Club Shay Shay - Godfrey Part 1
Episode Date: March 20, 2024Godfrey joins Shannon Sharpe at Club Shay Shay for a ride of laughter and insight. With spot-on impersonations of Shannon, Steve Harvey, and even Donald Trump, Godfrey brings the house down with his w...orld-renowned talent. From discussing Steph Curry's presidential potential to imagining Denzel Washington, The Rock, and Aaron Rodgers in the Oval Office, the conversation takes unexpected turns into politics, which Godfrey speaks on through the unique perspective only a comedian has. #VolumeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I was watching you on FS1, and I was like, I think I could do him.
And like my grandmother said, if you ain't a frog, you better jump in the pond.
I know that don't mean shit.
That don't mean nothing.
That will never make no sense all my life been grinding all my life sacrifice hustle paid the price wanna slice got the roll of dice that's why all my life i've
been grinding all my life all my life been grinding all my life sacrifice hustle paid the price
wanna slice got the roll of dice that's why all life, I've been grinding all my life actor and voice actor a hilarious host a writer producer international funny man every comedian's
favorite comedian the man of one million voices the impresario of impressions godfrey
it's been a while it's been a while bless up bless up bless up bless up bro we've been trying
to make this happen for a couple years yes now. Yes, sir. You've been busy.
I mean, the pandemic happened and I was all over the place.
Yes, sir.
I appreciate you taking time out of your busy schedule stopping by Club Shays.
I really appreciate that.
I appreciate you having out of your busy schedule bringing me here.
Yeah.
Because I ain't going to front.
I was like, I'm going to Club Shays.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to Club Shays.
I didn't tell anybody either.
Maybe told one or two people.
I say no.
One or two or one or 200. Yeah. Maybe told one or two people. I say one or two or one or 200.
Yeah, I know.
But I just want to say this first.
Maybe say it to the camera.
You all don't understand who the fuck you dealing with.
First off, give this man his respect.
Three times Super Bowl champion.
All right.
You caught John Elway's passes.
Yeah.
Fuck you talking about one of the hardest throwing quarterbacks ever.
I watched you on NBC.
All right?
Don Cricky.
Touchdown.
Shannon Sharp.
And shout out to your brother,
Sterling,
who was nasty
on the Green Bay Packers.
Even though I'm from Chicago,
I hate the Packers,
but your brother was cold.
I appreciate that.
No doubt.
Since we're on the...
You know what?
Let's go ahead and get this.
So let me ask you this.
Yes.
I want to go ahead
and toast right quick.
I'm going to try this. Hold on. I want to go ahead and, you know, toast right quick. Watch this.
I'm going to try this.
Hold on.
I want you to have just a sip before you do any impersonations, because I don't want you
to do any drunk impersonations.
Okay.
Okay.
Hey, for a non-alcoholic drinker, this is all right.
Smooth.
Yeah, see?
Because usually when you go, you're like.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah, this is all right. So,, you're like, yeah. You know? Yeah, this is all right.
So who are you coming with?
Who are you coming with?
The first time, who was your first impression?
My first impression that I ever did?
No, the first one you want to start with today.
Shannon Sharp.
All right, Shannon, I'm going to ask you a couple questions.
Here we go.
I'm going to ask you a question.
So what was your favorite sport growing up as a kid?
My favorite sport growing up as a kid?
As a kid.
Probably.
I like football.
Football, then basketball.
Basketball.
Did you ever play baseball?
Nah, I was scared of the ball.
So how good were you in basketball?
Could you dunk?
I could.
I was better in basketball than I was football. Okay, okay. uh did you play in high school did you start in grade school what
did you start in uh i played coming up i mean obviously you know you did all the sports you
played football ran track played basketball and so i played all the way through uh started playing
i was probably about fourth or fifth grade and played all the way through high school okay okay
um what was your uh favorite favorite event in track and field?
Were you fast?
I was.
I ran on the relay teams.
I really didn't do a whole lot of individual sprints.
I was a field event guy, so I long jump, triple jump through the disc.
But I was on the four by one and the four by four.
I was on the four by one.
Okay.
I was the first leg.
First leg.
And like my grandmother said, if you ain't a frog, you better jump in the pond.
I know that don't mean shit. That don don't mean nothing that will never make no sense but all the things people are afraid to agree with me because i'm a big motherfucker and i beat your
ass but anyway so let me ask you a question how did you how did you stumble upon like you know
what i can do him how long did you have to practice and how many did you play it back like
okay okay make sure i get the voice in play because you have to practice and how many did you play it back like okay okay make sure i
get the voice in play because you have the mannerisms yeah i was watching you you know on
fs1 and i was like i think i could do him you know i just was like i was like skip and then
skip help me yeah skip skip a skip skip listen skip skip i'm gonna tell you this right i've been
in the nfl for a long time right and i used to uh never had a toilet. I had a doodoo outside in the backyard.
I'm going to tell you that right now. No, it's cool. It's cool.
But I'm going to tell you now, how the hell are you going to tell me that the East is going to be the West?
Come on, Skip. Come on. Tell me.
You know, and I just it's it's it a it's like with a lot of impersonators right
you got pharaoh you got uh uh airy spears and it's just you just it just you hear it and if
it's in your range it's a natural gift it's like when musicians can just go all right let me just
play you know they can play something and tune it's like when they tune it with a piano or a horn right it's the same like one of my fave my first impersonations was was uh ali okay when i
was like five okay because my parent my um relatives come from nigeria okay and they would
say do do muhammad ali we'll give you one dollar dude i'd be like i'm fast i'm pretty i shook up
the world i'm the greatest i told you how it co-sale you too ugly. Joe Frazier's too ugly.
Ken Norton's too ugly. George Foreman's too ugly. I'm fast.
I must be the greatest. I used to do that at five. Right. Right.
And so I was like, OK, I could do voices. And so I would cartoons, cartoon characters.
And what's up, Doc? I would do that. Right.
So I was just always into imitating people and then when i started
comedy actually when i started comedy it was like my first my first time i was in a comedy team for
a year okay all right this is chicago i'm from chicago you know shout out to all the chicago
comedians because i heard the chicago they say chicago got the best comedian that's what little
real told me but uh little real might be right on that one because chicago what about the dmv you know they got quake listen man i ain't from the dmv
i said it i said chicago got the best you got me you got dion cole you got d ray davis you got
little rel bernie mac shout out to bernie mac and there's other cats my man evan lionel who
literally started bernie mac in his, who literally started comedy for black comics in Chicago.
Evan Lionel got to give him his credit. But there's a lot of a lot of great comics from Chicago.
You got Adele Gibbons. Yes. Oh, yeah. Adele Gibbons. You got. Oh, what?
Oh, God. From the talk. Oh, Sheryl Underwood. Sheryl Underwood is from Chicago.
We got a lot of great and a lot of younger people coming up.
But yeah, we're all...
Craig Robinson.
Right, okay.
Craig Robinson from Chicago.
So you have a lot...
It's something about Chicago.
We're all different.
We're all different styles.
Everybody says, none of you are the same.
I said, it's something about Chicago.
But I started out in a comedy team.
Right.
And a team with another guy.
It was Godfrey and
alexander and and my first time on stage it was impersonations we would it was a duo thing so he
played like a hypnotist and he would it was some corny shit but he would hypnotize me and shit
he's like oh i'm a hypnotist i'm gonna make you do different people so my first was bill cosby okay
and i know now cosby is kind of a
taboo taboo but it you know let's go for it so i'd be like you see the people and you
got to understand how to do that you know what i'm saying and so i did cosby then i did johnny
carson okay because i said you know nobody's seen a black dude do Johnny Carson. So I would go, wow, good stuff. I did not know that.
Wow.
Shannon, this is a great show.
Wow.
Wow.
I would do that.
So it was Ali.
Those were my first impersonations.
But I never really, I didn't dwell on impersonations.
Because if you depend on impersonations, your act gets corny.
Right.
So I made sure when I was doing comedy
In Chicago, I moved I finally I did it for about three years and I I went solo and you know
It's so funny. The person who told me to leave my comedy team was Steve Harvey
The gap so was that before but before he told were you
Impersonating him before or after?
Oh, I was impersonating Steve only like three, four years ago.
Okay.
I never impersonated him.
I wasn't interested, you know.
But he told me, because one day there was a club called All Jokes Aside in Chicago.
Okay.
It was the number one black comedy club for seven years.
Shout out to Raymond Lambert, Mary Lindsay, and James Alexander.
It was the number one club in chicago because a lot of times when you would do black urban rooms yeah it would
be a black night at a white establishment you know what i'm saying so but this was chicago was
a black comedy club in the 90s that was open seven days a week all right and so that's from there i went solo i broke up with the
guy that i was with i wanted to go solo so how difficult was that because you had got i'm sure
you guys had been together for what three four five years about two years about two strong years
you know and i was like i was a little because he i don't think he was as passionate as i was in it
i was writing most of the sketches and then i was like like, you know what? I think I'm going to go solo.
So I started writing shit on the side,
like just in case this doesn't go well,
I'm going to do shit on my own.
So I started writing stuff on my own,
and it was kind of easy to keep it moving.
Because you know what I'm saying?
I just started doing shit on my own.
I didn't even really tell him.
I just started going on my own.
And then from there, I ran into tk kirkland okay okay now
people if you know tk tk kirkland t to the above fucking k i ran into him because i would do shows
with him at this club all jokes aside and then tk said god three man i need to take you to new
york city he's like i like your style you kind of corny but you know what i like you and i'm gonna
find you a manager so he found me and this is facts he found me my first manager right and um
you know remember anthony michael hall remember breakfast club the movie breakfast club
or or six uh 16 candles yeah yeah with molly ringwald with the little blonde kid his dad was my manager okay tom chistarro they they passed him him and his partner david clement tk hooked
us all up it was me mike epps i was it was like john leguizamo it was uh yeah it was uh sandra
bullock it was and this is me moving to new york city i packed up drove 20 hours you know what i'm saying i said it's time i got my
agent this is all from tk doing right tk tk at the time criminal shit right take people's credit
cards get the rest of shit this man found me my agency right so as soon as i got to new york city
on my own i started doing the new york circuit you know, that's when I started to, I met, I would meet like Tracy Morgan and all these, Chappelle, everybody.
I was meeting all kinds of people.
And that was when, you know, I said, yeah, I'm going to start doing this on my own.
You know what I mean?
I drove 20 hours in a U-Haul truck.
Right.
20 hours with my friend Bernadette, who was in Love Jones.
We drove 20 hours.
And then from there, that was when i started to you know and
my manager at the time said you can do a lot of voices but don't count on that don't make that
your thing okay do build on your your comedy build on your jokes and your material and i said okay
i'm gonna do that so the voice thing now people didn't even know I did all these voices until the pandemic.
Wow. Nobody knew because I've auditioned for different sketch comedy shows.
Live in Color didn't get that shit.
SNL rejected me three times.
Three times.
I auditioned for SNL in, was it 98, 99?
Right.
It was me, Tracy Morgan, Jimmy Fallon, Kevin James.
A lot of motherfuckers i got a
standing ovation that night because i did cosby i did johnny carson i did i don't even remember
the other people i did but i did a bunch of them did a bunch of characters and i didn't even get
it get to the second round didn't even make it to the second round and you know as a young comic
i'm only three years in i'm auditioning for snl right
eddie murphy is my superhero eddie murphy like i might be able to do what eddie murphy did
because i saw eddie murphy in college right okay when he was doing the raw tour yes he came by
our school and i was like shit i was like damn and another i have to give tommy davidson credit
from the dmb he came and performed in my. He was one of the main guys that really influenced me to do comedy because in college is when I wanted to do comedy.
I was like, yeah, my third year. I was like, I think I want to do comedy. I was a pre-med psych major, you know, and I was like, yeah, there's Tommy Davidson because Tommy Davidson.
I showed him around the campus. He came to my campus and showed him around.
Tommy Davidson. I showed him around the campus. He came to my campus. I showed him around.
And then some years later, when I got to New York doing comedy in New York, I did this show called Premium Blend.
Premium Blend is on Comedy Central. That was when Comedy Central was funny. Right. Oh, that's what it was like.
That was a sneak dissonance. But Comedy Central was dope, you know.
And so Premium Blend is like you get up there and you
do like seven minutes so this was exciting for me i've never done tv comedy on tv and what's funny
as the as as as things go around and round tommy davidson was the host of that show i was on
and he remembered me he said you dude that showed me around your campus i was like yo you're one of
the main reasons i wanted to do comedy.
Right.
So it was Tommy Davidson.
Growing up, obviously, you grew up in Chicago.
Did you always want to do comedy?
What did you want to do before you discovered comedy?
Okay.
I thought I was going to be a baseball player.
I was a shortstop.
I played baseball from Little League up to high school.
I thought I was going to be a shortstop.
Okay.
And I thought I was going to be an astronaut.
I wanted to be either an astronaut or a baseball player. That's what I thought I was going to a shortstop okay and i thought i was gonna be an astronaut i wanted to be either astronaut or a baseball player that's what i thought i was gonna because i was a space
nerd well there's a lot of things in between that but okay no i thought i was gonna be a baseball
player or yeah or a shortstop or or um work for nasa you know what i'm saying
and i thought i was gonna that's what i never thought about comedy but i loved watching
comedies my family and my parents we watched comedy my mother was a big uh movie watcher
especially uh comedies you know with three stoogesoges, Don Knotts, Honeymooners,
Dick Van Dyke, you know what I'm saying?
Flip Wilson show.
We were a TV, you know,
there was only so many channels back then.
Yeah.
So you watched everything.
Carol Burnett, you know, you know, you, Pryor.
People don't realize Pryor was on TV sometimes.
Red Fox.
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
And that's, I never thought about comedy until college. Yes. You know what I'm saying? And I never thought about comedy until college.
Right.
Because people always say, oh, you were funny.
Why did you start doing comedy?
Because people say I was funny.
It wasn't even really like that because my friends were funny, too.
But in college, I used to always hold court in the cafeteria.
You know what I mean?
I used to hold court in the cafeteria.
And I was real militant at the time
uh-oh yeah oh you wanted more cry freedom
steven bico i was that dude when i got to college i we you know i went to illinois big 10 um and
it was about 40 000 students there 800, 800 black, about 800 black.
Wow.
But we had the biggest fraternal and sorority system in Illinois.
We had everybody.
We had Spanish fraternities.
We had a bunch of white fraternities, but we had the Kappas, the Qs, the Alphas.
We had Iodified Theta Sigma.
We had Deltas, Sigma Gamma Rho.
We had AKs. We had everybody so we all the black
people hung together right stuck together and the athletes I went to school where it was Nick
Anderson okay Kendall Gill yeah you know Henry Jones yeah uh who played for the Bills yeah I
know him yeah Derek Brownlow and all those Jeff George yeah was our guy so um yeah so I got
militant because it was just a small group of people.
We had our little African-American cultural center, right, that was a little dilapidated, but they gave that to us.
And so we formed this group, you know, and we said, why don't we start reading books about our people?
They're not teaching us anything.
So we got into all that shit.
Spike Lee movies are playing.
Do the right thing. All of that. So it was all that shit spike lee movies are playing right do the right thing
all of that so it was all this and public enemy is playing we listed the tribe conquest the brand
newbie and all that other shit we're listening so i was very militant and reading all these
different books like here we go ready stolen legacy isis papers francis kress welsing
mal autobiography of malcolm X you know we were I was
reading everything I was reading another book um um Bucks Coons Mulatto's and and Mammy's the
history of blacks in film by Donald Bogle I was reading oh yes stereotypes that they still repeat
now so I was reading all that so I was black everything was black right fight the power
my father would be like what are you doing what are you what what is all of this black it's okay
but what are you do your studies you know but i say dad you don't understand the black man
and the black woman is suffering man white supremacy that's okay but we're spending money on college you don't have to it's okay you know it's okay you don't have to be it's not do too much black you know it's okay
do your homework so i was that guy i would go see you know i would go see black speakers right i
watched stokely carmichael came to our you know our university. We was I was that dude.
And then I started incorporating it in like holding court.
I was talking about racism, but I'd be funny with it.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
So I said, man, and this girl and I want to give her a shout out.
It was a girl.
It was a rebound chick because I broke up with the girl I was dating on campus.
It's rebound.
I'm gonna give her props.
Her name is Toya Dixon.
I will never forget this. I always talked about, you know, I should do some comedy. I'm gonna give her props. Her name is Toya Dixon. I'm gonna I will never forget this
I always talked about you know, I should do some comedy. She's doing the stand-up and I remember one day
I was just riffing talking shit. She wrote everything down on a yellow piece of paper. Let you know this little yeah
Yeah, yeah, what does it call legal the legal pad?
So she's writing all these jokes and shit and I and I woke up I said yo, what is all this?
She goes remember all the shit you were talking about yesterday was so funny.
I wrote it all down.
You should do this comedy thing.
Wow.
So from there, I said, when I get back to the city, because, you know, Champaign-Urbana is a couple of, you know, it's a couple hours away from Chicago.
I said, I'm going to go to the open mics.
And that's when that's when that shit.
That's when the bug hit.
The bug hit.
And I remember that's when I met with my partner to do comedy solo and a comedy team.
Then, you know, the whole thing.
And it was that's how pretty much it started, man.
And I said, I want to do comedy because I'm different.
And I've always been very different.
I'm very I'm original.
I take pride in my originality. I take pride that. Well, listen, here's the thing been very different. I'm original. I take pride in my originality.
I take pride that, well, listen,
here's the thing about being different.
When you're different, it's a longer road.
You see?
Because they can't put you in a box.
But all my acting teachers say,
don't let anybody put you in a box.
Be amorphic.
I go, this shit ain't working.
You know what I'm saying?
But I always took pride in being different.
Did they say anything about be employed?
Yeah.
But I mean, I'm not.
Listen, I've done things, you know.
Right.
But I take pride in.
You can see a bunch of comedians, right?
Yes.
You go to a comedy show, you see a whole bunch of people.
But a lot of times people are doing the same kind of shit.
But one thing I took pride in for myself was that, bam, I said was different he was you know what i'm saying it's like i took pride in being doing really smart shit you know that was
my thing because a lot of comedians that i know and i'm not cracking but a lot of comedians that
i know that look like me are way more intelligent than a lot of than what you see on stage right a
lot of them have degrees a lot of them are engineers
and all this other and then they go up there doing this shit i go you're not even from that
neighborhood why are you front be yourself i always believed in being myself one of the first
places that i did start in was it also was the cotton club in chicago real quick the cotton club
which bernie mack hosted every monday okay and that was when when
i first doing open mics i was doing mainstream shit mainstream just you know everybody's there
mainstream but they say the white rooms but mainstream so i said you know what i want to do
some i want to do black shit i need to make sure i'm legit you know what i'm saying and they said
well you need to go see bernie mack and i was at this little poetry recital. I said, Bernie Mac, who's that?
He said, he's on the south side.
You go to his night on Mondays.
He has a band and shit.
You go Jimmy Carwash Spinks.
Remember Carwash?
Remember the guy that played Hippo, the big fat dude?
Jimmy's from Chicago, too.
And it was like, you got to go to their night.
So I went and I said, let me go over there and see this Bernie Mac dude.
So I went on Monday just to check it out.
And I see this dark-skinned dude with glasses you know i walk when you walk in the
cotton club the stage is right there so you can get talked about so you see bernie with this big
towel he's i'm sick and tired of being a motherfucking sick and tired i'm telling you i'm
tired of this shit you know right and i was like who the fuck is that bernie mac and so after he
got off stage i said hey bernie uh he go what's your
name man what's your motherfucking name i said it's god he said all right i said i'm i'm i just
started doing comedy i would like to you know i heard about your night he said okay come next
monday eight o'clock you got five motherfucking minutes right and if you go in if you go any
further the band go motherfucking play i said all right that's where i had my
relationship with bernie mack the whole night and bernie was impressed by me because i was one of
the first dudes imitating him right d ray i was the first i was one of the first dudes imitating
him and he said the one thing i like about you godfrey is you do that you you're yourself and
in the cotton club it was pimps hustlers bishop don juan yes he saw me when i first
started bishop don juan from chicago lisa ray used to come through uh the bulls it was you
see michael jordan ahmad rashad you see yeah so it was it was a whole chicago black elite and yeah
so bernie was like you don't even change your you don't even you could do mainstream you stay the
same i said well that's what i think is the best about comedy is being yourself and being true to yourself.
Right. You know what I'm saying? Because real gangsters know if you fake.
They know. You know what? I had cattle. Obviously, you know, I had cattle.
Yeah. And I see that. I ask him.
And it's funny that you say that you said mainstream and then you say the black.
So when you in front of a black audience, yes, you do comedy one way. But if you're in front of a black audience yes you do comedy one way but if you're in front of a mainly white audience do you change
no and here's the thing you tell the same jokes man and with black audiences because there's so
i travel around the country i've been a headliner for more than 15 years and when i travel around
the country there's some cities where it's all black like if i'm in cleveland yeah yeah if i'm in uh uh baltimore yeah it's black but i still do the same but the thing about
talking about race because i'm a race guy i love going in even all white audiences i go in
i don't go hey man it's racism we need to stop that shit i go nah let me tell you about you guys
let me tell about your little microaggressions yeah you know i go in but it's a craft right if you can craft it
right i do trump trump support i do i do the south trump support and i'm talking about right
fucking hillbilly motherfuckers you know you're from the south right of course you've seen them
southerners the mouth don't move what they's Tayshaun right now? Man, that hill. And he dying right there.
Where they fucking the mouth.
Right.
Yeah, they fuck with me.
But it depends on how you navigate the joke.
Right.
You know, I never change.
Black people just make you more loose.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
Because you're in front of your people.
You're in front of your people, but yeah.
But you got to be funny because they're going to let you know you're not funny.
Oh, no, no, no.
Funny is funny.
Yeah.
And there's people who are the ghetto comics that aren't funny.
Right.
And there's the intelligent ones that are funny.
It depends on the person.
Funny is funny.
I don't give a fuck what you're doing.
Right.
Juggling, whatever.
Right.
Funny is funny.
So I never change my shit.
And one thing I know about black audiences, they like it if you're keeping it real, you're
from the global, but they like it when you're talking about that pro-black shit, too.
Oh, yeah. They like both of that. Because whenever I'm talking about it, you can hear it real, you're from Louisville, but they like it when you're talking about that pro-black shit, too. Oh, yeah.
They like both of that, because whenever I'm talking about it, you can hear people like, preach, dog!
That's what I'm talking about!
Hell yeah!
You see what I'm saying?
So I'm able to craft that because I am a student of the game.
I'm a student of comedy.
I really study the people that have been before me.
I am white black i know
my comedy history you know what i'm saying so that's very important and i like to be intelligent
on stage i like i'm the kind of comic that doesn't use the n-word because we had a debate about that
okay you know about there's comics i see you know that it'll be a majority or audience that don't look like us
right and they'll use that word over and over and i go are these people laughing because the joke is
funny or are they laughing because nigga is funny right because nigga is let's be for real
phonetically it's a great it's a funny word god damn that word is funny it's the top it's the nike of racial slurs yes you know like
nigga is the top like spit just don't say it wake up with football every morning and listen to my
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Spick and chink, those are like Adidas, Reebok, but nigga.
Like, if I watch this joke, if I say, man, here come this bald-headed ass nigga.
Hilarious.
Right.
Here come this bald-headed ass brother.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
It's a little ah.
It's a little ta-yah.
It's a little spice on that, right?
Right.
And we had a debate about that.
I said, well, why do you use the word?
Why do you use that word in front of people when you're really not like that?
I understand cats that are like that.
Like, Cat Williams, when he does it, it's you don't like that all the time
yeah it's certain people that you go yeah i get that right but there's some other cats right that
i go yo you're not even like that but you when you get in front of a certain audience you use
it in front of them i don't know if it's irresponsible listen i'm not telling anybody
how to do comedy right but i just feel weird doing it i don't even use it in front of them i don't know if it's irresponsible listen i'm not telling anybody how to do comedy right but i just feel weird doing it i don't even use it in front of black audiences
okay you know yeah yeah but for me this is my style this is my style but when i do use the word
the n-word i i'm i'm making a point about the n-word okay because i have a joke about the double
g words right you know what i mean double g words something about the double g word like you got the n word you got the f word two g's yeah and if you know harry potter you ever know about harry
potter i'm a harry potter fan where there's a muggle they call him a muggle okay that means
he ain't a he's a half prince he's some bullshit so they call him they say you're a muggle harry
potter and they it's almost like saying that when you're watching Harry Potter you're like is he
talking to me oh Harry Potter's a muggle can you believe that you're a muggle Harry Potter
and I'm like this is he calling me a muggle you know so I I talk about the phonetic I'm into words
because I'm a big George Carlin fan okay big Carlin fan big Pryor fan and they're it's all
wordplay for me you know I'm really into the art form of
this shit so yeah the n-word thing is you know that's just for me i'm not telling anybody how
to do comedy right i don't want anybody to conflate this shit but that's i'm very i just
want to know why people use it someone told me well i don't want them to i don't i want it i
feel comfortable saying it because i'm not going to let them determine you know how i say the word
i'm not i'm taking the word back i said that was never your word right what do you mean you taking it
back they gave it to you right you're saying so if i'm it desensitizes the word really so when
they call you the name out of out of vitriol then you react to it you get mad so how is it
desensitizing you i'm just saying if it if someone calls your name you
shouldn't even flinch you go i say it so much it doesn't even bother me but it still stings that's
all it's just a debate we're still having with the n-word get in on the action with draft king
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When you did Steve Harvey, did you know it was going to be as funny as it was? And I read that he wasn't too enthused about it.
Because like you said, he gave you some great advice early.
And then you turn around years later.
Let me see.
Let me get some of this cognac.
Oh, boy, Shady, boy, you made it up, man.
That cognac good, boy.
I'll tell you right now. That cognac good, boy. I'm going to tell you right now.
That cognac good.
Like my grandmama said, if you ain't going to drink cognac, better get that Hennessy.
So, Steve Harvey met him, like, when Cat called it a man unit.
Yeah.
Oh, that was fucking funny.
God.
I remember when Steve Harvey had hair and it was kind of you know
thinning and i was in the hallway and i was mad about something i think we opened up for steve
harvey and steve goes he goes you know what's the matter with you i said ah man my partner he's not
really doing the lines he's fucking up the shit and steve goes how much you
getting for this gig i said um we're getting like a hundred dollars he goes so that means you
splitting it i say yeah he's are you trying to split in that shit i say yeah he goes cut his ass
and he left and that's when i went solo because of steve harvey right fast forward to now fast
forward to about four years ago right i'm on'm on my podcast, by the way, in Godfrey, we trust on the gas digital network.
So my the guy that I was co-hosting with, he was like he said something.
He answered a question real fast. He got frantic. I said, damn, this ain't the family feud.
And I was like, yeah, what's your ass say? I said, yo, dumb ass.
family feud and i was like yeah what's your ass say i said your dumb ass gonna answer yeah yeah so i did it on some bullshit right and then the next day everybody said your shit is going viral
i said what he said that's steve harvey shit you did i said oh i didn't know so then like all the
comments were calling me jay ferrell's goal yo man, man, I did not know you had a Steve Harvey.
I go, don't you have a Steve Harvey?
I thought everybody does Steve Harvey.
They say, no, you're the only one doing Steve Harvey.
So it kept going viral.
And Steve sent me a text.
He goes, boy, when I see you, I'm going to beat your ass.
I could just hear his voice in the text.
Oh, you got me fucked up, boy.
I'm going to tell you this right now. I'm from Cleveland.
I don't know you know me. Steve, boy. I'm going to tell you this right now. I'm from Cleveland. I don't know you know me.
Steve, I hope you see this imitation.
Because, yeah, boy.
And his hand.
I got the.
You got the mannerism.
I'm going to tell you, God has blessed me.
See, I was sleeping in my car.
I had no damn money.
But now I got money, boy.
I'm going to fine your ass.
And people say, that's Steve.
You ain't trying to laugh too hard.
No, no, no, no.
Because when I first heard it, like I said, if it sounds like that person to your ear, that's a real good imitation.
And when you're doing it, now I guarantee you, if you were to ask Steve, Steve will say to his ear, it sounds like him speaking.
Because he does with his W's.
Why?
Now, where am I going to find that?
You're going to say I had a wig.
I ain't no damn wig.
Where in the world would I have a wig?
And why?
You got me fucked up.
Wherever I see you, I'm going to wear your ass out, boy.
Have you ever done that in front of him?
Hell no.
Top five answers
on the board. Here's the question.
Name something Steve fit to do
to Godfrey when he see his ass.
Whoop his ass, number one answer,
boy.
We got the Harvids
and Godfrey. let's play the but yeah i you know and
and i just kept perfecting i would watch one day i was on the road and you know how family feud
sometimes the cable be trash in a hotel and it was just family feud for three hours i was like i
ain't got shit to do right let me watch ste watch Steve Harvey because he's so good. He's fantastic.
He's unbelievable, bro.
Remember we had Richard Dawson.
We had a whole bunch of people hosted.
Man, I said, yo, this is so fun.
Richard Dawson kissed everybody in the mouth.
Man, he kissed.
He licked my ass.
He was like, how you doing, love?
Top five answers on the board.
Here's the question.
He's like, how you doing, love?
Is this your grandmother?
Hey, what's your answer? All right. He's like, how you doing, loves? Is this your grandmother? Hey, what's your answer?
All right.
He went tough.
He was a smooth mug.
I don't know if people remember Richard Dawson.
Richard Dawson was the white dude from Hogan's Heroes.
Hogan's Heroes.
Yeah.
And he would kiss.
He's like, how you doing, love?
Yeah.
He had that long ass bite.
Like the Bob Barker joint.
Yeah. That long ass bite. Like the Bob Barker joint. Yeah, so Steve, like, what was I going to say?
Steve is so good at it, I was watching for hours.
And I said, damn, look at what he does.
And so, you know, he's always joking.
Right.
Steve don't let shit go.
So you can be like, name an animal that, you know, you have in the house.
And he's like, I'll say dog.
What y'all ass say
dog he said dog yeah and he'd go to the audience go out there so i was like look at he does this
right he goes he said dog i never heard i was like i said he keeps doing that. I go, okay. So I started going, yeah, yeah. Yo.
Yeah.
And I said, I think I got it.
And in your head, you're like, I think I got it.
Right.
And so people are like, yo, you got that shit.
You know, it's like with Trump.
Same thing with Trump.
I was watching Trump.
And I turned off the volume.
And I just saw his mouth.
It's very tiny.
Big head. This is a very good show very good show shannon sharp one of my favorite shows that i've ever seen uh club shasha
very good show club shasha whatever you call it i've watched millions and millions of shows
and this one is perfect perfect i don't watch a lot of black shows but this one better than
jimmy kimmel better than any other joe rogan there are pieces of shit but this one is top
one of the greatest i love this show i watch it all the time i think i'll get
more views than cat williams so did you stumble upon, like, you like, did you, do you stumble upon them or do you just try and practice?
I just stumble.
I'll look at stuff and I'll go, hmm.
I'll look and say, I think I could do this, dude.
You know what I mean?
I'll just look and go, that might be a good one.
Trump, who doesn't want to have a Trump?
Right.
And to do Trump, I'll do Trump in front of, like, Republican audiences.
Right.
It's neutralizing because I'm not hating him or I'm just saying, man, Trump makes me laugh.
Right.
You know, Trump, you know, Trump has a ceiling of intelligence.
When he hits his ceiling, he goes high school on you.
Right.
You know, if you bring up something, Donald, let me tell you something, Donald.
You don't understand the oil crisis in 1978.
It was prices of oil were ten dollars a barrel. And Trump would go in thereald you don't understand the oil crisis 1978 it was uh prices of oil were
ten dollars a barrel and trump would go and then trump don't notice it he'd be like this guy's a
piece of shit you always he's trying to be a tough guy i don't i never liked you your wife's a crisis
your wife's a crisis you're a piece of shit i know oil lots of oil yeah olive oil vegetable oil
so he would you know so i just started to get it and i started
getting i started watching him more and he's new york he's from new york right so when he goes i
talk to him there's that accent i say i hear that i talked to him the other day so he's still got to
put the new york thing in right so there's little nuances i catch how how important are the mannerisms
because when you do steve harvey you do all of his mannerisms when you. How important are the mannerisms? Because when you do Steve Harvey, you do all of his mannerisms.
When you do Trump, you do the mannerisms.
You've really honed in on that aspect.
Yeah, you have to.
You have to.
Mannerisms count because it's the person you're being the person.
It's like as an actor, you're being the person.
Like if you prior shit, God damn. You niggas is crazy.
Jack, I love your show.
Shit.
I'm watching that shit like a motherfucker.
Jack, I bet you get a lot of white bitches.
Don't you?
Yeah.
I'm a motherfucker.
Where's the coke?
But, you know, I Richard was this guy.
Yeah, he was.
Richard was shit.
God damn.
He was that guy doing this in the hands.
So you just can't.
Cosby was like, you see, when I worked for Cosby,
by the way, I worked for Cosby for six months.
I was audience coordinator for his second sitcom on CBS.
Okay.
And so I was there when his son was killed.
Okay.
I was there.
I lived in Queens.
And it was Kaufman Astoria Studios where they shot.
It's right next door to Sesame Street.
Okay.
You remember that famous song,
Can You Tell Me How to Get?
Yes.
How to Get to Sesame Street.
Just to see Shannon Sharpe know Sesame Street.
I do.
You'd think a big guy like him.
Everybody grew up on Sesame Street.
Of course, of course.
I could just see you singing,
Can you tell me how to get,
how to get to Sesame Street?
Come and,
come and sing it.
I want to see a big dude sing it.
Come and play. everything's a-okay
I love Sesame Street man
I'm gonna tell you this right now
Sesame Street's my favorite
my grandmother said
if you don't know how to get to Sesame Street I'm gonna show you ass
so when I was there
I remember to watch Cosby every
to watch him every Thursday like to do the sitcom with Dougie Doug, Madeline Kahn.
I was there. I was introduced. I would introduce Felicia Rashad. I was the audio coordinator.
Right. But I had to tell jokes to 250 people for eight hours. Right. Eight hours. I'm just talking.
I had to be clean. No singing, no nothing. You ask a question, but you keep joking. Right.
had to be clean no singing no nothing you ask a question but you gotta keep joking right when the lights come on you show them talk oh man and i remember one day um i walked into cosby's office
because you could just walk in and say what's up so i was like hey dr cosby how you doing you know
he's like hey and he had the cigar i'm not bullshitting you it was the cosby-esque and he
goes hey how you doing man you know and i said hey could you give me some advice i'm
doing comedy for years can you give me some advice on you know on comedy no i say no he goes and i'm
not boy he goes writing you got to write son you got to put it on the paper writing is the backbone
oh and that's him he's and you got to see and sinbad boy that's the bad he loves
sinbad first of all sinbad is recovering yeah yeah sinbad's recovering yeah and i hope you can
get him on here yes he is we cannot forget sinbad sinbad is like for real like one of the greatest
comedians that we we tend to ignore right one of the greatest some of the greatest hbo specials simbad thank you for he's recovering he's getting better speaking well
but yeah but that's how i imitated people if i'm around you long enough right i can start doing you
right like one of the comic one of my comic colleagues that i started imitating was dion
cole really yeah dion cole when we were in chicago like yo man you sound
just like me i would do yo you have understand man how you do that shit so i started imitating
my friends so i could just if i hear it and it's in my range i go i think i can do it you know
what i'm saying so that's where yeah the trump. Trump is selling sneakers. You get a pair?
Black people love sneakers.
And let me tell you something.
I released it because I'm a genius.
I released it during Black History Month.
Perfect month for black people.
I didn't get the sneakers.
But they weren't that bad looking.
I ain't gonna front.
Right.
They just painted them.
They were just simple. I've had shoes, sneakers like like that but they just painted them as trump pushing them i
don't even think they're made i think they're pre-ordered i don't think they're even completed
right you don't say i think it's bullshit did you get some no no i did not better than your
sneakers shasha way better so what do you think his chances are winning i think they're he's trying
to do something the only grover cleveland has ever done hold the office lose the office win it back uh
sort of like michael jordan you know i'm saying but i think he might win it i think listen man
he won the first time we thought hell no no chance and he he might he might win look at he has eight
thousand felonies eight thousand felonies and this motherfucker has a chance i think biden just
right he just got the democratic yes nod yes i don't even know if he knows but he got i got the
nod come on yeah i got the nod yeah i don't think they're gonna estimate i don't think they're i
don't think people are underestimating former president trump like they did in 2016 because he's held the office.
So, you know, he's capable of holding it again.
And the thing about Trump is he never stays out of the public.
He's always still connecting to it, whether it's some bullshit.
He's always in their presence.
Trump is always present.
I think about Trump.
I'll say, what is Trump doing right now?
I'll think about Trump.
And he's just he's a businessman.
He's all about being in front of people.
He wants you to say his name.
That's one thing about business people.
They want you, whether it's bad or good, just say my name.
Right.
Trump.
I don't give a damn if you hate me, but the one thing Trump has a weakness of is not paying attention to him.
If you're indifferent, that's his weakness.
But if you go, fuck you, Trump, he's like, this is great people.
Yeah.
He's like Thanos.
Yeah.
The more you hate him, the stronger he gets.
You know what I'm saying?
So he might win it.
I don't know.
You know how this country gets?
Of course.
You know when the good old boys go, God damn it.
We're going to make it great again.
He's like, you got to make this goddamn good and great again.
But you said Denzel.
You like to see Denzel run for president.
You think Denzel will make a great president?
Run for president?
God, I can see him.
All right.
All right.
So we're going to run for president, right?
Huh?
The economy.
What are we going to do with the economy, huh?
Yeah.
We're going to lower the taxes. We're going to lower what? The taxes. All right. Yeah. We're going to lower the tax. What else are we going to do? Gun control. Right. Yeah. I could see Denzel running for president.
the morning i think the other morning he was on a morning talk show and he was talking about potentially once his career is over steph curry steph curry he said maybe not the president but
politics because he wants to see him as an alderman what steph is alderman not a senator
oh good senator curry yeah i could see him first as like an all you know just like a
councilman like a city local local guy first you think he's gonna go for senate why not no no
because you look at look at arnold and uh uh uh who's that arnold went for governor yeah
clint eastwood jesse ventura oh that's on jesse the body that's right i was governor i remember
the time i was governor see i could kind of do him yeah and arnold's like yeah of course i had
i wanted to be president but i wasn't born here but i could have i could kind of do him yeah and arnold's like yeah of course i had i want to
be president but i wasn't born here but i could have i could have done anything
who cares no shannon sharp this is a good show i like you work hard you work hard your muscles
look perfect i'm not as good as mine at the time but it's like i'm still i'm like 75 and look at
me my muscles are better than yours i don't know it's weird what about the rock
we think rock rock has universal appeal i mean he does but everybody here loves him he's so positive
i feel like he's gonna snap one day my man the rock is always positive i just want to tell you
guys i'm very happy um my vodka's doing really well. And the people, all the people around here have been very positive to me.
He's very, very positive.
He could rock and definitely run.
I mean, when you're like that much, would you run?
How about you?
No, no, no.
You wouldn't run for something?
See, sports journalists, they're trying to find stories for sports.
Them investigative and the political journalists, they going back and talking to people
Oh shit, they did. Yeah, and I ain't got no skills in the clothes. I got a graveyard
Leave that alone. So you wouldn't run for shit, huh? I
Walked get you a picture
political Richard like
No picture, political picture, like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, he's not if he goes but robert kennedy jr runs with aaron rogers this shit ain't gonna work
it's not gonna work aaron rogers is already up in boiling right it's the people he's been saying a
lot of crazy shit which is his business right i love aaron rogers but you know he's been saying
too much i don't think he's gonna win see i think once you run for a politician then all your they
start to get bullshit on you they start to you know, I mean you start doing bullshit on you
They start calling. Oh you did this back in night to get all that. I'm not doing that shit
See, I would never do and now you talk about you want me I would never run
Hey, you know not your damn what's your favorite impression to do of all the impressions that you can do?
What's your favorite? You're what's your most favorite to do?
Trump is very fun. Trump is fun because he's so polarizing
um um stacy jason statham i like to do really yeah i liked i did statham for statham on youtube
it's on i was on this show opie and jim and uh opie and jim before it was opie anthony opie and
jim norton and i did jason statham was on the show and i did it for him so i i like doing
jason statham what do you think he liked it he's like wow you do me better than me that's pretty
good i like that yeah son yeah you did it you did it you did it he's like i like shannon sharp i
like watching your club shea shea it's pretty nice yeah bitch what yeah come get some I don't know why I did that so
like when I was growing up the the the master of impersonation was Rich Little was Rich Little
nobody I mean yeah there was not it I mean he just like yes and he just go in did hundreds of yes
yeah did you study Rich I I watched him on a lot of tv shows and he would do like a lot of presidents yes like
that and i did a show with him during covid in vegas i he was right before me he's 82 at the time
and he was doing his impersonations but old school impersonations for the older crowd but yeah i
watched rich do it you know i watched him do it because we would always look for he was the only
guy really doing it but also frank gorshin the guy who played the Riddler on Batman.
Was it a good impersonator? George Kirby.
See, I'm I'm I'm telling you, I'm a history buff and comedy.
George Kirby, black comedian from Chicago, could imitate.
He could sing like what's her name? Ella Fitzgerald.
He could switch his voice. George Kirby, underrated comedian from the past.
But, yeah, I would watch a lot of those guys yeah I ask people special comedians to come in here and give me their
Mount Rushmore oh gosh and they named seven people you do understand that Mount Rushmore
has four heads yeah but it's just okay go ahead and a lot of times what i've been getting yes is that current comedian says i can't
name somebody from my generation because i'm with them with them right so if i said okay give me your
your give me godfrey's four okay best comedian it's usually your four best or should be the
people that you watch the most like you watch video on them the most.
And I got Pryor, Carlin, Redd Foxx and Paul Mooney.
I watched them all the time.
And Paul Mooney.
Oh, my God.
I think Paul Mooney doesn't get the respect that he deserves, you know, because he wrote for Richard Pryor.
He wrote he wrote for Living Color.
Right.
Homie the Clown.
That was Paul Mooney.
He wrote for even the Chappelle show. Wow. I love Paul Mooney. Iown, that was Paul Mooney. He wrote for even the Chappelle show.
I love Paul Mooney.
I watch a lot of Paul Mooney.
And I wish Paul Mooney were alive to come on this show.
He'd be like, Shannon, this is a very good show.
You're brilliant.
You're brilliant.
You're brilliant.
But niggas don't like you.
Shannon Sharp, you a big motherfucker.
And you will kick a nigga's ass.
You didn't put Pryor up there.
I did. You put Pryor there Murphy, that's who you left no, Murphy
I think Eddie Murphy, of course he's a hero of mine
one of the greatest comedic actors
nobody's fucking with Eddie Murphy
on the comedy and movies
you can match, there's a lot of funny people
but Eddie Murphy is the best
I just
I don't think I've seen Eddie Murphy enough
as far as specials and stuff.
Okay.
But Eddie is up there.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
You said top four.
That's bullshit.
You need top five.
Eddie, let's put up Eddie.
Mount Rushmore.
Who are your four heads you're going to put on Mount Rushmore?
Well, those are presidents that should have no business up there.
Well, we got comedians up there.
We're going to put the comedians up there.
God damn it.
All right.
I just gave you Red Fox.
My Red Fox ain't bad.
Thank you very much.
I really like your show.
It's very good.
I watch it all the time.
How you doing, sir?
Anyway, this is Red Fox,
and I'm very happy to be on Club Shay Shay.
Because not a lot of niggas got a podcast.
You like George Carlin.
What is it about Carlin?
What is it about Carlin?
His wordplay.
It's his word
play it's he's it's his intelligence and how he puts words together and listen everybody has a
taste and carlin was never lazy with a joke he always because he grew up his parents were
advertising people his mom and dad were good with words and he was always is his joke writing it's
just the word play he loved using different
words and so i was like that's made me focus on words because comedy is an art form of words
syntax it's about how you say it some people some i see some jokes and like even for myself i'm hard
on myself if i see a joke and it's too lazy i go it could be better than that right and i watch
carl and i go damn even if the joke wasn't that funny to you,
but the work he put in it, you
go, God damn, that was
brilliant. You know what I mean? It's like...
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It's his wordplay and the things that he says about society,
calling out white supremacy.
A white guy saying it to white people is very important.
Yes. An Irish guy from Harlem. It's important that this white guy is saying, you know, y'all ain't shit.
You feel me? Has someone have you ever heard a joke? Yeah. And you like I could have done that joke better.
Yes. And then there's some jokes where I go, damn, he got that.
That's the best or she got that that
was the best take i've seen i've seen somewhere i could damn i could have done that better damn
i wish i had that joke that was perfect yeah of course a lot of many times you do so can you do
chapelle yeah see i'm gonna tell you something man this is great this is great i love being on club shea shea bitch man i love it
he's like at chapelle i've known since 97 96 97 and chapelle is one of the greats but everybody
does chapelle so you have to sort of talk like this right and now his voice is a little you know
i'm listen i'm not transphobic i'm not i have friends i have friends i have a lot of trans
friends and you remember when he got um
he got uh i guess they blocked his show in minnesota right and at theater they were like
the trans community came yeah they blocked his show and then he went to another theater about
20 minutes later and sold that out right he's like i i'm trans i feel i'm trans because i
transferred from one theater to another and that that was a great transaction, bitch.
When I hear people talk about him.
Yes.
It's like there's like he was a prodigy.
He started at a very, very young age.
Like, but a lot of comedians don't start until they're in the later 20s, mid 20s.
I started after college, 22.
So here's a guy that's 14 and they're saying he's going to these clubs where adults perform.
Yeah.
And so you knew him.
Did you know he was going to become this?
No, I didn't.
I heard about him.
Well, actually, when I first got to New York City, one of my first shows was with him on the show.
It was with him on the show, and I heard heard his name dave chappelle dave chappelle
because he did uh he had done uh star search yes um young and even ed mcmahon said that guy's gonna
be a star watch and people don't remember star search and ed mcmahon before american idol yeah
it was star search four stars three stars yep simbad came from there. Martin Lor- A lot of people that are stars came from there.
And I heard about him.
I heard about him.
Then I ended up on a show with him.
I think I had to go after him.
He murdered.
I had to go after him.
But I heard about him, and I knew, okay, this guy is something to watch.
Because everybody, Chappelle, Chappelle, Chappelle.
And I guess a guy, I want to give credit to Tony Woods, who Chappelle, he took Chappelle under his wing in D.C.
Tony Woods is another underrated comedian who's fantastic.
Yeah, so Chappelle, I knew Chappelle was going to be.
I didn't know how big until that Chappelle show.
I didn't know he was going to be like, woo.
I mean, he's massive.
I mean, because you see him in Nutty Professor.
He's reggie.
Kill that shit. And then you see him in Blue Streetty professor he's reggie killed that and then you
see him in blue street yeah and you like man dude is he's amazing and his comedy he's an amazing
comedian because he loves i think he loves comedy more than anything i believe so because he puts
the time in he puts the hours in yeah and i'm gonna tell you this i think you had a guest on
here that i disagreed with okay no and this is no i you
know i you know i would love to start beef because i want this to go to 60 million i want to call
somebody out i just want to fucking start some shit but i won't do that you know what i'm saying
damn um but when country wayne was on here yeah first of all i don't know country wayne at all
but i watched his video i give him his credit for him making all that money.
I was listening to him like, oh, how did you do this?
You know, I love his hustle.
Smart dude.
I mean, he's making millions off of this shit.
I wish I could.
But he said one statement that I disagreed with, Country.
I disagreed with you.
What was the statement?
I think he said, and if I'm wrong, you correct me.
Okay.
He said something about if anybody's in a comedy club still, that means you're not doing anything.
Something like that.
I don't know if he was answering Faison.
Right.
I think it was him and Faison going at it.
Because Faison's my dude.
Right.
Faison.
Everybody be going at Faison.
I love Faison.
Go say everybody else.
Faison's a funny son of a bitch.
But he's saying if you're still in the comedy clubs, you're not a real comedian.
I think he said that.
Am I wrong?
Something to that effect.
But I think he was talking about him.
Okay, please.
Because I was like, you are wrong about that shit.
I'm in the comedy clubs.
DL's in the comedy clubs.
Comedy clubs are still being built.
They're not fading away.
If you do theaters, that's like a blessing.
But theaters are multipurpose rooms.
Right.
Comedy clubs usually are just for comedy.
Comedians of all statures.
Right.
Do comedy clubs.
There's the rare moments you have.
You know, Chappelle still comes to comedy clubs and works on his shit.
Right.
Seinfeld, who's a billionaire, still comes to the comedy club.
But I think what he was.
I'm just saying.
Yeah.
I might be.
I might be misinterpreting it.
No, I think what he was saying
is that that's his only choice
is to do those.
The people that you mentioned
can do arenas.
They can do theaters.
Yeah.
He's saying that he probably...
The only thing he can do...
Okay.
I'm like, shit.
So what does that make me?
Because it's not easy.
First of all,
it's not easy to fill a comedy club. Even if it's a 300-seater, 400-seater Because it's not easy. First of all, it's not easy to fill a comedy club.
Even if it's a 300-seater, 400-seater, it's not easy.
Right.
Like, there's people who have been fortunate, especially with the algorithm.
You get the algorithm, you got 8 million followers.
Yeah, just numerically, you're going to fill the shit up.
Right.
But are you going to put the work in?
Are you going to have the performance that keeps up with it?
To match it.
To match it.
Which comedy, I'm going to tell tell you this and even cat said it you gotta you can't cheat comedy man i'm telling you
i when i first got to new york you know how many shows i was doing per week 40 shows a week 40 you
heard what i said 40 dog give me some cognac shit let me get that cognac come on man get some cognac. Shit. Let me get that cognac. Come on, man. Get that cognac.
Shit.
Hold on, God.
Get that shit.
Hell yeah.
There's only seven.
Wait a minute.
God, Fred.
There's only seven days.
Yeah.
So you doing.
Isn't that how y'all.
Yeah.
How are you doing 40 shows in a week?
Let me show you.
So when I got to New York City, i remember it was a tracy morgan and
some other cats and they were like yo i said hey because in chicago we would do you give them out
six or seven shows a week yeah what are they and i got i got to new york i did a show with i was in
harlem i did one show they was like yo we about to go i said we all going now
oh there's shows in brooklyn are you coming you got more shows hell yeah boom i hit about five
stages that same night and i said this is how y'all do it it's like hell yeah we do multiple
the average comedian in new york and i don't know if this is perfect math, does about between four to seven shows a night.
Stage time.
We got a lot of stages.
We got a lot.
Shout out to the Comedy Cellar.
That's my spot.
Comedy Cellar in New York City.
But I was doing five shows a night.
Wow.
Five shows a night on the weekdays.
Then on the weekends, I do eight or nine.
Eight or nine shows.
Yeah.
It would be me patrice
o'neill bill burr you know keith robinson it was all of us wanda sykes wanda sykes hall when i knew
wanda sykes hall that's my girl yeah wanda's one is the best but we were that's how you did it you
just ran all over the city and and there was sometimes there'd be a club down the block so
you can go on stage there you
go over there hit that yeah so i would start at about 7 a.m at 7 p.m and then end at around 3 a.m
so i was doing comedy and this is consistent there's no breaks this is consistent shit comedy
takes that much work it's really a sport it's a sport you got to go out there and you got to put
the reps in period you can't cheat it i
don't give a fuck who you are you can't cheat it is that how you get good at the craft you
goddamn right and then you and you know what's funny is when you're on stage they see the
difference they see the difference they see the wordplay they see the transition you get those
nuances as you stay on stage a lot you have to right. I don't know. Somebody told me it was a young commentator.
No. One day they're going to be able to skip steps in comedy. I said, just because you get on a TV
show faster than a veteran don't mean you're good at it because I'm not trying to be an asshole.
But a lot of these companies are skipping a lot of comedians that are ready. There's a lot of
because people ask me, will you get your next on netflix but i said they don't really approach me they don't really
approach a lot not just me but they don't approach a lot of us they they've been given specials to
people that don't even have an hour you can tell somebody ain't ready by the way they edit it you
go oh that motherfucker started bombing at 15 minutes that motherfucker started bombing at 20
they're not because comedy takes yeah you have to be ready you have to put
your time in and the people that are ready are like hey i'm ready for a special they're not
that's why a lot of people are putting their shit up on um on i'm sorry youtube example ali sadiq
if you ain't watched domino effect you're out of your damn mind domino effect one two and three
he just put three he's all on it's
all on youtube right it's all on youtube this guy has been ignored he had a chance he's been ignored
but he's putting it you're counting on yourself you got andrew schultz there's shane gillis there's
a whole bunch of guys putting shit up on youtube that's what i'm gonna have to do oh and by the
way shannon i'm starting a gofundme yeah that's right I'm starting a GoFundMe to raise money to do my own special
yes
you bullshitting
why am I bulljiving
I'm not bulljiving I'm raising money
listen GoFundMe go to GoFundMe
GodFreeSpecial I'm raising money for real
I'm taking donations no different than a church
and a preacher I'm taking donations
cause Jesus wants it but yeah i'm
raising my own money i've been offered some money because listen to do a special it's a big it's
budget you can go from 100 000 to 200 000 it depends right netflix pays for all that right
oh amazon pays for all that but if they're not coming to me and coming to some other some of
the other people i gotta i gotta raise money on my own and then it'll be mine and i can own it you know what i'm
saying i don't know but so that's what's going on there's a lot of comedians men and women that are
being ignored i got you got great comedians like yamanika sanders you got marina franklin you got
a lot of great people my man dante nero you got reuben paul you got a lot of great people my man Dante Nero you got Ruben Paul you got a lot of great comedians Tony Rock
you got a lot of great comedians that are really putting in the work and are ready to do one two
three let's go is I mean listen they're giving specials to the same people every time I see the
same people which some of them do deserve it I go yeah I get why but man there's a lot of people
just waiting on their first one and then they're giving it to people who have been doing comedy two years.
Bullshit.
It's bullshit.
How has social media helped or hurt comedy?
Listen.
There's, okay, I think it's 50-50.
It's hurt comedy as far as, I believe this is my, I believe there's a lot of bums in comedy.
A lot of mediocre bums in comedy because of social media.
Because they're seeing, okay, I had a friend call me the other day.
I haven't seen him since college.
He was like more of a business guy, corporate.
You got the same number since college?
No, not called me, sorry.
Facebook me, that shit.
Okay.
No, he actually called me because I had given him my number since college? No. Not called me. Sorry. Facebook me. Okay. That shit. Okay. Right?
No, he actually called me because I had given him my number a few years ago.
Then he goes, yo, I need to call you.
I need to talk to you.
I was like, oh, talking to me about what?
You know?
And I know what he does.
He's a corporate guy.
So when I was doing my comedy, being broke and shit, he goes, how's that little comedy
thing you're doing?
Oh, little.
Yes.
Little.
They would say that.
How's that little comedy thing?
I say, man, I'm comedy thing i say man i'm just
doing it man come to a show they would never come right boom those are the kind of guys that go see
the more famous guys yes but won't come to your shit yes i said cool so now years later he goes
yo you know i've been writing like comedy this dot dot dot dot you know i was thinking about and i
said why what are you for what why why are you a corporate guy
i mean ain't you a jp morgan word yeah we're older now why are you thinking about comedy i said in my
head he's been watching social media he goes well i've been watching a lot of video so now you think
it's easy ah that's the only thing i think social media has done is they make it look like it's fucking easy.
The YouTube tutorials.
That's like this.
Hi, welcome.
How to be a tight end.
It's so easy.
How to be the tight end.
It's the same.
You know.
You got to show up to practice and you got to put the fucking reps in.
I'm promising you because when I first started doing comedy, was funny i was fun it was me it was cory hokum who's another funny
crazy bastard cory hokum yeah cory hokum who i brought into the game by the way you guys can
thank me for cory hokum because i brought him to amateur night i brought him to amateur night made
him do comedy because i've known him since i was teenager and he's always been a very very very funny man um yeah it's you gotta put in the reps and we were all
funny at the beginning right d ray davis was all funny we didn't have the jokes yet you know we
didn't have nothing to say but we had funny quips here and there right it you well it takes years
to get your voice in comedy it's 10 years years. 10 years. I'm going to fuck.
Here's an example.
I was sitting with Seinfeld.
Yes, I said it.
I was sitting with Seinfeld.
He was doing a documentary called Comedian.
I'm in that documentary.
This is when he was making his comeback after Seinfeld.
He was coming back to comedy.
So he would come to the comedy cellar and hang out with me and hang out with all of us.
And one day he asked me, how long you been doing comedy?
I said, and I stuck my chest. I said i said nah about nine years now going on 10 he's like okay you're a nine-year-old
in comedy then that's your comedy age always remember that that's your age in comedy i never
forgot that my age in comedy is about 27 years now yeah i've been doing it almost 30 years
you know what i mean and then and i And I see why it takes so long.
Because it's effortless for me now.
But I still see the difficulty in it.
Because I can do one hour.
Now I got to do a whole different hour.
When you see Chris Rock, Chris Rock is a technician.
He'll go in, come in, in the comedy club, work on his shit, work on his shit.
Seinfeld does the same shit.
Ray Romano still comes in.
These guys are multimillionaires.
But because it's a craft, because the comedy is always better than you.
I always, comedy is always better than you because you always got to redo something.
You always got a story to tell.
You never, if you get too conceited, and that's another thing about social media.
It's making these motherfuckers cocky.
They come around thinking because, hey, man, I got 10 million followers.
I go, bro but you got to follow
me tonight wow shit we'll see what that shit does to you okay buddy you know i know i'm glad
that you have 10 million i'm glad you got your little sock puppet thing good for you but we're
about to do the real shit and uh good luck following me but you know it takes and listen
you know these these younger cats that come in they can't help when they were born.
They were born in the social media phase. But I try to tell them, dog, doing a sketch is different than stand up.
Please, Lord, I'm telling you, be careful because you're in a time continuum when you're on stage and people don't pay their money.
They don't send their kids a babysitter. And motherfuckers are sitting there like this.
All right, motherfucker. She's hundred hundred dollars the goddamn ticket man it better be i'll be some
hahas in this motherfucker real shit and so you got an hour and what if the dude before you just
did a hot 30 in front of you that the feature just smoked it now you gotta do your shit i'm like
i'm it's a re it's it's the hardest form of entertainment, comedy, which gets no respect, barely wins awards.
Comedy is the hardest.
You know why?
You know why people heckle?
You know why people heckle, Shannon?
What?
Because everybody has a sense of humor.
You make somebody laugh.
People over here make somebody laugh.
You was funny at the barbecue.
You was funny at the water cooler, right?
Everybody's funny. You were even funny on the field. You used to talk shit on the field. I did. You was funny at the barbecue. You was funny at the water cooler, right? Everybody's funny.
You were even funny on the field.
You used to talk shit on the field.
I did.
You did a commercial.
I remember the commercial that you did.
You'd be like, yo, what you going to do, man?
It was a commercial.
So that's funny.
But people go, okay, well, I make people laugh.
There's a man or a woman on stage making people laugh.
But I'm funny, too.
So I'm not even going to show you respect.
You go to the opera. Ain't nobody talking, are they'm not even gonna show you respect you go to the opera ain't nobody talking are they you go to the opera i go to the opera
i'm cultured you go to the opera figaro figaro and someone's like man sing that shit and he'd
be like negro negro yo no you're not gonna say that because you don't have a sense of opera
right you go to the ballet i've been to the ballet shit i go to that because you don't have a sense of opera. Right. You go to the ballet. I've been to the ballet. Shit.
I go to that shit.
You know, nobody says, man, that girl flexible than a motherfucker.
Right.
Why that dude balls out?
You know, Sid, you because you have a respect because it's something you can't do.
But for some reason, comedy is that one art form where everybody feels they're your equal
yeah even the comedians have been doing it two years to do your equal and i don't like it i
think comedy should be like the army like that's what i love about the armed forces i'm a general
you're a fucking cadet you stand at attention when i walk in when i see george wallace
i just saw,
I just did a show with Arsenio Hall,
by the way,
one of the nicest men I've ever met.
I've never met Arsenio.
Arsenio's a fucking legend,
what people don't understand.
Arsenio,
I went,
he goes,
and he goes,
Godfrey,
man,
good seeing you,
brother.
I've been watching you.
You know how his finger,
I said,
Godfrey,
I've been watching you.
Yeah,
he was way back there when he pointed that finger.
he's like,
Godfrey,
ah,
he goes, I've been watching you when he pointed that thing. Yeah, he's like, God, for him. Yeah! Ho, ho, ho, ho.
He goes, I've been watching you since the pandemic.
And I said, I got to salute you.
You're a general, man.
Right.
You're a five-star.
Right.
We got to, like, rank and file has to happen.
It's like in the rookie.
You know, I walked on the team at Illinois.
Oh, did you?
I did.
On a dare.
I did it because I was trying to do track and field, and I wasn't really sure.
And then this dude named Marlon Primas.
I'm saying his name.
Marlon Primas.
He came up with Henry Jones.
So this dude was so talented.
He was our free safety.
Six foot four.
Could throw the ball a mile.
Because sometimes we'd be on the field just fucking around practicing. And four could throw the ball a mile because sometimes we'd be on the field
just fucking around practicing and so and he could throw the i said my god man you can throw he could
punt i go how come you're not a quarterback he goes because in illinois they didn't want any
black quarterbacks they kept all the white they converted all the black dudes into defensive guys
right and he said and he was from la so he'd be like yo cuz it's like you should you should try out
cuz i dare you try and so i tried out and i made the team didn't start i was the meat squad but
hell i was you made it i made it i made the team i made the squad i was on there for like three
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Jamie Foxx recently had a he had
a setback he had a illness we don't know what it is they don't really care it's very mysterious
yeah but i'm glad he's doing better yeah so jamie cut his teeth comedians thinking about getting
back on stage yeah what would you rank jamie as far as comedic we know what he is as a comedic
actor yes but as a stand-up. We saw him in Living Color.
He was very funny, like I May Need Security.
That was funny as hell.
Ranking?
Ranking like what, you mean?
Like ranking as a top?
What's his, what's his, what's, when you look at Jamie, what kind of, what kind of comedic, what kind of comedic performer is he?
He's really talented singing.
Because I opened up for him a long time
ago in indianapolis at the mad of cj walker theater and he he did voices he's funny naturally
yes he can do some impersonation yeah he can do some impersonation we can go pound for pound on
the trump though anytime dog um anytime you want to compete i'm ready for jamie yeah but um he um yeah he did voices he had range
yes and yeah he's very skilled very skilled i've never seen him do a lot of stand-up right
because he's been in movies yeah busy so yeah but the people say the man was a clone
and then they saw him with a white one and said that's him that's jamie ain't no black girl yeah i don't know about the cloning thing because they said
he they said he was at like a mcdonald's yeah and they said that there was a tattoo i don't i don't
fuck i don't know about that shit i don't know anything you're trying to start something no no
no no we're gonna get 60 million tell me something boy I want you to tell me because... No, no, Jamie, I don't...
I mean, I know Jamie, but I don't know him like that.
Right.
But I don't know if it was a clone or not.
It wasn't a clone, man.
You know how we do stuff.
So was that a real Jamie?
Was that Jamie for real?
Yeah.
In that video?
I don't know.
Shit.
You don't believe they're cloning?
The one on the beach.
What beach?
Oh, man, you saw that man walking on.
He was on vacation.
With whom?
White girl.
You did like that.
There you go.
But, Harry, let me ask you this.
Yes.
Because people say, well, Shetty, you causing all this.
Did you know that this many comedians didn't like each other?
Listen, man. this community this many comedians yes didn't like each other listen man i it's really sad to say this
but our our our community i hate saying community community sounds so are we talking about the black
are we talking about comedic um no because the white dudes i'm gonna keep it 100 because i know
a lot of white comics and man they ain't beefing like that.
Hell no.
I'm not saying there's not guys that don't like each other.
But these motherfuckers, they will hold that solidarity.
That white solidarity, it will hold it.
Because they all are on each other's podcasts.
Rogan makes these motherfuckers kings.
It's Rogan.
And even though
shout out to adam carolla because i do his i'm a regular on his you know and um they they share
each other's shit they get on each other's podcast they help each other all the time
ah i don't even want to say this shit but if it causes controversy i'm down with it
we ain't shit real talk we are fucking whack because here's the
problem we always have air our grievances on public platforms okay this motherfucker ain't
that funny that motherfucker i'm like why i don't understand what is this fucking addiction of
calling each other out in public all the time on who's funny who's why i don't understand we're
the only ones that kind of do this shit okay you know and of course we watch because controversy is always fun but i don't
know why we do that we should be on each other's podcasts we should be like you know liking each
other's shit but we don't do that i know some comic and i i got comics that don't like me
and i'm not saying anything about how easy it i got comics that don't fuck with me. I've got comics that have talked
shit about me, but I never let them know they've talked shit about me. I've had comics talk shit
about me to people in the business producers who have come up to me and said, Hey, are you friends
with this particular person? I could say his name right fucking now. And they say, yeah, I know this
guy. What's up? Well, he was saying some really disparaging things about you, but we didn't
believe him. I think you should give him a call and i call him i say why the fuck are
you talking about me and i've never done anything to you because i don't do anything any you can
tell me about i mind my business shannon i stay in my lane right all i do is i let me be the best
comedian i can be i do i don't stab people i'm not into stabbing people in the back i guess that
means you're doing pretty good because that's's what I've been told. What?
It comes along with the business.
When you're doing well, people take shots at you.
They take shots at me.
I've had women tell me shit.
Here's the thing.
When a dude is talking bad about another dude to a woman, that's bitch shit.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's bitch shit.
Yeah, that's true.
I don't do that.
I can have a beef with you, right?
And if I see a girl that you know, I'm not going to say shit to her about you.
That's cornball shit.
But they do that to me.
And I've been told by women.
That's what's great is like my relationship with certain women will be like, yo, I just want to let you know.
You thought that was your man.
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
He, you know.
So, and it's like we are fucked up to each other.
I'm not saying there are pockets of comics that do help each other.
Black comics.
Let me not.
Because then they'll be like, man, how are you going to say that about the whole black? It's the truth. We don't help each other i'm not saying there are pockets of comics that do help each other black let me not because then they'll be like how are you gonna say that about the whole black it's the truth yeah we don't help each other even on even on social media motherfuckers won't like your shit
to help you dl hugley does that shit for me all the time he always puts my videos up if your videos
are great he'll put it on his platform dl always looks out he always looks out man likes my shit michael blackson
will like my shit sometimes just just a little little things here and there i guess he put mine
up because i'm wendy williams with a weight set so he ain't putting your wendy williams with a
weight set i remember one time you did send something to me when i imitated you say man
i thought we was boys man yeah i don't do was boys man and then that was it i never heard nothing no no but i know but listen i we were not we need
that's always been a problem with us in the first place though it is it's our unity our unity
this concludes the first half of my conversation part two is also posted and you can access it to
whichever podcast platform you just
listened to part one on. Just simply go back to Club Che Che profile and I'll see you there.
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