Comedy Bang Bang: The Podcast - Bonus Bang: Weird Al Yankovic, Paul F. Tompkins (Essential Andrew Lloyd Webber)
Episode Date: June 20, 2024This is Part 3 of our Essential Andrew Lloyd Webber series. Two immense stars from the world of music, “Weird Al” Yankovic & Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber are on today’s Comedy Bean Bag! After chatti...ng with Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber about English accents, the Little Prince, and nautical bed bugs, the Vicar of Yanks himself joins in on the conversation. There will be talk of drugs, what we shouldn’t expect from the next “Weird Al” album, and an intense game of Would You Rather? Homonyms!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, this is Scott Aukerman, host of Comedy Bang Bang, and welcome to another
Bonus Bang.
We are in the middle of a series called The Essential Andrew Lloyd Webber, and this episode
is in fact essential.
This is episode number 203 entitled The Vicar of Yanks.
The Vicar of Yanks.
This episode came out February 25, 2013 and has our good friend
Weird Al Yankovic as well as Paul F. Tompkins playing Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber. These, of course,
are older episodes that we're taking out from Behind the Paywall and letting you hear them.
This is an incredible episode. If you've never heard it before, you're going to enjoy it. If
you have heard it before, I would say you're going to enjoy it as well. And of course, if you like what you hear and want to hear the entire CBB archive, you can
become a subscriber at CBBworld.com where you can find every single episode we've recorded,
including all of the live episodes.
We will be back next week with a new episode of Comedy Bang Bang, but until then, enjoy
this bonus bang. Bonus Bang! If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, will all states still cover
the damage to my house?
Welcome to Comedy Bang Bang.
Ah, good catchphrase from, who's this from?
Malcolm McDowell says meow.
Even better screen name than the catchphrase I might say.
Screen name better than the catchphrase, I might say. Screen name better than the catchphrase.
The classic...
What is served as a better catching phrase?
We all know who that is, by the way. Welcome to the show Comedy Bang Bang.
That was a catchphrase. If you have one, you know what to do.
And I'm Scott Ackerman, and you know that melodious...
...molyphilous? Is that a word?
Molyphilous? Please, if you must borrow our language, dear wife, please do try to pronounce the words
correctly.
And that's what we're really doing.
We're just borrowing the king's speech.
Correct.
From the English.
That's correct.
No, not the king's speech.
The king's English, darling.
That's right.
I borrowed the king's speech from my friend, James.
Yes.
When are you going to return it?
Has he been talking to you about this?
He's mentioned a few things. Very passive aggressive.
Why is he talking to you? I didn't even know you were...
He's trying to triangulate us, don't you know?
Oh, okay, well...
He's against one another.
You must be going crazy right now.
I'm going simply bad! I'm out of my topping hat!
Thank you so much for bringing your topping hat, by the way.
Of course, I'm a gentleman.
We all know who this is.
Everyone knows who this is.
Brenda the Show.
Brenda the Show.
Brenda the Show.
Who?
Frenda.
I said Frenda.
Oh, I see.
In your charming colonial way.
Frenda the Show.
I'm a Frenda the Show.
I gotta talk to Gary Marshall about maybe a sitcom called Frenda the Show. I'm a Frenda the Show. I gotta talk to Gary Marshall about maybe a sitcom
called Frenda.
Ugh, please don't talk to him.
Really, do you have something against him?
He's just frightful more.
He is, isn't he?
So loud!
He's so very loud.
Constantly, horrid, screaming, yelling, bellowing.
Just like Gil Bellows as well.
Yes, the charming actor from the Shawshank Redemption.
And Gillian Bellows as well.
But we all know who this is.
This is, of course, Andrew Lloyd Webber.
We all know who I am.
Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber,
the composer of such Broadway musicals as Cat, Jesus Christ, Superstar,
Joseph in the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Starlight Express,
Express, I believe it's pronounced.
I beg your pardon.
Starlight Express.
Oh, did I mispronounce it?
Yes, of course.
Starlight Express.
Roller Skates.
Roller Skates. Roller skate train. Remember, dear Scotrick, when those people in their tight-fitting dance skins donned their
roller blades and risked life and limb to bring life to a musical that no one remembers
anymore.
I feel like you and I may be the only people
who do remember it.
It was the turn off the dark
before the turn off the dark.
That's right.
Was anyone injured?
I don't remember.
Everyone.
Every single person, every single night.
Check the Guinness Book.
Yes, we hold the record for most injuries
in a Broadway play.
Oh gosh.
You know, I can't afford the book,
but I've always wanted it to be online.
Why is it so prohibitively expensive?
Why is it only for people like me?
Why is it for the 1%?
Guinness, change your business model.
They ought to have a record for the most exclusive book.
That's right.
Andrew Lloyd Webber,
you're here.
I'm here. You are, as I said,
Frenda, the show, and you're
back, and we haven't seen you
in quite a few months. No, it's
been quite a while.
It's been quite a while.
It's been. What's that?
I don't know.
Have you thought, by the way, about doing
some sort of new musical based on the music of the Bare
Naked Ladies?
It's all I think about.
Then why don't you know the song One Week?
It's so, what is that?
See, that's what their song?
That is their most popular song.
The devil, you say?
Their one number one hit.
How does it go
it's been surely you know very short number well that's why I went to number
one people could listen to it over and over again oh and so it got yeah exactly
not like that American pie no oh god or Lido by balls skags or a stairway to
heaven hmm don't know that one either really but by Oh, God. Or Lido by Balskeggs. Or Stairway to Heaven.
Don't know that one either, really? By Led Zeppelin?
Yes.
Yes, of course.
What do you call it?
Stairway to Heaven.
Oh, I see, I see, yes.
There's some sort of disconnect here.
Am I mispronouncing it?
It's Stairway to Heaven.
Oh, Stairway to Heaven.
Yes.
Because there was an old musical song
called Stairway Away from Heaven.
Oh, how did that go?
I remember that a little bit.
It went something like this.
Me, me, me, me, me.
Singing, singing, singing.
Singing is fun.
Oh, granny's all upset.
No, you're making it a sort of hee-haw.
I'm just doing a hillbilly clap.
No, it's not a hillbilly song.
Okay.
Are you familiar with the tradition of British musicals?
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals.
I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals. I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals. I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals. I'm not familiar with the tradition of British musicals. I'm doing a hillbilly clap. No, it's not a hillbilly song.
OK.
Are you familiar with the tradition of British music?
Oh, of course.
Paul McCartney.
It was out of Vaudeville.
When I'm 64 type songs.
Yes, that's somewhat true.
He's very inspired by that.
Has he said that in interviews?
I'm sure.
I've never been able to sit through an entire interview
of Paul McCartney.
Poor lad.
Only a sir.
I hate his speaking voice. Love his singing voice.
It's a terrible speaking voice.
It's so bad.
One can hear the constant thumbs upping he's doing as he speaks.
And he'll like, ooooh.
Or the liver puddley accent.
Oh my goodness.
Is like something out of Dante's Inferno.
What English, and we'll get back to the other question we had,
Please! But which English accents get back to the other question we had.
But which English accents are pleasant to the ear?
Is it just like one square city block in England
and if you go outside of it, it just gets distorted?
It's not so much located by a particular region
as it is particular structures.
And I find that the most pleasant speaking tones
tend to reside in,
oh, what's the American word for them?
Mansions.
I see.
Castles.
What about a place like Big Ben?
If you grew up in Big Ben, how would you?
It's, you sound like a terrible cockney.
Oh, I see. It's too close. like a terrible cockney. Oh, I see.
It's too close.
Anytime you're near a large bell, if you're born...
You have to shout in order to be heard?
If you're born with the sound of any large bell, your accent just deteriorates.
So if you're growing up in a mansion, you're able to speak in lower hushed tones, much
like you, and then if a bell comes along,
then you have to be like, ow, the bell!
That's exactly right.
I see.
Just shouting.
You see, if one lives in a castle, one can speak very quietly, and because of the nature
of the stone walls.
And also you have servants who will relay instructions.
If I'm honest, most of it is the servants relaying things that you say to the other
side of the room.
Right.
Okay.
If you saw the movie Batman directed by Tim Burton.
Let me think about that one.
I know my favorite song is Bat Dance, but I don't know that I've ever seen the movie
for which it was written.
Wonderful song. By the Little Prince.
The Little Prince.
Yes.
Yeah, there's a scene in which Batman's alter ego is...
Batting man, do you mean?
I believe you're talking about The Bat Gentlemen.
Ah, yes.
The Bat Gentlemen is...
It is a daytime alter ego of Bruce Wayne.
I didn't know that.
He's on a date, a stay at home date with the reporter Vicki Vale.
Vicki Vale, Vicki, Vicki.
That's what that lyric in that song comes from.
Yes, indeed.
Vicki Vale, Vic, Vic, Vic, Vicki Vale.
The movie The Bat Gentlemen was inspired by the song Bat Dance.
I see. So, the little Prince wrote Batting Dance first.
Antoine de Salou's choir's Little Prince wrote the song Batting Dance.
I see.
It in turn spawned a motion picture franchise called The Bad Gentlemen.
Okay. Great. I'm on board.
Yes. Thank you, welcome aboard.
Thank you so much.
I christen thee, the good ship, conversation,
and God bless you and all who sail in you.
I'm just gonna take a nap in my room for 15 minutes
if that's okay before we.
Yes, I'll see you in eight bells.
I'll just kind of put away my luggage
and just kind of take a nap.
Just relax.
All right, thank you so much.
Make sure you check your room for bedbugs.
Oh really?
Is that a problem on the ship?
It's a problem on the high seas.
Hmm.
I didn't know that.
Nautical bedbugs.
You're not familiar?
Nautical bedbugs?
This is a problem.
I haven't heard of these at all.
Maritime bedbugs have been escourged upon sailors dating back to Sinbad.
And what would they do?
They would swim out from the shore and jump onto ships.
That's right.
And then, because they knew that the beds
were more comfortable.
There's a certain type of bedbug that's very adventurous.
It just can't stay still.
Can't be kept in a cage.
Can't be kept in a cage!
Needs to be out there on the wide open seas.
He feels as if there's something greater
than himself out there.
Sure.
And he's going to see it.
And there'll be no talking him out of it.
Oh, many a bedbug mother will weep on land watching her son swim out to a boat to make
people itch on the sea.
Too bad they have to live in the beds, because beds are usually in a room.
They can't be out, you know, with nothing above them.
Why can't they be tree bugs?
Ah, but it's right there in the name.
That's the problem.
Yes.
Do you feel that if you're a bed bug,
it's nature versus nurture?
I think, you know what,
I think there's an interesting children's book idea
that you and I should write,
and maybe our guest, whom we'll get to very soon,
he's a children's book author himself.
Why do you insist on having these guests?
You just want to talk, you and me, one of these days?
Well, you're close to what I'd like to do.
So you would just like to talk.
Well.
All right.
But I think there's a children's book in here
about the bedbug who didn't want to stay in the bed.
You know, like the adventurous bedbug who couldn't be confined to a bed. He wanted to, you know. What shall this bedbug who didn't want to stay in the bed. You know, like the adventurous bedbug
who couldn't be confined to a bed.
He wanted to, you know.
What shall this bedbug's name be?
Ah, I think that his name.
Hell, at the count of three.
Sure, we'll both say what.
Let's count down from five to one.
Okay.
And then we shall blurt out the name
that we both agree upon.
Okay, great.
Shall be the name of this adventurous bedbug.
So we'll count down five, four, three,
knows one.
Yes.
And then we'll say the three again.
Okay, great.
Five, four, three, knows one.
Hegemony!
I said hegemony.
You said Barnaby?
Yes.
Why did you think that we would say the same name?
I'm now realizing that there would be
practically no chance of that happening.
It's a God-old thing.
Don't you realize, in children's literature circles, alliteration is very important.
Ah, what was I thinking? And of course if his name has to start with a B, it's gonna be Barnaby,
because there's a B at the beginning and a B at the end.
Indeed.
Barnaby.
Barnab... no, he's not a B.
Yes, but his name starts with a bee and ends with a bee.
Barnab... B-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b To the day I die! When do you think that'll be? I know we'll get back to the Barnaby. Oh, I wish I didn't know.
You do know? Have you been talking to Cake Boss or what?
Who?
Never mind.
Of course I know who the Cake Boss is.
Boss of all cakes.
Are you joshing with me? Okay.
I'm jesting with you in a way.
Do you know, in England we have a history of court jesters.
They are the only ones forbidden to mock the royalty.
And in this realm, I suppose you are the royalty, much as it pains me to say so.
And may I humbly serve as your court jester?
Thank you so much.
You will, you fatuous idiot.
Classic jester.
Classic jester.
That's what they did. I was idiot. Oh, okay, well. Classic gistring. Classic gistring. I'm a little upset, but. Classic gistring.
All right, all right.
That's what they did.
So, Barnaby is a Christian.
Barnaby the Christian bedbug.
Yes, okay, great.
So his Christian name is Barnaby.
His surname or second name is bedbug.
Is bedbug.
It's also what he is.
Well, this is the tradition of names, isn't it?
Barna the bee bedbug.
If you were a miller, a brewer, a taxidermist,
these are all common last names that people have these days.
A Yankovick.
He was a vicar of Yanks.
He was an American clergyman.
Yes, of course.
Yes.
And of course, it becomes corrupted over time,
as it travels from England, as the Yankovics did.
Yes.
When they were Vicar Yanks.
And then they make their way to the New World.
And then it becomes corrupted and people just say Yankovic and then people get it wrong and call him Yankovitch.
Which is a huge problem.
Yes.
Oh, when people put extraneous H's in names, I'm not a fan.
Oh, no, no.
We're talking with Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Now you've done it!
And speaking of Yankovic, why don't we get to our guest?
Yes, let's leave all of those threads dangling.
What threads are we leaving?
And never return to them.
What are we leaving dangling?
That's for the listener to be frustrated by.
Yes.
Do they really need closure on this bedbug thing?
You'd be surprised.
I did want to hear you shout, because I was wondering if your voice would turn into a
cockney if you ever shouted.
Oh dear.
I wonder if it would.
That's terrifying.
Can we play act here and you shout something out, like pretend that we're across a parking
lot.
Yes, yes, yes.
Please do give me a scenario in which it would be necessary
to shout, now understand, I'm very rich,
and I'm a lord of the British Empire.
So shouting for me is very extreme.
So let me just think of something.
Okay, so we're out on the street,
we're in a parking lot, and I can see you
across the way of the parking lot, yes.
Is this some sort of post-apocalyptic dystopia?
Why are we out on the street?
Okay, okay, I'm sorry.
We're in a mansion.
Yes, go on.
Okay, and your manservant has taken ill.
My butler, my valet.
Both of them.
Who?
Who?
This is a post-apocalyptic dystopia.
An outbreak of the chickening pox.
And, uh...
Curse you chickens!
So...
I pox on you!
Ha ha ha ha!
You got him.
That's how you get him!
That, wow.
Trace the...
So, uh, uh, we are across the dining table from each other.
Yes!
You are at the head.
Like the Bat-Gentlemen.
Yes, you are at the head, I am at the foot. Much like the Batting-Gentlemen! A thread. Of course! You are at the head. Like the bad gentleman. Yes.
You are at the head, I am at the foot.
Much like the batting gentleman!
A thread.
Of course!
Let's wrap this up.
I am Vicky Vail.
Indeed.
You are the bad gentleman.
Oh, I'm the bad gentleman!
Yes, of course!
How exciting!
We're across a table from you, and I say past the salt.
I haven't seen the movie, but I'm imagining that's what it is.
Yeah, well, it's a sort of thing that if you don't have a full-time kitchen staff, you
may end up having to season
your own food.
Yes.
Some people do it. I personally don't subscribe to this method. I think people try to... They
think it's charming to season your own food.
Yes.
It's very common.
It's very, very common. And now we are across the table from each other and I say pass the
salt and you can't hear me. Yes. Let's see if you would shout. Okay. All right.
Pass the salt.
I'm sorry, do speak up.
Pass the salt.
I'm sorry, I cannot hear you. Can you hear me?
No, I can't hear you.
Speak up.
I'm sorry. Could you say, make your request a little louder, please?
Pass the song.
Just on the edge of my earring, I've never raised my voice quite this high before.
Uncharted territory.
Pass the song.
I can't hear you.
Pass the, pass the song.
Look, speak up love.
Whoa.
Oh no.
Oh my gosh.
That was terrible.
Oh.
I didn't. Oh heavens. Oh that was terrible! Oh! I didn't... Oh!
Heavens!
Oh!
That was like Eliza Doolittle there.
I don't care.
I don't care for that at all.
No, please.
Let's keep your voice down at all times.
Like I became a Mr. Hyde?
Ugh.
Have I done a Jacqueline Hyde musical?
Someone's done it.
You should do one, though.
I should have done it.
I believe it's happening right now, but I didn't do it.
Who did it?
It is out there.
I know Sebastian Bach.
Who out there?
Who dares?
Who dares to come up with the Jiggle and Hide musical before Andrew and Webber?
Are there musicals, and we'll get to our guests in a second, but are there musicals that you
want to get to that you've never gotten to?
We've talked about the Barenaked Ladies one.
Certainly Jack and the Beanstalk.
Oh yes, of course. So many songs while. Certainly Jack and the Beanstalk. Oh yes, of course.
So many songs while he's climbing up that Beanstalk.
It took him about three days, I believe, to climb all the way up.
He could sing probably fifty songs in that span of time.
It's a very tall Beanstalk.
Yeah.
It's a stalk of beans.
Of course, it's right there.
Um, let's see, what else?
Uh...
Uh... Uh...
MASH.
MASH?
Yeah, so what if we make a MASH musical?
MASH.
Hawkeye, BJ, Trapplejohn.
I'd have both the first season cast and the later season cast as well.
All of them in just one big melting pot there together.
Both Colonel Henry Blake and Sherman T. Potter.
But wasn't Sherman T. Potter the replacement for Blake?
Indeed, but the deceased Colonel Henry Blake who was shot down over the Sea of Japan, his
ghost would haunt Colonel Potter. You can never replace me, Sherman Potter.
You're placing your hand up against your face like it's the Phantom.
You can never replace me, I'm Henry Blaise.
You can't just put the Phantom mask into every musical.
Why can't I?
Who says?
Take it away from your face.
You'll never replace me, Sherbet Potter.
Now I'm sort of on board, actually.
Happy birthday to you.
Oh, those spinsters.
We're going to have to pay them.
Those misely old crones, mild-ridden Patty Hill!
Ah, I wish you wouldn't sing copywritten songs.
I do apologize.
Alright, we have to take a break before we get to our guest.
So sorry about that, but he's in the green room, anxiously awaiting to come out.
We must take a break if that's okay.
I'll allow it.
Alright, do you have any sort of jester-ish kind of thing to say to me before we go to
a break?
Uh, yes.
You look as if you have that acromagali disease.
Off with his head!
Wait, I'm the jester!
Oh, so sorry, so sorry.
It was cool.
Alright, let's take a break.
We'll be right back with Comedy Bang Bang and we have our main guest, Weird Al Yankovic,
coming up right after this! Bum-ba-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da won't get into that. No, heavens no. We have to get- Always going forward, don't you know? Yes.
We have to get to our guest.
Have to get to.
It is a privilege to.
Well, you're semi-unligated at this point.
I don't know.
I could just keep talking to Andrew Lloyd Webber and just make you watch for another half hour.
I can go back in the green room.
It's okay.
It's okay.
Weird Al Yankovic is here.
One of our favorite guests of all time.
Why, thank you, Scott.
Hurrah.
Oh, please.
Please. A round of applause for him.
Please sit down sir.
Weird Alan Yanks of you.
That was so nice of you to stand.
Yeah.
That's, here's American royalty as well.
It's the least I can do.
Do you hold some sort of a royalty title?
I am, you know, the vicar of Yanks back in the old country.
That's true.
So we have confirmation on, I know you weren't listening.
Are we talking about that earlier?
Yeah, we weren't. That's true. So we have confirmation on it. I know you weren't listening to the early part of the show. Are we talking about that earlier?
Yeah, we were.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Al, thank you so much for being here.
I have to guess is your fifth appearance on the show?
Let's go with fifth.
And you were on the TV show,
the last time we saw each other,
you were on the TV show last season,
the season finale.
Was that the last season?
I thought there'd be another one.
Well, of course, yeah, we're coming up on...
So it's not really the last season, is it?
I believe...
Okay.
It could be the penultimate season, we don't know.
It very well might be.
Vicka, he has trouble with the English language.
What he means to say is previous season.
Oh, now it makes sense.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You guys seem to speak the same language.
Well, yes, we're countrymen after the fashion.
That's right, that's right.
So what year did your family come over here?
Oh gosh, it was in the late 13th century, I think.
Oh my gosh, on some sort of Mayflower type ship?
On a raft, on a small raft.
On a small raft, all the way from England.
It was an accident, as I understand.
It wasn't intended, no.
Fairly accidental.
You just kind of meant to go out in a pond or something?
It was supposed to be a three hour tour.
And yet they wound up coming to America
centuries before it was, you know.
Steeper trucks of Hawaiian shirts.
They brought them right over, yes.
Really, so these are family heirlooms that you wear.
Yeah, they were, they float.
You know, Hawaiian shirts.
Of course.
It's a bit of it.
Not many people know that.
They're the one piece of clothing that floats?
That's why I always wear Hawaiian shirts on an airplane
because if we go down,
you don't have time for each other's life jacket.
I'm good.
So you only wear them on an airplane.
Pretty much only on airplanes.
You're about to catch a flight?
Yes, right after this podcast, I'm out the door, out to LAX.
I see.
Boy, a traveling guy, huh?
Yeah.
Always on the move.
A rambling man.
Yes.
Al, what have you been up to?
We haven't heard you on the podcast for a year.
It's a personal question, Scott.
It is, but I'm going to go there.
Oh.
What have I been up to?
Oh, gosh, I'm working on the new album.
I'm going on the road.
Yes!
I'm playing Bonnaroo this year.
That's gonna be fun.
Oh, so fun.
Now, Bonnaroo, I've heard of this.
This is where a bunch of people,
they stand around in the out of doors.
The Bonnaroovians you're talking about.
Yes, they're indulging in alcohol and drugs,
and they have a contest to see who can smell the most.
Who can smell the most?
What sense do you mean that in?
Who can give off the most pungent odor?
Oh, oh, oh, because I'm really good
at actually smelling the most in terms of like
guessing people's odors and what they had for lunch perhaps.
Now is that a skill or is that something
that is thrust upon you?
No, that was part of my DNA.
That was something that's been part of my family since the 13th century, pretty much.
Mm, so when they got on this raft, they were led by their smells to America, really?
In a way, because they sensed a new land out there, a land of opportunity.
They smelled it and they followed that scent.
I see. Interesting.
Follow your nose. Always good advice.
It always knows.
True.
Always.
Not always?
Always.
Oh, so.
That's Toucan logic.
OK.
Not always valid.
And we all know two.
Toucans.
Three of those make a six pack.
So now what I want to know, though, Al, is you're doing
Bon Run, you have a new album, and you this is when does the album the album come out you know it's on the
it's on the calendar I can't be held to this but sometime in the next 30 years
okay sometimes it's the last album on my contract and standard three-decade deal
yes the three-decade deal if you know by the time I'm 83 it hasn't come out yet
the record company is going to ask for money back back. They release you? Yes. I see. And this is the last of your contract with...
With Sony.
Sony!
Yes.
Oh, Sony. Such a difficult studio to get to in the middle of the day.
It is!
Have you talked to them about that?
You know, the traffic is just too heavy on Pico, so I have to...
It's just out there in Century City, the furthest point from anywhere on Earth, in the middle
of the day.
What is this, the Saturday Night Live sketch,
the Californians?
You big fan of the Californians.
If you turn right on La Fianega though,
on the way to the 45.
With Alan, what are you doing here?
Joyful sketch.
Just bring it up to them, that's all I ask.
I will.
Okay, thank you so much.
Like make that a negotiation point,
if you renew your contract.
Do you think you're going to renew your contract?
I'm guessing not.
I've been under a record contract since 1982.
Gosh.
It might be nice to breathe the fresh air for a while.
That's amazing.
A question, if you'll permit it, Vigga.
Do you do your own contractual negotiations?
Pretty much, yeah. We put the contract, we tape it on the wall, and we throw darts and figure out what parts we want to negotiate.
It's all very subjective and by chance. It's like a roulette wheel.
I don't think it's by chance, I think it's by divine intervention. I think God guides those darts to where...
You think so?
I do. I truly believe that.
I'm just being... There. Several schools of thought there.
Yeah.
This may seem like a trivial question,
but what type of tape do you use?
Do you use Scotts tape?
The Scotts tape.
Not masking tape.
Certainly not.
Take the fandom mask down.
No!
If you use half of the room.
Half a masking tape room.
I think the fandom is not half a role.
I think it is one of the greatest roles in the history of musical theater.
Homin' in Scottish, you've done it.
Thank you so much.
So, wow, it is amazing, if you'll permit me to swallow in the middle of that question.
Please, please do.
It is amazing, 31 years under contract at the same...
Indentured servitude.
Remember when Prince, the little Prince, he wrote slave all over his face?
Like, you ever feel like doing that?
That lasted a week, didn't it?
He used ash from the tiny volcano.
Remember how he changed his name to get out of his record contract?
I'm changing my name to an odor because I feel like since that's part of our family's,
you know...
Lineage, yeah. Lineage. Great lineage, I feel like that would be appropriate.
So what kind of odor would you be?
It's going to be a slightly lavenderish, slightly basil.
So a little mix of the two.
So if you ever smell that, then just, you'll know your records are around somewhere.
Now, Scotch, what sort of odor would you be if you were an odor?
Gosh, I mean, there's so many great odors out there in the world.
There's fresh-baked bread.
It's a good one.
You know?
I don't know that I could necessarily own that, like Prince owned that symbol.
I don't think that symbol existed before the little Prince actually...
No, he created it.
So I feel like we would have to create sense in order to...
Well, much like the vicar has done just now. Yeah.
With a basil and a lavender.
I believe it would be a lot like creating my own perfume,
where I just pour a little bit of this in,
pour a little bit of this. The Otterscott.
Yes, Otterscott, yes.
Otterscott.
And just pour a bunch of stuff into it,
and then create something new.
All the perfumes are all different, aren't they?
All of them.
Like snowflakes. Mm-hmm, yeah. No two perfumes are alike different aren't they all of them like snowflakes. Mm-hmm
Yeah, no two perfumes are like what if a perfume smelled like a snowflake? That's right
Because ice technically is odorless, but like a dirty
Snowflake yeah, very subtle. Yes and slash essence of snowflake. Yes. That's what I would that's that's what I would change
What do you call your scent dirty snowflake? Oh, I would
My name That's what I would change. What do I use? Would you call your scent Dirty Snowflake? Oh, I would. Oh. That's my online name. How did you know?
Oh, I've chatted with you.
That's my Words with Friends code.
Dirty Snowflake 27.
We should play Words with Friends, by the way.
I played with someone for a while, and she got...
I don't know, I don't want to go into it.
Oh.
Sounds fascinating.
Is it that Gillian Jacobs?
Yeah, Gillian Bellows Jacobs.
Do you know, I had a game of Words with friends going on with her for quite some time.
You did?
Wait, did she keep it going?
She did keep it going.
I tried to quit it a million times.
She kept her game going with you?
She said, please, please don't quit the game anymore.
You're the only person I want to play with. These other people people I keep having to quit games with them over and over and over.
Ah!
These foul idiots.
Foul? What is it because of the words? I wouldn't, I wouldn't...
Oh wait, oh! I feel I've said too much.
Yeah, I believe you have!
Oh no! I never put it together. Scotrick, please do forgive me. I hope I haven't hurt
your feelings. I mean, I haven't hurt your feelings.
I mean, you haven't hurt my feelings.
The situations hurt my feelings.
I don't blame people for relaying.
From the Jersey Shore.
Ha ha ha, homonyms.
But Al, 31 years, the history.
Oh, the history.
The Capitol Records building, I don't know.
Remember that?
You know, I mean.
Is it still there?
Maybe. The Thriller? Is it still there? Maybe.
The Victrola?
After the Apocalypse?
78 RPM? Remember that?
Listen Dog listening to music?
Remember all this stuff?
Remember my first 78 RPM record?
Gosh, so much history.
So Nathaniel King Cole.
That's right. The music industry in general just has so much history, and you're a part of that. It must feel amazing.
It's so nice to be a footnote in the Rolling Stone music guide.
No, you would be at least a mention.
A footnote and a mention.
A mention and then there would be a little number, a footnote next to it to explain who
you were.
Do you know what?
I've always wanted to get one of those little swords.
Oh!
To have that be the thing that makes people look you up
is the little tiny sword.
I wanna be a sword with the three notches,
so I would be the third time that they would,
it would be necessary to have a sword.
Yes, I don't wanna be an asterisk,
I wanna be a sword.
Yes, a sword.
Yes, of course.
You're talking about the sword, a sword cubed?
The little sword, and then it has like three notches on it,
as in this is the third sword on the page. Feel as if I haven't seen that one in quite a while yes yes thank you for that trip maybe that
maybe that'll be what i change my name to is that little sword with the three notches yes
it's going to wreak havoc with the publishing industry i wonder what that would smell like what
would it wreak of if it were a spell but Yes, Scott. So many hits.
So many, I can't even count them.
How many number, as if there were an infinite number.
How many number one hits have you had?
Number one, gosh, I can't even, zero.
Zero number one hits.
Actually, I can count them.
Not even in the- I thought I wouldn't be able to,
and yet I have.
Not even in the comedy charts.
Oh, on the comedy charts, yeah.
Does that count?
Nah, not really.
Not really.
But in the regular charts, what's the highest you went?
Oh, I had a couple of top 10s.
I think the last two albums went top 10.
The last two?
I mean, that's amazing to have your later records be the most popular records you've ever done.
It's slow build.
I didn't want to be the kind of artist that hits number ones right out of the box.
I wanted to wait 30, 40 years, have a slow build, a slow climb, and hit the top of the parabola.
And I think I'm gonna peak with my next album,
it's gonna be my best album.
And after that, the slow ride down the hill.
Slow decline as an independent artist.
I have a question for you.
Yes?
Do you feel as if your best work is yet to come?
It is, I'm doing it right now.
In this room.
What?
So they're not yet to come, but in the immediate future.
In the immediate future.
Which is the present.
Yes.
Now it's the present, now it's the present.
And you're blowing my mind.
Why did I eat that peyote button before coming into the podcast?
Oh my gosh, Mr. Weber, or Lord Weber.
Mr. Weber, Mr. Weber.
I'm not so high.
Mr. Weber is his father.
Mr. Webster.
I'm not so high that I can't detect that insult to my station.
How often do you get high, by the way?
Usually of an afternoon.
Every afternoon?
Yes, shortly after 4 PM.
Alan, I know you have younger listeners as well,
but how often have you been high, would you say?
I have never.
You've never been high?
No, I'm looking forward to it.
Not a single drug ever?
I haven't gotten around to it.
You and I have very...
Does Flintstones aspirin count? Mmm. Because I've had a couple of Barneys and a Betty once. What about drinking?
Have you ever like legitimately been drunk? Not legitimately, no. It's been very illegitimate.
Yes. Yes. Wasn't sanctioned by the council. I probably shouldn't say this, but on occasion
I have had the occasional blueberry daiquiri. Blueberry daiquiri, because you live in Hawaii sometimes.
Yeah, sometimes you have to do it.
Sure.
When you drink a blue drink, do you feel as if you're in the future?
I only order drinks by color.
I'm feeling kind of periwinkle today.
Make me something periwinkle.
Now this is what I'm talking about.
This is wealthy person's behavior.
This is how it is, Scotrick.
Maybe one day you'll do.
How wealthy are you?
It would blow your mind.
I honestly, you've had so many hit records in an era
where having hit records meant you were rich.
So I just can't imagine having that much money.
I was selling records in the day when people actually
bought records.
It's crazy.
I mean, I was thinking about this.
Remember the 90s when everyone had just to
buy one song, they would buy a person's record.
Remember that?
And they were all like $15.99.
Yes.
Looking back to it, how wealthy were you?
Well, I don't want to make you jealous, but I have actually two TV sets.
My goodness!
Yeah, thank you.
One for the living room.
And two separate houses.
And several houses.
How many houses do you own?
Four houses, but only two TV sets.
So sometimes the hard part is transporting the TVs to the houses as we need them.
Because it's not a carry-on. You have to check a television if you're flying on an aeroplane.
I always said a teleplane. Oh, I wish someone would invent one.
Oh my gosh, a teleplane. How amazing would that be just teleport the most amazing
You would have to walk into a plane like structure exactly. That's right
But then once you sat down sit down buckle up waited for 20 minutes while they closed the doors stupid announcements
Turn off everything. Yeah, and then boom you're teleported people to get yelled at for not turning off the telephones
Yes, of course, and then you would have to go through security
for a good two hour period.
Remove your shoes.
Yes, and they would some hats.
Topping hats.
Medals.
They would some medals, really.
You have to remove your medals.
I never thought about that.
Would you credit it?
They asked me to remove my medal
when I go through the metal detector.
And what I tried to explain to them is,
it's not that type of metal, darling. It's not a medal detector. It's a metal detector. And what I try to explain to them is, it's not that type of metal, darling.
It's not a metal detector.
It's a metal detector.
It shouldn't meddle with you.
Exactly, oh homonyms!
We're doing it!
Homonyms!
We are doing it!
Al, what can we expect on the new album?
I know you like to keep it-
You should not expect anything.
Songs?
What can't we expect?
I want you to have extremely low expectations.
I want you to think that it's just going to be horrible.
Unfortunately, I cannot accommodate you in that regard.
In fact, don't even expect there to be songs on the next album.
I expect it to be like a Marcel Marceau record, just like nothing but silence.
And that way, when you put it on and you hear the greatest thing
you've ever heard in your life, your mind will be blown.
Vigga, what should we not expect?
Great question. Great question for the LW.
It's very meta.
You should not expect the soundtrack to your next musical because that would be a copyright
infringement.
What if you guys work together?
Oh gosh, I would love that.
Well we've talked about a collab-o for quite some time.
It's just scheduling is a problem.
Really because there's no one to do it?
He's constantly shuttling his televisions back and forth between all of his four houses.
You know, a lot of people will be upset with me working with you because they're still upset
about that sacrilegious musical that you did where you took the Lord's name in vain.
Exactly.
Jesus Christ, superstar.
I wish people would understand it's a problem of punctuation.
That comma was never supposed to be in there.
And for 40 years, that comma has resided in that title.
Why?
Why did they send it to be proofread?
Why?
That's the one step that's the one thing you should do.
Why did they do it?
Cool.
Can you believe it?
Oh, no.
Lord Webber, please.
That plane needed a mask, I think.
That would have saved it.
Can you imagine if an airplane had a giant half mask?
Oh my God.
A teleplane.
A nose cone.
A teleplane.
A teleplane!
But if they build a teleplane,
they have to have a half mask.
Fly upon me, I'll transport you to where you wish to be.
Starlight Express 2 Teleplane.
It's all actors in plane costumes.
And they're wearing cross-country skis.
Yeah.
That's right.
I hate to break it.
This is like my last Southwest flight.
They did the whole thing with that costumes and everything.
Wow.
It was kind of irritating at the time,
but now I see that it's got some potential.
Do you know, I find those people on Southwest, the employees, they're very funny.
Aren't they?
They're very funny.
I love the parodies.
Some of them could be professional comedians.
Yes.
In my opinion.
Is there such a thing?
I don't know.
Professional comedians?
I've tried to be one.
Oh, but no one gives you money for that.
What about being a jester though?
It's very similar.
Oh, that's different.
You're a jester.
You're paid in, first of all, not being executed.
Sure.
That's payment.
You get to live in a castle.
Yes, it's a bit of a reward in itself.
You're exempt from execution.
You don't have to live in a dirt hut.
You don't have to live in a dirt hut.
You're free to if you like, but who would like?
You get mutton, I would imagine, free mutton.
All the mutton you can eat with your hands. Mead.
No utensils though.
I'm a mutton for mutton.
You wipe your hands on a passing dog.
They're very handy.
That's why they had dogs in the castle.
Why would you want to have a dog other than that?
Exactly.
I knew they didn't have utensils,
but I didn't know they didn't have napkins
or any kind of cloth.
No, no, no, they would eat with their hands, you see.
And then they would just wipe their greasy fingers
on a wiping dog.
Shh, shh, shh, shh.
Well, Al, we're gonna talk to you a little more
when we come back.
Why?
But we do have to take a break.
Come on.
We do have to take a break.
Let's take another break.
When we come back, we'll have more with Al.
Time to pay the piper.
The bills, the bills.
Do you have the skills to do so?
The piper pays the bills, actually these are in an intermediary in that risk
regard
steps
Let's come back. We'll be right back with more comedy bang bang after this
Comedy bang bang we are back with al yankovic weirdo you do you prefer to be called weirdo
I prefer to be called al Yankovic Sir.
Al Yankovic Sir.
With a comma or sans?
Vicar of Yanks.
Al Yankovic comma superstar.
Let's not be sacrilegious.
I gotta know, is there one song
that you've already released that's gonna be on this app?
No!
No scope.
On the last time around, I did this internet leaks thing where I...
How did that work out?
Eeeeee!
Pros and cons!
It got Grammy nominated, but by the time my actual album came out, people were saying,
oh, we've already heard half this album!
And they didn't buy the album in droves.
So I figured this time, let's not give away half the album beforehand.
I say, as a bit of a tease, would you be willing to hum six notes from one of your upcoming
songs?
Yes, I will do that.
These are not consecutive notes, but here are the notes.
Oh, even trickier.
Oh!
Mmm.
Mmm.
Mmm.
How many was that?
Five I think.
There we go.
I believe one of those notes was the same, just an octave separating.
Well I consider that different notes.
Will you swear to Jesus Christ the superstar himself that those notes will appear on the
upcoming album?
I don't swear on the radio.
They have to appear?
Does this radio count?
No.
Oh my heavens no.
Remember the radio.
That's part of music history.
Remember terrestrial radio.
Terrestrial radio.
Who are those things?
Remember Kevin and Bean.
Do you remember? Speaking? Terrestrial Radio. Who are those things? Remember Kevin and Bean.
Do you remember?
Speaking of terrestrials, do you remember E.T.,
the additional terrestrial?
Oh my goodness, he was an amazing terrestrial.
Yes, but he was extra.
He was one of the best though.
I even need him.
Additional terrestrial.
If you get an E.T., you have to include him,
even though he's extra,
because he's just that good at being a charastral.
By the way, the extras, that's where they get you.
Oh my goodness, Ron Sexsmith, by the way,
another musician, he was in here the other day,
had never eaten a Reese's piece.
What?
And he'd eaten one right before the show.
Was he freaking out?
He had not, I was like, and he was like, are these new?
Did you put them on the ground and have them follow you across the studio?
I'm trying to do his sort of, it sounds to me like country, but I know he's from Canada,
but I'm trying to do his sort of unassuming voice, but he was kind of like, oh yeah, these
things are pretty good.
Are these new?
Are these Reese's Pieces?
I'm like, from E.T.?
The movie E.T.?
He was like, huh, yeah, I just kind of stayed away from them because I don't like peanut
butter, but I'm like, you don't like peanut butter but I'm like you don't like peanut butter
and yet peanut butter? You bought them? Like his story was just full of contradictions.
Sounds like a madman. Now you know his surname very interesting if you go back to the old country.
Yeah but yeah to find something that late in life though that you that you all
the sudden enjoy you know what I mean?
I wish.
I wish I had something in the way
that Ron Sexsmith had Reese's Pieces.
I wish I could eat my first Reese's Piece all over again.
I say, Vicar, what if we were to undergo hypnotherapy,
erase the memory of Reese's Pieces,
and then find them at a store, a little corner shop?
I say, what are these?
Are they brand new?
What day is it?
You there, boy.
I'm afraid if you were to undergo hypnotherapy, Lord Webber,
that all of a sudden Mike the janitor
would come around again.
Who's that?
Never mind, never mind.
Is there something, Al, that you have never done?
Yes.
I mean, we talked about drugs.
Do you ever see yourself actually doing it or is it just
kind of like, you know, when I did that Analyze Fish episode, I don't know if you know about it,
but I went to Madison Square Garden and took a bunch of drugs. I'd never done these drugs,
but I'd never done ecstasy or anything like that, and I did them and there was that fear of just
like, I'm an old man. Is this the way I die? You know what I mean?
So do you ever see yourself like one day just going,
you know what, I just, you know, let's try mushrooms.
One of these days, when I'm in my late 80s, I think.
When you're out of the public eye.
When no one's judging you.
I don't want to be a role model.
I don't want to be held up to criticism.
I don't want the TMZ bus driving by
and seeing me tripping on LSD.
But yeah, I want to admit, late 80s I'm thinking, I'm going to try it all.
Do you think it's because, have you not, I mean, I know you had a very strict upbringing
like myself. Do you think it's just, was it just say no, Nancy Reagan? Did that prevent
or just, well, why do you think that you never experimented with it?
I think my folks probably scared me out of it, because they went through the nightly routine of
swear, swear, you will never do this!
Swear on the Jesus Christ superstar.
Shh, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
I do love ceremonies.
When parents have a do-do-drug ceremony,
a nightly ritual.
Put on the robes in the wigs of office.
I think that everyone makes fun of just say no
than it's a naked thing.
I know I do
Constantly it's kind of drag hanging out with you. It should be just say no. Thank you I think I think yeah, it's more of a problem than drugs calls
Nothing matters cost of nothing they gain you all but everyone makes fun of it
But I think it actually worked in my case like you know what I mean that Nancy saved you from a life
I think so because like I grew up just going with smoking is to anytime I see I see people
smoking by the way I just am like why is this I say cracking is whacking and whacking is
cracking yeah.
Oh but it's a converse is true.
That's it again.
All right I'll get off this this tactic I'm just fascinated.
I say though with the Just Say No campaign which I have mocked mercilessly as everyone knows,
it's the subtext of many of my songs. If not outright text.
That song that you sing about just say no was stupid.
They never, they never, just say no. How could you come up with such a stupid thing to say?
They never dealt with the idea of follow-up questions.
So the idea being someone says, would you like to try some marijuana cigarettes?
No.
No.
Are you sure?
Okay.
Yes, exactly.
That's how easily it crumbles.
In many cultures, you have to ask three times.
It's not polite to accept the first two.
Yes, of course. This is the way it is.
In America they wouldn't know about such things.
No, would you like some drugs?
No.
Would you like some drugs?
No.
Would you like some drugs?
Of course.
You refused twice on the third time you were sent.
Yes.
Only polite.
What was the first time you've ever taken drugs, Sir Andrew Lorde?
I'm so sorry.
Oh my heavens.
I wish I was on drugs right now.
I thought that you ate that blackout
It doesn't have the same effect on me as it used to you know
Yeah, how many years have you been doing that I've been doing a peyote for about let's see you're 80 years old now
I believe
No, I beg your pardon. I'm sorry. I'm just guessing. What am I Gary Marshall?
80 years old do you view him as like he's a guy who could have been your father probably?
I wish I could say I was that young.
I mean, he was from his family dated back to England from the Marshall clan, the lawmakers.
That's right.
Who'd be constantly rounding up criminals.
Yes, they were sort of the sheriffs.
The sheriff of Nottingham, I believe, was a descendant.
I believe his is a false surname.
What?
Yes, I believe he changed it himself, like a, like a, like a, like a, like a.
Because he's Jewish, isn't he?
I don't believe so.
I think he's Jewish and says he's Italian.
Much like the Fonz.
You seem...
I've heard you speak of this before.
I feel like you're on some sort of crusade.
I just don't like it.
It's very sad, your obsession with it.
I just don't like the idea that you should change your very lineage in order to just
seem like a tough Italian because Italians were in vogue in the 70s.
I just don't like it. Were they really? They were. lineage in order to just seem like a tough Italian because Italians were in vogue in the 70s.
I just don't like it.
Were they really?
They were.
I mean Saturday Night Fever, Danny Terrio.
Goin' Bananas with Tony Danza.
You know?
Like all these tough-
Danny DeVito.
All these tough-talking Italians, you know?
I just don't like the idea of it, you know?
Why is that?
I don't know.
I think you should be proud of who you are, you know?
I mean, we have the Earl of Yanks over here.
Vicar of Yanks.
Sorry.
What's wrong with your Swiss cheese memory?
My reference-ometer is off just a little bit.
It certainly is.
Usually you're like a steel trap with these things.
I am, I am.
I am, I am.
What were you talking about?
Drugs.
Drugs, yeah.
Oh yes, I've been taking peyote for about four decades.
Four decades?
Yes.
What was the first time?
I think... Burning Man? Probably at Burning decades. Four decades? Yes. What was the first time?
I think...
Burning Man?
Probably at Burning Man, my first Burning Man, yes.
How many Burning Man?
I went to the Burning Gentlemen,
I think, for the first time when I was 21 years old.
Ah, boy.
And someone offered me peyote, of course I did.
Was this the festival or was this the self-immolation guy?
Oh, this was just a fellow, yes,
it was a fellow from the neighborhood.
Ah, yes.
Yes.
It was known that he had drugs to sell.
Yes.
So we'd go around to the burning gentleman
and we'd say,
Oi, are you home in there?
Oi, really?
Well, when in Rome.
You didn't want him to know of your status
because then he would alert the papers.
We could hear him inside saying,
I'm burning to death, please call the fire brigade.
And you were like, oy.
This is code.
So in case the coppers are about.
Sure.
We don't want a bobby showing up and arresting us, clapping us in the bring.
Not a time bobby either.
Certainly not.
So I'd ask, I beg your pardon, do you have any drugs for sale?
He would of course say no. I would say, I'll ask you, do you have any drugs for sale? He would of course say no.
I would say, I'll ask you again, have you any drugs for purchase?
He would say no.
I certainly do not.
I would say, by the holy compact of asking three times, I abjure thee, have you drugs
for sale?
And he would of course be forced to say, yes, what would you like?
Oh man.
He was so composed for being on fire too, that's amazing. Yeah, well he was used to it. And he would of course be forced to say, yes, what would you like? Oh man.
He was so composed for being on fire too. That's amazing.
Yeah, well he was used to it. He was used to it.
I don't know. He accidentally sets himself afire.
You'd think he'd rush through it or maybe agree on the second time.
But no, a true gentleman.
Well, there's a true gentleman indeed. A burning gentleman is still a gentleman.
Yes.
What a long strange trip it's been then.
Yes. Tracking.
You ever followed the Grateful Dead around? No, they followed me Yes. What a long, strange trip it's been, then. Yes. Tracking.
You ever followed the Grateful Dead around?
No, they followed me around.
What?
Yes.
Who does the Grateful Dead follow?
Here's what people don't know.
It starts with me.
I'm traveling all over the place, sometimes shuttling televisions from one castle to the
next.
The Grateful Dead, they're on my trail.
They're trying to make me try marijuana, which I've never tried.
It seems like a very common drug.
The Deadheads, they're following the Grateful Dead.
They have no idea they're also following Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Whenceforth follows, whereforth follows the followees?
How soforth follows those who doth follow he who doth not follow but lead.
They thought they were Deadheads, but they were web heads.
Indeed, like Spider-Man, the Spider-Gentleman.
Turn off the dark.
And who are you following?
If you're at the head of this caravan, who are you following?
I follow my mistress and muse.
Music.
I thought you were talking about Sarah Brightman. Ever shall I chase thee from shire to shire, from town to town, from a village to a cloud.
What?
Are you doing Hobbit musical?
It was a Hobbit musical.
It was 48 frames a second, I could tell, that was great.
How did you do that?
Do you think we'll ever have 49 frames a second?
I don't think our brains could handle that.
No, no.
How, what's Sarah Brightman up to?
Oh Sarah, my beloved Sarah.
She's well from what I understand.
We don't speak directly anymore.
Don't you have children together?
We do.
We relay messages through them.
That's not the way to act as a parent.
Well, you understand the children are all their fifties.
Oh, okay. But still.
It's still gotta hurt.
We're in our sixties, the children are in their fifties.
Everyone's around the same age.
Well, you guys adopted, we all know that.
That's right.
You want friends more than children.
That's right, and that's what we got. They're a wonderful bunch.
I adore them.
Do you call them the wonderful bunch?
Yes.
Lord ALW's wonderful bunch.
When I need them, I'll shine a signal up in the sky.
Wonderful bunch assemble.
I've never understood that.
And you never will.
Because from what I understand, the batting gentleman, he's called by shining a light
into the sky.
Yes.
How does he... This is a four-text. How could you shine a light into the sky. Yes. How does he...
This is a vortex.
How could you shine a light into the sky?
This is of course pretextual message.
Pretextual.
That's assuming that there are clouds that it could bounce or reflect off of.
I mean, most of the house...
Scaltrick, you live here in Hollywood, California.
Sure.
Don't you ever see those searchlights?
The Cleags.
The Cleaglides.
Sure, but they're not projecting things upon the sky.
If we could project things upon the sky, everyone would do that.
I think they use comic book technology.
I think sky writing is a much better way to get a hold of the planet.
Oh, I see.
If you need the Batting Gentlemen, you would just hire one of those little planes to go
over the sky.
But what about at night?
When all the evil occurs.
Yes, that's when they need him the most, don't they?
Yes, you're right.
Your plan is flawed, Scott.
The Batting Gentleman is a nocturnal superhero.
Do you think in the Batting Gentleman 60s TV show,
they invented the red hotline phone
because they didn't want to pay for a big spotlight?
Probably.
They were notorious and cheap.
What happens if they need the bat during the day?
Do they ever think that far in advance?
Seemed to me like during that show
that he was always called during the day
because it's just cheaper to shoot during the day.
Yes.
Like most of his capers took place during the day.
Don't you think?
You always would see that batting mobile
come zooming out of the garage during the day.
So they signal him at night
and then he waits till the daytime
where it's cheaper to shoot.
Sure, yeah.
Well he's up at night.
To solve the crime. The television Gotham City had a much more active crime rate till the daytime where it is cheaper to shoot. Sure. Well, he's up to solve the crime.
The television Gotham City had a much more active crime rate during the daytime.
The motion picture Gotham.
It seems as if the criminals and the batting gentlemen have a sort of gentlemen's agreement.
We will only commit crimes.
This is all of them, because Vigilanteism is also a crime.
We will only commit our respective crimes past.
Six spells?
Past sundown.
Yes.
Let's call it 7pm of an evening.
That is when the crime lamp is lit.
Only when it can be noir.
Indeed, indeed.
French for night.
And thank you so
much for admitting that Vigilanteism is a crime. I mean a lot of people won't. If I
may Scotrick and Vicar. I will allow it. Take up a moment of the podcastual time. But watch
yourself counselling. Law plus order. If I may address any Vigilantes out there right
now. Please, the police and other law enforcement officials
are in place to do their jobs
and keep us together as a society.
I urge you, hang up your capes and cowls
and stop this Vigilante madness.
Frankly, when I watch the Batting Man movies,
I don't know who to root for
because they're all criminals on the train.
This is exactly it, Vicka, they're all criminals.
I root for that fat cop.
Me too. Bullock. Yes, Henry Bullock. I hope that he loses weight. He's the hero. I root for that fat cop. Me too.
Bullock.
Yes, Henry Bullock.
I hope that he loses weight.
He's the hero.
I'm rooting for him to go on The Biggest Loser.
Why don't they get more fictional people on that show?
That's true.
Then Cake Boss could talk to them.
Cake Boss.
Do you remember when the Family Feud had superheroes play against each other?
I don't.
Yes, they had the Justice League of America play against some other people.
Marvel?
I think I get some villains.
Oh, so the Justice DC villains versus the heroes?
Yes, yes, yes.
Oh man, I wish I could see that.
I wonder if this really happened or if it's a paediatric hallucination.
Of which you were about to base a musical upon.
Paediatric. Alright, tell you what guys, let's take a look. Reduced hallucination. Of which you are about to base a musical upon. Bidira.
All right, tell you what, guys.
Let's take a head.
Turn on the crime lamp, it's called.
Top 10 answers on the board.
That's a song for you right there.
The survey stage.
We have to take a break.
Let's take one last break.
When we come back, we will play a little game.
We'll be right back after this. Do do do do back with Viagra I thought you shouted Viagra no
but you know what I've never you know who's never fought for my thoughts is
that Viagra band music they make oh you're not familiar with them you've never seen the adverts from the adverts yes the Viagra band. I love the music they make. Oh, you're not familiar with them? No.
You've never seen the Viagra commercial?
From the adverts?
Yes.
The Viagra band.
It's a bunch of spellers.
They sing, it's a very clever parody of Viva Las Vegas called Viva Viagra.
Oh, I see what they did there.
It's a bunch of middle-aged men.
They're very excited they can have erections.
Thanks to science.
Al, do you just turn off commercials, Viagra commercials, in particular when you see them?
Or you...
I just, you know, I know this is crazy, but I actually fast forward through commercials,
so I've never seen a commercial.
That's crazy!
I don't like it.
A lot of your early work referenced a lot of commercials, and now you're not watching.
I was just guessing. I was just assuming Mr. Popeal?
I know really Mr. Popeal. Does he sell things? I just know I used to date his daughter.
Do you have a ghostwriter?
I said writer by the way not the ghostwriter
No, no, although Nicholas Cage actually has been a lot
In that film the ghostwriter. Yes. Did he ever ghost ride the whip?
Interesting.
That would have been a fun thing for him to do.
It would have been really interesting.
The whip?
Yes, you're not familiar with the phrase ghost ride the whip.
I guess not.
I believe it's your automobile is in motion.
Yes.
And then at some point you climb out of the driver's seat and you get on top of the automobile.
Who hasn't done that?
And that's called ghost riding the automobile. Who hasn't done that?
And that's called Ghost Riding the Whip.
I didn't know what it was called!
Well, of course I have.
It has a name, yes.
Yes.
This thing you've been doing all along.
Ghost Riding the Whip?
You didn't know what to call it, yes.
Well, we could talk about this literally all day.
I would be entirely wrong.
But it's time to play a little something we call Would You Rather?
Okay.
Please, Vicar.
Louis speaking. Have some respect plays.] Please, Vicar.
We're speaking.
Have some respect. Thank you, Luke Webber.
Thank you.
Vicar, please.
I understand.
As we are abolishing you,
we are technically speaking during the theme song,
but it doesn't count quite as much.
Vicar, please.
All right, it's time to-
Went back for it.
I know. I wanted to say it with
the proper intonation. Certainly. It was just gnawing at my brain of like, I really want to say it
within that cadence. I'm sure the audience was crying out for it to be done. Well, I'm sure they
were doing it at home. Like the minute I said it, they said it, so I just wanted to- Well, they would,
dear boy. Alright, it's time to play Would You Rather? And, yes.
And here we go. Yes, and here we go.
How do you play this game, Scott?
Oh, that's right.
Well, people send me Would You Rather scenarios
to our Twitter, which is at CBBWYR, comedybangbang,
or bing bong, would you rather.
And I then read them out loud.
You're free to ask any question about any of the,
either of the scenarios, as a matter of fact, that you like.
Could the CBB also stand for comedy beanbag?
It could.
I want to start selling comedy beanbags.
Bing bong beanbags.
Bing bong beanbags.
Bing bong, you've been beanbagged.
If you can say it, I will give you one.
If you can say it, I will spray it.
I also want the news, not the weather.
All right, so you're free to ask me about either scenario,
any question you like in order to help narrow down
your choice.
I will at a certain point open the floor for questions
and then you can ask the questions.
But not before.
Seems fair.
At a certain point I will close the floor for questions.
There will be no warning regarding this.
You will not say in about 60 seconds, I'm going to close the floor for questions. There will be no warning regarding this. You will not say
in about 60 seconds I am going to close the floor. No! Out of nowhere. I
suppose technically this is a warning that it is going to happen. This is the
only warning we get. Okay so there is a warning. There is one warning. And this is
it. This is it. We're in the midst of it right now. We're in the midst of a long warning regarding the fact that there will be no more warnings after
this one. So when you're saying there was no warning, that was a fallacy. A bit of a
fib, white lie. It's like a white lie. But you are saying, but all cleverness aside,
you are saying when the floor is closed for questions, it will be as if a chandelier has
fallen upon us. Out of nowhere. Can I ask one question? Yes. After the floor has been
closed for questions could I just ask one more question? No! And in fact you're
asking me a question before the floor is open for questions which I you know
you're on my last nerve Al. Vicar please. If I do a switch on based on vicar please do you get royaltiesalties now? I do, I get royalties on anything talked about on the...
You're overlooking the fact that Vicar Please has been running in the UK for about 25 years.
Because with the American version.
It's the most popular.
With Steve Carell.
That's right.
Is that what that phrase that we say in America is based on?
Yes, that's right.
It's a parody of that?
Yes, yes, yes.
I never knew that was a parody.
Speaking of parody, oh, Yankovick is here.
Hi, Scott. And, alright, this question comes to us
from Randy Miller, Randy underscore Miller on Twitter. He asks, would you rather be able to
talk to animals, but they're all sarcastic jerks, or have pockets that are always full of pennies?
Interesting question from an interesting Twitter person.
I can't wait until the floor is open.
I can't wait.
Oh my, I can't wait.
Neither can I, quite frankly.
Much to think about.
A lot to think about and have to digest.
Yes.
Let's take a mo.
All right.
A half a mo?
Take a half mo.
A quarter mo.
Take a haymo. Haymo. And if you mo? Take a half mo. Fort a mo.
Take a haymo.
Haymo.
And if you haven't got a haymo, God bless you.
No haymo.
Yes, yes.
No, or this is really our finest work.
Can I just say that little eight second chunk?
What I love is we're just saying things.
If you want to know what this podcast is about, that eight seconds will tell you everything.
Yes, everyone takes a turn just saying things that come into their brains.
The end.
Subscribe.
The floor is open.
I have a question.
Yes.
Lord ALW.
In the scenario where I can talk to the animals?
You are able to talk to animals. Oh, right. I guess we are all able to talk. Yes exactly
But they are sarcastic jerks. What yes, but they can they reply in English
Do I understand what they are saying what what he means is and I know what he means. I know what he means, which is that they reply not in English,
but they reply in barks or in lizard tongues going out. In their native language. In their native
language. But you can tell they're being sarcastic. But you can process it almost as if you had a
babblefish in your ear, and you are able to hear it in English. No, no one else can hear.
Well, Dr. Doolittle from the Dr. Doolittle franchise. So in this scenario, he's a real person.
He's a real person. He's around and your best friend. Now, you have a lot to talk about. Is
he a medical doctor? No, he's a he's much like Bill Cosby. That's Charlotte Jones Wenders. The Dr. William H. Cosby? Yeah, that guy.
All animals are sarcastic jerks.
Yes, which we, the rest of us do not know, but they are sarcastic jerks, yeah.
Are any of them funny?
They can be funny.
Do I enjoy it, is what I'm asking.
Is there ever a case in which, say this particular hedgehog, when he does it, it actually makes
me smile a bit.
I think there's one or two of them that you enjoy, because one or two of them have, you
know, the Babblefish translates their voice and you hear it as kind of like a, you know,
like a Roseanne type, you know, sarcastic and and but it makes you laugh because it's like that voice
Roseanne type. May I ask this question? Yes, of course. In this scenario are human beings capable of sarcasm?
Great question. This is why we play the game. No, there is no sarcasm in this scenario other than with animals
Yes, and so so sorry If that is the case,
Andrew Lloyd Webber got in before you.
Lord's before Vickers.
If that is the case,
does the sarcasm of these animals hurt my feelings?
It's so refreshing because there is none in the world,
and you are actually the one person who goes around
trying to tell everyone in the world about sarcasm, like,
there's this funny thing, I say something but I don't mean it, and I say it in a voice and with a look and a little glint in my eye that makes me funny,
and no one knows what you're talking about.
Is that more irony or sarcasm, though?
Great question.
I say, are these animals of this particular universe the jesters of that world, because only they are permitted
the sarcasm.
I didn't want to say it, but yes, they are the jesters of this world.
And you are not able, and in fact forbidden, from chopping off any of their heads.
Now, I feel I'm being a bit of a question hog, and this is unprecedented, but I will
allow a mo- I'll take a breather and allow the vicar to ask any questions.
Allow the vicar a hamo.
May I flip it a little bit and ask about the pennies?
Flip the script!
Let me flip the script.
Of course.
Now the pennies.
Yes.
Remind me again about the pennies.
What they are.
Are they small copper things?
It's a small copper thing that we use to buy candy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They were introduced because there was a candy surplus in America.
And so they wanted to give away this candy, but they didn't really want to give it away.
Did they sell whistles as well?
They also, there was a whistle surplus.
And so they had these two things, candy and whistles, and they were like, well, we don't
want to just give it to people.
So they created a small copper coin that people would trade for candy and whistles.
Now, these pennies, would they be 1909 Indian head pennies
worth considerably more than their face value?
They all are a 1909 Indian head penny.
Yes, is that a D as well?
Does it have a D?
It's an S, I think.
An S, yes, an Indian head S.
They are all for Saskatchewan, actually minted in Canada,
which makes them even more valuable.
Yes, they are all this penny.
So you are...
I wasn't quite finished answering.
I know, but I'm under the gun here.
I'll allow it.
Thank you.
Shall I watch myself?
Watch yourself, Kessler.
Yes, these pennies, when you say my pockets are full of pennies always.
Yes.
Yes.
How big or small are my pockets?
You wear skinny jeans everywhere you go.
Ooh, I like the sound of this.
So...
Am I quitesveled?
No.
Oh.
I like the sound of this considerably less.
So sorry.
You are your proper size.
Does the program What Not to Wear exist in this scenario? That tells people wear clothes that fit with the eight-sided mirror
Yes, yes, it does exist and so I do not heed the advice of what not to wear
You are not allowed on it because you had a fight with the producer. Oh, I see. Yes
Were we friends you were the best of friends and now?
And now dr. Doolittle has come and really created a rift between you two.
In this scenario as well?
In this scenario, Dr. Dolittle has come as well.
Curse that dementia-hopping charlatan!
So, the pockets, not much room in these skinny jeans pockets.
Not a lot of room, but enough room for about eight pennies.
Oh, I see.
Eight pennies per pocket.
But you keep refilling them.
As soon as you empty your pocket,
eight more will magically appear.
Eight PPP.
Oh, I have a perhaps, peyote infused question.
Sure, let's hear it.
Do pennies in this reality weigh as much as they do
in our current reality?
Excellent.
No, they do not.
They're considerably heavier.
As I feared, the density of these berries is perhaps too much for the human body to bear.
Yes, you are constantly having to crawl everywhere you go because the pennies are so heavy.
In addition to my presumed palm and knee issues, do I also have back problems?
You have no back problems.
Who?
Uh, you, uh, that is the one good thing about this scenario. Oh, I see. Yes, you You have no back problems. Who?
That is the one good thing about this scenario. Oh, I see.
Yes, you have an entirely clear back.
Oh, that's jolly good.
Yes, so if you have back problems where you are right now,
maybe that appeals to you.
You have knee problems since you're crawling.
Incredible knee problems.
Oh.
This is why I presumed them, Vigga.
That would be the downside, yes.
Yes.
Any other questions before I close the floor?
And let me just remind you.
Oh, that was a warning!
What? Was that a warning?
I think that was a warning.
I don't think that that constitutes as a warning. Was that a warning? I think that was a warning.
I don't think that that constitutes as a warning.
The chandelier is getting a bit shaky up there.
Oh no.
All right.
Any more questions?
No.
I have a question.
Yes, sir.
You've made a liar of me.
By the compact of any more questions, you are required to say, I have a question.
Indeed.
I wish I could fight it.
Yes, Dr. Dolittle.
Yes.
Was a merry old soul.
And a merry old soul was he?
Certainly.
No further questions?
All right.
I'm about to close the floor for questions.
Oh no!
I may do it very soon.
I might do it right about now.
I've closed the floor for questions!
And as I said, there was no warning.
I've got one more question.
Oh, a classic would you rather blunder.
But go ahead, I would like to.
Oh, oh!
Unprecedented!
I was just testing your verisimilitude.
No, no, no, no, no, I want to hear this question.
No?
I will have to dock you points.
That was a ruse, Scott.
I will have to dock you ruse points.
Okay, okay.
All right.
We all know that there are ruse points.
Okay.
Yes, everyone knows this.
What color are the pants?
Mustard yellow. Okay. All right everyone knows this. What color are the pants?
Mustard yellow. Okay.
All right, I've closed the floor for questions.
Here we go.
We're gonna vote now.
In your minds, figure out exactly how you're gonna vote.
Have you mulled over it enough to vote?
Mm, like a strong wine.
Like a strong wine.
You'd know about that more than anyone.
Pfft.
Hehehehehe.
Here we go.
All right, Al, how do you like to vote?
I'd like to vote correctly
because I do not want to give the incorrect answer.
Very good, very good.
So, and I believe the correct answer
would be the sarcastic animals
because I see no pro-side to the penny scenario.
I don't-
The rich, the wealth, you know,
it just wouldn't be worth it, you know,
life is short and I don't wanna be crawling around
on my knees when I have knee problems
already for crying out loud,
when I have to wear mustard yellow pants
that are skinny jeans, ah!
And then if I wanna buy a magazine at 7-Eleven,
I have to pay eight pennies at a time,
be there all day.
So I think I enjoy.
You'd also have to find like a coin collector all the time
and have them on speed dial.
There is no upside to this.
Plus with so many of those, that particular penny,
I mean, it's worth so much because there are so few of them.
But they're minted in Saskatchewan.
And now there would be so many of them
because the more you use them,
the more you're creating them.
The more you use them, they just become worthless.
Exactly.
Over time.
And I think I would come to appreciate sarcastic animals.
I think I would enjoy understanding what animals said.
Especially one that talked like Roseanne, like, hey, ow!
Yeah, and I don't think they'd be hateful.
I think I enjoy a little self-deprecation.
Was that Decaval?
You know?
So I'd be okay with that.
I would be fine with some mercilessly sarcastic animals.
All right, well, you wanted to vote correctly.
We'll see if you did.
Lord Webber, how do you like to vote?
I vote for the penny scenario.
What?
Yes.
Why?
Out of contrariness.
All right, very good.
All right, let's tally up the points.
Al, you wanted to vote correctly,
and let me be honest with you. You. Al, you wanted to vote correctly, and let me be honest with you,
you said I would like to vote correctly,
and if you had stopped there,
I would have awarded you all those points.
I wondered about that!
I would have!
Unfortunately, you then carried on
and you voted incorrectly.
I just went on and on and on.
You elaborated, dear boy.
I should have left it nebulous.
Comedy is brevity.
I try to be brief.
So, so sorry.
You can edit everything else out, though.
No, I'm afraid we don't edit anything in the show.
Yes, that's certainly true.
Al Wye.
You can call me Al Wye.
Al Wye, you have lost.
Al W, you are the winner.
Oh!
Congratulations, that's of course
how we play Would You Rather.
As it should be.
Now, we may talk all we like over the closing theme.
Yes, of course.
Yes, yes.
It's a new year, new rules.
Just like Bill Maher.
New rules!
No more of these types of people doing that sort of thing.
Yes, you do that very well.
Thank you.
Alright guys, we're at the end of the show practically.
The only thing left to do is a little something we call plugs. Yeah, get your plugs
Plugs for comedy by and by
Time to fucking plug
Hmm, interesting plugs theme as a musician now.
What do you make of that?
It's beautiful.
I was lulled.
Yeah, what'd you think of using that F word?
That's like something from the 90s. Oh, I'm so glad they fitted in before the end.
The song was almost over and I was thinking where's the cursing?
Uh, that is Gnarls Darwin.
I think I get it. Do you get it? Now Al as a parodist. Yes. What do you think of that? Love it! All right good. It's a parody of a parody. It is. Is that allowed?
Gnarls Barkley is a parody of Charles Barkley. Yes. And this is a parody of Gnarls, Charles Darwin.
I say, here's my parody of it, based on the situation comedy Bewitched.
Gnarls Durwood. Oh!
Indri- I love it! Right? Yes. Prince Gnarls. Oh, I love it.
Right?
Yes, Prince Narls.
It doesn't really work.
It doesn't work at all.
All right, well that plug bag is open.
So Al, what do you like to plug?
Oh, well I'm working on my Bert Convy tribute album.
It's a three.
A host of card sharks?
Yes, yes.
Not many people remember him, but I'm trying to keep
his memory alive. I'm doing my four CD set. It's sort of like a rock opera, a popera, if you will.
More pop than rock. The Convy Convoy. The Convy Convoy. Is one disc devoted solely to tattletales?
You know, it's funny you mentioned Convoy, that my follow-up is going to be an album with all
different versions of the song Convoy.
B.J. McCall.
Oh, B.J. McCall's song, great.
Kids love this segment, by the way.
The plug segment because they get to hear the modern reference.
They wait all show to hear things like this.
Convoy 2013!
And new record coming at some point and you're playing Bonnaroo.
Go to the record store right now and wait for it. I'm still writing it but
eventually you can sit by, you know, keep refreshing Amazon if you don't want to go
to the record store. Just keep doing it every five, ten seconds.
Sure.
Eventually there'll be an album there.
Fantastic. And any other plans for the rest of the year? You're gonna be on tour this summer.
Oh summer.
Or just Bonnaroo.
I've got a children's book coming out on June 25th called My New Teacher and Me, which is available for pre-order right now.
Is that a sequel to the last one you did or is that a...?
In a way. Well, a sequel, I think, my first one was called, what was it called? When I Grow Up.
So a sequel would be called When I Grow Up Again, which I couldn't do that. So it's not a sequel in the most strict sense.
But is it the same child?
Same child, same characters, same setting.
So it feels like a continuation.
So it's like The Hangover 2.
Yes, very much like that.
In fact, my book was inspired by The Hangover 2.
It has a little Zach Galifianakis character
running throughout.
What you could do is rise a sequel to that book entitled
Now That I've Grown Up and then keep it hidden away in a vault
until those children who've read the original book have grown up. to that book entitled Now That I've Grown Up and then keep it keep it hidden away in a vault until
those children who've read the original book have grown up. Yes and be like the Michael Aptid of
children's books. Indeed. Every seven years. Every seven years. Now that I'm continuing to grow.
Yes. Still growing. Still grow in with the apostrophe. All done I'm dead.
Picture of a grave on the front. I love it.
All right, Lord Webber, what do you like to plug?
Scott, as unorthodox as this may seem...
Scotrick, please.
Scotrick, I do apologize.
I feel I know you well enough now to call you Scott,
as other people do. It feels fun.
As unorthodox as this may seem,
I would like to yield my plug time to someone else.
This has never happened before.
I would like to promote something that's happening
in my hometown of England.
What?
Okay.
Yes, April 2nd through the 13th.
A very funny comedian, standup variety,
named Paul F. Tompkins will be appearing
at the Soho Theater.
Paul F-ing Tompkins.
Please.
I understand your lingo better than you think.
That's something very unsavory that you're saying.
Paul F. Tompkins.
F period Tompkins.
Tompkins with an H?
How now you know?
Oh sorry.
It should be with an H, but it's not.
I don't know what he's playing at.
But yes, Soho Theater, April 2nd through the 13th.
Second through the 13th, and there is no better night at the theatre.
There's no better night at the theatre than seeing stand-up comedy.
And take it from me, Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Who would know about the theatre?
I think I do, I think all too about the theatre, darling.
So April 2 through 13 at the Old Globe Theatre.
Yes, 2nd April through 13th April, as we say. Yes, at the Old Globe. Year of our Lord 2013.
Fantastic. And are your plugs done? This concludes my plugs. All right, I would
like to say hey come out and see me at South by Southwest. I'll be doing some
very special shows. I will be, Reggie Watson and I will be doing a show
along with James Adomian.
We'll be doing a very special show at the IFC house
on the Saturday, the first Saturday at South by Southwest.
And then I'll be doing a live podcast there on Sunday
and also a standup showcase on Monday.
So come out and see me and that's all I have to plug.
So the plug back now, let's close it up.
Here we go.
Weird Al remix. So the plug bag now, let's close it up. Here we go
Love it. All right
Guys we did it We certainly did we did a this is an extra long one for if not us not us, then who? If not now, then when? Whereforth follows the followees.
Thenceforth shall it be known forevermore,
and now and until the end of times.
This has been done by us, I say.
I do want to say, I forgot this during the plugs,
Matthew Blanchett, thank you so much for donating $100 to CBB.
Matthew Blanchett, you got a special plug
outside of the plugs.
How's that?
Thank you for sounding like a thing
that is useful in contacting the spirits from beyond
when using the Ouija board.
All right, guys, Al, always a pleasure to see you.
Did I say pleader?
Pleader, it's a pleasure to see you.
I pledge that it is a pleasure to see you.
I'm wearing pleather pants, so that was confusing, I know.
That's right, I wanted to sort of honor those. Always a pleasure to see you. It's a pleasure. I'm wearing pleather pants, so that was confusing, I know. That's right, I wanted to sort of honor those.
Always a pleasure to see you.
And Lord Webber, come back anytime.
I will.
Uh-oh.
You got a maniacal look on your face.
And you covered half of your face again.
No!
Scoffrick, you've done it this time.
I will come back anytime I like.
We'll see you next week, thanks, bye!