Comedy Bang Bang: The Podcast - Best of 2013 Pt 1
Episode Date: December 23, 2013Alas, we say farewell to another year but never fear because the best of 2013 episode of Comedy Bang! Bang! is here! There were sooo many good episodes this year that we had to step up the countdown t...o the next level. Making a rare appearance is special guest Paul F. Tompkins who helps Scott countdown numbers fifteen through twelve of the listener selected episodes of the year and some very special b-b-b-bonus-s-s-s clips. Stay tuned for Pt 2 to see which episodes YOU voted for made the list!
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this show. Counting down your top episodes of 2013, this is the Comedy Bang Bang best of
part one. I'll be here with Paul F. Tompkins and we will hear about your 15 through 12 episodes.
All of that and more all on today's…
Welcome one and all, yes. It is the end of the year and you know what
the end of the year means lists. Lists are plenty. You have Santa's list. He has a list.
It's sort of his own best of list, best of little boys and little girls. And you have best of movies
list. You have snubs and flubs, the best snubs, the best flubs. And of course you have best podcast
lists which the AV club who regularly cover podcasts. We were number one this year and speaking
of number one, there are going to be numbers said on these podcasts that we are recording right
now. This is part one of the Comedy Bang Bang best of 2013 and what a great year. Boy, what a
storied year in Comedy Bang Bang history. This is perhaps our best year yet, our most consistent
year yet. Who's that? Engineer Cody, is that you? Oh wait, we have a special guest here.
Well, I don't know about special. We haven't heard from him all year long. We haven't heard
from him since the very last best of episodes that we did. You know him as a comedian,
a raconteur, a member of the raconteurs as well. That's right. Along with Brendan Benson.
I'm a raccoon a tour. That's right. I tell stories about raccoons, dressed as a raccoon.
You are dressed as a raccoon right now. That's right. You have a little burglar's mask. That's
right. And you're holding, I would think they were bank robber sacks of money, but they don't have
the S with the line through it, but they have acorns in it. That's right. I have big sacks of
acorns that I've stolen because raccoons are burglars of the animal kingdom. They are. They
really are, by the way, Paul F. Tompkins is here. Hello. I'm Paul F. Tompkins. I'm here.
That's right. They're thieves. They are filthy scum. You notice that most animals in the animal
kingdom, they barter for everything. Yeah. Meanwhile, raccoons, they're out there just take,
take, take. That's right. You know? It's like that old fable by, it was either a
supper, Nick Casavetes, forget who, about the ant, the grasshopper and the raccoon.
Yes. Now, the ant, very industrious, very industrious because he's all,
ants are so speedy or whatever. And his mental powers, he can communicate with other ants.
That's right. Yeah. Was that covered in this? Ant, ant. Yes. He could summon,
he was an ant who could summon all other ants to it. He was a superhero, much like ant man.
Yes. But he was an ant ant. He had ant powers.
He had the powers of more than just him as an ant? Here's the thing. He had all the proportion
of strength of an ant in his ant body. In his ant body. Okay. I beg to differ with you on this.
But, but he was very persuasive and he had the ability to get other ants to do stuff that he
wanted them to do. I think that you or I could call ourselves superheroes by that logic. We could
be human man. Well, there was a band called Man Man. And as far as I know, they all have human
abilities. I believe so. At least the human abilities to play instruments. Which, that's,
to me, that's a super human ability. Yes. That could be extraterrestrial, as a matter of fact.
I think anyone who's in a band may be an alien. I think I'm more intraterrestrial.
I can't play an instrument.
So, there's ant ant. You have also the, who else was in that other than the raccoon?
The grasshopper. Oh, the grasshopper. Grasshopper was lazy. Well, here's the thing. I think that the
grasshopper has been, I think that history is kind, history is written by the winners. It's
written by the winners, of course, yes. It's ants. And I think that the grasshopper has been
unfairly portrayed as lazy when, really, he just wanted to enjoy life. That's right. Ants,
they want to enjoy a picnic. Grasshopper's life. They want to enjoy somebody else's picnic. Well,
that's the thing. See, but you know what? Who is this ant to cast crumbs? Ants are also thieves.
I'm now realizing that. That's right. But they're thieves, they steal from human beings,
so they have some twisted code. Ah, yes. Like Robin Hood. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, it's
okay to steal from our oppressors. That's right. And they see us as oppressors. Yeah. Because
we're always spraying raid on them. Are we spraying raid on ants or are we just stepping on them?
I spray raid on them. Do you really? Oh, yeah. That's, I take a little time out of every day.
Find some ants, spray some raid on them. Yeah, you don't have ants in your home. You're just
going out with a kind of raid. Out to Griffith Park. Just raising the ground. Such great ants.
Everywhere I look. Great ants at Griffith Park. Awesome, great ones. If you want the best.
The best. Get yourself around.
Come on, come on, come on and touch me, babe.
Ba da ba da. Don't you know that I am not afraid. Ba da ba da. What was that promise that you made?
Why won't you tell me what she said? What was that promise that you made?
Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da. Ba da ba da.
No, no, no. Ba ba da. Ba ba da. Ba ba ba da. Ba ba ba da. Okay, okay. We can't make it through.
Oh, we finally broke it. Guys, if this is your first time listening to this show, that's what,
yeah, we made a joke last year. That's right. Oh, we made it in one of our episodes in our top
10, actually. I was just listening to it today while I was compiling the clips. Definitely you say.
Yes. This is unprecedented. Yes, that is right. Is it right? Speaking of the countdown. Yes,
which we haven't yet. We're now doing it. Yeah, we'll get into the whole grasshopper raccoon ant
thing. I do want to get back to that. We do have to talk about the countdown. We got it. Look,
this is how the bread is made. This is how we pay the bills, and we have the skills to do so.
We have the skills in order to have the bills paid. Well, I hire someone to pay the bills.
There we go. That's a skill in of itself, the ability to accrue money and pay someone to do
things. I got the skills to hire a bill player. Player. Hey, player. Hey, player. Will you pay my
bills? Player, will you pay my bills? All right, guys, if this is your first time listening.
It is also your last. Sorry about all the singing, but Paul and I need to warm up.
This is how it happens. This is how we do it. It's Friday night.
That's right. I guess the feeling's right. But it is night, by the way. This is
atypical. I pointed out. Hollywood nights, and Paul is pointing at the window. Right over there.
We usually do this during the day, and this is, you know what? We had to do it at night to fit it
into our busy schedule, but here we are. Now, we're risking being attacked when we leave this
building. That's right. By creatures of the night. You know who else comes out at night?
The freaks. The freaks. The freaks. Now, you know, I hope that a super freak will defend us
against the freaks. Well, the super freaks, like freak freak, you mean? He has all the
force and its strength of a freak. Yeah. But he's a freak. Freak abilities.
Yeah. You think that a super freak would defend human beings against other freaks? I think much
like a super man would defend extraterrestrials for four men. I think a freak would be on the other
side. Hold on a second. Yes. Superman himself is an extraterrestrial who defends human beings
against other extraterrestrials. How can I forget that? I submit to you, Brainiac,
Mr. Mitchell. Don't say his word back his name. His word. What's your word again, Scott Ockerman?
My safe word? You have two words. What's your first word? My first safe word is Scott.
That's what a great safe word. Scott! Things get too raw. Yeah, I just yell at my... Hard to forget.
Hard to... That's right. You know what I mean? That's right. Unless you have amnesia.
Oh, do you? Let me check. I don't remember. I don't know. Amnesia. Paul, you have a topping hat.
I do. I have a little... This is my little hat for the winter. Oh, very good. It is winter.
It's a winter's night. It's a low-top hat. It's a low-top hat. It is. Yeah, it's like a half-top.
Half-top? Yeah. I requested a half-top. Looks like a half-calf when you're getting coffee.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Can I get a half-top? Can I get a half-top just for my head top?
Half-top for a head top. And everyone at the haberdashery knows what that term is.
Yes. It was busy there today. Really? Everyone's getting half-tops, regular tops.
Everyone's getting top hats of all different shapes and sizes.
I was in St. Louis recently, and there is a... Arch business?
Yeah, there's an arch business that just makes... Oh, no, I thought you were there on arch business.
What if there's an arch business who was like, wow, we got one in the can?
Business is going to be picking up after this. That sustained us for a while, but
the coffers are getting low. Did I tell you that I had once convinced Kurt Braunaule,
or when we were on tour in Portland, that there were so many bridges there
because the city of Portland made a bunch of them and couldn't sell them?
Yes. I was like, other cities, they defaulted on them, so they had to keep them.
But see, that's the kind of thing... I feel like if you told me that with a straight enough face,
I would probably... You'd have to think about it for a second.
Yes, I would. I can't blame Kurt completely. No, no. He's not blameless, certainly.
Now, no. And you are blameful. Yes, but he has some culpability in this.
No, absolutely. It takes two to tango. Certainly. Did you laugh in his face
when you realized he was taking these seriously? Oh my God, he was so embarrassed.
He was like, because I got really close to him, because I think if you laugh in someone's face,
you need to be about one inch from them. You need to be nose to nose.
Otherwise, it's not laughing in their face. Yes. You need to be nose to nose or your nose
in his toes, in his toes, in your nose. I suppose. Where's that from? Okay, so...
Anyway, I was in St. Louis, and there was a haberdashery, and I was just thinking how
lonely. And someone said you had been there. In St. Louis. In St. Louis, yes. I was there
doing the WITS program. In St. Paul. Oh, that's where I was. You're talking of hymys. Yes.
And yes. Shout out to hymys. Shout out to hymys! Hymys for life!
Hymetown. Remember that? Oh, that got the reverend, Jesse Jackson, in some trouble.
A little bit, and now he's back and thinner than ever.
You're completing the St. Louis arch of Al Sharpton. Same guy. With the setting of the
Mary Tyler Moore show, which is the Reverend Jesse Jackson. Ah, yes, yes, yes. Yes, hymys,
haberdashery, and I've bought many items there over the years. But how lonely is the haberdasher?
He's a pretty lonely guy. You know what I mean? Not a lot of call for him lately.
No, you know what? He was sitting there. I remember I saw him in the corner of the shop,
and he had cobwebs on him. Did you have to blow them off of him? I did. I did.
He woke up at the start, perched his spectacles on his nose, threw up the sash. I actually bought,
the last time I was there, I tried on a hat that I could not commit to. I think because my wife was
there. She was back at the hotel. My wife? Oh, no. It's back. It is back. It is back. It is back.
It is back. It is back. It's back. My wife. And then after I got back home to Los Angeles,
I called them up, and I bought that hat over the phone. Oh, man. I couldn't stop thinking about it.
Describe the hat, first of all. It's a black sort of Hamburg type hat,
and it's got a silver band and silver trim around the brim. It's beautiful.
And a Hamburg, is that the one with the curved top?
I don't know what you mean. Almost like a bowler, but different. Do you know what I mean?
It's sort of like a fedora, but without the dents in the front. Although you can put dents in the
front if you like, which I do. Okay. Why do you put dents in your hats? I like the way it looks.
Isn't that implying that there are dents in your head? That's what I'm trying to make people think.
Almost like trepanation. Yeah. I want people to think that I've had all the evils taken out of my
head, leaked out of my head. That's how ancient barbers used to do it. And my barber today.
Just banging on your head with a ballpeen hammer. They would take a hat. Well, there's Scott.
There's a little bit more to it than that. Well, I mean, I'm dumbing it down, of course.
They'd use a sort of chisel to make a hole in your skull, so that evils could come out. Yes,
of course. And it's not just good air. Yeah, they don't just hit you with a hammer. Yeah,
I'm sorry. I don't mean to imply that. Anyway, shout out to Jaime Town. Jaime! In a town.
But we do have to get back to the countdown. For those of you listening at home,
or maybe you're listening on the bus. Oh, the only two places, right? Yep,
home or in the bus. If you're listening in a car, be careful, the cops can pull you over.
Hey, if you're in it, they can pull you over anytime. I don't know. Is that a podcast you're
listening to? Has a cop ever pulled over a bus because he saw somebody in the window of the bus
and didn't like the way they looked? They should. You know what I mean? I mean, they can, right?
I guess they could. Everybody would be unhappy about it, but cops can do as they please. I don't
know that you can pull over anyone because you don't like the way they look. Well, but you
could pull over the driver. If you don't like the way they look, no, you can't. You have to suspect
them of... I'm not saying you're supposed to. Oh, but they do all the time. They do. All the time.
What's that mean? Driving while black. Oh. Yeah. That's a bit, that's, that's a little code for,
oh, I got pulled over for what, a DWB. I see. Yeah. And does this happen to you? Yeah, all the time.
That's my code, is what I'm saying. It's not a great code. I have a black car.
It's not, oh, I see. Anyway. But we're, the countdown, what are we talking about?
We have to talk about it. We have to talk about it. Okay. The countdown.
The countdown. What it is, we do this show. It comes out once or twice a week.
Now, Scott, you say we, but it's you who does the show. I'm talking about Cody. Oh.
Engineer Cody is here. Engineer Cody is here. No, meaning myself and my funny friends, we do
this show every week. Just trying to have fun. And we have fun. And we do them all year. And then
at the end of the year. All goddamn year. While we're all on vacation to our, you know, Saint
Tropez. Is that a place? Yeah. Okay. Saint Tropez. Saint Tropez. That's what it is. Okay.
That's Bandit Soleil. If you want, get Bandit Soleil if you want the Saint Tropez Tant.
Oh, okay. I will. Thank you. I've been meaning to do that. You're welcome.
But while we're all on vacation, we do these best of so you can hear the best clips from
the previous year. And we had a banner year. I mentioned it before, but this is one of,
maybe perhaps the best year. It's a beautiful banner, by the way. Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. I don't
know. I kind of threw it together last minute. What? Yeah. I thought that was store bought. Oh,
no, I took a calligraphy class. It's beautiful. Thank you. Yeah. I mean, it's beautiful. Thank you
so much. I mean, yeah. Could you tell that it was actually penned and not stamped? I thought it was
machine ninked. Thank you. Yeah. And I was judging it too. I was like, oh, this guy.
Judge Jury and executioner. Judge Judy and execute. Who said that? Did somebody say that on this
show? I don't know, but I like it. Judge Judy and executioner. I know I heard that.
If that's your joke somewhere. No, it is not. It's somebody's. I forget who it is. I forget
where I heard that. I enjoy it. It's funny. It is funny. I guess that's why it stuck with me.
It's certainly not me. I like to imagine that someone pissed on her leg, called it rain,
and then she executed them. Wait a minute. Did we? We've talked about that. We have talked about
Judge Judy executing people, right? I don't know. It runs together. We've done a lot of these shows.
We are up to 200 and what are we up to now? 236, 34, something like that. That's too many. That's
too many. Oh, 200. No, 263. No, too many. And then some best ofs and a whole bunch of live ones.
I did just shy of 100 this year. I did 97 episodes this year.
Now, how many weeks in a year are there? I believe, unless it's a leap year,
there are 52 weeks in a year. On a leap year, there are 53.
So you're saying you did just about two episodes a week?
Just about, yeah. Including the live ones. 50 plus 50 is 100. I don't know about that.
Then two plus two is four. That's 104. That is 104. How many did you say?
I did 97 of this show. Oh, well, then I take it back.
Yeah, so it's seven shy. Not that impressive. But we did a lot this year and so that's why we have
extra, what am I trying to say? Extra sized? What do they say? Super sized?
Super sized. Like the Superman of sizes.
Super sized me. Yes, I will. That's why we have a super sized best of this year. We're doing
four episodes. All right, four best of episodes. Oh, that's courting disaster.
Yeah, that's according to Jim. And executioner. According to Jim and executioner.
I like that too. So we have to get to it. What are we going to do
while we listen to this? We're going to count down your top 15 this year, not your top 10.
Because you're now, Scott, may I? Yes, you may. I think the reason, there's usually a top 10.
That's traditional. Yep. Tradition. Tradition. Tradition. But you're saying because,
this is what I'm inferring. Tell me if this is what you're applying.
Let me see if I'm implying it. I do know you're inferring it.
There's so many good episodes. It was too hard to confine it to 10.
Too hard, too hard. There were, there, plus the- There were five other good ones.
The bottom six or so are so close that I felt it was just wrong not to include them.
And we have the time. Why not put out, you know, four best of episodes? Why not?
The bottom six are neck and neck. Meaning 15 to nine or so were so close
that I just thought, you know what, we shouldn't just do a top 10.
But then once you get into eight through one.
Some of those are close within those. We'll talk about it as we go.
All right. I don't want to jump ahead. No spoilers.
All right. So we have to get to it. We're going to be counting down today 15 through 12.
And we're also going to have a couple of bonus clips.
What kind of clips? I guess I mean-
Boo, boo, boo, boo, boo, bonus!
There will be several of those.
Now, I thought we agreed you would take care of the boo, boo, boo, boo's.
I would take care of the-
And we both did boo, boo, boo, boo's.
No.
Did I only do boo, boo, boo's?
I win in my turn, sir.
I win in my turn.
I'm so so, so, so sorry.
You're a good boo, boo, boo, boo, boy.
From here, from here forth and here with-
Heads forth and forevermore.
I shall do bees.
You shall do essence.
I say to you, Captain Phillips.
It was J.O.K. in that movie.
I am J.O.K. in that movie.
I am J.O.K. in that movie.
Yeah, that's right.
So, let us get to it.
No more dilly-ing nor dallying.
Let us get to your number.
What's- which number is this?
15.
Number one, five.
That's right.
Number one, five.
15.
That's shoddy.
Number 15.
This is a great clip to start with.
This is from
episode-
Ooh, a delicious anticipation.
Which episode is this?
Scott, you're really teasing everyone.
This is exciting.
I've listed the number of every episode except for this one.
Oh, this is episode 203.
All right, this is episode 203.
The Vicar of Yanks.
Oh.
This- I like this episode a lot.
This episode is a great one.
The Vicar of Yanks.
This is Weird Al Yankovic.
And Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber.
What's this now?
Lord Andrew- the writer of the Phantom of the Opera.
The Broadway composer?
Yes, Jesus Christ Superstar.
So Light Express?
Yes, Joseph and his amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.
Do you think I sound like a musical robot?
By the way, I got a little voice robot there for that last section.
It was good.
Yeah, yeah, it was pretty good.
Did you make it like you made the banner?
Yeah, I did.
Yeah, it's sort of a short circuit type of thing.
I'm just- I'm getting into robotics and calligraphy.
25.
I'm getting into robotics and calligraphy.
All right, this is the Vicar of Yanks.
I don't think there's a lot too.
Sorry, I am late at night.
We're both- we're both- I'm feeling like we're on the same throat clearing cycle.
We are.
We're doing it right.
I think I'm- I'm good now.
I think I swallowed whatever it was.
I'm a perfect person.
Uh, this is the Vicar of Yanks.
Doesn't need any kind of setup other than Weird Al.
Our good old friend is here and our good friend Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber is here and-
The whole gang.
The whole gang is here.
Let's hear from that.
Number one, five.
Weird Al Yankovic is here.
One of our favorite guests of all time.
Well, thank you, Scott.
Hurrah.
Oh, please.
Around.
Please.
Around of applause.
Please sit down.
Weird Al and Yankovic.
That's so nice of you to stand.
Here's American royalty as well.
Do you hold as some sort of a royalty title?
I am, you know, the Vicar of Yanks back in the old country.
That's true.
So we have confirmation.
I know you weren't listening.
Are we talking about that earlier?
Yeah, we weren't.
Al, thank you so much for being here on what-
I have to guess is your fifth appearance on the show.
Let's go with fifth.
And you were on the TV show the last time we saw each other.
You were on the TV show last season.
The season finale.
Was that the last season?
I thought there'd be another one.
Well, of course.
Yeah, we're coming up on-
So it's not really the last season, is it?
I believe, okay.
No, I won't quit.
It could be the penultimate season.
We don't know.
It very well might be.
Vicar, he has trouble with the English language.
What he means to say is a previous season.
Oh, so now it makes sense.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You guys seem to speak the same language.
Yes, countrymen after a fashion.
That's right, that's right.
So what year did your family come over here?
Oh, gosh, it was in the late 13th century, I think.
Oh, my gosh.
On some sort of Mayflower-type ship?
On a raft, on a small raft.
On a small raft, all the way from England.
It was an accident, as I understand.
It wasn't intended, no.
Fairly accidental.
You just kind of meant to go out in a pond or something?
It was a three-hour tour.
And yet, they wound up, you know,
coming to America centuries before it was, you know.
Steva trunks of Hawaiian shirts.
They brought them right over, yes.
Really?
So these are family heirlooms that you wear?
Yeah, they float, you know, Hawaiian shirts.
Of course, it's a benefit of them.
Not many people know that.
They're the one piece of clothing that floats?
That's why I always wear Hawaiian shirts on an airplane,
because if we go down, you don't have time
to reach for the life jacket, I'm good.
So you only wear them on an airplane?
Pretty much only on airplanes.
We're about to catch a flight.
Right after this podcast, I'm out the door.
Out to LAX.
I see. Boy, a traveling guy.
Yeah.
Always on the move, man.
Al, what have you been up to?
We haven't heard you on the podcast for a personal pleasure, Scott.
It is, but I'm going to go there.
Oh.
What have I been up to?
Oh, gosh, I'm working on the new album.
I'm going on the road.
I'm playing Bonnaroo this year.
That's going to be fun.
Oh, so fun.
Oh, Bonnaroo, I've heard of this.
This is where a bunch of people, they stand around
in the out of doors.
The Bonnaroovians you're talking about.
Yes, they're indulging in alcohol and drugs,
and they have a contest to see who can smell the most.
Who can smell the most?
Yes.
What sense do you mean that in?
Who can give off the most punch and odor?
Oh, because I'm really good at actually smelling the most
in terms of like guessing people's odors
and what they had for lunch, perhaps.
Now, is that a skill or is that something
that is thrust upon you?
That was part of my DNA.
That was something that's been part of my family
since the 13th century, pretty much.
So when they got on this raft, they were led by their smells
to America, really?
In a way, because they sensed a new land out there,
a land of opportunity.
They smelled it, and they followed that scent.
I see, interesting.
Follow your nose, always good advice.
It always knows.
True.
Always.
Not always?
Always.
Oh, so.
That's too canon logic.
Okay.
It's not always valid.
And we all know three of those make a six pack.
So now what I want to know though, Al,
is you're doing Bonnaroon.
You have a new album, and when does the album come out?
You know, it's on the calendar.
I can't be held to this, but sometime in the next 30 years.
Okay.
Sometimes.
It's the last album on my contract.
Standard three decade deal.
Yes, the three decade deal.
If by the time I'm 83, it hasn't come out yet.
The record company is going to ask for money back.
They release you?
Yes.
I see.
And this is the last of your contract with?
With Sony.
Sony.
Yes.
Oh, Sony.
Such a difficult studio to get to in the middle of the day.
It is.
Have you talked to them about that?
You know, as the traffic is just too heavy on Pico,
so I have to.
It's just out there in Century City,
the furthest point from anywhere on Earth,
in the middle of the day.
What is this?
The Saturday Night Live sketch, The Californians?
You big fan.
If you turn left, if you turn right on La Fiennica, though.
With Alan.
On the way to the 405.
What are you doing here?
Enjoyable sketch.
Just bring it up to them.
That's all I ask.
I will.
Okay.
Thank you so much.
Like, make that a negotiation point.
If you renew your contract.
Do you think you're going to renew your contract?
I'm guessing not.
I've been under a record contract since 1982.
That might be nice to breathe the fresh air for a while.
That's amazing.
A question if you're permitted, Vigor.
Do you do your own contractual negotiations?
Pretty much, yeah.
We put the contract.
We tape it on the wall and we throw darts
and figure out what parts we want to negotiate.
And it's all very subjective and by chance.
It's like a roulette wheel.
I don't think it's by chance.
I think it's by divine intervention.
I think God guides those darts.
You think so?
I do.
I truly believe that.
Feral schools of thought there.
Yeah.
This may seem like a trivial question,
but what type of tape do you use?
Do you use Scots tape?
The Scots tape.
Not masking tape.
Certainly not.
Take the fandom mask down.
No.
If you use half of the room.
Half of masking tape.
I think the fandom is not half a role.
I think it is one of the greatest roles in the history of social theater.
Hominem, Scotridge, you've done it.
Thank you so much.
So it is amazing if you'll permit me to swallow
in the middle of that question.
Please, please do.
It is amazing.
31 years under contract at the same rate.
In denture servitude.
Remember when Prince, the little prince,
he wrote slave all over his face?
Like, you ever feel like doing that?
That lasted a week, didn't it?
He used ash from the tiny volcano.
Remember how he changed his name
to get out of his record contract?
I'm changing my name to an odor,
because I feel like since that's part of our family's, you know,
lineage.
Lineage, yeah.
Lineage.
Great skills.
I feel like that would be appropriate.
So what kind of odor would you be?
It's going to be a slightly lavender-ish, slightly basil.
So a little mix of the two.
Okay.
So if you ever smell that, you'll know your name.
Your records are around somewhere.
Well now, Scotridge, what sort of odor would you be
if you were an odor?
Gosh, I mean, there's so many great odors out there in the world.
There's fresh baked bread.
It's a good one.
You know, I don't know that I could necessarily own that,
like Prince owned that symbol.
I don't think that symbol existed before the little prince, actually.
No, he created it.
He created it.
So I feel like we would have to create sense in order to...
Much like the vicar has done just now.
With the basil and the lavender.
I believe it would be a lot like creating my own perfume,
where I just, you know, pour a little bit of this in, pour a little bit of this.
Odor scot.
Yes, odor scot, yes.
Odor scot.
And just pour a bunch of stuff into it,
and then, you know, create something new, you know?
Like all the perfumes are all different, aren't they?
All of them.
Like snowflakes.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
No two perfumes are alike.
What if a perfume smelled like a snowflake?
That's right!
Because ice technically is odorless, but like a dirty snowflake.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, very subtle.
Essence.
Slash.
Essence of snowflake.
Yes, that's what I would change.
What do I use?
Would you call your scent dirty snowflake?
Oh, I would.
Oh, yeah.
See, that's my online name.
How did you know?
Oh, I've chatted with you.
That's my words with friends code.
Dirty snowflake 27.
We should play words with friends, by the way.
I played with someone for a while, and she got...
I don't know.
I don't want to go into it.
00:31:40,320 --> 00:31:42,160
But it sounds fascinating.
Is it that Gillian Jacobs?
Yeah, Gillian Bellows Jacobs.
Do you know I had a game of words with friends going on with her for quite some time.
Wait, did she keep it going?
She did keep it going.
I tried to quit it a million times.
She kept her again going with you?
She kept...
She said, please, please don't quit the game anymore.
I'm...
You're the only person I want to play with.
Oh!
These other people I keep having to quit games with them over and over and over.
These foul idiots.
What is it because of the words I would...
I feel I've said too much.
I believe you have.
I never put it together.
Scortrick, please do forgive me.
I hope I haven't hurt your feelings.
I mean, you haven't hurt my feelings.
The situation's hurt my feelings.
I don't blame people for relaying.
From the Jersey Shore.
Hominems.
But Al, 31 years.
Yes, the history.
Oh, the history.
The Capitol Records Building.
I don't know.
Remember that?
You know.
Is it still there?
Maybe.
The Big �raula.
After the apocalypse.
78 RPM?
That's listening to music...
Remember all this stuff?
Remember, my first 78 RPM record?
Gosh, so much history.
So easily breakable.
That's right.
But the music industry in general
just has so much history
and you're a part of that.
It must feel amazing.
It's so nice to be a footnote
in the Rolling Stone Music Guide.
No.
No, you would be at least a mention.
Footnote and a mention.
A mention and then there would be
a little number of footnotes
next to it to explain who you were.
Oh, do you know what?
I've always wanted to get one of those
little swords to have that be the thing
that makes people look you up
is the little tiny sword.
I want to be a sword with the three notches.
So I would be the third time
that it would be necessary to have a sword.
I don't want to be an asterisk.
I want to be a sword.
Yes, a sword.
Yes, of course.
We were talking about a sword of sword cubed.
The little sword and then it has
like three notches on it as in
this is the third sword on the page.
And feel as if I haven't seen that one in quite a while.
Yes, yes.
Thank you for that trip.
Maybe that'll be what I changed my name to.
Is that a little...
The sword with the three notches?
Yes.
It's going to wreak havoc
with the publishing industry.
I wonder what that would smell like.
What would it wreak of?
If it were a smell?
Oh, homonyms!
But Al.
Yes, Scott.
So many hits.
So many.
I can't even count them.
How many number...
As if there were an infinite number.
How many number one hits have you had?
Number one...
Gosh, I can't even...
Zero.
Zero number one hits.
Actually, I can count them.
Not even...
I thought I wouldn't be able to and yet I have.
Not even in the comedy charts.
Oh, on the comedy charts?
Yeah.
Does that count?
Not really.
Not really.
But in the regular charts,
what's the highest you win?
Oh, I've had a couple top tens.
I think the last two albums won top ten.
The last two...
I mean, that's amazing to have your later records
be the most popular records you've ever done.
It's a slow build.
You know, I didn't want to be the kind of artist
that hits number one right out of the box.
I wanted to wait 30, 40 years,
have a slow build, a slow climb,
and hit the top of the parabola.
And I think I'm going to peak with my next album.
It's going to be my best album.
And after that, the slow ride down.
Slow decline as an independent artist.
I have a question for them.
Yes.
Do you feel as if your best work is yet to come?
It is.
I'm doing it right now.
In this room.
What?
So they not yet to come, but in the immediate future.
In the immediate future.
Which is the present.
Yes.
Now it's the present.
Now it's the present.
And...
You're blowing my mind.
Why did I eat that peyote button before coming into the box?
Oh my gosh, Mr. Webber.
Or Lord Webber.
Mr. Webber.
I'm not...
I'm not so hot.
Mr. Webber is his father.
I'm not so high that I can't detect that insult to my station.
How often do you get high, by the way?
The...
Usually of an afternoon.
Every afternoon.
Yes.
Shortly after 4 p.m.
Alan, I know you have younger listeners as well,
but how often have you been high, would you say?
Ah, I have never.
You've never been high ever.
I'm looking forward to it.
Not a single drug ever.
I haven't had...
I haven't gotten around to it.
You and I are fair.
Does Flintstone's aspirin count?
Because I've had a couple of Barney's and a Betty once.
What about drinking?
Have you ever legitimately been drunk?
Not legitimately, no.
It's been very illegible.
Yes.
Yes.
Wasn't sanctioned by the council.
I probably shouldn't say this, but on occasion,
I have had the occasional blueberry daiquiri.
Blueberry daiquiri, because you live in Hawaii sometimes.
Sometimes you have to do it.
Sure.
When you drink a blue drink, do you feel as if you're in the future?
I only order drinks by color.
Like, I'm feeling kind of periwinkle today.
Make me something periwinkle.
Now, this is what I'm talking about.
This is wealthy person's behavior.
This is how it is called trick.
Maybe one day you'll know.
How wealthy are you?
It would blow your mind.
I honestly, you've had so many hit records in an era
where having hit records meant you were rich, you know?
So like, I just can't imagine having that much money.
I was selling records in the day
when people actually bought records.
Yeah.
It's crazy.
I mean, remember, I was thinking about this.
Remember the 90s when everyone had just to buy one song,
they would buy a person's record?
Remember that?
They were all like $15.99.
And to have a hit song, you had to say both the MF word
and the N word.
You had to have the sticker on?
Yeah.
You said MFN?
Yeah.
It's just a crazy time.
But again, getting back to it, how wealthy are you?
Well, I don't want to make you jealous,
but I have actually two TV sets.
My goodness.
Yeah, thank you.
Two separate houses.
Two separate houses?
And several houses.
How many houses do you own?
Four houses, but only two TV sets.
So sometimes the hard part is transporting the TVs
to the houses as we need them.
Because it's not a carry-on.
You have to check a television if you're flying on an airplane.
I almost said a teleplane.
Oh, I wish someone would invent one.
Oh, my gosh.
A teleplane.
How amazing would that be?
Just teleporting.
The most amazing.
You would have to walk into a plane-like structure.
Yes, exactly.
That's right.
But then once you sat down.
You sat down, buckle up.
And waited for 20 minutes while they closed the doors.
Stupid announcements.
Yeah, just to turn off everything.
Yes.
And then boom, you teleported to where you wanted.
Wait for people to get yelled at for not turning off the telephones.
Yes, of course.
I mean, you would have to go through security
for a good two-hour period.
Absolutely.
Remove your shoes.
Yes.
And they would...
Top hats.
Topping hats.
Medals.
They would sum...
Medals, really.
You have to remove your medal.
They would...
I never thought about that.
What about credit it?
They asked me to remove my medal when I go through the metal detector.
And what I try to explain to them is,
it's not that type of metal, darling.
It's not a metal detector.
It's a metal detector.
Yeah, it shouldn't meddle with you.
Exactly.
Oh, homonyms.
We're doing it.
Homonyms.
We are doing it.
Al, what can we expect on the new album?
I know you like to keep it.
You should not expect anything.
Songs?
What can't we expect?
I want you to have extremely low expectations.
I want you to think that it's just going to be a horrible...
00:38:38,880 --> 00:38:42,000
Unfortunately, I cannot accommodate you any further.
In fact, don't even expect there to be songs on the next album.
I expect it to be like a Marcel Marceau record,
just like nothing but silence.
And that way, when you put it on and you hear the greatest thing
you've ever heard in your life,
your mind will be blown.
Vigor, what should we not expect?
Great question.
Great question, Al, W.
Thank you.
Oh, it's very meta.
You should not expect the soundtrack to your next musical
because that would be copyright infringement.
What if you guys work together?
Oh, gosh, I would love that.
Well, we've talked about a collab for quite some time.
It's just scheduling is a problem.
Scheduling, really?
Because there's no one to do it?
He's constantly shuttling his televisions back and forth
between all of his four houses.
You know, a lot of people will be upset with me working with you
because they're still upset about that sacrilegious musical that you did.
We took the Lord's name in vain.
Exactly.
Jesus Christ superstar.
I wish people would understand it's a problem of punctuation.
That comma was never supposed to be in there.
And for 40 years, that comma has resided in that title.
And why?
Why did they send it to be proofread?
Why?
That's the one step.
That's the one thing you should do.
Why did they do it?
Cool.
Can you believe it?
Oh, no.
Lord Webber, please.
That plane, that plane needed a mask, I think.
That would have saved it.
Can you imagine if an aeroplane had a giant half-mask?
Oh, my God.
What is news, Coon?
A teleplane.
A teleplane.
If they build a teleplane, they have to have a half-mask.
Fly upon me, I'll transport you to where you wish to go.
Starlight Express 2, teleplane.
It's all actors in plane costumes.
And they're wearing cross-country skis.
Yeah.
That's right.
I hate to break it.
This is like my last Southwest flight.
They did the whole thing with costumes and everything.
Wow.
It was kind of irritating at the time,
but now I see that it's got some potential.
Do you know I find those people on Southwest, the employees,
they're very funny.
Aren't they?
They're very funny.
I love the parodies.
Be professional comedians, in my opinion.
Is that such a thing?
I don't know.
Professional comedians?
I've tried to be one.
Oh, but no one gives you money for that.
What about being a jester, though?
It's very similar.
No, that's different.
If you're a jester, you're paid, first of all,
not being executed.
Sure.
That's payment.
You get to live in a castle.
Yeah, that's a bit of a reward in itself.
You're exempt from execution.
You don't have to live in a dirt hut.
You don't have to live in a dirt hut.
You're free to if you like, but who would like?
You get mutton, I would imagine, free mutton.
Or the mutton you can eat with your hands.
Meed.
No utensils, though.
No utensils.
You wipe your hands on a passing dog.
They're very handy.
That's why they had dogs in the castle.
Why would you want to have a dog other than that?
Exactly.
I knew they didn't have utensils,
but I didn't know they didn't have napkins
or any kind of cloth.
No, no, no.
They would eat with the hands you see,
and then they would just wipe the...
The wiping doggies on a wiping dog.
Number one, five.
All right, yes, that is a great clip.
How does it get better than that?
That's what I understand.
That's only number 15, if you can believe it.
I can't.
Yes, well.
I'm incredulous.
You are.
I'm looking at him.
And he is telling the truth.
This strains credulity.
We have to take a break, all right?
That is just our first clip.
When we come back, we will have number 14 coming at you,
and you will not want to miss that one.
Come on back after this.
Guys, a lot of you are probably cooking up
your New Year's resolutions.
Well, I got one for you to slip it in
right under the wire.
Read more.
Make yourself smarter.
Well, let me tell you something from one friend to another.
If you're just reading a book, you're doing it wrong.
You're doing it wrong.
Download Audible today, and you can read more
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All you need is the desire to read, and Audible makes it easy for you.
Go to Audible right now if you don't believe me.
Go there right now.
I swear to God.
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You know what you're going to find there, Mr. Smarty Pants?
You're going to find a free audiobook and a free 30-day trial.
All you have to do is log on to audible.com backslash bang bang to get it.
With so many choices, you probably don't even know what to download first.
Well, I got a hot tip for you.
Bob Odenkirk and David Cross,
Friends of the Show.
They have a book, Hollywood said no, that I am on the audio recording of.
It's narrated by Bob, David themselves, and a whole bunch of other people.
So get that right away this holiday season.
That is a free audiobook and a 30-day free trial by visiting audible.com backslash bang bang.
Remember, audible.com backslash bang bang for a free audiobook and a 30-day free trial,
and I'll see you never at the library.
Comedy bang bang, we are back here.
We are back.
Comedy bang bang.
I am Paul F. Tompkins.
My guest today, Scott Oxerman.
Hey, thanks so much for having me.
Listen, Scott, what is it like when you're on television?
Is it good?
It's so good because there's a camera pointed at you.
Can I stop you?
Am I good at questions?
No.
I'm not, right?
No.
I'm bad at it.
Yeah, you're, well, you're poor at it.
Oh, thank you.
You're question poor.
Oh, I'm not morally wrong at it.
Question poor, but answer foolish.
Welcome back to the show.
We just, before the break, we heard our number one five episode, and that was a good one.
Andrew Lloyd Webber and Weird Al.
And our number, this, this of course is, our next one is number one four.
Number one four.
Number 14.
Yes, that's right.
And this is an episode.
And this is the end.
This is an episode.
And goodbye.
Goodbye.
See you next year.
This is episode 204.
204.
And what do you think this episode would be?
I'm going to say this one is, what was the number of the last one that we heard?
Oh, you're really holding my feet to the fire on this.
I am.
That, a real foot, foot holder.
That was 203.
The one right before.
This is the very next one, if you can believe that.
It's probably, oh, it's probably an okay episode.
It's better than the last one.
Some really.
Yeah, according to the votes.
According to the votes, but I didn't vote.
So I get to complain.
Isn't that how it works?
Yes, amazingly, these are right next to each other in the countdown.
And they were sequential episodes.
And this is an episode called The Peppermen.
Oh boy.
The Peppermen.
Yes.
Now, here's what this is.
Zack Califinakis, major movie star.
That's right.
Former comedian.
I'll tell him you said that.
He's, and he probably would not disagree.
He is on the show in this episode, along with John Daly,
who people would know from Betas, which is out on Amazon right now.
People can watch that.
And he is a writer and producer on The Kroll Show.
That's correct.
They are friends.
And then they talk about a certain band a lot in this episode.
There's a clue in the title.
Yes, there is.
Men.
There are a lot of men in this band.
That's right.
Could be the Beatles.
There were four of them.
John, Ringo.
George Gilgamesh.
Gilgamesh.
Yes.
The Lads from Liverpool.
Hello, it's me, Gilgamesh.
It's me, John Lennon, the biggest creep in the world.
What's happening, John?
Hello, Gilgamesh.
I wish people talked about me more.
Oh, well, unfortunately, we kept you in the clues it.
Well, remember when the girls were throwing jelly babies at us?
Oh, jelly babies, my favorite candy.
Is that what those are?
Yeah.
All right.
That's right.
And 10 more minutes.
That's a bench work.
That's right.
What ever happened to him?
What?
Maybe we'll hear from him.
We'll hear from him.
But, OK, the Peppermen and then also Neil Campbell was a guest on this episode.
Is it not Camp Bell?
It's written like Camp Town Ladies.
Right.
But a bell instead of Town Ladies.
Right.
Yeah.
That's how I remember how to spell it, for sure.
Right.
But it's Cam Bell.
Cam Bell.
By the way, you should ask what his original name, what his name should be.
That's an interesting teaser.
OK.
Yes, you should ask him about that because it's not his personality at all.
All right.
It's a cryptic clue, anyway.
But the Peppermen, Neil Campbell comes out at the end and he has something interesting
to talk about.
So let's hear that.
This is number one four.
Number one four.
Comedy bang, bang.
We are back here with Zach Alfinakis, our good friend.
Good friend of the show, good friend in life.
He told me what I wrote that was so funny and I agree it was funny.
But we cannot share it with the listeners here
because it was a private exchange between the two of us.
And we have a speaking of a private exchange.
Let's open it up a little more and make it a little less exclusive
by inviting another good friend of ours to the show here.
John Daly is with us.
How's it going, guys?
It is going.
How you doing, Zach?
John.
What's up, Scott?
How's it going?
The sky, for one.
Nice.
Clouds.
Space shuttles.
All right.
Yeah.
Satellites.
Not anymore.
Space shuttles shut down.
That's true.
Got to update my joke.
John, a lot of people know you from the show.
You've been on the show many times.
Yeah.
Played many, many characters.
Bill Cosby-Bukowski.
Bill Cosby-Bukowski, Frasier Boss.
Dr. Frasier Boss.
Zappity, Tappity, many characters.
But yeah.
Let's put all that aside.
Let's talk to you as you.
Put out, yeah.
Let's talk to me as me.
And Zach and I have a podcast that we're going to be
premiering pretty soon on Ear Wolf that is called
The Pepper Cast.
Pepper Cast.
And it is.
Sounds exciting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's great.
It's we are, we've, Zach and I.
Zach's a little bit older than me.
Zach, but we've, you know, we've lived in Los Angeles for a while.
And, you know, the reality of our lives is we're in show business.
And we, we know the peppers.
And-
Wait, wait, wait.
When you say, you know the pe-
Do you mean the-
The Red Hot Chili Peppers.
RHCPs?
Yeah, we're, we're a huge peppermint.
Like we're, we're a huge peppermint in general.
But we also happen to know, I mean, to know the peppers.
So you, you started out as fans.
But now-
We started out as your friends.
We started out as super fans.
And, and then eventually just from living in LA and living our lives.
And we, we eventually got to know the peppers.
Ran into the peppers once at a party?
Or what did, does that count as?
Well, Zach.
Well, we, first of all, the peppermint is the
group that John started-
It's the fan club.
Red Hot, Red Hot Chili Pepper fans.
We got theme song and-
Yeah.
You know, Dead Heads.
Wait, theme song.
Dead Heads, Grateful Dead.
Sure, sure.
Pepper.
Fish heads?
Popper heads.
Popper heads, John Popper, Blue's Traveler.
So we're the peppermint.
We're the peppermint.
What's the theme song?
Can we-
Well, there's, I don't know if there's a theme song,
but there's a lot of great-
He just said there's a theme song.
Well, there's no, it's a, it's a song.
Well, it's a, it's in a way a tribute song.
And it's called Abracadalifornia.
Abracadalifornia.
Yeah.
And it goes a little something like this.
Okay.
Bing a bong, a bong, a bong, Burbank.
Giggie, gliggy, gliggy, gliggy, Glendale.
Bing a bong, a bong, a bong, Burbank.
Giggie, gliggy, gliggy.
Abracadabra-ly-forn-ya-cation is the best.
You know, and so-
That's the theme song for the, for the peppermint.
Well, for the peppermint.
So you sing that when you guys meet or-
Yeah, and we, you know, we, let's just say when we meet,
we meet in a basement and we got one sock on,
it's not on our feet, okay?
Wait a minute, hold on.
Yeah, well, you know-
Let me catch up to this.
The pepper tradition, you know,
I don't know if you're into the peppers, but-
The sock's not on the feet, but it's on someplace else.
Yeah.
I'm assuming probably not the hands,
because that would be kind of normal like the feet.
Although it's sort of funny.
The dick.
The dick.
Whoa.
Yeah.
Got it.
And, well, I mean-
Loud and clear.
I've been on the podcast a few times.
I mean, you know, a little, maybe, of what I've been up to,
but Zach, everyone knows what Zach's been up to.
Zach, you were Flea's midwife.
Yeah.
Midwife for Flea's wife?
Yeah, whoever, whoever the lady is-
Yeah.
Which you don't know who-
Well.
Who Flea, who you were the midwife to?
Well, Flea has a, Flea has a, you know,
I don't want to talk at a term, but there's, you know-
Well, I mean, yeah.
He's pretty open about it.
When you're intimate with the Red Hots.
Yeah.
The peppers.
He likes to call them the peppers.
I don't call them the Red Hots.
The peppers, yeah.
Anyone call them the chilies or chili peps?
I know a lot of people call them the chili peps.
Chili peps.
That's cool.
That's cool.
I could get a-
Have you guys not thought of this in all your meetings?
Chili peps.
Seems like this would have been territory that was well covered.
I'll have to look through the minutes.
John, do you mind singing the song again?
Just to really call the meeting to order?
The theme song.
All right.
Yeah, let's pretend we're doing it right now.
Let's pretend we're meeting.
Do you want me to lay down any kind of like funky bass?
Can you do a Reggie Watts kind of bass line?
Yeah, no problem.
Here we go.
Ready?
First I'll do the drum track and like-
Yeah.
I got a lot of sperm in my fucking nuts, motherfucker.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Oh my God dude.
Glick a glick a glick a glendale.
Podcasts are fun because I do it.
Give me the blue and the screw it.
Tell me Lord what the pepper man said.
Tell me Lord what the pepper man said.
Tell me Lord what the pepper man said.
Hit it flea, hit the bass line.
Cool drums.
Good drumming on that.
Very good.
That's a good version.
I like that.
I love how he called out the pepper man.
That must be a thrill for...
That took us a long time to get that in that song.
Yeah I mean it should start with that.
Alright well we have to get to our next guest of course.
And we can further talk about the peppers on your podcast of course.
But let's turn to Neil Campbell's on the show.
Welcome back Neil.
Hi, thanks for having me.
I've been on the show several times before.
You always have something interesting going on.
And what I found interesting when you contacted me this time about coming on the show
was that you said you're now a playwright.
Sounds so weird to say playwright.
But yeah I guess I am a playwright now.
So you've written your first play or...
I'm working on it.
I'm working on it.
Okay.
So you're a playwright and that's what you wanted to come on to talk about?
Well yeah I mean I just feel like...
I mean the theater...
Oh.
It's just such like a magical place.
Oh yeah.
Zach, John, did either of you guys start in the theater?
No but Flea did.
I mean I don't know what to go back on.
No we can.
Yeah we can talk about Flea.
I don't want to take...
No no we can talk about Flea.
I'm happy to discuss.
Flea played Tony in his sophomore year production of a West Side Story.
And sang Maria and realized I don't have the pipes for this.
I don't have the skills.
So he tried straight acting.
Did the straight play.
It was the Mousetrap by Agatha Christie.
Did the Mousetrap.
Did Raising in the Sun.
Yeah.
Burned through a bunch of classics.
Yeah.
Came to New York.
Tried his hand all the while.
Tony and Tina's wedding.
Back with the bass.
Back you know with the bass.
I played Tony and Tony Tony Tony.
A lot of people don't remember that.
It was me, Raphael Sadiq and another guy.
I never got his name.
Wow.
You won a Tony for that as well.
He did.
It was weird.
He also did Cat on a Hot Chili, Red Hot Chili.
Cat on a Red Hot Chili.
Excuse me one second.
We need to pause to hear exactly what you're saying.
Please.
It's not.
I don't remember the details.
Wait.
Wait.
Wait.
You're talking about Cat on a Hot Chili Pepper Roof?
Thank you.
God.
Oh that's by California Williams.
All right.
So anyway the theater Neil is your new love.
It is.
I mean if you've ever been in the theater.
Yeah I have.
Yeah.
You know I mean they say that when you're up on stage you dance with the gods.
Because only gods and artists can create.
Oh that's interesting.
I guess you're right.
You're sitting in the theater.
Lights go down.
When they come up you don't know where you're going to be.
You know you could be in a dingy tenement apartment.
Okay.
Or a majestic palace.
A hippie loved in or a war torn battlefield.
You never know.
You never know.
I mean I guess if you read the reviews before you go to the play.
Or the program.
Or the program.
Yeah sometimes it has that Act One 1946 at Tenement House so then you would know.
Sure.
You could find there are literally hundreds of ways you could spoil it for yourself.
But you don't suggest that.
You know.
What do you think people should do when they go to the theater?
Should they know anything about a play?
No.
Should they not even the title?
They shouldn't even look at the marquee as they enter.
They should just sight unseen, pay for a theater ticket and just walk in and see whatever is
playing.
Walk in, sit down, face the correct direction.
Okay good.
That's a good stuff.
What if I could pay a woman to blindfold me and lead me in into the theater.
So I know absolutely nothing.
What if you could pay one of the chili peppers to do that?
Or one of the chili peppers.
Or one of their wives if they're busy.
Yeah.
I mean who knows.
I think the theater has a strong tradition of rock stars' wives leading people into the
theater because rock stars are too busy.
Yeah.
Well you gotta text them and see.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Well the theater has a long tradition of people texting rock stars' wives to see if they're
too busy or not.
To blindfold you.
To blindfold them as they walk in so that yeah okay we all know that.
Yeah.
Right.
You know you're sitting there.
You don't know where it's going.
You know you don't know who's going to enter.
You know it could be a beautiful princess.
It could be a recovering alcoholic desperately eyeing a bottle of booze.
A salesman.
A sucker.
Anyone could walk through those doors.
Yeah anyone.
Wow.
Okay maybe you looked at the cash list ahead of time.
Sure.
Let's assume you're going with our first plan.
And there is something of the disbelief you know.
What do you call that?
Suspension of disbelief.
Suspension of disbelief where like an actor will walk in and I'll go oh hey I know who
that actor is and then they'll start talking and I'll be like they're not talking about
being an actor.
Right.
They're talking about some stupid shit about like I just bought this house and I'm going
to leave it to my.
Yeah.
And then all of a sudden you gotta go no no no no no you're actually watching.
I'm activating my disbelief.
I should be suspending it.
Yeah exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well that's great.
Well I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm rambling on a bit about my love of the theater.
No.
I'm just trying to write my own play lately.
I love talking about the theater.
I mean we had Justin Kirk on a while back and we talked about the theater so it's one
of my favorite topics.
It's great.
I love it.
I mean but it can be intimidating to write your own play.
I can imagine.
I've only I mean.
I mean you're a writer you're familiar with the scourge of the blank screen.
Sure.
Yeah.
I mean I write I don't do it on a computer.
Yes I do.
With one hand.
Oh on Smith Corona for me.
Oh okay.
But you know it's an art form.
It's already been mastered by O'Neill by Chekov Ibsen Beckett.
Pinter.
Pinter Shakespeare for God's sakes.
Let's not forget about him right.
So what can I say that they haven't already said.
I guess you're right.
That must be difficult.
That's that that was the problem I was having but then you know what the answer came to
me in the words of the immortal Bard himself.
To thine own self be true.
Okay.
Yeah.
You know.
Which the peppers not to get back on them.
Please let's get back on them.
Yeah.
The peppers.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
They had a sound that.
Punk.
Funk.
No one else was thinking of combining all these.
Well P-Funk did.
Yeah.
Punk and funk.
Yeah.
P-Funk.
But there weren't P-Funk.
That was short for Parliament Funkadelic.
Yeah.
More than Punk and Funk.
Chipper.
Chips.
Chili Peppers.
Chippers.
The Chippers.
Yeah.
They were influenced heavily by Bootsy Collins.
And Merle Haggard.
Mm-hmm.
Musicians.
All different sorts and stripes.
So but to their own selves.
Thine own selves they were true.
To thine own self be true.
Yeah.
True of all the peppers.
If you could do that in play form.
Exactly.
With your writing.
You can't keep comparing yourself to the greats.
If you're a new rock band you can't compare yourself to the peppers.
To the Chippers.
Yeah.
Just be true to yourself.
Your own experience.
Yeah.
And that's what you're trying to do with your play.
Write the truth as I know.
Exactly.
So you know.
My play.
If you don't mind if I just kind of describe it a bit for you here.
Mm-hmm.
I mean that's sort of antithetical to what you say we should do in the theatre.
That we shouldn't know anything about it.
But if you really want to do that.
I guess.
It's like my license plate says.
Life is full of contradictions.
Your actual license plate or the frame around it.
No.
The license plate.
The long vanity license plate.
I don't think it's legal.
Okay.
Well.
So yeah.
My play.
Your play.
Tell us about it.
It's not about salesmen.
It's not about East Village Bohemians or Star Cross lovers.
It's about something a little bit more personal to me.
It's about a hybrid goose man who escapes from the lab where he was created after falsely
being accused of murder and goes on the run with a rapping android named Oil Slick 2.0.
If you ask me that sounds about as good as Hamlet.
So.
Okay.
To your own self be true.
And you wrote about a.
You say it's a hybrid goose man?
A hybrid goose man.
What do you mean by that when you say a hybrid goose man?
Is it Ryan Gosling?
Well.
We haven't cast it yet.
Right now it just exists on the page.
Okay.
So a part goose part man.
Yes.
Exactly.
Well I can get into this.
Okay.
Right now you just know the story.
But you can't just have a story.
You're putting together a play.
You've got to have great characters.
Sure.
Sure.
You know Blanche Dubois.
It's a great character.
My play doesn't have an aging southern bell.
It doesn't even have an old salesman like Willie Lohman.
Mentioning the salesman.
You've got to hung up on this salesman guy.
I haven't noticed.
Okay.
But you know what it would have?
A vampire who works as a hit man for the Yakuza.
Okay.
I don't know.
That's what's important to me.
Okay.
In this modern day and age.
Huh.
So that's in your play about a hybrid goose man.
Yes.
You have another character that's a vampire.
Who's a hit man for the Yakuza.
Well he's on the run and that's who's chasing him.
Oh the goose man.
The goose man's on the run.
With oil slick 2.0.
Oh okay.
Okay.
Great.
And you know my play it may not have the acerbic word play of who's afraid of Virginia
Wolf but it does have snake guns.
Snake guns.
Those are guns that shoot snakes.
They have replaced regular guns in this dystopian future society.
Oh.
Cause bullets were too effective or they were not effective enough.
Let's just say the government changed their mind about the second amendment.
Okay.
Sorry to get political here.
So go on.
Snake guns.
They shoot snakes at you and I guess the snakes are propelled towards the characters
and then bite people.
Yes.
Exactly.
Are these bullet sized snakes or are they full sized snakes?
They're great questions.
Yeah.
That was a great question.
They are full sized snakes.
Sure.
It's like a rifle.
How do they fit into the gun?
They're like long rifles.
Okay.
Like revolutionary war style.
Okay.
Like muskets.
Yeah.
Okay.
Snake muskets.
The musket is the snakes natural enemy out in the wild.
Oh I never thought about that.
That's what that song musket love is all about.
Yeah.
Okay.
The musket love.
Play is spectacle.
That's an important part of a play.
Oh yeah.
You have to.
You have it.
But you know my play it doesn't have a falling chandelier.
Like the phantom with our good friend of the show Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Exactly.
But it does have a sequence where oil slick 2.0 does a choreographed dance with a gang
of Hispanic teenagers and then because of that they help him win his next fight.
Hmm.
Sounds interesting.
I don't know.
That feels a little bit more truthful to me than dusting off some old classic like Death
of a Salesman.
Wow.
You really don't like Death of a Salesman.
No.
It's a classic.
It's one of my favorites.
Zach what do you think about this?
Does this sound like a juicy role that maybe you...
Which one?
I don't know.
There's so many.
I know.
The vampire.
The oil slick.
The vampire.
The half goose.
Half goose half man.
Yes.
Which half is which by the way?
It's all, it's all, it's one half of the double helix is goose, the other half of the
double helix is man.
So it's all just man.
It's just inherent in his DNA.
What's he look like more?
Howard the duck.
He looks exactly like Howard the duck.
Yes.
Does he talk like him too?
I suppose.
That's what the stage directions say.
Is he a duck?
Or a goose?
No.
No.
So he looks like Howard the duck, yet he's a goose.
Okay.
Interesting.
No, I see that.
Interesting.
Okay.
Keep going.
If the name of the play is it, does that have a name yet?
Yeah.
Okay.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
All right.
I don't know.
To me, it sounds like you could just, King Lear, the cherry orchard.
Sure.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
It fits right in.
It does.
Yeah.
The long lineage in tradition of, it kind of reminds me of uplift mofo party plan.
It really does.
It does.
It's a mouthful, but it loves.
I wonder if Keeds could ever rap, maybe he could do the music for this show.
For the play?
For the play.
Yeah.
You know how a lot of musicians like, Branford Marsalis, no, or Wynton Marsalis, or was
it Branford?
I can't remember.
One of those guys, they started doing music for plays now.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Branford Sax, Wynton's Trump.
Mm-hmm.
Tee.
Trumpet.
Man, that might be, would you be open to that at all?
I would love that.
I'm, theater's all about collaboration.
What's the title again?
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
Oh, that's, what would that sound like?
I think Keeds could wrap his mind around that.
Let's take, let's hear a little bit of that.
I love this.
Hey.
Here we go.
So, do you need to look at the, or do you remember it?
I remember that, no.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
I'm a motherfucking really cool guy.
I'm a motherfucking really cool guy.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
Spectacool we don't focus on.
Oil slick is a fucking guy that we're friends with.
Let me start over.
Let me start over.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think I should start over.
I don't think I really did it justice.
Yeah.
Say the name of the thing again?
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
Quackers feather beaks cuckoo caper.
I have a big penis.
I have a big penis.
I put a sock on it.
For a rocket.
I lost a loser.
92, 93.
How are you?
Back in the day, I had AIDS.
But I didn't ever get to grade school.
I was on different drugs than that.
I went to the pool and went swimming.
Oh.
Let's get some ducks.
Look like how about the duck.
I want to fuck some ducks.
I'm a fucking guy that likes to fuck people in costumes
at Comic Con.
I stick my dick out of a hole in a costume.
Yeah.
Does that work?
I do have something like that.
I don't know if you like, if that, yeah.
Does that encapsulate the theme?
I thought it started pretty great.
Okay, cool.
This is the title of the play.
People say the play is set in this dystopian future society
and has all these characters.
A song where, I don't know, 20 seconds in,
it just becomes Anthony Keith's talking about his own life.
Well, I wasn't trying to answer any questions.
It would be tough to see how that would fit.
I was trying to leave the audience.
I do challenging stuff, so, you know,
it's kind of meanders at the end, but it's open-ended.
But there's hope.
It started well, you say.
It started well.
She said the title of the play, you mentioned a couple of characters
that Anthony Keith has talked about.
See, that's what I thought.
I thought it started to heat up there.
That's where I thought it started to really go, but...
He did admit he had AIDS.
Yeah, well, in the middle of that,
as well as an admission of not getting good grades, as I recall.
Yeah, it didn't get good grades.
It had nothing to do with getting AIDS.
Number one, four.
Oh, good clip, huh?
I really enjoyed that clip.
Now, full disclosure, I'd heard it before.
You have.
I heard the episode when it...
You're never on the show, but you're a listener.
Well, that's why it's so exciting to be here,
because I'm such a huge fan of the show.
Did you win a contest to be on here?
Yes, I did.
Oh, good.
Did you put down a winning bid?
Yes, I did.
Who did you outbid?
How much did you pay?
I think I outbid Sir Richard Branson,
so this feels great.
And I paid $100.
Okay.
He's stingy.
He's rich, but he's stingy.
What was his bid?
I think it was $99.
Oh, my gosh.
And he just wouldn't...
He wouldn't go to 100?
He just wouldn't go up.
He wouldn't do it?
He's like, three digits?
No, thank you.
It's like it's $1 more, Sir Richard.
Two zeros, pass.
Why don't you do more characters?
I don't know.
I know good at them.
Oh.
You're poor at them.
Oh, by the way...
Oh, thank you.
By the way, I do do a character on your podcast.
What?
The Dead Authors podcast.
That's very true.
People should listen to this.
I have two characters now on that show.
But there's an episode that was just released where I do a man whose name I cannot even
remember.
That's the most recent episode.
You play Clement Clarkmore, the author of A Visit from St. Nicholas, more commonly known
as Twas the Night Before Christmas.
Twas the Night Before Christmas.
And...
I didn't do the S on that, like I promised.
That's...
Thank you.
Oh, I hope there was not a B in there somewhere that I accidentally pronounced.
Nope.
The show is done in front of an audience, so we wear costumes because we're portraying
characters.
And you showed up with a suit jacket.
You just turned up the collar.
Turned up the collar on your shirt, wrapped a tie around your neck in a way that people
don't wear ties.
And you said, I think I'm too old to have costumes at the ready anymore.
Yes.
I used to have a bunch of costumes in a closet.
Probably have like a little...
Yes, of course.
And I would go, oh, this is my thing that I use when I do this type of character.
This is my thing.
And I just, like recently, I was like, you know what?
Why am I keeping costumes around the house to be used one time a year?
So I got rid of them all, and I just didn't have anything.
But it turned out okay.
It looked okay.
It looked okay in the photo.
Yeah, it looked interesting.
It looked interesting.
Yeah.
I think people will be intrigued enough that they will say, I'm going to listen to that
podcast episode.
But people can hear Neil Campbell from the previous Kip and Clip.
He played Kip on Buzz and Buddies.
He did.
That's what his name should be.
People can hear Neil and I in that episode.
They should seek that out.
That is the Dead Authors podcast.
You as HG Wells are the host of that.
That's right.
Neil Campbell played Irving Berlin.
Author of White Christmas.
That's right.
Yes.
So now, before we take our next break, we have what I like to call a bonus clip.
This is from episode 197, a few before these last two that we've heard.
This is from an episode called Please Clarify.
Please Clarify.
This was an episode with Tim Heidecker and John Daly, who we just heard.
But you're not going to hear really much of anything from them, because this is all
Paul Rust all the time doing his patented new no-nos.
This was a very requested bonus clip, and these are his new no-nos for 2013.
Let's hear that right now.
Bonus!
Clip.
From what I understand, Paul, you called me up a couple of days ago.
You said, hey man, are you doing a show?
Are you doing a live stream?
Are you doing a podcast?
What are you doing?
What did I say?
Scott, I am cheese.
You're cheese-ed up!
I am peaved.
I am ticked, pissed, and earnery.
All right.
Well, I love to hear what you're so cheese-ed off about.
We all tend to get cheese-ed in our lives, but what you do is you get cheese-ed, and
you just turn that somehow, you're like a comedy rumple stiltskin.
You turn that straw into gold.
And I like to say a lot of people think I'm crazy, but I just show the crazy things we
do.
All right.
I can't wait.
All right.
So Paul, Rust, what do you need from us for new no-nos?
I just need you to start the clock.
Oh!
Yeah!
New no-nos, people!
New no-nos!
What's up with these gas prices, huh?
They're always fluctuating.
Some days they're up.
Some days the gas prices are down.
Hey, I got an idea.
Why don't we make the gas prices all the same price, and we just pay one down payment?
Ten dollars a gallon.
New no-no!
Every gallon's ten dollars.
And wait, we buy it, we make a down payment on them?
Hey, it's not going up, it's not going down, it just stays ten dollars.
But could we, okay, oh, I get it, okay, so you're not paying it.
New no-no!
You're paying more now.
Okay.
New no-no!
How many of you got teenagers, huh?
Oh boy.
See ya!
Hey, hey, remember when getting sent to your room used to be a punishment?
Now with all these Nintendo's and TVs and guitars, it's a vacation going to your room.
Hey, I got an idea.
What if the kids went to the parents' room?
No.
What if the parents went to their room?
New no-no!
Parents are going to the parents' bedroom now.
Wow, they probably just have sex in there.
I'll run that by Claire, I don't think it will be popular.
New no-no!
Have you ever seen a movie and you go, uh, yeah, I think I've seen this where before,
huh?
Seen this where before?
I've seen this where before.
Sure.
We've all done that.
We've all done that.
Hey, I liked The Lincoln Lawyer the first time I saw it, when it was called The Lincoln
Lawyer.
I saw it twice.
Me?
Me?
New no-no!
I saw Lincoln Lawyer twice and I thought they were separate viewing experiences each
time.
Oh, that's a good new no-no.
New no-no!
Have you ever gone to a restaurant and the food they serve you is boiling hot, burn
your mouth?
New no-no!
All food should be cold now.
I like that.
Give me a big ol' plate of ice cold spaghetti.
Matri-D.
Really?
The Matri-D helps you out with that?
He usually just sees you make sure of me.
No, no, no.
The Matri-D's serving me now.
Okay, great.
I appreciate that one.
Hey, what about these people who talk so loudly on their cell phones in public places?
I hate them!
They drive me nuts!
These are the people I'm talking about who cheese me off!
Yeah!
Hey, I got an idea.
If I can't hear the other side of your conversation, then maybe I'll just go home and imagine
what that side of conversation is and perform it all by myself.
Ya moron!
You like that, ya dum-dum?
All right, wow.
Nice.
You want a couple more new no-no's?
Yes!
Yes!
Are you that cheese to give us two more?
You must have been so hot.
Cheese!
New no-no!
What's up with hand dryers, huh?
The hot air comes up, up, it goes down.
Why can't it come out in a little Tasmanian devil-like cyclone that I have to chase around
in the bathroom to get my hand dry?
No, no, no, hot air is a cartoon cyclone now.
Okay!
That would be fun!
One more, do you have one more new no-no?
One more new no-no!
Teachers who assign homework on Fridays?
Gotta hate that.
What about this teach?
Every bit of homework we have to do, you have to do.
Okay.
Wow.
Incredible.
Wow.
Wow.
Well, hopefully you don't make that one, you're closing.
Check my website.
Check my website, I'm selling some of my snotty shirts.
Snotty shirts?
What do you say I would do?
They're my snotty shirts.
I got one just in, it's, no, I'm not being sarcastic.
I like that, maybe you could get in on this, maybe you could show them the square.
Tim, if you want to help me out, man, you know I'm a big fan.
Maybe if you guys know, if you know a shirt distributor, you could use them for something.
Hey!
Talk right into the mic if you're going to say something that golden.
Maybe if...
Bonus!
Clip.
All right, oh, great new no-nos, huh?
How does he do it?
Why does he do it?
When does he do it?
Well, he did it right then, in episode 197.
All my journalistic questions have been answered then.
All right, we have to take a break.
When we come back, we will hear your third, number one-three episode, your thirteenth episode
right after this company bang-bang.
Hey everyone, Scott Ackerman here.
We have a new sponsor and I am excited by them.
Let me tell you their name, blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah, that's a drumroll by the way.
That's not me just going blah-blah-blah-blah like I'm a crazy person.
I mean I was twirling my finger next to my head while I said that, but anyway, blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah-blah...
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I have a friend who has a sling box and I've jealously coveted it for years and I never
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You know what?
Well guess what?
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First of all, let me tell you about it.
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Really, any geographical location, sling box gets your TV to you.
A lot of TV providers say they're gonna do it.
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Well sling box, sling box does it all.
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Comedy bang bang, we're back here, Paula Tompkins is my guest.
Paula Tompkins, guest.
And we're up to your number one three episode, uh, episode, still not quite sure how to do
these, this is episode one three.
This is from episode two eleven.
Alright, we've heard clips from episode two or three, two or four, this is from two eleven.
So two eleven is the thirteenth favorite episode.
Yes, okay, this is your pick for number thirteen.
Wow.
This is an episode, yes.
Maybe not my pick.
Oh, you're talking to the audience?
Yeah, collectively.
This is your pick, yes.
Okay, well I'm sorry.
This is from, uh, Lucky Thirteen by the way, this is from episode two eleven.
This is an episode called April Fools.
Ooh, sounds fun.
April Fools, now let me set this up for you a little bit.
Please.
This is with two people, John Hamm.
He's one.
And Nick Kroll.
He's the other.
Okay, now John and Nick, they've been on the show many times together.
They're friends of the show.
You know John from Mad Men, you know Nick from the League and Kroll Show.
Sure.
This is a, uh, it's a testament to how good this part of the show was that the early part
of the show John was very late for, um, he had a very late Mad Men call, woke up as the
show was going on, I think, and texted us, like I'll be there in ten minutes, like scrambled
to get out here.
And so we did a good portion of the early part of the show, just me and Nick talking
and talking about John Hamm's texts.
And then when John got here, he read his texts as Don Draper.
Um, so those were fun.
But this is an interesting part of the show where, um, a couple of, well, first of all,
one old friend of the show drops by and then we meet a new friend of the show.
A new old friend.
A new, he's an old friend now, but he was new then.
So let's hear that.
This is clip number one three.
Number one three.
Is it exciting for you to know that your character on Mad Men is descended from cavemen?
Aren't we all?
Let me think about it.
We think about it.
Don Moore, he's a real hunter.
Right?
Sort of a hunter.
Does that pop into your head ever when you're doing a scene of like, oh, holy shit, every
human being is, was once a caveman?
That's literally the funny thought about most, most of my scenes when I'm staring on a window
or I'm drinking or smoking, I'm like, you guys, we're all cavemen.
Do you ever, when you're doing amazing and because I'm like in the sixties, right?
I'm like, by the way, great mascot for an insurance company someday, someday, someday.
One day.
Did Don, did Don run the Geico account?
Yeah, he started it.
When you're doing a scene, do you ever have like a, like a bit of human modern knowledge
pop in your head, like a picture of a computer and it just like takes you out of the scene?
Um, like, oh, holy shit, I'm envisioning a computer.
I guess I know because I'm an adult and I think about other things all the time.
But you'd have to stop down and say as a crew like, guys, I just thought about a computer.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
We have an innovator.
He's seeing into the future.
Atari.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Guys, sorry.
I thought of Pac-Man.
Sorry, Atari.
Sorry.
Ruin the take.
Ruin the take.
Can we go back?
Can we go back?
But I think that Don Draper knows that.
So that's what makes him such an icon in his industry.
You think he's a futurist.
You're right.
Now, like, for example, he's obsessed with carousels.
Exactly.
And the musical carousel.
Is that what this is?
I loved you.
They're doing a revival of carousel.
He just does all of Billy Bigelow's lines.
Maybe a dream ballet in the middle of the-
Why not?
Yeah.
Well, we'd have one more season to explore that.
Is it?
Is this one more left?
Yeah.
Just one more.
Yeah.
Let's talk about some of the products that you guys are doing on the show.
Some of the things that the ad agency- let me guess, socks?
We have a sock account.
Okay.
I don't think I'm spoiling anything here, but Haynes comes in.
Haynes, where do we get our Haynes on you?
That's a modern slogan.
I did not make that up.
Okay.
Any other ones?
Yeah.
I would imagine-
I don't know.
Plugs.
It's a chopa-gabbe.
That's a modern slogan.
I did not make that up.
Okay.
Do we have any other ones?
Yeah, I would imagine plugs, electrical plugs.
We don't know any plugs.
But they chose to sponsor my plug.
Plugs!
Wait a minute.
Who's this?
Plugs.
It's a chopa-gabbe.
What?
Los enchufadoras.
Yes.
Los enchufadoras.
Enchufadora.
Is this two chopa-gabbe?
Or is this just one?
Yes.
Oh, my God.
Chupacabras.
Tenemos dos.
There are two chopa-gabras now.
Chupa, you have a brother that I don't know about?
Chupacabro.
Chupacabro.
How are you?
The twin.
He's my twin brother.
You have a twin brother?
Yes.
He's been stuck in Mexico for the last many years.
Down in Alisco.
Welcome to the States.
This is such a pleasure to meet you.
Nice to meet you.
Have you ever met Nick Roll and Tom Ham?
Yes.
Oh, it's very nice to meet you at your home.
Juan Jamón, how are you?
Wait a minute.
You've met John Ham several times.
Chupacabra.
Yes.
And yet you haven't and you say you have.
No, he's from another country.
He's never been here.
Wait, you guys are twins.
Have you been like swapping, or not bodies, obviously, but have you been like taking each
other's places?
Chupacabro.
You know, Juan Jamón is the star of...
Maming.
No, he's the angry man.
The angry man.
Maming.
Maming.
I told him all about the show.
Maming.
But in Mexico, the angry man is the angry man.
Oh, of course.
Yes.
Roughly translated, that's the...
They call it man-man.
Don Draper.
Don Draper?
No, no, no.
Don Draper.
Don Draper.
Don Draper.
Don Draper.
Yes.
Don Draper.
In Mexico, the angry man is a show about a man who is a prince.
Don Draper.
Don Draper.
So he's a prince, really.
You lose all that he's arranged.
Yes.
And now, is this done mainly in the dialogue that takes the play?
Because obviously you don't reshoot an entirely new show.
He's dubbed.
He's dubbed.
It's the doblado.
It's the doblado.
What does that mean?
Dubbed.
It means it's a...
Don Draper.
When you hear Don Draper in Mexico...
It's a different voice.
Oh, dubbed.
Dubbed, yes.
So it's all...
El chupacabro, that's the voice.
I know the voice.
Don Draper.
You do the voice of Don Draper.
So you have to replace all the dialogue, and all the dialogue is replaced with mentions
if him being a prince.
He's a prince?
Yes.
He's the prince of his domain.
Okay, so he doesn't work in an advertising agency in Mexico?
Well, sort of.
Okay.
He is Don.
He is Don.
El Don.
Oh, I get it.
El Don.
Okay.
El Jefe.
This family that are living in a weird home-looking place, and this is his principality.
So when he's at work, in the Mexican version of the show, that actually is where he lives,
and all, like, Roger and everyone like that, is his family?
Is that what you're saying?
Sores.
Bees.
Okay, what an interesting show.
Yes, you should hear him do the lines, like the flatness.
The flatness line?
I would love to hear, yeah, El Chupacabro do some of those lines.
Sure.
Say, I would...
Don't have to twist your arm, huh?
This guy.
This guy.
Okay.
Here we go.
Momentito.
It's a different process in Mexico.
Yeah, he's really got to get into it.
Flatness.
Somehow equals.
Alarm.
Say.
And he's in English.
You do the whole thing in English.
Wait a minute.
In Mexico.
Why are you dumping the show in English?
Because it sounds.
It sounds.
Hey.
So just to have the accent?
This is all in Spanish right now.
English is all the same.
Nina wants to speak Spanish very well.
Wait.
I've never known this about you El Chupacabro.
Why do you think we speak in English?
Because it's all demo.
That's the audience.
That's the audience.
It's important to understand.
Do you know that AMC beat Univision in Mexico?
It's crazy.
So Univision does better here than it does in Mexico.
Yeah, it is.
It's not very popular.
Wow.
So you...
Because it's all in Spanish.
So you're from Mexico and you don't know any Spanish at all?
No.
We speak Spanish.
We speak Spanish.
We speak Spanish.
We speak Spanish.
But...
This doesn't make any sense.
But I'm learning so many interesting things about you.
Like...
You didn't know how to ask a twin brother in Chupacabro?
No.
I have to confess the last few times you've been on the show has been certain.
Yes.
Just ask a question.
Just ask a question.
We know how we were right here.
How am I supposed to know to ask the question do you have a twin brother who has a very similar name to you?
I have some interest.
Hey, alright.
Taking your fellow man.
I'm so sorry.
Okay, can I ask you some questions?
Yes.
Chupacabro?
Yes.
What was your mother like?
Well...
Mama...
She was a beautiful woman.
She was with many men.
Lovely.
She was a lovely woman.
She was with many, many, many, many, many men.
Do you share the same father?
No.
No.
Wow.
Did your mother have sex with two different men in one night?
Yes.
And one of you was from one of them and one of you was from the other?
Yeah.
My father was Ray Donaldson.
Ray Donaldson?
Ray Donaldson.
Wait, Ray Donaldson, why is that ring you?
You may know his name.
He plays the actor who plays the most interesting man in the world.
Oh, he has that guy.
But this was when he was not the actor playing the character of the most interesting man in the world.
He was just the most interesting man in the world.
Oh, okay.
Name Ray Donaldson.
Interesting.
And my father is Ray Croc, who was literally the most interesting man in the world.
Yes.
Because he invented McDonald's.
McDonald's?
I was going to say McDonald's.
Why the two McDonald's brothers?
Right.
Come here.
Ray Croc.
But Ray Croc elevated the company.
Yes.
Sanchez.
He was the franchise.
No, no, no, no, no.
They both came down the other way with her mother.
She was an old couch.
And then we, you know, her mom was the town bike.
She was a bike, but shaped like a couch.
Your mother was a bike.
A very comfortable bike.
Okay, interesting.
But she was shaped like a guy.
Like a climbing bike.
Like something you would see a burning man.
Oh, okay.
I understand.
So you have two different fathers.
You have a mother who's a bike shaped like a couch.
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
Okay.
And then you popped out and your brothers.
We did not pop up.
It was a painful birthing experience.
I can imagine that.
Physiology.
Twins from different fathers in the same womb.
Were you conjoined as well?
We were connected at the pinkies.
At the pinkies.
And you're not now, obviously.
I'm fairly simple sort of.
About eight, nine years ago we did it.
And then I came to the U.S. and he stayed.
It took a while.
Wow.
I've always wondered why your pinky has looked odd.
It's okay.
Who looks at a pinky?
Who looks at a pinky?
You know my favorite cartoon was Anna Minniacs.
Yeah.
With pinky in the brain?
Yes.
Of course.
That pinky a lot of people looked at and it worked out quite nicely with him.
Yes.
Pinky.
You guys, so why did you just never come to America?
El Chupacabro?
Well, I had a pretty good in Mexico.
Yeah, that's true.
Redubbing Don Draper's lies in accent in English.
I had a good job.
I had a lot of family.
Wait a minute.
You had them?
Yes.
Why past tense?
But it's seasonal.
Oh, it's seasonal work.
They only make mob men every six years.
One episode every six years.
It sort of catches cash cans.
You know what I'm saying?
That's the other one.
He did it.
The voice, all the voices for catch me if you can.
All of the voices.
All of the voices.
Tom Hanks, Leo DeCaprio.
We did it together.
Police officer number two.
Yes.
They flew me down to do the B.O.
The voice over.
You said that he did them all himself and you're saying you flew.
He was sick half the time.
So I came down.
I did the other half.
We switch off.
You have very similar voices.
Being twins, of course.
Number one, three.
Ah, that was a good one.
Chupacabro.
He's the brother of El Chupacabra.
That's right.
Behind El Chupacabra.
Did you see that on HBO?
I did not.
Behind him was El Chupacabro.
That's right.
In the shower.
They had plastic surgery to look like each other.
They didn't have to.
They're brothers.
Exactly.
That's the twist at the end.
That was a good clip.
That was fun.
We had a lot of fun doing that.
None of that planned, obviously.
But before we go to a break, it is time for a...
Bonus!
And this is an interesting one.
This is...
Now, Paul, I went on tour this year.
So did I.
Yes.
With me?
Yeah.
That's right.
You were around.
Yeah.
You were in the car.
You were there, too.
Yeah.
You were in the car the whole time.
We sat next to each other for hours.
In a car.
That's right.
That's right.
That was fun.
That was right.
That was fun.
Okay.
So we did that this year.
We hit 15 cities, I believe.
Or not 15 cities, but we did 15 shows in 12 cities.
12 days.
Yes.
Something like that.
City a day.
It was fun.
It was a lot of fun.
And we released them all.
You can buy those at the Ear Wolf store.
A lot of people have said they are great, great episodes and well worth the...
I believe it's only $25 for a ton of those episodes, I believe.
Hours and hours of stuff.
Yeah.
Some of them were super long and some of them, they're all canonical, too, with updates
on many of our favorite friends of the show drop by.
You have Ice Tea, you have Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber, John C. Riley, and then special guests
like Tom Lycus and...
Did you have any of Jesse Ventura?
Ventura was there and...
Coco Marx.
Coco Marx.
So this is a clip.
I'm just going to only play one of these as a bonus clip.
They didn't get a lot of votes because not enough people have heard them.
And Scott, may I say?
Yes.
That's a shame.
That is a shame because some of these are better than any of the episodes.
Those shows were kind of magical and the crowd was really...
The crowds were amazing and it was so much fun.
Everybody was kind of at the top of their game.
Yeah.
It was amazing.
It was an amazing experience.
This is just to give you one of the best moments from that and to just let you know
you should go over there and get those shows because they're great.
You won't be sorry.
This is from San Francisco.
This is Doug Benson is there.
And this is Werner Herzog talking about a hotel that we were staying at.
And this is your...
Bonus!
Clip.
Scott, thank you for having me.
Forgive me if this is unorthodox, but I am also staying at the Majestic Hotel.
And I would like to read you the review I have composed for Yelp.
I lie awake atop the covers of my cruel bed in the absurdly cramped quarters I have procured
at the Majestic Hotel.
Sweat flows freely from my entire body, pooling under me and soaking the preposterous bag of
air and stones that serves as the mattress.
A clammy apprehension ceases me as I reach for the thermostat above the nightstand.
Am I truly controlling anything?
Certainly not the temperature.
Mankind struggles always to convince itself that machines may give its way over cold,
heat, but eventually the earth claims every creature, thinking or brainless and all of
us shall share the climate of nothingness.
In the dark, through the wall, I hear a cry and the unmistakable sound of the breaking
of a human toe.
All right, great bonus clip, huh?
If you want to see that review on Yelp, it's still there.
It's still there.
The username is WernerH.
And it's still there.
All right, we have to take a break when we come back.
We will have your number 12 clip coming up after this.
Hello, friends.
Hey, it's me.
How are you, Scott Ackerman?
I have a question for you.
Are you prepared to answer?
Please answer honestly.
Here we go.
Have you signed up with HostGator yet?
Some of you said yes.
Thank you to you guys.
But the rest of you, come on.
What are you waiting for?
I mean, HostGator is the easiest and best place to host a website on the internet.
Come on, guys.
Look, let me give you a very simple analogy, perhaps the simplest analogy I can think of.
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Nothing carbonated.
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HostGator.
See, guys, it makes sense.
Sign up with HostGator today.
Let them do all the work.
What is HostGator?
Okay, let me talk about it.
HostGator, it's a flexible and feature-rich web hosting service that's perfect for people
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Or maybe it's perfect for those who have had years of web hosting experience.
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ComedyBangBang, we are back here.
Paul F. Tompkins.
I am back here.
I am Paul F. Tompkins.
And we are counting down your top 15.
You are Scott Ackerman?
We are counting down your top 15.
Yes, we are.
We're doing it.
And with this, it is good.
Everyone is simply doing it.
Let us do that.
Key party.
Key party or key party?
Key party with the tea party.
Oh, man.
Hey, you're on key party with the tea party.
That is a fun of your dice catch.
I would love to see it.
Let's cast it right now.
Who's in it?
Okay.
Rob Riggle.
Rob Riggle as who?
Who's in the tea party these days?
People are jumping ship.
They really are.
You know what I mean?
Ted Cruz.
Rob Riggle is Ted Cruz.
Absolutely.
That's right.
There you go.
There we go.
You got Riggle is Ted Cruz.
You got...
Michael K. Williams as...
What's his name?
Who?
Guy.
He fucking ran for president.
Why can't I think of his name?
Wait.
Mitch Romney?
No.
Mitch Romney.
The pizza chain guy.
Pizza?
Papa John?
No.
Yeah.
Papa John.
Yeah.
Super Mario.
This is the guy.
This is the Domino's Noid.
I've avoided him.
Who's this pizza guy?
Why can't I...
Herman Cain.
Herman Cain.
Rock you like you're Herman Cain.
Exactly.
All right.
So, all right.
It is just about time for your number 12 clip, but I did...
There are a lot of people they want to know what the top 20 are, so I figured I would
just tell you what just barely made it.
These are the five that barely didn't make it.
That weren't good enough.
That's right.
But so good.
That's what you mean to say?
I did mean to say that, yes.
These are five that just barely didn't make it out of the top 20.
Honorable mention.
At number 20, we had Please Clarify, which we just heard some before the break of that,
with Tim Heidecker, Paul Rust, and John Daly.
So close.
At number 19, the creepy Halloween special with Stephen Yuen, Paul Rust, Molly Bradhauer,
and Nick Weiger.
All right.
That just barely didn't get in the top 15.
At 18, we have Goodfee Lines with Ben Schwartz and Horatio Sands.
At 17, Megusta Characters with Nick Kroll and Chelsea Peretti.
Close one.
Close.
And at number 16, just a few votes shy.
Just a few.
Let me count how many.
Just 50 votes shy of getting into the top 15 was the Cake Council with Andy Richter
and our good friend Cake Boss.
Cake Boss.
That didn't make it into the top 15.
That did not make it into the top 15.
You better.
You should recount those.
I think there's obviously a mistake.
Is that one of your favorites?
For some reason, yes.
I recall it as being an excellent episode.
That's how good this year was is those episodes, which could be the best episodes of any other
podcast, didn't even make it into our top 15.
The other ones I get, but that one seems weird to me.
Check for Chad's.
That's my charity, by the way.
Check for Chad's.
That's right.
For every Chad people bring in, you'll give them a check.
Yes, exactly.
So how many Chats have you given away so far?
Well, only Chad Lowe has ever dropped by, so I've given him one.
Well, it was nice of you to mention him.
It was.
He's not around these days.
I'm like some people.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I know exactly.
Oscars, snubs and flubs, speaking of them.
What are grubs?
Do they ever make it into the year-end list?
They never do.
What are the best grubs of the year?
I've never seen that list before.
Your top 10 grubs.
I'd love to see just a list of larvae and maggots.
You're going to get it after that request.
Oh, why did he say that on a recording?
All right, we have to get to.
We have to.
Your number 12 episode.
Number one, two.
Number 12, this is episode 222.
Like the room.
Not the movie, the room.
It's not like 227, that room.
No.
Well, that was an apartment, right?
Yeah, but it's not.
Or was it the number of the apartment building?
I believe it was the number of the apartment,
but that's a room, technically.
I thought it was 227 was where everyone lived.
227 is a comedy.
I remember that.
Yes.
And then room 222 was about a school.
By the way, no one knows that that is the promo song for the show 227.
I don't know why I still know that, but it went 227 is a comedy.
But I know there's someone out there who knows what that is,
and that was what that reference was.
Jack A.
That's right.
And Marla Gibbs, of course.
227 is a comedy.
227.
Mr. Belvedere.
I'm going out with a doctor tonight.
That's my wife.
That's my impression of my wife's impression of Jack A.
My wife.
My goddammit, Scott.
Why?
What's the point of me being married?
If you're going to drop the ball on this.
I'm sorry.
You know what?
I apologize.
You should maybe get a divorce, though, if I'm not going to do it.
Thank you.
Okay.
This is number 12.
This is an episode called A Peanut in the Rain.
This one is very dear to my heart.
Yes.
This is a great episode.
This is, let's see, who do we have?
We have Gillian Jacobs from Community.
Oh, sorry.
That's right.
We also have Mike Hanford.
No.
Yes.
Mike Hanford has Ducky Powell.
That's right.
We won't hear from him until afterwards.
But this is basically our good friend Gillian Jacobs in a previous episode had gotten married
to our good friend Gary Marshall, creator of the Happy Days.
Please call him Gary.
I will.
Our good friend Gary, creator of Happy Days, Morgan Mindy, Valentine's Day, New Year's Day,
all those things.
Pretty woman director of that.
They had gotten married in a previous episode.
And in this episode, we catch up with them and see exactly how that marriage is going.
Hint.
Not so great.
Not so great.
And I start this clip off with a very indelicate question for which I apologize.
All right.
Let's hear that episode.
This is number 12.
Number one, two.
Gary, tell me about your sex life.
Who are you fucking now?
Listen.
This is, I'm married to the same woman.
Perhaps you are alluding to a strange relationship.
It was weird.
That I embarked upon with a young lady.
It was an illicit affair.
Yes, you could say that.
This is a young lady.
Yes, I grant you that permission.
I appreciate that.
This is a young lady.
She's an actress here in Hollywood.
We met doing your podcast.
She found out that I'm a wealthy, older man.
She conspired blatantly right in front of me to have me murder my wife, marry her,
and then become rich due to being my wife.
She would be rich, not you.
You would be as rich as you were before.
Slightly less.
I'm just always getting richer.
So, you know, I get paid these residuals.
It's crazy.
As far as I know, the rich get richer.
And the poor?
Yeah.
They get poorer.
They get poorer.
Yeah.
It's a good setup.
For the rich.
Sure.
For the poor, I could see how you wouldn't like it.
What percentile of richness would you say you are in terms of the world?
Bring back the sex questions.
This is even more crass.
Probably 1%.
You're in the top one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Must be nice.
It is.
Must be nice.
It is.
I live in Bel Air, gated community.
It's not a house that's like a castle blew up.
A castle blew up?
Yeah.
So, it's so wide and expansive.
That's right.
It's like meaning blew up like a balloon?
Yeah.
Oh, I see.
It's like a castle had an allergy to something.
Okay.
So, it's not like a castle that someone bombed and there's rubble everywhere.
It's like if there was a royal family, they were made of peanuts.
Uh-huh.
If they moved into this castle, this castle had a nut allergy.
I see.
So, the royal family was made of peanuts.
It's a race of peanut people and they're led by a king.
So, is it an entire town of peanut people?
Yeah, it's a whole country.
It's a whole country.
Yeah, you don't have a king of a town.
That's a man.
They've been wandering what?
The desert for 40-odd years and he's led them to this castle.
They're dumb.
They're made out of peanuts so they never lived in shelter.
So, they're just kind of wandering around in a circle and at one point they stumble upon...
It's just like all sitting around like, hey, Your Majesty, what do you want to do today?
And he's like, you're looking at it.
And then, you know, it rained and everybody would say, ah, it stinks.
I would think a peanut in the rain, that gets soggy.
That's...
Oh, what a beautiful turn of phrase.
A peanut in the rain.
It gets soggy.
So, then...
At one point they wander into this castle.
They rub up against it.
Here's what happens.
There's like a guy in the court of the peanuts who's like...
He's like the Da Vinci of the peanuts.
Oh, okay, sure.
So, he's like, hey, idiots, it's simple.
Here's what you do.
You build a structure.
Everybody can live inside it.
So, you don't have to get wet in the rain.
We don't have to be a peanut in the rain anymore.
Exactly.
We can be warm, dry peanuts.
Toasted even.
Toasted, roasted by the fire.
Salted.
Sprinkle salt on ourselves and we'll eat each other.
We're a cannibal kingdom.
Sure, of course.
Last man standing.
First man.
To the victor goes to the spoils.
That's right.
The old saying.
Yes, to the...
Yes.
So, is this how, by the way, is this how Mr. Peanut came to be?
This is later.
Is he the last...
This is later.
Peanut standing?
He's the last in the line of the peanut king.
And yet, he advertises for other peanuts, inanimate peanuts, to be eaten.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Because he's a cannibal.
He can't help it.
It's in his nature.
Sure.
But you'll notice he dresses in a very elegant manner with the top hat, the monocle.
To disguise his nature.
No!
To flaunt his nature.
He's...
You don't say.
He's a descendant of noblemen.
I thought it was because, much like all of us, any time we put on clothes, it's to disguise
our very base human disgusting nature.
I mean, look at you.
You have an Argyle sweater.
What are you trying to say about yourself?
You're putting on heirs of like, I'm a classy gentleman?
Much like Mr. Peanut, what I'm trying to say is, don't eat me.
It would be a hassle to get through all this stuff for you.
Right.
Move along.
Move along to another peanut.
That's right.
This is the shock theory.
Shocks.
They see a guy in a scuba suit.
They're like, ooh, a delicious seal.
They bite into it and they're like, hey, you're not a seal.
You tricked me.
Too much rubber.
Move along to something else.
You've never seen the movie Jaws.
What's that?
Okay.
So now we're talking about the peanuts.
They get in.
They create the structure.
They build a castle.
Right?
Yes.
They get in there.
Somehow this castle, it's got a peanut allergy.
Yeah.
As you said.
Yeah.
Somehow.
Now, when you say somehow, what do you mean?
Like, how does it happen?
I mean, it was a mistake in the building.
Probably in the mortaring together of the stones.
Then maybe they use, here's what probably happened.
They probably, you know, like there's workers that died.
They're inside Hoover Dam.
Yeah.
It's like this.
It's creepy to think about when you think about it.
Oh, I think it's exciting.
To know that there are skeletons in there.
Yeah.
Oh, especially the skeleton part.
To look at Hoover Dam, I get my grandkids together.
I say, look, Poppy's going to show you something.
Look at that.
Honey, look.
There's skeletons in there.
The kids are like, oh, Poppy, why did you tell us that?
And they run away and they hide.
They think it's Halloween.
They come back later.
Ask for candy.
I'm like, no, you're shit out of luck.
It's just skeletons in there.
Guys died.
They like that kind of language when you say shit out of luck.
They do.
They learn it from you, I think.
Maybe they do.
A case could be made.
What's the nastiest word you've ever said?
Are you trying to wind up to it?
Just trying to get your mouth.
You think cock.
You think.
I think so, but it's contextual.
Sure.
In what context?
I worked on a farm.
So on the farm.
When I was first learning the film game, I worked on a farm.
Sure.
And I used to run the projector at a farm.
And what opportunity did you have to say that word while you were running the projector
on this farm?
There was chicken running around.
Okay.
See, it's not such a bit.
Wait, there was a double meaning and everybody enjoyed a nice little giggle.
Okay.
So I said, I got to get my cock out of here.
And everybody, this is big in farms.
Did you take your penis out at that moment?
My wife might be watching this.
Barbara, turn off your YouTube.
Did you really?
Yeah, I did.
I was a young guy.
You know, you make mistakes, hopefully.
Was it a mistake or did anyone?
I'm not proud of it.
You're not proud of your penis or just the opportunity?
Both.
Really?
I'm ashamed of the human body.
Yeah, I get that.
I think we're disgusting.
So you don't have a problem penis in general?
No, same problem penis as everybody else.
Yeah.
The fact that we have them is a problem.
Oh, you led me down a road.
Oh, the Primrose path.
It's not what I call it.
Let's get back to what we were talking about.
Filth alley!
Let's get back to what you're talking about.
What are we talking about?
You had an affair with a young woman, but that's all over.
Yeah, it's over.
We came back on this program.
You guys had split up.
I revealed her.
I didn't actually murder my wife.
I put her in suspended animation.
She was, of course, very upset.
I granted her a Bel Air divorce.
Which Morgan Freeman gives to you, as I recall?
Denzel Washington, but nice try.
Okay, I guess I have a problem.
Who was it George Washington carver?
Peanuts.
Call it a back.
Yeah, so then we got divorced and that was it.
And she's not coming back on this program because...
Well, as a matter of fact, she's here right now.
Honey, you want to come in here?
She's here right now.
Come on in here, honey.
Yeah, it's Gilly and Jacobs.
Hey, Gilly.
Gilly, how are you? Sorry.
I'm okay.
I was just catching him up on a history...
Hi.
Hi.
I'm surprised to see you.
Well, yeah, you didn't invite me, but I'm here nonetheless.
For record, I also did not invite her.
What is happening right now?
Well, I send him a text message and...
Do you receive texts?
I receive them, I don't send them.
What does he text back to you, Gilly?
Usually it's those three dots, like he's writing something,
but nothing ever comes through.
I don't know how to make it go.
You press on the thing and then it's just...
Yeah, you have no idea.
I get like the little balloon means you talk here, stupid.
But I don't know what you're supposed to do after that.
Anyway, I texted him that I had something really important to tell him,
and I wanted to do this in private, but I guess this is the only time you could...
Whoa, so this is happening, whatever is happening is happening right here.
Yes.
Live on our show.
I don't like the sound of this already.
Well, Gary.
You have a sweatshirt.
Oh yeah, what were you going to say?
Continue to call me Gary.
It's so hot in the studio.
Why do you have a sweatshirt?
What I wanted to tell you, Gary, is that you're a father again.
What? This is crazy at my age?
That sperm's good.
Wow.
That's nice to hear.
Oh, by the way, that's what she said.
That's what I did say.
Also, I guess that's not really a double one.
Well, I guess this is to be expected.
So you don't wrap a Jimmy on that?
Who has the time anymore?
You know what I mean?
I don't expect to be alive five minutes from now.
They don't make them that small, so we just didn't bother.
Listen to this.
Regular tody fields over here.
Regular shields in your nail.
They were mimes, honey.
Okay, so here's what happens.
They were mimes, honey.
Another great turn of phrase.
A peanut in the rain.
They were mimes, honey.
After the last time, we saw each other waiting in the elevator.
Stone cold silence.
I mean, it is thick in there.
It's like a madman.
A fog of silence.
So we eventually get stuck in the elevator.
It's like something out of a sitcom.
Wait a minute.
So the elevator stopped after this program?
Yeah.
It got stuck.
Yeah.
You were here in February.
That's right.
We're forced to talk to each other.
So eventually we're making nice.
Everything's fine.
We're talking about work.
She's on a sitcom.
I created the modern sitcom.
At this point, she doesn't know if community's coming back.
This is a show.
It was just about to premiere at that point.
It's on the bubble, right?
Sure, yeah.
The prime time panic.
Do you need that adjusted for you?
I'm not this short, but I'm not this short.
Maybe someone thought you had terrible posture.
They assumed you were going to slouch.
They saw your army jacket.
They were like, hey, Travis Bickel over here.
Let him slouch into the microphone.
Very funny.
I'm wearing the movie.
You know what?
I'm a new mother.
I don't have time for you.
You're not very good at it so far.
What?
You're holding the baby upside down.
You got to watch out for the fontanelle, which is not a girl group, by the way.
Was that Fonzie's girlfriend?
Pinkie Tuscadero.
Oh, God.
That was fontanelle.
Sorry.
Oh, my gosh.
Look at that thing.
So she says, he's a beautiful little boy girl.
For those of you just listening, she's...
That was something I didn't want to get to until later, but our child was born without genitals.
Oh, my God.
Can I feel that?
Yeah.
Get in there.
There's nothing to do.
Nothing there.
Nothing there.
Nothing there.
This is making me very uncomfortable.
Nothing there either.
That's just a dent.
There's no hole.
There's no butthole.
I'd love to tear him a new one.
Here's what happened.
I said, I'll make you a bet.
If community gets picked up for another season, I will have sex with you.
Yep.
I never thought in a million years that show would get picked up.
No one did.
No one did.
It's all references.
Hey, this guy, he's like, he loves the movie so much.
Let's do the movie.
They do the movie.
All right.
That's the story.
Yeah.
It's like, you know, hey, I love Reservoir Dogs.
They start it, and then by the end, you know, Mr. Pink gets shot.
The end.
What?
So anyway, here we are.
So what I'm not understanding is, months later, you're trapped in the elevator in February.
Yeah.
You promised to have sex with her if it gets picked up.
It was picked up maybe three weeks ago.
That's right.
Yeah.
And there's a baby here.
Yep.
Thank you for walking me through the timeline, because this does seem strange.
Seems a little strange.
What are you talking about?
Because how old is this baby?
This baby.
This non-gendered baby.
This baby's like nine hours old.
You say you just said this baby today.
Yep.
So tracking nine months back, that's November, which is when you guys were...
Mama!
Okay.
So maybe this is...
Oh, did you hear that?
Oh my goodness.
It's talking.
So maybe this baby was conceived while you guys were still in the throes of passion.
I think this baby was conceived in February.
Hold on a second.
That's when all babies are conceived.
In the throes of passion?
Yeah.
No, it wasn't conceived on the phone.
Well, it could have been rape.
Boy, oh boy.
I don't think that word has ever been said on this program, please.
Gilly.
Sorry.
I mean, I'm just saying.
I can't believe that actually happened.
Sorry.
Did you guys have sex in the elevator?
Yes.
No, we didn't have sex in the elevator.
We had phone sex in the elevator.
With whom?
With each other.
I said, hey, I'm getting a signal.
Are you?
She said, yes.
We turned our backs.
We sat back to back and we had phone sex in the elevator.
So you were sitting back to back though, so you could sort of feel the vibrations of what
you guys were doing.
Yeah, it was very erotic.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
So wait, you had phone sex in the elevator.
Yes.
And then five months later, there's a baby.
No, well, yeah, we had penetrative sex.
When did I get picked up?
Like two weeks ago or something like that?
I think so.
Something like that?
Yeah, we had sex two weeks ago.
You penetrated her, she says.
This is, we're talking about sexual intercourse.
Yeah.
But just like burst in here.
Hey, I'm not Barbara Marks, all right?
So how does this happen, Gilly?
Well, he undid his pants.
Oh, my goodness.
Continue.
I pulled down his underwear.
Oh, God.
Please go on.
I mean.
It sounds less erotic now in the telling.
Yeah, tidy whiteies or?
He wears loose boxers, very loose, barely held up.
Who's texting you at the professionalism council?
Oh, look at that.
So good.
And he wears loose boxers?
Loose boxers.
Yeah.
Like one size too big?
The elastic's kind of worn out.
They're barely holding on.
They're perfectly good.
Why should I throw them away?
It's got a tight belt over those pants.
So you penetrate Gilly here.
Yep.
And how does a baby, do you have like some sort of super sperm?
Is that what we're?
I told you the sperm's good.
That's not for me to say.
The sperm is good.
How many of your kids came about in this manner where they were born within two weeks?
All of them.
Sorry, it's hungry.
I got it.
Oh, my goodness.
All of my viewers are getting a treat here.
Right through the clothes.
It's a strong baby.
Yeah, all my children had a gestation period of two weeks.
Can I?
Okay.
And this is going to sound really crazy.
And I hesitate to even say it, quite honestly, because it sounds fanciful.
And I think the answer has to be no.
All right.
I don't think it's possible what I'm asking, but I'm just going to throw it out there anyway.
Okay.
Are you from some sort of race of alien super beings?
Full.
Never been asked that before.
I can see why not.
It couldn't even be possible.
I don't know why I asked it.
But are you some sort of alien super being that comes from another world that has come
here to impregnate our women?
Our Hollywood actresses?
I mean, that's not the only thing I came here to do.
Oh, sir.
Yeah, yeah, I am.
You are?
Yeah.
God.
Yeah, from outer space.
You're white.
What was the other thing you came here to do to create Hollywood?
Television shows and movies.
And what about the Loch Ness monster in the Bigfoot?
I'm trying to find that Loch Ness monster.
Why are you trying to find them?
Are they a threat to your super being?
No, I want to bring the Loch Ness monster back to my home planet as an example of mythology.
I was going to say as an example of earth creatures, it's not an example of earth creatures
because no one's been able to find it.
Well, it honestly is the thing.
I've become very attached to the earth and I don't want it to be destroyed.
So I think if I bring the Loch Ness monster back there, everybody will be afraid they
will destroy the earth.
Gary.
No, I'm not so bad after all.
Gary.
Oh, I'm just a simple guy from another planet.
I want to impregnate Hollywood actresses, make movies and find the Loch Ness monster
and scare my home planet.
Two part question, what is the name of your home planet and are we under threat of being
destroyed by them?
I'll take the second part first, Scott.
That's fair.
Yes, you are in danger of being destroyed by my planet.
Looming?
Danger?
The imminent danger.
And number two, the name of the planet is Gregord.
Gregord.
Yes.
Gregord?
Is that with a hyphen at all?
Nope.
Just.
Just like it sounds.
And are all the letters right after each other?
No.
No, they're all mixed up?
Not on your planet.
Interesting.
Wow.
And so this is an half alien.
I mean, I'm assuming you're a human being.
I mean, wait, I have a question for you.
Sure.
I've got a sense now.
Now, on your planet are babies born sans genitals?
Yeah, we don't need them.
So then how did you get your...
So what's that beautiful dick of yours?
I mean, where'd that come from?
Oh, you sweet to say.
That's a beautiful sweet dick.
Where did it come from?
It's a thing that I can grow if I need to.
Okay.
Yeah.
We're compatible with any species in the universe.
Under dire circumstances, you can grow that.
They aren't dire.
So can this baby grow what it needs to grow?
No.
You can start to because it's only half.
Oh, man.
He's a happy.
Yeah.
What do I do about the lack of butthole?
You won't have to worry about it.
All right.
Do I feed it?
Do I keep feeding it?
Nope.
Don't ever feed it.
You didn't feed it, did you?
Well, I held it like that.
Yeah, that you've held it like that.
That's not really been doing it.
That's feeding.
But it was through my shirt.
So why have you been doing it?
It wanted to.
Oh.
Feed me.
Feed me.
It's talking.
Was that you?
I don't think so.
No.
Her mouth wasn't moving.
Obviously it wasn't her.
I wasn't paying attention.
Feed me.
Well, this is a fascinating story and I want to know more about this.
I'm sure people are bored.
You think people are bored by the revelation that there's alien life here on Earth?
All right.
Well, you have a shorter attention span than I.
Hey, when you get to be my age, you've heard it all before.
What's your alien name?
Oh, it's unpronounceable.
Really?
Is it the N word?
Is that why?
Yes, and?
Yes, and it's not the N word you're thinking of.
Oh, really?
That's right.
Which one?
Oh, it's a word we have on my own plan.
Number one, two.
Great episode.
Maybe the greatest.
I'm surprised that it's so low in the rankings.
If that is a number 12 clip, man, the next 11 are going to be amazing, don't you think?
They better be.
Well, I want you guys to come back and listen to part two.
I do too.
Well, you're going to be here for it.
Well, no, no, no.
I want them to come back to you.
Oh, yeah, yeah, you do.
Well, for the listener.
For the listener.
Okay, listen, listeners.
I also want you to come back.
It's not just Scott.
It's not like Scott wants you to come back and I'm like, I hope they stay away.
I want you to come back too.
Good, good.
It's good to express something like that.
That felt good to say.
Thank you, Scott.
All right.
Very good.
So come back to that.
Part two of our very special best of 2013.
And before we go out, we're going to hear something else from that episode of Peanut
in the Rain.
This is Mike Hanford as Ducky Powell doing his wonderful song.
We will see you on the next episode, part two of 2013.
See you then.
Bye.
For now.
Well, so where are we in this?
We seem to be at a stalemate.
What?
We find ourselves at a curious crossroads.
I may be the hottest I've ever been.
I should say, Scott.
Don't take that jacket off.
Don't know.
I will not.
What brings you by today?
Was that sort of a question that I'll host my day?
I was going to sing a song if I could.
Oh boy, oh boy.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Music, music, music.
Yeah, yeah, music.
Yeah, yeah, music.
Sing it, sing it, sing it, sing it.
Sing the song.
Well, I would enjoy some accompaniment if possible.
He's got a mellifluous voice.
I can carry it too.
Guys, do you hear that?
You're not wearing headphones.
No.
I see gnarly trails.
Fresh powder too.
I grab bits of air.
So tasty, it's true.
And I think to myself, what a thrashable slope.
All my ski buds are grabbing tasty air.
I'm going to count the fifth.
There are smiles on their faces as they pop.
Nasty flair.
I see gnarly back scratchers.
What?
And tasty daffies too, they're tricks.
What they're really saying is skiing fucking rules.
I munch tasty powder.
19.
I'm talking about snow.
There are so many trails that I'll never know.
And I think to myself, what a thrashable slope.
And I think to myself, what a nasty, tasty gnarly little slope.
Ski rules.
Oh, wow.
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