.
They would heckle us and yell at us.
So, I guess I've been the eyesore and now I'm on the other side of it.
My grandfather lived in the same house that he bought in the 1940s.
And when he bought it in the 1940s, this was in, it was an all-Italian
neighborhood in Newark.
And then they started doing, you were born in Newark?
Newark, New Jersey.
No shit.
What's up, dog?
Brick City, motherfucker.
Let's go.
That's where I learned karate.
Is that really?
From detectives in Newark.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, people don't know.
You're a black belt in Taekwondo.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's wild.
Do you still do it at all?
I mean, I work out, like, you know, not with people, but I know my moves.
And I do a few in the new Netflix special.
I throw some kicks for fun and tell the story about getting a black belt,
starting at six,
getting bullied.
My mom dragging me to the house of empty hands.
That was what it was called.
Ronnie Roselli, Newark detective, teaching me karate, almost like a father
figure.
Oh, that's awesome.
Gave me confidence, gave me self-respect, respect for others, taught me that
hard work pays off.
You know, when you get a black belt at 10 and a half, you go, wow, maybe I
could be something
in my life.
If I work as hard as I did at that, maybe I could be good at something else,
too.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, it teaches you a lot about, like, the belt system is really good
because you get
rewarded for your work and then you see, like, a tangible result.
Instead of just, like, ooh, I'm getting better, it's like, ooh, there's, like,
a ceremony.
Yeah.
Like, I've reached a new level.
Yeah.
Like, now, you know, now I have to be.
Some of my most cherished memories are those ceremonies of my dad and mom
watching me get
my brown belt, blue belt, brown belt, and black belt competing in tournaments
all over
the East Coast.
Isn't that awesome?
What was his name?
Gary?
There's this karate guy I used to throw.
Gary Alexander.
He threw East Coast tournaments and I used to compete.
I still have a room, half a dozen karate trophies in my house.
That's awesome.
It's the best time of my life.
I lost most of my stuff, but I do have a bunch of medals that I still have that
are in
my drawer by my bed.
A bunch of medals from the day.
But it seems weird when I pick them up.
They don't even seem real.
It's from another life.
Oh, it's another life.
Like, I don't even, until I, like, hit a bag or something like that, I almost
forget
that I could do it, you know?
And then I do it.
I'm like, ooh.
Right.
I still got it.
I like, my kicks, I can front snap kick.
I can't side kick.
I can barely roundhouse at this point.
But it's like.
Why not?
I got a belly.
There's no real good reason.
Other than I'm just, you know.
You ever thought about, like, starting to take classes again?
If I, if I, I do think about it.
I probably could.
Yeah.
You know, you're good at kicking, of pushing me to do stuff like that.
It'd be good for your health.
Just take a class a couple times a week.
What would I take?
If I was a black belt in taekwondo.
Take taekwondo.
Just start taking that again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, you're doing it for exercise.
It's not like you're going to fight in the UFC.
No.
Just go and start, you know.
You'd probably feel it a little bit.
And then you remember what you used to be able to do.
And so your muscle memory would kick in.
Yeah.
You'd start probably watching your diet a little bit better.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Drinking more water.
Yeah.
Taking vitamins.
Then next thing you know, four or five months have gone by.
And now your waist is thinner.
Right.
Your kicks are snappier.
You're going to three classes a week instead of two.
You know?
You feel better.
People go, Jeff, look at you.
You're looking great.
Like, hey, I started taking taekwondo again.
Yeah.
It's not a bad idea.
I guess I wouldn't wear my black belt.
I would feel like I was disrespecting the art.
Yeah.
So I'd have to re-earn that.
Well, you could always take a totally new style and start out as a white belt.
You know, you take, like, Kyokushin.
This is a shirt I'm wearing right now.
George St. Pierre.
Take something else.
Just take something near you.
Like Krav Maga.
Like, take anything.
My manager, Amy, told me she was your publicist when you were on the cover of
Black Belt magazine.
Oh, yeah.
Amy's V.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Way back in the dizzy.
I love that.
That's so funny.
Yeah.
I mean, I never stopped working out.
I just don't.
It's too much of a part of my brain.
Like, my mind doesn't operate well if I have days.
Even if I just take a couple days off, I don't feel right.
I feel squirrely.
I feel like I'm not balanced, you know?
Sometimes I just like to stand in front of a mirror and just throw blocks and
just make
sure that I like the way that it feels.
Just do it.
It's meditative.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I used to love doing, especially when I lived in California?
I'd take a couple bong hits and just hit the bag and just, like, feel it.
Just.
Just start feeling it.
Just.
I remember my cottage.
Womp, womp.
Do you?
Do you remember all those?
I remember at least the first two, I think.
God, I used to hate those things.
I didn't think, I was young and immature and I didn't understand the value of
forms.
I used to think that this is pointless.
This isn't fighting.
I only wanted to practice fighting technique.
But now I understand.
It teaches you body control.
Like, you know, you throw a sidekick and you snap it up in the air and you hold
it and
you turn and block and all that stuff.
Like, it teaches you body.
It's like a, almost like a form of yoga, you know, and it teaches you to
control your
body.
I do a lot of kicks in the air now and I do them slowly.
Like, I, and it, it's really good for your control and your balance.
And I didn't think that when I was younger.
I thought that was like a waste of time.
I thought like really what's important is like hitting things really hard and
being fast.
And now I realize like, no, no, no, no, there's like a lot of value even to
help your
techniques and to be able to hit things hard, like do it slowly and just have
full control
of your balance and your movement.
So I like to do that.
I like to do like slow kicks in my, like, that's why I like yoga.
Yoga is amazing.
Yeah.
I feel like that's akin to martial arts.
It makes me high.
Yoga is like the best high.
You take your shoes off.
Oh, yeah.
Your phone is gone.
You're so relaxed when it's over.
It's just about your body and control.
You're so calm.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yoga is so good for your brain.
Usually on Mondays when I'm here, I would go with Tony to his hot yoga.
Yeah.
Oh, Tony loves it.
Yeah.
He raves about his yoga.
He told me he's been off it a little bit.
He has.
Yeah.
Well, you know, the thing about Tony is like he's so focused on Kill Tony right
now because
the momentum is so extraordinary.
And he realizes that like Tony's really aware that he's in a very rare moment
in his life.
Yeah.
Where things are going so well.
So he's got his foot on the gas.
Yeah, of course.
And he's got a new special that he filmed that he's editing right now to get
ready to
release.
And he's so proud of him, man.
And he's earned it.
I always told him he would take a different path than a normal entertainer.
He always had this kind of odd trajectory.
Well, he's an odd guy.
Yeah.
You know, Tony, you'd swear he's gay and he's not.
But he's an awesome person.
Like people who don't know Tony, they see like the outside of him.
Of course.
Like as a friend, he's a great friend.
Of course.
He's a great guy.
I love that guy to death.
We're always checking on each other.
He's the best.
He was so happy.
He was the first one to text me when I knew I was coming down here.
When I was workshopping my show, he came and saw it in Austin.
He came to the opening night on Broadway in New York.
He's like there for his friends.
He's the best.
A hundred percent.
A hundred percent.
Well, that's the beautiful thing about Kill Tony is it's all about supporting
people and
giving people careers.
Yeah.
I mean, he's given so many people careers and pumped so many people up.
I mean, he's really, that thing, that Kill Tony thing is also, it is, in my
opinion,
well, first of all, for our club, it's the cornerstone of the club.
It's one of the most important things about the mothership because having Kill
Tony at the
mothership every Monday night lets all these people that are upcoming comedians
see what it's like to have one minute that you've polished and worked on really
well and it kills and then you pop and then all of a sudden, you know, it's on
YouTube.
It's got 11 million views and then, you know, maybe it's on Netflix and it's
got millions and millions of people watching all around the world.
And then all of a sudden people come to see you in the clubs and you're selling
out weekends and you're writing and you, and then you get a golden ticket and
you got to do a new minute every week.
You're a regular, I mean, it's really a new minute.
My show comes on tonight.
It's 90 minutes.
It might be the longest standup special in Netflix history.
Well, your show is like a one man show.
90 minutes.
It's a little different, right?
I haven't seen it, but I've heard great things.
Yeah.
You're going to love it.
I'm, I'm, I'm sure I will.
You're really, I think you're going to like it because it's about us.
It's about comedy and the community of, of what we do.
It's a embattled community and it has its like detractors and it has a bunch of
haters and a bunch of shitheads in it.
But for the most part, like as far as creative communities, it's one of the
most supportive communities ever.
I mean, it's an amazing, the community of comics, like real comics that are all,
that when we meet up in clubs, it's always hug.
Like people think like we're all like angry, bitter, like the tears of a clown.
It's not, there's a few people like that and they always make me sad, but the
reality is like most of us are all super happy to see each other.
It's always hugs and laughing and watching each other's sets and giving each
other tags and telling each other like, oh, that fucking new bit is amazing.
It's like, it's so supportive.
I was at your club last night and it was like, oh, the comics come in to say hi.
I brought some extra chicken wings.
Jamar was there.
It was just fun.
Moses was doing roast battle.
I sat in on that.
Then I went outside, said hi to some people and went upstairs and did a spot.
It's like, it's family.
I don't have a wife and kids to go home to.
This is what I do.
This is the people that I love.
The comedians are my kids, my cousins, my uncles, my aunts.
You know?
Well, I do have a wife and kids, but it's still my other family.
Yeah.
It's like the family of comedians, it's like a band of brothers and sisters.
It's like a weird kind of friendship that, you know, it's like only they know
what you do.
You know, only they understand that it's like 10 years before you're even any
good.
Right.
10 years of being, like, if you're out there and you're headlining a club and
you're on
the road, like, you fucking put in that work.
There's no shortcuts.
It's impossible to have a shortcut.
You just got to grind.
I learned long, and I learned over time, I don't want a shortcut.
I like the process.
Yes.
That's what I live for.
Oh, yeah.
You know, we have a roast coming up May 10th.
It's not about May 10th.
It's about, I can't wait to hang in the writer's room again.
I can't wait to figure out who's coming.
I can't wait to figure out the seating.
Who are we going to make fun of?
Who's going to be in the front?
You know, what am I going to wear?
It is the grind that's exciting.
Yeah, there's no finish line.
Right.
The finish line doesn't exist.
You'll have little finish lines, like you do a special, like your special that's
coming
out, that's a finish line, but it's only a stop.
Right.
You're stopping to get water.
But where is the finish line, Joe?
Like, okay, so I did the Broadway show, then I shot it, then I edited it, but
now I'm here
still talking about it, and then in a month from now, two months from now,
someone will
stop me at the airport and go, hey, my kid was sick, I was in the hospital, I
watched
your thing, and it made me laugh for five minutes when life was ... So all of
it is, there's
no finish lines.
No, there's no finish line.
If you're sitting around going, I hope I win the Oscar, if you're ... Tom
Cruise is jealous
of George Clooney, and George Clooney is jealous of Brad Pitt, there's no
finish line.
There's no finish line.
It's all the ... I have a big neon, like you have the neon, I have a big neon
in my house
that just says, enjoy the process.
Yeah.
That's where I'm at.
Yeah.
Trust it.
Trust the process and enjoy it.
And that's the weird thing about when you release a special, and then you have
nothing.
And then, you know, you have to like scour your brain for what you want to talk
about.
I took like a whole month off of stand-up after my last special, I didn't do
any stand-up.
Maybe more than a month.
And I just thought, I said, let me just think.
Just like, no pressure.
Let me just think.
What is interesting to me?
What do I want to talk about?
Instead of just rushing to try to put together a new hour, let me just think
for a while.
You know, and I'd come to the club every now and then and watch guys do sets,
but I didn't
do any sets for a while.
I'm in that zone right now.
It's nice.
You know what?
Scary.
When I first finished the special, it was years of material building with a
through line
and a story.
And then when it was over, I was a little bit lost.
Like I'd go to the comedy cellar.
I was still in New York.
I couldn't let go of some of the, and I was like, I need to stop doing this
material.
And then I felt like I had no purpose.
Like I didn't want to talk about anything.
And I said it to my buddy Kai and he goes, dude, relax.
You're between albums.
Like he put it in musical sense for me.
He's like, you're like a musician between albums, absorb some new things, see
some movies,
go on a trip, have some new life experiences.
And then I was like, yeah, that's probably a break.
After doing the same thing, the same kind of hunk for years, your body, your
brain, like
think about something else, absorb new things, download new influences.
And that's kind of where I'm at.
And then of course, Kevin was like, I'll get roasted.
And I was like, all right, I can put stand up away for another two months and
just write
that.
Yeah.
So I go back into roast mode, which gives me, I'm like a dog who needs a job.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
It's kind of the same thing as your dog.
It really is.
It's like, you need a task.
If you're just doing nothing, like the idea of like, oh, one day I'm going to
retire and
just relax.
Like, bitch, you'll go crazy.
Did you see we're roasting Kevin Hart?
That's what I heard.
Are you supposed to say that though?
Yeah.
Are you supposed to talk about it?
I am.
Okay.
You're allowed to?
My show.
Okay.
Because I was told not to tell people about it.
We're doing it May 10th, baby.
Mother's Day live on Netflix.
So you're officially announcing it?
Yeah.
Okay.
I could talk about it now.
At the forum.
Because I was told about it, but I was told I was not supposed to tell anybody.
I don't know who told you that.
Some people.
No, dude.
They said keep it under wraps.
You like it?
Oh, it's already a thing.
Yeah, they announced it this weekend, I think.
Oh, hosted by Shane Gillis.
Let's fucking go.
Nice.
That's awesome.
That's awesome.
Sweet, right?
Fuck yeah.
Kevin is so pumped up.
That's awesome.
That's going to be fun.
Dude, he's out, you know, he's...
These Netflix fucking...
The Tom Brady one was insane.
That was so good.
That was so good.
That kind of like juiced comedy back up again because it was so wild.
It was like the jokes were so wild.
It was so raw.
Yeah.
And we had gone through this like weird period of like people getting canceled
for jokes.
Right.
You know, it's like all of a sudden like, no, that's out.
That's gone.
No, no, no.
I said to him, I've been big game for him.
Game hunting Tom Brady for years.
It took a couple years.
He retired, unretired, but I kept him on the line.
And finally, we were shooting promos and I was like, why are you doing this?
Because I could tell, you know, it's starting to heat up and some heavy hitters
were signing on.
I go, why are you doing this?
And I'm like, it wasn't for the money.
And he goes, I want to bring comedy back.
I'm sick of the woke bullshit and cancel.
I want to make comedy like fun again.
He understood that.
And I caught him.
I caught him on a Super Bowl Sunday.
He was playing in the Super Bowl.
And I saw him looking at some jokes on Instagram that I posted.
And I'm like, this is where he goes to relax.
He goes to the roast.
And I'd heard that.
So as I was like, he won the game.
And I was like, I think it's time.
And then we reeled him in and he did it.
And I will admit that roast was harsher than I expect.
Even I expected.
It was vicious.
I mean, it was a bloodbath.
And I saw Tom the other day and I said, it's time to take your win.
You know, he was like, it was so harsh.
It was tough on my family.
I go, I get all that.
But you wanted to do it to bring comedy back.
You did that.
1.6 billion viewing minutes, Emmy nominated against the Oscars and the Super
Bowl half.
It was the most watched thing in the history of Netflix.
Right.
You know how nuts that is?
Think about how many things are on Netflix.
That roast was the most watched thing in the history of Netflix.
And it was because it was so funny.
It wasn't just because it was Tom Brady, which of course made a lot.
But it wasn't just because all these great comics were on it, which of course
meant a lot.
Right.
It was so good.
It was so good that people were telling people about it.
Yeah.
And it's like a great Super Bowl.
It's going to be around forever.
Yes.
Netflix leaves it up.
Oh, like the Charlie Sheen roast.
We were talking about Patrice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They're always going to be there.
It's going to be there forever.
I do think, all respect to Tom, I do think this one with Kevin and Shane Gillis
is going
to top it.
Really?
I think it's not quite a sequel, but it's its own thing.
It's going to be the greatest roast of all time.
Netflix is the place for roast now because as great as Comedy Central was, you
had restrictions
on language and content.
Right.
And it was editing.
Yes.
Editing.
This is a...
And commercials.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
This is buck wild.
Buck wild.
Netflix is fucking amazing.
I mean, what an insane platform that you have.
You could never get bored.
If you're bored in this life, like you're bored, you don't have anything to
watch.
Like, are you crazy?
Yeah.
There's so much shit to watch.
Only boring people are bored, right?
Yeah.
Or people are uninformed.
But I mean, even in this day and age, you could just, you know, do an internet
search.
Like, what's the best roasts on Netflix?
Right.
What are the best dramas on Netflix?
What are the best shows on Netflix?
Right.
There's always something.
That's exciting, though.
It's going to be a big one.
Yeah.
Mother's Day.
Motherfucker's Day.
Kevin Hart.
There's a guy, like, I don't understand how he has the time to do all the
things he does.
I do not understand it.
I'm a pretty busy person, and I look at people like him, and I feel lazy.
I'm like, how are you doing this?
Right.
How do you have time to sleep?
Right.
And I saw him out with his wife having drinks two nights last weekend.
He must sleep like four hours a night.
I don't know how he does it.
Some people just built different.
Yeah.
I mean, well, it's growing up poor and realizing that, like, once this is
happening for you,
like, keep your foot on the gas.
And that guy keeps his foot on the gas better than anybody.
Yeah.
And he's ambitious as fuck.
He's always got, like, some tequila brand and releasing this.
He had a vegan restaurant chain for a while.
I would have talked him out of that.
What the fuck are you doing with that?
Well, you know, he likes to branch out and be a businessman.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
I just don't understand the time.
And then, in the meantime, he's doing arenas at the same time.
It's like, okay.
And killing.
Yeah.
I don't get it.
The roast for him is back to his roots.
Mm-hmm.
That's what I love about it.
It's like the Philly thing.
Mm-hmm.
Talking shit.
Yep.
Shane's from Philly, so there'll be a big Philly angle.
Mm-hmm.
You know?
And we got some of his oldest buddies coming on.
It's going to be pretty massive, I think.
That's nice.
Yeah.
Well, you've carved out an interesting path for yourself as the roast master.
Yeah.
You know?
It's like an old-school skill, you know, that used to be a big part of comedy.
You know, the Friars Club roasts.
Yeah.
I miss those Friars Club roasts when they were just like, you know.
Sometimes they weren't even on TV yet when I was doing them.
I just bought a Leroy Neiman painting from, they had an auction of old Friars
memorabilia.
Oh.
And Leroy Neiman painted Henny Youngman surrounded, and he painted his punchlines
like around his
one-liners around Henny holding his violin.
And he used to sit in the dining room at the New York Friars, and Henny in his
wheelchair
would sit under that painting.
And for some reason, it's all up for auction, so of course I had to grab it.
Oh, that's awesome.
That's so cool that you got it.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
I miss some of those guys.
I was thinking about Buddy Hackett.
I almost wore a Buddy Hackett t-shirt today.
I loved Buddy Hackett.
He has a Buddy Hackett t-shirt?
Somebody made me a Buddy Hackett t-shirt and gave it to me.
Yeah, those guys are from a different time, you know?
Different time.
No television.
No nothing.
Doing the cat skills.
Right.
Different world.
They would do each other's acts.
They would do whatever got a laugh.
Yeah.
They were assassins on the road.
It was a totally different life.
And if you had a name, like you had a name back then, like if you were a famous
comedian
back then, there was a rarest of rare things.
Yeah.
How many of them were there?
There was like 10?
Right.
You know?
Shecky, Buddy, Nipsey.
Yeah.
A few of those guys.
Yeah.
A few of those guys.
There are not many left.
No.
They're really all gone now.
Yeah.
That's what happens.
That's going to happen to us, buddy.
That's what I hear.
Or better than the alternative.
What?
Stay around forever?
No.
You either keep going or you saw the picture, Gilbert, Norm, Bob, you know?
The alternative is death.
So when I go, I don't want to get old, I go, yeah, you want to get old.
Yeah.
As long as you keep your body moving, you just don't want to be an old, like
completely incapacitated
person.
Like that's, especially if it's avoidable.
Right.
You know what I mean?
I went through it all year.
I went in for a route, three weeks after that Brady roast, I had a, went in for
a colonoscopy.
My buddy Jordan had been texting our text chain.
Everyone's got to get, he's like kind of a hypochondriac.
So I kind of ignored it.
It's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was too busy.
I was on the road.
And then finally I went in for a routine colonoscopy and I waited too long and
they found a tumor
in my colon.
And immediately that an hour, two hours later was on the phone with a surgeon
and stage three
and found a specialist, took care of it right away, but never felt doomed.
Have you changed your diet after that?
I don't, I'm eating a lot less red meat.
Red meat?
Now when I eat red meat, it's like going to be the best red meat.
Why is it red meat?
I don't know.
I mean, for me growing up in a catering hall in New Jersey around pastrami and
prime rib
and he said that that was a big cause of colon cancer.
Really?
Yeah.
And processed foods.
Processed foods makes sense.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
So I'm eating a lot less of that.
Yeah.
I moved over to Turkey and chicken and a little bit of fish.
And cut out the processed stuff?
As much as I can.
What about alcohol?
Did you cut that out?
I've never been a big drinker.
That's good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a little wake-up call.
I mean, you have a health scare.
Yeah.
A little wake-up call.
Time to take care of yourself.
I just had the, you know, I talk about this in my show.
Like I had my chemo port in on Broadway, on the show.
And I was like, still kind of in it.
It's like I was having a human experience on stage.
And just two weeks ago, I had the port, the chemo port taken out.
My sister came down to celebrate and hang with me.
And it's like a war prize.
Like I hold the port where they put the chemo.
Like I have it on my desk now.
And let's just say they put a lot more in people than they take out.
So I feel very lucky.
I survived it all.
Yeah.
I'm glad you're alive, dude.
People die with those fucking ports in them.
They do.
Well, they die with cancer.
That's for damn sure.
Colon cancer is a very common one.
This guy, James Van Der Beek, younger than me.
I know.
I met him.
He was a nice fucking guy, man.
He came to the club, hung out with his wife in the green room.
Sweetest guy.
Just such a nice guy.
And apparently he was struggling back then.
I didn't know.
He looked real thin, you know.
So when you asked me, right when you walked in, how are you doing?
I was like, great.
You know, like it was a pointed question.
And you asked politely and innocently.
I was like.
Yeah.
I didn't know that you had gone through that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
God, I haven't seen you in when.
When was the last time I saw you?
I saw you in D.C.
I saw you in New York for Kill Tony.
Briefly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We didn't like sit down and shoot the shit.
We had a drink.
Was it your birthday in New York when you were doing Kill Tony?
Or was it here?
New York.
I think it was in New York.
It was August.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I remember that.
But then I saw you in D.C.
where you were with your family.
It was quick.
But I feel like I see you because I pop into the mothership.
But I always pop in on the weekends when you're off.
Yeah.
But, yeah, it was a crazy thing, man.
I've never been sick a day in my life.
I've always had that, like, my grandfather used to call it world beater energy.
Like, I always felt invincible.
Never thought for a second it would be me.
Yeah.
And then I did wait too long to get a colonoscopy.
And they're not a big deal.
Like, guys are afraid of colonoscopies because—
Because something's up your butt.
Yeah.
But in the end, it really isn't up your butt.
It's a doctor checking you out.
You're out cold.
That's what they tell you when you wake up.
They go up your butt, bro.
And get the endoscopy, especially for smokers and stuff like that.
And, like, for what is essentially, like, a one-day inconvenience.
Okay, they can really save your life.
It did save my life.
Well, I'm glad you cleaned up your diet.
Yeah.
You know, you've got to do that because I know that you are—
I mean, I've run into you at Cat's Deli before, too.
That's another thing I needed to talk to you about.
What?
I forgot all about this until you brought it up.
Do you remember running into me at Cat's Deli with Tony?
And I guess you must have been in town doing stand-up or something.
This was, like, already 10 years ago.
I don't think it was that long ago, was it?
It was.
And I'll tell you how I know.
One of the things when I got booked on this appearance, I said, I make a mental
note.
I owe Rogan an apology.
And it's not a big deal, but it always kind of bugged me.
I came in to say hi, and I was self-conscious because I had something wrong
with me, and I didn't know what it was.
And you said, what's with your eyebrows?
And I, like, kind of shoulder shrugged.
And you were like, is it for a roll?
And I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh.
Do you have any recollection?
I do.
And I lied.
Yeah.
Because I was embarrassed.
You said I shaved him off for a roll.
I was like, oh, that's crazy.
What are you playing?
I was embarrassed because I had alopecia.
Didn't really understand what was happening to me yet.
And I used to say, I had a big fro, big bushy eyebrows.
I was, like, the Propecia Man of the Year.
And I don't know what causes it.
It's an autoimmune thing.
It's not life-threatening.
But suddenly I looked completely different.
My fame, like, if anyone ever recognized me, walk into a restaurant, you know,
get a good table, skip the line.
It was all gone.
Just suddenly and within a few weeks.
I was, I remember being at Zany's in Nashville and just scratching my head and,
like, a big clump of hair came out.
Then I was on a plane and I was like, there's no hair on my leg.
What the fuck's going on?
And then within a month, me and Adam Egat and Tony went to the barbershop on
Melrose.
They came with me because I was kind of, like, shaken up.
Like, what is happening to me?
Am I dying?
So it happened really quickly?
It happens all within a few weeks.
All your hair fell off within a few weeks.
And then when I thought it was done, eyebrows started going.
And then eyelashes.
So sweat, salt.
It was like, what the fuck?
I didn't even recognize myself.
And...
Is there anything they do that reverses that?
There's some medications.
Dr. Drew actually hooked me up with a research doctor, Brett King.
He was at Yale at the time in Connecticut.
And I did have some restoration of eyelashes and eyebrows.
But the side effects were a little bit scary.
And they lower your immune system a little bit.
So I did that for years.
And then when I got cancer, I was like, fuck those meds.
I can't do it anymore.
And the chemo eyebrows, eyelashes, gone again.
And now I'm literally, like, hairless.
Like, I have no hair.
And, you know, you learn to live with it.
You know, you got to channel your inner rock star.
Listen, there's worse things that can happen.
Believe me, I get it.
You know.
Right.
More than anybody.
But it always dinged me.
Because you and I have been friends a long time.
We have an honest friendship.
Comics.
Brutal honesty.
Truth.
And I looked you right in the eyes.
And I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I went with it.
I found out slightly after that that you had alopecia from other people.
Because someone else brought it up.
And someone said, oh, he's got alopecia.
And I'm like, oh.
I asked him at Cat's Deli.
And he said he shaved his eyebrows off for a roll.
But I just felt like you're probably embarrassed.
And I totally understood.
Like, it's weird.
Right.
They say a lot of these autoimmune issues come from inflammation.
And a lot of inflammation comes from what you eat.
Right.
You know.
The doctor would tell me that wasn't true.
Yeah, doctors aren't always right.
And one of the things they're not always right about is nutrition.
And the impact that nutrition has, particularly on autoimmune issues.
Very few doctors have any knowledge or any education in nutrition and the
impact it has.
I mean, your entire body is built out of and reconstructed from what you
consume.
Right.
That's the only thing that your body has.
Right.
In order to, you know, your body makes new cells.
Your body replenishes cells, recreates all the tissue.
There's only one way to do it.
It's got to be what you eat.
It's the only thing.
What you drink, what you eat.
That's it.
And if you're eating a bunch of processed stuff that has a bunch of bullshit
and preservatives and...
What causes inflammation?
Well, there's a lot of things.
Allergies cause inflammation.
Processed food cause inflammation.
Excess sugar causes inflammation.
Alcohol.
There's a lot of things that people eat that cause inflammation.
But it's really genuinely a thing of a balance of, you know, your diet and, you
know, what your body has to work with.
You know, if your body doesn't have any nutrients to work with, no vitamins, no
minerals, you know, you're dehydrated, you're drinking too much sugar, you know,
things start malfunctioning and misfiring.
And then, you know, there's a bunch of different consequences for having a high
inflammation diet.
And for a lot of people, it's sugar.
Sugar is one of the leading causes of inflammation, especially in the standard
American diet.
Because the standard American diet is just riddled with excess sugar, corn
syrup and bullshit and preservatives.
And your body just after a while just gets tired of processing that stuff.
And then you start encountering a bunch of issues.
And I know there's a lot of autoimmune issues that people have had success in
reversing by completely cutting out everything other than whole foods.
Just eating chicken and meat and vegetables and drinking water and that's it.
Cutting out all the bullshit.
Yeah, I got to do better.
Have you ever gotten blood work done?
Well, now I have to do it all the time.
Do you?
Yeah.
Do you ever get blood work done from like a comprehensive laboratory that's
looking at your nutrient levels and all those different things?
I don't know if I've done that.
Well, you should do that.
There's a place in town, Wastewell.
I'll send you there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They're really good.
I mean, they do.
They take a shitload of blood and they do these really comprehensive blood
panels.
They can scan for cancer too, by the way.
Well, that I've done.
Yeah.
That's a big one.
Yeah.
Because they can check for any kind of cancer in your body.
Well, now that I'm through all that, I'm much more open to taking care of
myself and staying on it.
The first time I did that one, I was like, cancer's a scary one.
And I was like, boy, I hope I don't have cancer.
I don't know about it.
When it came out zero, I was like, whew.
But I do so much to take care of myself.
I do the sauna every day, cold plunge.
I take a ton of vitamins.
I'm always exercising.
I eat probably like 99% clean every now and then I'll fuck off.
Or if my daughter makes cookies, I'll eat cookies.
But for the most part, I give my body.
What kind of cookies?
She's really good.
She makes a bunch of different stuff.
Today was white chocolate chip cookies.
They're really good.
I had one this morning.
But for the most part, your body can only use what you put in it.
There's no other building blocks.
It doesn't have anything else.
There's nothing else it can draw from.
And that's one of the problems is when you don't give your body what it needs,
it starts
taking things out of the tissue.
It starts taking things.
That's where osteoporosis comes from.
Your body starts literally taking calcium out of your bones.
You know, you got to give your body the building blocks.
Without that, it doesn't know what the fuck to do.
And slowly but surely, you start to deteriorate.
You know, and there's a giant difference between giving your body a nutrient-dense,
healthy diet
and not, you know, and taking care of yourself and exercising and not, and
drinking much water
and electrolytes and not.
There's a giant difference.
And it's all, your body just cannot recreate itself correctly.
It cannot build itself and repair itself correctly unless it gets the proper
nutrients.
That's where a lot of people's issues come from.
And doctors don't tell you that.
Like, um, I had a family member that got real sick and the doctor said they got
cancer.
And the doctor said, it doesn't matter what you eat.
I go, well, fuck that doctor.
Right.
That's not true.
I don't believe it anymore.
This doctor's telling you you could eat cake and just take chemo and you'll be
fine.
That's horseshit.
That's not true.
That's not true.
Because they should, one of the things they should tell you immediately is get
on a ketogenic
diet.
Because one of the things that, uh, has been proven is that cancer uses glucose
to survive.
And, you know, autophagy, which comes from fasting is one of the best ways that
people
can get rid of errant cells and cells that are, you know, misfiring.
Make your body burn off fat, use ketones for energy and, and just get rid of
all the dead
cells.
Give her all the shit that your body doesn't need.
And even if you want to do that, do intermittent fasting, you know, where you
only have a period
of time where you eat, like give yourself like a 16 hour window with no food
and then start
eating after that.
But how do you keep your, how do you not be cranky and lose your mind doing
that?
Because your body's relying on carbohydrates, right?
So when your body is not relying on carbohydrates and your body's burning off
ketones, you don't
have that problem.
You don't have that crashing problem.
The crashing problem is from a high carbohydrate diet.
And I've had that before.
Look, I'm Italian.
So it's carbohydrates was my thing.
You know, it was all about pasta and pizza.
And I love that stuff.
I just love it.
And that's my cheat food.
If I'm going to cheat, I'm going to eat Italian subs and that kind of shit.
But when your body gets accustomed to that, first of all, you get a big insulin
spike, you crash,
you get exhausted.
The way to avoid that is to get your body to start using fats.
And the way your body uses fats is that you give it for fuel and your body
adjusts.
And then your body does something called gluconeogenesis, where it starts using
meat and protein and turning that into glucose.
And when you go through this process, it's a shaky process at first.
Like, you get what they call the keto flu originally, initially, rather, where
you get tired all the time.
You're like, oh, this is exhausting.
And your workouts suffer.
It's like you have no energy.
But eventually, your body adapts and your body just gets accustomed to using
fats.
And when your body gets fat adapted, first of all, your brain works better.
You get an extra gear in terms of, like, your ability to think and communicate.
And it just feels like you have more energy.
You don't need naps.
And you don't crash after you eat.
That's why when you're saying, like, you shouldn't eat red meat, I eat mostly
red meat.
That's, like, most of my diet.
Right.
That's, like, 80% of my diet is meat.
Yeah, well, I mean, it's an addiction for me.
I love it.
I don't think it's an addiction.
I think it's the most nutrient-dense food in the world.
The problem is processed red meat, right?
So if you're eating a bunch of processed shit that has a bunch of preservatives
in it, yeah, that's not good for you.
But, like, a ribeye steak, a grilled ribeye steak, there is nothing wrong with
that.
It's one of the most healthy foods you can eat.
And it has everything you need.
It has plenty of vitamins.
It has fat.
It has all the things that your body naturally knows how to process.
And people have been eating that food from the beginning of time.
Yeah, you just got to get educated in it.
And it's, like, most people, especially, particularly most doctors, I've had
conversations with doctors where they've said, you get everything you need from
a balanced diet.
And I'm, like, fuck you.
You don't know anything.
Like, how much time did you spend in medical school learning nutrition?
Was it even an hour?
Was it a day?
Right.
Like, it takes a long time.
And there's real researchers who have spent decades understanding the balance
of nutrient-dense foods and vitamin supplementation and what vitamin supplementation
can cure and fix and what it's good for and how to balance it out and what
vitamins work synergistically with other vitamins.
Like, if you're taking vitamin D3, which is fantastic for your immune system,
you have to take it with K2.
You should take it with magnesium as well.
Like, you got to know these things.
And most doctors, they just, they talk out of a voice of authority about
something they're not educated in.
They're educated in getting people in and out of their office as quick as
possible and getting that insurance money.
And that's what they do.
And most of them, they talk like they're authorities.
Meanwhile, they have a gut.
You're sitting there looking at this guy who looks like shit.
And he's telling you about health.
Like, bro, you're not healthy.
Don't talk to me about health.
This is angry.
It makes me angry.
It really does.
I get it.
It's infuriating because it's like these people, you count on them as
authorities.
And really, they're just paying off their student debt.
They're paying off their fucking loans.
They have insane malpractice insurance they have to cover.
They have a giant monthly nut.
And they're trying to push pharmaceutical drugs on you as much as they can
because they get compensated for that.
And that's what they do.
And this is the standard American health system.
And it's a real problem.
Yeah.
It's a real problem.
And it leaves us sicker.
You know, this is the thing that RFK Jr. is trying to balance.
Like, we are, we spend more money on health care than anyone in the world.
We make more money than anyone in the world.
And we're sicker than anyone in the world.
We spend more money than we ever have on health care.
We're sicker than we've ever been.
Because we're living the life.
We're eating well.
It's not it.
It's we're eating shit.
You know, if we're just eating healthy, the people that are just eating healthy
have way less problems, way less health consequences, way less issues, way more
energy, way more mental acuity.
All those things.
Because that's how your body is supposed to live.
For thousands and thousands of years, what did we do?
We ate fruit.
We ate vegetables.
We ate meat and chicken and fish and eggs.
And that's what you're supposed to eat.
Right.
That's real food.
Most of these things that sit on a shelf, you're not supposed to eat those.
Right.
Just like your dog.
Like, your dog's not supposed to be eating kibble.
Right.
You know?
Feed your dog raw food, your dog's going to go bonkers.
Feed your dog human-grade food, like farmer's dog, your dog will go crazy.
Watch how she eats it.
Watch the difference of the weight.
I'll try it.
My dog can't wait.
He's dripping, water's dripping off of his mouth before I feed him.
He's, like, sitting there waiting, like, stay.
And I'm putting it in the bowl.
Okay.
He, like, attacks it.
Like, Jamie, you were saying that about your dog, right?
Like, Carl, like, when he was eating kibble, he wasn't even interested.
Yeah.
I mean, I would, excuse me, never had a chance to even give it to him.
He would never, never ate it.
He would just sit there.
I'm like, well, what do you, how do you, you're, how do you, who's been feeding
you?
You know, what have they been, like, how did they get in your body?
I always give my dog, when I give her, like, turkey, you know, putting it,
sometimes if I have turkey or chicken around, I'll put it in her bowl.
I always give her, you know, like at Katz's Deli, when you order the sandwich,
they give you a little piece before that.
Yeah.
I always give her a little piece to get her salivating.
And she snaps it.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, because it's real food.
Right.
That's what people are supposed to be eating too, man.
We're supposed to be eating real food.
You know?
We got tricked.
Because things have to stay in the supermarket.
You got to be able to sit it on the shelf and it's got to be able to stay there
for a few months.
That's how you make your profit.
That's why milk is homogenized and pasteurized and I'll try to scare you off
raw milk.
Bitch, I drink raw milk every week.
There's nothing wrong with raw milk.
You just can't get it from a shitty farm.
Just like you can't get meat that's rotten.
Just like you can't get sushi that's rotten.
I eat ice cream every day.
How bad is that for me?
Ice cream is actually not that bad.
Ice cream, when you think about bad things to eat, ice cream is probably one of
the best desserts to eat.
Because ice cream has fats from the cream.
It has protein from the milk.
And it does have sugar.
So you got a little bit of sugar.
But you're absorbing that sugar along with all the fat and all the cream.
And it probably is way better for you.
It's way better for you than sugar.
Like drinking like a soda.
Like a soda is the most alien form of sugar your body absorbs.
Your body doesn't know what the fuck this is.
Because sugar in nature comes from like an orange.
It has all this fiber.
And you're eating it.
And it's a slow digestive process.
That's why you don't get this crazy spike.
But orange juice is fucking nuts.
Like you take all the fiber out.
And now you just have just pure sugar water.
And you think you're being healthy.
Well, you're not.
Okay, look.
You get a little bit of vitamins from the vitamin C that's from the oranges.
But you're not supposed to eat it that way.
You're supposed to eat an orange.
Right.
Like apple juice.
Right.
Like my daughters are like very conscious of like food and like what's in it.
And she put, we went to a supermarket and she was going to get an apple juice.
She's like, this has 30 grams of sugar.
This little thing had 30 grams of sugar.
Like that's crazy.
That's just, you're just, you might as well have a Coca-Cola.
Right.
It's kind of the same thing.
Huh.
Yeah.
Your body, like, I think there's a, there was some paper that was written
recently about
ice cream actually being good for you.
And by far the best of desserts that you can eat because it's, it's milk and
cream, you
know, it's like there's, there's actual food in ice cream.
I crave it every night.
Ice cream, not that bad.
Look at this.
Can ice cream be healthy?
What recent studies actually show.
Recent research has sparked debate about ice cream's place in a balanced diet.
By examining long, long-term health studies, scientists are exploring whether
moderate consumption
may have unexpected links to certain health outcomes.
So ice cream has long been regarded as classic indulgence rather than a healthy
food.
The discussion largely emerged.
Okay.
However, in recent times, some surprising research has sparked the debate among
nutrition scientists
by saying that consumption of ice cream may be related to certain unpredictable
health
outcomes.
The discussion largely emerged from data analyzed in long-running research
projects such
as Nurses Health Study and Health Professional Follow-Up Study, two major
epidemiological studies
that track diet and health outcomes over decades.
Research examined dietary patterns among participants with type 2 diabetes.
Notice unusual pattern related to ice cream consumption.
Discussion earned...
Okay.
What is the discussion?
The problem is with epidemiological studies, you're just basically filling out
a form as to what you ate and they track that with large study groups of people
and they try to figure out, okay, that's one of the ways they find out like, oh,
the people that eat red meat more are sicker.
But that's also like, what are you eating?
Right.
You eating burgers that you call red meat with sugar with a Coca-Cola and some
fries?
Right.
Because that's what a lot of people are eating.
Right.
So it's not like grass-fed steak with a salad.
Right.
You know, that's not the problem.
Remember Craig who came in here?
Craig from Craig's?
Yeah.
He told me to say hi.
I love Craig.
He said steak and I thought about steak.
Oh, he makes a great steak.
That was my joke when I got colon cancer.
I told Craig, you're going to go out of business if I'm not eating your steak.
I don't think you have to stop eating steak.
I mean, I'm no doctor, but I don't think steak's the problem.
I think all the other shit's the problem.
I think it's preservatives and bullshit and processed food.
It's just not good for you, man.
None of it's good for you.
If you could sit on a shelf like that, how's all these preservatives?
That stuff wrecks havoc on your gut bacteria.
When you're consuming things that are filled with preservatives, those preservatives
are essentially killing life.
That's what they do.
That's how it keeps bacteria and mold from growing on the food.
It's a life killer.
And then you eat it, go, oh, yum, yum, yum.
Oh, it's preserved so I can eat it.
I mean, your healthy gut bacteria just gets fucking nuked.
Yeah, I don't think meat is a problem.
Sometimes, you know, I was on a USO Christmas tour and I ate worse on that than
I would.
And I go, how are they?
Yeah.
That's something they should fix.
That is something.
They're trying to fix that.
RFK Jr. is trying to fix that.
It's like eating ice cream and shakes and burgers and pizza at every base.
Yeah, it's a lot of processed food.
Yeah, it's terrible food for those soldiers.
It's terrible.
And then you're asking them to go to perform in the most fucking scary thing on
earth, combat.
So it made me think, well, maybe it's all bullshit.
If the military is eating the same pizza and pepperoni that I'm eating at home,
then they should be more.
No, what's bullshit is the way they treat those people.
That's what's bullshit.
What's bullshit is the way they take care of them.
That's what's bullshit.
What's bullshit is the consideration they give to the diet of these people.
You're asking these people to make the ultimate sacrifice.
That's what I'm saying.
You're giving them prison food.
That's what's bullshit.
Right.
Yeah.
It's not, diet's not bullshit.
Diet's everything.
It is literally everything.
Like I said, your body has nothing else, nothing else that it can build itself
up with other than nutrients.
That's all it has.
You consume it.
If you don't, you starve to death, right?
If you don't eat, you starve to death.
So, in order for your body to take care of itself, what are you giving it?
It's that simple.
You drink a lot of water?
A lot of water, yeah.
You still drink a lot of coffee?
I drink less.
I've been drinking coffee later in the day now.
I've been, like, going through my day and not drinking my first cup of coffee
until, like, noon now.
I've been doing that a lot lately.
Hmm.
Yeah.
You don't need it in the morning to get going?
Sometimes I feel like I do.
I enjoy it.
I indulge if I enjoy it.
But I don't like relying on things.
I don't like having to do things.
I don't ever want to have that feeling.
So, lately I've been, like, and I've gone days without coffee just to see what
that feels like.
Sometimes I feel a little sluggish.
But there's ways you can avoid that, too.
Like, I'll take nootropics, which is brain nutrients, you know, theanine and acetylcholine
and a bunch of different things.
Like, there's alpha brain.
That stuff pumps my brain up and fires it up.
It's just you get addicted to caffeine.
Caffeine is very, very addictive.
And I feel like if I can get my day going without it, it's probably better.
Yeah.
I drink a lot less, but I see what you're saying.
I love it, though.
Oh, it's great.
I love a cup of coffee.
I love it.
I love it.
And I landed yesterday, Austin Airport.
Like, I needed a coffee so bad I'd been out partying the night before, early
flight.
And I land, and you just want a cup of coffee before you even start seeing your
texts because you don't want to deal.
And it's like the first place I go to, it's like there's a long line.
I finally get there, and it's like it's a kiosk.
And I'm like, I can't kiosk.
I need to just tell someone to put coffee in a cup and hand it to me.
And I go to another place, and it's like they charge me, and then they hand me
a cup and go fill it.
And I walk away.
I just can't.
I get so freaking cranky.
And I go to the third place, finally, and it's just like they give you a cup of
coffee.
The kiosk and the no employees, it all makes me so mad.
I want to talk to somebody.
Oh, okay.
I don't like filling out a computer when I want something.
I rarely go to coffee places because I drink black coffee.
And black coffee at Starbucks tastes like dog shit.
Right.
It's all burnt and tastes terrible.
It's just not good.
I could drink any coffee.
You could take old coffee, put it in a microwave, and it's the same to me as an
espresso that you're making it.
Oh, I like this.
This is fresh press.
What is that?
Black rifle coffee.
You want some?
Yeah.
Get in there, dog.
That's good coffee.
That's real coffee, son.
Thank you, brother.
That's coffee.
Cheers.
Taste that.
Cheers.
Here's another problem.
That's good.
That's not bad, right?
If you get coffee from Starbucks, you're getting it in a paper cup.
And if you get it in a paper cup, it's not paper you're drinking out of.
It's plastic because the inner lining of those paper cups is basically like a
condom.
Right.
Ever see when they break it down?
Yeah.
Well, if you add hot liquid to plastic, that plastic leaches chemicals into
your body that are not good for you.
They're called forever chemicals.
They're terrible for you.
So, like, every time you drink a hot liquid that's in a paper cup, you're
sucking on plastic residue.
That's gross.
We're gross.
There's a lot of things that are gross about the American lifestyle.
I mean, if you get coffee from Starbucks or something like that, ideally, you
should bring your own cup.
Bring a mug.
Bring, you know, like a little, one of those little Yetis, you know?
So, it's like pouring right into stainless steel.
That's how you're supposed to drink it.
But who does that?
Who brings a little stainless steel Yeti with them everywhere?
Nobody.
Not me.
Nobody.
But if you did that, you'd get a lot less of these fucking microplastics in
your gut that also wreak havoc on your body, destroy your immune system,
destroy your endocrine system.
They're endocrine disruptors, so it stops your body from producing hormones
naturally, which also can lead to a host of different diseases.
Makes me think maybe Charlie Sheen was right after all.
Crack.
Smoking crack while getting a blowjob.
Yeah, that's how to do it.
You don't think he was worried about the plastics in the pipe?
Well, there's certain dudes that are built different, and they could, I mean, a
lot of people that did what Charlie did would have already been dead a long
time ago.
He's resilient.
I do hope somebody puts him in a big movie.
I like your idea.
I like a good comeback story.
Maybe he's due for another roast.
It'll be hard now.
He's all clean and sober.
It's like, what did you do 20 years ago?
It's like, eh.
But now he's kind of doing all right.
He looks good.
He looks healthy.
He looked a lot better than I thought he was going to look.
It doesn't look like a guy who's went through 25 years of crack.
And he was sick?
Mm-hmm.
What did he have?
HIV.
Oh, yeah.
HIV is weird.
That's a weird one.
Because with the medication they have now, you don't really, you're not even
testing positive.
But they just tell you you have it no matter what.
It's dormant.
It doesn't totally make sense.
There was a guy named Peter Duesberg that I had on my show a long time ago.
And he was a professor out of the University of California, Berkeley, and just
brilliant, brilliant guy.
Groundbreaking work on cancer.
But he had a very controversial take on HIV.
And his take was he didn't believe that HIV is what caused AIDS.
He said the fact that you have HIV is because your immune system is so severely
compromised that HIV shows up.
That was his take on it.
And he was ostracized.
You've got to realize, like, during the AIDS crisis, do you know who was the
guy that was in charge of the medical establishment in this country?
Mm-mm.
Anthony motherfucking Fauci.
Mm-mm.
Same guy.
And that guy had everybody convinced that we're all going to get AIDS, that we're
all going to die, and you all have to take this medication.
And one of the medications they gave people was AZT.
The problem with AZT was AZT was a chemotherapy medication.
And it was killing people quicker than cancer was, so they stopped using it.
They repurposed it when AIDS came along.
And they started giving it to AIDS people because they didn't have to go
through this whole process of, like, getting a drug certified, getting a drug
to go through the FDA.
And they already had a drug.
So they said, well, this drug, this will be the drug we use for AIDS.
But it fucking killed everybody they put on it.
Killed tons and tons of people.
When they stopped using AZT, people stopped dying.
You know, that's what Dallas Buyers Club was all about.
It was all about them trying, that movie with Matthew McConaughey, it was all
about them trying to find alternative cures, alternative medications, and being
able to access alternative medications.
He wanted everybody to use AZT.
And he was like, AZT, the reason why they use it, it's the only drug that is
both safe and effective.
It's literally what he said back then in the fucking 80s.
And that's the same guy that sold us his bag of bullshit with the COVID origins
and whether or not it was gain-of-function research that caused it.
He's just a creepy fucking guy.
We never really got answers on any of this.
We will.
It'll take time, but we will.
And he'll probably be gone by the time it's publicly understood.
But if you read RFK Jr.'s book, The Real Anthony Fauci, it'll open your mind.
It'll open your eyes.
He talks about how they were testing out in the 1980s, they were testing out
HIV vaccines on foster kids in New York and killing them.
Jesus.
Yeah.
They tested it out on foster kids.
Yeah, it's real.
If it wasn't real, he would have been sued.
He hasn't been sued for it.
Wow.
It's a dark book, dude.
The Real Anthony Fauci, I can't recommend it enough.
It's a fucking terrifying book.
But that's the same guy that was a part of the AIDS thing.
The movie's going to be weird.
Who would play Anthony Fauci in a movie?
It'd be Martin Short.
I think it's another Sean Penn tour de force.
Sean Penn was all about the vaccine.
Do you miss acting?
Not even a little.
I was thinking about that the other day.
You really were in this whole other world, Joe.
Call times, makeup, lines, blocking.
Well, I enjoyed working on news radio.
And it was very, I felt insanely fortunate to be able to work with Phil Hartman
and Dave Foley and all those people on that show.
Steven Root, Maura Tierney.
So many funny people.
Andy Dick.
It was incredible.
Candy Alexander.
It was an incredible cast of people.
I mean, I felt super, super lucky.
But once it was over, I'm like, I don't think I'll ever be able to recreate
that because that was, like, optimal.
And I had been on a couple other shows as a guest.
I didn't like it.
And I was like, this is not what I like.
I only did it for money, you know.
It's not my thing.
And it's a long process, dude.
Sitcom hours are, you know, especially in the beginning days.
It was, like, 12, 16-hour days.
Who wrote that show?
Paul Sims and a bunch of other writers.
But he was from the Larry Sanders show, you know.
And he did Bard Walk Empire after that and a bunch of other stuff.
Wow.
But brilliant guy.
But that show was just, like, they caught lightning in a bottle.
I got so lucky to be a part of that show that I'm like, I could never be on a
shitty sitcom after that.
You know, I couldn't be on some fucking, you know, sloppy, canned horse shit
show.
You went highbrow with Fear Factor.
Well, I took that because there was no actors.
First of all, I took Fear Factor because I thought it was going to be canceled.
I thought this was going to be giving me a lot of material.
It was like Radford ever.
148 episodes.
Yeah, it was nuts.
Have you seen the new one?
No, I haven't.
But Johnny came on.
Johnny Knoxville came on to do it.
I didn't see the Ludacris one either.
But how long did Ludacris do it for?
I don't know.
I didn't even know that until now.
Yeah, Ludacris did it, I think.
Was it on MTV, Jamie?
I think he did it on MTV.
MTV did it for a little while.
I think he did it for, I don't know how long.
But I love Johnny.
Johnny Knoxville is the fucking, he's the best.
A true gentleman.
Sweetheart of a guy.
I love him so much.
I hope it does well.
You know?
I hope they don't hurt anybody.
That's the problem.
Like when Fear Factor came back on NBC, when we came back in 2011 and we only
did six episodes,
they were really trying to make it bigger and better.
I was like, Jesus Christ, we're going to fucking kill somebody.
Right.
It felt like it.
It felt like when it was canceled, I was happy.
I was like, fuck this.
You were done.
Yeah.
Well, it got canceled because they had a drink cum.
Do you know that?
No.
You don't know that?
What?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
They played horseshoes to drink donkey cum.
We still talking about Andy Dick at News Radio?
No, no.
We're talking about Fear Factor now.
Andy only drank people cum.
He's a gentleman.
But yeah, that happened and that's what got the show canceled.
But it was because they were just trying to make it as outrageous as possible.
It's like the early.
You were right at the beginning of that crazy.
This is it.
Fear Factor.
Donkey juice.
This is it.
They had to play horseshoes and they drank donkey piss and donkey cum.
There was three sets of twins and one twin had to drink the cum.
Look at that.
That's a mug.
Oh, cum.
Oh, my gosh.
It's so foul.
Wow.
Yeah, so TMZ, I think, got a hold of the clip or images and said that Fear Factor
was doing
this and it never aired in the United States, but it aired overseas.
It aired somewhere in Europe.
I want to say the Netherlands or Denmark or some shit.
Wow.
Yeah.
Now you survived.
Good times.
Good times.
Now you're drinking delicious coffee and you're palatial.
Hanging out with you, Jeff Ross.
I love it, man.
Dude, I've known you since you were Jeff Lipschitz.
I've known you since your best joke, which was never trust a hooker with a walkie-talkie.
You go, I learned, you were like 25, but you're like, I've learned a lot of
things in my life.
Yeah.
I never trust a hooker with a walkie-talkie.
Was that the joke?
No, it was I went to college for three years.
You know what I learned?
How did it go?
Don't trust hookers with walkie-talkies?
I don't know.
You know me since Jeff Lipschitz.
I'm still, by the way, I'm still Jeff Lipschitz.
My ID, my passport.
Maybe you shouldn't tell everybody.
It's all right.
We should have hid that.
It's, it's, it's, at this point.
When did you change it to Ross?
What year was that?
Oh, I can tell you.
What happened was I got booked on Star Search down in Florida.
Like my first time on TV.
You know, we were all starting to get like on MTV and Star Search.
Those shows were coming around.
And I go down to Orlando where they were shooting it back then.
And Ed McMahon was the host.
And he kept introducing me by fucking up my,
Arch, this week's challenger, Jeff Lipschitz.
And I walk out and I, it would screw me up, you know, then the next, I'd won.
And then the next day, it's like this week's challenger, you know, life shots,
you know,
he would just screw it up every time.
And on the flight home, I was like, I either have to, if I, I really love
comedy.
I was like two years in, I go, let me think about this.
Ross is my middle name.
Jon Stewart was Jon Leibovitz.
And he had told me he did it for the similar reasons of like, no one can, if I
asked you
to spell Lipschitz right now, even you couldn't and you'd know me 35 years.
So I was like, all right, either I'm going to have to change my name or my
whole family's
going to, I don't know what to do.
So Ross, it just made sense.
It's easy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's easy.
Jeff Ross.
What was Ed McMahon like?
You know.
Did you ever hang out with him?
I shook his hand and that was the end of it.
I didn't get to know him very well.
I heard he was an animal.
I heard he drank a lot.
Yeah.
But then I made some joke like that and people got mad at me online going, don't
disrespect
Ed McMahon.
Was he gone by the time you made that joke?
Yeah, it was recently because they rebooted Star Search just now.
Fuck people online.
You can't listen to them.
Oh, dude, that's another thing Saget taught me, Bob Saget, like block the
haters.
Like, you know, we would argue about this because like he would block people
and I go, well,
then they know you saw it.
Just ignore them.
Let them float out to sea.
He goes, no, he goes, no, I want them to know that they're blocked.
He goes, and I don't want them following me.
I don't want, I don't want to say funny things to people who say mean things.
He valued himself.
I say, don't read the comments.
I say, don't even pay attention.
Let them exist in the ether.
Well, you're off social right now.
Yeah.
You told me.
Yeah, I post things, but I post and ghost.
That's what I tell people.
Post and ghost.
Just post things.
It's like people know about stuff or something's interesting.
You know, someone sends you something interesting.
Like, oh, people should know about this.
Right.
That's it.
Get out.
I've gotten better instead of using social media.
Like, Seth Green is my neighbor.
Good buddy of mine.
The actor.
And he started doing this during the pandemic.
Instead of texting or liking people's stuff, he FaceTimes.
It takes longer, but he's like, it's a real connection.
Oh, okay.
So he'll FaceTime me, you know, and talk to me.
Just even if it's for a minute.
What if you have an Android phone?
Then you're fucked.
And my friend, Benji Aflalo, goes, he quotes Brody all the time.
He'll just, he'll write, he'll text me emojis, positive and a check.
Positive check-in.
Like Brody used to do.
He would just positive check-in.
Positive energy.
Positive check-in.
God, he was so fun.
Here's another guy who's on my fucking contact list that's gone that I miss.
I almost wore my Brody t-shirt today.
I was thinking about him a lot lately.
I don't know why.
Enjoy it.
Enjoy it.
Has there ever been a comedian who's been less famous, but more, his cadence
has been more
like remembered.
It's almost like him and Dangerfield have the most memorable deliveries of all
time.
Especially for us.
Brody Stevens, I don't know if people know.
Yeah, for the guys who were around him, he was so, he was just such a unique
dude.
And he would show up at the comedy store and pull into the lot.
Everybody'd smile.
Oh, I, when I first met him, I really, truly hated him.
I really hate him.
It was, it was, it was literally like the mid-90s, Joe, like in New York.
And I can't believe I, I haven't thought about this in so long.
The show that, it's so funny.
The show that's coming out tonight, I'd started developing 30 years ago.
My grandfather died.
I live with my grandfather.
And it was like a way to like process it.
And it was emotional.
And I was doing it at little alternative comedy spaces in New York.
And I didn't know Brody.
And Brody would sit in the front.
He was obsessed with it because I was like talking about stuff that hit for him
somehow.
And he would sit in the front, but he would like over laugh or twitch around at
a seat.
So then, you know, I'm developing this like one man show is like different than
standup.
And he's like, he would want to talk to me about it.
And he would say like weird things that kind of threw me off.
You know, he would notice the differences.
And I said, listen, man, HBO's coming to see it next week.
Could you just not be in the audience?
He goes, oh, okay.
I understand.
I'm the guy who bothers you.
You don't like me.
I get that.
I go, no, it's not that, man.
It's just that like, you're like, you're like, you're like, one, eight till I
die.
You're distracting me.
And I'm not like, you know, I was only doing for comedy a few years.
So then HBO comes and Brody, I walk on stage and Brody's in the front row.
So afterwards I go, dude, what the fuck is your problem?
I told you not to be.
He's like, there were no other seats.
I couldn't miss it.
And our friendship grew where we both moved out to LA and we became such good
friends that
I had a Comedy Central show.
He was the warmup.
I had to have him around me all the time.
I felt safer and better.
I think we both grew from like.
I was a model in Pakistan, cover of Camel Beat magazine.
I dated an amputee.
We met on StubHub.
What was the one about the Nickelback tour jacket?
I was at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
I saw the Nickelback tour.
It was in the Lost and Found.
I love Brody.
Look up Brody Stevens.
Yeah.
I heard you talking about him the other day, too, about his friendship with
Zach Galifianakis.
Yeah.
And that, were you there when they did the memorial at the comedy store?
No.
No.
I had a good line.
I don't like those things.
I was backstage and Brody's like college baseball coach, high school baseball
coach, and all
his friends all spoke for like an hour.
And then they bring me out and I go, after hearing all Brody's friends talk for
an hour,
I'm starting to understand why he killed himself.
That's why I don't like those things.
It was beautiful.
I prefer to mourn people solo.
It was beautiful, actually.
Well, Brody was a beautiful guy.
That's our world.
We got to remember these guys.
I know.
We do.
Well, you know, one of the good things about podcasts is like the world gets to
understand
a lot of these people and hear us talk about a lot of these people.
I think our world is more understood now in this day and age with the podcast
world than I think
it's ever been known before.
More criticized, but that's part of the process of it.
That's normal.
But also more understood.
Like people get it.
They get it.
It's a weird art form.
I remember when you had Gilbert Gottfried on.
That was great.
Gilbert was awesome.
I don't think he fully understood what was happening here, but I remember
really enjoying
your interview with Gilbert.
What do you mean you don't think he understood?
He'd done Stern.
He'd done open and open.
But he, he, this is, Stern is fast and jumping in and Joe, you know, like
impressions.
This is more of a conversation, which Gilbert in his spectrum-y thing, you know,
it's tough,
a lot of yes and no answers.
I thought he was great.
Yeah.
But I loved him, you know, and he knew I loved him.
I was always a giant fan of his.
So it was like, I think it was pretty easy.
I wear a Gilbert Gottfried shirt in the special.
That's cool.
Ultimate tribute.
He was a sweetheart.
So sweet guy.
So fucking funny too.
God damn, that guy was funny.
I used to love watching his sets in New York.
The best.
Especially like in the nineties where no one knew who he was.
Like, oh my God, he's such a killer.
One of his last times on stage, I was at an improv in Florida and he came with
his family
and he came on as a surprise guest.
He walked out and he told this long, crazy joke about skull fucking his dead
grandma.
So at his funeral, at his funeral, like a year and a half later, I said,
Gilbert's comedy
was fearless and ruthless and subversive.
Yet he was so lovable that he could get us to laugh at a joke about skull
fucking a dead
person.
And then I looked at his coffin and I said, not so funny now, huh, Gilbert?
Gilbert.
So I love Gilbert.
We've had the very unique opportunity to be around some really, truly
exceptional people.
Rare, rare human beings, you know, and so many of them, you know, we're so rich
in our
associations with so many completely unusual people, you know?
There's one more Gilbert story.
Okay.
One time we were roasting Joan Rivers.
I was producing it and I booked Gilbert and I'm on the phone.
I'm smoking a joint and I go, I got one joke I like, but I can't do it.
He goes, what is it?
I go, well, you know, like Kanye West's mom had recently died during a plastic
surgery procedure.
It was the background and, and, uh, I go, Joan Rivers, Gilbert, you know, Joan
Rivers, Kanye's
mom has a better plastic surgeon than you.
And, uh, and, uh, I go, but I can't do that.
And Gilbert goes, I'll do it.
And that's what I realized.
I was being a pussy and I had to do it.
So I did it.
So he pushed me.
That's awesome.
That's awesome.
He's a really special, special guy.
We're lucky dudes, Jeff.
We really are.
We're lucky.
And especially now that we know all these people that we just talked about that
were amazing
and they're gone.
We're lucky we're still here.
Being a comedian is like a backstage pass to the world.
You get to see things you never would see as a civilian.
It's true.
I just went to Qatar, Djibouti, Africa.
You were in Djibouti?
What were you doing in Djibouti?
You did stand up there?
For the troops.
Christmas with the vice chairman of the joint chiefs.
Saw the Patriot missiles that they're using now.
I was in two of the bases that just got hit just a few months ago.
Wow.
That's nuts.
You get to see.
And when you're with the vice chairman, sometimes you're on FOBs, they call
them, forward operating
bases.
They don't even tell you where you are exactly.
Oh, wow.
You know, you're like 80 miles from the Iranian border somewhere in Kuwait or
Qatar or Jordan.
It's so cool.
Wild.
You've always done a lot of stuff with the troops.
Yeah.
You've been doing that from way back, from like the early 2000s.
2003, my first trip to Iraq with Drew Carey.
Wow.
Yeah.
He took me in 2003.
Saddam was still alive.
I went back in 05.
I've done probably 100 of those shows all over the world.
Wow.
It's the best, man.
That's why I'm a comedian.
That's the best feeling.
That's the best feeling.
They say, oh, thanks for coming.
And I'm like, thank you, man.
Just forget that I'm like entertaining.
You know, you're doing a show for people who are starved for entertainment.
It fills me up.
Like it invigorates me.
It's just they're not drinking.
They're the best crowds.
Right.
I highly recommend it.
That's awesome.
All right, dude.
Your special isn't out yet?
Tonight.
Tonight.
Look at you.
A Netflix comedy special.
Longest special Netflix ever did.
You got the Bobby Brown microphone on?
I sing.
I sing a song in the show.
A perfect salty, sweet, sour mix.
Look at that outfit.
It's a suit of armor, this guy.
This guy, poor guy, lost his hands in an explosion.
Oh, jeez.
I asked him why his wife never got finger banged.
Jesus.
It's a multimedia show about my family, about resilience, about bouncing back.
Are those screens on the back wall?
A bunch of different screens?
Yeah.
And they show different things on them?
Yeah, the dogs.
Oh, that's cool.
You're going to love this show.
I'm sure I'll love it.
It's about some of the stuff we were talking about, like when you take a hit,
getting back
up.
That's awesome.
And what's it called again?
It's called Take a Banana for the Ride.
When I was an open miker, I would take my grandfather to his doctor
appointments, and then at night
I would go in New York and try to get on stage at the open mics, and my
grandfather would
give me a few dollars for the bus and tolls and a banana, take a banana for the
ride.
Kind of his way of saying, I can't go with you, but I'm there with you on the
ride.
I just tattooed a banana with my mom's, would write I love you or I miss you
and put them
in my school lunches.
So I found an old letter with her handwriting and made a tattoo.
So now I always have a banana.
This is what Eddie Vedder drew.
It says, born to roast.
Oh, that's cool.
All right.
It's out now.
Ladies and gentlemen, go watch it.
Jeff Ross.
I love you, buddy.
Love you, Rob.
Thank you.
Good to see you.
Bye, everybody.