Club Random with Bill Maher - Penn Jillette | Club Random with Bill Maher

Episode Date: July 7, 2024

Penn Jillette is one half of the magic duo Penn and Teller, who have the longest running show in the history of Vegas. Bill tries his best to get magicians' secrets out of Penn, and they discuss the l...ove of humans vs. animals, the magic trick "blood from a stone," libertarians and seat belts, Penn being in the “nut chair” on Politically Incorrect, Bill’s opening joke on the Jerry Lewis telethon that almost got him cancelled, the problem with the brains of young people, Penn on hopping trains as a young man, when Bill was a nanny, and much, much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:27 Benefits vary by card, other conditions apply. Don't street show guys like that make a lot of money? The amount that I made would knock you over. Then why were you living in the alley? Club Rando. I just told you I changed my mind from this point of view and you just said you should change your mind. Oh good Look at you sir. Good to see you. Wow, you look like you're less a lot of weight
Starting point is 00:00:54 I only am I hundred twenty pounds really? Yeah, and I know it wasn't those epic No, no, it was right. I'm not a big fan of that, but it's been now. I mean, I just haven't seen you often. It's been like nine years I've been down this road. Really? Yeah. Oh my God. And also that brought me around to a point of view of yours that I thought I would never share. Oh good.
Starting point is 00:01:16 Which is it brought me around to being, I'm afraid, I'm a pretty hardcore vegan now. Have been for nine years. I'm not a vegan. I know, but here's what happened, you see, when you. But I'm afraid I'm a pretty hardcore vegan now. Have been for nine years. I'm not a vegan. I know, but here's what happened, you see, when you. But I'm a.
Starting point is 00:01:30 A animal rights. A medical, well, animal rights, yes, but also a medical skeptic in the broad sense. I started out stopping animal products for my health, and it turns out. Yeah, I don't know, I don't agree with that. You don't either? I'm not sure. I think the science is completely out on that. I mean, the science may very well be that people,
Starting point is 00:01:53 or some people, need to be adopted with health, animal protein. That may be the case. I know that's not what PETA wants to hear, and I love my friends at PETA, but I'm sorry, the truth always comes first, and the science is out on that. Yeah. And I've heard many, many doctors say,
Starting point is 00:02:13 all my patients are vegetarians, they don't look good. I disagree with that because I know vegetarians who do look fine, but. I'm not sure you do, but I'll give you that the, but what I was saying was What's really interesting is when you give up? Having to resolve your cognitive dissonance with factory farming and so on. Yes, once you no longer have to do that, right? I agree. It's one of those things that I don't think you can you can find a person that will do anything
Starting point is 00:02:44 I don't think you can find reasonable can find a person that'll do anything. I don't think you can find reasonable people who would go into a factory farm and say, I feel good about this. This is the way we should be. But there are definitely people who, even if they saw it, wouldn't care that much. That's right.
Starting point is 00:02:58 That's different. It's different. I mean, there are some people, I always compare it to me in babies, not that I would ever wanna hurt a baby, but like, you can show me humans in fact, but babies like in a movie, and bad things are happening, it won't actually make me cry, but an animal?
Starting point is 00:03:17 It's just some people are fur people and I... There's, you know, I believe that's a cultural thing, you know, how we start to function that way. I'm not sure that would be built in. Really? Yeah. Oh, I don't know about that. A cultural thing to like just have a thing for animals?
Starting point is 00:03:35 I think our culture is moving in that direction. What culture hates animals? Well, you would say America. America? Well, yeah, but not like, but mostly because they're more like the, you're right about the fact that if most people saw it, they would be appalled. But they just want to do the at a site, at a mind. It's one of the amazing things about freedom
Starting point is 00:04:00 of speech in this country. You can't show the inside of a slaughterhouse. Ag-gag rules. Yes. Big ag. How does that happen? And you know what? This is all coming to, this is all going to come to the floor again. I tried to make it a case when COVID happened with, you know, I said, when you torture animals, it's going to come back on humans. We kept, keep doing it. Yeah. It's not even, it's not the torture. It's putting a billion of these things in close quarters.
Starting point is 00:04:26 Well, that's torture. You're torturing them. But I'm saying it's a byproduct of the torture. It's not the purpose of it. But the sickness that you're putting into the animals by torturing them comes back to make us sick. I'm not going to go into all the details of how that is. This is not a science show. Why bother?
Starting point is 00:04:43 Because we agree. Right. No, no. Right. But just for people listening. But what this is- There's people listening? No, not really.
Starting point is 00:04:50 I thought this was the first honest conversation we'd ever had. Well, it is. It is the most honest conversation you'll ever have anywhere in media. I'll guarantee you that. But what I was going to say is, this is all going to come back in a much bigger way now
Starting point is 00:05:02 with bird flu. Oh, yeah. It's all bird flu. As a matter of fact, with COVID, we got really lucky. The first thing we get that's bird flu related, it's really bad. I mean, the coming plague, as the book said, or the epidemic that's coming
Starting point is 00:05:17 is gonna be really, really bad. And our hope is maybe we can be dead by then. That's what we're clutching onto. Well, no, that cannot be the, we gotta find a better way to look at it than that. Well, one thing, you know, is if you cut down animal products a lot, you would help things a lot.
Starting point is 00:05:40 But you, what was, I remember you and the potatoes. Yeah, well that. What is the potatoes? The potatoes was, I'm a glutton, and I was completely on the sad, which is, you know, standard American diet. Right. And a friend of mine, who's pretty pro-science, worked at NASA and all that shit, said to me, you know, you gotta knock yourself outta your head. So people tend to say it back in an oversimplified way.
Starting point is 00:06:10 That's why I'm asking. That you just started to eat potatoes. And the fact is I did for two weeks. Right. And what that did for me, I'm not saying for anybody else, what it did for me is it taught me what it felt like to be hungry,
Starting point is 00:06:22 which I didn't know. You know, you've never been fat. But learning not... My dear, but not fat. Learning not to be a glutton and not to fall for all the social cues, you want to knock yourself out of it for a little while. And two weeks of eating nothing but potatoes,
Starting point is 00:06:42 I was thinking differently. And I started to taste food potatoes, I was thinking differently. And I started to taste food differently and started to feel differently. Yeah, I mean, I sort of. It could have been anything, potatoes weren't magic. Right. It was just a mono diet for long enough to say,
Starting point is 00:06:56 I'm not gonna see those ads the same. Just something to disrupt, I mean, when you think about most people who never do a fast, for example, I mean, they would never really think, and I never really thought for year after year, anything other than I eat three meals a day, and I never skip a day,
Starting point is 00:07:16 because it's eating for fuck's sake. And then you get older and you have health issues, and then you're doing things like, I mean, I've, like, think for about five years now, a couple of times a year I do that Pro-Lon fast. It's like they call it the fasting mimicking diet. Yeah, I've just, I've done a... Tiny bit of food, but it...
Starting point is 00:07:36 I've done just water for two weeks. Just water. See, I can't do that. I tried the hardcore, I can't. But remember, I still have. I mean, for one time, I was down much lower than this, and probably to where you are in terms of body fat. But I'm not there now. I could easily go three weeks. But what the fast does, especially if you do it, you know, regularly, it does, again, retrain you
Starting point is 00:08:01 to how much food you need. And, you know, and then you can go to what I did was two meals a day instead of three, because compared to the fast, two meals a day is joyous. I do one. One, one, like a dog. I eat very, very carefully, and it's all vegan, but I take the supplements.
Starting point is 00:08:21 The thing that I didn't really understand is that how much of the way we live our lives is based around food. Of course. I can now talk to somebody without eating. It used to be that's all I did was eat when I did. Well, when I do the fast, I can't talk to anybody because it is social. So I have to stay home.
Starting point is 00:08:41 I mean, some people can work through a fast. I'm amazed. I can't be social. I don, some people can work through a fast. I'm amazed. I can't be social. I don't want to talk to you on the phone. I just have to be alone. And that's OK for five days. It's actually a nice reset. Reading and certainly can't do any pot.
Starting point is 00:08:56 When you come back from doing a fast and you go into Hollywood meetings, and it's 10 o'clock, and they have bagels and donuts, and you say, who's hungry right now? Why have this food? Who came to the meeting going, wow, I'm wicked hungry? Wait, you go to Hollywood meetings at 10 a.m.? I have, I have.
Starting point is 00:09:16 Recently? Even though they know, no, but I mean, a few years ago. I was just gonna say. I'm from Vegas, so I'm not really supposed to be up before noon. Right. What time do you get up? I usually get up actually about 10. I was just gonna say... I'm from Vegas, so I'm not really supposed to be up before noon. Right. What time do you get up? I usually get up actually about 10, nine or 10.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Because I go to sleep about two. So how many years have you been at the Rio? I should interject here, because you might be interested. The longest running headliners in Vegas history. Fuck you, Sinatra. Um, we have now gone, uh... I only say that because he's dead, 23 years we've been playing. Conveniently named Pennatella Theater.
Starting point is 00:09:54 Right, I've been to it. Do you remember that I did a trick with you guys? Yeah. What was that for? It's funny because I don't know what year this is, I'm guessing the 90s? Yep. Okay.
Starting point is 00:10:07 We've been on Sin City Spectacular. Okay. And we called in a favor. I remember, I was happy to do it. I was honored. The name of the trick was blood from a stone. Oh yeah, yeah, with the hand. And I remember, what?
Starting point is 00:10:21 Into the hand, the razor into the hand, yeah. No, there was a stone. Yeah, but it turned into a faux expose that had people cutting their hand. I don't specifically remember that. I don't remember much. Of course, it's the 90s, I'm a pothead. But what I do remember, I remember the name of the trick,
Starting point is 00:10:40 blood from a stone, and I also remember afterwards thinking, oh my God, that's so cheap when you get up close to it. Well, thank you. Like, really, this is what's, fooling all these people, it was just like a magic shop rock. Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:01 That was the first part. There was a second part we paid off. Okay. You were the setup. Oh, I was the setup? Yeah. Yeah. That was the first part. There was a second part we paid off. Okay. You were the setup. Oh, I was the setup? Yeah. Okay. There was a payoff later.
Starting point is 00:11:10 But yeah. It buried all, you know, we have, we do fool us, so we have to come up with 20 new tricks a year. Right. And most magicians do 25 in their lives. So we are writing a lot of material. And it's really fun.
Starting point is 00:11:27 You know, I'm now- I bet you that's fun because that's new. Yeah. What I can't wrap my mind around is the amount of shows you do. Like, I couldn't do that. Like- We do a lot of shows.
Starting point is 00:11:39 Do you do two a night? No, not anymore. We're doing, but we also go on the road in between. But how many weeks a year? Well, 52 if also go on the road. But how many weeks a year? Well, 52 if you count on the road. Like for instance, next year. What, you never take a week off? No.
Starting point is 00:11:51 Next year we'll be doing Australia and England. It's the 50th anniversary. Oh my God. But I don't, I take a day or two off every two or three years. I just love to work. Humans are so different. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:09 I mean, the thing, I mean, just the, you're not bored if you're doing the same act? I don't do the same act. We have, we do different stuff on the road than we do in Vegas. We put different tricks in it. So from Thursday to Friday, it's a different show? This week it will be way different, yeah,
Starting point is 00:12:25 from Thursday to Friday. But you just happened to get lucky on that question. The best living magician is a man named Juan Temeriz, who's from Spain. And we have a bit in the show called The Spaniol, which we wrote with a great Spanish magician named Hondro. And he's a student of Juan Temeris. So we were gonna pull that out of the show
Starting point is 00:12:48 and a bunch of other stuff to put new stuff in. But Juan's coming from Madrid to see our show, so we're keeping him the stuff we want him to see. That may be unprofessional to say, tonight's show is for this guy. And your partner feels the same way about all this work, or are you dragging him? No, he's happy to do it too? Yeah, we intend to die in office. It was for this guy. And your partner feels the same way about all this work, or are you dragging him?
Starting point is 00:13:05 He's happy to do it too? Yeah, we intend to die in office. We have no plans of retiring. I mean, Teller is seven years older than me. So I am three score and nine, and he's 76. Three score. Now, for the kids out there, I can only explain this to you
Starting point is 00:13:27 in terms of the Gettysburg Address. Kids, you remember four score in seven years ago? That's 87 years. That was the time for the American Revolution to the Gettysburg Address. Score means a period of 20 years. And only people who are three score or older would ever use it.
Starting point is 00:13:46 And certainly not to get laid, but... No, no. No, but you're married, right? Yeah, I believe we're... Well, you've been married. I've been buried, oh geez, I don't, 20 years. 20, a score. We have two children.
Starting point is 00:14:01 We have two children who are 19 and 18. You like them? I do. Okay. I do, and that's fortunate. Although I will tell you that there isn't a study that will tell you that I'm happier than you because of having children.
Starting point is 00:14:17 Wait. They all say the opposite. What do the studies say, that you're happier if you have children? No. Oh, that if you don't? No. Well, first of all, it's so stupid.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Because we're all individuals. What makes me happy isn't what makes you happy. So we're comparing apples with not even another type of fruit. What'd you call me? Well, again, I've heard rumors. Yeah, well, they're all true. Right. What were you, like a gay when I'm drunk kind of guy?
Starting point is 00:14:45 I've never been drunk, you know that. Oh, that's right. I'm stronger drunk. So what was your excuse? Full moon? You know, that's one of the things that these two people have differently. I don't even drink caffeine.
Starting point is 00:15:00 Right. I've never had a puff of marijuana. I don't think that's true for you. Well, you're gonna get one tonight. And, you know, I don't drink alcohol. But I have had, you know, what they referred to as medicinal drugs like morphine and stuff when I was wicked sick. And I gotta tell you, I really enjoyed it.
Starting point is 00:15:24 Morphine, of course. And a matter of fact... It's opium. You know Trey Parker. Well, now I don't know him, but I know who he is. Well, Trey used to say, probably still does, I haven't talked to him in a while, that my biggest flaw was never being high. You personally? Oh, I see.
Starting point is 00:15:44 Yeah. So he said he wanted to be moving, but I was high. So, I had gone to the dentist, and they had made a mistake and given me, uh, much more than they should have of, like, some powerful painkiller. Good for them. So, I said to, um, my wife, I said, call Trey Parker. -♪ he flew in and spent an evening
Starting point is 00:16:10 talking to me and said, I was right. You're a lot better high. Well, look, some people literally are better high. I think I am in some areas. I love to write high. Stand up, I can do high and often have. Real time, no. That would be a disaster. That's not the kind of thing you wanna be high for. There's too many elements going on, too many important people, gotta keep the clock.
Starting point is 00:16:35 I'm more on a big network. It's not the same thing. In this show, I can go, oh, what were we talking about? Or, you know, fuck you, or, you know, are you gay? Whatever it is, just, I'm not gonna, that's just a different kind of thing. High is right for something. I've never been an everyday smoker.
Starting point is 00:16:53 I've said this many times, I'm a situational smoker. And that's how I know it sounds counterintuitive to say, I'm not addictive to marijuana, I could have quit any time in the last 45 years that I've been smoking it and I just didn't. But it's actually kind of true. I think it is true. Like when I do the fast, I don't miss it.
Starting point is 00:17:11 It's like I know I'm not gonna smoke during a fast or on a Tuesday night or whatever night I'm not smoking and my body doesn't go, come on, let's do this. When I was on cigarettes, my body was saying, come on, let's do this. There's very little evidence of addictive qualities of marijuana by almost any definition. You know, I'm someone who doesn't smoke marijuana
Starting point is 00:17:33 who has been on the cover of High Times Magazine. Well, that's it. I have been very, very pro legalization of everything. Because I just think that if you don't have the freedom to smoke dope, I don't really have the freedom not to. Right. And I think if we ask most men on the street, women on the street, whoever trends on the street,
Starting point is 00:17:59 I don't wanna leave anybody out. Whoever happens to be on the street. Any life form on the street, pendulet, first they would say magic, and of course they know that. Second, I think they would say is libertarian. Yeah, which faded a little bit for me. I got that tag too.
Starting point is 00:18:15 And look, I think we're probably similar on this. Some things I am libertarian about. Sure. Where it makes sense. You once said to me, I think, that libertarians were, you know, conservatives who wanted to smoke dope. Some of them are. Yeah. And the formal party...
Starting point is 00:18:38 That has come to be more true. The formal party takes it too far. Like the actual libertarian party. And also, they're the ones who I think of saying, you know, uh, seat belts? No. They restrict my freedom, and I want to soar like an eagle right through the windshield.
Starting point is 00:18:54 Oh, the other thing is that, uh, for me, uh, a lot of what gets forgotten is the responsibility. Libertarianism only really works if people are taking a lot of what gets forgotten is the responsibility. Libertarianism only really works if people are taking more responsibility than many people want. And the fact that I seem to want responsibility, you know, it's that mistake that's made
Starting point is 00:19:22 with the do unto others thing that we've been hitting again and again. I cannot treat you like I wanna be treated because you want different things, you know? And that is the problem with extrapolating from your own desires that everybody else wants. I don't understand that. Of course you can treat me like,
Starting point is 00:19:43 we're talking about things we have in common, like we treat each other like I'm polite to you. Of course. But I can't use the solipsism of thinking that you have the same desires I have. No. And that's what makes the world go round. What I'm saying is a good thing. It is a good thing.
Starting point is 00:20:03 Because we all, or else we'd all be competing more so for the same things. I mean we are already competing for a lot you know people I mean this is a capitalist society we're all trying to get ahead and get rich and or die trying and but at least we're not competing like on other levels like for pot and liquor and women. That's all you meant. That's all you meant. Right.
Starting point is 00:20:29 I mean, I think the marriage, not marriage thing, is to me the clearest divide as to how people are just built differently and have different DNA and different needs. Part of it is psychological, of course. Part of it is physical. Some people just have a very high libido. But I was very anti-marriage, as was my wife,
Starting point is 00:20:51 which is an odd thing to say. And I did not think that the solution was gay marriage. I thought the solution was no marriage for anybody, make contracts. But we talked to several lawyers, and we couldn't get anybody to tell me 100% that if we had children and my wife died, custody would go to me.
Starting point is 00:21:14 I see. And we tried to write up an elaborate contract that would do that, and the lawyers finally said, get married. Save yourself some money. Because we, I think that all the stuff that comes with marriage and saying that there's one way or a broad way that people interact with each other is madness, it's insane.
Starting point is 00:21:39 But they've put up so many roadblocks because I would not want, and I trust my wife's family completely, But they've put up so many roadblocks because I would not want, and I trust my wife's family completely, but I don't wanna be in the situation where she would have a car accident. Of course, this is now academic question because my children are over 18.
Starting point is 00:21:57 But when they were 10, my wife has a car accident and someone in her family decides to take me to court over custody, I don't want that to happen. And when you're married, there's no doubt, you're the father in sin. Boy, you think about this more than Biden. I mean, Club Random is brought to you
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Starting point is 00:26:19 I can't watch Bill's show. My closest friend, as you may know, is Lawrence O'Donnell. And I would watch his show. You did not know that. And I would watch his show. You did not know that. And I wrote to Lawrence and I said, I gotta stop watching the news, and that includes your show. And I said, make me one promise, Lawrence.
Starting point is 00:26:39 If things change enough that I should vote for Trump, send me a text. Ha-ha-ha! Other than that, I'm not watching the news. So I'm a little bit self-conscious, because I used to have a pretty good idea what was going on. But you should see the clip from Friday of Jiminy Glick on MyShow. OK.
Starting point is 00:26:54 He will die. I'm just sitting there. I'm just the prop. But you know Jiminy Glick. I mean, he did it for me, and it was just, I mean, I've never had reaction like that. It's really, I mean, he's just a genius. He is, absolutely is.
Starting point is 00:27:08 But you're not the only one. I mean, Sam Harris famously got off Twitter about a year ago. Yeah, so did I. And talked about that and said, like, he was so much more clear after that. Like, you couldn't. It's really remarkable.
Starting point is 00:27:22 I mean, I don't get it because, like, I wanna say to these very smart people, like, you can, I mean, I don't get it because like, I wanna say to these very smart people like you and him, why did you ever go down this stupid rabbit hole to begin with? I'm not a genius, but I saw from a mile away that this is a stupid thing to do, to engage with the whole world on everybody's complaints, 24-7, really, you thought that was a, of course.
Starting point is 00:27:42 But also there's this other thing that's happened, I believe, and maybe this is simply getting old, and I... that's a possibility. And if that's the answer, then that's the answer. But I believe that some people were talking about issues in our lifetime. And I believe that now it's become nothing but team sports. Well, it is. And I would watch Lawrence O'Donnell and go,
Starting point is 00:28:07 how's Trump doing? Is he going to be OK with it? And I just can't do that. Yeah, but to be fair, that's not what I'm doing. That is not what I'm doing. And the reason why my show and my career in general are doing better than ever, my book went to number one, is because I'm not doing that.
Starting point is 00:28:23 Yeah. Because I'm the one. I'm'm not gonna say the one guy, I don't monitor everybody else, but people come up to me all the time and say it to me, you are the one guy who is not playing this partisan game. You are, I get that you're center left, but you are not afraid to go after, right. You never have.
Starting point is 00:28:42 You are not afraid to go after the left. As the person who was on the first week and the last week of politically incorrect. Is that right? Yeah. Really? I'm the one who was on both. Oh my God. You knew it at the time.
Starting point is 00:28:50 Did you get, Smilkos, when you saw the sign behind you there when you walked in? Yes, I will tell you. Isn't that a perfect spot? Yes. I mean, and you had to put a stripper pole in front of it. I tell you my favorite Bill Maher story. Oh please, because I love him. I was on and you had to put a stripper pole in front of it. May I tell you my favorite Bill Maher story?
Starting point is 00:29:07 Oh, please. Because I love him. I was on Politically Incorrect. And they were the seats there. I don't know. Yeah, 90s. Long time ago. And there was your seat.
Starting point is 00:29:19 And for some reason, this didn't often happen, but it was just the two of us on the set. And I had the list of the people who were on with me. And I forgot who it was. It was some... drug czar for Clinton and someone else. And so it sounds, you know, it was these people. And I said to you, and it was probably... Bless the sitcom actor.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Yeah, it was probably your kindest moment in your life. I looked at it, I mean, I was sincere your kindest moment in your life. I looked at it, I mean, I was sincere. I was not setting up for a joke. I said, this is a weird list, Bill, because you always have one nut. You have one person, the nut chair, and you always know who the nut is. And you went... That's all you did?
Starting point is 00:30:02 And I went, oh, it's me. And you went, well, you know, we have all different people on. And I said, I'm in the nut chair. And then you kind of looked at me like, you always are, Penn. You're always in the nut chair. That's hysterical.
Starting point is 00:30:19 But your look is a look that they've never seen Bill Maher give, which was the look of, I'm kind, I care for you, but there's a truth I have to tell you that might be a little tough. Well, I was more fond of the nut chair. I didn't even know we had one, but yes. Yeah, now it's coming back to me, right? I mean, I wouldn't call it nut, but like somebody,
Starting point is 00:30:42 of course, the nut chair was where you were probably going to get the lion's share of the good stuff that came out of the show, because the nut chair is somebody who is voluble and probably interesting with unpredictable ideas, and that's what I always wanted. And that was the, you know, I always say about political inquiry, it was a designed train wreck of four different people who have nothing in common,
Starting point is 00:31:08 but we all get to vote, so we should all get to talk. And there were some people who were on that show, like musicians, a couple of them. I won't say the names, I think I can remember at least one of them, who sat there for four segments and said nothing. Like they just had a good seat for the show. They did. Like, they just had a good seat for the show. They did.
Starting point is 00:31:26 Like, the whole show went by, and they did not make a word come out of their mouth. The only show... And I did your show a bunch of times. The only show that I shouldn't have done and I didn't enjoy was right after my mom died. And this is not your fault. I was on the show with a psychic who talked to the dead.
Starting point is 00:31:51 And it was the one time I've been on your show that I couldn't mitigate my grief and my anger. Wow. And my outrage, I couldn't temper with any sort of comedy. And I remember after this show... Because you thought he was a phony? No, I'm asking. That's it. Because you're the musician. But also, but the point was that my mom had just died. So I had no, I should have called up and said, my mom died two weeks ago,
Starting point is 00:32:25 I shouldn't be on your comedy show talking about life after death. And afterwards you just went, yeah, your mom just died. I'm so glad we got onto this because you're the guy to ask about this. All acts who do like a psychic thing, they're all phony. Is that what you're saying? I have. Because sometimes, I don't, I guess. All acts who do like a psychic thing, they're all phony. Is that what you're saying?
Starting point is 00:32:45 I have. Because sometimes, I don't, I, I, I have, I have looked very, very hard, sincerely trying to find something that seems supernatural and I haven't been able to. Meaning? And that's as far as you're gonna get out of me. Every single person that I've experienced has been phony.
Starting point is 00:33:06 OK. And every single person. I don't know the name of this guy. And I don't see this a lot because I don't seek it out. I do seek it out. OK. That's why I'm asking you. OK.
Starting point is 00:33:18 Barbara Streisand. I don't know if she's. I think she exists. Oh, yes. And is a very good friend of mine. And I love her dearly. And she may be right. I don't know if she's... I think she exists. Oh, yes. And is a very good friend of mine. Mm-hmm. And I love her dearly. And she may be right. I don't know. That's why...
Starting point is 00:33:29 To love you? Well, she's definitely right to love me. Um, but she has someone who comes out in her act, at least when I saw her the last time live. And this is going back, you know, not that long, but maybe eight years. Uh, and it's somebody she presents in the middle of her show who does a psychic act and does things, you know, like somebody in the audience.
Starting point is 00:33:55 And you can tell when someone is not a plant in the audience. No one is that good an actor. I agree with you on that. Okay. So, I mean, and then, you know, writes on a whiteboard the name of their high school boyfriend or whatever it is that is like, it's like, no, I know I don't know how magic tricks work, so I'm saying maybe there is a way, but it is befuddling to me how someone could do that trick.
Starting point is 00:34:23 What could possibly be the means by which you get into this person's head. You just described a trick, you just happen to have. You described a trick that's trivial, that is easy. But there are other ones that are harder. Easy? How do you do it? Well, I don't know. First of all, I wouldn't necessarily be right.
Starting point is 00:34:44 And that's what makes me hesitant. I'm not protecting magic secrets. But whenever you postulate this is how a trick was done, you could be wrong, because I don't know all the details. But you can. It's pretty easy to get information off a whiteboard. It's pretty easy to get information off a chalkboard. If you write something down, I know it. No, but he's, I don't understand, he's writing it down. Oh, he's writing it down.
Starting point is 00:35:09 He's writing it down. He's saying, he's talking to somebody in the audience who just, again, unless they're the most brilliant actor or actors in the world, I don't see acting. I see, no, I've never met you before, and you know, and then I'm writing something down that is in your head that only you would know. I would imagine they're telling the truth on everything.
Starting point is 00:35:34 What's, who's telling us, what do you mean? I would imagine the person in the audience is telling the truth, as you said. I'm agreeing with you. Yeah. So you have to, different volume. Yeah, the person is blown away. Yeah, they're destroyed.
Starting point is 00:35:43 Rob Schminckis was my eyes go. Or the guy got the name wrong by one letter or something. And it's like, come on. I just, I can't explain it. I can. Please. But it takes a long time. There's a thing called pre-show work, which
Starting point is 00:36:02 is much more brilliant than you think it would be. And there's also something called dual reality, which is really, really important. If I'm doing a trick for you and the audience is watching, if I do a trick that will blow you away and you're amazed, it may be a different trick than what the audience thinks it is. I don't see this as a trick. A trick involves a prop, like blood from a stone.
Starting point is 00:36:31 No. Okay. No. This is just mental telepathy. But you're making, you're making, I think... I don't know. You're making a mistake that is pretty important. While you were going to college,
Starting point is 00:36:52 while you were doing all the things you were doing, learning to be funny, learning to write jokes, learning to deliver jokes, other people were working on other things. I will bump into doctors. Yeah, I just don't get the infrastructure, the college you go to, to learn how you could ever learn how to do that.
Starting point is 00:37:11 I'm sorry, but maybe if... I do know. If you want to learn to do that, I can point you where you need to go. Just give me a little something to hang it on. Like, again, a person the guy has never met. What you're asking me to do, Bill, is you're asking me to tell you in 2 and 1 half minutes
Starting point is 00:37:30 how to go out and do an hour stand up show. No. It's not the same. It is exactly the same. No, because I know how my stand up act got in my head. I want to know how what's in that lady's head in the audience. If you to know how... What's in that lady's head in the audience? If you can control the question,
Starting point is 00:37:48 you don't have to worry about the answer. They're making you... If it's Rob Schminckis? If it's that specific? They're making you ask a different question, which is how they got in that head. And that's... They've already lost the bat. What I'm saying is, maybe, maybe,
Starting point is 00:38:07 the only time this has ever happened, happened when you saw it with Barbra Streisand. I'm just saying I've seen that same effect, and I've seen. Yeah, because it's another guy who has this, if this is what it is. But it's not. Well, you say it's not, but you're not giving me anything. But you say it is, and you're not giving me anything. I'm not saying it is. But it's not. Well you say it's not, but you're not giving me anything. But you say it is, and you're not giving me anything.
Starting point is 00:38:26 I'm not saying it is. Okay, good. I'm saying my mind is open, which I'm sure is some disappointment to some people who are like, well Bill you made religious, I thought you were like logical. I am logical. That means, and religious by the way, I don't say there is no God, I say I preach the gospel of I don't know, I don't think there is. The most important three words in science, I don't say, there is no God. I say, I preach the gospel of I don't know. I don't think there is. The most important three words in science, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:38:49 I don't know, exactly. And that is what makes science. Before science starts, I don't know is never said. Kings don't say I don't know. Religious figures don't say I don't know. I don't know are the three words of the key to everything. Absolutely. And that's the brilliant thing about you
Starting point is 00:39:05 dealing with religion. And that is, by the way, what atheists say. Right. But like, I don't know how this guy does this trick. And again, maybe are we sure? Or should we clear out what he's? Now again, I'm remembering this from like eight years ago and very vaguely.
Starting point is 00:39:21 But he is on stage with a whiteboard. He talks to someone in the audience, hi, we never met, absolutely not, I'm convinced of that. And you've been feeling whatever lately, okay, anybody could be, I'm getting a, it's about a friend, yes, it's a male, yes, high school, yes, and then he writes the name down. I mean, I don't know I don't know where he's where this trail the begins for him
Starting point is 00:39:49 The you're not helping me with that the fact that you don't know How something happens does not make it supernatural. I agree explain a refrigerator works that I could go I absolutely could study up and you can study up and learn this too. I took physics for poets my sophomore year in college, and by the end of the term there was one great shining day when I could derive for you E equals MC squared. It took the whole semester to get there, but I understood it as we did it. I couldn't remember one thing about it now. Let me tell you something that might illuminate this
Starting point is 00:40:30 that I do know, because I wasn't there and I can't talk you through it. I don't know who it was. But I can tell you this. There was faith healers who were doing a lot of faith healing. And there was one trick they were doing, and I will use that word, that amazing Randy, you know, my dear friend of mine,
Starting point is 00:40:46 the great debunker, could not figure out, no idea how to figure it out. And that was the healing people in wheelchairs. Get people up on stage with wheelchairs. He would say, get up, dance. Well, that's the power of, I mean, like. No, I'm gonna tell you the trick. I'm trying to explain it to you.
Starting point is 00:41:04 When you arrive at the theater, they had 50, 25 non-matching wheelchairs. And when someone came in who was limping or with a cane or their family was helping them, a very, very nice person said to them, would you like to sit in a wheelchair? Would that make it easier? And they wheeled them down toward the front. And when it came time to heal, all the things you say about the world. The world is full of charlatans, we agree. And much of this would be charlatans.
Starting point is 00:41:43 But that works because nothing is lying, right? Had you ever danced like that before? I was gonna fill the, throw that wheelchair away. Do you need that wheelchair? No, I don't. I can't, but that's, okay, but it's a very different thing. Yes, that exists in the world. It has nothing to do with the thing I presented.
Starting point is 00:41:58 Yes, it is. It's exactly the same. No, it's not. It's not at all. Let me tell you. It's not, that's a cheap trick that is understandable, and the other thing is not understandable. To you! To you!
Starting point is 00:42:11 Well, if it is to you, again, you're giving zero out. Okay, let me give you more. And maybe that's because you're protecting the magic. You want more? You want more? But again, I don't think it's really a magic trick. But it is, and I can tell you more. Tell me how he... Yeah me how he does it. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:28 He has never met that person before. Right. Ever. One way you could do that, that gives you the exact effect you're talking about, is for a nice usher to say to people, you know that the psychic's gonna be performing tonight. What kinds of things are you concerned about? And you're done.
Starting point is 00:42:50 And it works. And they will never, ever admit that because it's not part of their reality, because they have... Down to the boyfriend-specific name. Yes. Yes. Okay, I feel like he would have gotten busted by that. Like the lady would have seen.
Starting point is 00:43:07 The magician. The psychic guy. Who's going to bust him? The girl who said. She believes it. OK, but she could, if it was me, I would have said after the show to somebody, oh, well, you know, I did tell that to the usher.
Starting point is 00:43:21 And what does the forum you say that on? I don't know, Penn. There's no place anyone could put out material these days if you only had some sort of internet or some sort of social media where you could. And it would be out there. And it is out there. I've never seen.
Starting point is 00:43:40 No, you haven't looked for it. That's true. I haven't looked for it. You believed it. OK, maybe. You can find these people busted everywhere. Maybe that's right. But I'm not saying that's't looked for it. That's true. I haven't looked for it. OK, maybe. You can find these people busted everywhere. Maybe that's right. But I'm not saying that's how they did it,
Starting point is 00:43:49 because there's a bunch of other ways. OK. Yeah. OK, but at least you gave me something. What you're saying to me is he does need some confederate. Not necessarily, but in this particular story, yes. I don't see how I, you have, okay. You can also do, for instance,
Starting point is 00:44:10 you can also do people filling out forms that they keep with them. That's a very common thing. Filling out forms? You can just say to somebody, to help focus your thoughts, write it down this piece of paper, don't let me see it, cover it up.
Starting point is 00:44:26 I'm never gonna look at that, keep that in your pocket, hold it close to your heart, and you're done. What about, okay, let's move on to ghosts. Goats? There's the fainting goats that I... Now, I know many very intelligent people who are not religious. Why do you say intelligent in this at all?
Starting point is 00:44:47 That doesn't mean anything. Because, well, okay, well, because they are. But anybody can make a mistake. Okay, let me get to the question. Okay, let me get to the answer. So, I mean, there are many people over the years who, again, not drunk, not stupid, have some sort of experience with what you would call a ghost. Like they moved into a house and it would be an odor or a little rush of air would
Starting point is 00:45:20 go past them. Certainly there are places who people who say they see furniture move across the room, you know, the comedy story supposedly haunted and that. What's that? I have no idea. But why are you jumping? I'm not jumping. I'm asking. But if you take take take ghost out of that and tell me that someone went into their home and their furniture moved,
Starting point is 00:45:48 why are you giving an explanation? Why aren't you stopping it? I don't know. I am saying I don't know. Okay, then we're done, right? When you say people have seen ghosts, you're making this jump. Well, they've seen, they have some sort of experience.
Starting point is 00:46:03 Sometimes it is visual, but I've certainly heard it more to be like something like a brief brush. I mean, I know some of them once said they moved into an apartment and they would feel this odd. And it wasn't, and very often these presences don't seem to be particularly malevolent. They just live there and she said, one day she just went, get the fuck outta here.
Starting point is 00:46:30 And she yelled at the ghost and she never felt it again. I don't know. But see, the problem is your question contains the assumption. If you say to me, someone's feeling something rubbing against their head, they felt when they moved in this apartment, they felt it over and over again, they yelled, get the fuck out of here,
Starting point is 00:46:47 and you say, why did that happen? And I say, I don't know. You're the one who said that was a ghost thing. I'm just saying, let's call it phenomenon. No, let's call it, there's a- There's a phenomenon that the vernacular would be ghost, some sort of spirit, some sort of something. I personally have never experienced any...
Starting point is 00:47:10 But you're also clumping those things together. I'm just saying it's odd to me that people who are otherwise, let's use that proviso for you, otherwise intelligent. And under cross-examination, we'll tell you, I know I wasn't dreaming, I know I wasn't, and I certainly wasn't drunk, and it's, was it, is it a hallucination? No, there's nothing, there's nothing you're saying that I disagree with, even slightly. And if you say, can you explain these, my answer is no. If you say, can anyone explain this? My answer is no.
Starting point is 00:47:48 My only moment is when you say, well, then it was a ghost. How about you say, well, then we don't know. And then we're done. That's all I know. When I go, I don't know if I want to be cremated, because if they could keep your something around, they could maybe bring you back with AI in the future. Not that maybe that wouldn't be.
Starting point is 00:48:11 Although you're trivial on AI, they've got plenty of you talking recorded. They've got what? They've got plenty recorded of you talking. So they don't need me? They don't need you. They can do an AI dom Bill Maher, like that. You know, we're doing an AI of Gilbert Gottfried
Starting point is 00:48:29 that we've been playing around with. It's pretty fast. That's his painting there. I know. He sees, you know, I miss him all the time. That was Jerry. That was Scott Carter got that for me from the Jerry Lewis telethon.
Starting point is 00:48:41 That was outside Jerry's door. Isn't that awesome, Jerry? And it's certainly true. It's so Jerry. He needed time to dress, think, and rest. There's just no doubt that he did. He needed more time to dress, think, and rest than the rest. It's so Vegas. Not that I don't.
Starting point is 00:48:59 I was just there. Did you ever do the telephone? Yes. And I have to tell you, I probably shouldn't even say this because I could probably get canceled, but okay, my opening joke was that I parked in the handicap spot. It could have all ended for me that night.
Starting point is 00:49:19 I mean, it was like. Well, it has all ended for you three times. And you still keep coming back. I know, but talk about... Well, it has all ended for you three times, and you still keep coming back. Yeah, I know, but talk about... I don't know, if you...charitably you would say balls, uncharitably you would say, what a fucking idiot. I mean, talk about not reading the room. And it's also...those two things are often indistinguishable.
Starting point is 00:49:40 What? Balls? Oh, absolutely. Yes, yes. No, absolutely. It just depends who Oh, absolutely, yes, yes. No, absolutely. It just depends who has to be talking at that moment. And how it's taken.
Starting point is 00:49:49 Jerry, I mean, he could have been worse, but I just figured like everyone's always sort of tiptoeing around them. You know, just they probably want to laugh too. I was wrong about that. But that's what I figured. Sure, sure. That's the thinking. That was the thinking that went into it. And then I saw a ghost.
Starting point is 00:50:12 No. Riverside Theater in Milwaukee, July 26, the MGM Musical at Fenway, Boston, Massachusetts, July 27 at the Toyota Oakdale Theater in Wallingford, Connecticut. Come out and see me and laugh your ass off. It's really interesting to feel evolutionary love. Such a great way to put it. I've never heard it that way. That really, I mean, I get it. It's just not moving the needle on me. But but I did such a great way to put it. There's no reason you need to have evolutionary love. Right. You are. It's not
Starting point is 00:50:56 a decision. I get it. And that's fascinating. You mean you're compelled to do it. It's a calling. Well, no, it's just it's like hunger. There's no control over it. You care about these beings a tremendous amount. Right. Well, because they're, as you say, evolutionary. They're an extension of you in a way no other person can be. Right. And we would not have survived this far
Starting point is 00:51:19 if our children were able to get us to kill them. If what? If our children were able to get us to kill them, If what? If our children were able to get us to kill them, we would not be here. Because they're so annoying? Yeah. I mean, they try. They try, and we have this love built into us that we can't control.
Starting point is 00:51:36 Right. But believe me, if we could control it, it would be the end of the race. Because they're that annoying? Sure. Of course, I agree. That's why I don't have them. My hat is off to any parent today, really,
Starting point is 00:51:52 because I think it's never been harder because you're not allowed to boss them around the way, and you should be able to boss around children because there's children, because they're just stupid. Well, I'll just tell you, if you want really clear advice on raising children, you have to talk to someone who doesn't have children. Really?
Starting point is 00:52:13 You have to. Because anyone that has children. Talk to me. That's what I'm saying. You were just giving advice. And I was commenting on that by saying, the fact that you have an understanding means you don't have children.
Starting point is 00:52:24 People that have children go, ah, ah, ah. Well, the polling always says, and it's kind of depressing, but it does say, what people say, at least Americans say, is I love my children, but if I had to do it over again, I wouldn't, which I feel is kind of an indictment on your love of your children. There's no doubt about it. It's a very, very complex situation. I think that's more of a comment on Americans or, you know, we are such a successful civilization for all the problems we have and the complaining that goes on, and I understand a lot of it,
Starting point is 00:53:06 but a lot of it is just a lack of historical perspective at how bad things could be, how bad, how much worse they were for almost everybody who ever lived. Well, you just fell into that trap when you said it's harder to raise children now. It was harder with polio. It was, but harder in the sense
Starting point is 00:53:24 that people just expected it to be hard. Also, the staff. And now people have children, they're like, oh my God, I can't go to the club? I've got this mule-ing brat that I have to take care of? I think a lot of it is that, life got so cushy. And children interrupt that. Children do interrupt that.
Starting point is 00:53:44 It's interesting that you have a lot of people And children interrupt that. Children, children, children do interrupt that. It's interesting that you have this complete love, and yet it's a difficult task. It's a very difficult task. It is. And you've made the decision, for whatever reason, that you want to take on this task, and that responsibility is overwhelming and crushing.
Starting point is 00:54:10 And I think that when you start to realize that, you're going to have moments, especially when the pollster is interrupting you, going, yeah, I wish I didn't have you, fuck, fuck it. You know? Because there's a lot of parenting that has been going up here. Right, I'm sure there is.
Starting point is 00:54:27 And that's okay, you know, we choose all the time to have life experiences that are hard. So you must feel awesome now because you're almost at the end of the. Well, no, I have friends who have children that are 40 years old and it's still hard, you know. Well, that's bad parenting then. Yeah, sure.
Starting point is 00:54:47 They should, you gotta prepare them. But here's the thing, Bill, this was an argument. One of the things that Americans have done is turn having children into a narcissistic experience. Because you think, even when you said that's bad parenting, my responsibility for my children is keeping them alive, feeding them, and loving them. Beyond that, I have very little control.
Starting point is 00:55:17 And this argument, it's poetic, it's not a deep intellectual argument. This argument changed my whole view on everything. If parents are so important to their children, why don't immigrants' children have accents? Say that again. When someone comes over here, first-generation American, their children are born, they have heavy accents, they don't speak English well, the children do not have accents. And yet they're learning the language from their parents,
Starting point is 00:55:48 supposedly they're learning all the words from their parents, and yet it is not the parents. But they're also in American society, they go to school. So the, by point. They get both, they're bilingual. My point is, no they're not all bilingual. Most second generation are, because again, as you say,
Starting point is 00:56:04 they hear the old language, this is Italian, everybody in the home from the parents. They don't have the accents. And that really shows you how important society is. And so, you know, they did huge, a lot of information on Dylan Fleabal, Colorado school shooters. Trenchcoat murderers in the very, Columbine, the very first school shooting.
Starting point is 00:56:35 Yeah, not actually, but yes, the one we know about and the one we talk about. And they've done a lot of research and those parents were really good. They were really good parents. Everything we heard about the Columbine school shooting was wrong at first. Like they were not unpopular.
Starting point is 00:56:56 Right. You know, it was, it's much more of a befuddlement why they did that. Well, that's, the fact is, anyone that says anything about school shooters we know is lying because we don't have enough data points. If you have 100 people out of a sample of 350 million, you can't know anything. The brain is just not in a good place when you're that age.
Starting point is 00:57:27 It's just, it's amazing more shit doesn't happen. Well, I'll tell you something. You're so stupid. And I think that's just what that is. They just, you know, weren't really like thinking ahead. That's it. Really, I mean, it is amazing. And women, of course, much better at this.
Starting point is 00:57:49 Much better. Like, the difference between a woman of 19, 20, 21, and 25 is night and day. And believe me, I know. I've done extensive research on this. Whereas for a man, 20 to 25, almost the same idiot. Almost. And even up to much higher years, I hate to admit. But truly.
Starting point is 00:58:12 And we can also speak not only of statistics, but also of personal experience. Oh, I mean. I mean, I was. I need to. I still am, but I was quite a knucklehead. Me, we all must, I certainly know I was. And for many years past when you think,
Starting point is 00:58:30 oh, you should be mature by then. I mean, I remember being, I was in a long, the longest relationship I've had in my mid-30s. And when I got out of it, I was 37. And I remember thinking, oh gosh, I'm too old to date. It was like, no, you're not even ready to date. You're just still such a dick. Not a dick, but just doing stupid things.
Starting point is 00:59:00 Just still not really getting how to be around women in the best way for them. But also you have, you know, as a friend of mine said, no matter how bad high school was for you, when you go through it the second time with your children, it's worse. Really? Yeah, it's a really tough time. I mean, as much as you remember how tough 17 and 18 were.
Starting point is 00:59:25 It can't be anything like it when we were in high school because there was no social media, there was no phones. But that doesn't... That has to change everything. Everything. But the angst is what's causing it, what you think is causing it changes. But it's a tough time to be a human being. Oh, I had so much more anxiety from, say, well, from birth to, you know, I don't know, mid-20s.
Starting point is 01:00:01 Just, but especially school. There was no day where I didn't go off to school without a knot in my stomach, I seem to remember. High school, grade school, you know, just if you're not like one of the cool, you know. And yet we find out as we grew up and when you talked to those cool ones, they weren't having a good time either. I don't know about that.
Starting point is 01:00:23 I think the cool kids in my school were having a great time because they were the cool kids. I mean? I don't know about that. I think the cool kids in my school were having a great time because they were the cool kids. I mean, I don't know how they got there. I guess some of it was they were better looking, or I don't know, they're just richer. No one better looking than you, Bill. Richer.
Starting point is 01:00:38 What made some sort of confidence that just human beings just sort of sense and they make that the alpha. Certainly I didn't have that. I had no confidence, super shy, and just trying to survive, and sometimes not. But the cool kids, I think they were eating it up. I mean, they should have been.
Starting point is 01:01:00 I don't know. What were you in high school? Were you not the, what group were you in? The nuts? I don't know what I was in high school. I was in, you know, I was quite, I had the longest hair. I was the goofiest. And I was also, the worst thing you could be in high school, I was a juggler.
Starting point is 01:01:21 You were in the nut chair. I was in the nut chair. I spent all my time. I wasn't wrong. chair. Yeah, I was in the nut chair. I spent all my time. I wasn't wrong. Yeah. I was in the exact right chair. Were you popular with girls?
Starting point is 01:01:32 Yeah. Yes, listen to that. Well, I wasn't. And if some girl liked me, I was too shy to do anything. I was talking, I'm still friends with my high school girlfriend. We were talking about that, and we were saying. I wish I was. We were'm still friends with my high school girlfriend. We were talking about that and we were saying. I wish I was.
Starting point is 01:01:48 We were saying to each other, we were saying, why was everybody else having trouble getting laid? Really? But we had each other, yeah. Throughout all of high school? Well, no, there were different girlfriends, but you know. Different girlfriends? Oh my God. I had one and when she dumped me,
Starting point is 01:02:05 I've not to this day ever been sadder. To this day. So that's why it's, you know, that brain that you have, it's just your brain is so bad. And you have access to adult things is the problem. So I mean, I feel like I can't, I remember in college. You're pushing back adolescents. I mean, really just 200 years ago, at 15, to be raising a family.
Starting point is 01:02:36 I mean, that's the insane thing. 200 years ago? Yeah. We pushed adolescents back to... Oh, I see. Yes. Oh, God, yes. I mean, we treat people. I mean, we're now gonna directly contradict
Starting point is 01:02:51 what we were just saying before. The other problem is, one problem is, that people stay children until they're 27. The other problem is we treat people like they're children until they're 27. So we're contradicting ourselves, but I think both are true. No, I don't think so.
Starting point is 01:03:10 We indulge it. Yeah, we really indulge it, yeah. We indulge it, and it's not good. It's funny because it's not good for anybody. It ruins the parent's life, because now you gotta worry about, and you should be free after 18 years. And it ruins the kid's' life because they're not able
Starting point is 01:03:27 to function on their own. Funny story about, oh I don't know, six, seven years ago, a young lady I was seeing once said to me, and it just made me laugh out of the chair. She said, we kind of got into a really serious discussion about our passage, she said, I ran away from home when I was 18. I'm so glad you appreciated that.
Starting point is 01:03:52 I said, honey, you cannot run away at 18. You're supposed to be gone by then. And that, I felt like said it all. And of course she said it without irony. I mean, she was gone by then. And that, I felt like said it all. And of course she said it without irony. I mean, she really meant that. I believe I understood this story completely. I don't even need it annotated in the least.
Starting point is 01:04:14 You're so right. And the hint was how hard I laughed at the exact right time. I know. You're right. But, I don't know. I'm glad you're happy. You seem like you're very happy. I'm doing okay, I'm doing all right.
Starting point is 01:04:29 You know, I left, I graduated on a plea bargain from high school. Didn't really graduate. Really? And right after that, I left hitchhiking. And I lived on the street, juggling homeless people I was going to graduate. Really? And right after that, I left hitchhiking. And I lived on the street juggling homeless for two years and called my mom and dad every day.
Starting point is 01:04:55 Called them collect every day. What do you mean living on the street? You had no home? No. I could have gone home to my parents at any moment. Any moment I could have gone. Now that's the difference between our generation. I don't have quite nearly as dramatic a story as that,
Starting point is 01:05:11 but I was miserable when I went off to college. Just wanted to put my tail between my legs and go home every day. I hadn't, I mean, I was ostracized in the dorm. So whatever, it's so funny, I remember going off to college and you're thinking, again, in your stupid brain of 18, you're thinking, oh, I'm going to a completely new place where I can be a completely new person. I was loser in high school.
Starting point is 01:05:41 I'm gonna be James Bond in Ithaca, New York. Because, and there was one kid who was going to Cornell I was a new person. I was loser at high school. I'm gonna be James Bond in Ithaca, New York because... And there was one kid who was going to Cornell from my high school and I thought, I'm going to have to kill him because no one can be at Cornell who knows of my past because now I'm James Bond. And of course you're the same.
Starting point is 01:06:01 You have left nothing. And I mean, I wasn't there a month, and I was ostracized again, which happened in high school. So I was miserable, and I so desperately wanted to get out of there, but I didn't. Because again, not to pat our generation on the back, but the pride of not going back home to the nest was even stronger than the misery.
Starting point is 01:06:24 What was your relationship with your parents like? Fine. And they would have been fine with me. I mean, I think they would have been disappointed. But I just, what I'm saying is we had something in us that was a little sterner, which is funny, because when we were kids, it was like, oh, you kids are so soft.
Starting point is 01:06:42 But compared to these kids today, we're the fucking Marines. Yeah, you know, I used to, it's, I don't even understand it because I was, you know, I was, you know, sleeping in alleys and I was juggling to make money and I was, I didn't have any place I lived. And yet I would call my mom, dad every day and say,
Starting point is 01:07:02 I'm doing great. And they were okay with me doing it. Where did you go to the bathroom? Public restrooms or behind trees. Behind trees? Were you in the city? I was all over this great country first. I hopped trains.
Starting point is 01:07:18 Here's the problem, Bill. Like a hobo? Yes. With a stick and a bundle tied to the end of the stick? I had a backpack from LLB. But I hopped a train. See, here's the thing. I was a huge Bob Dylan fan.
Starting point is 01:07:34 I read about Bob Dylan. That's no excuse. I wanted to be like Bob Dylan. I didn't find out two years. I didn't find out for years later that Bob was lying. When Bob said he worked in the carnival, he was lying. I worked in the carnival. When Bob said he hopped trains, he was lying.
Starting point is 01:07:51 Really? I hopped trains, yeah. So the Bob Dylan, if you take that two years of Bob Dylan's life that talked about in the press releases when his stuff came out, I lived it, not Bob. Bob, Bob was from Hibbing, Minnesota. Well, I like to think of it as you lived it for Bob. For Bob, yeah.
Starting point is 01:08:10 And then I also made Bob not a lie because somebody did it. Wow. So why did Bob lie? Because the story of I grew up in Hibbing from a dad who owned an appliance store and then went to University of Minnesota and dropped out, and then went to New York,
Starting point is 01:08:27 and now I got famous in 15 minutes. You know, because it was instant that he got successful. Wasn't very interesting. Well, also I must say, and again, these are people, let's put this in perspective, I love Dylan, I'm sure you love Bob Dylan, we're not trashing him. I really love John Lennon. There's a picture of him somewhere around here.
Starting point is 01:08:48 But he also had a embroidered history. He's the one who wrote like working class hero. He's a rich guy from Liverpool. He's not rich. Well, he was called, from Liverpool he was. He was richer than the others. Yes, that's what rich means. No it doesn't, I don't think so.
Starting point is 01:09:08 I think rich means rich. You're rich now, you were poor then. No, I mean it was. He was well off in Liverpool. The others were real working class, like the lowest sort of kind of. Paul a little less, Gringo was the lowest. Lowest kind of housing that you could have.
Starting point is 01:09:24 And he had a much more middle class that weren't rich. It was a little cottage house. But yes, it was more like in the suburbs. And he wasn't a working class hero. No. He, there was, you know, Elvis Costello had the wicked line about him and his greats. Was it a millionaire?
Starting point is 01:09:41 Yeah. Was it a millionaire? Oh, you know it. It's an imaginal possession. Yeah, imagine? Oh, you know it from... Imagine No Possession. Yeah, imagine. Wow, you know you're almost Costello. Well, I just, I knew where we were going. You know the song? I do.
Starting point is 01:09:52 What song? What is it called? Oh, the... The Other Side of Summer. Oh, the Other Side of Summer? The Other Side of Summer. Perfect for this time of year. Yeah, I might have... What a poet. This first line, the sun struggles up. Another beautiful first line the Sun struggles up another
Starting point is 01:10:06 Beautiful day the Sun struggles up like not all lyricists in rock and roll are poets You know like they don't write quite like poets That's yeah wasn't a millionaire who said imagine no possessions a poor little schoolboy who said we don't need no lessons That's a shot at Pink Floyd. Yeah, it certainly is. Yeah. And we don't need no education. I beg to differ. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:10:31 Ha ha ha. Right. But so you were a corny and a bum? I didn't know. So interesting. I would go. I would get hungry, and I would do shows to try to get money on the street
Starting point is 01:10:46 by juggling. And so the- And I would do stand up in bars and anything I could do. But all I needed to do was make, you know, five bucks a day and you can do the street juggling. So hapless civilians who encountered you would give you small change to make you go away? Well, I was actually did a pretty good job. By the time I got to be 20, I had a really great street show.
Starting point is 01:11:10 I was just going to say, don't street show guys like that make a lot of money? The amount that I made would knock you over. Then why were you living in the alley? Because that was two years after when I learned to do that. Then I was living in a great place. See, at least when I went, do that. Then I was living in a great place. See, at least when I... When I went, when I went, I was working streets
Starting point is 01:11:29 in Philadelphia, down at the head house square, and I was juggling for money. And I was making a lot, because I was doing three to five hundred dollars a show, and I was doing five shows a day, and I was working Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. So I went to an accountant, tax guy, and I said to him, I said to him,
Starting point is 01:11:53 you know, I'm making all this money, and it's all in cash, shouldn't I be paying taxes? And he said, how much money are you making? And I kept notes and everything. Still have every dime I made and every street show is written down. I showed him all that. And he said,
Starting point is 01:12:14 this is the amount of money you say you make juggling on the street? I said, yes, it is. He said, if you bring this to the IRS, they're gonna think you're a drug dealer. And then IRS, they're going to think you're a drug dealer. And then he paused and said, I think you're a drug dealer. Yeah, you knew a stripper account. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:12:35 They can tell you how to hide cash. I just had so much fucking cash. I mean, I was absolutely in the stripper market. I mean, we just so much fucking cash. I mean, I was absolutely in the stripper market. I mean, we just had boxes of cash. Oh my God. I did not. I mean, my version of you were living on the street. Well, you were a drug dealer.
Starting point is 01:12:55 I was a drug, exactly. I was a drug dealer. Well, a pot dealer. In college, we sold whatever our dealer had, which was quite frankly everything except heroin. I never dealt heroin and I'm proud of that. But when I got to New York, I mean I also. Me neither.
Starting point is 01:13:13 I also would have been on the street except I got a rent free situation which was, you could find this in the back of the Village Voice and you did something for somebody. The first two interviews I went on, I realized after way too long I was being interviewed by an old queen who wanted me to do something that I did not want to do. And I finally got a place on the Upper East Side, living with an ambassador. And I had to fucking be the basic au pair for his kids,
Starting point is 01:13:50 and I fucking hate kids. It might have been better to be on the street, but that's what I did. I took the fucking kids to school. Who would hire you? Who the fuck? Exactly. Who would hire this ambassador?
Starting point is 01:14:03 I mean, put him in jail now. I know. No, I was a good actor, I guess. I mean, I convinced them and I was supposed to speak French to them and I didn't really do that. But I brought him to school, I picked him up, I took him to their stupid activities. I was supposed to be, look, it didn't, nothing bad happened, but they were, I think, a little disappointed.
Starting point is 01:14:27 They were expecting someone who was gonna be more engaged with the kids. But they wanted someone who was- More engaged than you would be with the kids? I mean, let me take that in for a moment. But they wanted a guy, because they wanted someone who could bodyguard them. You know, they didn't want someone-
Starting point is 01:14:42 When I think bodyguard, you're the top of the list. Yes. Whether, I'll tell ya. Hey, those kids were never kidnapped. I respect you. And this was a controversial country. I respect you as much as anybody, but I would never hire you as bouncer, bodyguard,
Starting point is 01:15:00 or au pair. Those are three jobs you will not get from Penn Jillette. Okay? If you are completely destitute and you call up your buddy Penn, I might be able to give you some coin, I might be able to hire you, but those are not three jobs you will get, got it?
Starting point is 01:15:18 You're so right. Write it down. You're so right. No, you're so right. I can add a few more, but we'll stay with those three. I'm not a bodyguard, and I wasn't an au pair. But they wanted, I guess, a man to take their kids and watch over them, and they were never once
Starting point is 01:15:36 kidnapped or killed. I mean, and this is New York City, and I was always there, even though it was very early in the morning and I had barely gotten to sleep yet, coming home from the clubs, but it was on the Upper East Side. I could walk to the comic strip and I could walk to catch a rising star, and I did.
Starting point is 01:15:56 And I was like the Lincoln of comedy. I always... I would walk miles to borrow a joke. Laughter I would walk miles to borrow a joke. But, you know, I don't know. Would it be great to be young again? Yeah, but not to deal with that shit, to deal with the things we dealt with. You have to be young.
Starting point is 01:16:20 I mean, why do you think they put them in the Army? You need someone who is able physically and mentally to put up with just really rough conditions that we, I mean, we wouldn't survive at this time in our life. Are you telling me that you and I wouldn't do great in Marine boot camp? Is that what you're claiming? Or sleeping in an alley or dealing with children.
Starting point is 01:16:45 I couldn't get him to disagree with me too much on Go, so I'll go this, we can go into boot camp thing, see if he'll disagree with me there. So what do you think your 70s are going to be like? Where do you think, like you're 69, by the way, I'll be 69 next year, so we're very close. And it's funny, this has come up a couple of times in conversation. Like you're 69, by the way, I'll be 69 next year, so we're very close. And it's funny, this has come up a couple of times
Starting point is 01:17:07 in conversation, whenever you say 69, everybody has the same reaction, like, oh, you know, elbow in the ribs. As if anyone ever really did 69. It's the most overrated sex position. It's the fucking beta max of fucking. Everybody tried it once, They didn't like it. It's impossible to do.
Starting point is 01:17:27 I tried it, you know, and I couldn't do it. I could stick up for it a little bit. I've enjoyed it many times, yeah. I've enjoyed it. Well, once again, you have qualities I like. I have enjoyed it. It's different for me because I'm taller than you. Well, I wasn't suggesting we do it together.
Starting point is 01:17:50 I'm just telling you it would be different because I'm taller than you. I mean, I remember asking some guest, some woman guest I had here, I can't remember who it was. I said, if a guy is doing the alphabet, can you tell? Like, can you tell what letter he's on? Well, this is Kafka's in the penal colony, right? Kafka's short story in the penal colony.
Starting point is 01:18:07 I know the story. The prisoners don't know what crime they've committed till they etch it into their back. So you could. Till they what? Till they etch it with needles in the prisoner's back. That's how they find out what they're guilty of, is being able to feel it in their back.
Starting point is 01:18:22 So what you're saying is this is the oral sex equivalent. You can do messages that way, probably more efficient than needles in the back. Anybody who can make that analogy to Kafka does not belong in the nut chair. That's all I'm going to say. I'm going to change your chair. It's all you have now. You only have the nut chair. You have devolved. Right. Who wants anything but the nut chair? I know.
Starting point is 01:18:49 I know. Who wants, you know? The whole story is not about the nut chair. It's about the kindness in your face. But I mean, one thing about you, you were always just interesting. Like, well, that's an interesting guy. That's why we wanted you on the show.
Starting point is 01:19:05 You know, like, there's a guy who's always thinking about stuff. I don't have to agree, but mostly I do. I mean, I feel like we really have come around to very similar ways. I mean, we're both atheists. Yeah, well, when you come, when you're able, the idea that I would even entertain animal rights 10 years ago was... Really? Totally outside.
Starting point is 01:19:28 What'd you have against animals? Nothing against animals. I just thought, I mean, the very simple answer, if you'd asked me for a facile answer to that, I would say first, have every child on earth fed, clothed, sheltered, and eating, and then we'll all work together on the mountain gorillas.
Starting point is 01:19:50 That's no long, no, don't say shut up! I did shut up! I just told you, I changed my mind from this point of view, and you just said you should change your mind. You've already won then. Sorry, sorry, sorry! Me too. Me too.
Starting point is 01:20:06 You never got me too, did you? Only by the grace of God I didn't. No, you're a nice guy. You never did bad shit with women. No, no. I didn't realize you were such a cathode in the pussy beaker when you were young. You know, I'll tell you, I will now give you the secret to getting laid in high school. It's a little late, pal.
Starting point is 01:20:35 I know, I know. Fuck smart girls. I could have. I wish I could have had the courage, yes, to at least just react to the girls. There was a couple of girls who were sweet on me. Like if I could have just reacted to it, I couldn't even do that.
Starting point is 01:20:56 We are about the same age. Yes. It was the girl with the baggy black sweater and the hair part in the middle carrying around Henry Miller, believe me, under that sweater, everything was beautiful. No, there was a girl, there was a girl, so long ago, in eighth, was it eighth grade,
Starting point is 01:21:18 and there was a Sadie Hawkins dance, which you asked them, and she asked me out to this thing, and I still couldn't say yes. Yeah, well that's, yeah I still couldn't say yes. Yeah, well that's, yeah, boy, that's sad. All I'm doing today is agreeing with you. I made up for it, but I mean, it is, I mean, youth is just so hard.
Starting point is 01:21:39 I mean, I understand like why people in many cultures for most of human history and somewhat into today, have many, many children because they anticipate that a fair number will not make it because they're just so fucking dumb. In agriculture, the more children you have, the better it is. Yes, because three of them are gonna get kicked by a horse.
Starting point is 01:22:04 But also, they help around the farm. Once you get out of agriculture, children are just a liability. Right. I've always said that. Children are just a liability. Because you're not a farmer, is that correct? I am not a farmer.
Starting point is 01:22:19 If you were a farmer, you might see it differently. I've got one crop out there that I think qualifies. I'm not really the farmer around here, but it is growing well. But yeah, so when you're like married with kids, I always hear about like date night. Yeah. Is that a thing? Like when you carve out a specific... We try to do that a little bit, but the truth is, I am always working. We grab whatever time we can.
Starting point is 01:22:56 My other question about marriage is always like, how do you know when to do it? Like, if you can always do it. Like for me, sex always had to be an event. Like I always had trouble with that. Like how can it be an event if it's ever present? You know, like how do you know when to throw down? I think we really, I was thinking about if I built a time machine, killing Hitler, buying Microsoft, now I think it's going back and talking to you in eighth grade.
Starting point is 01:23:28 I think that is what I would do. I think that from the future, Pem would appear and say, listen Bill, let's talk about the Sadie Hawkins dance, because this is gonna have repercussions for the rest of your motherfucking life. Butterfly effect. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:23:45 Possibly. You get me late in high school, and I'm telling you. No problems in Gaza. Bird flu has now wiped out the whole world. Or no problems in Gaza. Yeah. It could have happened. We don't know.
Starting point is 01:23:57 So that's what I would do now. Let Hitler live. Go back and help Bill. I did a joke in last week's monologue. I thought it was like such a combination of the old and what's the newest, like because I'm always doing Johnny Carson in my monologue. And I don't usually do, it's so hot,
Starting point is 01:24:18 but it was the first day of summer. You know, so there was some funny one. So hot yesterday that Jew haters were protesting without the mask. It was like a Johnny beginning and then an ending he would never do. You don't think Johnny would do that? Jew haters, no.
Starting point is 01:24:37 You did that, Joe. Did I show up? I have a story that's sadder. Sadder than your story of eighth grade Sadie Hawkins. Oh my god. It's horrible. It's the worst thing ever. It's the Night Show story?
Starting point is 01:24:52 What's that? A Tonight Show story? Yeah, it's terrible. Johnny Carson asked us to go on the Tonight Show. Or we were, you know, Fred, whatever, asked us to go on the Tonight Show. And we were going to do the water tank, where I'm doing a card trick and tell her to drown in the water tank. I we were gonna do the water tank, where I'm doing a card trick
Starting point is 01:25:05 and Teller drowns in the water tank. I think I've seen that. Yeah, yeah, we did it a million times. Right. So, it's a great trick. We did it first on Sadness Night Live. We're gonna do it on Carson. And to me,
Starting point is 01:25:19 because I was an idiot, the most important part was leaving Teller dead. So I can't find the card, I can't find the card, it's a signed card. And then I, Teller drowns, I turn around his dead body, and then on his face is the signed card. Miracle. And he's still dead. So we said, I'm going to say Johnny, but it wasn't a direct conversation with Johnny.
Starting point is 01:25:41 We said to the Johnny people, we'll leave Teller dead and go to the brick. And they got back to us and said, Johnny says he wants you to open the tank. Teller comes out, he waves, we go to commercial brick. I said, it's not funny if Teller isn't dead going to commercial brick. And they said, Johnny does not want to go to commercial brick with Teller dead. I said, Teller isn't dead going to commercial break. And they said, Johnny does not want to go to commercial break with Teller dead.
Starting point is 01:26:06 I said, Teller's not dead. It's a trick. And he's a magician. Johnny Carson's the most famous I started as a magician guy. He just said, for this show, we don't want to go to commercial with a dead guy. So we said, he said, this is my show. And we said, this is our trick. Wow. So then they say, Johnny says he really wants you on the show. He really
Starting point is 01:26:36 doesn't want that on his show. So here's what he said to do. Jay Leno is filling in hosting, do. Jay Leno is filling in, hosting. Come on and do the trick exactly the way you want. So you have your integrity and I have mine. Great. And we said fabulous. And then we did it with Jay and changed the trick. You changed the trick. We did a different trick because we could ship the water tanks. We did a whole different trick that would have been fine with Johnny. And Johnny, we became friends after he retired. He's a magician. He loves it. Yeah, and he's also, he's a skeptic, and although I think it's safe to say now,
Starting point is 01:27:13 you could say he was an atheist. And, um... I don't know, but he seems like the type. He said it to me. He did? Many times. So you were friends with him. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:27:23 That's awesome. I called him up, and he called me up because he was a real fan of Bullshit. He liked our show Bullshit. Oh, I was too. And he called me up and he said, I just want to tell you, I think Bullshit is the best show on television. That's awesome. You know, Johnny, I don't know if you knew this, but the night show was also on television
Starting point is 01:27:44 and that was a better show. And from there we became, I have another sad story that you can think about when you're lamenting the eighth grade. So we did the movie called The Aristocrats, which you were. Yes, of course. And Johnny Carson loved the joke and we were talking.
Starting point is 01:28:00 And when we were working on the movie, I was calling Johnny and talking about the movie, which he would not be in, because he was retired. And I didn't even ask. I never even asked him. Yeah, yeah. And Johnny said to me, would you do me a favor? You're going to go to Sundance. When you're done at Sundance, do you have a couple days?
Starting point is 01:28:16 Can you fly down to LA? And can you and Paul of Provenza, can you show me the aristocrats in my home? And I said, Johnny, I can't think of a greater honor. And Paul and I were over the fucking moon. We're gonna do Sundance, we're gonna fly down and show it to Johnny, man, how beautiful would that be? And we did Sundance, it was very well received.
Starting point is 01:28:45 The next morning, Provenents and I met at a Starbucks to have a hot chocolate to celebrate because he's working with a child so we don't go out drinking like grownups should do. So we're having a hot chocolate and my phone rings. And I was going to just ignore it and it was Randy, Amazing Randy. And I said to Paul, it's amazing Randy, he doesn't call me often, this might be important. And I pick up the phone and Randy is sobbing, uncontrollably sobbing.
Starting point is 01:29:18 And I said, Randy, what is it? And he said, Johnny. Johnny's dead. And I said. Fucked up your weekend. I fucked up my weekend. And I said to Paul. Typical. Johnny Carson died. And Venza, I didn't say another word.
Starting point is 01:29:34 He just went and added to the end of the movie for Johnny Carson. You know, next time a starving homeless guy asks me for change, I'm gonna tell him that story. I'm gonna say, buddy, we all have problems, and yours are not the worst. I bet you Johnny was such a fan because, you know, he was, he melded magic and comedy,
Starting point is 01:29:56 which they not all do, which you guys probably did more than anybody. I could, I could, I... I mean, you were always, I mean, that's why you have these records in Las Vegas, is like, because you did something, you put a dimension to it, and you know, a wit to it. Well, thank you. That, like, I don't know if you want to like talk about other magicians.
Starting point is 01:30:19 I mean, I play in the David Copperfield Theater. Right. When I play at the MGM Grand now. I play in the Penn Copperfield Theater. Right. When I play at the MGM Grand now. I play in the Penn and Teller Theater. Just so you know. No, I understand. Just so you know. No, I do understand, right.
Starting point is 01:30:35 It's easier to find when your name is on it. But I've heard some of these magicians really phone it in. Huh, have you? And I'm sure, do you have a club like, you know like, oh we all get together. You must, come on, because only you can kind of understand. Oh sure. Really? Like every night you and John Stewart and Dennis Miller
Starting point is 01:31:00 just get together. Yeah, that's the three of them. Well that's the three of them you just suggested with me. I understand. I know. I know. And I even could map those three, by the way. What do you do?
Starting point is 01:31:12 I could never live in Las Vegas. I love it for a weekend. I was just there. I don't gamble. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I go home and read. So it doesn't matter that I'm in Las Vegas.
Starting point is 01:31:23 It doesn't matter where you are. Doesn't matter. I care less about where I go home and read. So it doesn't matter that I'm in the house. It doesn't matter where you are. It doesn't matter. I care less about where I am than anybody. How far is your commute from? 22 minutes. 22 minutes. So you live out in Henderson.
Starting point is 01:31:35 Actually, the other side, Summerlin. Whatever it is. I could talk all night with you, but. It's been too long and it's also been never. I know. Because I never really, one reason I love this thing is I get to talk to people and request people to come here so that I can get to know somebody.
Starting point is 01:31:57 I just had Ray Romano here, same thing. Somebody I should have been friendly with, there just wasn't enough time. They said you've known Bill for 33 years. Right. And they said, how close are you to Bill? I said, I think we've talked not on camera 45 minutes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:15 And I say this also to many people who have been here recently. Jerry Seinfeld and I just said the same thing. But it's just the truth. Like, when do you talk to people? When you're working. That's all. We have to, you just said it before,
Starting point is 01:32:28 I work all the time, like, what compels us, what motivates us, what gets us to be in this situation, which we would love. Gotta be working. Which we would love anyway, is that there's a camera in the wall. And I'm gonna be. Okay, great to see you.
Starting point is 01:32:44 Good to see you. Good to see you, though. Thanks. You're out of the nutshell. Oh, good. I'm good. But I'll be back in it another time, I hope. Club Randall.

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