Comedy Bang Bang: The Podcast - Best of 2018 Pt. 4
Episode Date: January 3, 2019Scott and Paul F. Tompkins have arrived to the final part of the Best of Comedy Bang! Bang! 2018 countdown with numbers three, two, and one as voted by YOU. Happy New Year! This episode is brought to ...you by Squarespace (www.squarespace.com code: BANGBANG) and Hotel Tonight.
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Welcome to Comedy Bang Bang.
Thank you to Charlie Murphy Brown for that cast-raised submission.
Oh, Murphy Brown, R.I.B.
Yeah, and Charlie Murphy, R.I.B.
Oh, that's true.
Wait, are you saying the character Murphy Brown has died?
Yeah, I mean, her show's canceled, so maybe not officially, but...
But I mean, were they planning on just...
They're planning on it being a big hit.
I don't think anyone plans on doing something without going like,
this is going to be huge.
Well, I guess I thought it was a limited thing.
I mean, they limited it in the sense of they only ordered 10 or whatever, but they wanted more.
Is Will and Grace the idea that that is just going to continue?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
It was such a big hit and the Roseanne thing was such a big hit.
They were like, oh, let's bring back anything.
And then Murphy Brown, they were like, ooh, no one likes this.
All right, see you, Murphy.
We'll check in with you in another 10 years.
It's not quite the same thing, I guess, Murphy Brown.
Also, I don't know that anyone liked Murphy Brown when it was out, right?
It was very popular.
It was popular.
When was first on?
But I mean, all those people have passed on.
Yeah, they're all dead.
With whom it was popular.
They're all dead.
By the way, welcome to the show.
This was mostly to get back at Dan Quay.
Welcome to the show.
Yeah, I know.
Oh, man, he's stirring in his hot seat there.
Because he'll never be vice president again,
but that show got brought back on the air.
You think Dan Quay could be president?
Like if he was like.
100%.
Welcome to the show.
This is Comedy Bang Bang Best of 2018, part four.
If you haven't heard parts one through three,
what the fuck are you doing with your life?
I hate you.
Get out of here.
Get out of my dreams.
And into my car.
Those are your choices.
You have two choices.
And I know you can't control the first.
You have two choices.
Get out of my dreams.
Get into my car.
They're going to find you.
You're going to be taken out of my dreams.
Get into my car.
Get into my car.
Welcome to the show.
I'm Scott Ackerman.
Across the desk from me is Mr. Paul F. Tompkins.
We bought a desk.
You know that movie we bought a zoo?
This is like that, but with a desk.
Far less interesting.
But more compelling somehow.
It is somehow more compelling.
You know why?
Because the drawers are filled with tiny zoo animals.
That's true.
They're alive, but shrunken down.
I think I knew someone or maybe I was dating someone
whose friend told me the story that they were in San Francisco
and they bought a desk with their significant...
They were moving in with their girlfriend
and they went out to a furniture store and bought a desk.
And they were so excited.
They were moving in together.
And when they went up to pay for it,
the person behind the counter said,
oh, the desk has been taken care of by that gentleman over there.
And they look over and it's Joe Montana.
And he says, you guys are so cute together
and you remind me of when I got together with my wife
that I just wanted to buy this desk for you.
I feel like this is a story someone told me at some point.
But someone with whom I do not speak any longer,
as they were perhaps a friend of a previous relationship
or something, but I think that's a true...
And if you're out there and it's you, we want to hear from you.
Also, Joe Montana is listening.
Joe, hit us up.
Buy us a desk.
That is simultaneously the most and least romantic thing I've ever heard.
Most from... In which side of it?
Most and least from...
Most because the idea that your love would inspire someone
to buy a high ticket item like a desk.
Right, because this must be $1,500 or something.
But also, it's a boring thing.
Yeah, I know.
It's not like you're like, hey, buy them a drink,
which is kind of romantic.
Yeah, or dinner.
Like their dinner's on me and you look over.
Oh my God, Joe Montana.
Joe Montana.
No, it's like...
But he bought them like a $1,500 desk.
Yeah, it's weird.
But then he explained himself and it was romantic.
It is romantic, but it's... I don't know.
I... You know what?
Because I'm picturing like the harsh fluorescent lights.
The harsh glare of the department store eyes.
Unless it was a candlelit department store.
It may have been.
Which sounds beautiful.
Sounds beautiful, but it is a fire hazard.
Like if you go to Staples and it's lit by candles.
Oh, it's just beautiful.
They have like those old fashioned gas lamps, you know?
Oh yeah, you would love it.
You would never want to leave Staples.
You would love it.
You know who lives in the Murphy Group.
I know you're 17, but come on.
I choose to believe it.
And I think Joe Montana...
Is that who I'm thinking of?
Because he's San Francisco.
It's got to be him, right?
From the 49ers?
Yeah, from the 149ers.
Anyway, wonderful story.
And I choose to believe it.
And so I'm going to.
But that couple, maybe not still together?
Probably not.
I mean, what are the odds?
50-50.
You know what I think happens?
Because this sounds familiar to me now.
I think Joe Montana...
Familiar to me now.
The islands.
Familiar to me now.
The rhythm.
I think that Joe Montana was buying people desks as a gag.
All day.
And they were all...
Was it part of a prank show?
It was part of a prank show that never aired.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, right.
It was...
Joe Montana's jacking the desk?
So he was jacking it?
No, no.
There was a puppet in the desk that was jacking it.
Oh, got it.
He'd open up a drawer and then a puppet would pop out.
But they never picked up the pilot,
so the puppets never popped out?
Is that what...
No, people did get those desks and they took them home.
Oh.
But here's what would happen.
The camera crew would follow that.
First, the camera crew was there, hitting cameras,
watching Joe follow the desk.
Then they have to follow the desk.
And then before the people go into their houses to say,
can we just go in there real quick?
Can we just like...
Yeah, let us just watch you open this desk.
Can we not...
Well, they couldn't tip it off?
Sure.
They had to come up with an excuse to get into the home.
Can we borrow some sugar?
Can we borrow some sugar with you outside?
And then they would put the jack in the desk there?
No, the jack is already in the desk at the store.
So what are they doing?
Just setting up a hidden camera?
Just setting up the cameras.
Oh, got it.
This is a good show.
Why did this not get picked up?
Wow.
Joe Montana's jacking the desk.
It was politics.
Oh, yeah.
It was politics.
Yeah, Republican.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, there was a grain embargo from the...
Tariffs.
The Empire.
The Empire from the Grand Moff.
The Grand Moff himself stopped by and said,
this show will not air.
Well, I choose to believe that.
I think Joe Montana is out there just buying desks for people.
Yeah.
Well, it's sad now because he's lost his mind.
It's true.
If you could be out there and buy a desk for someone, would you?
What a question.
God damn.
If you could be out there and buy a desk for someone,
would you?
Would I do it?
I like to think that I would.
But am I ever going to be in that situation?
Are you ever going to be out there?
I don't know if I'm going to be out there.
If you could be out there and buy a desk for someone, would you?
I mean, I'm in these streets for sure.
Right, definitely.
I don't know if I'm buying desks though.
I don't know if you're going to be out there though.
If you could be out there.
If I could be out there buying desks for people, would I?
I hope so.
I hope so.
But I don't know.
We have lost our minds by the fourth episode.
If you don't know how Paul and I do this is,
you're listening to these over a two week period.
We tape them all back to back.
People should listen to these back to back.
Say them up.
With their loved ones, back to back.
All of your loved ones stand back to back.
And then you walk 50 paces.
That's right.
Turn around and fire.
Turn and fire.
Shoot yourselves.
Shoot yourselves.
Shoot each other.
Shoot him.
That's creepy.
Shoot him.
Yelling.
With squirt guns.
Of course.
Safety.
Filled with bleach.
That was a thing.
I feel like that was a thing that kids were doing.
Squirt guns filled.
Oh, to stain someone's clothes.
So that.
No, I think to blind them.
Oh, I was.
I think it was an aggressive move.
Did I just hear a computer?
Gboop.
I heard that too.
I heard it.
We both heard it.
How could we hear that?
How could we?
How could we hear that, Sam?
Donkey.
Donkey.
Oh, it was donk back.
Can you imagine?
I swear I heard a computer sound in here.
He's doing his blanket gymnastics.
So we're, this is an exciting episode, Paul,
because we're going to hear the top three episodes of 2018.
Do you know what, when you told me that,
I thought you were making it up to sound.
Just fucking around.
I thought you were trying to sound cool.
Yeah.
And now that it's real, I can't believe it.
And I feel embarrassed.
Yeah.
Well, you should, but you should also feel excited.
It's happening.
And I feel honored to be here.
Well, I am honored to have you.
How many years have we been doing this together?
Three.
It's got to be more than that.
We haven't been doing it all 10 years, have we?
No, but close to.
Close to?
Yeah, I think, yeah, maybe nine out of the 10.
Listeners, we want to hear from you.
Text one for Joe Montana, two for 10.
You know what, the top episodes of the year
are always fun to listen to because they're the ones
voted on by you is the best.
And we accept your opinion over ours.
We're spineless weaklings who can't make up their own minds
about anything.
So thank you, master.
No, this is great.
We had over 35,000 votes this year.
I mean, that's a lot of votes for something that,
I mean, more people listen to the show, but.
To actually like write down your favorite episodes of the year.
00:11:10,000 --> 00:11:14,160
That's as many as Donald Trump got in that electoral college.
What?
That's as many as Donald Trump got from the electoral college.
No, he got like 290.
290 votes?
Yeah.
That's not a lot.
No, you only need 270.
Oh, no.
Oh, no, what?
Yeah, he's president.
Our system.
Our system, yeah.
Oh, no, our system.
I know, it's crazy.
Hey, do you think there will still be an earth by the time?
By the time this comes out, well, let's see.
This is coming out on January 3rd or so.
I think there might be an earth.
Not too much longer after that.
Let me, if there was some sort of thermonuclear devastation.
Would these episodes still come out?
Yeah.
That we've prerecorded?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, if they're uploaded.
Is there a system?
Yeah, is it an automated system, Sam?
Get off your phone and don't talk into the mic.
Sam, you have to pay attention to us every single second.
He's pointing again, like Superman.
Like Superman points.
Do it with a Superman, but don't get on mic, you motherfucker.
Don't you get on.
Don't you ever.
This is a throwing chair.
This is an Hollywood handbook.
No, we're not going to make a star out of you on this show.
We aren't.
We aren't.
Those men.
Hashtag.
Those men.
But why were we talking?
Why, what do we ask, Sam?
Oh yeah, is it automated?
Like once these are all edited together,
do they get pushed out automatically?
I would imagine if there was a thermonuclear war,
that the internet wouldn't exist.
And so they wouldn't go out there, but.
Well, but I mean, like they're in some sort of cloud.
They must be some stored somewhere on some sort of.
But I mean, that's the whole thing about digital media is,
is that they're only as good as the devices,
which we have to decode them.
That's very true, man.
That's very true, man.
So it's, you know, and that's pretty much all recordings
throughout time.
I mean.
They don't call this the true man show.
When they invented the phonograph record.
It's not like you own music, you own this piece of plastic.
It's not the phonograph record.
It's not Adam and Onograph record.
It's Adam and Poneograph record, because I pwned you.
So undoubtedly they'd be uploaded to some sort of machine
that clickety-clacks, but no one would have any way to.
Without a doubt, without a doubt.
Without a doubt.
So really, what are we doing all this for?
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's fun to do while we do it.
Scott, I think you fucking cracked it, dude.
I mean, that's the only reason to do anything, right?
It's fun to do it while we do it.
Also to survive and to food and shelter.
And to food.
And to food and to shelter.
To survive, to food, to shelter.
But what kind of legacy will we have upon this earth?
I used to think about that more.
Really? Now you don't care?
No, I don't think about it as much.
Really?
Well, now give us, I don't have one, so.
What do you mean?
There's so much stuff.
You create so much happiness in the world that when you retire,
I'm not going to say when you shuffle off this mortal coil.
But when you retire from show business, which I hope you never do,
I think that you should.
I think I'll ever be allowed to.
Personally, I think that you should, even if you had a nest egg
that you could just say, you know, fuck it, I'm out.
I think that you would be one of those people who just keeps doing it.
You do it for the love.
Exactly.
You're the king of podcasting.
You're on so many podcasts that I don't think anything could keep you away.
What if podcasts stop happening?
That's a problem.
I'm done.
You are done.
That's it.
Well, I mean, look at you.
You went from stand up comedy.
Look at you.
Look at you.
You piece of shit.
Now you went from stand up comedy, then you segued into writing
and acting on television, and then you segued it.
There would be something new for you to get into.
Oh, I hope mobisodes were supposed to take off.
I remember mobisodes.
I was going to do show for the Motorola Razer.
That was a thing we wanted to do that on Know You Shut Up,
which was an episode that was optimized for Motorola Razer,
and just have it be a little square in the middle of the screen.
Right.
I remember those years when I was approached about creating content for phones.
Oh, yeah.
Which I guess all stuff is created for phones now,
but this was back when people had like flip phones.
Yes, exactly.
And they were trying to say like,
people are on their phones a lot.
We're going to create content for phones, simply for phones.
It was like when they wanted me to like...
Simply for phones, you boy.
I think it was a particular phone company wanted me to create like stand up based stuff,
because I was doing the show with the UCV, the stand up show.
Was it an American telephone and telegraph?
It may have been.
And they were like, look, Watson, we need you.
Get in here.
Come here.
Did he say I want you?
Was it I want you or I need you?
I always thought it was I need you.
Very thirsty, Edison.
Talking about a thirst trap, he invented the phone.
He's like, I invented these tasting things.
The original thirst trap.
Thomas, Alva Edison.
Meanwhile, you got...
Nope, Alexander Graham Bell.
Oh, that's right.
Meanwhile, you got Notorious Power Bottom, Ebenezer Scrooge over here.
Just going like, hey.
Hey.
Hey.
Get up here.
But yeah, I remember those years.
And I remember the years before that at around 2001 or so when people were saying like,
you got to come create some content for computers now,
and we're going to use flash animation.
Come join us at Icebox.
Yes, I remember that was one of the places.
Mr. Wong.
And everyone had left all of their jobs for regular television networks.
Left their families.
They didn't have to leave their families.
No, they did, though.
Really?
That's fair of their contract?
There were people...
No, there were people...
The most renowned to your wife.
There were people like, I don't...
What the fuck do I need you for anymore?
I'm working...
00:17:05,200 --> 00:17:06,720
I'm working for the computer.
I'm going to do this racist cartoon for the computer.
But yeah, everyone left their jobs,
and they just went into these other jobs that were gone within a year.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, podcasting, still standing.
You mentioned on some podcast recently that weird
trailer park farm?
Trailer park farm.
Where?
You were doing that show with Bill Dwyer and Karen Kilgarov.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They were like these people.
And I remember like...
The Naked News.
They were doing...
Yeah, Naked News.
And they were doing...
I believe Second City was co-branded that.
But it was like...
There was some spate of radio...
Some radio shows people were doing that.
Greg Barron had a show, and Beth Lapidus had a show.
I wasn't at the trailer park farm,
but I remember what you were talking about.
Because I went to...
Yeah, I went to see, I believe, Dave Anthony and Greg Barron performed their show, right?
And I was like...
Yeah, and it was a warehouse with trailers inside
that everyone did radio shows on or something.
It was weird.
It felt very ephemeral.
Like you walked in there and like, this can't last?
I guess I was impressed by the scale, and I was like, oh, wow.
And we were all pretty young.
And so it was like...
Well, the trailers were 100 feet tall.
Yeah, it was cool to see Dave and Greg have a...
It was like a real job.
Sure, I was.
But yeah, the thing that I did was...
It was in Santa Monica, which was the worst,
but it was topical jokes that we had to write first thing in the morning.
And especially we're on the West Coast,
so we had to get up really early.
We had to get up at five in the morning or something,
beat traffic, go out to Santa Monica,
and then write topical jokes about four subject matters.
The news, entertainment, sports, and what was the other one?
I know there was a fourth.
Religion.
Yes, we were writing religion jokes.
Oh my God.
This is in 1997 for MSN, or MSNBC, maybe, and...
I think it was just MSN.
Was it MSN at the time?
It was MSN, and it was the Second City Naked News.
And so it was me and Karen Kilgariff and Bill Dwyer and...
Mike Nichols and Lane May.
Yeah, okay, all of us.
Avery Schreiber.
Rosanna, Rosanna, Dana.
And we would write these jokes every day,
and we would write them starting at 8 a.m.,
and then at approximately noon,
we would try to write two pages of topical jokes a day.
At noon, we would read through them all,
and then we would record them for this basic...
Like, it was a radio play with flash animation
that people were supposed to watch, I guess.
It was like, for basic a-bitches.
I do remember that Bill Dwyer had a leg up on his,
because he had such a funny delivery
that even if the joke he wrote wasn't good,
he would always add a tag that was such in his voice
that we would always like the tag better than the joke,
and we'd go, all right, we pick that one,
just to hear him do the tag.
Fun times, 1997, technically my first professional writing job.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much.
Lasted a summer and then canceled.
But you got in there.
That's the important thing.
That's the important thing is I got my foot in that door.
Yeah, and it's still there.
It's still there, still going, hey, showbiz.
And you're blocking the way for other people to get in.
Oh, definitely.
Hey, showbiz.
If I can block 10 people a day from getting what I have,
that's what I try to do.
It's a numbers game, showbiz.
That was fun, though.
That was a fun summer.
You were working on Mr. Show,
and we would talk on the phone occasionally from our respective offices.
Fun times, 1997.
That's when you used to talk on the phone.
Yeah, that was not a weird thing to do.
We would have hour-long conversations on the phone back then.
You and I sometimes, so bizarre.
I mean, normally, here's what would happen is I remember this from 95 to about 98 or so
around four or five o'clock in the afternoon.
Suddenly, everyone would start making a round of phone calls to each other
to try to ascertain where we were all meeting that night.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it was like, hey, have you heard anything about where we're meeting today?
I don't know who was making the decision on where we were meeting, but it was never me.
But it was always like, do you know where we're meeting?
And someone would go, oh, yeah, Mary Lynn and CJ have a show over here on this night.
So we're all going to meet there and go this place afterwards.
If no one had a show, then everyone would pick a particular bar for whatever reason it would be.
Because this was right before cell phones, before everybody had cell phones.
Yes.
And we all found ourselves...
And technically, I mean, the internet was still around, but I remember not really having,
I would get one email a day, probably through 1998 or 1999 or so.
You know, you would turn on and the whole, you've got mail was like,
nowadays, can you imagine that?
Like, of course I have mail.
I get hundreds a day.
Of course I do, you idiot.
But at the time, it was like...
Why do you sound so surprised?
It was a lot like getting a letter in the mail.
It was like, oh, well, one a day, if that.
Now imagine, imagine if you had...
With vitamins.
Imagine if you were getting so many letters every day that you had a stack,
like you just stacked them on the floor.
And you're like, I got to get back to these people.
Yeah, it's like, imagine, just throw this one away.
I'm never going to get back to them.
Like not opening mail immediately.
Like, what did I get?
What's this?
Boy.
But at the time, we had no way to contact each other.
But we all found ourselves in offices.
Right.
So we all had phones.
We all had phones, but I do remember even 90...
We didn't want to do work.
95 to 96, I don't think some of us had jobs.
So it would just be at home, I remember.
Yeah.
And you just call up people and you talk to them for a good hour or so,
trying to figure out and just sing what's up with them that day.
But we all...
Every comedian in this circle of friends met every single night and drank
somewhere every single night.
Captain Fiddle quite often.
And it was usually based on who had a stand-up set earlier in the night
that we would all go watch and then find the bar next to it after that.
Fun stuff.
It was fun stuff.
But the communication trail is really the part that was exciting.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That seems like...
Like the idea of talking on the phone for that long seems absurd to me now.
That's how my wife and I got together.
Is she called on the phone?
You were a phone sex operator.
And I was working as a waitress in a cocktail bar.
Which she met you.
Yeah.
No, she called on the phone and I talked to her for two hours, I believe,
on the phone.
And I had only met her a couple of times and made plans to go out the following week.
And that's how it happened.
The rest is history.
It truly and the future.
I hope.
The rest is the future.
What if I get home and the rest is the future?
She's not there.
Oh, that would be weird.
I heard the rest was history, so I left.
She's not there.
She's not there.
Do you think that song would pop into your head?
I think so.
If I looked around, okay, it would take me a little time.
I would have dabdo with it.
Of course.
And it would take me a little time to actually accept that what was happening was happening.
Like, she really left.
But then suddenly, I think, at that point, it would pop in my head.
She's not there.
I'd be so mad.
I'd be so mad if that popped into my head at the wrong stage of dabdo.
Yeah.
In which stage are you talking about on ad?
Denial, anger.
I'm going to say.
No, bargaining.
I always mess up betrayal with bargaining.
I think in the in the ABD.
ABD.
It's as easy as.
One, two, three.
Paul.
Yeah, Scott.
I have to tell you that we have to get to the first clip on this countdown.
Well, then I have to be gotten to it.
I think we've been talking for over a half hour and have not gotten to the first clip.
People like this.
People enjoy this.
Things like this.
I have to hear a shoot and the shit.
But let's get to it.
Tell you what, we're doing the top three today.
And these are important episodes.
This is just how it is.
This is just what happens when you do a countdown.
And let's get to it.
This is episode number three.
Number three.
Okay.
Episode number three.
I want people to know.
Yeah.
These are the top three.
That's it.
That is it.
There's not we're not going to be like, oh, here's a few.
Oh, we made them.
There's not that.
There's also like, oh, we made a mistake.
This one's actually number one.
This one's actually number.
This is it.
This is it.
This is the order of the official order.
By the way, and we're not going to do a bottom three either.
Fuck no.
Would that be horrible?
All the performers.
That'd be interesting.
New that knew that.
Oh, I did the least popular ones in here.
Look, I see those types of stats.
But you do.
Will you tell me off air?
No.
Because I'm in them.
You son of a bitch.
Okay.
This is episode 534.
Okay.
Still in the 500.
Still if you can't believe it.
This is an episode called solid as a rock.
And the participants are.
Do you know what?
What?
Solid as a rock.
Acronyms to soar.
Soar.
I think that's beautiful.
It's soar actually.
No, it doesn't.
I just realized.
Solid or a rock.
Solid or a rock.
Well, speaking of that song, you're going to hear it a few times.
The people involved are Paul Rust and Claudia O'Doherty.
From the television show Love.
Sure.
Paul is the co-creator of it and the co-star of it.
And Claudia is one of the supporting characters on it.
And for a few years, Paul and Gillian Jacobs,
who is co-starred on the show with him,
would come and do the episodes.
But I think she was doing a Broadway play or something.
And so she could not come.
She's some weird excuse.
She did do another episode that is not in our countdown,
which is a fun episode.
But so Paul and Claudia are there at the top.
The first thing you are going to hear is, look,
Paul Rust, I've known for all.
Love this breakfast.
Look.
Paul Rust, I've known for a long time.
I have known him since probably like the first few months
when he moved out here from Iowa.
And he and Neil Campbell and Mike Cassidy,
they all had their group together.
And so I've known him a long time, really, a dear friend.
And what I love about Paul is,
and if you watch the television show Love,
I personally, did you watch it?
Or did you watch it?
I really enjoyed that show.
And I thought it was so unique in the themes
that it was discussing.
And certain things that got me frustrated
about Paul's character were resolved by the end of it
in a really interesting way.
Anyway, I just thought it was such an artistic achievement
and such great performances from Mitch and Claudia.
So anyway, go check that show out on Netflix.
It's not going away.
They did three seasons.
Can I point out one quibble?
Yeah.
And this is not, didn't ruin the series for me,
but it did give me pause early on
because it happens early on.
OK.
There's a scene where Paul is gathered with some of the other
people who live in his apartment complex,
this condo world or whatever.
Right.
They live basically at the, what's it called?
The Oakwood.
So yeah, the Oakwood.
Yeah, yeah.
And Paul and Gillian's character have just embarked on this.
They've just, their relationship has blossomed.
They've gone on a few dates or whatever.
And then so the guys are asking him,
so what's going on with her and with you and her?
And he says, well, you know, it's like a real
Adam Baldwin Meryl Streep situation.
Adam Baldwin?
I'm sorry.
Oh, Alec Baldwin.
Alec Baldwin Meryl Streep situation.
It's complicated.
And they go, huh?
And then he goes, it's complicated.
And then they all laugh in real life.
Yeah.
People would roll their eyes.
The, basically the, basically whatever happens when I'm talking.
Those people being, if they were those real people in real life
would say, what?
No, let me tell, let me tell you something though.
If those people were who they are in real life,
because I've worked with most of those people.
Sure.
In a writer's room.
I believe Mike Hanford was one of the friends.
And who else was in there?
I believe Dave Gruber Allen was there.
Okay, okay.
I've not worked with him in a writer's room.
Steve.
Steve from, yeah, from Freaks and Gears.
Yes.
Bannos.
Bannos, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The guy who's so good at playing the kind of dumb stuntman guy.
Oh yeah, he's great.
But I don't know.
I can't remember his name.
00:29:57,440 --> 00:29:58,240
He's so good.
He's really good.
On commercials now.
On commercials now.
Yeah.
But I thought it was with like all the people at his,
who played his in his band.
No.
Oh, it's just with the other people.
Okay.
Because those people would definitely laugh.
Of course, those people would, yes.
Yeah.
A hand man would love it.
A hand man would die for it.
A hand man would die for it.
Anyway, what I was trying to say though about Paul's show.
Yeah, I was trying to be funny.
And I guess the bad guy.
So, yeah.
I mean, it was not cool what you said about Paul.
It was not cool.
It was not cool.
Ah, the not cool are here.
I recognize the delegate from Raku.
Not cool.
Yeah, it just happened.
I know, but I was trying to think of the word delegate.
And I was successful and pretty happy about it.
So, what I, so about Paul's show is it's a, it's kind of a serial comedy.
Because it gets serious.
And I,
There's big issues.
I'm not too ashamed to admit that I had a tear in my eye a few times.
Oh, no, man.
I'm sorry.
I'm not a pussy.
I'm not saying.
I'm stone cold.
But so he's a, he has that side to him where he's a serious guy.
But the thing I love about Paul too is he's like one of the silliest guys I know.
He's very silly.
And he was one of the Bang Bang writers for the first three seasons.
And so he's so silly.
Anyway, so the first thing that we're going to hear is his recurring segment
that he's done on the show several times called New No-Know's,
which is his parody of Bill Maher's New Rules.
That's right.
So we'll hear that.
And then this is exciting.
Um, we have two people who are making their first appearances on the countdown in,
in position number three.
That's impressive.
This is Carl Tarte and Ego Nwodim.
Ego Wodim.
Ego, what?
Wodim.
Wodim.
Oh, okay.
I said the N, but I should not have.
And I said Eam instead of M.
That's right.
I don't think that I've ever, like I have known her just as Ego for so long.
I don't think I've ever had occasion to actually say her name, but that's good to know.
It is good to know.
And it's fun to know.
It's fun to know.
Wodim.
Wodim.
Wodim.
Yeah.
Wodim.
Well, anyway, Ego and Ego is of course now on Saturday Night Live.
That's right.
And Ego and Carl have not been, Ego made a big splash on the show.
She has been on only for maybe six months before she got SNL.
So she did a handful of episodes, which are some of my favorites.
And then Carl has been a writer on Brooklyn Nine-Nine and has not been available.
So they have not been on the show this year all that much.
I know. I lost them from my show too.
Yeah. It's a sad, sad day when those guys got jobs.
I know. I guess I'm happy for them.
I'm not.
But this is one of the last episodes they did before they left.
And they are playing Bashford and Franklin, whom I mentioned previously.
This is a wonderfully silly episode.
I really enjoy it.
This is your number three.
Number three.
Are you getting heated?
I'm getting heated.
Are you getting cheesed?
I'm getting cheesed.
Is it time?
This cheese is melting because it's heating up.
Is it time for our favorite segment on this show?
That's right.
Is it time for?
Start the clock.
Start the clock.
Get out of the room.
Oh, man, it's time for some new no-nos.
New no-nos.
Oh, boy, if you've never heard these before,
this is where Paul gets some things off his ample chest.
Yeah, I get a little steamed about stuff,
and people like to hear it get off my chest.
And you know this, the new no-nos.
New no-nos.
What time?
Oh, dragon!
You know that annoying co-worker of yours
goes into the break room, decides to cook something up,
and it stinks real bad?
I hate this guy.
I hate you.
You know what?
I got a deal for you.
New no-nos.
If you cook something stinky where I work,
I'm going to cook something stinky where I live.
Just sitting in my house, eating eggs,
and there's nothing you can do about it.
Oh, and the worst part?
You don't even know it's happening.
New no-nos.
I eat stink.
Yeah!
New no-nos.
Have you ever had people go,
you want to look at a picture of my kid?
Aw, man, I hate that.
I've done that, yeah.
Yeah, you want to look at...
Oh, okay, yeah.
I'll look at a picture of your kid
if you look at a picture of me dressed as your kid.
And guess what?
I already got it.
Ready and loaded!
How'd you get the kids clothes?
Shopping.
I assume they're grown person-sized reproductions
of the clothes, not the actual clothes.
No, the same size.
I twist, I cram, I fit.
New no-nos.
I twist, I cram, I fit.
Yeah!
Okay, look out.
New no-nos.
You know, the kids are like,
you know these people who slurp their food?
Aw.
So annoyed.
Okay, you like slurping?
Slurp everything.
What?
You got to slurp chicken.
You got to slurp turkey.
You got to slurp ham.
You got to...
New no-nos.
Throat clearers.
They're worse than the slurpers.
Okay, how about this?
Every time you clear your throat,
I pee in my pants a little bit.
You're annoying.
Dribble, dribble.
Yeah, I'm just pee in my pants.
And guess what?
It's uncomfortable for me.
Not you.
New no-nos.
You made me pee my pants tonight.
Yes!
Any more of my good bitch?
I don't know.
I don't think the PC Thought Police will let me.
No, come on.
We're going to let you.
We're going to let you.
Restirp that clock.
Okay.
Restirp that clock.
Start the clock.
Don't spoil anything.
Don't spoil anything.
That's what people say all the time.
La, la, la.
Pugging my ears.
Okay, well, I'm sorry.
I'm going to spoil everything for you people.
In the sixth sense, Bruce Willis is in it.
Whoa!
Go back.
Red the sixth sense and give it a watch
because Bruce Willis is in it.
New no-no.
Bruce Willis is an actor and he plays a character
in the sixth sense.
He takes his shit in it too.
If you see it, if you can catch him.
In the middle of the movie.
Throughout the movie.
New no-no.
My bad.
My bad.
I'm so sick of this expression.
My bad.
My bad.
Everyone uses it constantly.
New no-no.
My bad.
It's now my bat.
And is it a baseball bat?
Is it a vampire bat?
I'm not going to tell you.
You'll have to find out when you say it
and the person hands it to you.
New no-no.
My bat.
And then they give you a bat.
So do we have to carry around bats
to give to people when they say it?
Check your lockers after the show, guys.
Full of bats.
Any more?
Express lanes.
Oh, turn up that clock.
Oh my god.
You go to the grocery store, what do they say?
10 items or less.
12 items or less.
10, 10, 12, 8, 8.
15 sometimes.
Okay, so if it's up to 15, let me get this straight.
Okay, let me do the math.
Does that mean I can bring in
five?
Yes.
Does that mean I can bring in
nine?
Well, you could probably just breeze right through the line.
Could I just bring in one?
Yes.
Are these real questions?
Okay.
Deal.
I'll bring in less than 15.
Great, that seems like a little...
You can also bring in 15, because it's 15 or less.
Oh, but I can't bring in 16?
No.
Sure.
You probably could bring in 16.
I don't think they'd notice.
I feel like this is less of a new no-no when you asking us how these lines...
How do these work?
Oh, okay.
Low talkers, close talkers, high talkers.
You've never seen Seinfeld, new no-no, watch Seinfeld.
Double Dippas.
Yes.
Spongeworthy.
Social media.
Uh-oh, uh-oh, uh-oh.
Cast in a wide net.
I've added up to here.
I think he's moved on.
Twitter, Facebook, Instagram.
Snore, snore, snore.
Oh, what's that up?
That sounds good.
Snore, snore, snore, snore, snore.
Snore, snore, snore.
There's four.
You got to write them, even though you only say three.
Whoa, I love that.
I'm downloading that now.
What?
What's with social media?
No, I don't want to look at a picture of your sandwich.
Okay.
Um, maybe, you know what?
You want me to eat the sandwich?
Is that why you're showing it to me?
Then I'll pretend to eat it.
Every time I look at one of your sandwiches,
I'll put down my phone,
and I'll pant to my, I'm holding the sandwich
and spend 20 minutes at least eating it.
Is that what you want?
So you, what?
Is that, are you done?
Was that the end?
The music faded out.
Fellas, put the toilet seat down.
Yes, yes.
I agree.
I agree.
Thank you, thank you.
Oh, sorry, I had to get that off of it.
I had to roll B in my bonnet.
Oh, good stuff.
Really grinding my gears there.
Oh my gosh.
I'm allergic to Bays.
They are musicians and also geologists.
Wow, that, what an exciting combination.
Uh, please welcome Bashford and Franklin.
How you doing?
Oh, Scott, thank you for having us.
Oh, you're quite welcome.
It's my pleasure to have entertainers
of any stripe here on the show.
So, and you fit into that perfectly
because you are musicians.
But I think what's also interesting
about you is you're also geologists.
So it's my pleasure to have you on
and thank you for appearing.
Thank you so much for having us, Scott.
We're so happy to be here.
Are you happy to be here?
I am happy to be here, Bashford.
I'm happy to be here too.
Okay, so you're Bashford.
I'm Bashford.
And you're Franklin.
I'm Franklin.
We are married couple.
Oh, you're a married couple.
Oh, okay, that wasn't in your bio.
It should read musicians slash married couple.
We want to be known under our own merits, okay?
Oh, I see.
Because you think people would judge you differently
if they knew you were married?
Absolutely.
Why did you say it right off the bat then?
This patriarchal society always gives the male
more credit in the workplace behind the music board.
So what you're saying is you think
that Franklin wouldn't be given her due
because they would assume that you just pulled her
up into this business?
Absolutely.
But if you don't know you're married,
then people will assume...
We're equals.
You're equals.
Great, great.
Much like Claudia and Paul over here.
Yes, oh my God.
Equals.
Equals.
Equals.
Am I equal to you, Paul?
I thought you were my boss.
No, you're double me.
Yes.
Ooh, double both.
Like W?
W.
W.
Yeah, I just got the,
it was sent to me in the mail this morning.
I found out.
Great.
You ever see that movie, W?
Nah, God did.
Have it.
Can't say that I have.
I saw that movie.
I loved it.
Did you really?
I thought Josh Brolin did a great job as George W. Bush.
He did, didn't he?
He did.
Yeah, just a spitting image.
He endeared him in my heart because I was quite upset.
You were upset at George W. Bush.
Between the years of 2000 and 2008.
Really?
I was quite upset.
The entire eight years you were upset?
The entire eight years I was in a...
He didn't get out of bed.
He didn't get out of bed.
What did that do to your mental health?
My God.
Oh, that made it worse.
Oh, yeah, well, I...
No, I...
It was a bad product of his mental health.
Oh, my heavens.
But now I'm back.
You're out of bed.
You're on stage.
Oh, yeah.
And was it the movie W that got you out of bed?
The movie W got me out of bed.
Once he became a human to me and endeared himself to me.
He's fine.
Dude, he's fine.
We all make mistakes.
He loves baseball.
He paints.
Oh, he paints.
Oh.
Do you own any of his paintings now?
Yeah, we have a whole room.
We have a whole room of George W. Bush paintings.
And all painted by Josh Brolin as George W. Bush.
Okay, well, those are even more rare.
Because there were only, like, probably 27 scenes
where he was painting in that movie.
Yep.
And we have all...
We have 26 to 27 of those copies.
Wow.
Who has the 27th?
Cut one.
I don't know.
I'm not exactly sure.
Who do you think has the 27th?
You gotta track that down.
I was somebody in...
I think I saw somebody in Ghana had it.
In Ghana?
On Etsy.
I was looking on Etsy.
Not gonna do it.
Not gonna do it.
Scott, I love you.
That might be George H. W. Bush.
But so you guys are singers as well as...
I assume you said musicians, but you sing?
Sing, yes.
Both singers and songwriters.
You sing...
You duet on each one of your songs?
Or do you take turns?
Do we ever?
We duet on each one of our songs.
Because we only have one song.
Oh, honey, oh, let's duet.
Oh, yes.
Start, say, why don't you start it off for us?
Wait a minute, you say you only have one song?
We only have one.
One.
And you're gonna do it now?
And it's a cover.
I don't know that we're set up for the...
Do you need the music?
No, I don't know.
No.
Do we have access to the music?
We can do it acapella.
We can do it acapella.
Let's do it acapella.
All right, go ahead.
Yeah.
You start us off, baby.
Oh, you don't even know who starts?
You want me to take your part today?
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
How about I just start at my line
when I come here?
Okay, baby.
Not run away.
There was no time to play.
We built it up and built it up and built it up and built it up.
And now we're solid.
Solid as a rock.
Honey, I did the baroque version.
You did the baroque version?
You said solid as baroque.
Baroque.
Oh, my God.
Let's take it back.
Okay.
Okay.
I'll start from my part again.
Okay.
So wait, you guys are doing a cover of solid as a rock.
But you forgot and it was solid as baroque.
Okay, so now you need to start over.
I just want to be on the same page.
Yeah.
Get on that page, Scott.
It's page 68.
Oh, hey, right before my favorite one.
And five, six, seven, eight.
There was no time to play.
We built it up and built it up and built it up.
And now we're solid.
Hey.
Solid as a rock.
Did you say baroque again?
What?
I don't know what keeps getting into me.
All right.
I was looking at your lip.
I was reading your lips, much like George H. W. Bush.
Yeah, don't.
Solid as baroque.
Did you say George W. Bush?
We have political differences.
I will say that.
Oh, really?
00:45:43,120 --> 00:45:44,880
What are your differences?
I like baroque.
And I like Michelle.
Not that different.
So you liked the first lady.
You both supported the administration.
And I liked the first man.
Right.
But still, you have to like the other one.
You like the other person in the marriage, right?
I have no qualms or opinions.
Bo, the dog.
Bo.
Bo, they had a dog named Bo.
They did have Bo.
Sasha and Malia.
I liked Sasha.
Michelle's brother is the basketball coach
at Oregon State University.
Good bit of trivia.
So you guys feel like you have big political differences.
Huge.
We did not get along.
You know the other day we got into a fight
over our political differences?
I stayed in bed for weeks.
He wouldn't get out of bed.
I said Michelle was fine.
I said she was fine.
He wouldn't speak to me.
Wouldn't speak.
He wouldn't look at me.
Wouldn't look.
Wouldn't look.
Wouldn't speak.
Wouldn't look.
Wouldn't speak.
I closed my eyes and shut my mouth.
Closed his eyes and shut my mouth.
And but now we're solid.
Can I?
Solid.
As baroque.
Right.
Can I ask you guys a question?
You say you're musicians.
Yes.
We don't say we are.
We are.
You are musicians.
Yes, we are.
But you only halfway know one song.
What?
You don't even know who starts it.
You can't even get the lyrics right.
And it's not your song.
You didn't write it.
We didn't write it.
And that's why we don't know who starts it.
Okay, sure.
But it's a cover that we use.
And we go around the town.
And every town we do a dig in.
We sing this song at the dig site.
It's like a coronation of the dig.
Oh, I see.
Okay.
Which brings us to the geologist part of it.
Yes.
So you guys are geologists.
You're scientists.
We are.
We are.
You're married geologists as well.
We're married.
We're geologists.
And we sing.
But we don't tell anybody that we're married on the digs.
Really?
Because, see, in our patriarchal society,
I don't believe that she will get the credit
for being a better digger than I am.
I am a better digger.
I am a better digger.
He's an okay digger.
I'm an okay digger.
Okay.
Well, you guys obviously know what you're talking about.
Because geologists call each other diggers all the time.
00:47:52,960 --> 00:47:53,840
That's my digger.
Okay.
I wasn't going to say that.
You weren't thinking it.
You weren't thinking it.
You weren't thinking, yes, that's my digger.
Okay, look.
Guys, how did you get into the science of geology?
Well, I got into it because I was studying communications
at University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh.
And...
Not Big Osh.
Not Big Osh.
Just University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh.
That's the community college.
Okay.
Yes.
What's the mask out there?
Overalls.
Overalls?
Just overalls.
Just like a sentient pair of overalls.
Overalls, they walk around town.
They go to the basketball games.
Every time they lose, they unbuckle.
Is like the flap of the overalls like the mouth?
Yes, right.
And it talks.
All right.
Okay, good.
Go Oshkosh.
Go Oshkosh.
Not Big Osh.
Not Big Osh.
All right.
And something was weird under the ground of my dormitory.
And so I began to dig and dig and dig.
Tell them what you found, baby.
I found a pot of gold.
How could you tell what was weird about it?
You know, every time I walked...
I'm so glad you asked, Claudia.
Every time I walked, I walked over the carpet
and there was always a hump in the carpet.
And I was on the ground floor.
I said, why is this hump in my ground floor?
So I took a box cutter and I cut open the carpet
and then I saw that the ground under it had shifted.
Okay, was it a...
It was concrete underneath?
Concrete.
But it was broken.
Oh, it was broken.
Okay.
Yeah.
Oh, interesting.
The concrete.
So it was carpet on concrete.
It was carpet on top of concrete.
A very hard floor.
There's probably a carpet pad on that as well.
None.
No carpet.
No carpet.
Just carpet.
What?
This was the first time hearing of this.
This floor was solid.
Hey, solid as a rock.
Okay.
That's what this floor is.
The carpet's still hot, hot, hot, hot, hot, hot, hot.
I'm just getting, by the way, that you're singing solid
as a rock and you're geologist.
I'm catching up to that right now.
Twist.
This is like when I found out that Bruce Willis
was in the sixth sense.
Oh, spoiler.
Those were all things.
Oh, what a twist.
Scott.
Those were all things.
I haven't seen that movie.
So how did you dig into the concrete?
I took a spoon.
Like prison style.
Like Shawshank Redemption style.
Like Shawshank Redemption style.
Did you know that Bruce Willis was in that?
No, I didn't.
Stop spoiling movies for me.
I'm sorry.
Is that a normal tool for a digger?
In prison?
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
So wait, you weren't in prison, though.
I wasn't in prison.
I was in college.
They had imprisoned you in this college.
No, no, no.
I could leave and go as I...
But they did put you out for breaking the floor
of the dormitory.
They put me out of college.
At this point, you have a pot of gold.
What do you need college for?
Exactly, Scott.
You caught right on.
So was it...
Had a leprechaun left it there?
Or was it...
Was it literally in a pot?
Or was it as much gold as could fit in a pot?
It was in a pot that you would use to cook oatmeal
or some other hot breakfast cereal.
Malto meal.
Like a hot pot?
Like a hot pot.
And it was in the pot, had a handle.
Not to be mistaken for a crock pot.
Not to be mistaken for a sock hop.
Not to be mistaken for a hot block.
I will not mistake.
Sometimes the block is hot, isn't it, baby?
Sometimes the block is hot.
So you have this pot full of gold.
Did you ever find out whose it was?
I didn't, but the pot stayed hot.
And when I saw it, I said,
The pot is still hot, hot, hot, hot, hot, hot, hot, hot.
So then how did you get into geology,
if I may ask Franklin?
You see, I was living below him in the dormitory.
What?
This is on the second floor.
She lived in the basement.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
So you dug into, you dug into the floor,
but it was really your roof.
Yes.
And you see, I was bleaching my hair.
And I started getting concrete in the dye.
I stomped upstairs.
I said, what is the big idea?
Right.
And were you, were you, I have to ask,
is this pot of gold, was it your possession?
It was.
It was mine.
It was mine.
And this is news to you.
This is news to me.
Stop spoiling our love.
Twist.
I put it in the ceiling.
I put it in the ceiling because I thought it would be secure.
That people always put things in a mattress, in the floor.
But no one ever looks up.
But no one ever thinks into looking the ceiling.
Yeah, it's like that movie taken,
if she had like a hid up on the ceiling,
she wouldn't have gotten dragged down.
Please don't spoil it.
Oh, I'm sorry.
The endesis is in it though.
Also that movie, 54.
The boss of studio 54 hit all of his tax evaded money in the roof.
Mike Myers.
Mike Myers.
Yes, Claudia.
Yes.
Come through.
Come through.
Maca did.
Come through, Queen.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
So.
So.
Yeah, I went up there.
I said, what's the big idea?
I'm trying to dye my hair.
And then I said, this man, this man is solid.
Well, Scott.
I think you're pardoned by just Scott.
It felt like you were leading us there.
Scott.
With that dramatic pause.
Do you sing, Scott?
I've been known to carry a tune.
Oh.
You're carrying it all right.
Straight to hell.
Look.
Hey, you guys only know one song.
Oh, but we sing this song.
But we sing it to the skies in heaven.
Oh, and it's on tune, on key, upon pitch.
All right.
I said, this man looks solid.
I said, what's the bigger?
I had been lifting a lot of weights.
I was on the eyescotch football team.
Oh, OK.
So you guys got into a fight.
But then you said you were solid to that.
I said he was solid.
He looked me dead in my eyes and said.
What color are you dyeing your hair?
I said blonde.
And I said that color is solid.
Solid as the rock.
Oh my god.
OK, so you thought he was solid,
but that didn't lead you into the song.
It took you.
Well, no, it didn't.
It was just a moment.
It took him thinking that your hair color was solid.
We looked each other.
You know, from that moment, I haven't spent a day
without him since.
Really?
Not even one day?
Even all those days in bed?
No, all those.
She came in and watched me.
She sat at the foot of the bed.
I said, I said, I'm not going to do anything
until you do something.
And I said, well, it's going to be a while.
So how long ago was it that you met?
It was pre-2000.
It was 1934.
Wow.
Oh, you guys are old.
We are quite old.
We are quite old.
I had no idea.
You look incredible.
Yes, black doesn't crack.
But I tell you what does.
What?
The floor rocks.
The floor rocks.
And the floor.
Number three.
So good.
Oh, boy.
I love hearing those guys laugh through their appearance.
We're all having a great time.
It was a great episode.
That was really fun.
And I think because it's called Solid as a Rock
and they sing it so many times,
I think also a lot of people voted for it
because, I mean, it's a great episode,
but also very recognizable title.
Very recognizable.
I knew exactly what it was.
It's just sort of.
All right.
Let's go to a break.
When we come back, we're going to be doing
the top two episodes of the year.
Paul, what could they be?
Don't even guess.
Don't even guess.
Do you really want to know?
Yeah, I really want to know.
What do you got?
Better not tell you no.
All right.
Let's hear it on the other side.
Where's the game ball?
We'll be right back with Comedy Bang Bang.
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Comedy bang bang!
Back here best of 2018, part four.
And it is the new year.
It's the new year.
It truly is.
Welcome to 2019, Paul.
Nineteen!
No, no, no, no, 19.
La Cuerre Vongole.
2019.
The fine Colombian makes the night a wonderful thing.
Steely Dan.
Steely Dan.
The fifth character.
On comedy bang bang.
New York City, of course.
Yes.
I'm sorry, New York City is the fifth character.
Oh, okay.
So it's you?
Yeah, they're number six on the call sheet.
That's right.
Collectively, though.
You, me.
Walter Fagan and, no, Donald Fagan and Walter Becker
are not separate there.
Walter Fagan's also there.
And Fagan from Oliver.
Fagan from Oliver.
He's one of the power bottoms, I believe.
Number four, New York.
And then Steely Dan.
I think so.
Welcome back.
We are counting.
We're up to the top two.
You've got to be a bottom or two.
Oh, Bill Sykes.
Bill Sykes.
Bill Sykes is a top.
He's a top for sure.
He's a top.
He's a top.
Let's go through all the details.
Every, we did that on a previous episode.
As many as we can remember.
All right.
We got to get to this countdown.
We got to get to this countdown.
Don't we?
I mean, what are we waiting for?
I think we owe it to the audience.
We owe it to the world.
Let's do it.
Let's go to, this is your episode number two.
Number two.
All right, episode number two.
Now this has to be better than the previous episode.
It's got to be right.
But not as good as the next one.
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
So this is episode 543.
I just want to preface this by saying.
Yes.
If I'm not on this episode.
Oh boy.
Here it comes.
I'm going to be furious.
Hulk mashup.
Well, we'll see.
Okay.
This is episode 543.
So.
We're still in the 500s.
That's good.
Okay.
This is an episode called the ninth anniversary show.
Paul, you are in this.
Oh, that was a close one.
Queue.
Please don't say that before our next episode, by the way.
What?
No, no, never mind.
Let's see the people.
Okay.
This was our ninth anniversary.
We started the show back in 2009, about April 30th or May 1st.
I can't recall what the first one was, but one of those days.
And this is nine years later.
We did episode 543.
Let's talk about who came.
First of all.
Let's talk about who came to the episode that we do.
First of all, those men, Sean Clements and Hayes Davenport,
were recording their own show and were leaving.
And I said, hey, come on over and do the top of our show.
Don't stay the whole time.
But do the very top of our show.
And they were nice enough to do that.
So they.
And nice enough not to stay the whole time.
Yeah, exactly.
Thanks, guys.
But we have PFT over here.
Lauren Lapkus, Sean Distin, Zeke Nicholson, Ego Wodeem.
And Wodeem, sorry.
And Madeleine Walter are all here.
Now, here's, okay.
This is the ninth anniversary.
And I wanted to shake it up a little and have some of the recent people
who were doing such a good job on the show.
Ripple.
The Ripple, yes.
So, you know, you got Sean Distin, playing Rudy North, who,
you know, made such a big splash.
Zeke Nicholson, who's been a great recent addition to the show.
Ego, who had been on for maybe six months at this point, or nine months.
And Madeleine, who is another great performer, who I lost to Brooklyn99 as well,
who has not been able to be on the show in nine months or so while that fucking show goes on.
Didn't that show get canceled?
Yeah, it did.
What is this?
Oh, it drives me crazy.
What are we doing now?
There's no rules anymore?
It's like a real Hogan family situation.
You got Valerie, then the Hogan family?
So this was, this is a really fun show we all got together.
And these, these anniversary shows are like just big, you know, fun, anything goes,
types of episodes where everyone is talking and trying to talk over each other.
And I put out the invite to a bunch of people and see who can come.
And I'm always blessed with a wonderful turnout.
So this one, and this one was really great to me because of course, you know,
I had to have you and Lauren there as cornerstones of the show.
But even Lauren was a new addition for, you know, maybe four years ago,
she was one of these new people.
So that's what I'm, I'm, I'm trying to always bring new people into the fold
and get new performers on.
So this one was,
And you're trying to push older people out.
Yes.
Out the door.
I'm keeping that door open.
That's right.
Hit on the ice floe, grandma.
So this one was fun for me because it had a lot of the new people,
great mix of the old people and the new people.
So let me tell you what we're about to hear.
Now in the episode, uh, previous to these clips, you and Lauren, uh,
are playing Emily grandchildren and Dirk Nasty.
And you are, uh, you work for the RC Cola Corporation who owns my show somehow.
The RC Cola Corporation owns scripts, which owns mid-roll, which owns.
Which owns Comedy Bang Bang.
So you're here from corporate, um, on my ninth anniversary to check out the show
and see if I'm doing a good job.
Yes.
So, uh, that happens before these clips.
And then,
But it was, it was good.
I'm sure, I'm sure.
You can only pick out so many clips.
Oh yeah.
Now I'm not good enough for a clip.
Okay.
Come on.
But then we talked to, uh, Rudy North.
Now we heard Rudy North earlier in our countdown in his first appearance.
And, uh, he had one in between that and this.
And his, uh, his catchphrases are evolving.
And he is coming up with, uh, new stuff.
So, uh,
This is when we find out he's in the speed force, right?
Yes.
And, uh, by the way, if you're, if you don't know who Rudy North is,
don't worry, he recaps his character every time he appears.
Yes.
Um, so, uh, we didn't.
Yes.
We do find out about the, the, uh, speed force in this one.
Um, and then, uh, in between that clip and the next one, uh, Zeke Nicholson playing Kiwi
Chris comes by.
So if you hear an Australian character, uh, or something that sounds like it's
trying to be an Australian character, that is New Zealand.
New Zealand.
Right.
That is Kiwi Chris.
Um, and, uh, uh, we have Eggo, uh, playing Entrez Pineur is, uh, the character that she
debuts.
And a lot of people, uh, really want Entrez Pineur to come back along with,
I believe she mentions her brother.
Oh yeah.
So we're going to see what, what we can do about that.
If I can get Eggo, uh, to come in here whenever SNL, uh, is not around.
Um, so we're going to hear.
Yeah, SNL is not around.
Not around.
Where'd SNL go?
I don't know.
It's not around.
It just disappeared.
It's not bad.
It's like a bit of 43 year.
Yeah.
No explanation.
I just noticed it just one day.
It's like, it's March.
Like an SNL have come back from break.
Right up to the live show on Saturday.
So they're working on a show all week.
Right.
And then when it comes time for Saturday, no one's in the building.
Just no one's there and the cameras are gone.
And everyone's like, where'd SNL go?
Yeah.
I don't know.
SNL's not around.
SNL disappeared.
I would love that.
Um, I'd like it too.
Well, it's just so weird.
Yeah.
What?
It's what's weird about it that it's just been there for so long or.
What's weird about it?
You know, it's what's all right.
I know what's weird about it.
I just want to hear you say it.
Well, because it, there's not many other live shows besides like the news.
You know what I mean?
That would be another weird one.
It's just like football.
We're building up to the.
Are you ready for some football?
Well, sorry.
And then no, the teams aren't here.
We don't know where they are.
They're not here, man.
Teams out here, man.
I like every show should be live.
I think.
Agreed.
Agreed to disagreed.
All right.
Let's hear these clips.
These are some really fun ones.
Of course, we can't play the entire episode because it's like two, two and a half hours.
Just do it.
Let's hear these clips though.
This is your episode two.
Number two.
Our producer is handing me a sheet here and everyone is a surprise to me today.
So let's see who we have here.
Oh, well, this is, this is very exciting.
This is, it reads here fan favorite.
He's been on the show several times, but only recently.
Yeah, that's right.
Only in approximately the last five, six months.
Yeah, he's catching all quit this guy.
Yeah, Rudy North is here.
Rudy North, professional employee, Rudy North.
Professional employee and fan favorite.
Scott, I need to get this out of the way, right?
Oh, really?
You don't want to meet our other?
I'll get to these two in a second.
Okay, you have to get something off your chest, Rudy.
Welcome back to the show.
Thank you, Scott.
No time for formalities or pleasantries though.
I gotta get to this right away, Scott.
You gotta get to it.
Okay, let there be no more dalliances, please.
Scott, let's go ahead and do a recap previously on Comedy Bang Bang.
I am a dirtbag.
I life swapped a guy, took his job at Postmates.
Got fired for Postmates for punching people in the throat.
Right.
Then I life swapped a guy at Target, took his job at Security.
Right.
Got fired for punching people in the throat.
Right.
Then at the end of the last show, I took engineer Cody's job.
We had a life swap.
He's no longer here, dear world.
He's no longer here, but I haven't seen you around.
I was immediately fired.
Oh, okay.
I punched engineer Brett in the throat.
Oh, no.
Brett, is that true?
You don't get on that.
Yeah, you've noticed.
He can't be him.
He can't talk anymore.
His throat is fucked up.
Oh, is that why?
Oh, my gosh.
You've been gesturing the please give me the Heimlich motion.
He does that a lot now.
It's a comfort thing for him.
It's like a thunder blanket for a dog.
Okay, so that catches us off?
Yes, that catches you up.
So because as far as I recall, you were also a magical being.
That's not important, Scott.
Scott, I'm here to talk about my employment.
And Scott, I got a new job.
You got a new job.
That's right, Scott.
Okay.
Well, I was fired from your Wolf, of course.
Of course you were.
Of course.
All right.
Now, I was walking through a park.
Just the other day?
I was walking through a park just the other day.
Okay.
And there was a guy, I heard the sound and it was loud.
Describe the sound, please.
The sound, it was loud.
Okay.
Well, sounds are normally varying volumes.
So this was at the upper end of the decibel scale.
It was a tonal sound.
Oh, okay.
So the tone, it was like a tone.
Can I give you an example of what it sounded like?
Yes, please.
It sounded like this.
That kind of sound.
So sort of like...
It was like singing.
But it was coming from an engine, a motor.
And I walked over to it and I saw a man holding a leaf lower, Scott.
Okay.
This is very confusing.
Let me try to figure this out.
You heard a sound.
A sound like singing.
Yes.
It was coming from a motor.
And that motor...
In the car?
It was a leaf blower, Scott.
Oh, I think I know what's going on here.
And correct me if I'm wrong.
Was this a Flintstone situation where the leaf blower was a living creature?
Like a dinosaur or some sort.
You know what, if this was prehistoric times, it might have been.
But this was current times.
But this was current times.
We had the machines.
Look.
Can I ask you a question?
You noticed it was from a motor before it was from a leaf blower?
I have a keen sense of hearing, Scott.
Oh, okay.
Based on my time on this.
Yeah, but you heard it and it was singing.
Based on what?
I'm sorry.
Based on my time on this earth.
Okay.
Oh, okay.
But I heard it.
It was a singing.
We've all had time on this earth.
So why should yours be my more keen?
My hearing is very good.
Yeah.
I'm very old, but we don't have time to get it to this.
Oh, that's right.
You're hundreds of years old.
I'm hundreds of years old.
I'm Scott.
Yes.
I punch this guy in the throat.
The guy holding the leaf blower?
Yep.
Took his leaf blower.
Okay.
Took his job.
Took his life.
Okay.
What was his job?
Leaf blower.
Oh, okay.
I thought that might be something he was doing on the weekend.
No, no.
He's a leaf blower.
He's, okay.
And he works for the city of Los Angeles.
Okay.
Scott, I'm happy to say that I'm a happy employee for the city of Los Angeles.
I'm a leaf blower.
Oh, my gosh.
Congratulations, Scott.
Thank you.
Rudy North, you finally have.
I found a job.
What could be a career?
Now, Scott, a lot of people, now you're calling to Korea and I appreciate that
because a lot of people look down on leaf blowers and they say,
is that even a job?
It's very easy.
Well, I would assume no one would do that unless they were getting paid for it.
Well, yeah.
Or they were trying to do the upkeep of their own property.
But, Scott, I say being a leaf blower is akin to being an architect.
Okay.
How do you mean?
I'm trying to think of architects that I've met.
Mr. Brady.
Mr. Brady is the only famous example of an architect.
Frazier.
Frazier.
Frazier was an architect?
I think.
Caroline in the city.
She drew buildings.
She drew buildings?
She did draw buildings.
She drew buildings?
Was she a cartoonist?
Ted Nights from Too Close for Comfort.
He also drew buildings.
I feel like Frazier was a call-in radio host.
I feel like he might have been.
But I might be wrong.
I don't know what you think about Holly.
Frazier Crane.
Your last name's Crane.
You don't work with them?
Oh, shit.
You know what?
He was an architect.
I'm a little confused by the sound that this leaf blower made.
All right.
You want me to do it again?
Yeah, well, no.
But it sounds like a human being singing.
Well, Scott, I'm not.
That was pretty good.
Oh, we were sneezing.
Oh, that was a sneeze?
That's you.
It's not tight.
It's one of the things that caused us to work together
we realized around the office.
Oh, that's another one.
We both, oh.
You instantly harmonized.
Wow.
Did we?
I got a good ear.
I couldn't hear over my own sneeze.
No, you got a good ear.
I guess any two different notes are harmony in a certain chord.
Hey, you're the music expert, Scott.
I'm just the leaf blower expert.
I guess Scott's criticizing how we sneeze.
I'm not criticizing at all.
I'm merely, I was more criticizing what Rudy said.
Well, hold up.
Don't criticize.
If you're going to criticize anything, criticize these nuts.
My dear fellow.
Well, I'm just saying, Scott.
Wait, did you say that because your nuts are crittersized?
Those are as big as possums.
I got big nuts and if you're going to crittersize anything,
you got to criticize my nuts.
Rudy.
You're not respecting me, Scott,
because I'm telling you that leaf blowing is hard.
Don't punch me in the throat.
I'm not going to punch you in the throat.
All right.
Dirt bass, head shake.
I'm not going to taunt you in the throat.
No, Scott.
Were you a genie or something?
No, I was not a genie.
Now, yes, I might have a similar voice to a genie
that might have appeared on the show.
Don't we all?
Don't we all have similar voices?
I know.
I sound like a genie.
I sound like many people.
But I'm trying to, you always come in here and you never,
you say we never have time to talk about your backstory.
I'm worried we're getting into the, you know,
the intricacies of leaf blowing when I'm really interested in the.
How could you be interested in me?
You're immortal.
Okay, Scott, I'm immortal.
I wasn't born into a human body.
I was born in 1600.
These are things that we all know.
Can we talk about leaf blowing?
All right, go ahead.
Scott.
Look, it's your show.
I don't think you understand.
It's his show?
I'm already on the show.
It's your time.
It is my time.
The floor is yours is what I mean to say.
Thank you, Scott.
This forum is mine and I want to talk about the importance of blowing leaves.
The importance of it.
Yes.
Now, where do they go?
Oscar Wilde.
The importance of blowing leaves by Oscar Wilde.
Where do they go?
Anytime I see someone blowing leaves around, I'm like,
it's like when you go in, there's an air dryer in the public restroom.
And where does the water go?
Where does the water go?
It's just like flicking it around onto the floor.
It evaporates.
Yeah, and that situation, it evaporates.
But with leaves, it's very...
So do leaves evaporate?
Can't you just absolutely see where the leaves go?
Oh, it seems like they're just flying around?
That's exactly right.
They're no longer on my property anymore.
They're on someone else's.
Yeah, my job is to get leaves off of sidewalks
and get them onto people's shoes and faces.
And to sort of get them so that people can walk down the sidewalk
and be like, wow, this is clean, but oh, it smells like mulch.
There's bugs everywhere.
And somebody's sort of swished around all this dirt with air
and didn't really do anything.
Right.
I mean, so you're just like blowing leaves onto someone's face
so they look like Gene Simmons in his kiss makeup or something?
That's my favorite thing to do.
Blowing leaves on people's faces so they look like Gene Simmons in the kiss makeup.
It's very specific.
Scott, you should be a leaf blower, man.
I'm very happy in my current position.
Yeah, you know what?
I don't know if you have the skills to blow leaves.
Yeah, what are the skills involved?
I mean, it seems like you pick up a thing
and then you point it at something.
You have to turn it on.
Is that about it?
You've never leaf blown before, Scott?
I don't believe I ever have, no.
That was some expert shit right there.
I mean, damn, you pick.
So you pick it up and then you turn it on.
You're pretty good, Scott.
And then you point it.
You know what?
Man, leaf blow is pretty easy.
Yeah, I mean, it's a very low paying
job. I mean, I'm sure there are people out there.
I mean, I don't think there's anyone out there
listening to podcasts while they leaf blow.
I think it would be impossible.
No, that's crazy.
So, you know, I don't think I'm insulting anyone.
No, no, no.
But it's a very low paying, low wage job that, you know,
people don't want to stay in for a long period of time usually.
Can I ask you a question, Scott?
Sure.
How much money you make?
Has anyone, that's a good question.
This is interesting.
Has anyone ever asked you that before?
Yes, I'd like to hear this.
I mean, here's the problem.
This is when you're in show business,
jobs come and go, it fluctuates so much.
Give me an average of the last three years.
Of the last three?
I would have to take a look at my tax returns.
I don't have them easily accessible to be.
This is interesting.
Well, that is interesting.
This isn't a rude question.
I feel like this question is a normal question.
You put the rude and rooty north, my friend.
Yeah.
Ooh, funny rhyme.
That's a funny rhyme.
That is a funny rhyme.
That is good.
Quite good.
So, how much money do you make?
Well, I mean, you know.
What are we paying you?
You guys should have this information more than anyone.
Yeah, we do.
We just want to know how you interpret it.
In dollars.
Okay.
Wow.
You would trouble that, Scott.
Interesting.
What are you talking about?
We're making a note of that.
Look, rude, why are you here?
What?
Not to quote the Beastie Boys, but why are you here?
It's supposed to be pretzels.
It's supposed to be pretzels.
I did want to tell you about my new job,
but I did have some other news I need to deliver to you,
but then we can move on and we don't need to talk.
Okay, this is news about yourself or news about me?
It's kind of news about myself,
but it's news about everybody.
Okay.
Scott.
I'm sorry.
Everybody in the world?
Or everybody here.
Everyone who's ever existed.
Ever existed?
Or the dead?
Yeah.
Look, Scott.
From the first caveman that, you know,
took a lightning strike to a tree branch
and decided like, oh, that keeps me warm.
He's affected too, Scott.
Oh my gosh.
The first caveman that took a lightning strike to a tree branch.
And said, oh, that keeps me warm.
You guys think that's a weird question?
I got it.
Scott, your actual name is Slott Ockerman.
We're living in a Flashpoint-esque scenario
where I've traveled back in time and changed details.
And you've altered the future?
Yeah.
Little details have changed in everyone's lives.
It's just like the buttercream effect?
It's like the buttercream effect, Scott.
Oh, no.
So, yeah, your name is Scott now.
It's Scott now, but it used to be Slott?
It used to be Slott Ockerman.
I don't know quite how to feel about that.
What was my name?
Do you know about that?
Oh, your name was Mrs. Grandkids.
Mrs. Grandkids, not Miss Grandchildren?
No, it was Miss Grandkids.
What was my name?
Oh, your name?
Dick Thirsty.
I'll stick with Dick.
OK, yeah.
OK, but was Miss Grandchildren married to Stephen King
in the previous?
She was married to Stephen Prince.
Stephen Prince?
Yeah.
Scott, I don't really want to explain all the differences.
All the differences.
Was Stephen King's name Stephen Prince before?
Or was it a totally different person?
When you go back that far in time,
it's hard to kind of predict the outcomes.
So, yeah, it's hard.
How far back did you go in order to change all this?
I went back before humans existed.
Whoa, the primordial ooze.
I think you have a lot of other guests, Scott,
and I feel like we shouldn't really get too far into this.
How did you do it?
How did you achieve it?
Because as far as I know, you're just an immortal.
Oh, yeah, I can run really fast like the Flash.
Just like the DC Comics Flash.
Okay, so you can't time travel in terms of just like,
if you wanted to, you'd have to run really fast.
I run really fast.
Backwards in time.
I have the same powers as the Flash.
Every single power?
Yep.
I could phase through stuff.
I could also make duplicates of myself
when I vibrate really fast.
Okay.
Can you bring other people into the Speed Force
and have that experience?
Oh, I would love to experience it.
You want to talk to the Speed Force?
Yeah, let me get in there.
All right, hold on.
Oh my god, that was amazing.
Yeah, that was pretty crazy.
That was like three years we were in there.
What did you say to the Speed Force?
I don't know, we just...
It didn't talk back, so I just...
Yeah, he said a lot of stuff,
but Scott, we had a lot of fun times in there.
That was really fun.
I feel like, I mean, you're my best friend.
I love you, Scott.
For the last three years.
How long were we gone?
Was it like two years?
Why are you guys still here?
I can't believe it.
It was...
Oh, the time stopped over here, I guess.
It was just like a millisecond to us.
Oh my...
Oh my gosh.
That's right, Scott.
Rudy and I have experienced so much.
He told me his whole backstory.
I learned everything about him.
Yeah, Scott, now that you know the backstory,
let's not start telling people.
It's boring to me now.
It's boring, right?
I don't want to hear it.
You've talked so much about it.
I don't have any information about them
other than their name,
but please welcome to the show
Entrez P. Neuer.
How you doing?
Hi, Entrez.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you?
I'm good.
Call me by my full name, please.
Entrez P. Neuer?
Yes.
My mother didn't name me Entrez P. Neuer for nothing.
Wow.
Okay, I beg your pardon.
I guess it's a custom in human beings
to only call someone by half their name.
Well, I'm not like other human beings.
I'm an Entrez P. Neuer.
This must have come up so many times in your life.
I'm not sure why you're so upset about it right now.
Because I'm hot, all right?
Okay.
You're coming in hot here.
I'm coming in hot.
It's hot outside.
I'm hot inside.
Okay, it's so nice to meet you.
I'm Scott.
I'm the host of the show.
Good to meet you.
We've never met before.
Scott, last name of the show.
I beg your pardon.
Scott David Ackerman.
Scott David Ackerman.
Good to meet you.
Okay.
This is Kiwi Chris.
I believe that's his full name.
Oh, yeah?
He won?
Good to meet you.
Rudy North, of course.
I know that's his full name.
Great.
It's Rudimentary North.
Rudimentary.
I can't believe you forgot that.
It's okay.
I'm sorry, but it was 18 years ago.
Did you show me?
You just reminded that never came up in the last 18 years.
Sorry.
Andre, how you doing?
Excuse me.
Who you talking to?
Andre P. Noor.
I'm good.
I'm good.
And who are these two?
This is Dirk Thirsty.
I'm Dirk Thirsty.
And Emily Grandchildren.
They're from corporate.
They work for Arsicola.
We're here to monitor the show,
and we're going to report back on what we hear.
You work for corporate, you say?
I'm sorry, I'm going to sneeze.
Okay.
Are you looking to invest in some businesses?
Oh, sorry.
They just sneezed.
We sneezed, so I sounded like a leaf blower for a second.
Sorry.
Please ask a question again.
Are you interested in looking to
purchase some businesses?
Are you interested in looking to purchase some businesses?
We are interested in looking to purchase some businesses.
Yes.
So what were the first steps?
Well, we're going to think about looking.
First, yes.
We think about looking.
We're interested in that.
Have you thought past that?
No, not yet.
We're not done.
We're at the beginning stage.
Yeah, because there are a lot of places to look.
01:21:31,760 --> 01:21:33,920
So you have to get all those places,
get all your ducks in there.
I have a great business.
I would love for you to consider thinking about
investing in.
It is a platform for people to interact with one and another.
Like on the internet, a social media platform, do you mean?
Or?
You've never seen nothing like it before.
It is you can put photographs, captions as well.
Put photographs where?
Sounds like Instagram.
Or a scrapbook.
Does Instagram include captions?
I've heard that a few times.
That's OK.
But these are old photos.
So old, they're not eligible for Instagram's throwback Thursday.
I forget what the cutoff point is.
What is the cutoff year for throwback Thursday?
If your photo is older than 40 years, you can't put it up there for throwback Thursday.
I forgot.
That's in the terms of service.
I forgot.
I can't get my baby picture to stay.
Never seen a TBT from civil rights era, huh?
Yes.
Whatever he just said, sure.
Are you interested in looking to invest in this?
We're interested in thinking about looking.
Yes, exactly.
I can't tell.
Is it on the internet?
Is it a social media platform or is it a literal platform?
You go on.
I don't know the answer to your question, Scott David, I'll come in.
But you go on to the web.
Are we talking about Spiderweb or are we talking about the actual World Wide Web?
Get on a spiderweb.
Will it be any spiderweb or is it a specific one?
Well, now you're putting words into my mouth.
You can have whatever.
Please put words into your mouth.
It helps us make sense of this.
Words come out of my mouth.
They don't go back in.
I understand the words that are coming out of your mouth.
Your mouth is exit only.
Can you understand the words that are coming out of my mouth?
I can't understand the words that are coming out of your mouth.
Can I say almost nobody in the Steam's The Woods coming out of my mouth?
Rudy, what movie is that from?
Oh, what?
What movie is that?
That's obviously a movie reference.
No.
You saw another movie without me?
Okay, I saw Rush Hour, right?
Is that it?
Rush Hour.
Rush Hour 2.
Rush Hour 2.
I have an idea for a movie as well.
You do?
Yes.
We were moving on from this platform?
Well, y'all don't seem to understand.
Oh, you were describing something that already existed.
Oh, no.
You telling me that there's a platform where you could put photos that are older than 40 years old?
Multiple.
Name one.
Facebook.
He's going down.
Okay, okay.
Do you know something that we know?
Oh, okay.
Mark Zuckerberg is going down with the government.
Please use his full name.
Mark Anthony Zuckerberg.
By the way, what does the P stand for in your name and why aren't you insisting I use that?
It is just P.
Oh, it's just P-E-E?
It's a homer-taste situation.
Like that famous tape?
It's P-E-E, capital E. The last one is a capital E.
So it's bookended by some capitals.
The P tape.
P we are.
So you're, you're pitching, so you're saying Facebook's going down, so you're pitching a
replacement to that?
No, it's not a replacement.
What I do is original.
Say that again?
Original.
So people will not do the same things they did on Facebook.
They will do totally separate things.
Yes.
This will not be a substitute for Facebook.
Yes, people will talk to their parents.
People will accept friend requests from their grandparents.
Can I ask you a question, Andre P. Neuer?
Yes.
Have you ever been on Facebook?
I've seen it from a distance.
Sure.
How far of a distance?
Like a football field?
At a coffee shop over a young man who, I spoke to him, he said he was a writer.
Okay.
But he spent the whole time on Facebook.
Oh, that's pretty common here in Los Angeles.
One of the features of your, your website is I can accept a friend request from my
grandparents.
Precisely.
And you put that in a pitch.
You're a pitcher.
Precisely.
And you can also, that's the second thing in your pitch.
If you're, if you're not.
You're front loading your pitch with this.
If you're not looking to invest in my product, I have other product.
Yeah, tell us your idea for the movie.
A black and an Asian man.
A black period and an Asian man are two.
So first sentence a black.
A black period.
That's a subject, predicate, verb, all of it.
Okay.
Yep.
Yes.
Indian man.
And an Asian man.
They're police.
Okay.
Okay.
And they're going to, uh.
And just, just, just, can I ask, does someone not understand words that are coming out of
someone's mouth?
Sure, sure.
Is it a sequel?
No, it's called hush hour.
Okay.
Because the other person.
Now hold on.
Have you seen a quieter place?
I've seen a quiet place.
I don't know what that is, but a quieter place is, uh,
a movie about a family.
And they are in, I feel like I'm in church.
Pitch.
Church.
Pitch on.
Give us the rest.
Here, stop.
Pitch on.
Let the spirit of the picture get inside tonight.
Okay, yes.
I can feel the pitch coming inside me, Lord.
Yes, Lord.
Use me, God.
Okay.
The pitch, the pitch for a quieter place.
Mm-hmm.
This is a family.
A family in a sound studio.
The father is trying to record a mixer tape.
A mixer tape?
He wants to record his mixer.
This actually genuinely sounds like a cool original idea.
This is the time I like this.
Thank you.
Wait, why am I talking like this now?
See it rubs off on you, don't it?
Sorry.
That's pretty cocky, eh?
My time is up.
Your time is of the essence.
Of the ebony.
That's my magazine.
That's my magazine of choice.
Can we bake up a quick bit of a question about Russia era?
Sure.
Push hour.
Push hour.
Can the Chinese guy touch the bleak guy's radio or no?
Wait, he...
The Chinese man don't have no hands in this one.
He's so, in fact, he can't.
Why is he Chinese?
Why did you assume he's Chinese?
I'm from New Zealand.
It's the only Asian folks we have there.
Okay, she just said Asian.
I did just say Asian, but I appreciate your help, Australian.
Kiwi, big difference.
Kiwi.
See, but that's exactly what you just did with Chinese and Asian, you know?
I was trying to make a point, do you see?
Oh, very good.
Entrez P. Neuer.
Thank you very much.
Point resaved.
Well, if y'all...
Does anyone have...
Just like Dirk's beard here.
Point received.
The end of it, I mean.
What did you just put in your coat?
My beard.
Yeah, as you can see, Dirk's rainbow-colored beard comes to a point at the end of it.
Oh, I see.
As you can see.
Does anyone have any interest in considering these businesses for funding?
Let's move on to a different business, because I'm not sure about the other.
Well, I have interest in considering that.
We're looking to be interested in considering this.
We are looking.
Looking, looking, looking, looking.
Oh.
Look, look, look, look, look, look, look.
Stop drinking.
I have a chicken.
I might be interested in a more original idea.
Sure.
A lot of these ideas sound fun, but they're a little...
They're a little, yeah.
I didn't want to do this on this podcast, but...
All right.
I didn't want to out this idea, because I don't have the patent just yet.
It is pending.
That's pending.
Okay, well, that's good though that it's pending.
Because no one can swoop in there.
I've never heard of something patent pending that someone was like,
got in there, you know, a little earlier.
Well, this one is, oh, this is going to be my claim to fame.
Oh, okay.
I can't wait.
Great.
A rectangular shaped object with four to five seats inside of it.
A wheel in front of one seat.
Look, you're describing a car right now.
Hold on, hold on.
You're poorly described with a car.
I thought just wait, what does it do?
What does it do?
What does it do?
01:29:24,800 --> 01:29:25,360
What is it about?
What is it, what is this about?
The person, somebody will sit in the car...
Oh, shit.
Everyone, everyone.
You just, you just said car.
You pitched a car.
You know what a car is.
You're just copying ideas.
No, the devil done got inside me.
You sent car.
You sent car and you planted a seed of doubt in my mind.
I beg your pardon.
I'm sorry.
I don't mean to get in your head.
I'm sick to must.
Don't make me think.
Number two.
Oh, yes.
Good shit.
Good shit, my boy.
Was this all, so I wasn't listening to the clip.
I was looking at stuff.
Yeah, was...
Madeleine Walter, by the way, came after these clips
and did Charlie Manson.
That's right.
Yes.
Was this the debut of Speed Force Thanksgiving?
Yes, so...
That's a concept that has delighted me.
I enjoyed that as well.
God, yeah, there's a Thanksgiving.
There's a separate Thanksgiving in the Speed Force.
That takes place inside the Speed Force.
And apparently in one of the clips that we didn't play from this,
I learned all of Rudy's backstory in the Speed Force.
Like in all the time that we spent together.
So I have to remember that next time we do an episode
that I apparently know all of it.
You better not cry.
And we found out in our last episode,
in the holiday spectacular right before these episodes,
that apparently Rudy is Jewish.
So that's good to know.
Oh, Judy North.
Yeah, Judy North.
You don't think?
You don't think?
Is he the Wandering Jew?
What?
Rudy North is the Wandering Jew.
Well, did you say that he's been alive since Christ died?
Since 33?
I believe so, yeah.
Did I say that?
About the Wandering Jew?
Yeah.
The Wandering Jew was there for the crucifixion,
that much we know.
Right, and he's been wandering ever since then.
Yeah.
Oh, we gotta ask him this.
Do you think for the Wandering Jew,
like, did he know he was cursed at the time?
Or did he just, like, a year went by and he's like,
no wrinkles yet.
Awesome.
No wrinkles yet.
We don't know that he doesn't age.
That's true.
Well, yeah, he might be 2,000 years old.
Yeah, he might look like shit.
I didn't know wonder he's wandered around.
Yeah.
Um, I don't know.
We gotta find this guy.
We gotta find this Wandering Jew.
Where in the world is the Wandering Jew?
I feel uncomfortable saying Jew so much.
Jew?
But it is...
Look, that's what he calls himself.
All right, he's a made-up person.
It's me, the Wandering Jew.
All right, let's go to a break.
When we come back, we're gonna get to it,
your number one episode of the year.
Very, very exciting.
Just to reiterate, if I am not in this episode,
I will be furious.
Yikes!
All right, real cliffhanger.
We'll see you on the other side of this.
You guys traveling out there,
maybe during the holidays or maybe not in the holidays.
That's my favorite time to travel, not the holidays.
Well, look, here's a little insider travel secret
from our friends at Hotel Tonight.
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Seriously, if you love scoring amazing hotel deals,
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Hotel Tonight shows you a select list of incredible deals
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They even get...
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and pictures of what the rooms actually look like.
Not these fisheye lens-looking pictures.
And here's something I found out.
Their name is Hotel Tonight,
but they don't just sell hotels for last-minute bookings.
You can book in advance.
When I did it, I booked it three weeks in advance, I think.
I went up to Santa Barbara.
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Perfect for spontaneous weekend getaways,
three-day weekends, staycations.
That's what I did.
I did a staycation.
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Now, I guess I did a vacation because I went away.
Is it a staycation where you stay?
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Oh, I see.
Is it where you stay?
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Booking a place with a pool.
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Hotel Tonight.
How many days of podcast did Erewolf put out this year?
Probably 365, right?
Well, if you really count up the hours that they put out,
okay, it's Erewolf published 1,785 episodes this year,
which comes out to over 1,591 hours,
which ends up being 66 days
if you just listen to it straight of podcast listening.
That sounds pretty daunting.
I don't think you have time for that.
I don't have time for that.
You probably don't have time for it either.
So how do you sift through and find the stuff
that is really, really good?
Well, all of the hosts and producers here at Erewolf
chose their favorite episode of their show this year,
and they made a playlist for you.
Is that nice?
Of all the best episodes of the year.
So go see if your favorite episode made the cut
and check out some new shows.
What better place to start
than what they consider to be the very best episode of the year?
I picked a wonderfully silly episode
of Comedy Bang Bang this year
that I want you to go check out.
And here's how you do it.
Go to erewolf.com slash pics, that's P-I-C-K-S,
to see all of the selections.
Again, that's erewolf.com slash pics.
All of these episodes are out from behind the paywall
and Stitcher Premium members,
there is a special version of the playlist just for you.
All you got to do is search Stitcher
for Erewolf Pack Pics 2018.
Thank you, everyone, for a great year of podcasts.
And we want to hear what you think your favorites are.
Just tell us your favorite episode of 2018
with the hashtag Erewolf Pics.
Comedy Bang Bang.
And we ended the previous segment on a cliffhanger.
That's right.
Paul F.
Previously on Best of Comedy Bang Bang.
Now just to reiterate, if I am not on this episode,
I will be furious.
All right.
And why will you be furious?
I'm glad you asked me that, Scott.
What is it about?
I know as human beings, we all want to be recognized
for what we do.
We want to feel that our time on this earth was not for not.
That's right.
Is that a hit?
Did I just explain it?
Oh, that's a big part of it.
Then explain the rest.
I will explain the rest.
And thank you for giving me this platform.
Great.
I do and I do and I do for these people.
And if they want to toss me aside now,
after all that I've done,
all you've done continue to do.
No, Paul, I will not be able to contain Paul.
They love what you do.
They love what you do.
Maybe they don't love it enough to vote it into the number one spot.
Do you know how they prove that they love it?
How?
By voting it into the number one spot.
All right.
You read my mind.
Cret skin.
Well, look, I think it's time we get to it.
It's time we get to your number one.
Which I will remind you.
If you know anything, you're going to be furious.
Okay.
What?
Okay.
Do you remember the other episodes you did this year?
I don't remember anything.
So then why do you think this?
We may have gone through all of the episodes
that you've done this year.
We may have already breezed through them all and they were.
Breezed through them all.
What what episodes do you remember that you did this year?
I remember when I played breeze through them all.
Breeze through them all.
Now you have to do a character called breezed through them all.
That's how JW's door happened.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah.
Or was it JW's door was born that way?
How was it?
Well, that's how big chunky bubbles was.
Is y'all safe?
I started doing that voice on a best of.
And then in January, we did that show that ride.
Oh yeah, it's all safe.
That's right, right, right.
I heard a crime go.
That's what that was.
That's right.
Yeah.
Good shit.
We should do more of that stuff.
We should.
We should do more stuff.
I don't know.
Just fucking around till we find a character.
How about this guy?
Hi.
I don't hate him.
He's not bad.
I mean, I took a real risk there.
Anyway, my point is I'm the best.
You are the best.
It needs to be recognized all the time.
Well, what do you think then?
Do you think that this episode is going to have you in it?
If you had to guess what is the top episode of the year?
I'm not in the business of guessing.
I'm just going to say if I'm not in this episode, I will be furious.
All right.
Well, let me tell you that this is episode number 525.
Okay.
Does that give you any sort of hints?
Now, you may remember earlier on in our countdown,
episode 524 was on it, Merry Chunky Christmas.
It's not looking good, Scott.
Not looking good?
So 525, the very next week, what do you think it could be?
The very next week.
What song is that?
I joined in with you.
The cat came back.
The cat came back the very next day.
Did you sing that at camp?
Somehow I sang that at camp.
I feel like it was a church thing.
The cat came back the very next day.
The cat came back.
We thought it was a goner, but the cat came back.
He just couldn't stay away.
Real jazzy for the camp.
There goes the Spider-Man.
Spider-Man, Spider-Man.
Let's do this.
You sing Spider-Man and I'll sing Cat Came Back.
Five, six, seven, eight.
The cat came back.
The very next day.
The cat came back.
We thought it was a goner.
The cat came back.
He just couldn't stay.
The cat came back.
We thought it was a goner.
The cat came back.
He just couldn't stay away.
I think Sam got a video of that.
Oh, good stuff.
See?
See what?
Why wouldn't I be in the news?
Why wouldn't I be in the number one episode?
I tell you, Paul.
Plus, I do these.
People have said this every year.
They said if we could vote on the best of episodes,
they would be the most popular episodes of the year.
People love these.
Unfortunately, they are ineligible.
But look, this is episode 525.
This is the episode after.
Oh, I know that.
But look.
After Merry Chunky Christmas.
What episode could it possibly be?
I don't know.
Happy Chunky New Year?
No.
How the fuck do I know?
It is, of course, the 2017 Holiday Spectacular.
Wait a minute.
That's right.
And let me tell you who's in this episode.
We have Jason Manzuchus, John Gabriel, Lauren Lapkus,
Mike Hanford, James Addomian, Carl Tartt, Tony Newsom,
Jeremy Rowley, Drew Tarver, Neil Campbell,
the band Mr. Heavenly, and Paul F. Thompson.
Oh, yeah!
Oh, yeah!
Yeah!
You're out of order!
You're all out of order!
I'm the devil's advocate!
Oh, I'm a cent of a woman!
Power bottom!
Ebenezer Scrooge!
If Albatina were to do a Christmas carol as Ebenezer Scrooge,
would he play him as a power bottom?
You'd have to.
You'd have to.
First of all, if you respect the text, you'd have to.
You'd have to.
Can you imagine anyone worse playing Ebenezer Scrooge?
I mean, he would just shout,
SPIRIT!
From a mustard!
Get out of here!
But what, as big as me, sir?
I'm the Justin Beef!
What day is it?
I'm awful.
Who has he played recently?
Paterno?
That's right.
Who else?
Returno.
Returno, of course.
Famous sequel.
I think that's a sequel that's better than the original.
I think Returno is so much better than Paterno.
You play Paterno, you play Kevorkian, you play Phil Spector.
What is it with this guy?
He's just going to play like famous weirdos the rest of his life?
He's got to play the jinx.
The jinx.
He's got to play the jinx.
Al Pacino.
He's got to play the jinx.
Couldn't stay away.
Just couldn't stay away.
Hey!
This was a really fun episode to do.
As I talked about Mr. Heavenly, great band that engineer Brett plays in.
That's right.
He plays guitar or bass, I can't recall for that band.
Well, the bass is always guitar, but the guitar's not always bass.
We don't know.
They are playing and occasionally they will chime in and grind the episode to a halt.
No, they're great.
Before the clip we're going to hear, before the first clip we're going to hear,
because we're going to hear several clips, we can't play the whole thing.
It's a two hour, two and a half hour show.
First, we talked to Jason Manzuchus.
Lauren Lapkus playing Ho Ho the Naughty Elf is there.
John Gabrus is playing Intern Geno.
He talks to us for a while.
Oh, he does play Geno in this one?
Yes, he does.
And my Canford plays John Lennon, who, as we all know, if you have been listening to the show,
is the famous John Lennon who, after being dead for five years,
decided to come back to life and is now alive in New York City.
Before this clip, we have been talking to them, so they're all in the room,
when we introduce Paul here, who is playing Mayor Junius Bubble Duneery,
who is the tiny mayor who lives in the walls.
And we find out something very surprising about you in the first clip,
something that I didn't remember about your backstory.
About my backstory?
About your Mayor Junius Bubble Duneery, just your identity.
A fun fact about it.
A fun fact about it.
So we'll hear that.
And then the next clip that we're going to hear is Carl Tartt as MC Sugarbutt,
who is a rapper who went into a coma in around 1985 and then woke up recently.
So everything he says is in the style of rap from the early 80s.
And also, James Addome and us, Chris Matthews.
And this is such a good impression that James does.
Yes, it is.
And it was like killing us while he was doing it.
So those are the clips we're going to hear.
Let's hear them.
This is your episode number one.
Number one.
He is the mayor of, where are you a mayor of again?
I'm the mayor of Inside the Wall.
That old lady's here.
Look, that is that old lady.
I'm not an old lady.
My voice is in quavery at all.
I'm just little.
Right.
Please welcome back to the show Mayor Junius Bubble Duneery.
Hello, Mayor.
Just my size.
Who is this creature?
This is hello, the nodio.
So just for just for the listener at home,
can you guys describe the size disparity between the two of you?
I'm the size of a dollar bill.
And I'm slightly smaller than that.
Wonderful.
A foreign dollar.
Like a euro?
He's not a coin.
Sorry.
He got you there.
Zingy, zing.
I know he's a pert.
Geez.
Ho Ho, you seem very intrigued when you saw someone
that's just a little bit smaller than you.
Just my size.
Well, you know, there are certain similarities between
this race of creature and my own.
Mr. Mayor, just as a head job,
you're standing ankle deep in what I think is Ho Ho comes.
So just as a head job.
It's snow.
It's snow.
Yeah, but it did come from the tip of his peep.
That candy cane?
I guess it's still out.
Yeah, you see what I'm talking about.
It sounds like he's fine with it.
That's what buzzes him to bother him.
It's snow and a candy cane.
I mean, what's the big deal?
This is great.
What did you put it that way?
You should get tested.
Where are you from?
I'm from inside the walls.
Why is that so horrible to you?
It's creepy.
Well, you're from this weird old house up in the North Pole.
That's creepy to some.
People love the North Pole.
They talk about it for their whole life.
Their whole life?
Yeah.
I mean, at best, maybe like a week at the end of the year.
You are talking about it now.
Well, it's a week at the end of the year.
He's got both.
Do people live inside the walls along with you or just you?
Yes, though.
I'm part of a race of people that live inside the walls.
Of which he's the mayor.
I'm the mayor of them.
And how many people do you govern?
Oh, untold millions.
Untold millions.
Yes.
So this is all walls all over the world.
All walls, all over the world.
There's lots of space.
No gerrymandering with all these walls?
How dare you?
Well, and can I ask you as a mayor,
do you oversee a small number of those millions
or is mayor the highest level of political office in the world?
How high does this go up?
As far as the presidency?
Follow the money, Scott.
Follow the money, which, as I've established before,
is cookies.
Our currency is cookies.
Right, by the way.
Now, do you mean cocaine?
Because these guys over here say,
if you say cookies, it could mean cocaine.
That's true.
Cookies is slang for cocaine where I come from.
But it also means money, which also means actual cookies.
Oh, OK.
Actually, here are some holiday cookies, by the way.
Here's some holiday cookies.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, I'm rich.
They're in a plastic bag, so just be careful.
Can we just unwrap these?
Oh, god.
Do you eat the money or do you just spend it?
And you think cookies are good in your land
or is that not edible because it's money?
It gets confusing because we're spending cookies
to buy cookies to eat.
Right.
So are there eating cookies and spending cookies?
It's all the same, but you have to be specific
when you're exchanging them.
How many cookies can you?
I'm giving you this.
How many cookies does one cookie buy you?
It's a one-to-one.
Are there any?
Is there any other food besides cookies?
It's not.
It's not a trading system.
Well, there is other food, but food that we get from humans
when they're asleep.
OK, but that's OK.
So you're not forced to eat.
Slowly subsiding on cookies.
Yes.
So you're forced to eat your income.
You should.
You should just eat cookies.
I mean, you should eat other stuff.
Right, yeah.
So are there good cookies and bad cookies?
Like, are there some cookies that people go,
oh, god, not butter cookies?
Yeah, it's fucking cookies.
What do you mean?
Right, of course there are good and bad cookies.
Would you trade a bad cookie and get a good cookie?
Do you think we're not discerning at all?
Just any cookie is great?
Everything about you is different,
so I want to know what these differences are.
Mr. Mayor, I do just want to say
that Scott speaks only for himself.
Thank you very much.
And that I consider you and your population
to have probably even the most discerning taste.
All right, so what would you consider
being a discerning little person
to be a poor-tasting cookie?
Um, bit cells.
Any of those Italian cookies that all taste like licorice?
Right, OK, so but.
Don't like them.
If you get one of those.
You gotta dip them in espresso, that's the trick, though.
If you want.
That's starting to get to work.
I just want to eat a cookie fair enough.
No, that's just, jeez, I just learned that.
Parillo towards the end of it.
I was on Parillo towards.
What's that?
Can someone say parillo?
So if you acquire one of these cookies,
one of these poor-tasting cookies.
Yeah, so if I bought a cookie.
Are you allowed to spend it
and buy a good tasting cookie?
Yes, there's some weirdo who wants that cookie,
but here's the thing.
If I am unfortunate enough
to have bought a poor-tasting cookie,
well, that's an eating cookie,
and I'm just stuck with it.
Because that was the arrangement
that was decided upon.
And how long does it take you
to eat one poor-tasting cookie?
It's not fast.
You can't just switch that
into a spending cookie?
The whole system would break down.
Oh my god, he's getting red in the face.
I have a question.
If you've got a cookie in your bag,
in my cookie bag.
A good spending cookie.
By the way, it's as big as you.
That's right.
So now let's say you take a nasty tumble,
and you open up your bag and your cookie is in.
You have it forbidden.
It's in crumbles.
It's all crumbs now.
Because sometimes cookies crumbles.
Your buddy's all in crumbles.
Lenny's writing a song.
I'm sorry.
Oh my god.
Get on the guitar.
Mr. Heavenly, give him the guitar.
Send me that bass.
I want to try that thing out.
I can't touch my bed around.
Oh, wait a minute.
He's putting it on.
And oh, Nick just...
Oh!
Give it at the Paul Gaudy School of Bass.
He brushed around.
Does that crumbled cookie retain its value
as crumbs or no?
It's change now.
It is.
It's like pocket change.
Yes.
And the way one of our human dolls
of it shatters is just as much change.
Is our continue with your story?
Is each crumb equal?
So like if it breaks into five...
I'd like to pursue what John was talking about.
You know when you have a dollar bill?
Sure.
And it's out in the cold.
The phone break is a holiday special.
And you drop it on the ground.
It shatters into change.
Maybe that's never happened to anyone here.
I guess I've never tried it.
A frozen dollar bill?
Yeah.
Just shatters into time.
Just shatters into times.
And you shake those, they shatter into pennies.
What's the temperature at which paper freezes?
I think.
Negative 450.
And look, and I'm no...
Mayor, can you tell us about your outfit?
Because it's so weird.
Well, I don't see how it's so weird.
I'm merely wearing my cutaway coat with mayoral sash,
my striped trousers, and my top hat.
Right.
No shirt.
No sense.
No shirt.
Just a sash.
None taken.
No shoes.
No service.
You stand in barefoot in what is definitely elf cum,
my friend.
Seriously.
He doesn't have a problem with that.
Please get it.
That's really nice.
It feels like snow.
I don't know what to tell you.
Your feet are blistering actively.
Lucky.
Do you like blistery feet?
Yeah, I like anything nasty.
Yeah.
I believe you had a question about the crubs.
Well, sure.
Are they equally divisible?
Are they worth one crumb apiece?
No.
The crubs, you have to count the crubs from a crumbled cookie
to determine what the worth of each crub is.
That's why the theater warm up.
Count the crubs from a crumbled cookie
determine what the worth is.
Count the crubs from a crumbled cookie
determine what the worth is.
Why are you warming up your voice?
Because I'm going on stage.
What are you doing?
I'm doing a play.
Really?
What's the play?
My life in pieces.
Is it about a dollar bill?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it's always fascinating
to have two people of the same size here in the theater.
Is it?
That's fascinating to me.
How often does it happen?
Well, I mean, usually I'm lining up every guest
back-to-back just to see it.
And usually people are like, one's 5'10", one's 5'11".
But we're not the same.
He's smaller than he is.
I'm smaller than he is.
Slightly.
But your size is all the same.
No, see, that's not true.
Stop lining us up back-to-back.
Gut is a requiem for a dream.
You want to be front-to-front?
What is up front-to-front?
No, front-to-back.
I'm just happy that in the event of a fire drill,
I'm the first out the door.
Why is that?
I'm the smallest.
Okay.
It should go smallest to tallest.
Yeah, but it's going to take you such a long time,
you have such a short stride.
I'm very spry.
I'll be honest.
Really, how fast can you run?
Watch this.
Oh my god.
Hold on, I didn't even have time to get a stopwatch out.
Wow.
Wow, that is incredibly quick.
Okay, I'll come back.
Oh my god, that was like 70, 80 miles an hour.
Something like that.
That's above what Sammy Hagar would do.
What do you mean?
Because he tops out at 60 or so.
Oh, I thought it was that.
I thought I can't drive 55 beats.
He never got up to 55.
I thought he was always at 54 or 56.
He just couldn't get it right.
He cruise-control style.
He just wants to get it at 55.
I think the original draft was like, I can't drive 55.
I heard it turns out he had a marble under the accelerator,
so it wouldn't go all the way down.
Really?
Yeah.
Who put it there, a little person?
He made me.
So what are your traditions during the holidays?
Well, during the holidays, of course,
we like to move out of the walls and into gingerbread houses.
Oh, really?
Is that why we make them?
I guess I never realized why.
Yes, it's an ancient pact between humans and our people.
Really?
I've always done it for fun.
Well, maybe that's what you thought.
Sure, yeah.
I guess I never realized the reason why.
You know how when you're making a gingerbread house?
Sure.
And your mind goes blank.
And you're just like a robot that's been taken over
by another consciousness.
Oh, gosh.
And then when you're done, there's a gingerbread house there.
Sure.
Totally known as the gingerbread fugue state.
That's right.
That's because of us.
You're welcome.
Ed, we thank you.
And why do you like to do this?
I mean, it seems like if you had to be displaced,
it would be unpleasant.
Well, it's not that we're not going that far.
It's just from the walls to the gingerbread house.
Sure.
But I mean, in accordance to your size,
that's like me moving two blocks away.
It would still be an inconvenience.
OK.
You're getting really hung up on scale.
I know you can move fast.
Is gingerbread considered a cookie?
Is it like opulent for you guys to be living in there?
It's like living in a mansion.
Yes.
Oh, that's nice.
It's like living in a house made of dollar bills.
You got a gold toilet.
What?
Or do you have a gingerbread toilet?
We have a cupcake toilet.
Wait, are cupcakes currency as well?
There's no hole in a cupcake.
No, they're not.
They're just very comfortable.
But you sit on a soft toilet?
Yeah, why not?
Because then the bottle just goes in your butt.
What?
What?
There's a hole?
There's a hole.
But the poop just ho-ho goes in your butt.
There's a hole.
There is a hole.
01:55:51,680 --> 01:55:52,400
There is a hole.
OK.
We have a hole in the middle.
The seat is a cupcake.
Got it.
Got it.
I've never been there.
Can I ask you a question?
You should talk sometime.
How kind of you.
Maybe you'd see a different way of life that you could enjoy.
What's wrong with my life?
Well.
Constitutes and motels all that long, baby.
Laying on a cockroach, rolling across the ground.
Yeah.
Few of us do, I think.
What was your question, Jason?
Send the baby.
When you live inside the walls,
are you living in houses, in the walls, or no?
No.
It's not houses.
It's like little platforms and stuff.
It's not very convenient.
Why not have us make permanent housing for you?
Jason, can I stop you right there?
Please do.
The last time I was here.
This was covered.
This was my, well, this was my parting words to everyone.
Please, humans, consider putting working plumbing in doll houses.
It would make things so much easier for everybody.
But just a doll house, keep it all the same.
But put a working shower, sink, toilet in there.
Oh, yeah.
I've been fooled a few times by those.
What are you doing going in doll houses?
It's just an emergency.
You know, my stepdad's in the can, and I gotta,
I look around, and all that's left.
You ever been at a home, you ever been at a home depot,
and you know, you're just like, oh, thank god,
I got a shit so bad.
Then you realize you're on a display toilet
in the middle of an aisle?
No.
Me neither.
You ever walk down that door aisle,
and you keep opening the doors?
Because you think there's 100 rooms?
Screaming, how do I get out of here?
How do I get out of here?
I use the home depot door section as my mind palace
to help me remember things.
You ever go for your friend's house to eat,
and the food just ain't no good?
What, what do you mean, like the macaroni soggy?
The peas are mushy.
What's the chicken taste like?
Wood.
This is ringing a bell to me for some reason.
I can't recall why now.
It's the season.
Oh, that's right.
Ring some jingle bell.
How do you feel, sir, if I may ask about the borrowers?
Now, let me say, oh boy, oh boy.
Man, we talked about this a lot.
Yeah, we did, okay.
I figured it might have come up.
I know, it was a sore spot.
Here's what I don't like, the borrower.
It's okay, it's okay, I get this a lot.
Here's what I don't like, the borrower.
The littles.
Yup.
Steward little?
Hate him.
Really?
Is that a mouse?
Yes, it's gross.
But it's, it's regular mouse size.
He's vermin.
Wait, but there must be plenty of bugs in vermin
where you guys live, right?
Yeah, we don't like them, do you?
It's the same size as you.
It's like you seeing a bear, Scott.
I love bears.
What about the Indian in the cupboard?
We're not talking about.
Oh, search terms again?
Not a bad.
Not a bad.
Not a bad.
John Lennon hung his candy cane on his microphone.
I was gonna eat it later.
So you put it on your microphone to remind you?
I started eating it.
Oh, and then I, you know, I can't eat the whole thing.
And you don't want to put it upon the table
because germs may stick to it.
Oh, there's ink everywhere.
Right, of course, yeah.
I wanted to ask a question of the mayor.
To the mayor.
Please, feel free to ask it to and of me.
What is the name of your people again?
Did we ever find that out?
No, you know, I hadn't mentioned that.
I don't think it's important.
Wait, the name, what was it?
The name of your people?
Yeah, I don't think that's important.
Nobody needs to know that.
No way, humans.
Are you a human?
Yeah, I'm just a small human.
Solider.
Solider?
Solider?
Did you say soul eater?
Yes.
Wait, soul eater.
We're called soul eaters.
Are you soul eaters?
Yes, eat.
Do you think that's a skateboard?
Do you remember how I said we eat cookies?
We love cookies.
Oh, the soul eaters.
But you also said you don't eat those exclusively.
Are you eating human being souls?
We're not, okay, look.
We're not eating like all of the soul.
It's just enough.
We're little, we're little.
It's just enough to get by.
Kill him!
Hey, get him!
Hold on.
Get him!
Walk him up!
Walk him up!
Hold him down!
I'm over here.
Let him grab his candy cane.
He's too fast.
He's too fast.
If I'm going to get out of here,
I need this candy cane with me.
He's been on the show before,
and it's wonderful to have him back.
Let's first welcome MC Sugarbutt.
How are you?
Get on up and get on down.
Sugarbutt is in your Christmas time.
Oh, very good, MC Sugarbutt.
It's snowing, it's snowing.
It's snowing, snowing, and snowing.
Scott and Z.
How you be, Scott?
I'm good, it's actually not snow,
it's ho-ho-come.
Hey!
Ho-ho-come!
Ho-ho-come, like coke and rum.
Ooh, that's a good tongue.
I also want to welcome,
I don't believe he's ever been on the show before, but he is.
No, they've been here a long time.
First time.
Yeah, he's currently had a show.
I miss him, I miss him, I miss him, I miss him, I miss him.
He's currently on MSNBC.
The host of Hardball.
Please welcome Chris Matthews.
Chris Matthews, thanks for being here.
What are your thoughts on politics?
It's very political.
What a political year it's been.
He does the question there.
When you say Quinnipiac polls, you have 12 points.
Do you think I said representative polls?
Quinnipiac?
I don't know what you're saying.
Have you ever suffered a Quinnipiac?
Have I ever suffered a Quinnipiac?
Yes, that's valid, answer that one.
I don't think I've ever suffered from one, no.
You'd know it if you had.
Quinnipiac is a certain kind of stroke
that broadcasters can have 12 of them a day.
Oh, is that what they're talking about
when they talk about the Quinnipiac polls?
Quinnipiac poll, yes.
Yeah, well, it's so good to see you.
It's great to be here, you know, when you come,
when you think of podcasts and your legendary Tip O'Neil once said,
we gotta take a break.
Great, great.
And MC Sugarbot, you are a musician
and John Lennon here is a musician.
Oh, John Lennon.
Yeah, John Lennon.
He was a part of the Doors.
Oh, see, that's why I bring it up,
because not everyone knows what band I was part of.
I was part of a European rock band.
The Doors were in America.
Who?
You brought him up first.
Behind you there is another American band, Mr. Heavenly.
Mr. Heavenly, not in hell.
People in jail go to sleep.
Oh, boy, his rhymes aren't wrong.
The best way to pass the time when you're in jail, just sleep.
MC Sugarbot, are you known for your freestyles?
You know, I'm known all across the world to all the pretty girls
about all the raps that you ever did see.
I like that line, because it didn't rhyme.
I know, I loved it.
You have a lot of trouble sticking the landing.
You know what, though?
Keep going.
I think you're gonna get there.
Is that Jason Mann over there?
Jason Mann shouts out.
Oh, I'm just saying hello.
That just ended.
MC Sugarbot, if you don't win the primary, will you rent a party?
Let's say that again.
If you don't win the primary, will you rent a party?
Oh, yeah.
It's real indent.
I'm gonna run for independent.
Oh, very good.
It's real indent?
Yeah, you never got to ride with a dependent.
I know you're not supposed to ride the same word twice,
but apparently you can just take letters out, Mr. Heavenly.
No indent, space in front of a padrock grab.
It's real tall.
Is that a giraffe?
She goes, she goes.
Hey, he's getting better.
Do you go double-spaced?
It's not that giraffe, get in here.
Do you double-space your jacquemates?
Always double-space.
Makes the pages longer.
And he's back.
Chris Matthews, a lot going on this year.
That's safe to say, right?
This is fantastic here.
It's a wonderful year for politics.
You got Vladimir Putin entering the thing?
I mean, you slam your Putin polling number?
Number one in New Hampshire primary across five polls.
That's true.
The outlier is Zogby.
Where did we cut down Zogby, Mayor Julius?
You registered a Zogby poll, 0.4.
Yes, well, that's those polls.
Look, it's early days, and I don't think this is the time
to be paying attention to polls.
Certainly not the Zogby poll.
Okay, it sounds like a guy who's running for office
or trying to dodge some kind of scandal.
Well, he is trying to dodge a scandal.
He's admitted to eating souls.
Of evil people.
Well, maybe you could take over from Joe Scarborough
when he's done.
Hey, how's his band doing?
I think it's fun.
You know what?
I actually, I go sometimes.
I get a nice ale.
I drink about half it.
You ever see me on MSNBC
where it's just me broadcasting in front of like a town hall,
people walking around voting and stuff?
That's all fake.
There's cops all over the place.
Make sure you get in front of me.
Cool.
That's great.
Well, good name for viewing that band.
I wish one of John Lennon.
John Lennon, you shot me a hat.
Did you ever complain to Mayor John Lindsay
of New York City in crime and punishment?
I said this type of stuff can't happen.
It can't happen to a guy like me.
If it happens to me, it can happen to anyone.
Are you the worst?
Like, I don't need to talk about it.
I don't think we need to answer that right here right now.
I'll talk to you about that off the air.
It's getting very different.
John Lindsay, a question there.
It must hurt because shot in the back like that.
Would you pretty shot in the front?
Would that have been better?
I think I would have.
I would like to have seen it coming.
But there would be a danger of you getting shot in the nuts, though.
If it was from the front.
That's true.
That is very true.
You get shot in the nuts from behind.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's true.
I guess if they're swinging, but.
If you got a nice fruit basket in there.
I was at the time when I got shot.
Thank God I wasn't shot in the nuts.
I was walking around the streets with my pants down.
You were?
Right.
They don't talk about that.
They don't talk about that.
And tell me slow, do your nuts hang down real low?
Tell them really slow.
I'll tell you slow.
Let's really take our time with this.
In the winter time, when I'm pantsless in New York City.
Get on deck.
They drag on the cold con crease.
Burn, that's burnt.
In the winter.
Keeping an eye on my nuts drinking by my random.
That was a classic Beatles number right there.
Was it B-side, C-side, or D-side?
That was a date.
Wow, my gosh.
I have to go.
I'm hungry.
Oh, really?
Okay, Ho-Ho.
It's always nice to see you.
Ho-Ho, bye, Merry Christmas.
Fuck you.
Whoa.
Strong words from Ho-Ho.
Headphones.
All right, so you didn't get a chance to interrogate Ho-Ho,
but did you ever get a present as a child during the winter times?
Well, sure.
I got a bunch of buttons to reelect Eisenhower.
Eisenhower?
Eisenhower buttons.
Buttons supporting him?
Sure.
I used to have a founding member of the Scoop Jackson fan club
when I was a junior high school.
Who else do you want me to respect you for back then?
If three more names would be great, just to place you in time?
Well, Teddy Kennedy was fantastic.
I just have Teddy Kennedy crisps.
We need them for breakfast.
Teddy Kennedy crisps.
This is post-chappaquitics?
Well, yeah.
You were supposed to just knock the cereal over,
and we almost drowned.
Some of them would drown, but then some of them
would swim back and testify.
Then you get to eat your bowl of cereal, Congress.
My gosh.
I understand about every third word you're saying,
but it's fascinating.
That's, you know, what that's politics.
It's just going to go over some people's heads,
and they're going to be involved, and be involved,
and be involved.
MC Sugar, but how do you spend the holidays?
I spend the holidays with my fam.
He's sitting right there.
It's Jason Mann.
That's my cousin.
Your family not related by blood, are you?
Not related by blood, not related by flesh.
Hey, you're looking real French.
Is that deodorant under your arms?
Yeah, it's a little bit.
I put on a little splash this morning.
Hell, yeah.
Cool water brand deodorant.
We, you know, always wearing a tank top.
Got to have a tank top.
Sun's out, gun's out.
Sky's out, thighs out.
Get them going.
You could try to get by, but you got to get trapped.
How many, how many tattoos do you have, Gina?
I have one tattoo, and it's of the island of which I was born.
Yeah.
Little island.
Ice slip, fantastic airport.
Love that airport.
Really?
Right next to a cemetery where my dad's buried.
I only fly into and out of ice slip everywhere else
I go and sell a train, a damp track.
Wait, are you also being a human table at Palm Springs as well?
Or are you going into the Palm Springs airport?
Oh, yeah, sure.
If you give me a Palm Springs airport,
I'm going to take the Acela train there,
and it doesn't run there.
So I'm able to jump it off the tracks and just run it.
It's not got like a freight car.
I've got a special loud car.
I always look like I've got special privileges
because I have a loud car.
I was, yes, there's a quiet car.
I mostly have track trains.
I have the loud car.
I just sit in the front and I go, hey, politics!
All the windows are down.
Have you ever, yeah, the windows are down.
Have you ever cleared cattle just from just sheer drool and volume?
I have special privileges, the damp track.
I was bored of the Acela train somewhere with just Big Bay.
You were!
How many years ago now?
How old of a man are I?
I look at you sometimes on television.
I can't tell exactly your age.
Well, that's intentional.
It's intentional.
You know, people of this vanity,
you want to look a little bit younger,
so I froze myself at 60.
Ooh, you froze yourself.
Yeah, I think that was my peak,
so I just always want to look like a six-year-old man vibrant.
Right, okay.
So you're above that, but you look so...
No, unless I'm youth-fitting, like Merlin.
Oh, really?
I used to think the gravity test is so age-sixty-years-old.
Really, you're going to lens yourself to,
you know, the force of state.
How do you feel about, like, the current environment we're in?
A lot of guys in media, a lot of guys in your world...
Yeah, being taken down.
Are you any fear of that from you?
Okay, more room for Chris.
More room for Chris.
Wait, your show isn't expanding, though.
The halls are empty.
MSNBC.
Very, very few people walking around.
A lot less contact, physically, between people.
That's good.
More room for Chris, you know?
I never looked at...
Wait, is more room for Chris
the name of a show you're doing?
That's my weekend show.
More room for Chris.
What do you talk about?
It's my weekend fill-in show, or late-night show.
They do it.
If there's, like, anybody bam off the air,
Chris Mathews fills in.
More room for Chris!
Is that about politics or about local interests?
No, it's about local interests.
It's about, you know, it's just school issues, education.
Bar reviews, Yelp.
Look at it, Yelp!
Really, you just go on Yelp and re-reviews?
I go on Yelp, and I don't even necessarily vocalize.
It's just me clicking through Yelp.
When you walked in, I didn't think your face could get any redder,
but I was way wrong.
Jesus Christ, Chris, are you okay, pal?
Sure, yeah, I live in a diet of ranishes and strawberry juice.
It's very Christmassy.
It's festive.
Yeah, thank you.
They planned for the holidays,
but the controversy, ACLU said you shouldn't have a Christmas parade.
You're going to go ahead with it anyway, eat the flesh?
We are going to have a Christmas parade, as we always do,
mimicking human behavior.
That's what we do.
Where does this parade occur,
because you're in gingerbread houses this month?
It's inside the goddamn walls.
So when you're in living in gingerbread houses,
you do the parade in the walls.
Yeah, yeah, it's a hassle.
What happens if a human, a full-size human catches sight of you?
Because I've never seen,
so you're the first person of your kind that I've ever seen.
Is that so?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, it was quite a surprise when we saw you for the first time.
We're out there all the time.
We never see you.
I've never seen you.
Why had like Steven, since we're surprisingly dominated?
Well, we're not talking about him, we're talking.
He was considerably much taller than you.
He is like the size of a dollar bill, of a euro.
But not a coin.
Smaller than a dollar bill.
Smaller than a dollar bill.
Foreign policy question, shoot, asbestos, where do you come down?
I think that asbestos is in the walls,
asbestos is in the neighboring country.
It's in other walls.
Okay, all right.
Asbestos is an issue that is considered the third rail
in politics where I come from.
Oh, yeah.
Third rail, they're really full, huge, full.
This gets me going.
You can't win talking about it.
You can't win.
Minds you about it.
I can't win against it.
Also a very good bar.
It is, sure, one of the stations down there,
Union Station or Freedom Station.
Yeah, how many stars on Yelp?
Stars on Yelp.
Yeah, stars on Yelp.
For six and a half stars on Yelp.
Wow.
Six and a half.
That's amazing.
Yelp for you using.
The third rail gets an unfair reputation.
Go down, just touch it.
Lick it sometime.
It's a little shock.
It's like a battery.
MC Sugarbite, you ever lick anything you shouldn't have?
Ooh, I'm glad.
That's a great QUE, Scotty D.
I'm going to answer it, but now for you at D.
My middle name is David, so, and he knows that.
We talked about it before.
Most of the time when I'm licking things
that I shouldn't be licking,
I'm getting ready to do a sticking.
Some magicians be doing tricking.
It's a note to the editor.
Just take out the gears grinding a little bit.
No, eat the gears.
I'm all ears.
Listening to you and all my fears.
I'm scared of snakes.
I'm scared of bats.
I'm scared of roaches.
I'm scared of rats.
You live in the walls.
Damn this dog.
You're not.
The longest he's ever gone.
Oh boy, so good.
There it is.
That's why I'm number one.
After these, you're number one.
After those clips, then we hear Tawny as Gary Urbansky
and then Drew Tarver and Jeremy Rowley as Keith and Ming
talk to us for a bit.
And then Neil Campbell comes in as Ernie Bred.
Yeah, what was this thing?
Ernie Bred to a self, he's a guy who
who plays at the pond across the street with ducks
and came in saying that he was a fan favorite character.
But he was really just a guy who wanted to come in.
Ernie Bred, by the way, his name is Ernie Bred,
the thing you throw at ducks.
And his catchphrase is does a duck quack.
Funny stuff.
I almost included that clip, but when I listened to it back,
it's really funny and then kind of other stuff happens.
It doesn't have like a definitive ending,
but it's a really funny episode.
So listen to the whole thing.
Or be damned.
Or be damned.
And that is our countdown.
Like I said, over 35,000 votes.
And let's run through some stats here, okay?
Who's in the most episodes that ended up in our countdown?
Paul, you will be surprised to know you were in seven episodes
in our countdown this year.
Lucky seven.
You only performed in nine.
And seven of those are in our top 14.
Wow.
Not bad.
Not bad at all.
You, the ones that didn't make it are
where you played J.W. Stillwater and Shevil Knievel.
Another one that I forgot about.
Another one I'd love to talk to you again.
But you were in the most episodes in seven.
Jason Mandzukos is in the second most,
in four of the top 14 episodes.
Lauren Lapkis is in three of them.
And then appearing in two episodes
are Thomas Middleditch, Ego Wodem, Carl Tartt, Drew Tarver,
Tani Newsom, Sean Diston, and Mary Holland.
Those are all two episodes.
I really enjoyed this year's countdown
and the clips that you all voted for because
there was like a lot of variety in it.
And new people that have not been on the show
and not been in previous countdowns.
I remember there were like two years
that John Gabrus was on the show
that just his episodes weren't ending up in the top 10.
And then I think we talked about him
on one of these best ofs and said,
oh man, he's so great.
People should be voting for him.
So he's been voted in since then.
But it's just great to get the new talent into the show.
I think I talked about this last best ofs.
I said that this year, 2018,
was going to be a transitional year for Comedy Bang Bang.
I don't know if you remember this at all.
I do remember it.
And basically, I was trying to transition you out of the top 10.
That's what I remember.
Did not work.
Couldn't do it.
No, and let me explain that for a bit
because I think people started to think,
oh, I'm ending the show, what's going on.
And basically, I don't know if you recall, Paul,
but when we were taping these last year,
it was right before the holidays.
And I was kind of freaking out a little bit
in terms of my schedule.
We went out to lunch in the middle of them.
And I talked to you a little bit about it.
I had a big work project that was coming up
that was fairly overwhelming to me
and was about to start.
And I was looking at the schedule
and I was like, I don't know if I can do it.
Looking at the schedule for this show
and saying, I don't know if I can do it.
And build a ship and a bottle.
Exactly.
I mean, those are my three passions.
Whatever this project is, doing the show.
Oh, I thought the ship and the bottle was the project.
No, no.
Oh, you had a whole other thing.
I had a whole other thing.
Oh, Scott, I'm so sorry.
No, I'll never stop building those ships and bottles.
I'm so sorry.
I was giving you such a hard time.
I was like, you're building ships and bottles.
No, no, I built 27 this year.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much.
You're the best.
So anyway, so I was talking to you about it at the lunch
and I was kind of like, I don't know what to do.
I was asking you if you wanted to maybe guest host some stuff.
I was just really looking at the schedule
and I was freaking out about it.
And so I had some plans of what to do this year
of how to achieve doing it
or maybe I was thinking of even going on hiatus.
I didn't know.
So anyway, to just make a long story short,
the thing I was doing got postponed a couple of months
and I worked it out.
You were like, great news.
My thing got sponed.
Business as per years.
Well, the good thing about it was it got postponed
to the extent that we had already been recording
Freedom, which is our other show that we do
here on the Your Wolf Network.
We had recorded maybe seven or eight out of the 10
that we were going to do by the time that this had come up.
So with the postponement, I was able to finish those out
but also do 16 more of those with you guys, which was great.
So we did 26 episodes of those
and those are currently airing for free
on Your Wolf on Thursdays.
But then I was able to do,
I'd already recorded maybe eight REM episodes up to then
and I was able, I think we did like 30 of those or something.
No, maybe it wasn't that much.
But we did, yeah, I think we did,
might have done 30 of those or something.
So I was able to work out my schedule.
Everything's fine.
It almost sounds like you didn't know
what the fuck you were talking about.
Well, at the time, I did know what I was talking about
but then circumstances changed.
Well, yeah, but now it's like I did 30 episodes
of this R&M podcast.
No, but really the thing about the show
is that every year, in a sense, is a transitional year
for the show because I want to keep having new people on.
And sometimes people are like,
who is this anytime there's a new person
or they go, oh, they don't get it or whatever.
But that's very important to me is,
if it was just the same people
that we started with nine years ago,
how insane would that be?
If it was, I mean, obviously, Paul,
you've been here the entire time,
almost 10 years at this point
and there are certain people,
but everyone just gets busier.
You know what I mean?
Paul, you only did nine episodes this year.
Yeah, that's true.
It is true.
At a certain point, you were doing at least one a month
at some point.
Everyone gets really busy
and so that's a really important part of the show to me
is to find new people to be on it.
And I love hearing the new people
being so high up in the countdown.
Having Carl and Ego's episode at number three
is just fantastic.
That's terrific.
And so, you know, I think 2019
is going to be a transitional year for the show
and we're just going to keep trying new stuff.
It's going to be our 10th anniversary
and that's exciting.
That's a big deal.
It's a big deal.
It's a big deal.
10 trips around this great big ball of fire
that we call the sun.
What?
No, you're right.
We do call it that.
Why?
What do you call it?
No, I'm soul.
You worship it, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
You know that.
You're a soul worshiper.
Yeah.
Oh, by the way, soul eater is the thing
that we found out about
Mayor Junie's eat souls.
I'd forgotten that aspect of it.
In any way, in any case, rather.
In any event.
In any event, whatever you need to say.
I have no intentions of stopping the show.
I think Rudy North last week said something
like don't stop the show
or something, you know,
because Sean is like listens to it
and is like a fan of it.
I'm not stopping the show.
I think he was fanning the flames
about this transitional year thing.
But I have no intentions of stopping it.
I still got plenty of gas in the tank.
I was just a little worried last year
about just merely, you know,
being able to get the show out there.
And I didn't want the show to suffer.
And frankly, I don't think the show suffered
at all this year.
And I think it was one of our best years.
I mean, there's a stretch of episodes
where it's just on fire, I think, this year.
I will say, you know that I'm a listener
and I listen to the show when I'm not on it.
First time listener.
Yeah.
You know, I'm a first time listener.
I decided to try an episode where I wasn't on it.
I was like, this is not about that.
I mean, it doesn't have to be.
I listen to the show on a regular basis.
And this was a tremendous year for the show.
This show for me is, you know,
I'm running around from one thing to another.
Constantly.
You're always doing errands.
You're always late.
I'm always doing errands.
I'm always late.
Oh, fuck, cuckoo.
I dropped my dry cleaning off.
I'm sorry.
The guy behind the camera was like,
I didn't know you were going to be here.
What do I care?
It makes it worse.
So so I listened to the show a lot in the car
and it it keeps me company.
And it's it's, you know, keeps me.
It keeps me from getting, you know,
too stressed out, afraid.
Well, I mean, honestly, yeah.
But but it's it's a it's a companion to me.
And this has been a great year for the show.
Companions.
They come to me.
They come to me at night in the car when I have my dry cleaning.
There's a new one, by the way.
There's a new car.
Oh, there is.
Oh, I got to say that.
We got to talk about it on three.
Where it's like he sees a it's a different guy.
He sees a squire.
I think it's wise that it's a different guy.
What's he looking at now?
Yeah.
Who's this crazy old bird up to today?
He like looks down and he sees there's
two dogs and then one disappears.
Oh, no.
Only one.
Yeah.
It's just it's not like he saw one dog and it disappeared.
No, he saw two.
There are two dogs.
Only one.
Well, so I don't even know if that one is real because that
one could go at any time.
It's not quite as dramatic as the previous one.
Okay.
They're like, okay, let's pull it back, guys.
How about the guy sees two dogs and then one disappears?
Getting network notes.
Well, guys, you're really straining credulity here.
Look, he sees two dogs.
One disappears.
It's easy.
This is all to say that this has been a great year for the show.
And I say that as a listener of the show.
Thank you very much, Paul.
And I say this as the host of the show.
I'm doing a great job.
Keep at it, Scotty Boy.
These are my motivations.
No, I had a lot of fun this year.
It started to look like it was going to get hard to juggle,
but it all worked out.
And I was able to cover my shift.
That's what it really was, what it is.
That's right.
You know?
So this year is going to be even better.
It's going to be our 10th anniversary.
And you will not believe what we have in store.
Give him a little hint.
Uh-oh.
I don't know.
No.
But it's going to be fun.
It's going to be fun.
And keep listening to it.
You know, it really means the world to us when you write to us
on our various social media platforms to say that, you know,
we get a lot of messages from people who are anything
from being in the hospital and having this is the only art form
that they're able to either concentrate on or consume
for various reasons to people going through hard times
who don't think that they are allowed to laugh.
And this sort of leads them into the ah of Dabda.
But it really means a lot to us to hear stuff like that.
And so we're not going to stop, you know?
I'm not going to stop.
And I hope you don't stop listening to it until the apocalypse.
And then, and only then, are you allowed to stop listening.
But two more episodes.
Two more episodes after that.
Apocalypse, two more episodes.
Two more episodes because they'll already be scheduled.
They'll only be scheduled in the cloud.
So while you're running away from zombies or then, you know,
the nuclear wasteland, uh, scarred chuds.
The toxic adventure.
Yes.
Make sure to have those headphones in.
The tremors worms.
Do you think that's how the apocalypse is going to come about?
I think it's going to be just like tremors.
The tremors worms?
I think it's going to be just like tremors.
That's what's going to do us in?
Yeah.
And thank God we still have Reba McIntyre.
Reba.
All right, guys.
I want to thank also everyone who worked on the show this year
in the booth over here, Engineer Sam.
You did a lot of episodes.
Don't get on my.
And you did a ton of episodes this year.
It's great.
All of our engineers, we got some new ones in this year.
And some state even.
Yeah.
So yeah, really great working with the people who work at the company here.
And also the people who worked PCAST last, last week,
the, our big festival that we had in, in Los Angeles,
the ear wolf people and Stitcher people who worked that really made it go smoothly.
Also in my assistant, Korean did a lot of work on that.
So a shout out to her.
And then one guy from these who watched cops on his laptop.
That was so bizarre.
It was strange.
What was his job?
I couldn't tell you.
I don't know what he was doing, but he was right there a stage left the entire time
watching cops on his laptop.
Had a great seat.
And the best seat in the house instead watched cops.
I've been meeting the catch up on the show.
What are all my favorite criminals up to?
Anyway, thanks to everyone.
We don't mean to get modeling, but it means a lot to us that you listen.
Well, Paul, I want to thank you especially for doing these with me.
Every year it's really great.
You're a big part of the show.
And I hope you never quit it.
I hope you never quit me.
I hope I never get fired.
Scott, I love being a part of this.
I'm going to buy you a phone, by the way, this year.
And you, you may receive a text on Christmas Day.
You remember from a million years ago when we started doing these best stuff.
I love being part of the show and I love doing these best stuff with you.
It's so fun.
I really look forward to it.
And it's always a good time.
So thank you for, thank you for having me on the show.
My pleasure.
It truly is my pleasure.
And I hope even more than that, the audience's pleasure.
That's going to be it.
I hope it's, who knows?
I hope it's our pleasure more than theirs.
Really?
You hope that we, I mean, I probably do get...
We're the ones doing it.
I know.
I probably get more out of it than the audience does.
Well, but I think that makes sense.
Yeah.
It's our life's work.
Audience, take a breather.
It should be more enjoyable to us.
Don't listen to this.
It should.
No, they need to hear it.
Okay.
It should be more enjoyable for us than it is for you,
because we have to do it.
All you have to do is listen to it.
It's all done for you.
But we're the ones sweating.
We're the ones...
I sweat a lot when we do these.
Yeah.
I am soaked through right now.
You sweat a lot.
You are always sweating.
Oh, really?
If you notice that?
If a gland problem.
Yes.
Your glands are fucked up.
I'm saying, my point is, I'm not saying what we do is hard.
It's just a little bit more than what the audience has to do.
So we should enjoy it more.
I've made my case.
All right.
You're out of order.
You're the devil's advocate.
Why would I want to do it?
I'm gonna take a breather and breathe.
The Jinx.
All right.
We will see.
It already is 2019 when you're hearing this,
but we'll see you on Monday for the first episode of the year
with Ben Schwartz and Horatio Sanz.
It's going to be a great 2019.
Stick with us.
We'll see you later.
Thanks.
Goodbye.
Hey, everyone.
Thanks for listening.
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