Duncan Trussell Family Hour - ANDY KINDLER AND BERT KREISCHER
Episode Date: July 27, 2015Two comedy legends join the DTFH at the 33rd JFL festival in Montreal!!! ...
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And now on with the show.
Hello, friends.
It is I, Duncan Tressel,
and you are listening to the Duncan Tressel Family Hour
Podcast, and I have just returned
from the Montreal Comedy Festival.
And ever since I got back,
I've been thinking about aluminum
and the Singularity episode with Aaron Frank.
If you didn't listen to that episode,
Aaron Frank talked about,
one of the many things he talked about
to help explain what exponential acceleration means
in relation to technology was he talked about aluminum
and he talked about how at one point
in the history of the world,
aluminum used to be so incredibly valuable
that Napoleon, when he had parties,
would serve the most esteemed guests
with plates made of aluminum
and silverware made of aluminum
and all the other shitheads at the party
got to eat off of plates made of gold
and they would sit there with their crappy gold,
silverware and gold plates
and look over at the great guests
eating off of aluminum plates with jealousy
because at the time,
aluminum was incredibly expensive to produce
but thanks to technology,
they figured out how to make aluminum
at a fraction of the cost
and of course, Napoleon probably went back
to serving his guests on gold.
So these poor bastards who probably invested
all this money in whatever machinery or equipment
they needed to produce the expensive aluminum
suddenly found themselves in a predicament
very similar to the predicament
of Parisian taxi drivers today
and a lot of taxi drivers
which is if you wanted to drive a taxi,
you would have to go through all this crazy licensing bullshit
and that was ostensibly placed there
to protect the public from unscrupulous taxi drivers
but the reality is that a license is just another,
is quite often just another name for a bribe
and whatever long process taxi drivers had to go through
in Paris to become a taxi driver
has been completely subverted by the beautiful technology
that is Uber and we're seeing examples of this
in every single industry including the TV industry
which is why it's really cool to be at a festival
where many comedians have come there
in the hopes that somebody from the TV industry
will give them money to make stuff which is fine
unless you've let yourself believe
that that's the only way that you can make stuff
that has any kind of validity
and a lot of people have tricked themselves.
I got in a conversation with somebody,
a comedian who was headed over there
and I was talking to him, he's like,
yeah, I don't really do much social networking
but I think that this is my shot here.
Like this is it, man.
I think this is where it's really gonna happen
at this festival and it's like, whoa, wait,
what's gonna happen?
Somebody from a network that is creating content
that's supremely expensive and time consuming to make
that gets a fraction of the views of other content
being produced by individuals all over the planet
is gonna give you some money?
That's what you want?
You want someone who's a representative
of antiquated technology to night you
and to give you some money
for which you will exchange your artistic autonomy
and maybe you'll water your vision down a little bit
and then you'll maybe produce some content
that will get put up on what is no more
than a glorified YouTube channel
in which really might receive,
might be viewed by far less people
than if you've just done it yourself.
So it's a weird mindset that a lot of people
get themselves into.
Maybe some of you guys have gotten yourself
into that mindset and it's a totally,
it used to be the way things were, man.
Back in the 80s and the 90s, that was really how it was.
You would be completely dependent on a corporation
giving you money if you wanted to get your shit out
to the world because there was no YouTube,
no streaming services, no internet,
but it's just not like that anymore
and you're not gonna hear about that on TV.
It's just the entire model has changed,
the terrain has changed and Sun Tzu's Art of War,
it says the most important thing
is knowing the terrain that you're fighting on.
If you don't know the terrain that you're fighting on,
you're fucked and a lot of people right now
are still fighting on terrain,
they're fighting using techniques developed
for a terrain that no longer exists
and if you're one of those people,
then you need to adapt your fighting style,
you need to adapt to the terrain
that we're currently existing in
and that terrain is a terrain where all you need
is where you need less than $1,000 worth of technology
to create the content that formerly used to cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars to make.
So don't let yourself get tricked if you're an artist.
Don't let yourself get fooled, don't get caught up
in the ridiculous bureaucratic development process
that people can get sucked into.
Don't trick yourself into thinking
that you're not procrastinating
because you're going to a million meetings every week.
That's just procrastination, if you ask me.
Going to meeting after meeting after meeting,
going to pitch meeting after pitch meeting
sitting down with groups of people
to develop some stuff that ends up taking years and years
to finally get rejected.
That's just procrastination and it's okay.
Procrastination is just the manifestation
of your fear of success.
That's what procrastination is.
A lot of people are fucking terrified of succeeding
because innately inside of all of us,
we know that there's just a general sense of emptiness.
So anytime you're working on anything,
you're always going to get this weird fraudulent sense
that goes along with it.
And if you have the power or the potency
or the insane, or if you're delusional enough even,
you can do this ridiculous pull up
where you just decide, you know what, fuck it,
I'm going to make stuff.
I deserve to make stuff.
I'm a human on this planet and I'm going to create stuff
and I'm going to get it out to the world
and I'm not going to wait around for some guy
to tell me that I'm good enough to make stuff
because really you're the only person
who can tell you that.
You're the network now.
Everyone's their own goddamn network these days.
You're the network executive
and you've got to give yourself permission
to start making stuff right now,
if that's what you want to do.
If you're not a creator, you just like enjoying,
you enjoy listening to stuff and consuming stuff,
that's awesome.
You can just enjoy it and congratulations to you
because this is the golden age of entertainment.
There's never been more options for stuff to listen to.
There's never been so many information streams
in the history of humanity.
But if you're a comedian or an actor
or somebody who just loves making stuff
and getting it in front of people
and you're waiting to do that
until somebody who's a representative for an industry
that is in the midst of a really tumultuous series
of changes to tell you
that you're going to be the next star,
then you're fucking yourself.
Don't do it.
You don't need to be knighted by anyone.
Those days are gone.
There's a great interview with Louis CK on David Letterman.
And he's talking about getting at the comedy store.
It used to be that you'd have to perform for Mitzi,
the owner of the club.
I used to work for her.
I drove her around.
I was a talent coordinator there
and I remember what it was like.
She'd sit in the back, a comedian would get on stage
and if she liked you, she'd make you a paid regular
and you'd get to work out at the club.
Anyway, you can look it up.
Louis CK is on Letterman and he's talking about
how he'd been doing stand up for 20 years
and he got on stage,
had barely said anything when the light turned on
indicating that he should get off the stage.
He thought there was a mistake
and then looked in the back of the room
and Mitzi's like waving for him to get off stage.
Now, this is Louis CK,
who's now one of the top comedians in the country.
Regardless of what you think of him,
I love him.
I think he's hilarious.
He's one of the top fucking comedians right now.
But, and if he'd allowed himself to believe
that Mitzi Shore or anybody else on planet Earth
knew whether or not he could be successful,
then he wouldn't have, there would be no Louis CK.
If the moment Mitzi had waved him away,
he had allowed that to be a poison dart
that stuck in his brain
and he allowed himself to think,
shit man, all the struggle to be a comedian was useless
because this woman who has theoretically created
so many great comics or been part of their development
doesn't like me,
then there, we would have no,
there would be no great comedy
from Louis CK would have skulked off somewhere.
And anytime you find yourself sitting
at the bottom of a pyramid looking up at someone,
hoping they let you live as opposed to sentence you to death,
then you have really gotten yourself
in a shitty situation
because you're waiting for a monkey descendant
to give you permission to be an artist.
Somebody else is in charge of them.
There are three temptations that face Buddha.
Three progressive temptations.
The first one is Mara, the Lord of the earth
starts hurling fireballs at the Buddha.
This is the fear of death, destruction.
And the Buddha laughs and the fireballs turn
into flower petals.
Then the second temptation the Buddha is faced with
is the daughters of Mara.
The Lord of the earth presents Buddha
with his beautiful daughters.
And a lot of people say this represents
like the erotic temptation
or the temptation to start a family.
But I believe it was, I think it was Chogyam Trumpa
who said that actually this temptation
is the temptation to believe that you're becoming enlightened
and getting lost in the sort of ego game
of being a spiritual person, right?
That's the second temptation.
The third temptation is one of the most curious temptations
which is where Mara, the Lord of the earth says to Buddha,
why do you think you get to be the Buddha?
Why do you deserve to be the Buddha?
Why do you deserve to be the Tathagata,
the great wheel turner?
Why do you deserve to be the generator of a world religion?
And the Buddha takes his finger
and puts it to the ground.
He just touches the earth.
And voila, now we've got the,
that's when he reaches Nirvana, that was it.
Because you know, I think I always wonder
about what that means, but I think that it's the,
it just represents a person making the decision
to fully embrace their autonomy.
It was the Buddha saying, I deserve to be the Buddha
because that's what I am.
And in the same way, if you're a comedian
or any kind of artist or any kind of creator
and you're sitting around waiting for the Lord of the earth
to come and tell you that you're an artist
or that you're a creator or that you deserve to make stuff
and you're not gonna start putting yourself out into the world
until that happens, then you're failing a test.
You're failing an initiatory test,
which is that eventually you have to make the decision
that regardless of what this person or that person says,
regardless of perceived results,
regardless of perceived obstacles,
regardless of whatever you think is standing in your way,
you are going to make your art and you're gonna do it,
even if it kills you, even if you fail in the endeavor.
Because who cares, everybody's gonna die,
everyone on planet earth is gonna die.
No one, I'm about to quote Jim Morrison,
which is why I'm stammering because I don't want to,
but no one here gets out alive.
There's no way out of this mess that we're in right now.
The only way out is your own personal extinction.
That's the way it works.
The Paris catacombs are filled with the bleach bones
of the unknown dead who molder under there.
Nobody remembers who they are.
And many of them, no doubt, many of those skeletons,
many of those skulls belonged to artists who waited
for somebody to give them the go ahead
to make the stuff that they wanted to make.
And they just croaked to the plague
and now they're down in the catacombs
getting their pictures taken by pasty tourists,
blasting oyster farts into the darkness.
Don't be one of those.
Don't wait for somebody to tap you on the shoulder.
Don't wait for somebody to tell you you're okay.
Start making your stuff now.
Just do it.
All the technology is there for you
and it's the first time in the history of our species
that this has been the case.
All right, okay.
All right, guys, we've got a great podcast
with Andy Kenner, brilliantly funny comedian,
Bert Kreischer, he's been on the podcast several times.
We're gonna jump right into it,
but first some quick business.
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Okay, everybody.
Now, it is my extreme honor to welcome
to the Dunkintrustle Family Hour Podcast
two incredibly funny comedians,
Andy Kindler and Bert Kreischer.
And once again, this was recorded live
from the Just for Laughs Festival in Montreal.
Here they are.
Open your third eyes, squeeze your pineal glands,
spray as much astral love in the direction
of these two divine beings, Andy Kindler and Bert Kreischer.
It's the Dunkintrustle Family Hour.
Welcome, welcome upon you.
That you are with us.
shake and glory to be true.
Welcome to you.
Welcome, welcome, welcome.
It's the Dunkintrustle Family Hour.
It's the Dunkintrustle Family Hour.
It's the Dunkintrustle Family Hour.
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It is I, Dunkintrustle,
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podcast being recorded live at the Montreal Comedy Festival.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
perché.
Thank you.
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Yeah.
Thank you.
You are welcome.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're welcome.
корso.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Hi, skies.
Take a short break.
Yep.
I'm saying you're inside.
I am doctor.
Obviously, I don't know what I'm talking about,
but I'm with you.
You are very spiritual.
And I always thought it was like, it's like, it's
felt like Gert Jeff, right?
That guy?
Yeah.
It's felt like it's Gert.
It's Gert G, but you can pronounce any way you want.
Yeah.
No, I was into Ram Dass and I was into Alan Watts.
Well, Andy, you, now you do.
So I could out spiritual you, my friend.
I'm sure you can.
You're intro.
It's very interesting to me because you are, for those of you
who don't know, Andy does this thing called the state of the
industry address every year at the festival where he
crucifies so many different.
So to speak, ladies and gentlemen.
So to speak.
To speak.
But it's like, you know, it's, some of it's pretty brutal.
It's always funny, but some of it's really brutal.
It's not always funny.
I was here two years ago.
It's not always funny.
I've had some trouble.
I've had some trouble.
Let's not kid ourselves.
But I was there today and mother fucker.
He fucking killed.
What was the joke?
I tried to repeat the joke.
Uh, the, let's, let's judge Jerry Seinfeld's joke on a
scale of.
Oh, uh, who cares to, I admit it's a sentence.
It was, it was, I said this to Andy and this, and I have to
share this a little bit because I'm a, I'm more than a
comic.
I'm a fan of comedy.
I will always be a fan of comedy until the day I die.
And I love the feeling of getting in the back of the
room and getting let in and they say, oh, sure.
Right over there.
And you watch Andy kind of just destroy any pepper
tone who's walking out in a fucking.
You, what did you audition for the role of?
What was that?
Oh, I said, so my, uh, that's the alpha.
He warned the role of the guy who rips up ticket at the
racetrack.
It was down the ground.
It was destructive.
And I said to him, I go, when did you start?
Cause he free forms it at the beginning and you free
formed it for at least 20 minutes.
Yeah.
I don't never know how that's going to work.
But the other part of it is, I mean, there's not a cheat
to it, but I do get to do anything that I've done over
the year that relates to show business.
Right.
I did this.
So you've got a catalog.
So whatever I wrote over the year that, that would fit
the show, uh, I try to open up with that.
So I know it was so fucking good.
The spiritual person, well, how do you balance this kind
of like me, like, I don't want to call it mean, but this
kind of like attack style of comedy with the idea of we've
got to love everybody and be kind to everybody.
Does that create any kind of dissonance inside?
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, I struggle all the time with, uh, you know, and
also it's, and the main thing is like, I think you have to
be aware of what you're feeling, but I do think anger.
I mean, Jesus wrote again with the New Testament, Jesus
wrote through the temple.
He got angry.
Right.
I'm saying I'm Jesus writing through the temple of show
business.
No.
So I mean, anger is an appropriate thing.
Uh, and I think the thing is, is that if you try to be
loving, it's doesn't, it just doesn't work.
You know what I mean?
I try to love Hitler.
God knows that.
Who has?
Wait, wait, wait, how many, how many people did you
compare to?
Oh, my goal is to commit, is to compare every, uh,
comedian to Hitler.
It started with Dan.
I said, uh, the Dane Cook phenomenon reminds me of,
of Germany in the thirties.
There's a guy, he's screaming, all your friends like him,
you don't understand.
But Dane Cook is worse than Hitler because at least
Hitler had a point of view.
So that was the first year.
Wait, wait, what was the one you did about Spurs all the
day?
Oh, so Si fell, I said, uh, I wasn't so, no, I actually
compared, though.
I said, Bill Maher is like, is just like Hitler except
Hitler didn't laugh after every joke.
It was so fucking good.
I swear to God, that's the one thing in this festival
that I'm so glad I can accept it at the festival to
perform because I get to go watch you do that.
It is so fucking good.
I have to go now, right?
Right this, no, no, I mean, like I have to go on the
high.
You got nervous there for a second.
Well, I thought you had the one.
No, but it's not 1130 yet.
That's, but yeah.
No, you got plenty of time.
Myself, but okay.
So never early say, that's what happened.
You know, Jay Leno claims that he was on Diner
Shore, but I think Jay Leno lies about everything
because he took it from somebody else where he
said, when did you want us to play you off?
He said, when I do this joke and he did the word
from the joke early and they played him off.
So that's what almost happened there.
Right.
That's funny.
That's the great thing about that, that about that
say the union to Duncan is that you watch him run
through his notes and you're like to mean to mean
too much about me.
Yeah, because this paragraph, I think you read them,
you write them in like a month before or the
night before or whatever.
They sound like a whole self, you know,
righteous anger.
And then you read it.
It just looks terrible.
I never know what's going to work.
I mean, I do know certain things, but I don't know
other things.
Are there.
So are there jokes that are funny that you won't
say because they're too mean?
Well, by definition, by definition, I'm saying
things that, well, I mean, if it was, if I, you know,
I was giving examples like when I hang around like
David Feldman, like sometimes comics to get alone
will do a bit that they would never do on stage.
Right.
They would be too mean.
So that's like, but that's just like, you're almost
like making fun of the form.
By definition, I'm trying to keep my targets high
and all that kind of stuff.
And I have over the years done material about people
and then I realized, well, why am I making fun of
that guy?
So it is something I think about a lot about how
mean it is.
And, but I can't do it just on the basis of whether
the target is working.
I can't just do it on the basis of they always have
to be Leno.
You know, it always has to be someone who's clearly
horrible.
Right.
No, I love it, man.
I mean, it's one of, but it's like, don't you get
dissonance?
Like it's like, I want, like I want to be mean.
And sometimes like, and I feel like I'm not sometimes
because you know what haunts me.
I did this Skype with a Ram Dass once where, because
he does this crazy thing where like you can do this
heart to heart with Ram Dass.
And I remember going on his website, signed up for it,
didn't think it would happen.
And then out of the blue, you know, they schedule it,
your phone rings.
It's like, hey, it's Ram Dass.
And then it's really intense.
And then like suddenly he's like on your computer screen
and the guy just like beams love out into the
universe.
It's crazy right here now.
He's a love radiator.
Even all that, even through Skype, you can feel it.
But anyway, I was, I was talking with him.
I was actually with Natasha Leggero.
We did this and we were asking him about comedy.
Like, what do you think about comedy?
And he said, and I still, I remember how my heart
sank.
He's like, he said, as long as it's not mean.
Right.
And it was like, ah, fuck really?
Like you've like deactivated so much of comedy
is attack, revenge, to like getting your pound of flesh
and to remove that from the equation.
It seems like it would hobble you as a comedian.
Well, I love, I mean, he's like a hero to me, Ram Dass.
He was, you know, he was originally Timothy Leary's
partner at Harvard.
But I don't agree with every single thing that he says.
And I also think, no, no, no, no.
I thought you said Dennis Leary in that one.
Yeah, he was with Dennis Leary.
I was like, that's so odd.
Such a weird, he was with Dennis Leary at Harvard.
And, but the point is that you have to make your own.
It's like to me, I do think there's a part of life where,
you know, the thing about Buddhism, Zen Buddhism,
that I really resonate with, it's not that you don't like
things, but you try to, it's that you don't get,
it's everything is something to be attached to equally.
So that's why you don't want to get attached to the results
of things.
And Ram Dass talks about it.
Everything, everything can be a moment,
every moment is to be here now, you know, cooking, whatever.
So, so I also think anger is part of that too.
But he does tell a great story about when he went to his guru,
Ram Dass, and the guru one day said to him,
you have to, you have to lose anger Ram Dass.
And he goes, I do.
Yes.
So I thought, you know that guru guy that he,
Yeah, Neem Kurali Baba.
Who, by the way, there's stories of him, you know,
that his guru yelling at people.
And that's used as an example of how it's not about putting on
this facade of being nice to everybody, certain situations,
you're supposed to get pissed off and be angry.
But man, by the way, I love your comedy.
So I'm sorry if I'm like, well, why are you so God damn mean,
Andy?
No, but I know it's a very, it's a very important question.
I, it's not like I walk around not struggling with it, you
know, but so much like when I've gotten bad feedback,
it's been because the person's thin skinned and then they're
trying to use certain people like say I went after Sandler.
Well, Sandler's really thin skinned and he'll put the message,
don't come after me.
You should probably put in some of your Sandler jokes right now.
They're pretty good.
Well, I said Sandler.
He has that movie out called The Ridiculous Six, which is a take,
which take over the Magnificent Seven, but require it
literally to name you come up with before you engage your brain
at all.
You know, how about the Crazy Nines, the 15 fantastic 12s.
And I said, Native Americans walked off the set because he had
all these terrible names like Where's No Bra for the,
and Beaver Breath and Native Americans walked off the set and
they said they would prefer another genocide over.
Wow.
I'm the bad guy.
But here's the thing is that, is that it is, and I don't think
people understand this sometimes.
And in a weird way, I'll say this is a guy sitting in the room
and I know Andy and I barely know each other in life.
We talk through Twitter and stuff, but like everyone in the room
kind of hopes your name's in there.
Right.
You know, like, it's respect.
It's respect.
When you talked about Marshall, today Marshall Books Club
and Atlanta that Andy works at.
He's here somewhere.
No, he's not.
He's at where you see Dave Chappelle.
What a dick.
And so, but it's like, it's an art form.
This is an art.
And what he's doing is an art form, and it's respected by us.
I don't know if it gets, everyone gets it, and maybe when
you have the target, you don't.
But man, it's like that reason we're all going to hustle to go
see the Roast Battle tonight.
Jimmy Carr is going up against the gay guy from Australia.
And I want to see that.
It's not, I don't care, I don't care about my views on
homosexuality.
I want to see the artistry of comedy displayed in front of
crowd of people that judge it.
Oh, fuck.
That's what this morning was.
Andy walked up, Jonathan Katz gave an introduction to him,
and Andy walked up and destroyed people we look up to,
and he appears and us in the room, and it's fucking awesome.
Yeah, it is.
Well, there is something about it that's very cathartic,
because one of the inevitable feelings.
Oh, fucking Marshall just showed up.
Oh, there, we were just talking about it.
Marshall Charles, everybody.
We, no, one aspect of, like, at a comedy festival,
especially this comedy festival, you see this vector where art
meets business.
That's a pretty fucked up place a lot of the time.
It's very desperate.
Desperate and creepy, and there's a real palatable darkness there,
which is why you're kind of like an exorcist when you go up there
and start pointing these things out, because it needs to be said.
It's really cool in that way.
Well, the other part of it, though, is, and I'm sorry for
interrupting, but that's what, that's my hook.
How do I oversell everything?
The other thing is that, the other part of it is that you have
to add, my problem in life, and I've realized this,
is that my spirituality, I believe, it's not like I believe
in spirituality, it's just if you sing, or if you play music,
or if you meditate, or if you do comedy, watercolor,
you get into this zone that you can't explain,
it's not something you're trying to prove,
and you can feel it.
Now, whatever it is, it is.
But to say there's no other state other than something,
you know, I need a double-blind experiment to meditate, you know?
And so, but why I get so angry at these new atheists,
getting angry at them is right, because Bill Maher is a bigot.
He, look at that guy who killed these people today,
when the guy killed the people in, was it Tennessee?
Bill Maher was like, yeah, we know what the cause was,
what's his name, because his name was Muhammad, you know?
So, but a week later, he's silent when a white guy
who says the problem is in America is all these immigrants,
and he says nothing about it, because this whole thing is,
so you have to get mad, I have to get mad at it,
but I get so mad because I still see my father
who would fight with me when I was a kid.
He wasn't trying to hurt my feelings, but I was so angry
because I believed he was my hero,
and he was disagreeing with me about spirituality,
so I'm still fighting that battle.
So I think spirituality is getting angry, but also having,
and that's a big problem of mine, is letting the rage go
and letting it, and that's very hard for me.
Yeah, that is hard.
Anger is very, very problematic for me too, man.
It's really destructive. You have to watch out.
It's a, I would compare it to, it's like you can,
it's like fossil fuels or something.
It's like a spiritual fossil fuel.
You can run your engine on anger, and a lot of comedians do,
but god damn it, the end result is you get this kind of
subjective global warming happening in your life
where the end result of it after a certain period of time
is like shit starts melting down,
like stuff around you ultimately gets a little misshapen.
Let me jump in as the opposite of that.
God, not what this gets.
You don't seem like an angry guy at all.
I'm the happy fool a lot of times.
You can giggle, that's fine, I'm cool with it.
I get drunk a lot, and I like to have a good time,
and I giggle.
I cried watching him laugh, tell jokes today.
I cried, I fucking cried.
Next to Ari, who's not a hard laugher.
Ari's like, ah, ah, ah, ah.
I'm sitting there crying, I'm crying next to him.
The difference is we in turn, the happy fool internalizes his anger
because you hear people take jabs at you all the time.
A perfect example.
I love this guy with all my heart,
I don't need to subjectify him at all, but Todd Glass.
Todd Glass is like me, we're happy fools.
We like having a good time, we like giggling,
we like fucking smoking weed,
and pretending that the weed may turn us into a different person.
Just goofiness, like goofy fucking shit.
But then we also become the easy target,
and that anger resides in someone sometimes
where you're just going like,
where do I ever voice this to anybody?
We were talking about this backstage,
we had a really hard time in the conversation.
I had a really hard time in the conversation.
So then you sit there silently,
and that's why I love a guy like Andy,
and a guy like Jeff Ross,
and all the people that's doing the roast battle,
is because they're saying this shit that I couldn't do that,
I could not do roast battle.
I would be a fucking puddle of vodka the next morning.
They say all this shit that I already think about myself,
and they're like, how dare you?
You're also bringing up a very, very good point,
and the point is this,
I think a lot of my whole thing is like,
I say these things on stage,
but the other part of it is like,
I certainly hope this is not going to affect my career.
So it's like, I can be like everybody else,
but I notice a lot of people, they go through their whole life,
and these people are like,
and your thing is, I relate to it,
the confrontation, the non-confrontation,
but there's other people who won't ever take an opinion on anything,
because there's like,
what are you getting hostile for part of our society?
I think that's the thing that society does,
and that purposefully, like someone thought of it,
and they said, make it a law,
but it keeps you down, and it keeps you from acting,
and that's why people like Martin Luther King,
or Mandela, or whoever, or Malcolm X,
and then you, you know, it's like,
there's different techniques for it,
but there's a lot of people who never, ever
confront anything, and not just confronting fighting,
but they won't give their opinion,
they won't say anything, and I think that that,
all of it, that, and not in your case,
but you know the people who are like,
I just like, no, I don't know, I hear you,
I don't really have much in the opinion,
I see both sides, and all that stuff,
I used to think that was the cool way to be,
but that's not a good way to be,
because that's a sheepy thing, not you.
You can take me.
No, because you don't want to be,
I hate the confrontation,
my wife has to call up and say,
you ruined my husband's shirt in the dry cleaner,
and I'm like, you know what, thank you for doing the shirt.
My wife does that for me too!
My wife will be like,
I'm not sending this back,
and she's like, it's overcooked,
I go, just leave it, I'll eat it, I don't care.
And she's like, let's send it back,
you ordered a Flamin' Young,
it should be medium rare, and then I go,
don't worry about it, I'll just eat it.
I was like, fuck it, you're a fucking bitch,
and I'm like, oh, okay.
Do you think of yourself as an activist?
Are you an activist?
Me?
Oh, let me go first, Andy.
No, go ahead.
I think it's having an image of you,
uh, yeah, I mean, well,
I mean, that's a weird word in a way,
because I don't go on a lot of marches,
I don't find that.
You go on a lot of Twitter marches though?
Yes, that's not a good sign.
I don't go on a lot of marches.
Marches?
Marches are pretty outdated, marches are pretty weird.
It's just having a Twitter profile description,
I go on a lot of marches.
I enjoy marching,
I enjoy, uh,
my walking papers,
so, uh, no.
I am in that sense, and I really am.
I got it from my, um,
I absolutely won't let stuff go.
I won't let stuff go.
People hate me for the new atheist thing.
They hate me, I know they hate me about it.
And I am annoying, I admit that I'm annoying,
but I'm not going to get away with people saying
that asshole's not a fucking bigot.
Well, yeah, it feels like you're doing it
when I watch your...
What?
The way you said it. I don't go on a lot of marches.
Well, yeah, that's what I think of an activist.
I don't have a clipboard.
I don't have a bank of phones.
I don't go on a lot of marches either.
I haven't been on one march.
I don't have a 501.
You've never been to one march, I don't believe that.
I've never been on a lot of marches.
That's amazing.
I'm going to talk to those people about...
What are you guys here for?
I don't go on a lot of marches.
I'm just fucking funny the way you did it though.
But that's the beauty of a comic
because they don't know they're being funny.
He literally went,
I don't go on a lot of marches.
Well, that is a...
Well, I always ask how much marching is involved
is because...
Is this a sit-in or a march?
Yeah, how are we doing? What are we doing with this?
Have you ever been to...
Have you ever done like a sit-in or a march?
Have you...
Fucking have a stroke.
During the Vietnam War,
but I was a little kid. I was on marching.
What about...
Remember when we were about to go to war with Iraq?
Did you go to any of those marches in L.A.?
Remember those?
No, I just cried in my house. You mean the Second War, right?
Yeah. Remember that?
There were these crazy marches. Man, that was crazy.
I went to one of those.
That was pretty intense.
The energy was so weird
because it's a country
that doesn't want to go to war
trying to come to terms with the fact
that it doesn't appear that it's a democracy
to stop it.
And all these people are marching
and the energy is very sweet but tragic
because you know it's not going to stop anything.
But I remember, man,
as we're marching this way,
some weirdo,
muscle, some big muscular guy
is walking the other way
and elbowing everybody
that he passed,
violently hitting people.
And you realize, Jesus, that is a demon.
That's a person
like maybe that's a person who got sent there
to make it a little uncomfortable.
Then the cops come
and they're wearing the new cop outfit
because like back in the 60s
and the Vietnam marches,
the cops weren't dressed like Darth Vader, right?
They were wearing
more like normal police officer clothes.
Now the police come out.
They're dressed like Darth Vader.
They've got batons and tear gas
and the message that it sends
is we are not you.
Whenever you see that shit happening,
it reminds me of like
when you finally get to the very
edge of the wall
in the Truman show.
When you finally get to the perimeter
of where society can be,
the guys in the fucking Darth Vader outfits
come out and they beat you back
until you just forget like,
okay, okay, okay, go to war, go to war.
We can't do anything about it.
When you're talking about how angry you're getting
and this kind of thing,
people like Oprah or The Secret,
they totally miss,
you know, they're twisting
older concepts
that actually have validity
to make it like, oh, you want to do something?
You're just like Tony Robbins.
I was in a play with a guy with a Tony Robbins thing
and he was like saying, I said,
have you ever been to the comedy festival?
He goes, well, I hope to go.
I mean, I know I will go one day.
So it's like those people,
but the idea is that you can control,
you think that at some point,
I have to turn the TV off and I have to disconnect
and I have to breathe,
that it's not healthy for me.
The anger's good, but if I'm just all day
believing that my life
is controlled by these events,
that I believe
is a misunderstanding of,
because most of the time, if you really think about it,
nothing horrible is happening to you,
even if something is happening to someone else,
but it's that anticipatory fear
that's going to happen to you.
You get that, Bert, right?
You're haunted by that, right?
Which is interesting because your career
is based around putting yourself
in catastrophic situations,
which is really curious.
That's the thing, I can't believe he doesn't like confidence.
He's so brave in those things.
I am a fearful...
I said to this young girl,
I'm not very liberal.
I'm regular liberal,
I don't say the M word,
but I'm just saying regular...
The M word? Oh, yeah, that is...
That was a bad one, that was a bad one.
That was a bad one.
I don't say any of the M words
or the F words. I'm pretty liberal,
and I want everyone to be happy. That's all I want.
But my problem is,
people say you scream like a girl,
and I started hearing that as offensive,
because I have two little girls,
offensive to little girls,
and then I got this stance, don't say that
to people. I have my toenails painted, you can't see it,
and people always go, oh, what's up with that?
And it's like my canary in the mind
of how homophobic people still are.
I go, I'm just a dude with painted toenails.
I'm not sitting here blowing a dude in front of you.
I'm just...
painted toenails.
You're not going the whole route.
I don't even know why we started talking about this,
because now I'm lost because I'm kind of drunk, but...
I like where it ended up, man.
You got painted toenails.
I painted my toenails with my daughters,
and...
I don't...
Let's see them.
Let's see them.
The hard part is I have to put my
fucking socks back on them, so fucking fat.
So I paint my toenails.
Uh...
Give those sweet toenails a round of applause,
you guys.
That guy's got nice toes.
I have beautiful fucking feet.
I have gorgeous eyes and beautiful fucking feet.
You've got a great arch. What's the name
of that color?
Electric blue.
Are your eyes also electric blue?
My eyes are gorgeous.
Do you not notice the blue hat,
blue toenails, blue jeans?
Let me tell you something.
It makes your eyes pop.
One therapist.
I'm in therapy right now.
With two therapists?
Just one therapist. He's doing good.
He's doing good.
Wait, you Skype with your therapist?
He's doing good.
He was depressed when he first talked to me.
The reason he's doing good
is the first meeting I said,
I might have a drinking problem. Let's not bring that up for a few things.
And he was like, I don't think you do, man.
You've got a stressful life. And I was like,
fucking yeah, man, you're hired.
Act the way your beers are like.
You ordered them at the comedy store.
The two drink minimum.
I don't have a fear of
running out of beers.
That's my fear. Like last night when they cut us off,
I was like, what the fuck am I supposed to do?
Right.
No, wait.
You might...
You probably do have a drinking problem.
Why are we doing this here?
Exactly.
Intervention time.
I probably... Here's the deal.
If you think you have a drink...
Stop it. Stop it.
Not with those eyes though.
I think
if I lived a regular person's life,
I would never drink.
But I think in the lifestyle we live,
it lends itself to either
overeating or over drinking
or smoking cigarettes when you don't know you shouldn't.
Yeah.
And it's like you're in Montreal.
This weekend's bad. This week's been pretty bad.
I'm shocked none of us died.
Because you get there and you just party
and you're having a good time and you're having a blast.
And you have people that are fucking hilarious.
Who doesn't want to get a beer?
I literally, when Andy was doing his thing today,
I was like, why didn't they serve him fucking beers?
And...
I don't know.
I think that if you look at me
from your life as a lawyer,
you're like, oh that guy's got a problem.
But I'm a fucking lawyer.
You're also gesturing with a beer can.
I think that always...
I tell you,
I don't have a beer can.
This is my Bill Clinton thumb.
It's fun to get loose,
I think every now and then.
I'll just get you loose.
I've never really spoken
much about pop.
But I will say that I think it's fucking ridiculous
that it's not legal everywhere.
It will be.
It will be. But you know, man,
to get back to your drinking problem...
Jesus Christ. Come on.
Come on. But here's the thing.
It's not like you're lining them up.
By the way, if you take a picture, you're like, his socks off.
You're fucking...
I don't have a drinking problem.
If my therapist and my wife don't think
I have a drinking problem,
I don't fucking need to talk to them. Nobody.
You shoved for the right therapist.
I think people's stigma...
I think having the idea of a drinking problem
and a lot of people's minds,
they put it up there with having
HIV or something.
It becomes like, oh, a drinking problem.
It's like having leprosy or some awful thing.
But it really is...
By the way, I know the chick I got this from, by the way.
That's obvious.
That you got what from?
My drinking problem.
You got it from a person?
It's HIV. It was one chick.
I remember the day I got it.
Mike Osborn.
This chick is some of my best friend.
Are we going to be...
You guys want to be honest? Let's be fucking honest.
And let's be uncomfortable.
The chick is some of my best friend.
I was in college. I've only slept with two girls
for my entire life. I've only slept with six total.
I've only slept with two girls and
she gave me the clap.
And it fucking broke my heart.
It just... everything crumbled
in front of me. And I didn't know how to deal with it.
I really didn't. I was...
I really discovered anxiety and OCD
and my buddy Mike Osborn goes,
hey, man, I don't know anything,
but I know if you drink, these feelings go away.
And we sat
at Clint Munn's apartment
and just started pounding beers
and I went, it's not getting... it's getting better.
It's getting better.
I told you, man, I'm no doctor.
I'm no doctor.
Did you use penicillin, too, or just...
I had to stop drinking to...
Just to get that going.
That's sad that I say that, but I'm sure
people in here have had a venereal disease.
Sure, of course.
Show of hands, show of hands.
Why won't we all be honest right now?
What is that? What's wrong with that?
I just said it. I just said it.
People will be like, me, too.
But don't do it, don't do it, don't do it.
Why is that? Why is that?
Listen, everybody in here who has a venereal disease...
Not has or had.
...or has had one, after this podcast,
we're gonna go on a march through the Montreal County.
Not all of us.
Some of us don't like marches.
We'll be marching.
I just don't...
You know, man, I think that...
I love the way...
I love Ramdas, you guys.
But I love the way he talks about addiction,
which is it's like...
There's a lot of different schools of thought
when it comes to addiction.
You've got the AA school of thought.
This is a progressive disease.
There's no way out.
It just gets worse and worse until you die.
You gotta stop drinking completely.
If you drink, you're gonna go in a downward spiral
that's gonna lead to your life exploding around you.
That's like a really severe way to look at it.
Whereas Ramdas says,
you're a great teacher,
and if you're addicted to something,
start watching the way you act
and the way the addiction is controlling you
because it starts teaching all this amazing stuff
about yourself.
And practicing mindfulness as you drink,
as you watch the beer go up to your lips,
as you like that first beer,
and you get that anticipatory weird feeling
in your body where like,
oh, I'm about to have a beer,
and the excitement of it,
and then the subsequent intoxication,
you just watch the whole system
and you watch it without judging it.
And somehow, because the whole thing you're doing
is like, I don't have a drinking problem.
Maybe I have a drinking problem. I'm guilty.
I'm not guilty. Watch that too
because it's all part of the same cycle.
And then from observing it in that way,
it kind of starts fading away on its own.
It starts falling away on its own.
It's really curious. It's really interesting
to try.
I think having a drinking problem is not a problem.
Keep saying it over and over again.
Look, don't feel bad about the drinking problem.
It's like, one guy doesn't have a right arm,
and you keep going right arm, right arm, right arm.
It's a problem. Everyone knows it's a problem.
I've seen it on Zalker.
I think I have a drinking problem.
I know I do. I love alcohol.
If I'm not careful, I'll drink.
You've got this guy upset. I'm sorry, sir.
See ya, man. I'm sorry.
He's like, I have a clap and a drinking problem.
Never get told. Never get told.
People leave. You assume things about it.
That's right. You do assume things.
When I go to comedy shows and
when I was at FSU,
someone goes to the bathroom and the guy would make fun of me.
I'm like, what the fuck's wrong with that guy?
When I see people stand up, I'm like, oh, light up this motherfucker.
Yeah, he just had to pee.
That's all.
And it is your worst nightmare as an audience member,
because you're sitting there like, Jesus, I have to piss.
I think I can go right now. I'm not going to get noticed.
And then the guy with the drinking problem
is like, what the fuck?
Is that really your worst nightmare?
Because I'm worried about getting rounded up like the Jews.
I'm worried about another Hitler.
Or Bill Maher.
But it's kind of, when I
see the stuff that you get angry about
the radical
atheism that seems to hate.
I hate them like poison. I hate them.
But it's singling out Islam.
It's singling out Muslims.
And it's saying that the entire thing is bad.
If you look at the Quran,
if you take it literally,
there's no way around what it's saying.
It's an insidious,
evil religion
that can only lead to a kind of
theocratic totalitarianism.
And that if we don't
start acknowledging the fact
that that's what this is,
then we're going to end up in this terrible
apocalyptic war.
When they present their case,
if you're not careful,
you can find yourself getting
drawn into it.
Oh, no question.
I'm never again ever going to try
to argue with these people.
And I actually don't, but I get into some kind of thing.
And it's wrong. It's bad for me.
But it's spooky because
it's because that kind of talk,
it always starts off with talk.
Like I'm sure that
before Hitler rose to power,
there was just some talk about
Judaism, these Jews.
They're trustworthy.
It feels like the way they group together
is like, it's not,
they're not contributing to society.
They're taking away from society.
We really should keep our eyes on them
because I think the religion itself
is not really good for society as a whole.
And it just starts as talk.
And it starts as fucking intellectual talk.
It starts as smart people
just throwing out these ideas
in the laboratory of thought.
And then the next thing you know,
it's a little bit more pronounced.
And that's what's really creepy about what's happening
with Islam and the anti-Islam
because it's like fundamentalist
Islam wants
people. They love it.
They couldn't be happier. It's the best.
The people who are bombing things
that we turn on everybody who's Muslim.
Because that's what they want.
That's what they're saying about us anyway.
That's what they want. And it gets really spooky
when you consider that
that culture,
is really good at war.
That's a really old warring culture.
Muhammad was a warrior.
The whole thing is very strategic
and smart.
Have you ever heard that
some in Japan
they plan out
centuries. They don't plan out years.
They think centuries ahead.
So if you look at that kind of
concept of a very
long war
where some fundamentalist Muslims
really do want the apocalypse to happen
in the same way fundamentalist Christians
want the apocalypse to happen.
There's a lot of people who really want the fucking
apocalypse to happen. And if you look at it
from the POV of a group of people
knowing that all they've got to do
is a few more terrorist attacks
here or there.
Just a couple more. And then all of a sudden
that chatter about this is an evil religion
is going to become more than chatter
and then the next thing you know
you've got a fucking world war based on
religion and that's an unwinnable war.
That's the apocalypse
and that gives me the goosebumps.
That creeps me out. So I'm glad
that you're fighting back but
it's spooky when you just think that all it takes
is one, like how many
more? Three more? Like one more
September 11th level event
that's all it takes.
And that's it, right? That's pretty much it.
That's going to be World War 3.
I find it interesting that that's what you like
about Andy's fight and I
love it because I go to his Twitter and I see him
fighting with someone. I'm like, oh, I'll just
read this chat thread. Yeah.
I'm gonna fucking scroll back and I'm like, it started
with Jen Kirkman. Shut the fuck up.
Like she said something in Nagy.
Andy made a joke. Someone jumped in
and like hopscotch. Like a stranger doing hopscotch.
It's awesome. Not hopscotch. Double dutch
and Andy just fucking lit him up and I love
those moments. Well here's the thing.
I do want to say one thing and I really think it's
important. I know I sound like an asshole so much.
But here's the thing. Everything depends on where
the point of view is. We are
ridiculously stupid as a country.
Like we don't even know
like one of my friends who did a graduate
work in Iran studies
couldn't believe what George W. Bush called Iran
the axis of evil. When in 1953
we overthrew the government
in I think it was Iran or Iraq.
I forget which one. It was Iran.
But we've been meddling with these people forever.
It's kind of like Richard Dawkins.
He's a British colonialist. They see
this guy slamming him. He's the same
people who were British petroleum in 1900.
There was an inquisition.
Everything depends on your point of view.
So now all these people because I was always
saying like look I don't know about Charlie Hebdoe.
I don't know. I'm not saying that I'm
not saying I love them
just because everyone's saying
I love them. And I was saying you know
sometimes some of those cartoons
could possibly be just racist.
And they're like saying people always say to me
well you shouldn't kill them. And I was like
do I really have to make that
a statement to you?
Oh of course. I hope you don't think I mean
we should assassinate cartoonists.
No we should not assassinate cartoonists
but just say like Bill Marr says
why are they getting upset about this?
Because they live in countries where they can't
wear a burqa. And when you see those pictures
of Muhammad because I already heard Metzger talking
once about how those pictures of Muhammad
they're like you know it's not like a hooked nose Jew.
It's exactly like a hooked nose Jew.
He's got his thing. There's one where
he's got Muhammad's balls.
And that is the point of them
tearing down Muhammad.
Those people respect Muhammad.
Muhammad didn't this cartoon didn't do anything.
And it's the same thing with people like
freedom of speech, freedom of speech.
But where were those same people
when they wouldn't let them build mosques
around 9-11?
But comedians they think of the
I don't want someone shooting me for my comedy.
Which is understandable.
But put yourself in the position of someone
who can't worship at a mosque.
And also freedom of expression.
Vote for me.
Andy Kindler everybody.
Let him hear it.
You're the best Andy.
So cool.
That way.
See Andy. Thanks everybody.
So leave us with that Andy. We'll finish it up.
Wow.
That's so intense.
Yeah I don't know man.
I'm just still shocked that
people on GY's they're still worried about cartoons.
Right.
I haven't read the funny pages in a really long time.
Yeah.
It's one of the cartoons.
Yeah. Well they get mad.
I'm fucking on YouTube bitch.
They get mad.
Fucking we're looking at cartoons.
We're talking about, I feel like Alan Harrison.
We're talking about cartoons.
Who the fuck is reading cartoons?
We're making a funny one stage.
You don't see that?
Fucking cartoons?
I'm fucking drunk.
That's okay.
Man.
I just think Mohammed was like,
my mom didn't like to get her picture taken.
And I think he was probably
somebody who just didn't want to get drawn.
No camera.
I think it was like that.
Happy anniversary.
Yeah.
That's why you just dream of a time machine
so that you could go back
and just have one 10 minute discussion
with somebody like that.
Show them what the world looks like
and see what his reaction is.
Because you get the feeling you'd be like,
oh god, those idiots.
I didn't mean it at all.
That's not what I was talking about.
But over time, it gets so watered down.
It's like, this is something,
have you ever heard of Abraham Maslow?
I was hoping you were going to say Lincoln.
No, I haven't.
Man, he's got this
wonderful breakdown
of how
human beings
who actually, like every once in a while,
this is something Alistair Crowley talked about too,
which is really cool.
He said that if you look at our species,
as compared to other species,
it's the only species that has
a superversion that appears
from time to time
and creates massive societal change.
As far as we know,
monkeys, orcas,
any of the advanced species
that have developed gigantic brains,
there doesn't seem to be
a Muhammad whale that appears
and starts saying, here's the way we should all swim.
There doesn't appear to be
a Jesus monkey that appears.
We have to start forgiving everybody,
because Jesus monkey is a great fucking name
for a band or a show, clothing line.
Feel free to do it.
But with humans, you get these
emergent beings
who have
an experience that
causes them to somehow
become something more than just a human being.
Buddha, Muhammad,
Jesus,
and then what happens is
those people get so lit up
by whatever the thing is that they figured out
that the people around them
change too.
They actualize too, because
just being around a person who somehow
has overcome whatever the
boundaries are that keep us from merging
into the whole, just being in their presence
apparently is enough to
melt you down too,
and then you become a disciple.
And then once you're the disciple of this person,
you carry that energy with you,
and then you bring it to whoever you come around,
and that energy moving down the line
is something called the Disciplic Succession,
is what they call it.
It's like a hot potato
of enlightenment that kind of moves down
the line, but then Maslow says
that over time, that hot potato
it starts getting a little less hot
and a little less hot and a little less hot,
and then it turns into religion.
And then when it turns into religion,
it's just people repeating the same shit
over and over again, but the energy
isn't there at all anymore.
Are people watching me get confused?
No.
By the way, you said
the total opposite of what I thought you were going to say.
What did you think I was going to say?
I thought you said when it got to the warm potato
it was people like me that were like,
I believe in something, I don't know what it is.
And then you were like, it turns into religion.
I was like, what?
It's like, wait, how do they get it?
Oh, fuck, I'm not following the potato.
Because it goes like this.
Let me help you follow the potato.
It goes like this.
Jesus makes a potato.
Exactly.
Jesus makes a potato.
It's steaming hot.
It's nuclear fire, it's so hot.
But he can touch it because he's Jesus.
He is the potato.
Jesus is the potato.
Jesus is the potato.
And he like,
you get around him and it's like,
it's done, game over.
You get around the guy,
your consciousness is going to get shifted
to the disciples and then you're somebody
that is spreading that energy down the line.
So it's like, when it's somewhere
down the line, what happens
is it goes from being, I'm trying
to think about works with comedy.
It's like comedy.
To put it into perspective, you get
Bill Hicks, right?
This incredible, innovative, brilliant,
amazing, revolutionary
comedian, Bill Hicks appears.
And then all of a sudden, down the line
because of Bill Hicks, you get a lot
of people that are kind of like Bill Hicks.
And they're doing their own thing.
They're super funny, but they're being honest.
Like Bill Hicks has opened it up
so that now comics can be really honest
and do these weird political rants
and it can go on and on maybe without
a big punchline in it even,
but it's so raw and real that it's amazing.
So then you get these other comics
around Bill Hicks, but then eventually
it becomes just a case of people
imitating what they did.
Just a guy in a fucking, in a duster
that's not doing it. He's not doing it.
He's just wearing a duster.
He's doing a kind of like pseudo angry thing
where he rants about something that
seems like revolutionary or something,
but it's like...
We're gonna hate this part of the question.
What were we talking about?
I forget where we started.
I know we started somewhere.
I know, but it's not potatoes.
Potato is an analogy for something we started about.
I don't know what that was.
Man, you can never try to go back
where it started.
This is why we need a time machine.
We're talking about the idea of going back
in time exactly to have a conversation
with Muhammad or any of the great prophets
to find out what they're really fucking like.
Because my theory is
they're probably the opposite
of the way people think they were.
My theory is that you get around people like that
and it's like being around...
I heard a description once
of a saint.
Somebody who runs
Ram Dass' foundation had gone up to India
and there's apparently a woman
living up there right now
who's a realized being,
whether you believe it or not.
I don't know if I believe it or not,
but I don't think that they have any reason to lie.
I don't see why they would have any reason to lie.
But there's a few people out there
and probably in other parts of the world too
that for whatever reason
they've created the chemical conversion
in their mind where they're no longer
attached to being a human anymore.
It sounds something else,
but this woman's name is City Ma
and
he said that being around her
was like being...
and it sounds really strange,
being around her was...
you don't feel like you're with a human.
It was like being around like a wild animal.
It was like something that is so
fully in the moment,
so completely here,
something so completely here
that it's no longer a person.
It's not what she's going to do
because she's fully in the moment,
whatever's coming through her
is like the force of infinity.
And that is way different
than like, I don't know,
like somebody wearing a funny outfit
with like a Bible
making you repeat over and over again
like...
Predictability.
It would be cool if priests were unpredictable.
If they had the spirit inside them
and they were like,
stop it, everyone on your fucking knees
and you're like, whoa, what are we doing today?
I can guess.
I hope everyone appreciates
that we're not similar,
but I love you.
Like, I love listening.
Everyone can witness.
You're seeing my face.
I get lost every now and then,
but I love having friends like you
these interactions because I don't think...
You know me, I called you from Hawaii
that one time thing and I had to tickle a cancer.
Yeah.
And you were like, you were like,
don't ever go into your brain by yourself.
Well, that's a Jack Cornfield quote.
He says, yeah,
your brain is like a bad neighborhood.
You shouldn't go there alone.
Yeah.
But it's like, I wouldn't have
someone like you in my life.
Like, it's the greatest thing
bigger than I think.
I'm a pretty meat potatoes kind of guy.
I'm a therapy and I'm working things out,
but like, I hear you talk about shit
and I'm like, hot potatoes.
Like, fucking,
I'm going to put that into an analogy with my daughters.
Like, and it won't be the same one.
Your teacher is like a warm potato maker.
Thanks, man.
But it's like the greatest thing about you.
I fucking, I had to say that
in the moment because I was like,
so overwhelmed by, I don't know,
you're all here and you paid to see it
or did not or whatever.
But like, you came to see him
and I got to be on stage with him.
I just think that's cool.
Well, it's just fun to have these conversations, man.
I think you're super smart and I think that that's
a weird thing that people do
where they're like, I'm not smart,
you know, in this way.
Not like you though, like you're different.
I'm not smart like you.
That's the whole idea.
You know, your wife Christmas house by yourself.
Exactly.
I can't make that joke.
I can't do what you just did.
That's brilliantly funny.
And so it's just a different kind of thing, man.
It's such a cool,
I like, I hate to slug each other's dicks up here,
but like, it's literally do it.
We'll make podcast history.
You've already painted your toenails.
Let's go for it.
All I'm thinking is,
if we did slug each other's dicks,
would I do it good or poorly?
Like, it's the worst I do,
the longer your dicks in my mouth,
the better I do, you're like, that guy's fucking good.
You know what, man?
I bet if we do it, we'll definitely make it
in the kindler's next state of the industry address,
for sure.
God damn it, that guy's funny.
He does get hot about shit.
I like it. I like it too.
That's really cool, man.
I love that.
There's something about somebody
who isn't afraid of confrontation,
who likes to fight,
or maybe doesn't like to fight, but just does fight.
I find that very inspirational.
Because I think a lot of times
people like to
rationalize their cowardice
and when I say people, I mean me,
a lot of times people rationalize
their cowardice
by thinking they're spiritual.
So they say, oh no, no, no, no.
I'm not afraid.
I'm not fighting because
I'm not abstaining from fighting because I'm afraid.
I'm abstaining from fighting
because I'm just too holy
and sacred a person to do that.
When the reality of the situation is,
you're not, if you knew
you would win the fight,
that's a way you can tell if you're a coward or not.
There's a fight that you're withdrawing from
and you consider to yourself,
wait, would I fight this fight
if I was 100% certain that I would win?
And the answer is yes.
Then you're being a coward.
Well, here then to find this, because here's the thing
I'm going through right now that I feel ashamed about.
I
end up giving advice to people
that maybe aren't asking for it.
I find myself getting to
preachy rants about advice
but it's stuff I actually know about
but I give advice to people
and I find it disgusting.
Why?
Because it's arrogant.
Advice is arrogant.
I get advice from people.
I go, hey, you don't know me.
Don't do that.
I think maybe we talked about this the other day
when we were fucked up.
I get advice from someone.
I go, hey, easy man.
You don't have all the information.
You don't know me and our business
but I'm on a different path maybe
or maybe I'm not going where you're going
or maybe I need something else from my life
but I find myself fucking doing it.
Here's the thing about managers.
Kids are signing with new faces
or signing with managers.
Here's the thing about a manager.
What the fuck am I doing?
I do have great advice to give to
a new face
signing with a manager because I've been in the business for 16 years
but still it's disgusting.
Giving me great advice didn't think like that.
But how many people have given you
fucking mediocre advice to hear themselves speak?
Yeah, but you forget about those people.
I don't remember that.
I just remember the people.
The only ones I remember I don't remember the good advice.
Yeah, that's it.
The shitty advice you just forget immediately
but sometimes when I'm getting good advice
there's usually, I know
it's happening because
A, it makes me feel uncomfortable
like whatever the advice is
pushing me past where I think I should be
I see what you're saying.
Let me preference this.
I remember Joe giving me advice very early
when I met him
and I didn't hear it as advice.
I heard it as the truth.
I was like, that's what I need to be doing.
What was the advice?
It must have been great.
It was great advice.
Joe's advice was
and I'll be candid about it.
You're a very sweet guy
that everyone likes
and you have a lot of people that love you
and you just need to
accept us as friends.
We had just done a shot of whiskey
and we had done
the Ice Health Chronicles
I was about to go on stage
and it was very sweet and he gave me a hug
and I thought, I don't think I've heard that from a man
ever.
I've never heard that from a man.
You're a very sweet guy.
A lot of people love you
and you deserve bad things in your life.
I always thought that I deserve bad things.
Everyone thinks they deserve bad things.
I always look in the mirror
and sometimes I go, oh you piece of shit, whatever.
That's your conditioning of where your head's at.
I remember hearing that and getting on stage
and I was kind of fucked up by it.
I was like, what's that mean?
Then I got in the car and I was like, oh he's a good guy
or he's a good guy, Joe is a good guy.
I went into therapy right after that.
I'm saying way too fucking much.
I went into therapy right after that
and he called me up and he was like, dog.
Let's get coffee.
I said, I can't, I gotta go to therapy.
He goes, dog, fucking cancel that shit.
He goes, let's me and you hang out.
We'll drink coffee and we'll talk.
You don't need to pay anybody, I'll listen.
I remember me and you and Joey had coffee
and then we had a podcast and for a month
I sat with Joey every single day and had coffee
and I didn't think I really deserved good friends.
Tommy Segura is one of my best friends in the world.
I don't get to see anybody much.
I remember hearing that from Joe
and I went, that's the best advice I've ever gotten.
I think I had surrounded myself
by people that were maybe not,
my interest in my life
was not their interest.
My happiness and my
success or my trajectory
was not their interest.
What I could give to them was their interest.
Right.
Joe said I had nothing here.
I was like, if you have a date, let me know.
I'll tweet it for you.
I really didn't trust it.
I was like, I'm not fucking telling you anything.
Then he was like, why wouldn't you tell me there?
I could've tweeted it and Joey was the same way.
He'd come by my house with his fucking family
and we'd fucking sit in my front yard
and I was like, what's going on?
I was very shaky about that shit.
Isn't that weird?
I'm right on the same page with you, man.
It's really difficult to accept love
and that's one of the strangest aspects
of being a human being
because you'd think it'd be the opposite way.
You'd just be like, oh great, love,
oh friends, this is great,
but for some reason, for some of us,
probably not all of you, but for a lot of people,
when it comes to you,
you'll find yourself pushing it away.
It seems like you'd automatically
on paper, burst, someone likes you
in a weird way, my defense is
if any of you guys tonight will say,
hey, that was a great podcast, you'll see it.
I'll go, everyone do it to me.
But you'll see me, I'll go,
oh thanks a lot, I really appreciate it.
Those are my words that I say, but I push it away
because I can't accept that.
And even friends, I go, oh good, good, good, good,
but I'm waiting for you to hurt me.
In a weird way, I'm waiting for you to hurt me.
I'm waiting for that.
It's fascinating because you'd think on paper
if you said, hey, you're going to be loved.
I'd be like, who fucking bring it?
Shower me with letting tongue kisses or whatever.
This is a funny battle, man.
And I'll tell you very quickly
about one of the coolest
mushroom trips I ever had.
It was when I was in college
and I was really depressed.
I actually got so depressed when I was in college
that I got on anti-depressants.
I had to get on anti-depressants.
It was awful.
I was having suicidal thoughts.
I was really, truly, deeply depressed.
And I took mushrooms,
which is maybe not the best thing
to do when you're deeply depressed,
but some people are saying that they might cure depression,
but I remember, or they might help depression.
But I took these mushrooms
and I'm so gloomy and I'm feeling so down
and the trip starts and it's not a great trip.
I'm walking through the woods,
just bummed out,
and then came out of the woods
into this giant field of flowers
near my college.
And it was the weirdest moment
because all of a sudden,
it's like I could feel
the entire universe
was made of love
and that it was pouring in on me
like through the flowers
or it was just love, love, love, love, love, love, love.
And it was like the universe was saying
you're the last part
of the universe
that doesn't love yourself.
You're the last piece
of the universe.
The entire universe loves you
except for you.
And you've got to be able
to accept it and not just accept it
but be it. And the moment you do that
then
it's a party. Like it's become
now you're in heaven.
But until you can do that,
as long as you keep this membrane
up between you and all of this
tsunami of love coming in at you,
you're going to feel sad.
You're going to feel like somebody
standing in front of the most delicious
meal that anyone ever ate
starving to death
for whatever reason
thinks there's an invisible
screen between you and that delicious food.
It's really cool, isn't it?
And this is why they talk about
the concept of surrender
which is in so many different religions.
They say you've got to surrender.
You've just got to surrender.
And we hear that if you're
depending on what kind of family you're raised in
the term surrender has very negative connotations
associated with it. You don't want to surrender.
Loser surrender. You don't want
to surrender.
But this concept is
you're surrendering in the battle
of
fighting against love.
You're saying all right,
I give up beating back love in the world.
I'm putting down
my weapons and I'm now going to be
completely enveloped
by the great transcendent eternal
love field that
the entire universe is composed of.
And it's a really scary thing
and that's kind of scary for a lot of people
because it means you merge into this like ocean
and it's terrifying.
It's better to feel like you're starving
and have a self
than to not be starving anymore
and become everything for a lot of people.
You know what I mean.
I like it visualized as like a meat head
jersey guy who is jealous
and couldn't accept the love his girl gave him
because he was so hot. She was so hot.
She was like, what the fuck are you talking to her for?
What the fuck are you talking to him for?
And that's the surrender. I was like, just let it go.
She loves you.
Just be her boyfriend.
Yeah, that's it.
And you could do it in every single thing.
I'm not the smartest person.
But the way I see things are pretty
basic sometimes.
It was all jersey short.
But yeah, I see it.
I don't know.
I'm in therapy. I'm very happy I'm in therapy.
I love it. I love it.
I'm learning so much about myself
and I didn't like it before. I fucking hated it.
So how long have you been in therapy for?
Probably like a day.
No, I've been in
since I fell off that waterfall.
So probably like
a couple months, a few months.
By the way, being friends with Bert
is like being friends with a pirate
because he's got pirate level
adventure stories that
I'll never have one.
If I could just have one.
Yeah, that was the time I fell off the waterfall.
But that would be amazing.
But you've got fell off the waterfall
almost died scuba diving.
Rupture my nut.
The classic pirate story
of rupturing your nut.
Drinking Goat's Blood with a Masai Chief.
Like it's been. I never knew about that one.
I drank Goat's Blood with a Masai Chief.
This is a good story.
He told me
there's other Chiefs in Tanzania.
And we get in access to his tribe
and the Chief pulls me aside.
I got the whole crew with me.
I'm the executive producer of my show.
So we roll in and he says
it's an honor to meet you.
We're shooting a TV show in his village.
I was like it's an honor to meet you.
He brings me over and he cuts
a goat's throat in front of me
and bleeds it into a horn.
And he says it's a welcoming ritual.
I want to welcome you into my tribe.
Goat's Blood. I'm like motherfucker.
Blood in Africa is not a good idea.
No.
It's like maybe like top 5 worst ideas.
Literally I'm like does anyone fuck this goat?
I'm not even being cracked. I'm being honest right now.
I'm about to drink the fucking blood.
That's what was going through my head.
And his whole tribe's like drink it.
And so I drink it.
And he says in front of his whole tribe
he's got his bossy bottom like the Wu-Tang Clan.
He goes how are you famous?
He doesn't know any better.
I'm like fuck yeah.
Big time.
He goes how did you become famous?
Now I have a spiel.
I give people when you go how did you
like tell me your story.
I was very quick. I can tell you.
In 1997 the Rolling Stone magazine called me the number one party in the country.
Oliver Stone optioned the rest of my life.
That began the movie Van Wilder.
So Smith discovered me.
After six months of doing stand up and I started doing TV.
I've been doing TV for 16 years.
And I'm on travel channel. I've been there for six years.
It's the greatest job in the world.
I take people on adventures of a lifetime.
And now I'm here and I'm meeting you.
And he says wow.
I said how did you become chief?
And he says when I was 12 I killed a lion.
Fucking I just I watched the Wu-Tang Clan behind me.
Like oh shit bitch.
They started doing that
stuff
to each other.
And my whole crew
tells how to kill a lion.
I was like fuck you guys.
Do you want to hear it? It's a good story.
So in Tanzania
in a lot of places in Africa they don't do
circumcision until they're like 13.
Because they do it in front of the whole tribe.
They cover them in mud and they
circumcise them with a fucking rock.
A sword and a stick
and a whole tribe.
And if any of the mud on their face cracks
then they're shamed and they can't live inside the tribe.
They can't marry any of the women from the tribe.
And they're shunned.
Wait you mean if they make any
an expression.
Any expression.
Wow. Fuck.
He's telling this goddamn story.
I've told him I was in Rolling Stone.
You think he even knew what Rolling Stone was?
I fucked up. I fucked up.
I should have made it bigger like BBC
and so
the day before your circumcision
you're set outside the tribe to kind of reflect
about the day you have tomorrow.
And so he goes outside the tribe and a fucking lion rolls up on it.
So he climbs up a tree and a lion
climbs up the tree. He takes a sword.
They're all given a sword at a certain age.
He takes a sword and he cuts the lion
and the lion falls out of the tree and dies.
He then takes the lion and makes yours instead
throws it over his shoulders and the next morning
rolls into fucking camp with a goddamn
lion over his shoulder.
And the rock in the movie nobody saw.
And then he says to me,
this motherfucker says to me at the end of the day
here is that sword.
He gives it to me. He hands it to me.
He gave me a fucking sword and I go
and I was like oh thank you
and then he looks at me. I can see it in his eyes.
He's like what do you got for me?
He's like you can't give a present
not get a present.
I wish this story was better in the ending of this.
I wish like because in my head I was like
do I give him my cell phone?
Like oh by the way
I did show his whole posse porn on accident.
And so I was like do I give him my cell phone
but he didn't have a charger. They don't need
a wifi.
And all I had to give him
was a fucking football.
I gave him, we had a football
and so I just handed him a football and he was like
uhhhh.
Thank you. Oh man.
So I got this awesome massage.
You got a magic sword like in a video game
plus eight sword.
A holy sword and you gave him a fucking
football.
Not even a leather football like a rubber football.
Here's what I think. This will ease
your mind. I have a feeling
that this chief
has like a whole cabinet filled with
swords and anytime
a right person.
By the way, I gotta tell you
I'll show it to you next time you're in my house.
It's a weird color to sword.
You're like kind of like
it's like a mauve.
Is mauve the right color?
It's like almost pink but red but
like big.
Mauve.
Wait did a black guy just yell move to me?
Mother fucker!
Shelf your fucking stereotypes!
Move bitch!
It's so
funny though
to imagine as you guys are
coming him and his friends
his friends are like are you gonna do that lion
trick? Cause it got us a VCR
last time.
Tell the lion story.
Give him that fucking bullshit sword.
Burke Kreischer everybody give him a round of applause
Burke Kreischer.
I had a fucking fantastic time tonight
thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening everybody
this episode was brought to you by
harrys.com
you can go to
to order some
fancy gourmet level
razor blades and if you use offer code
family hour you'll get
five dollars off
of your first purchase.
If you enjoyed this podcast I hope
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importantly use whatever portal you
must to connect yourself to whatever
force it is that is creating
all life and matter in this universe.
I love you guys.
I'll see you soon.
Hare Krishna.
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