Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh - Schulz Reacts: Chappelle’s New Netflix Special
Episode Date: October 8, 2021Flagrant 2 is a comedy podcast that delivers unfiltered, unapologetic, and unruly hot takes directly to your dome piece. In an era dictated by political correctness, hosts Andrew Schulz and Akaash Sin...gh, along with AlexxMedia and Mark Gagnon, could care less about sensitivities. If it’s funny and flagrant it flies. If you are sensitive this podcast is not for you. But if you miss the days of comedians actually being funny instead of preaching to a quire then welcome to The Flagrancy. Join the Patreon Asshole Army: http://bit.ly/2xQwHYf
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So are we going to talk about chapelle special or what we were talking about this before and it is a tricky one and i know i'm going to seem like a complete hypocrite because i guess i've been
quite critical of past ones but i i for whatever reason maybe i'm growing i'm becoming a better
person or something like that but i do feel feel difficulty in being critical of a stand-up's work when
they're doing stand-up.
Yeah.
If you're a stand-up that is moonlighting as a late-night TV host and you're putting
out corny shit, it's like, okay, that's not it.
But if it is your art and that is your thing, I understand the vulnerability of putting
something out and having the world be able to criticize it.
That is a vulnerable thing. I understand the vulnerability of putting something out and having the world be able to criticize it. That is a vulnerable thing.
I'm sure musicians feel this way when they put it out.
I'm not a fucking musician,
so I don't really care as much about the thing,
but I do care a lot about stand-up.
So it's tricky to come out here and be like,
oh, let's criticize the greatest working comedian.
here and be like oh let's criticize yeah you know the greatest working comedian right um so i want to start out with like some praise yeah for it and i think he is and i've said this on the podcast
before the greatest storyteller that i've ever seen in my entire life yeah it's fucking unbelievable
the story at the end if you're watching the special and then you maybe you don't like it
or something like that and you halfway through you turn off you're missing the special and then maybe you don't like it or something like that and you're halfway through, you turn off, you're missing out on the greatest part of the special in my opinion, which is the final story that he tells.
Unbelievable.
It's probably 10 minutes, maybe even more.
And it is masterful.
Like playing with energy, like using comedy as a tool to drive the story.
It's really genius. It's almost like stand-up is just this tool he has in the shed,
and he's choosing to use it during the storytelling
right when he needs to to keep pushing the story on.
I always think about, remember those crews in USA, the race car game?
You've got to pass the checkpoint to get a little more time?
Right.
Using the jokes as that pass the checkpoint
so you can drive the story
that we're really curious
to hear like what happens
and it's a fucking
beautiful story
and
not only is it beautiful
it's like strategic
and like pointed
and really executes
the exact thing
that he's trying to say
throughout the special
it was masterful
right
I mean I thought
it was absolutely brilliant
what did you guys think about
at least that section
that was incredible
I do wish he ended it right, like 90 seconds earlier, the special.
If he ended it 90 seconds earlier, I thought it would have been fucking perfect.
On the line that says.
Yes.
Yeah.
I mean, we're going to give it up.
We're going to assume everybody's seen it by now.
And if you haven't seen it, it's okay.
You'll still enjoy.
But on the line that's like, and I want to have that conversation with him.
I knew your father and he was a great woman.
Yes.
I mean, that is. That's the perfect ending. Drop the it would have been the fucking like his emmett till ending in equanimity when he told
the emmett till story was incredible yeah yeah this would have been even better yeah i wish he
ended it right there it's still so good but i wish he ended it right there yeah and i guess
maybe he had another point that he wants to drive home yes like yeah i'm doing this for my people or something like
that i don't you know but like as a pure storytelling finale that is the final point
fucking perfect maybe he felt he had to round out the whole piece yeah add more but like for me
yeah that's the metaphor for the whole piece yes
i could love you even though maybe you and i disagree on some shit and i'm still gonna say
some jokes and they're still gonna be funny yes even though i really fucks with you yes that'd
be hilarious if he did not set up that fun for the kid like that i would respect it more
this kid is just tweeting like where's his his phone? I'm 21, Jay. Where you at?
This is good.
Okay.
Your guys' thoughts on the final story.
Just off that one, I agree with you.
I wish he did my trap right there, but I understand why he included that last line.
What do you think?
I just kind of feel, in his head, he is really
taking some shots at us. Like, he feels
like he's taking some, I think,
I'm assuming, I think he's taking, like, oh, I'm
taking some career-ending possible shots.
Like, I'm really going at
the trans. I'm really going at
Jews. He's like, hey,
I need to let you people
know, like, I gotta explain it to you,
the reason why it is. And I think he needed that just so, like, I got to explain it to you, the reason why it is.
Ah.
And I think he needed that
just so it's like,
yo,
you guys attacked me,
this is the reason.
It's protection.
Yes.
If you didn't get it
throughout the special,
it's like,
this is it.
I think if you couldn't see
the humanity of Dave
in that story
in and of itself,
you're the problem.
Yes,
people are dominating.
Sure,
there's some.
I also,
he gave you two endings. Yes. He gave you the smart, artistic ending there's some he gave you two endings
he gave you the smart artistic ending
and then he gave you
the dumb twitter ending
yeah
like if you didn't get that I'm gonna make this
very easy for you to get
the fun thing about art is you leave it open to interpretation
and that's the scary thing
the issue with cancellation is that it's open to interpretation
what do you really mean by it?
Do we let him live
or do we fucking kill him?
Okay, what were your thoughts
on just the story?
I didn't see the whole thing,
but I saw the story live
when we were in Austin.
Yes.
So you can speak on that.
And it was cool.
I really enjoyed it.
I actually was misdirected
by the ending.
I didn't actually see
how it was going to go.
And it seemed sort of like
a return to form for him
based off of his previous specials like and i guess like his set in
general that night and it was a lot more polished than the night that we had seen we had seen what
i was saying so i was like i'm happy to see that he's taking that turn and i'm pretty sure this is
his last special with netflix right uh for a while or like his last of like the deal yeah i thought
he only had to do like three for the deal i'm sure he got more and then he re-upped again maybe i'm sure but yeah i think he can keep re-upping
whenever he wants it's not like um no he said no he said for a while he said that and then he also
said uh i'm not talking about you guys anymore yeah i'm trans community i'm never talking about
this community and like And that was after,
which I wish he also
just leave it.
Like you just left it
so beautifully.
But my one pushback
on the kind of
covering his own ass,
you can't cancel Dave Chappelle.
He doesn't want to be
in your movies.
His stand-up
will always be worth
$40 million a pop.
He's worth nine figures.
He has Chappelle's show
that he owns now and he can get the fucking whatever residuals,. He's worth nine figures. He has Chappelle's show that he owns now, and he
can get the fucking whatever residuals
or whatever it's called forever.
So you can't cancel Dave Chappelle.
He doesn't need your new opportunities.
But he wants to drink in
bars in Michigan without being
bothered.
So he needs that.
He has a problem drinking in bars in general,
I think. So I think one of his friends needs to talk to him.
I'm just saying every person can be canceled depending on how you look at cancellation.
Like, say, if he actually does want to put out a special event, say, if he gets so much pushback from the Jewish community and the trans community, trans community, LGBT, whatever.
Yeah, I think it's OK.
trans community trans LGBT whatever yeah I think it's okay so Akash is speaking more towards cancellation in terms of opportunity financial industry and you and him probably have different
perspectives you that's enough money but you can't decide how much uh is enough money to someone else
he may believe that he wants to make 500 million dollars and donate 200 fuck a million to uh the dead poet society
for whatever it is but just just to just to finish the point so and he's allowed to have that feeling
as well even though that's enough money for you and maybe when you get there you'll decide i'd
like some more money too and i want to continue this i think it's not about i think it's not about money. I think it's about lifestyle.
And I think he is a comedian.
He cares about what people think of him.
Yes.
It is very important.
We all do, yeah.
As we all do, right?
If we knew who we were and we felt validated every single day, we wouldn't go up in front of strangers and try to tell them to validate us through laughter, right?
try to tell them to validate us through laughter right like so i think it is painful i'd imagine is painful for someone who cares about what people think of him to think of him as something that he
does not identify as so if he's walking around all day going these people think i hate gays they
think i'm homophobic they think i'm transphobic that's probably way more painful than not being
able to be in the next paramount movie right okay so that i think is the thing that's the
impetus for the other.
Yeah.
But you're 100% right in terms of like the industry can't withhold anything from him.
Him specifically.
Specifically.
And I didn't even just mean financially.
I meant opportunity wise.
Like he's not a hundred millionaire off of movies or TV shows that you wrote for him.
Right.
He wrote one himself and then he puts out his own standup and like opportunity wise
he's, I think.
But yeah.
But that makes a lot of sense.
The emotional cost.
And he's a sensitive, and I don't mean that in a negative way.
He's a dude that's like empathetic and like a human.
Thoughtful.
He's thoughtful.
He's a very thoughtful guy.
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But yo, this is actually, I think this is good.
Like if we go make fun of everybody, if we're really going to do that thing where we sit here and we go, we make fun of everybody.
We can't just make fun of the people that can't do something for us.
And then the people that can do something for us, we're like, oh, we got to be polite.
Everybody got to get these jokes, bro.
Yeah, I hate saying you can't punch down but i also hate not
punching up yeah like if you said we we're like yo fuck that punching down you can't punch down
shit but then if you're scared to punch up you ain't shit either it was funny that the last joke
about the punch down i think i was talking to mark about this this was like maybe last week i think
i was talking to you about this but i was like with the punching down thing and i was like uh
was it you maybe somebody else but like, I had thought about the same thing.
Like, I don't like the concept
of punching down
because you make me,
you're basically like,
I think less of everyone.
Yeah.
Like, you can't remember
when we were dealing with
like some notes process
and they're like,
we said that here.
I think we've had
this exact conversation.
Yeah, okay,
we have said it here.
Yeah, I always hate that
because it's like,
no, you're placing them beneath you.
I don't see it that way.
I see me punching somebody that's equal to me. You decide they them beneath you i don't see it that way i see me
punching somebody that's equal to me you decide they're beneath you that reflects your own bias
and it also creates a social hierarchy of social oppression yeah who's below what but look they're
gonna take it on the chin i'm gonna fucking take them everybody's gonna take it on the chin i think
once you start to realize that and feel that there's like a safety and security built out there
right and maybe that's the shitty thing about like being able to yank a joke out of a special.
You're just like, oh, you see this joke he made about Asians?
It's like, were you listening to the joke he made about the Puerto Ricans five minutes before
and the joke he made about the Jews seven minutes after?
Once you understand the context not of the joke itself, the joke itself could be hateful.
But the context of the whole piece yeah you're like
oh okay i get what we're doing here yeah and that's why roasts nobody cares about right because
you walk into the roast going we're gonna be hurtful for fun yeah yeah the comedy special
you walk in going this is just gonna be a great old time we're gonna laugh yeah so maybe we should
like start the like a disclaimer or like call the
special roast for fun or like this fucking when you walk in this is the deal yeah everybody gets
these jokes i do that at the top of every show i try to like i'll say like we all laugh at
fucked up jokes like we need this like we're all gonna laugh at fucked up things that's the best
i think that's part of the reason why Chappelle had the caveat in this discussion. Like,
hey,
I'm just trying to make you guys laugh.
I'm not trying to hurt anyone's feelings.
I am trying to make a point
in terms of like a political statement.
Yeah.
I'm not trying to do it
at the expense of other people.
So if you feel that I am,
you've misinterpreted me.
And he probably feels
that he could have done a better job
than tell me or whatever it is.
But I think he needed to add that caveat more for himself.
Right.
So people know he's not white.
He had another caveat that I typically think is bullshit,
but I believe this one where he was like,
if you listen to everything I've said
on every special about trans people,
I do not, I'm not complaining about trans people
or something he said.
I'm complaining about white people.
And if you think about all this shit he's saying,
it's like,
Oh,
I see what he means with like the entitlement,
the white entitlement that comes from the white trans people who tend to be
complaining,
who tend to get heard the most,
et cetera.
It's like,
Oh,
I actually believe that when he says this is about white people and not
trans people.
And I think that he's using trans people as an example or gay people as an
example of what black people can't do.
Yes.
Right.
So he's just juxtaposing the black experience and this other oppressed groups experience and going, yo, why can't we get motherfuckers out of here like this?
And he said that I'm not transphobic.
I'm jealous.
Yeah.
How effective your movement has been and how we're stuck here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
How'd you guys already get ahead of us?
Now, do you believe that that is the sentiment
or do you think that that is convenient logic to...
Probably a little bit of both.
Maybe.
It probably starts off a certain way
and then as you get hatred,
as a human being would,
as people start telling you you're a piece of shit,
you're like, you know what?
Fuck them.
And then you also start using their rules against them.
Yeah.
It's like they're like...
That's the g like
he's a master and i mean this in the best possible way like manipulator and as a comedian you do have
to manipulate the emotions of an audience right even to induce laughter but like that was masterful
it's like oh you set the rules as don't punch down i'm gonna convince you we're below y'all
you better not bully me yeah you see what you did to your own. You got your own offing themselves from bullying.
Right.
The feminist move.
He's like, hey, this is a feminist.
Hey, you just want women to be equal.
And then you wouldn't allow the black feminist to speak at whatever movement or whatever.
Yeah.
So it's like, even for a movement that's about women, you're still putting black women below.
And I think he added that point so he can make his final point of view. Right. He's like, even for a movement that's about women, you're still putting black women below.
And I think he added that point so he can make his final point of view.
Right, right, right.
It was cool, man. Look, you know that there's always going to be a reaction to a Chappelle special, which is, well, I didn't laugh as much as I thought I would laugh, or something like that.
That seems to be a lot of the reaction.
I think, Al, you brought up a really good point before,
which is basically you're just comparing it to other Chappelle specials.
Yeah.
And you brought up the Drake analogy.
Say that.
I thought this was really poignant.
So, let's serve our love of boy.
People are saying this is not one of Drake's best albums. Yeah, because they're there to Drake's other album
It's like your best work is gonna come in the beginning
It's like yeah lifetime of thoughts that you want to get out
Yeah, and now you're having two years to put together special but at the same time it's quality of work still so
Beyond everyone else. Yeah
And like would it be would drake's album be the best da baby album ever yes yeah you know i'm saying like if you were
if the baby put out drake's shit right here you'd be like oh my god this is the most amazing one so
he is competing with himself in that regard so that even more so with comedy. Who has it for 20 years?
Chris Rock's last special.
What was his worst special?
Tambourine?
Had some beautiful moments.
Slow as fuck the first half hour.
Who is still funny?
Bill Burr is the one guy I can think of
who's been doing it 20 years,
and he's still so strong.
But even then, I think it's a fame thing
where you're so famous,
you're just performing for your fucking sycophants
or whatever your
fanatics and they're gonna laugh at everything so you don't necessarily get to cone and craft
and whatever and it's this superstar level where it's like that's not sustainable for most comics
yeah you always hit a plateau and he doesn't seem like i'm used to me maybe i can't tell but it
doesn't seem like he's performing for his fans. Like he, it seems like he's,
Hey,
I'm going up there for myself.
And this is the shit I want to get off.
Like this,
this is shit that's bothering me.
So I'm going to talk about it.
Even if you dislike the fact that I'm talking about trans in the last three
specials,
it's like,
this shit still bothers me.
So I'm talking about,
yeah,
I respect that.
That's more artistic to me than like,
Oh,
let me just focus on the big political things that are going on at the moment
yeah like talk about the shit you care about yeah yeah that's the weird thing with chapelle as far
as like performing for his fans i feel like if you're a comedy fan you're probably a chapelle
fan you know what i mean yeah like it's not really like music where you're like oh i don't listen to
that i only like this i only like that like yeah most people that are fans of like comedy nerds
they're like oh yeah i'll go watch chapelle yeah you know what i mean like he's legendary and it was good to see
him doing comedy again yeah yeah unforgiven and all that i was like jokes yeah yep first half
first half was jokes i do think it's probably harder though for him to get the same type of
like laughs per minute into jokes that he might have had previously in his
career simply because he's getting a much bigger reaction off of less funny jokes by proxy of his
fame like that that's just like so it's not even his fault it's like where maybe he was younger he
would it would be like tag tag tag yeah another misdirect another misdirect keep building keep building and like
now he's getting huge explosion off of premise yeah you know punchline and i think that that
is the nature of fame and maybe that's why he's gone and like put time into developing these
stories right because that's something that doesn't change no matter who's watching right
right it's like i'm gonna build out this other thing i already getting this huge pop off of this one idea that maybe 10 years ago i'd have to drive
a bunch more punch lines in and really do it but i can execute the exact point i want and get the
intended reaction way quicker let me develop these stories and make these stories have these crazy
arcs and like beautiful thing that's something i can actually do despite how much the fans love me appreciate me right etc and in my opinion i feel like that's a bigger flex because
i see it with you guys it's like uh you're able to stretch out a story and fit in jokes whenever
you feel like you fit in little uh pops yeah when you feel and you can go like a cheap pop
or it's like oh no i give you a poignant pop yeah and so when you get when you feel, and you can go like a cheap pop, or it's like, oh no, I give you a poignant pop. And so when you
get, when you're operating at that level,
I think it's harder for him
to say, hey, how long can I get
this story and still keep you
engaged? Like, that's the flex for him,
because if he wants to make you laugh, he can make you laugh.
Yeah, yeah.
If you wanted to just make people laugh on cheap shit,
just make them rolling laugh, then you can
do cheap jokes throughout the whole set.
Right.
But you pride yourself and be like,
no, no, no, I want to send a message between these jokes.
And that, to me, is like...
It's harder.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So when you're operating at that level,
it's like, I'm not going to knock what he's doing
because I think he's doing it for himself.
So what do you say to the person
that's not familiar with Chappelle's early work,
but sees Chappelle and assumes that this is the greatest comic alive because that's what
they're hearing all the time right but they just enter this stage of his career is it similar to
what i probably went through with carlin where like i was told he's the greatest and then i
watched the later work and i'm like man this guy's really smart
and he's saying like really thoughtful
fucking things but like I'm not
dying laughing but I recognize
he's a really smart guy and I recognize
everything. Great writer. The writing
is great the observations are really brilliant
but like I'm not dying to laugh the same way
I'm dying from watching David Tell
or watching Eddie Murphy
Chris Rock whoever. You know what I'm saying?
What do you say to somebody?
Because it's hard for me because I'm as a comic.
Like, it's hard for me to remove it.
But what do you say to that person?
Like, if my girl watches or something like that.
I feel like with most art, like music or even food, it's like you have to, you get in on the easy stuff and then once you realize that that
stuff is easy you appreciate the hard stuff more so it's like for somebody who just gets into
chicago now i'm gonna tell them no go back go back start from the beginning you can't appreciate
now unless you go back the other tricky thing about everything, art, sports, whatever, it always moves forward.
Very few things age well.
If you go watch Wilt Chamberlain highlights right now, you'd be like, this is the fucking guy?
This is the guy we're talking about.
Shaq would body this motherfucker anywhere.
That's just the nature of how these guys push everything forward.
Jay-Z said it to Lil Wayne and the Carter.
He said, go farther, go further, go harder.
Is that not where we came?
If not, then why bother?
That's it.
Chappelle pushed the envelope so the next great guy can push it further.
And Chappelle got there because Rock and Pryor and whoever else,
they all pushed it further.
You watch Pryor now, it's funny.
It's not changing the world, but you don't realize comedy wasn't like that until him.
But what are you saying to the fan that's catching the end of the journey, not the beginning?
And their reaction to the end is based on a wealth of knowledge or lack thereof of Chappelle, right?
Like, you've only seen maybe two specials and you're like, everybody keep telling me this is the funniest guy that's alive, but I'm not laughing as much as...
I would just tell them
to start from the beginning
and know that they might not get it
because it just always evolves.
In the same way,
your dad tells you
Bill Russell is the greatest
basketball player of all time
because he changed the way
defense was played.
Yeah, yeah.
And if you watch Bill Russell,
you'd be like,
that's just the way the world moves.
Right.
I just gotta accept
that some people aren't ready.
Like, I'm not, my eyes aren't as developed watching comedy as your guys yeah yeah so it's like maybe cheaper jokes might be funnier to me than they are to you yeah you're like ah that was so easy
i don't think that chapelle's early stuff was cheap no i'm saying yeah the way he did comedy
was like oh i know the best way to get a laugh.
And it's like, even though I'm still making smart observations, like the laughs are quicker.
So it's like, you don't, he didn't take a long story to make you laugh.
What he does with the trans story, level of difficulty, even though I fucking love Killing Them Softly,
maybe my favorite special, the level of difficulty in the trans story is higher than anything in Killing Them Softly. Yeah, favorite special. The level of difficulty in the trans story
is higher than anything in Killing Them Softly.
Yeah, but to me, the trans story wasn't great
because it was funny.
It was just a beautiful story.
Yeah.
Imagine if you didn't laugh at all.
You would have been like,
this is not gonna happen.
He is such an amazing storyteller.
I mean this sincerely.
And I knew going into it,
I've said this,
as long as you've known me,
I've said he is the greatest public speaker alive.
Okay, but the last
time he put out
a public announcement, you're like,
this is a comment. Shitty story.
Shitty story. Nah, story was
good. Three Card Monty was a good story.
No, he's talking about George Floyd.
Yeah, yeah. Should he just throw out
on YouTube or whatever? Yeah, he did the Three Card Monty
thing after, but yeah, I see. Oh, I'm sorry.
I thought you were talking about the George Floyd thingorge floyd thing no i'm just saying like
if there's no jokes in between i can see you not because you know him as a stand-up like hey
where are the jokes i could i would be critical if it was called a stand-up piece i guess but like
in terms of actual just stories that like i looked at that story like i was watching the moth i don't
know if you guys remember that but i i was watching The Moth and I was like, oh, this is the greatest piece
that's ever been said on The Moth.
I could watch that no matter what.
It was so brilliant.
I remove it
from any category. I just go,
here is content to watch.
It could be a TED Talk. Fucking amazing.
It doesn't matter what it was.
It was just so great.
I guess I'm just trying to understand the new eyes. If someone it doesn't matter what it was. It was just so great. I guess I'm just trying to understand, like, the new eyes.
Like, if someone doesn't really know Chappelle that much, like, and then they start watching a special and they don't laugh as much, what do I say to them?
Do I go, I don't know, what do you think, Mark?
I mean, comedy is unique because you're not only consuming the art in, like, its fundamental level.
You're consuming the person as well.
Whereas, like, with music, you're consuming the person as well whereas like
with music you're kind of just you can can just consume like oh this is a song i heard but like
with comedy it's so intrinsic to the person that's saying it that it kind of requires having context
of that person insofar as they require that you know them and chapelle is so intimate when he
speaks it's like especially at this stage in his career it's like yeah you are kind of required to
know him as a person to really truly appreciate what he's doing at this point.
His early stuff, you didn't need to know him, and he knew that because he was unknown.
So are they wrong to say that it isn't as joke-dense or funny as other comedians that they're familiar with?
I don't think it's wrong.
Like, if my girl says that to me,. I don't think it's wrong. Like if,
if my girl says that to me,
I can't go,
you're wrong.
Not in an objective sense,
but if you judge him and say he's not as good as a comic holistically than other comics,
I think it's just a hasty judgment that I think,
I think that the knee jerk reaction is often like,
it was really,
it was like really interesting.
I just didn't laugh that much with this stuff.
And,
and,
and what I try to tell people, I'm like, I don't even, I did this with, I think Patrice put out Mr. P and it was an audio
album and I was sitting in a car with a friend and he was watching it or he was listening to it.
We're just listening together. And he like really wasn't laughing. And then I was, and I told him
before, I was like, this is the greatest ever. Yeah. And I realized I might have not even laughed that much, but I was just so in love.
Oh, I can't go multiple times.
Sure.
Yeah.
But that's not the point I'm trying to make.
I was just so in love with the guy and his viewpoints and his thought process and how
he creates a joke and where he creates Mr. X.
Because you know him.
Because I know him.
And this new guy is like, yeah, he had some really good ideas and there were some funny
moments.
I laughed. But it was that moment I was like, yeah, he had some really good ideas and there were some funny moments. I laughed.
But it was that moment I was like, oh, shit, have I been mesmerized?
Does somebody have to like – have I been hypnotized?
Does somebody have to shake me out of it?
No.
It's not hypnosis.
It's just –
What?
It's a little bit.
It's a little bit of that.
But at the same time, it is hard though because like Drake's early albums, we love them because he just put out bangers.
He's like, how can I put a bunch of bangers on one album?
Now he's focused on like, yo, I'm going to tell you about just a story about some girl I used to fuck and how she wanted money and shit like that.
He's doing it more for him.
Here it is.
No, no.
You just hit it.
You just hit it.
It is this.
Remember when nobody knew you and you had to go on stage?
You had to prove yourself every time.
You had to prove yourself every time.
So, of course, in that stage of your career, the jokes are going to be crafted in a way that if someone is experiencing you for the first time, they're going to enjoy it the most.
Exactly.
It doesn't necessarily mean that they're the funniest, but the jokes are going to speak to things greater than
just maybe your experience. And they're complete.
Exactly, right? And yeah, you're going to be
I got to prove it every 10 seconds, otherwise
they might not realize I'm funny.
I got to, every time, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang.
It's specifically crafted to the person
who doesn't know you. Yeah.
As you develop, the specials are specifically
crafted to the people
that do, because oftentimes that is more interesting to the people that really love you.
They want to know about your experience, what the fuck you've been through.
Like when Richard Pryor lit himself on fire, we're like, fam, tell us why you were on fire.
And you've also evolved as a person and you're aware of your prior body of work.
And comedians' careers are holistic in that way like game of thrones like someone watches season five and they're
like i didn't like it it's like yeah you joined at the middle of the show