Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 159: Are Farts Actually Funny? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 159
Episode Date: September 3, 2018R&L discuss the history of farts in the entertainment industry, their families' attitudes towards flatulence, and why context matters when it comes to a comedic air biscuit on this week's episode of e...ar biscuits. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
man, we are going to tackle a deep dark issue.
We're gonna seek to answer the question
or at least explore it in detail
with a scope-like device of conversation.
That question is, are farts actually funny?
Are they actually funny?
And you know, I want this to be.
I'm gonna start echoing.
I think we should do that because I've heard that
in order for people to remember things,
you have to say it multiple times.
So from now on.
I don't think anybody needs to remember that.
Are farts actually funny?
Are farts actually funny?
And I don't wanna just be a bunch of,
like two school kids.
Yeah, we're not a bunch.
Being idiots.
I wanna be sophisticated about that.
I mean, this is.
I've got historical data. I have, I've got information about, I mean this is. I've got historical data, I've got information
about the first joke ever recorded,
I've got information about the attitude,
historical attitudes towards farts and media.
I'm gonna blow your fartin' mind.
And I have a lot of experience.
With farting?
Yeah.
You know the average person farts 14 times a day
and everyone will deny that it is that many.
You said what, 10 to 20?
14, well 10 to 20 is.
I read 10 to 20.
Yeah, 14 is an average.
I think I probably farted 14 times just today
when we were talking a little bit about farts earlier.
Oh, well a wise man once said,
laughter is like farting from your mouth.
Yeah, that was you, Link, you're a wise man.
A wise man once quoted himself in the third person
saying something about farts.
Did you really, actually, did you notice
that as we were talking about this
and looking at the research,
that we were standing in our office
and there was multiple audible farts.
Coming from you.
Yeah, but it was, no.
None from me.
None from you today, maybe.
But I was just getting into the spirit
of this whole thing, you know?
But then I started realizing that it's typical
that that's how it is in our office
when no one else is in our office.
Is that there's open, it's an open farting policy.
I wanna get back to this.
Okay.
So I don't wanna get into it right now
because I'm glad that you admitted that you have an issue.
An issue, no. I wanted to explore it.
I had the- You don't think it's an issue.
I had the vegan- So you think it's funny.
Sunset bowl from grain lab or whatever it was.
When the sun sets, the tide dries.
Quinoa, beans, broccoli.
All right so we're gonna get into farting
but it's gonna be sophisticated.
It's gonna be adult and it's gonna be.
You just made the word adult sound.
It's gonna be life changing.
That it was, I don't know what it was.
It just made me think more about farts.
Okay, but I do, I have to say that
I'm gonna have trouble, I'm having trouble turning,
I'm doing the Batman thing that I have to do sometimes.
The Batman swivel where the shoulders turn
with the nose?
Yeah, because I because earlier today,
when I was at the gym getting my pump on,
It's not a thing, what you just said
is not how it's said. I hurt my upper back.
Now, as you know, Upper back.
I've got lower back issues that I've dealt with on and off,
and I have a recurring upper back.
Everybody, I assume, I know you've got your shoulder thing,
and you kinda know when it's about to happen
and you know when it's happening and it's very specific
and it's in a certain place and the pain radiates
in exactly the same way every time.
Well just as a side note for those of you who don't know,
my shoulder.
There's an ant in my cup.
Will pop out of socket and then pop right back in.
It's like the ligaments got, did you get it?
There it is.
There, all right, he's flinging it on the floor
and now he's drinking a big gulp of the drink.
Without the end.
Okay, go ahead.
A residue.
Ever since attempting to bench press as a middle schooler,
my right shoulder would just
pop out and pop back in, but anyway. Very disconcerting.
Yeah, now I have issues from how I slept on it.
But I've actually, in trying to take care of my body
and watch what I'm eating and doing the Pilates
and now I'm going to this, I've been going to the gym
and meeting with this personal trainer who's like focusing
on like my back health and posture and things.
Wealth of knowledge, those personal trainers.
I haven't had the upper back issue in quite some time.
It's something that would happen even in college.
I remember the first time it really happened
and I thought that I was down for the count was when we were watching UFC.
We got into watching UFC in college
and we would watch it and then we would wrestle.
And other guys in the dorm room would come in
and there would be like, other people would sometimes
join in on it, it was very strange now that I think about it
but I was trying to guillotine you.
Like a headlock?
Almost like a suplex kind of thing,
but we never really did any real moves.
It was just like kind of like grappling,
you know, like sparring.
But in pulling up, I felt this little snap
right in between my shoulder blades
just to the right of my spine.
And that was when I thought that I wasn't gonna be able
to make it to class the next day.
Oh.
Because it hurt so bad.
It's not nearly that bad but I was not doing a pull up.
I was doing something short of a pull up.
So you're saying that's when your upper back
injury originated?
I've had the upper and the lower back since
like high school, college.
Oh I didn't know you had an upper back thing.
But go ahead.
Yeah it's a sharp pain.
Anyway and then when I get it, turning both ways
causes this really sharp pain in the middle,
which is much better, because I've been like,
you see me massaging myself all day?
You didn't offer to help, by the way.
Somebody's gotta do it.
I've been sitting here massaging myself.
But I was doing a pull up, but not a pull up.
It's just the exercise was just jump up and hold yourself up like you're doing
a pull up.
And hold it for five seconds and let yourself down gently.
And then like.
Like a reverse chin up.
The third one. Chin down.
Felt the snap and I was like oh no no no no no.
Thanos.
And then I'm like an old man at that point
and I'm like I don't know what else I can do.
Oh, was the trainer there?
Yeah.
And then I'm like, also my knee's kinda hurting
and my lower back was already hurting from earlier.
And I was just like, I think I should just quit today.
And, did you?
Well, she ended up like giving me some modified things
just to fill the time.
She had to make that money.
I ended up being.
She's like, I know you're decrepit
and you're falling apart here, but I gotta get that money.
Ultimately what I'm saying is if you see me touching myself
during this podcast, it's just because I'm trying
to comfort my own spine and I'm gonna be fine.
Don't worry about me.
Your sympathy is appreciated.
But when I turn to you like this,
I might use the swivel in the chair
and it's just because this hurts more than normal.
I don't mean to look at you with a blank,
unempathetic stare but that's,
I just can't conjure up anything else right now.
I think somehow this is, you deserved this
and I didn't wanna say that out loud.
But do you know what would be a great superpower?
A great superpower would be able to snap your fingers
and make someone else feel exactly what you're feeling.
Oh. And so I could be like,
and then you'd be like, and then,
oh, I'm gonna take it back now.
Well, speaking of Thanos, I mean.
Perfect empathy, it would be like a USB port.
There is the, I mean. Perfect empathy, we'd be like a USB port. There is the, I mean like the empath superhero
in Guardians, but she can feel your pain.
She can't make you feel her pain.
That's pretty self-centered.
You keep saying Thanos.
I said Thanos earlier,
and then I said speaking of Thanos later.
Oh, oh.
I'm talking in the Marvel universe.
And what is that superhero's name?
She's the one with the antenna and the big eyes.
Oh, and the weird bald head thing?
Oh no, yes, oh.
Yeah.
Part of the crew, she's like pink-ish, yeah.
She's on Thanos' head, man.
Yeah, yeah.
You remember Thanos?
I spoke of him a couple of times.
You keep speaking of Thanos.
The snap, you said the snap earlier.
I get it.
I'm just, I am really sore myself.
Oh really? But I have not
sustained an injury because in my gym experience,
yesterday morning, I had to do some pull-ups.
Oh, real pull-ups.
Oh my gosh.
Man, if you haven't done pull-ups,
if you wanna get sore, do a bunch of pull-ups
having not done pull-ups for like a couple of years.
And it'll just ransack you, man.
Like everything underneath my armpits is just like a,
just a tender place of emotion.
It's like just poke anywhere and I'm liable
just to start crying, man.
But something feels good about it.
Like you were talking about, last week you were talking
about I can't walk because they had me doing
one-legged squats.
Yeah, it was awful.
I had just recovered.
That's the thing. But did you like it?
Did you like, was there an aspect of liking the soreness?
Like I actually feel like I have some muscles
because I'm sore.
I like soreness in general but it was extreme.
It was like I couldn't go upstairs, it was that bad.
And it was that bad for like, I mean I did go upstairs
but I had to really use the arm rails.
It was like three or four days,
and I'd finally gotten over it,
and then I frickin' injured myself.
You gotta watch it, man.
You gotta watch it. Gotta be more careful.
Do you let any farts out?
Like when you're straining so much to do a pull up
or do some of that Pilates that you do,
I mean to get back to the farts,
to just start to wet our appetite for the-
Please don't use farts and then wet right after it.
There was an H in there, I think it's wet.
No, I actually think about it-
You don't wet an appetite, you wet it.
I actually think about it quite often.
You're holding them in?
Oh yeah, and the morning time,
that's like prime time, man, that's like deflation time.
That's like you're equalizing like a scuba diver
for the first two or three hours that you're awake,
at least if you're me, maybe it's just
because I'm six foot seven.
Do you eat something before you go into the gym?
Because I think, I actually don't have
a fart problem usually.
I have a stink problem, like if I eat garlic
the night before.
You mean not from the farts, but from the body.
I will stink from my whole body.
But I don't have a fart problem usually.
No, I mean, it's not, I mean,
I had oatmeal today before I went in.
But I mean, definitely there were a few times
when I was like, if I was in here alone,
I would let it go right now, but I'm not going to.
I don't, I'm not gonna put,
however, during the end of the workout,
while, what happens in my gym is after you work out,
your trainer stretches you,
makes you feel like a professional athlete.
Oh.
And they line you up, there's like four stretching tables
and usually they're pretty full, you know,
weekday morning around 7 a.m. or whatever.
And so. Oh, on a table.
Not even on the floor.
You're on this like table. Like a physical therapy table. Yeah, or whatever. And so. Oh on a table. Not even on the floor. You're on this like table.
Like a physical therapy table.
Yeah and they're stretching you.
And. Oh wow.
Someone.
They don't do that at my gym.
Someone next to me, like the people,
the trainer and the patient, what do you call them, client?
Over here to the right of me, one of them farted.
And it came over towards us.
Was it audible?
No, it went in my right nostril
so I was able to like echolocate the fart
so I knew where it came from.
Right.
And I knew that it wasn't my trainer and it wasn't me,
but I was like, she might think that it's me
because it definitely smelled like a dude's fart
because there's just a difference.
Well, hold on now.
There's just a difference. Well, hold on now. There's just a difference.
Well, it's like-
That's so sexist, man.
Well, ultimately-
Women's farts stink, man.
No, what I'm saying is if there was a bear
that got into my house
and there was a deer that got into my house,
I kind of feel like ultimately I'd be able to tell you
if it was a bear or a deer.
And I feel like men have like bear farts sometimes.
Not all men, but some men.
So then I was like, should I say something?
Like, it wasn't me.
No, you can't do that.
So I just began to stretch a little more
in an effort to waft it away.
I definitely would, I don't know,
it would have said something.
But now that I'm saying that, I'm like,
I have been hit with the opportunity
to explain that it wasn't me,
but then I'm also worried that it's them
and I'm putting them on the spot.
So then it's like, well then,
I'm putting them on the spot to lie if it was them,
and then if they don't lie, it's extremely embarrassing.
So the reason why I don't do it is for that reason,
to not make the other person feel like I'm back
at the corner. Don't even acknowledge it.
But if you had echolocated the thing,
then I think you should have let that rip.
Hey, it wasn't me.
Yeah, it was that guy over there.
It was one of them two feet away from us.
Okay.
You should have done that, man.
So we've already gotten into farts a little bit here
and I think that-
Was there any comedy in that?
I think there was some,
I think me saying the term echolocate a fart
probably made some people laugh.
That wasn't my intention necessarily,
but it just the way it came out, just like a little.
But that's for them to say.
Yeah.
Not you. But was it funny? I them to say. Yeah. Not you.
But was it funny?
I don't know, you be the judge.
I was asking, was it funny for you to experience it,
not did you just say something funny?
No, but are farts funny?
Okay, all right.
Are farts actually funny?
That's fair, so us talking about that.
Oh yeah, I think we talked about it for comedic effect.
And I think we were fishing for some comedy.
And I do think we're gonna be talking a lot about.
I don't know if we echolocated it.
Farting being incorporated,
farting specifically being incorporated
into purposeful comedy.
Oh.
I think is a big part of this discussion.
I don't think it's just like,
is it funny when someone farts and why is it funny?
We'll get into that.
But is it funny to then make fart jokes?
Is it funny to have a fart joke in your pants
ready to flip it out and impress somebody?
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Some things were just meant for each other, Link.
Blank and blank, blank and blank,
and now, I think I'm supposed to say things
instead of blanks.
Yeah.
And now Ear Biscuits and Spotify.
But we should fill in the blanks.
You say one. Peaches and cream.
Jumping and a little bit of breeze. Jumping and a little bit of breeze.
Jumping and a little bit of breeze?
You know how when you jump, it creates vertical breeze?
Don't criticize mine, come up with your own.
Yeah, but that's cause and effect.
I don't think we're looking at cause and effect
relationships, I'm thinking two independent things
that you bring together like spaghetti and meatballs.
Squatting.
Butter and bread.
And standing.
Okay, I don't think you understand the concept.
Jumping and landing.
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Now back to the biscuit.
So we've got a few things, right?
We've got personal farting stories,
but I don't even feel like we should get into those
because we don't even know if they're funny yet
because we haven't even explored if it's okay
for farting to be funny, for fart jokes to be funny,
which is kind of what we're getting into.
So there's the stories,
there's also our personal philosophy with like our comedy
and how we,
like how do we view farts in our comedy repertoire,
but then also kind of like the history of farting in comedy
and people's viewpoint on it.
What do you think makes the most sense
in terms of getting into first?
Let's set the stage with some cultural analysis
of farts through the strata of comedy.
Okay, good idea.
Now, I got some of this from,
do we post like sources anywhere?
We don't do that.
Do we?
Yeah.
I mean.
You can tweet an article if you'd like.
Okay.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
I'll do that when this comes out.
I'll talk about it.
But right now, I have this article
from the Pacific Standard,
which talks about a few of these things.
And then there's another article that I'm this article from the Pacific Standard which talks about a few of these things and then there's another article
that I'm not remembering at the moment.
But you can get this information in multiple places.
First of all, one of the things I found really interesting
is that Jimmy Pardo, you remember Jimmy Pardo
who we were on his podcast?
Yeah, Never Not Funny.
And then we did his.
His fundraiser.
Charity thing.
His marathon fundraiser.
In this article in the Pacific Standard
by a guy named Rick Paulus,
he was talking about how some comedians
really hate fart jokes and Jimmy Pardo was quoted as saying,
"'I don't think there is a topic I hate more
"'and you can quote me.'"
He's like really, really adamantly against fart jokes.
Really?
And you know who's also just against bathroom humor
in general is Jimmy, Jimmy Fallon, another Jimmy.
Maybe if you're Jimmy, there's a new theory.
You don't like bathroom humor.
But my dad's name is Jimmy and he'll fart up a storm.
But does he make jokes about it
or does he do it for comedic effect?
Both, so it doesn't hold true, bad theory.
But Jimmy Pardo and Jimmy Fallon,
neither of them are into fart humor.
But interestingly, the first joke ever recorded
in Sumeria, 1900 BC, was quote,
"'Something which has never occurred since time immemorial.
"'A young woman did not fart in her husband's lap.'"
It seems to get lost in translation a little bit.
That was the entire joke?
Yeah, that's it.
Something which has never occurred since time immemorial,
a young woman did not fart in her husband's lap.
This is ringing a bell.
I think you've told me about this, sir.
This has come up before.
I've heard this.
Yeah, I don't exactly understand what the joke is there.
We didn't figure it out then
and I don't think we're gonna figure it out now.
I can say that my wife didn't necessarily fart on my lap,
but she did fart on a dude's lap in high school
and she tells that story and it's a funny one.
Well.
Yeah.
It's a funny one?
Yeah, well, I mean.
How did that happen?
I just told you.
You didn't tell me, you said there was a story.
She has a- Tell me the story.
All I know is that she sat on a dude's lap
and shortly thereafter she farted
and everyone started laughing
and it's a story that is told time immemorial.
And apparently it was funny in Sumeria.
But I think that the bottom line with that
is as far back as we can go to people recording a joke,
it was a fart joke. So this is something that, this isn't a new thing, I don't think anybody thought that, as far back as we can go to people recording a joke,
it was a fart joke. So this is something that, this isn't a new thing,
I don't think anybody thought that, but it's interesting.
Also, did you know that Shakespeare was in-
Had diverticulitis.
He was not above a fart joke.
I had to just, I mean, there were multiple ones
to choose from, they were a little bit subtle,
almost like a silent fart.
Well that's because we don't understand Shakespeare.
But in Othello.
That's a board game, right?
The clown says, are these pray you wind instruments?
And the first musician says, aye, merry they are, sir.
Clown says, oh, thereby hangs a tale.
First musician says, whereby hangs they are, sir.' Clown says, "'Oh, thereby hangs a tale.' First musician says, "'Whereby hangs a tale, sir?'
And the clown says, "'Merry, sir,
by many a wind instrument that I know.'"
He's talking about the anus.
The butthole. Yeah.
And how it's- The fart.
It's like a wind instrument.
The fart took us.
And this is just, again, one of many examples
that you can find of bathroom humor,
they might even go as far as to call it scat-a-tuk,
scat-a-colog, can you say that word for me?
Eschatological.
Nope, it's scat-a-tological, scat-a-tological,
scat-a-tological, yep.
Like ology of the scat.
Yeah, of the scat.
And Shakespeare had made a lot of these.
And then, we actually talked about this guy
on the show on GMM before.
This French baker who was known as Le Petit Mime,
something like that, is a guy who his whole act,
he was in the late 1800s, early 1900s,
his whole act was farting.
Yes. Through a cone.
He was a baker.
They're like a megaphone?
And at first he had people who would come to his bakery
and hear him fart impressions of musical instruments.
What?
Which is an interesting thing to happen in a bakery.
Really, don't really want a carb load after that.
Then he took his act on the road
and became this national treasure of France
that people like Sigmund Freud would actually pay to see
while traveling Europe.
But this wasn't comedy.
This was an exhibition.
It was comedy.
Oh, it was?
Yeah, it was, I mean, yeah.
It wasn't just like.
He would do impersonations of people,
of animals, of musical instruments.
He would blow out a candle from across the stage.
Yeah but at a certain point you're no longer laughing
and you're just clapping.
You're in awe.
It's a trick.
It's an exhibition of talent.
No doubt there are elements of that, without a doubt,
but I definitely think that people thought it was funny.
I mean, a French baker farting?
It was at least lighthearted.
I think it was more of it.
But then, for most of the 20th century,
in media, farts were off limits.
It was kind of this last taboo
of something that you couldn't talk about
and you couldn't do in movies,
like all the early film movement.
No farts, no bathroom humor really.
Until.
No scenes in a bathroom, nobody sitting on a toilet.
Well, I can't. Type of scene, probably.
I just know that directly addressing the fart
or somebody farting was not something that happened
until 1974, Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles,
which was a sort of revolutionary comedy film
in a bunch of different ways.
This is, they had the first fart in a film?
Well, multiple sources that I looked at said
that this was sort of breaking the seal, so to speak,
on incorporating farts unashamedly into media, into comedy.
Well, incorporating is an understatement.
That verb undersells how many farts
they put into that farting scene.
Yeah, we just, we watched it a second ago
and the dudes are, the cowboys are around the fire
eating beans. Oh yeah.
And it's a slow zoom out and like the,
there's burping as well.
There's a burp and then there's a fart
and then there's a bunch of farting.
Yeah.
And then the guy comes out of the tent
and you probably won't find it funny
just because it hasn't translated very well,
at least that particular scene.
But it was revolutionary in the sense that it was like
Mel Brooks was taking a chance and saying,
I'm gonna do it, we're gonna have all these actors fart.
And you know what it makes me think of,
just to flash forward in time a little bit,
in terms of great points of flatulence in cinema.
I think about that freaking Eddie Murphy movie
where he plays all the different characters
at the dinner table.
Nutty Professor.
Nutty Professor and is it his mom or his dad
or does the whole family start farting?
There's a dinner scene where multiple,
I actually have Nutty Professor written down
because I wanted to use it as an example later on.
Yes, I just thought about it.
I just remember dying.
That was so funny, man, because one fart
will catch you off guard.
I mean, and that checks the box of a certain type of comedy
which is surprise.
You take somebody by surprise,
you add a little embarrassment into the mix,
and then all of a sudden you're laughing.
But then I remember with that scene,
it just kept happening.
It just kept farting.
And I just remember belly laughing.
Like, I just couldn't stop.
It was so funny.
The first time.
Of course, the first time.
Watching it again, would you laugh in that way?
Probably not, right?
I don't know if I would crack a smile
if I watched The Nutty Professor right now.
I mean, speaking of bathroom humor,
it's like when I rewatched A League of Their Own
with the kids a few months back,
and I remember the Tom Hanks scene where he starts peeing
in the women's locker room and the whole team,
he's been on like a drunken binge and he pees
and it just keeps going and going and going
and I remember in the theater,
there was like rolling laughter.
This is much,
It hits you again.
I actually talk about this.
Second wave.
I've talked about this scene multiple times in my life
because it was very formative to me as an aspirational peer.
Right, because you haven't been at a pee very long.
And it stopped and then it started again.
But then when I rewatched it with them,
because I knew that it was going to end at some point,
I didn't have just the big question mark of,
I can't believe this is still going,
when is it gonna end?
Same thing with all the farts and Nutty Professor.
Once you know it's just a bunch of farts,
you kinda roll your eyes.
Well, and you kinda got at this a little bit,
to why farts are funny.
And there's a number of theories about,
first of all, theories of humor and theories of comedy
are super complex and there's lots of disagreement.
But I do think that farts have two things.
Number one, they're relatable.
So there's a relatability to farts
that's across all cultures, all times,
because everyone's got to get rid of the gas
in their butt at some point.
It's kinda, it's like the gross version of saying
everybody puts their pants on one leg at a time.
Right, but it's even more relatable than that.
Everybody releases air pockets from their anus.
Because not everybody wears pants.
There are cultures that don't wear pants.
True.
But everyone has a butthole.
It's better than that.
And gas comes out of it.
Your butthole is like the pants of the globe.
The galaxy? The galaxy. the pants of the globe. The galaxy?
The galaxy.
Pants of the galaxy.
But in the second thing besides relatability
is what you called surprise,
which when discussed in theories of humor
is called pattern disruption.
And that's what makes,
a fart has those two things in full supply, right?
Not just the gas, but it's got the relatability,
then it's got the pattern disruption
that causes this sense of surprise, which elicits laughter.
And we don't know exactly, but it's just,
that's why when you put a fart into church,
that'll go over like a fart in church,
the old euphemism goes.
When you put a fart into something that humans
have dressed it up to be formal
and to have a certain level of expectations
that we're not all thinking about each other's
butt holes at the time.
Like we're doing the least think about each other's
butt holes thing that we can come up with,
like be in church.
Yeah.
Or a newscast or a formal dinner or something like that.
And then all of a sudden, somebody farts.
There's no question as to what it is,
you don't have to speak any particular language
to know that was a fart, that came from that dude's butt
and that surprised us and disrupted this pattern
that we've got going on right here
and everyone begins to laugh.
And that's why it's universally funny.
So I think the first part of the question is,
are they actually funny?
Well, yeah, they're funny.
I think it depends because, well,
I'm curious if our upbringing and how we interacted
with farts over the course of our lives
has primed us to find farts funny
because I don't think there's any secret
that we find farts funny, right?
But not in every instance but-
Not all farts.
We have a general predisposition to find farts funny
and I think at least for me,
it has to do with my upbringing.
So and I'm curious about yours but for me,
both of my granddads would just,
when I would go visit my grandparents,
they would just, I mean, they would just
do these reverberatory farts that were,
we would just all get a kick out of it.
Like my mom's dad and my dad's dad,
they would just rip them and everyone would immediately laugh.
And I mean they were so expressive.
I mean when you get a laugh in that way,
you start to know how to harness that pocket of air
for maximum of effectiveness.
It becomes a tool.
But my nana, she'd also rip them.
But now she's at a point and I've, you know,
you fast forward to this point in her life,
great-great-grandmother, just walking around
doing whatever she wants, farting,
just doing the walking farts, every step.
Burp, burp, burp, burp, burp.
God bless her, let her do what she wants.
It's not even for comedic effect anymore,
but we kind of, we laugh at her,
we kind of snicker because it's happening
and sometimes she'll cut her eyes.
But I mean, it just comes from a long line of fart.
A fart is followed by a laugh in the Neal household.
But now in my house, I operate that way.
I fart, I expect to get a laugh.
But you know what, it doesn't happen.
And my kids will say, well it's gross.
It's gross.
So I think that, I don't know,
they just haven't been around enough people laughing at it
and they've only experienced the negative parts
which are like the smell part.
Well, I have a theory.
I have a theory for why your kids don't find it funny,
but I don't wanna get there yet.
Okay.
And so I kind of give you my background is very similar.
I mean, I didn't have as, I wasn't close to my grandpa,
my grandparents didn't live in the same town.
And so honestly, like when I think about like my,
I know that my grandma's mom and Elle's husband,
but my step granddad we called Pop, he definitely farted.
I remember him sitting in like a recliner and farting,
but it was just like a handful of visits.
And it was funny.
There was absolutely no shame associated with flatulence
in the families that, in my immediate family
and also the families that we were related to.
Which is usually you say extended relatives.
I just said families I was related to.
But will your parents,
did you grow up with your parents farting?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like both of them?
Both of them, yes.
Now my dad would do it for comedic, for comedy's sake.
Comedic punctuation.
And he might, there might be like,
well you know what I think about that?
Well placed fart.
With my mom, I think it might have been like,
it wasn't always on purpose, but when it was,
it was immediately acknowledged and diffused with a laugh.
So we weren't one of those families
that was ashamed of farts,
unless it felt like more than a fart happened.
There was certainly a glass ceiling.
If a shart happened, at that point,
there's some shame involved in it.
And it's still very funny,
but it's a different kind of laugh.
I think there was a glass ceiling
for my mom.
The men in my life, it seems like they would hold them for the perfect moment and just let them rip,
just force it out in the most reverberatory way.
But I don't think the women were expected to do that,
which is a shame.
Right, yeah, there's a double standard.
So for them, you'd laugh at them
because something slipped out.
But the men, it was like, good Lord, what have you done?
I mean, we were staying, a few Christmases ago,
we spent the night at my dad's house
and all the kids slept in the sunroom,
which is like at the back door.
And Lincoln tells the story of my dad,
who he calls granddaddy,
coming in and saying, taking his dog Gypsy out.
And he's like, he said, Gypsy!
And that made Lincoln stir a little bit.
And then my dad, I don't know how you could have
this much gas inside of your belly.
And it can't be healthy.
And he let out this fart that was like,
it was like,
it was like a huge deposit.
I mean, it could have filled up the whole sunroom.
It was like.
It started again.
And then it woke up Lincoln.
It woke him up.
It was like an earthquake was happening.
And my dad said, gypsy! And then he let out the fart Lincoln, it woke him up, it was like an earthquake was happening.
And my dad said, gypsy, and then he let out the fart and then he was like, good lord.
And then he just walked out the door.
Yeah, you gotta walk out after that.
Good God almighty.
You don't wanna sit around and discuss it.
And it scarred Lincoln.
It scarred him.
Scarred him? It scarred him, I mean it didn't literally leave a scar on him, he wasn't that close to it. And it scarred Lincoln. It scarred him. Scarred him? It scarred him.
I mean it didn't literally leave a scar on him.
He wasn't that close to it.
But the only farts that my family likes that I do
are the ones I do in my mouth.
They'll ask me.
Do that farting with your mouth, Daddy.
Do that fart with your mouth.
Because I got one. Gather round, kids.
It's not like a.
It's like the Waltons.
It's like.
Goodnight, Daddy.
That's it, that's it.
They love it when I do this fart
that comes out of the lower right part of my mouth.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
They love that.
Yeah.
But when I really fart from my anus,
they don't like that.
Where's it from?
And I think that's why they, that's my theory.
I'm just gonna skip to my theory and wait for your,
I just think they know that they smell something,
I mean this is gross, I'm sorry, but I think this is,
they just think there was air in your anus
and now it's in my nose.
Yeah.
I don't care how funny it sounded, that is gross.
Well.
And you know what, it is.
Okay.
And I think comic relief is the only way
to get over that reality.
Well I think.
That's my argument for it being funny.
I think there are two reasons
that your kids don't find it funny.
Well and this goes back to the theory of humor, right?
So one aspect of the theory of humor is, or to the theory of humor, right? So one aspect of the theory of humor is,
or someone's theory of humor,
is that things that are funny involve
something going wrong but no one getting hurt.
Mm-hmm. Right?
So somebody falling down the stairs.
Sometimes it hurts.
Somebody falling down the stairs and dying is not funny,
but somebody falling down the stairs
and not dying or not getting hurt is funny.
Yeah.
It's just the outcome.
So when your flatulence is stanky and is experienced
by your kids in a negative way, they're getting hurt.
Right, so it's like it may start as funny,
but then when it's like, oh, that actually stunk,
this is unpleasant, it's no longer funny.
But I actually think an even bigger part of it,
and this is why I wanted to use the Nutty Professor
because I remember laughing at that,
but I would not laugh at it now,
is I think that because a key to a fart being funny
is this pattern disruption,
but when the fart becomes the pattern,
it's no longer funny.
So if you go to the fart too often,
as I do believe Eddie Murphy does too much
in The Nutty Professor.
In that one scene.
And potentially you may do too much
as the farting dad in your house,
you're wearing out the fart's welcome
by going to it so often.
And now it's no longer disrupting a pattern,
but the pattern has become dad farts for attention.
Yeah, yeah.
And if you're farting on a regular basis,
so for in other words, if you had a friend
and it was like the first time you ever met this guy,
you walked into the room and he farted,
you would laugh and you would tell the story,
but if every time you walked into the room,
he farted and that was his thing,
you're like, I don't wanna go into the room anymore.
It's unpleasant, it's also not funny
because I'm expecting it.
And an expected fart isn't funny.
I also think that it's really hard
in a cinematic setting to make a fart funny
because it's, well, everything's calculated.
So if you're deciding to go with the fart joke in that moment,
it better be really good and surprising
and original in some way.
It just can't be like adding a fart sound effect
when Jar Jar Binks runs off scene,
which I do have a memory of that being a part
of the Star Wars movie, that Jar Jar Binks, they put a fart sound in at one point.
Is this true?
I believe it.
There's a fart noise?
Yes, I'm pretty certain of it.
And that's just, okay, that's just cheap.
It's like, okay, won't the kids find it funny
when this character farts, you know?
And also, who's the most likely character to fart?
Jar Jar Binks. Don't give him the fart. Right. Give the fart's the most likely character to fart? Jar Jar Binks.
Don't give him the fart.
Right.
Give the fart to the most unexpected character
and maybe you're getting somewhere.
Darth Maul.
Yeah, if Darth Maul farts, I'm laughing.
I'm laughing at that all day.
But Star Wars isn't a comedy,
shouldn't have ever tried to be one,
and that's why that dude's life was ruined.
The farts now. You told me about the Jar Jar Binks guy. Yeah, the guy who played Jar Jar Binks. That's why that dude's life was like ruined.
You're the one. The farts now.
You told me about the Jar Jar Binks guy.
Yeah the guy who played Jar Jar Binks.
I mean.
He like had a horrible life.
A while back.
Yeah he came forward saying screwed up his life.
So it is a thing, Jar Jar Binks fart.
Yeah just Google Jar Jar Binks fart,
you'll get it on YouTube.
All you want.
But in real life, farts can be hilarious.
Like, I mean, if I search TV fart bloopers,
I can watch videos of newscasters
or people in like a talk show setting accidentally farting.
And hilarious.
I looked at those before I came in here
and I thought to myself,
as long as I'm seeing a fresh clip I've never seen, the laughs are not gonna stop
because you get the facial expression
and the beautiful thing is you don't smell it.
You don't smell it.
Nobody gets hurt.
Nobody gets hurt when it's on the other side of a screen.
Matter of fact, speaking of somebody getting hurt,
it can get you fired but it can make a career.
I'm sure many Ear Biscuiteers have heard about Paul Flart,
who has an Instagram account.
He's a security guard at a hospital.
The story is he would fart
when no one was around at like the entrance to the hospital
and he realized how good the acoustics were
and he started turning on his,
well the shot's the same exact time
so it's almost like a webcam shot,
I don't know if he's doing it with his phone
but it's his face and the top of his uniform
and you can see the hospital sign behind him.
Not all of it, just a little bit of it.
It's mostly his face and he just kind of-
You're like in an office or something.
He blinks, no he was in the reception area.
Okay, reception.
And he would, each Instagram video is just one fart.
But it's, I watched all of them.
And you saw me over there cackling.
Yeah, and when I looked over your shoulder,
it was definitely very, very funny.
Because it's just his face blinking and twitching
and then his reaction to his own fart.
And then whatever caption he might put on it.
Like, ferocious, felt that one in my chest.
Anyways, he starts getting big on the internet.
People put compilations on YouTube and whatnot.
He's got 74,000 followers on Instagram as of this recording,
but that was plenty to get him fired.
Oh, wow.
Which he then livestreamed as it was happening.
Getting fired?
Getting kicked out of the hospital, yeah.
So now he's trying to make a living.
As a farter? As a farter.
He's got a Patreon, you give him $5,
and I got fired, you're really paying me to fart.
Thank you, that's what it says, $5 a month.
Or you can give him $1 a month.
It seems like he could still get a job somewhere.
A place, you know, like a glue factory.
We actually knew a guy.
Oh, because of the stink.
Who worked at a glue factory,
which just smells absolutely horrible
because of the things that go into glue.
And he said that the best thing about it was
if you had one that you knew wasn't gonna make any noise,
you were in a boardroom and people were just constantly
letting them fly because it was masked by this.
I think that he needs to be a security guard
at a glue factory and then it's the best of both worlds
and everybody's happy.
I mean, if you're in a plane and all of a sudden
someone like sawed a log,
that sounds like a snore but I was trying to come up
with a fart euphemism.
I don't find that funny, because of the pain thing.
You're exactly right about that.
Because we're trapped, we're trapped with you
in that place.
But a video of you not on that plane watching other people
on that plane, you would laugh at it,
even if you felt bad for the people.
Remember Tommy G?
The story we tell, he was sitting,
I don't wanna say his last name anymore.
G, starts with a G though.
Sitting on the front row of Miss Innes' history class.
I was sitting in the middle,
you were sitting somewhere over to the side.
All of a sudden you hear a fart.
And it was so loud and so long
that everyone in the class had a chance
to stop what they were doing.
Miss Innes stopped talking and everybody turned
and locked on him and echolocated it directly
to the one seat, the one butthole
that was emanating this fart.
Tommy G.
It was like when an earthquake lasts so long
that you can start to try to keep things from falling over.
That's what was happening in the room.
It was like a game of Marco Polo
except the person just holds out polo until you touch them.
It's like, it's just so easy to figure out where they're at.
Polo.
And you know what?
No one was laughing in the moment,
but right, because it was so, it was unbelievable.
But then as soon as it ended, it was like,
the room didn't erupt out of reverence for,
I mean, that would have been cruel,
but we laughed about it a lot later.
Well, but Miss Ennis actually addressed him
after he did it.
Good gosh.
She said something like, well, Tommy.
Like, because she knew too. Yeah, I like, well, Tommy. Because she knew too.
I mean, you gotta say something.
I felt bad for him.
You gotta have a back pocket line for that
because this is a serious thing.
How brutal kids can be.
You gotta have a back pocket line.
Like while that fart's coming out and you're like, oh no,
they're gonna echolocate, they're gonna know it's me. Yeah.
You gotta stand up and bow.
You can't let your face get red.
You gotta stand up, you gotta bow, you gotta own it
and people will be telling that story forever.
Kids are mean, ruthless.
So do you fart, how do farts go over in your house now?
Well.
They get a laugh?
You know, I feel like, again,
not to continue the sexist commentary,
but I've got two boys, and at least in my experience,
they tend to be a little bit more fart friendly.
And the, yeah, so there's just,
there's a shaking of the head of my wife.
Now she's not uptight about it at all.
There's no like, we didn't have like a no fart policy.
There are many relationships where there's a no fart policy
but we don't have that in our relationship.
But pretty much any fart in any context gets a laugh
and there's no like, oh, come on dad situation thus far.
That's the experience.
But also, based on what you're telling me,
I don't feel like I'm doing it as much as you.
Or that yours aren't as potent and stinky as mine are.
I have noticed that you do often smell
like something has died inside of you.
I will say that.
Okay.
I don't know.
I'll take that note.
I don't know.
I'm not exactly sure what the cause of it is.
You might need to see a doctor.
But I gotta say, I do have a,
I can have significant volume
and I can have significant force
and I can have significant frequency,
but I don't often have significant stink unless I'm sick.
I envy you, man.
I don't know what it is, like I stopped drinking
regular milk, drinking the almond milk.
Yeah, and the oat milk.
Yeah, and the oat milk, I think that helped.
You think, yeah, yeah,
because dairy does contribute to it.
So you don't have an issue under the bedspread?
Where you like?
I mean, I'm not saying I haven't ever dutched ovened,
dutch ovened my wife.
Yeah, I have.
I try to seal it down.
I put my elbows on top of the covers and hold it down.
Seal it down and then flap your foot
so it goes out the bottom.
Yeah, that's right.
Okay, I see the plan.
It doesn't work too well.
But I think. It'll seep out.
I think we've established that we personally
find farts funny in real life and also
in media that is depicting real life.
So, but to get back to what you were talking about
a second ago, which is the scripted fart,
the scripted fart joke.
Yeah.
Bathroom humor.
Because I'm gonna widen out a little bit
into bathroom humor in Junior in general.
Don't call me Junior.
And Junior, let me tell you this.
I think, so just a little bit about our philosophy of humor
in the way that we've approached our comedy.
So very early on, we kind of made a conscious decision
to not go into certain places with our comedy, right?
You may have noticed that we don't really do
political jokes, we don't really do religious jokes.
We don't really get into controversial things
as a policy, I mean, every once in a while
we may hint at something or break the seal on something.
There's no intentionally shocking humor.
Right.
Like the shock jock stuff.
And we're also not cynical, like our humor
is not cynical, I mean, I might get a little cynical at're also not cynical, like our humor is not cynical.
I mean, I might get a little cynical at times,
but in general, we don't have a cynical point of view
when it comes to our comedy.
And then also, we don't get overtly sexual.
Obviously, if you watch the show,
you know there's a lot of innuendo that happens naturally
that we kind of embrace and have embraced even more
as the years have gone by.
But it's not overtly sexual, it's not overtly blue,
it's not R-rated.
And so, when you sort of box yourself in,
you then have to think to yourself,
well what am I going to do?
What lines am I going to cross?
And so you naturally end up, because humor is about crossing lines first of all.
A big part of it is about defying norms and crossing lines
so you're going to offend someone.
Once you build a box like you've described for us.
It's gotta fart its way out from one corner.
If you squeeze the box, it's gonna.
It's like an accordion.
Yeah the box that we put ourselves in,
a little nod to Weird Al.
Squeeze out the comedy.
And so the comedy often comes out
in the form of bathroom humor.
So not necessarily fart jokes,
but there are, you know, we get into bathroom humor
and some people are like, that's not my thing.
I wonder sometimes when people are like, I'm not my thing. I wonder sometimes when people are like,
I'm not into bathroom humor, I'm not into blue stuff,
I'm not into sexual humor, I'm not into religious humor,
I'm not into political humor, I begin to wonder,
well, what makes you laugh?
I don't know, where else do you go?
We do have other stuff in our life.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, I'm just, I don't necessarily,
there's some people who are like,
I don't like bathroom humor, I'm grossed out by it
and I never find it funny.
That's their prerogative, I'm just trying,
I'm honestly, I would wanna talk to that person
and be like, okay, well, what is the funniest thing for you?
And is it something that doesn't cross a line?
Because I don't, that doesn't compute for me.
But we've tried.
I would ask that person, if you're watching Jeopardy,
I'm not assuming they watch Jeopardy just because they don't have a sense of humor.
Right.
But let's say you pass by a television,
Jeopardy's on, you're not even intending to watch it.
Alex Trebek's asking, he doesn't ask a question
because they ask the question.
He gives the answer.
Gives the answers, man.
Yeah, you gotta get that right or else you get it wrong.
He's in the middle of an answer and he farts.
Yeah.
Would you find that funny?
Would you find that funny?
I think most people would.
That would be like top 10.
Like if I told you that was on YouTube
and that I found it hilarious and honest,
you'd search it, right?
Yeah, I'm searching it right now.
Because if it's happened, I wanna know.
Can you Google Alex Trebek fart, see what comes up?
Because I feel like I might be onto something.
Like my future.
I'm sure it's one of those.
You remember the, who's the preacher?
It's probably somebody adding it to like.
Who's that preacher that the televangelist who like
makes like the, he makes like the faces
and then they just put a bunch of fart noises
every time he made it.
Tillman, Robert, what's his name?
Farting preacher, if you Google farting preacher
it'll probably be the first thing that comes up.
But it's basically just.
That's an edit joke of course, he's not really farting
but his face looks so contorted and it's timed so well
that it's just, it's splendid.
It's so great, but let's talk about the times
when it hasn't worked for us because the prime example
of this, yeah that's him, what is his name?
Robert Tilton.
Tilton. Robert Tilton.
Tilton.
When it hasn't worked for us is when we leaned into it
so heavily on this thing that we did called First Date Farts.
That was a while back, it was a,
it was within the context of a GMM,
but it was like a short two minute sketch
where we're in the car,
you're playing a woman on a date with me.
And you're covering up the fact that you're farting.
By saying that it's my ringtones
and my text messages and stuff.
I'm pretty sure that that idea came from a conversation
that Cassie was having with Stevie.
That's my memory.
That sounds right.
Is that Cassie has an idea that Stevie relayed to us
and then we turned it into that sketch.
And it's, again, I think that-
Did you rewatch it?
I did. It doesn't work?
I don't know, I don't like leaning into it that much
because that's when I believe that you are getting
into a place where the surprise is taken out of it.
Yeah.
That's my best assessment of that,
is that when you get that joke
and then you just run it into the ground
and that's the whole sketch,
the pattern disruption element is gone
because the pattern becomes, the fart becomes the pattern.
And at that point, I'm not, that's why if you watch a movie
that relies too much on it,
and it becomes the pattern itself,
it just, it's not sacred anymore.
There's nothing unexpected about it.
Keep the fart sacred.
It can be cheapened but we can reclaim that.
Do you remember Sundance two years ago
when Swiss Army Man premiered at Sundance
and we were trying to figure out
what we were gonna go watch.
We were trying to figure out what things
we were gonna go stream.
And you started, and the way Sundance works is
you're in line with people, you're talking to people,
so you end up asking them what they've seen
and there'll literally be a buzz around movies.
Chatter.
Chatter around movies that you have to see.
And all the chatter about Swiss Army Man,
at least from the people that we met,
was we heard it's not good and it's really gross
and there's like this scene at the beginning
where like there's a dead body that's farting
and it's really, really gross and it's like was weird
and you shouldn't see it.
Like that was like the sentiment from multiple people
and I was like, what, this sounds stupid.
We're like, is Alex Trebek in it?
And then we didn't end up seeing it at Sundance
and then we get back home and of course,
like at that point I see, well, months pass,
however long it took from Sundance to the film
actually coming out in theaters, which could've been a year, I don't even know how long it took from Sundance to the film actually coming out in theaters, which could have been a year,
I don't even know how long it was.
I see the trailer for this thing and I'm like,
this looks like an incredible movie.
This looks, I have to see this.
This looks like right down my alley.
Or right up it.
And then we went to see it and saw the whole scene
where the dead body is being propelled by farts like a boat,
like a freaking jet ski and we loved it.
But it was taking a fart joke to an absolute extreme,
like an appalling, surreal extreme
that a place that had never gone before.
It was completely innovative and so it wasn't a pattern.
It was rooted in science too.
You know, you have a dead bloated body.
Propulsion.
Which by the way, it wasn't a gruesome dead body.
It was Daniel Radcliffe who then was the star of the movie
playing a dead guy.
It wasn't, so it wasn't morbid.
It was endearingly comedic.
I absolutely loved it.
Magical, it was magical.
And it was one big fart joke that in my mind worked.
But I think it's an illustration of,
if you're gonna do a fart joke
and it's in something scripted at this point,
you've got to do it in a way that it hasn't been done before.
You can't, no one, like, you can't just come out
with Nutty Professor 5 and expect people
to still care about it.
I mean, I didn't see Dumb and Dumberer.
Most people hated it.
And I think one of the reasons that people,
and I'm talking in ignorance because I didn't see it,
is that they kind of went back to the same well
in a lot of ways and.
Was there a lot of farts in the well?
I think they should have never remade the movie
because it's one of those things that you can't out,
you can't win, it's a lose-lose situation
when you want to remake a movie like that.
Because they go back, there's so much gross humor,
they're okay, I'm gonna go back to the exact same well
20 years later, is it still gonna work?
No, it's not gonna work.
But if they were to suddenly do it differently,
everybody would criticize them for doing it differently.
Why are you guys trying to get intellectual
with your fart jokes?
It wouldn't work, so just don't make the movie,
just let the movie, the original movie stand on its own.
So in other words, if you're gonna bring farts
into comedy purposely, now we've done it accidentally,
we both independently farted accidentally on GMM
and it made it into the cut both times.
Yeah, because it was, yeah, that really worked.
That was funny.
But if you're gonna do it on purpose,
you're gonna write a fart into something,
you better do it right.
Yeah, that's a, it's like threading a needle.
If that needle, the eye of the needle were your sphincter
and the fart joke was, I don't know, the enema.
Yep. The fart joke was, I don't know, the enema.
Did I lose the analogy?
Does it matter?
A little bit, but I think we all know what you mean.
So our position on our farts actually funny seems to be,
yes, they are intrinsically funny
for all the reasons that we covered,
but it is the context of the fart
that determines whether or not it wears its welcome out.
Now, I have a decision to make at this point.
Okay.
Because I've worked one up.
Oh gosh.
And I'm like, if I just, of course I'm probably,
by talking about it, I'm probably spoiled it.
I didn't, well, I didn't work it up.
I'm just, I find myself in a position
where I could fart.
I mean, so I think I've already made my choice
because I think the alternative would have been
don't say anything Link, play it cool.
And then at the very end, as we're ending this episode,
I could just punctuate my last sentence with a fart
and get your honest reaction.
Okay.
But I guess it's too late for that now that I've.
I mean, I don't know.
It depends on where you work it in.
Well I'm not working it in right here
because you expect it.
I can't be looking at you when it happens.
It needs to be able to turn my head like Tommy G
and I need to be able to locate you and where it came from.
I'm not gonna do it, but.
Well, Leslie Nielsen of Naked Gun fame
and a lot of other things before that,
who died in 2010, had written as his epitaph, epitaph?
Epitaph. Epitaph?
I don't know.
Gravestone engraving.
Let her rip because he was so,
the fart joke was his thing
and he had like a fart machine
that he had with him at all times
and there's actually a clip that we were watching earlier
that I don't know if it was a real fart
or if it was the fart machine,
but he's like being interviewed on Australian TV
and he just lets it rip in the middle.
He's talking about comedy and he pauses at a certain time
and just this fart noise comes
and people don't know how to interact
and he moves right along.
He was a genius at doing that.
Because he didn't know.
You're getting into some.
He didn't know if it was gonna.
Epitaph, epitaph.
Yeah, I know.
Did I say that?
Yeah.
Okay.
You didn't know how they were gonna respond
so he wasn't making a joke, he was pulling a prank on them
and the joke would be how they respond.
Right and so. But you know, he died like he lived. he was pulling a prank on them and the joke would be how they respond. Right.
And so.
But you know, he died like he lived.
He let it rip.
Yeah, so if you've got a fart this big.
Well, I don't know how he died.
He died of pneumonia.
Oh.
Which is like not funny at all.
Oh.
You know what I'm saying?
It was like the least funny way to die.
I don't know, maybe it was a funny pneumonia.
I'm sure he had his sense of humor in it.
Wow.
What I'm ultimately saying is if you start talking
about potentially laying a fart into your conversation,
you're standing on the shoulders of giants.
Which is a perfect place to let it rip, actually.
Yeah, so I mean, I'm totally fine
with just waiting it out and seeing what happens.
What do you mean waiting it out?
If I'm gonna fart right now?
Yeah, waiting for like a gopher to come out of a hole.
Oh, oh.
I'm not gonna do it.
I think I'm done with the whole thing.
I'm moving on.
No more fart humor for me, man.
I think you've made the right choice.
It's not funny.
Wow, you're still here listening.
Thanks for doing that.
Thanks for hanging out with us.
Let's continue this conversation online.
Yeah, can we talk more about farts on Twitter?
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
I'm sure that many of you have strong,
this is a polarizing issue.
Some of you made a decision to quit listening a while ago
and why I'm not even talking to you.
Those of you who are still listening
probably either just gave us the benefit of the doubt
or you actually think farts are funny too.
Let's talk about it and come to a collective conclusion.
Are we right, are we wrong?
Let us, oh gosh.
There it was.
Two of them.
Wasn't.
That's funny, man.
Oh.
You had one too?
Yeah.
The first time it was bigger,
but you laughed in the middle of it.
Oh gosh.
See, he's not funny anymore.
It's over.
It's ridiculous.
We're coming for you, Eddie Murphy.