Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 34. Susie Essman LIVE @ NYC Podfest '15
Episode Date: January 17, 2015Although Susie Essman is best known to audiences for playing the acid-tongued Susie Greene on HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm," she began her career as a stand-up comic, opening for people like Jerry Sein...feld, Richard Belzer and a young Gilbert Gottfried. For our first live episode (as part of the annual NYC Podfest) Gilbert and Frank sat down with Susie to talk about her obsession with Turner Classic Movies, her favorite "Curb" moments and how comedy saved her from a life of crime. Plus: Peter Lorre! Margaret Hamilton! Susie roasts Jerry Stiller! Larry David pens a pilot for Gilbert! And the curse of the "Shiksa Goddess"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast.
My co-host Frank Santopadre and I have done over 40 or so episodes of the podcast, but we've never done a live episode until now.
A week ago, we took part in a New York City podfest where we sat down in Fontana's Bar
in front of a live audience with my old pal, Susie Essman.
We think it turned out pretty well.
Listen for yourself.
Ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome to the stage Gilbert Godfrey's
Amazing Colossal Podcast! Thank you.
And that was my show for tonight.
Where do I sit? We'll put Susie on the air.
Oh, okay.
Welcome to the first live episode
of Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Thank you. Thank you. I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And tonight we're joined by an original and audacious stand-up comedian and actress who's appeared in movies with people like Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, and John Travolta,
and in hit shows like American Dad, Blue Bloods, Law and Order, and The King of Queens. But she's
probably best known for her unforgettable role as Larry David's ar arch enemy, Susie Green.
On
HBO's
Curb Your Enthusiasm,
please welcome
our friend and the
always shy and retiring
Susie Essman.
Gilbert, you're such a good reader.
Yes.
No, it was all off the top of my head.
Yes, as always.
Yes.
So if I may ask you a question
that people in front of the Lubavitcher trucks ask,
so pardon me, you Jewish.
You know, interestingly enough, I played a Lubavitcher in a Hallmark Hall of Fame TV movie.
And I had to wear a shidle.
And it was the middle of summer.
It was not fun.
I had to wear a shidle, and it was the middle of summer. It was not fun. I had to wear a shidle and the whole thing.
And the more I read about it, the more I didn't enjoy.
Now, do you know if there's any actual truth to that thing of Hasidic Jews with the whole...
With the sheet?
I knew you were going to ask that.
I knew you were going to go there.
Having never had sex with a Hasidic Jew, I don't know for a fact.
And I think that's the only way you could know, is to actually have sex with a Hasidic Jew.
They don't want me.
Actually, you know what?
Did you ever do this?
The worst gig I ever did in my life, ever, was this Hasidic cafe in Borough Park.
Did you do this?
Louis Veranda booked it.
Oh, no.
It was in Borough Park.
It was a Hasidic cafe, and no women, only men were allowed in.
And they had comedy.
They had comedy.
And I've never died a death.
I mean, you're so used to dying in a way that nobody else is.
That he is.
I never died a death like I did. you're so used to dying in a way that nobody else is. I never
died a death like I did. Everything about
me offended them. They wanted
a minstrel show.
Everything about me offended them.
It was death.
Do you know, can I just tell the audience,
years ago, I met
Gilbert at a catch-a-rising store like, what,
1983, 84, something like that.
And when they would have
like stragglers
at the end of the night
they'd be like
two, three people
that wouldn't leave
they would put Gilbert on
to clear the room
right
Gilbert and who else
do they put on
to clear the room
oh wait, wait
Larry David
oh my god, yes
they use him with you
and Larry David on
to clear the room
Of course with me
I didn't give a fuck
Whether they were laughing or not
He didn't care he would just go on like you know blind
And they'd be booing me
And I didn't care
And I'd go worse and worse
And Larry would actually get in fights
Yes he would
Larry would Like if he's here if everybody's audience. Larry would, like if he's here, if everybody's laughing, one person looked at their watch, that's it.
He's riveted on the one person that looks at their watch and starting some fight.
I remember once, and we used to all go watch him because you never knew.
Oh, yeah.
Something interesting was going to happen because he was going to start a fight.
Quite often, there'd be him and an audience member going out into the
street. Right. And the club
would pull them apart. Right.
One time I remember he was doing a
bit about a bungalow and a woman
in the audience said something about
what's a bungalow. This set
him off into maybe
three hours of tirades.
It was quite interesting
to watch. But no, you were a different animal.
You didn't give a shit.
Yeah.
You'd be ripping up tissue paper into squares.
You didn't care.
Do you remember the first time you saw him, Susie?
The first time you saw Gilbert?
The first time I saw Gilbert,
I opened for him at Caroline's
on 8th Avenue and 28th Street.
And Richard Belzer had asked me to open for him.
I was introduced by Lenny, who died recently, Richard's brother.
And then Caroline saw me and asked me then to open for Gilbert.
And I didn't know who Gilbert was.
And everybody said, oh, wait till you meet Gilbert.
He's the funniest thing in the world.
He's brilliant, but a little odd.
So I opened for him.
And I think at that time I was just doing characters.
I had never spoken. When I first started, I just did characters time I was just doing characters. I had never spoken.
When I first started, I just did characters.
I was too scared to speak in my own voice.
And I remember I was in the village.
And at that time, I don't know if you remember this,
they used to have, Carolinas used to have posters plastered all over the city
with your picture on it.
So there was a picture of Gilbert in some big afro.
And it was in Sheridan Square.
I remember this so well. And I had been in the business
for like maybe three months. And then I see underneath it said, opening act, Susie Essman.
I remember I got the chills because not that I was listed under Gilbert, but that it was
like, oh my God, I'm really in this business now. I'm like on a poster with my name and
there's Gilbert's Fotch. And yeah, I remember that so well that it was like a moment.
It was 1984 when I was like, oh, my God, I really am a comedian.
I'm a legitimate comedian.
Then, of course, I met him, and I realized he was so important.
Short-lived.
Oh, and I remember, if we could go back, we were talking about Larry David.
I remembered one story.
That one time, Larry was on stage
and he was bombing horribly.
And he got into an argument
with some guy in the audience
and the guy says,
hey, your mother fucks my dog.
And Larry goes,
oh yeah?
Well, I bet your dog doesn't
enjoy it.
He's quick, that boy.
And Larry wrote a special for Gilbert, which not a lot of people know.
Oh, Norman's Corner?
Norman's Corner.
Norman's Corner.
Norman's Corner.
It was so bad that it almost kept...
When he was trying to get the deal for Seinfeld,
the studio said, Wait, who's writing it?
Larry David?
Didn't he do that piece of shit for Gilbert Gottfried?
What was it?
You were a newsstand?
Yes, yes.
You had a newsstand and different characters came up to the newsstand?
Yeah.
It was bad.
It was bad.
Were you and Larry on SNL at the same time?
No, no.
But you had equally horrible experiences.
He was on Fridays when I was on SNL.
And then he went on SNL after Fridays or before?
Yeah, he did Fridays with Michael Richards.
Yes.
And you were on SNL in 80.
Yeah.
But only 13 episodes.
80 to 81.
You were on SNL in 80.
Yeah.
Right.
But only 13 episodes. 80 to 81.
Yeah, he was on with Michael Richards and then Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
That's right.
Yeah, Larry was post-Gilbert on SNL.
Oh, so then Larry went to SNL after you.
Uh-huh.
He was in the Brad Hall, Julia Louis-
They never wanted me, SNL.
You auditioned a couple of times?
I auditioned all the time.
And I did all these characters.
They had no interest.
I was too Jewish.
I was too-
They had no interest in me whatsoever.
You?
After you, they gave up on the Jews is what happened.
You ruined it for every Jewish comedian after that.
But what was your first appearance anywhere?
When I was eight and I was at sleepaway camp.
Not that far back.
Well, but it's interesting because we were doing, they were doing The Wizard of Oz.
So I wanted to be Dorothy so bad.
And I have a decent singing voice.
And I auditioned and I sang Over the Rainbow
and I was crying.
And they gave it to some little blonde
who couldn't act her way out of a paper bag.
And me, they gave the Wicked Witch of the West.
And the part was pantomime.
They had the witch pantomime.
And I was like, fuck this shit.
And I went to the counselor. I said, can I write my own part? So she said, yes. So I did. And I did a whole
melting scene. I was very careful not to make it Margaret Hamilton, to make it different,
but equally as, you know, effective.
I don't want to be derivative of Margaret Hamilton.
Yeah, exactly. At eight, I didn't want to be derivative of Margaret Hamilton and end
up doing Maxwell House commercials.
That's right.
So then after I died, I was supposed to sneak under the curtain because I was dead.
But instead, I got so many applause, I had to stand up out of my death and take a bow.
And then at curtain call, I got more applause than Dorothy.
And that's when I knew, you don't want to play the ingenue.
You want to play the wicked fucking witch.
You know, you want to play like the character.
So at eight years old, I got that
that they didn't want me as the ingenue
and you know what? I didn't want them.
So that's when I started realizing that I was
going to be a character actress. At eight.
Much more fun
to be the witch.
Think Linda.
So that was my first, you know,
then it took me many, many years
before I got on stage again.
Well, tell us a little bit about that.
In your 20s, you were a little bit aimless.
You didn't know what you wanted to do.
Right.
You were depressed.
I was depressed.
I was very depressed.
I was living with a bad guy.
I was selling drugs.
I was in a very bad place.
And friends, I was waitressing friends.
I used to go back into the kitchen
and imitate all the customers.
That's how I kept myself entertained.
And my friends that I was waiting with
kind of dared me or forced me
to get up at an open mic,
which I then did.
But I used to just do these characters,
you know, like, I don't know, whoever.
People from my family,
which was psychotic, you know.
Let's get into the selling drugs
part.
I never knew that about me.
Well, I had this boyfriend
who was a drug dealer,
but he couldn't,
he couldn't, like,
it was coke, and he couldn't, you know, this was the 80s, and he couldn't, he used to do it.
I never did it, because why would I want a drug to make me more insane than I already was?
You know, I didn't want an up thing.
I wanted, like, tranquilizing things to shut me the fuck up.
So he gave it all to me to take care of, because he couldn't handle it.
So it's like he put his little, you know, wife into business.
And I used to, I was cute in those days. And I used to go around
to like Wall Street guys,
you know, and sell them drugs.
And they gave me money and that was it.
And I kind of equate that. It was like
easy. It was kind of like you make people laugh and they hand
you money. You hand them cocaine and they give you money.
Same shit.
I'm not proud of it, but you know.
Now, how did you actually go?
Did you just walk up to people on the street?
No, no, no.
I wasn't like, loose joints, loose joints.
I wasn't like that.
She's a businesswoman.
I knew somebody, and they knew me,
and then somebody else in their office,
and then somebody else in their office and then somebody else in their office.
But then there would be guys at the apartment
with guns and it was not pretty.
You know, it would be
like mobster kind of guys.
I look back
and I'm horrified. And now that I have daughters
that age, I'm horrified
by my entire behavior.
Luckily, I found
comedy to get me out of the drug dealing trade.
If I didn't find stand-up, where the fuck would I be now? I don't know.
Take us through that a little bit. You took a comedy class.
I took a comedy class and I was so scared. They would give us an assignment. I don't know what,
like write something about what you did last summer or whatever. And I was so scared that I would cut the next class because I was petrified to get up and talk in front of people.
And then there was this guy, I went out with everybody from the class,
and there was this one guy in the class who said, well, what if you do these characters?
What if I just interview you and you improvise as the characters?
So we did that one day, and I was getting laughs.
I was like, oh, wow, this is incredible.
So then I kind of put an act together of these characters and I went to an open mic night, mostly magic.
Do you remember that on Carmine Street?
Oh yeah.
They had an open mic on Tuesday nights and I did my, you know, I got five minutes together
which I did in like a minute and a half, you know, because I was a wreck. And there were
these guys there, Paul Herzog and Burt Levitt,
and they came over to me and they said,
we're opening up a comedy club called Comedy U,
and we'd like you to work there.
And I was like, yeah, yeah, fine.
I gave them my number.
Never got on stage again, was petrified, horrified that I did it.
A couple of months later, they called me.
They said, we're opening the club.
We want you to come work there.
Can you come down and do 10 minutes? And me, like a fucking
idiot, said, yes. I didn't have 10 minutes.
You know, 10 minutes stand-up is a lot.
So I wrote 10 minutes, and
they just kept on putting me on stage.
For like six months, I never went anywhere else.
And that's where I met Joy.
They had a women's comedy night.
And that's where I met Joy Behar, and
Rita Rudner was there, and Carol
Leeper, and all these girls that had been doing it longer than me.
And from there, I met more comedians and then I went up to Catch a Rising Star.
They wouldn't put me on stage at Catch a Rising Star for years.
What was his name?
Flip.
Oh.
That asshole.
Wouldn't put me on.
Wait, wait.
Well, Rick Newman ran. Yeah, but no, this was
post-Rick. This was after Rick.
Oh, there was
Richard Fields who took after Rick.
What an asshole he was.
So,
anyway, Lucian Holt
put me on at the comic strip. He was my big...
And then eventually I started
developing an act
in my voice. I remember Ronnie Shakes, Oliver Sholem, was a great comedian.
Died young.
He must have been, how old was he?
Yeah, I think he was like 40.
Yeah, had a heart attack.
And I remember him saying to me,
it takes at least five years before you find your voice as a comedian.
I remember thinking, that's not going to be like that for me.
I'll find it next month.
But it took me like 10.
It takes you a really long time to know
who you are on stage I think
and what you're... Gilbert has such
a specific persona and you're always
true to that persona.
So it took me a long time to develop
and figure out who I was on stage.
But once I did, it was smooth sailing
for me.
But it is.
It's like the amount of years where you just have no idea.
No idea what you're doing, and you're doing it in front of people.
You can't do it in the mirror at home.
You can't really do it in a class.
You could take a class in the very beginning, you know,
but you have to do it in front of strangers.
And we would be at these clubs, Catch a Rising Star and the Comic Strip and wherever.
And on a Friday, Saturday night, we'd do five, six, seven shows a night.
Remember?
That's how we made our money.
It was cash.
And see, when I started, there wasn't even the cab fare.
There wasn't even the $5.
Well, cab fare was like seven bucks.
Well, you were 15 when you started, right, Gilbert?
Oh, yeah.
And what did you have to say at 15?
Nothing.
For years, I was doing it, and sometimes I'd go up and I'd do great.
And if you wanted like a seltzer or something, they'd charge you.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
But see, later on, I think we got really smart where we would just go to clubs that had food.
Oh, yes.
I don't know if you know this, but Gilbert is notoriously cheap.
That's like a known fact.
So we would have, you know, you would do like on a Saturday night, you do like a few clubs uptown on the Upper East Side.
Then you go downtown to like the Duplex and Green Street and blah, blah.
And like Gilbert would always like find out where you were going and get
in the cab with you and then never share the fare.
I would go home from
catch on the 2nd Avenue bus.
On the bus. In the middle of a
freezing cold night with snowing
and raining, we'd see him standing
on the corner
waiting from 77th
Street and 1st Avenue to the Lower East Side on the bus.
And I remember people who couldn't believe it, how, because I would do it every night,
they would say to me, so, all right, 3 o'clock in the morning, and I'd go, oh, that's the
312 bus.
And I'd go, no, down to the second.
Were they on time?
No.
When did you decide that Gilbert was your favorite comic?
Very
shortly. Gilbert can make me laugh in a way
that nobody else made me laugh. It's just like
when he would just
I don't know, he just hit a funny
bone in me of almost
like a childhood
giggle fest. But then we would laugh a lot together. I don't know, he just hit a funny bone in me of almost like a childhood you know,
giggle fest. But then we would
laugh a lot together.
I think part of that was like we would be at the clubs
and we'd be hanging out at the bar. And we would talk
about old movies a lot.
But then there were other people that we knew in
common that we could make fun of
to each other, which always tickled us
tremendously.
Whenever you bad mouth another person, you know it's the bad mouth.
Yeah, when you find out you hate all the same people, that's a bond.
Right.
For sure.
That's a strong bond.
And being a movie buff, I mean, the first time I saw Gilbert, I think I was a teenager
at the comic strip.
And being a movie buff, here's a comic doing references to Ben Gazzara and Ted Bessel and Norman
Fell.
And it was the strangest thing I'd ever seen in my life.
And what happens when you're a kid...
It's rewarding to somebody who grew up on that stuff.
When you're a kid and you're a movie buff, and when we were kids, there was no VHS.
You watched Million Dollar Movie over and over and over again.
Or the 430 movie.
The 430, the ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding.
But when you found somebody else that had that passion,
you thought you were a freak and you were the only one that had that passion.
And then when I would go out and meet people,
when I started being a comedian,
there was other people that had these strange esoteric passions
that knew who Norman Fell was.
And you found a bond
there in something that was really important.
I think.
How many people know who Norman Fell was?
That's pretty good.
That's because you're here.
Let me tell you something.
My husband knows who nobody is.
Nobody.
Tell us, when you met Jimmy, your husband,
he had never seen you perform.
He had never seen you on television.
No, he had never seen me in Curb,
because otherwise, why would he have gone out with me?
You know, I mean, it's like...
He didn't have cable. He didn't have HBO.
And he thought I was this delightful
woman. And then I
didn't let him... It's interesting because
Joy Behar, who as you know is my best
friend, she, when she
first met Steve, her now husband,
for a year, she didn't tell him
she was a comedian.
I think it's... Men would go on the road, even Gilbert,
before he was married to the lovely
Dara, and get laid.
Women would go on the road, and
nobody wanted anything to do with us.
We were just like pariahs.
I was getting laid on the road?
Maybe not.
Yeah.
But women find
funny men attractive.
Men don't find funny women
attractive as much.
Because they're more scared, I guess. I don't know.
Is that why Joy never told Steve that she
was a comic? For the first year. She was afraid that he would not be
attracted to her. She was afraid that he would just be
you know, yeah, exactly.
But she wanted to let him be the funny one.
I think women say they find
funny guys attractive.
See, it's like now
there are these women who
will go, oh, see, I always was
attracted to guys like
Larry David. Right.
And I think, well, there are a million
guys just like Larry David
wandering up and down.
Why don't you want to go after them and fuck them?
You know, can I tell you something?
Because they're not.
I get this all the time.
I get this constantly where men come up to me, you know, at Zabars or whatever,
and say to me, I'm exactly like Larry David.
And I have to hold myself back from saying,
no, you're an annoying Jewish accountant from Great Neck.
Larry is a genius.
You're just a neurotic, annoying schlepper, basically.
That's hilarious.
We will return to gilbert gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this okay so
gilbert and i in i think it was 1992 when we were in miami doing the one night stands oh yeah it
was like an assembly line yeah they do those they did these one night stands on hbo which was the
you know half hour comedy specials. And they would pair comedians
together. And Gilbert and I were the same
night. We performed in the
theater the same night.
So we were hanging out
at the Doral
in Miami Beach. And we'd be on the phone
every night, just hysterical.
Oh, and by the way, speaking of which,
I scraped my knee really bad.
I tripped and fell because I was a nervous wreck because I was doing this special.
And I had like, it looked like a really bad rug burn on my knee.
And my boyfriend at the time thought that I had had sex with Gilbert.
And didn't believe me.
And I was like, no, I hurt my knee.
He's like, that's a rug burn.
And I know you were down there with Gilbert.
It was like, no.
I never told you that.
Wow.
So,
he thought
you were doing it like doggy style.
Exactly.
I want you to
picture that right now.
Her and all fours and me behind her.
We would have just been laughing.
It wouldn't have worked because we would have just been laughing.
So there was this comedian.
There was this comedian who was doing the warm-ups,
who came down from New York, who was doing the warm-ups,
African-American comedian.
You never heard of her.
Oh, okay.
So before Gilbert got there, she said to me,
you know, I'm really nervous about Gilbert coming
because when he comes, he always makes fun of me
and always says things about me and always, you know,
like asks me what I think of good times.
And like the Jefferson.
So I said to her...
Yeah, I used to go,
who did you prefer, Amos or Andy?
Right.
So I said to her,
I said to her,
we'll call her Linda.
I said to Linda, I said, her, we'll call her Linda.
I said to Linda, I said, listen, you know what?
He doesn't mean it.
He's just, that's not his humor.
Just ignore him.
Just don't pay attention to him.
Just ignore him.
And he'll just stop.
Because if he's not getting attention, he's not going to go.
So Gilbert calls me.
So he comes down.
Then he calls me that night in the hotel room.
We weren't having sex. And he says, you know, I did my usual thing with Linda
and started saying something to her about Amos and Andy.
And she said to me, I'm not listening to you.
I'm ignoring you.
I'm not paying attention to you.
I told her to ignore him.
So instead of ignoring him, she's like, I'm ignoring you.
I'm not listening to you.
I'm not paying attention to you.
Yeah, because you had been saying, ignore him.
Don't pay attention to him.
And so all she did.
I'm ignoring you.
I'm not paying attention.
So for years, we've laughed over that.
It's like 12-year-olds.
And the funny thing is, then, you wrote about it
in your book, and they
told you not to mention
her being black.
That's right.
Yes.
Sort of kills
the story.
Because, you know, when you
write a book, they say to you over and over,
put in anecdotes.
Put in anecdotes.
He's just like, I don't remember any fucking thing that happened.
You know, I don't remember these things.
They just want details about what did Gilbert say?
What did Larry David say?
What did...
It's a funny book, regardless.
Thank you, Frank.
Frank has questions.
He's very well prepared.
Gilbert doesn't prepare a goddamn thing.
You know, I was thinking about this,
because I know this is about the movies,
and I listened to the podcast with Robert Osborne,
which, by the way, I ran into him the other day on 57th Street.
Nothing could have made me more excited.
The nicest man.
Oh, it's like, there's Robert Osborne.
I got, like, you know, very, very excited.
But I was thinking about growing up
and what changed the exposure to movies that we got.
And for me, it was when I was in college,
they would show, Saturday nights they would show movies.
They would show full-length movies uncut.
And you started to realize these movies
that you had watched your entire life,
when you saw them uncut,
it was a completely different movie.
You know, I didn't even know Humphrey Bogart was in Casablanca when I first saw it.
I thought it was all about Pauline Reed.
Right.
Yeah, I remember Robert Osborne was on the podcast, and he said he got everyone together for this one musical he loved that was coming on TV.
And they watched it it and there was no
music in it oh that's right that's right yeah they cut it out yeah yeah yeah I think it was
cover girl yes yeah yeah you're obsessed with Turner Classic Movies well you know it's it's
my background it's my white noise it's what I have on in the background for many reasons one
it's so visually you know especially the black and whites.
I just like to have it on.
And also,
there's no commercials.
Right.
You know,
it's just Robert Osborne
and Ben Mankiewicz
talking every now and then.
Yeah.
And Drew Barrymore.
And Gilbert was on
as a guest programmer.
Yeah, I know.
That was a lot of fun.
It's the only time
I was ever jealous of you.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Other than the time when I was
fucking you doggy stuff.
What kind of narcissist am I
that I would be jealous of you
fucking me from behind?
Doesn't make any sense.
You know... You know what's interesting, though, about the movies?
I've been thinking about this.
You know, when I watched movies when I was a kid,
or even TV shows, you know, what we grew up on,
the Donna Reed and Leave it to Beaver and blah, blah,
Father Knows Best,
or just seeing, you know, the movies from the 40s,
it never had anything to do with me.
It was always pure fantasy because it so completely had nothing to do with my upbringing.
It wasn't until I saw Annie Hall
and I saw the family around the dinner table
talking about disease,
was the first time I thought,
oh, that's like my family.
The man has diabetes.
Yeah, it's the first time I ever saw something on screen that I thought, oh, that's like my family. The man has diabetes. It's the first time I ever saw something on screen that I thought, oh, that's like my family.
Other than that, it was like this is nothing like anything that I ever grew up with.
And the funny thing about the old movies and old TV shows like, well, like Andy Griffith.
I thought this is a totally non-Jewish show you could get.
And it was all Jews creating all this stuff.
Aaron Rubin created the Andy Griffith show. Yeah. And it was a Jews creating all this stuff. Aaron Rubin
created the Danny Griffith show.
Yeah.
And it was a spinoff
of the Danny Thomas show,
which was also created
by Jewish guys.
Yeah, yeah,
but Danny was not.
People forget.
For me, it was always hard
because...
Now, wait, wait.
Since he brought up
Danny Thomas...
I know where you're going.
You're not going to do it,
are you?
Okay, would you tell the story? Well, I don't you're going. You're not going to do it, are you?
Okay, would you tell the story?
Well, I don't know the story.
I just know the rumors of, you know...
Yeah, well, that... And it wasn't at St. Jude's, I'll tell you right now.
That according to rumor,
Danny Thomas would lie under a glass coffee table.
And hookers, some say black hookers, you pick your racial type.
And the hookers would shit on the coffee table as Danny Thomas looked up at the shit coming out of there.
And said, make room for duty.
Nicely done.
Some say
that there wasn't a table involved
and they shit on him directly.
We don't know if any of this
is true, but we've heard the rumors.
But then they said, look,
there's a rumor that Gilbert fucked me from
behind in a
hotel room in Miami.
I'll tell you right now, it's not true.
No, that was Danny Thomas
fucking you from behind.
You know, that was another
interesting thing. They always, it was like, well, he
wasn't Jewish. He was what, Lebanese?
But they always had the
shiksa wife, no matter who they were.
Yeah, you have a theory on the Hollywood shiksa.
Well, you know, I actually just finished reading the biography of Samuel Goldwyn.
But I read about all these guys all the time.
And these guys who created Hollywood were these, they were peddlers.
They were.
They were smata salesmen.
He was a glove salesman.
Right.
And they bought into Nickelodeons is what they first did.
And then they somehow, it's amazing to think, you know, how they went from having a Nickelodeon with a schmata to, you know, MGM.
Samuel Goldfish.
Yeah, Schmool Goldfish was his name, actually.
Right.
But, you know, these are the guys that created Hollywood.
And they were so worried about assimilation.
And they were the ones that created the Schicksal Goddess, which has ruined my career all these fucking years.
But because they all married non-Jewish girls.
Louis B. Mayer converted to be an Episcopalian.
They were so worried, and rightfully so, because there was a huge movement about Jews own the entire industry in the 30s.
So they were frightened about that, that they were bent over backwards to be not Jewish.
And to not have any kind of, even though all the writers were Jewish and all the directors,
Billy Wilder and William Wilder and Mankiewicz and blah, blah.
I forget one of the movie studio heads, you know, old Jew, and he changed his birthday.
I think it was either to make it Christmas or Fourth of July.
It was Louis B. Mayer.
It was Louis B. Mayer.
Yeah.
Yeah. Incredible. And they all Mayer. It was Louis B. Mayer, yeah. Incredible.
And they all raised their kids like Christians.
Yes, well, Samuel Gold,
well, his wife was Catholic
and his kids were raised Catholic.
But yeah, it was all about,
I mean, in television,
I also have this theory that
all the television, not all,
I don't want to go into that conspiracy,
but a lot of television executives
were Jewish guys.
And it was okay for them to have the funny Jewish guys,
the Seinfelds and the Paul Reisers
and the blah, blah, blah. But the
Jewish women, that just reminded them of
their mother and their sister.
It couldn't be. They couldn't have us.
And it's
funny. I remember reading
that when they were creating
Golden Girls.
The heads of the studio said to them look there's two things that people hate divorced women and jews really
so they were old they all acted very jewish like Bea Arthur and the mother,
but they said they were Italian because you could get away with it.
You were a lot like George Costanza.
Right.
I always wondered about that.
Why did George Costanza?
With Jerry Stiller as his father.
Because wasn't the...
If that's not Chewie Jujumin, I don't know who is.
Yeah, Seinfeld was the most Jewish show in the world,
and none of them were supposed to be Jews.
I know.
Larry kind of corrected that in Curb,
and totally Jewed it up in Curb in a way.
Well, if the George Costanza character was based on Larry,
which he was,
why was the decision made to make him Italian?
Because it was more acceptable in some ways.
Frank Centopadre.
Ah, there you go.
I changed it.
It was Fishbein.
Sorry.
And Elaine was a total Jewish girl.
Yeah, well, Julia's Jewish.
Yeah.
She's a French Jew.
But they made her, you know, Elaine Bennis. Yeah, yeah, Julia's Jewish. Yeah. She's a French Jew. But they made her, you know, the Lane Bennis.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, decoy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I've also heard you say it's strange that Seinfeld's a mega hit, and it's a very Jewish show.
Yeah.
You would think that in an industry where everyone loves to imitate success.
Well, you know, even more to the point, Frank, is when I was first coming up as a comic,
The Nanny was a hugely popular show.
And that was this Jewish girl from Queens with a heavy New York accent.
So the networks are not that, they're always copycatting.
If something's a hit, then they try.
Of course.
So you would have think, if that's a huge hit, who are they going to try to develop something with after that?
No, they thought it was an aberration.
They thought The Nanny was an anomaly, that it shouldn't have been.
And obviously they thought the same thing about Seinfeld.
Yeah.
Because there was no other Jewish show.
And yet Larry went on to do Curb, which was hugely successful.
Not in the way that Seinfeld was, because it was HBO, not network, but hugely successful.
Well, they tried, what's his name, Silverman in a show called The Single Guy.
Oh, yeah.
Is that an actor's name?
Help me out. I don't remember. Yeah, he was from name, Silverman in a show called The Single Guy. Oh, yeah. Is that an actor's name? Help me out.
I don't remember.
Yeah, he was from...
Jonathan Silverman.
Yes, yes.
From Weekend at Bernie's.
I mean, that was their attempt.
They were a couple.
Friends was supposed to be another Seinfeld, but nobody was Jewish.
And then there was that show...
I guess Ross and Monica.
...called It's Like You Know was the title.
Well, that was Peter Melman's show.
Yeah.
One of the Seinfeld writers.
Yes.
They tried.
That was the L.A. Seinfeld.
You know what?
It's really hard to make a hit show regardless of whether you're Jewish or not.
May I just say.
It's like there's so many things that go into it.
You could have a great cast and great writing and just somehow.
You know, Seinfeld, something about Seinfeld just clicked and the chemistry of it worked.
You know, Seinfeld, something about Seinfeld just clicked,
and the chemistry of it worked. But it's really, really hard to get a show that the public likes
and the network likes and to keep it on the air.
It's almost impossible.
And when they try to create something,
and it's like it's a cliche that you'll see in comedy bits,
but they actually do sell stuff by going,
well, it's kind of
Seinfeld meets
Law and Order.
Right, right, right.
It's like, yeah.
Right.
Right.
Meets Lost.
But it's like
William Goldman famously said,
nobody knows anything.
That's true.
You know, I mean,
you just don't know
what's going to work
and you don't know.
You could see it in movies.
You could see a great cast and it just just falls apart, and it doesn't work.
And then something else is just magic.
We mentioned Casablanca.
Why is that movie so magical, and why does every piece of it work every time you watch it?
It just does. Who knows?
What would it have been with Ronald Reagan?
And yet the script wasn't written until they were writing it day by day.
Nobody knew it was going to be that.
It's just, you know.
They expected that movie to be a disaster.
Right.
Because everything was wrong with it.
Exactly.
And yet it's one of the greatest movies ever made.
And I could watch it over and over and over again.
So it's just, you can't decide on what these things are.
And what's fascinating about
Casablanca to me, going back to the
Jews again, is
most of the Nazi army
were Jewish
actors from Germany.
Right. And they
were like in these tiny parts
in Casablanca where they have like
one line.
It would be like a Jew from Europe who used to be a major star there.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, well, it was sad what happened to all those great Germans. I mean, the German film industry was huge.
And again, but a lot of those people, William Wyler and Billy Wilder and all those, the Von Sternbergs and all those people came to the U.S.
Michael Curtiz who directed Casablanca.
Michael Curtiz and created an amazing industry, you know, from that.
Billy Wilder is, to me, the most amazing of all of them because he wrote some of the wittiest, most amazing scripts.
And English.
Taught himself English first.
He didn't speak English.
I know.
It's incredible.
You know, it was his second language.
And he wrote great scripts even before he started directing.
And funny.
You know, some like it hot.
I mean, just really funny.
So many.
And to have humor in another language, I think, is really difficult.
Although you've been doing it for many years.
I'm still...
In the interest of time, Susie, let's talk about Curb,
because we've been talking about Larry most of the evening.
I don't think everybody knows how you were cast.
I mean, you've told the story a couple of times, but how did you get the part?
It's sort of an indirect path.
I did a roast.
Gilbert's king of the roasts.
But roasts are hard.
You see, you're really good at it because you're so jokey.
For me, roasts are really hard.
I did a roast of Jerry Stiller.
Were you on that roast?
No.
Okay.
No wonder it was so bad.
So I did a roast of Jerry Stiller.
And it was the Friars Club roast.
And it was aired on Comedy Central.
And Comedy Central, the Friars Club put me in to be on the roast because I had done several.
I had done a Danny Aiello roast where he cried.
Didn't Belzer make him cry?
Well, no, the Danny Aiello roast.
He had this, Joy was the roastmaster.
She was the first female roastmaster.
And he had his show, what was the name of that show?
Della Ventura.
Della Ventura had just come out.
And the reviews were just fucking brutal.
I mean, they just ripped him a new asshole.
And Richard Belzer gets up at the roast
and reads the reviews.
And Danny cried.
Yeah, yeah.
Danny cried.
He's a very sentimental guy, Danny. You know, he's a very sentimental guy
Danny
he's a sweetheart
I love Danny
he's a very sweet guy
bells are so mean
and I say that lovingly
so anyway
Comedy Central said they didn't want me
I was too female, too old
too Jewish, whatever.
I was not their demographic,
which is this other demographic thing
pisses the fuck me off.
So anyway, the Friars Club pushed for it,
and I worked really, I had laryngitis,
which I think was emotional.
I worked really hard on that roast,
and I worked with our friend Larry Amoros,
who was a great writer,
and I had lines like, you know,
on the day of my opening line was, Alan I had lines like, you know, on the dais,
my opening line was,
Alan, can you ever think you'd live so long
that your prostate would be as big as your ego?
You know, and Maury Povich, I said,
Maury, we all wondered why you married Connie Chung.
Then I realized we all know Jews love to eat Chinese.
Then, you know.
It was very jokey, which is not really my style,
but it was very jokey.
And then Larry David saw that, and I hadn't seen him in years because he moved to L.A.
You know, we used to all hang out, but then he moved to L.A. and who saw him?
And he married Laurie.
Who saw him?
He saw it when Comedy Central aired it.
No, he actually saw it before that. Because Jason was the...
Jason Alexander was the roast master.
And he saw it, and he had this part in mind of Jeff's wife,
and then he just called me and offered me the part.
He called me over, and I'll never forget this.
Susie, hi, it's LD.
I was like, oh, hi, I haven't heard from you in 10 years.
What's up?
I have the part I want you to do at an HBO show.
I said, well, what's the part?
Don't worry about it.
You can do it.
I said, well, can you send me the script?
There's no script. There's no script.
It's just you're Jeff Garland's wife and there's no script.
You just play yourself.
And I was like, okay, well. Oh, and there's no money.
There's no money.
And you're going to have to
fly yourself out and put yourself up.
And I was like, well, Larry,
you know, I love you and I'm sure it's going to be
brilliant and I'm happy to do it for scale, but I'm not flying myself out.
Well, that's the way it is.
And I was like, oh, forget it.
Then they called me back, and they found money to fly me coach.
And they did.
We had no money on that show.
We didn't have trailers.
We had nothing.
We didn't have Port of Sands.
You were a day player for a while, weren't you?
I was a day player for three years.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was day scale for three years.
Yeah, three seasons.
I know.
Thank you.
People see you on TV, they think you're loaded.
You know, they see you on TV.
Oh, yes.
They think you're loaded.
No.
I'm not complaining.
But, yeah.
And you never discussed the character with him?
With Larry?
Yeah.
No.
I mean, the only...
It's funny, now that I think about it.
The first scene that I had to do
where I was in true Susie Green form,
the first episode that I did
was just kind of introducing me and whatever.
Then the next episode was where, you know,
the only...
He gave me two directions.
One was, I want you to rip Jeff a new asshole,
which I thought I'd been in relationships before I could do this.
And then the other direction he gave me was,
don't make her too Jewish.
I didn't listen to that direction.
So, no, we never discussed the character.
We just kind of had like a dialogue of the unconscious going on
that he kind of saw what I was doing,
and then he started writing more towards that,
the outlines that he would write.
And I kind of saw what he wanted, but we never discussed it.
We just kind of organically...
But that show is like that.
That's one of those happy accident shows
that just kind of like that that's one of those happy accident shows that just kind of evolved
in that way and and that was that's another one of those shows that gets brought up by people going
well it's a kind of a curb yeah yeah that's the new catchphrase yeah yeah this show is like a new
it's not because curb is larry has story brain that's just brilliant.
I really think Larry's genius in so many ways, but it's really story that's his true genius.
And when you read those outlines and you see how they're constructed, it's just, I can't even understand how he gets to it.
And I have a comedian's brain.
I read it and it's transcendent to me.
I have no idea how he does it.
And nobody else can do that. It's not this willy-nilly
improv that we do. It's very
structured. You know exactly what's
happening in each scene.
So it's not like Curb. Because unless Larry's
creating it, it's not like Curb.
And what was the first
TV you did?
Oh, wow.
I don't even remember. Was it Baby Boom?
Well, Baby Boom, yeah.
That was a fucking disaster.
Sorry to bring it up.
They cast
Joy and I
in the series of Baby Boom, which was
a takeoff of the Diane Keaton movie.
But Kate Jackson
from Charlie's Angels was playing
the lead character. Not Diane Keaton.
No, not Diane Keaton.
But it was Charles Shire and Nancy Meyers who created the movie.
And they cast Joy as a German nanny, okay?
Like a Helga von Brunhilde.
And they cast me as the secretary, which was a little closer.
But the whole thing, we went out to L.A., we were miserable.
The whole thing was a nightmare.
I think it lasted 13 episodes.
The last I remember of Kate Jackson
was the last night she took us
to dinner at Spago.
I just remember her in the bathroom
having drunk too much.
Gilbert was fucking her from behind.
Of course.
Can I get sued for saying something like that on a podcast?
What is a podcast?
What's a pod?
Why is it a pod?
That's a good question.
We're at the podcast festival.
Yeah.
I don't know the answer to that.
We'll check with Jeremy, the founder of the festival. It's because Kevin McCarthy invented it.
Oh, the pods.
Yes, I get it.
Who gets that reference?
No one caught that.
I get it.
Yes, thank you.
Yes, Frank.
What was your favorite Curb episode?
I know people ask you this.
You know, I have different ones.
Each season, there's a new different one like
i loved the last season i loved the one where you know if you would have said to me those days at
catch a rising star that someday i was going to be driving around harlem having an orgasm in a car
next to larry oh that's a great one the broken car paid for it i would have said no fucking way
you know what's interesting i if you would have said no fucking way. You know what's interesting?
If you would have said
to anybody at the bar
in those days
at Catch a Rising Star
that Larry David
was going to be richer
than all of us combined,
we would have said no.
Insane.
No, we never would have
believed it.
And yet he is.
It's amazing.
I thought he was
one of those people
that he would either be
like a multi-billionaire that he is or be homeless.
Be homeless, which is what he thought he was going to be.
He thought he was going to be homeless.
I like his line that he says, I went from being a poor schmuck to a rich prick.
You're right.
Always like that.
But, you know, he said to me recently, in those days, if somebody had said to him,
you could have $200 a week for the rest of your life, he would have just accepted that.
You know, he wasn't that ambitious.
But neither were we, really.
Yeah.
It was, that was a very strange time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We were just like, we were just into doing the jokes and then going to the green kitchen
afterwards and laughing.
And we never really thought about, like, the career and getting a sit.
Well, you had Norman's Corner.
Oh, yeah. never really thought about like the career and getting a sit well you had norman's corner oh yeah
so in your face
or in wherever it was when i'm fuck you doggy style
i have to say suzy i'm partial to the episode with Sherry O'Terry as the crazy nanny.
That was a great, there's a lot of great episodes.
Pushes you out the window.
I love the doll.
The doll's great.
Because what's more fun.
Where's the fucking head?
Yeah, what's more fun than being able to scream, get me the fucking head, you know.
But to me, that job, I don't think I'll ever have a better job.
That I just get to go there and just
scream and yell and tell Larry and Jeff to go fuck themselves. It was, I mean, I did
it for eight seasons, the most fun job I ever had. And much less stressful than stand-up.
I mean, the stand-up is so stressful, even now, to this day. It's just so stressful.
Acting is like nothing. It's easy.
Even now, to this day, it's just so stressful.
Acting is like nothing.
It's easy.
Yeah.
People don't realize how different it is standing up and acting.
Acting is like you get up from your chair.
They go, okay, come this way.
Say this line.
Especially, don't you love doing cartoons, voiceovers?
Oh, my God, yes. It's the most fun.
Yeah.
It's really fun.
Tell us about that.
You did Bolt.
Yeah.
Because you go, I mean, it's hard.
I don't want to say it's hard.
It's draining, you know, because you're by yourself in a room with headphones
and you're acting with a dog or a cat or a pigeon or whatever the fuck you're acting with.
But you're by yourself.
The pigeon's not really there.
Yourself, the pigeon's not really there.
So you have to do the line like 10 different times, all different ways,
faster, slower, louder, softer.
But I enjoy it.
I enjoy voiceover.
Oh, it's a lot of fun.
Yeah.
And it is like you're almost. And the residuals are nice.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And you're almost never with the other people.
Never.
I've never had been.
Yeah.
Have you ever been with the other people?
Well, I love hearing those stories of like, oh, my God, during Aladdin, when Gilbert Gottfried
and Robin Williams got together, I never ran into him once.
Really?
Yeah.
You didn't work with Robin the entire time you were doing Aladdin?
No, not once.
Did you work with Robin the entire time you were doing Aladdin? No, not once. Did you work with anybody?
I think with the guy that played Jafar, I worked with a couple of times.
And then they would have me coming in by myself going, Jafar.
But mostly by yourself.
Yeah.
And the thing that I remember is that I had to do a lot of running scenes,
so it became like this porn.
Because I had to do all these scenes where I was like,
you know, like out of breath. Sort of like your orgasm exactly and then screaming falling like you're all that kind of stuff well i i remember when they were recording the aladdin
cartoon and the princess is running and and aladdin is going uh come this way. Hurry, hurry, hurry. And I had them play this tape a hundred times because I loved it.
She's going, I'm coming, I'm coming, I'm coming.
Is that because you don't get to hear that off?
Yeah, yes.
I heard it once.
In Miami. Yes.
When I was doggy fucking Susie.
Yes, Frank.
Tell your daughters not to listen to this episode.
My daughters?
Oh, God.
Did strangers actually come up to you in the street and say, curse me out, do a Suzy Green? They do it every day.
Still?
Constantly.
People want me to tell them to go fuck themselves.
You know, I'm not always in the mood.
People want me to tell them to go fuck themselves.
I'm not always in the mood.
You're going about your day.
You're buying produce.
You're whatever.
And people just like, you know,
like,
lethally want you to just curse at them.
It's a job.
It's work.
Yeah, it's work.
You know?
And by the way, you don't get it for free.
Right.
Right?
Yeah, I can't tell you to go fuck yourself for free.
Exactly.
And what am I going to take, ten bucks on the street?
Okay.
Bad form.
We should wrap.
Oh, we're wrapping?
Oh, yeah.
We haven't even talked about the movies.
Okay, talk about the movies.
I have nothing to say.
What's your favorite?
You told me on the phone.
Gangster pictures and musicals are your two weaknesses.
So give us a gangster picture.
My favorite gangster picture?
Desert Island movie.
Maltese Falcon.
Really?
Great.
Yeah, just because the dialogue.
You're cracking foxy on me
and you know
just
I think John Huston
wrote that
didn't he
it was Dashiell Hammett
first picture
yeah
so I would say that
I really prefer
the asphalt jungle
from John Huston
I know that's
well I love that also
that's Marilyn Monroe's
first you know
just love that one
yes she was very
what Gil
no no
I was just gonna say that
Maltese Falcon
is one of those movies where if you had never seen Bogart, Peter Lorre,
Sidney Greenstreet, or Elijah Cooke, and you said, just show me one thing that explains,
that would be it.
And one of my favorite scenes is the very end when they find out that the Maltese Falcon
is right, and Peter Lorre says, you stupid fathead.
You bloated idiot.
It's one of my favorite things.
I think I kind of stole that from him in my Susie Green years.
You did.
You borrowed from Peter Lorre.
Exactly.
I remember one of my favorite scenes there is when they're all yelling at each other.
Bogart, Astor, and Lorre and the cops are trying to figure out.
And Laurie picks up his cane and starts sneaking out.
And they go, where do you think you're going?
And he goes, I'm not going anywhere.
It's getting quite late.
There are different, darker gangster films,
but that one I could just watch over and over and over again.
Because it's got a really interesting plot.
The golden, jewel-encrusted falcon.
What a load of shit that was.
The MacGuffin.
Yeah, the MacGuffin.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
And musicals, my favorite musical?
I don't know.
The Bandwagon, probably.
We talked to Julie Newmar on the podcast. Well, that would be Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. And musicals, my favorite musical, I don't know. The Bandwagon, probably.
We talked to Julie Newmar on the podcast. Well, that would be Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.
She was in also.
She's in The Bandwagon, too.
Is she in The Bandwagon?
Yeah, she's a dancer.
She's very large.
Yeah.
She was statuesque.
They had to put her in the back.
Yeah.
Yeah, but The Bandwagon, any Fred Astaire, any Fred Astaire would be.
I used to wake up, I used to set my alarm, because on Channel 9 they would have Fred
and Ginger movies at 1 o'clock in the morning.
Remember that?
And I would set my alarm to watch them because that to me was just pure joy and delight to watch that.
And I remember the first time I saw Evan and Costello meet Frankenstein.
That did nothing for me.
Yeah.
That's a boy thing.
No, that's three stooges.
Evan and Costello, Stooges. Abbott and Costello, Three Stooges.
No, I would have rather watched Shirley Temple movies,
which I did every Saturday morning.
Yeah, no, you liked Abbott and Costello.
Oh, I loved it.
You used to do that whole bit about Abbott and Costello.
Da-da-da-da.
You remember that thing you used to do?
Yeah.
It's hard to explain to people.
Yes. He used to do Luke Costello in Citizen Kane. Yeah, it's hard to explain to people.
He used to do Luke Costello in Citizen Kane.
Can you do that?
Yes. Hey!
Rose!
Rose!
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Rose!
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Rose!
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Rose!
Rose!
Rose!
Rose!
Rose!
Rose!
Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! Rose! I think we should wrap up. I think we should wrap up. I think we should wrap up. I think we should wrap up. I think we should wrap up. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should wrap. I think we should end on that.
So do you have anything to plug?
Yeah.
What's coming up, Susie?
Oh, I don't know.
I got a lot of gigs.
Which I'm dreading, every single one of them.
You and me both.
Oh, God.
Isn't that funny?
Oh, God. No, but it's fine. It's good. Yeah, yeah. You of them. You and me both. Oh, God. Isn't that funny? Oh, God.
No, but it's fine.
It's good.
Yeah, yeah.
You make the people laugh and they pay you money, and I'm very thankful that they still
laugh and they still pay me.
In my old age.
Almost 60.
Gilbert and I are the same age, which we found out that day in Miami.
No.
I have a lot of gigs.
You go to my website.
Okay.
And I'm actually going to be doing two guest stars on SVU.
Great.
Tell us about it.
I don't know.
I haven't seen the scripts. My wife's favorite show.
I haven't seen the scripts yet, so I don't know what the character is.
Okay.
A Jew?
Maybe.
Maybe a Jew lawyer.
Go figure.
And then there's another thing that I can't talk about that might be happening.
Okay.
But I'll come back. I'll come back and plug that.
Please do.
Okay.
So this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast, the first live one.
Yes. Thank you all. Thank you.
you all. Thank you.
With me and my co-host,
Frank Santopadre,
and our guest and friend,
Susie Esmond. Thank you guys for coming.
We appreciate it very much.
Thank you all so much for coming out.