Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Chip Kidd Encore

Episode Date: June 12, 2023

GGACP marks the 30th anniversary of Steven Spielberg, Michael Crichton and DavidΒ Koepp'sΒ "Jurassic Park" (released June 11, 1993) with this ENCORE presentation of an interview with the creator of th...e original "JP" logo/art, award-winning designer and pop culture historian Chip Kidd. In this episode, Chip joins Gilbert and Frank for a lively (and educational!) conversation about classic movie posters, Jewish comic book creators, the convoluted history of Captain Marvel and the 80th anniversary of the Caped Crusader. Also, King Kong goes to Japan, Andrew Wyeth inspires Charles Schulz, Gilbert plays a Superman villain andSaul Bass directs the "Psycho" shower scene.Β PLUS: Tobor the 8th Man! Batman vs. Godzilla! In praise of Alex Ross! The Hulk shreds his pants! And the strange death of Jack Cole! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:41 Try the new creamy parmesan and bacon quarter pounder today and discover how words are so unnecessary for a limited time only at participating McDonald's restaurants in Canada Hey Jeff, you know what I could go for? What do you want Dave? A little Gilbert Goffrey, amazing, enormous throbbing
Starting point is 00:00:59 Colossal Colossal Podcast I thought we were going to get a sandwich I thought we were going to get a sandwich. I thought we were going to get a grinder. Give it up for Gilbert Gottfried. This is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:35 I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and our engineer, Frank Verarosa. Our guest this week is here to join us in discussing and celebrating the 80th anniversary of the iconic American character known as Batman. He's one of the most knowledgeable sources on the subject since he's been obsessed with the cape crusader since he was all of two years old and has authored and co-authored several books on the topic including batman animated batman and Batmanga. That's easy for you to say. Batmanga. Batmanga. Batmanga. The secret history of Batman
Starting point is 00:02:34 in Japan. As well as graphic novel Batman Death by Design. He's also an expert on other comic strips and comic book culture. And the writer, co-writer, or designer of the books. Shazam! The Golden Age of the World's Mightiest Mortal.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Mythology. The DC Comics art of Alex Ross, Jack Cole, and Plastic Man stretch to their limits, and only what's necessary, Charles M. Schultz, the art of peanuts. And if all that isn't enough to keep him off the street, he's also an award-winning graphic designer, undeniably the most successful admitted
Starting point is 00:03:35 book covered... Admired. Admired. Also admitted. Fuck it. I gave up trying at the beginning. He's also the most admired and book cover designer in the world, producing memorable images for bestsellers by Michael Crichton, Cormac McCarthy, James Elroy, Dean Kuntz, Oliver Sacks, David Sedaris, John Updike, and even Catherine Hepburn, just to name a few.
Starting point is 00:04:18 You know the famous Jurassic Park dinosaur logo that you see all over the world? He came up with that. He also designed movie posters, CD cover art, and promotional art for performers like The Police and Paul Simon. And in his spare time, he wrote two novels on the New York Times bestseller list, The Cheese Monkeys and The Learners. And a man who still has the Robin the Boy Wonder costume his mom made for him back in 1964. The Dark Knight of Design, Chip Kidd. Wow. That's all. We don't have time for the show now, Chip. Yeah, I was going to say.
Starting point is 00:05:21 All right. So we're done. We're done. All right. Do we have the year right on that costume? Was it 66? Actually, the costume itself would have been 68. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:05:30 I was born in 68. I'm way off. But I mean, what are you going to do? Yeah. Just that you still have it. I do. It's a cool thing. I do.
Starting point is 00:05:36 Now, here's something. I used to be a big fan of going to, when people still read newspapers there would be an entertainment section in each paper that would have movie posters you don't find that in people you mean the movie ads yeah the movie ads i don't find movie ads anymore and i remember I was always more attracted and fascinated to the simple ads when it had too much going on. Yes, I totally agree. Yeah, too many people in parachutes and guns and dancing. And I thought they're trying way too hard. And like a poster like the Godfather, which was a hand holding marionette strings
Starting point is 00:06:28 i thought now see that's something that i'm interested in yes and and stolen from the book cover yes yeah and when i was way back in 1990 when i when we got the manuscript for jurassic park at work i work for Alfred A. Knopf, it's like my day job, and I'll be there 33 years in October. Wow, congrats. My boss, Sonny Mehta, who is still my boss,
Starting point is 00:06:55 he's an amazing editor-in-chief, he kept saying, now remember Jaws. Remember Jaws. Like, you know, because that was taken from the book cover too. Sure, sure. And we knew that Spielberg had bought this to make a movie.
Starting point is 00:07:10 That's all we knew. This is before, well, I'm doing the book cover. And he's like, something that iconic, the shark and the waterline and the girl, title. Like, yes, we need to do and i remember thinking there is no way that i will ever ever be able to come up with something like that that would be that memorable for this but of course i didn't say that i just said okay sure but you know uh simple jaws it's perfect yeah that and that godfather that's a that's an iconic image sure it's one you picture absolutely yeah i saw an article uh and you you pick jaws as one
Starting point is 00:07:55 of your all-time was it favorite book covers was a piece in time i think yeah yeah sure yeah and and and of course i have to ask you, Jurassic Park, trillions of dollars. They made about ten of them. Is this a Charlie Kochman question? Yeah. And it's being shown all over the world. Each country. In India, it's made a trillion dollars.
Starting point is 00:08:19 So what are you doing with all that? In countries that don't have movies. Oh, my God. The royalty money must drive you crazy. Well, you can see how I'm dressed. I mean, come on. No, I forget how old I was. I was probably 25, 26.
Starting point is 00:08:39 And I did that as part of my day job. But, I mean, the cool thing to this day about being a book cover designer as opposed to other forms of graphic design is that your name as the designer goes on the flap. It either goes on the flap or the back cover, okay? And so I had done this image and made the book jacket. And, again, this is back in the day before cell phones or the internet or anything. So my phone rings and it's like,
Starting point is 00:09:13 Hi, I'm a big scary lawyer from Universal Pictures. Can I speak with somebody named Chip Kidd, please? I'm like, yeah, that's me. Well, we're making this movie and we think that we might want to buy the rights to the image in case maybe we want to use it. And even back then, I knew. I'm like, okay, let me transfer you to our big scary lawyers
Starting point is 00:09:39 and you all can sort of hash it out. And they did. But, I mean, they paid a pittance for it. And, you know, that was kind of it. You've said that's going to be, what, on your gravestone or in your obituary? Well, it's not going to be on my gravestone. On your obituary.
Starting point is 00:09:58 If I can help it. I mean, I won't be designing my gravestone, so whoever does that... A gravestone with a T-Rex chomp. Right, yeah, like chomp. I don't know why I my gravestone, so whoever does that... A gravestone with a T-Rex on it. Right, yeah, like chomp. I don't know why I said gravestone. No, I said that would be the first line of my obituary. That's what I meant.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Yeah, I mean, unless something else comes along. It would look pretty damn cool on a gravestone, though. So had you gotten a penny of the royalties, you could have... Of the royalties? No. My boss, again, Sonny Mata, was a real gent. And he basically, the money that Universal paid, he basically turned it over to me, which was very sweet. And he didn't have to do that.
Starting point is 00:10:41 And at the time, it was like, wow, well, that's kind of cool. But it's not a lot but the thing that really kind of stung is that I'm not mentioned in the credits at all like Universal can't officially acknowledge that but on every copy of every book even if it's a movie tie-in book it has my name on the copy
Starting point is 00:11:01 and see there too is a case of, it's a simple design. It's a skeleton of a T-Rex. And I could imagine them going, oh, can we have one where every dinosaur is in the poster? Right. Yeah. Yeah. But they didn't. They didn't.
Starting point is 00:11:20 And again, I did the drawing of the dinosaur. It was then adapted for that logo. Like the background of the cover that I did was white. And then they changed it to red. And then they put that, frankly, awful lettering with it. But what was really interesting to me is they didn't alter the drawing at all. Interesting. Whereas Jaws, if you see the original,
Starting point is 00:11:46 Yes, that was in the article. the composition is the same, but the drawing and the colors are completely different for the movie. Yeah. And speaking of movie design, I mean, you've dabbled in it. You've done a couple. Dabbled, yeah. You did the Harrison Ford movie and the Robert Downey movie,
Starting point is 00:12:01 but it's not really your thing. It's a totally different challenge than designing. Oh, I mean, absolutely. Every now and then, some clever art director for Paramount or something like that was like, hey, let's get this guy to do it. And sometimes it works out
Starting point is 00:12:19 and sometimes it's just a total disaster. But it always pays well. Okay, now here's a strange question and I just want you to say yes. Yes. Okay. Did Jews create the superheroes? Of course they did.
Starting point is 00:12:36 Thank you. Okay. Gee, that wasn't too hard. And all the good Christmas music too. Yeah, this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Club. Good night. They started with the Gollum. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:51 Yes. Yes. Very good. Excellent. Excellent. Right. And they just kind of kept going. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:58 Yeah. Yeah, because the Gollum was paved the way for not just superheroes, but also Frankenstein. Sure. Yes. Yes. But I mean, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, excuse me. Sure. They were extremely circumcised.
Starting point is 00:13:13 And. And Stanley Lieber. Yeah. Yes. And. Jack Kirby. What I noticed too, in Hebrew names, there's like an L at the end of a lot of the names. Okay, yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:30 And like Jor-El and Kal-El. And so there are names that end with the L. He's put a lot of thought into this, Jim. Yes. Yeah. And I think with a lot of, like Superman, secretly they were probably saying, you know, that Clark Kent is a nebbishy little Jew. But he turns into this powerful goyim. Yes, exactly.
Starting point is 00:13:54 Would you like to belong to Temple Kal-El? Does that make you happy? If only they would have him. Yeah, I forgot Jack Kirby's real name too, but it's Jacob... They're all Jewish fellows. Kirbystein. Yeah, there was something. They're all Jewish guys.
Starting point is 00:14:13 Bob Kane. Yeah. Kane-a-witch. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Jerry Robinson co-created the Joker and Robin. His name came from Robinson. Yeah, sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Let's talk about Batman and your childhood obsession, since we alluded to you still having the Robin costume. Yeah. Which is in the book, which is in Batman Collected. Yes. Yeah. My mom made those costumes for us from scratch. Yeah. This is great.
Starting point is 00:14:43 I was showing this to Gilbert. This is you and your older brother. That's my older brother, and that's Bat-Mom in the middle. So those costumes your mom made? She did. They're pretty impressive. Yeah, she was a great seamstress. And when we were really little, she made a lot of our clothes.
Starting point is 00:14:59 And you still have that exact one? Because there's that picture of you on your website. Yes, I have the cape, which you see. That's the Batman cape. But I have the Robin tunic. Because, you know, we used to run around in those things all the time. Oh, here's a question I have to ask. 99% of superheroes have capes.
Starting point is 00:15:22 Yes. What purpose does the cape serve? Well, like how geeky do you want to get? As geeky as you can stand. As geeky as possible. And of course, the wonderful, incredible, you know, Edna Mode, no capes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:15:39 Very fun. I think the idea was to literally cloak yourself, you know, in Batman's case anyway. You wanted to hide in the shadows and that would sort of help. Sure, sure, sure. And I think it also, there's a tradition out of certain kinds of circus wear. Oh. That, you know, especially like,
Starting point is 00:16:05 because I know with Captain Marvel they based it on like Russian opera stars from the turn of the century who would have these weird little half capes that they'd wear.
Starting point is 00:16:13 I'm fascinated that Captain Marvel was designed to look like Fred McMurray. Yeah. Yeah. That's a cool thing. That's actually come up
Starting point is 00:16:20 on this show before. Yeah. By the way, we're referring with these superhero costumes, we're referring to Chip's great book, Batman Collected, which you guys have to get.
Starting point is 00:16:27 And it's totally out of print. Is it out of print? Am I plugging a book that's out of print? You can go on eBay. Find it. Find it. You must find it. But the obsession began at a very early age for you.
Starting point is 00:16:40 Yes, it did. I told you in email we had Adam and Bert. Both were here well and if you page through that the only image that we shot for that book that's arguably not an inanimate object is adam oh cool um and there it is there it is and again that was in the summer of 1995 wow look at that so um and so photoshop was then, but we put in the ears on the shadow in Photoshop. Yeah. Isn't that cool? And we had two cat women, Julie Newmar and Lee Merriweather.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Oh, man. Adam paid Gilbert a compliment that he's still living off of. You want to tell Chip what he said? Adam West told me that I would have made a great penguin. I can, yeah, but I mean, you'd have to like put on about 200
Starting point is 00:17:33 pounds. I mean, I guess I can do anything with a fat suit. Yeah, no. Or a CGI. You're a little skinny. Yeah, no, you would have been great. You can do anything. You could have played the shark in J skinny. Yeah, no, you would have been great. You can do anything. You could have played the shark in Jaws. So you grew up in rural Pennsylvania.
Starting point is 00:17:51 I grew up in southeastern Pennsylvania in a town called Redding. Yes. There's a Philly farm team there for years. There's a Philly farm team there. They are still there. I hate sports because I'm gay. But you knew that. I did know that.
Starting point is 00:18:11 I got dragged to those fucking games. But there's like five, barring me, there's like five interesting people from Reading. The writer John Updike. Wow. The poet Wallace Stevens. The artist Keith Haring. people from reading um the writer john updyke wow the poet wallace stevens uh the artist keith herring um there's a playwright named douglas carter bean who has a ton of stuff on and then some skank named taylor swift those are the five those are the five plus your kid and then me right yeah i'm not in their league It's an eclectic group.
Starting point is 00:18:45 Not in their league. Now, since I think we all, all of us, the three of us here, all watch the same stuff on TV, you must have watched those truly horrible Marvel cartoons. Right. Yeah. Oh, God. Those barely moved. You had to bring those up.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Yes. They barely moved. They had to bring those up. Yes, yes. They barely move. They would hold a picture and shake it. Or they'd zoom in and zoom out. Yeah, and only the mouths moved because, you know, they just sort of had to a little bit. The theme songs were cool. The theme songs were great. Yeah. Nobody loves the Hulk.
Starting point is 00:19:21 That's it. I'm going to send you a video of the guy who composed the theme songs who's still around. Wow. Yeah, I remember. Here's Bruce Banner. Turns into the Hulk. That's it. That's it.
Starting point is 00:19:31 But those were so awful. They were. Yeah. They'd shake pictures, zoom in and out on the still picture, and that was the movement. But when you're a kid, you're willing to accept so much. What do you care? was the movement but but when you're a kid you're willing to accept so much because i i remember not with those so much but um i i mean i was watched everything and was in love with everything but um speed racer sure and then i don't know 20 years later i watched a couple speed racer cartoons i'm
Starting point is 00:19:58 like this animation is pathetic i know they don't hold up yes i felt that way about the spider-man series from the 60s. Remember that one? Yeah. And as a kid, I adored it. I went back and looked at it. I bought them on DVD and I said, oh my God. Any TV animation back then is just horrible. Cheap.
Starting point is 00:20:14 And the song was, when Captain America swings his mighty sword. Yeah, sure. You watch those? Oh, sure. Yeah. I was a real TV kid I mean Gilbert I know you're much older than me but
Starting point is 00:20:29 in my generation yes I was also both my once I started going to elementary school both my parents were working so I was one of the original latchkey kids. So I would let myself in and just watch TV
Starting point is 00:20:48 from like, you know, three o'clock to six o'clock till they got home and just watched everything, all that crap. Did you have a 4.30 movie there in Pennsylvania? We had one here. I'm thinking Tri-State. Well, we had Dr. Shock. Oh, so you had like a shock theater.
Starting point is 00:21:03 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We had Zachary. From out of Ph theater yeah yeah yeah we had from phil out of philly yeah we had zacherly yeah now you must you must have watched the bowery boys too i just i tried i mean you know again back back then you know cable barely existed and so there wasn't a whole lot to choose from and every now and then it's like a rainy Saturday afternoon, Bowery Boys movie, all right, I'll try it. I couldn't relate. I had absolutely no idea what they were doing or why.
Starting point is 00:21:35 What about the Little Rascals? They were on in syndication. Now that I got. Yeah, okay. Loved. Right, right. Loved. And all those crazy contraptions they made.
Starting point is 00:21:44 Right, that's right. Yeah. And the very weird, surreal Abbottptions they made. Right, that's right. Yeah. And the very weird, surreal Abbott and Costello show was also in syndication. Yes. When we were kids. Which is strange to watch to this day. It's like they're movies, I feel, with the exception of Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein. Most of the movies are like good in part.
Starting point is 00:22:04 But I'm fast the TV show is an acid dream yeah strangely depressing of Abbott and Costello yeah it's very weird it's dark again quite seriously it was either before my time or they weren't running it
Starting point is 00:22:19 because I just watched the movies and when what Joe Besser would show up as Stinky, that would scare me as a kid. I would get scared of Stinky. The inspiration for Newman on Seinfeld was Joe Besser's Stinky. But I know something you did watch was a lot of Japanese cartoons. Yes. And I know I have a list here. I know you were into
Starting point is 00:22:45 Tobor the Ape Man, which, believe it or not, we've discussed on this podcast. Wow. With who? I don't know. It's come up. We do little episodes on Thursdays, just the two of us, and we just riff on anything off the wall, or just stuff we remember. Like Gigantor was another one. Oh, yeah. Japanese.
Starting point is 00:23:01 Now, was that... I talk over the guests. i hope you don't mind you're only just trying to talk and i'm but but before i forget gigantor the teenage space age is that your command yeah close yeah okay damn close but Damn close. Call Tobor, the eighth man. Oh, yes. Faster than a rocket, quicker than a jet. Call the mighty Tobor, he's the one to get. Call Tobor, the eighth man. Quick, call Tobor, the mighty eighth Tobor man. There's a prehistoric monster
Starting point is 00:23:54 Who came from outer space Created by the Martians To destroy the human race The FBI is helpless It's 20 stories tall What can we do? who can we call? Call the war, the 8th man Call the war, the 8th man
Starting point is 00:24:15 Faster than a rocket, faster than a jet He's a mighty robot, he's the one to get it Call the war, the 8th man He's the mighty robot He's the one who can't Call no more He makes slams Quick calls no more The mighty and Robot of M.O.S. Gilbert, you've met your match.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Yes! But the really, really cool thing was the book I eventually did on Batman in Japan, which by the way, the correct pronunciation is Bamanga. Bamanga. Bamanga. Gil, you want to try that again? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Bamanga. Really, really quick. The guy in Japan who drew Batman for the Japanese audience for like a year and a half, 66, 67, was named Jiro kawada creator of eighth man very cool okay here's something that drives me crazy because i have the habit of putting stuff up on the internet which i never should but i i once refer if i ever refer to a cartoon out of Japan as a cartoon, people go out of their minds.
Starting point is 00:25:30 Just because you're associated with Japan now? No, no. No, because they don't say anime. Yeah. Oh, I see. Anime. What the fuck is that?
Starting point is 00:25:38 Yeah, no. Anime didn't really exist until like Battle of the Planets or something much much later and what's the difference between anime and like the Flintstones nothing I mean one's American and one's Japanese
Starting point is 00:25:55 it's like saying what's the difference between eat in English and manja in Italy I thought he was going to in English and manja, manja in Italy. I thought he was going to pronounce it bad manja. Right, yeah. It's an affectation.
Starting point is 00:26:14 Just tell whoever it is to calm down. I thought you were going to tell me the Japanese were still giving you shit from your tsunami tweet. You watch Astro Boy, Marine Boy? Oh, my God. Marine Boy. She didn't wear a shirt. That mermaid. Yes.
Starting point is 00:26:33 Yes. They had to very creatively keep her hair sort of flowing in front of them. I haven't seen this latest, The Avengers. I don't even know the fucking name of it. End game. Endgame. Endgame, son. Now, isn't one of the superheroes that used to be
Starting point is 00:26:52 a man, isn't Captain Marvel a woman now? Well, we could do an entire week's worth of shows just about that. But yeah, she's a woman. She's a woman now. Because, you know, Captain Marvel was at... This is so geeky. Your fans probably won't be into it.
Starting point is 00:27:09 No, they are. Believe me. You haven't met our fan base. The original Captain Marvel, this person I'm pointing out, that book is in print, by the way. Shazam. Oh, great. Was called Captain Marvel,
Starting point is 00:27:22 was published by Fawcett comics in the 40s, 50s, and was at its peak more popular than Superman. The people who owned Superman sued Fawcett back and forth for years and years and years. You're infringing on our copyright. Into the mid-1950s, at which point
Starting point is 00:27:41 Fawcett finally gave up because people weren't really buying that many comics anymore. Like, not three million issues a month. So, then, fast forward,
Starting point is 00:27:57 Marvel Comics buys up the name Captain Marvel in the late 60s. And so, now Marvel Comics is publishing Captain Marvel, and late 60s. And so now Marvel Comics is publishing Captain Marvel and it's a guy. The old green and white suit.
Starting point is 00:28:11 And DC buys the rights to this character, but they have to technically call it Shazam because they don't legally have the rights to the word Captain Marvel anymore. You got it, Gil? Oh. It's really not all that interesting. But this crazy to the word Captain Marvel anymore. You got it, Gil? Oh. Yeah. That's good. Somewhere along the line,
Starting point is 00:28:26 he became a woman. But this crazy, stupid Shazam movie came out a month ago. And, you know, anyway. But Marvel then, in the 70s, I think, turned the character Captain Marvel into a woman. And did a lot of the superhero comic books stem from the early pulp fiction detective?
Starting point is 00:28:53 I would say so. You know, you had The Shadow, The Shadow and Doc Savage, which were, quote, the pulps, which were more prose stories that had, you know solitary illustrations scattered throughout but they were not what we would call sequential
Starting point is 00:29:10 imagery panels with pictures and words that A to B to C to D to whatever they didn't tell stories that way they told stories differently and then of course there was the radio I'll have to learn to pronounce sequential imagery.
Starting point is 00:29:27 While you're working on Batmanga. Yes. Well, you know, I told you in the email, he wrote a comic. He wrote a Superboy comic. Yeah, yeah. And you said that they came to him. And I was thrilled when you were Mr. Mix-It-Click-Click. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:48 click click yeah although in the comic book i was knickknack who i was also in two or three episodes of the superboy series yeah the syndicated superboy series animated yeah no that was live action yeah that was live action live action yeah okay i forget who that guy who played him, but yeah, it was a live action show and I was in about two or three as Knickknack, Master of Toys. Uh-huh. And then that's who I did in the comic book. And then I was in a bunch of different things
Starting point is 00:30:18 as Mrs. Piglick. Yeah, I loved that. I did a whole thing that you read the book Batman Animated I did with with Bruce Tim and Paul Dini. And that was right before they were going to do Superman. I think that was a good Superman series. It was. Yeah. Yeah. Those guys are great. Yeah, they're great. They're really amazing. I was Miss Jess Picklick in the one where Tim Daly was Superman. And then I did it in some other thing, and I never know what the name of it was. How did they tell you to say his name? With me, it was Miss Jess Picklick. Miss Jess Picklick.
Starting point is 00:31:00 Because as kids, we never knew. Never knew. Yeah, there's been a trillion. Say it however you want. Did you know Michael J. Pollard played him on the Superboy series? Oh! Which I found today while researching your character. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
Starting point is 00:31:18 But first, a word from our sponsor. But let's talk about Batman. Let's talk about Batman 66. Wait. Michael J. Pollard replaced me in the awful Gene
Starting point is 00:31:36 Wilder, Richard Pryor comedy, Another You. There you go. He was my replacement. Michael J. Pollard. Remember this actor? I know the name. You'd know him if Michael J. Pollard. Do you remember this actor? I know the name. You'd know him if we showed him to you. In a second. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:49 He's in Bonnie and Clyde. He had like a crazed baby face. That's my favorite kind. Cherubic actor. So you're a latchkey kid. That's not easy to say. And you're watching all this stuff. You're watching Japanese cartoons. You're watching latchkey kid. That's not easy to say. And you're watching all this stuff. You're watching Japanese cartoons.
Starting point is 00:32:07 You're watching Speed Racer. Do you remember Kimba the White Lion? Oh, my God, yes. Yeah, that's another Japanese. And my God, which was ripped off to become the Lion King, by the way. That's correct. I mean, holy. Wow, now you're...
Starting point is 00:32:20 Yeah. How about the animated King Kong, which was also Japanese? You know what there you got me yeah I'll send it to you there you got me and Ultraman we were talking about
Starting point is 00:32:30 which he doesn't remember oh god that was great that was cool that was very cool beta capsule yep remember Ultraman
Starting point is 00:32:39 huh Gil here's a movie that they used to show on TV a lot that was like a joint american japanese effort called the manster do you know this one no we like to stump our guests no well i'm stumped although it sounds like somebody i used to date who's in the manster refreshing well it's an american is the lead and he's in japan
Starting point is 00:33:08 and something whatever radiation or he gets bitten by a monster whatever and he becomes this two-headed uh creature and there's a great scene where he looks at himself in the mirror pulls his shirt, and there's an eye growing out of his shoulder. We got one for you, Chip. Well, you had me a two-headed. Hilarious. By the way, I sent him the clip of you
Starting point is 00:33:40 running amok in the Japanese toy store, which is just fantastic. You are really good. We went deep. in the running a muck in the Japanese toy store, which is just fantastic. Wow. Half the stuff. You are really good. We went deep. You did.
Starting point is 00:33:49 You're shocked at how half of this stuff isn't even licensed and it's off model and not legit. Yeah, that was real. Really funny. That was fun.
Starting point is 00:33:59 I love Japan. I love going there. I love going to that place which is called Nakano Broadway. Yeah. Crazy. Crazy. Yeah. And I like how to that place, which is called Nakano Broadway. Yeah. Crazy. Crazy. Yeah. And I like how you specify. You don't want to be tempted from stuff from
Starting point is 00:34:09 the 70s because you're a purist and you just want to collect 60s. 60s or before. 60s stuff. I admire that. And you said that in Japan, they love the American Superman series with George Reeves. Yes. That's interesting.
Starting point is 00:34:26 Emperor Hirohito's favorite show. Wow. That's fascinating. And that's true. And this begins, he fights for the American way. I know. Yeah. Strange. I think there was a very strange Hail the Conquering Hero thing going on.
Starting point is 00:34:41 And quite seriously, with God as My Witness, I want to do the super manga book because that would really be amazing. Because the guy, okay, the guy who drew an animated Speed Racer did a four-part Superman comic book for Japan in the late 50s with Bizarro.
Starting point is 00:35:08 And it's amazing. Wow. It's beautiful. Oh, and did the creators of Superman get fucked as bad as it sounds like they did? Worse. Yeah. That's a sad story.
Starting point is 00:35:21 It's a very sad story. I mean, what happened to me with Jurassic Park is like nothing compared to what happened with them. Yeah. Yeah. It's a sad story. It's a very sad story. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:31 What is the full story? I mean, they were two animators. Well, they were cartoonists. Seriously, they were two Jewish kids in Cleveland. Yep. In the 1930s, they were obsessed with this new thing called science fiction. And they made
Starting point is 00:35:49 zines. They made zines, and their first concept for this thing called The Superman is that he was a villain. He was like this big, all powerful villain. And then all of this is well documented. But then they decided,
Starting point is 00:36:05 no, let's make him into a hero. They figured out the costume, et cetera, et cetera. And they went to every publisher to try and sell the idea. And nobody was interested. And finally, this guy at National Periodical Publications
Starting point is 00:36:21 said, all right, I'm throwing this out there, but okay, we'll buy the idea from you for 300 bucks. And, but it was quite clear, like, okay, but we'll own it. You guys will write and draw it, but we own it. And they were, frankly, they were so thrilled.
Starting point is 00:36:40 They were kids. They were kids. They weren't even 20 yet. And they were so excited that they like, yay, let's do it. And for a while, it was kind of great because it took off immediately and they were getting a steady, decent wage. But it just kept getting, but they were, and this is where the whole concept of what we call work for hire in the comic book industry started so you you had that the flip side of that would be walt disney who always owned everything on and again disney is different than than comic books but um yeah so as it went on, Siegel and Schuster, they would like try to sue to get the rights back.
Starting point is 00:37:29 And they didn't have a lifelong battle. It was a lifelong battle and they didn't have a legal leg to stand on. And finally, like in the 70s, DC paid them like $100,000. I think when the Donner movie came out, they were publicly shamed. They were publicly shamed and they paid them like $100,000. But at that point, they were publicly shamed. They were publicly shamed and they paid them like $100,000. But at that point, they were near death. It's a heartbreaking tale.
Starting point is 00:37:50 One of them went blind in this later year. I think the artist, sadly and ironically enough. Well, thanks for bringing the show down, Gil. Yeah. I'm just a laugh riot.
Starting point is 00:38:06 I'm a laugh riot. Just so let's talk about you just sort of discovering. By the way, one question about Superman being big in Japan. There were really two versions of that Superman series. There was the noirish black and white version, the first version. And then when it went color, it got light and campy. That's interesting. The Adventures of Superman. That's interesting. The Adventures of Superman.
Starting point is 00:38:25 That's interesting. It's really two shows. Somebody posted this on Facebook today. It's really kind of two different shows. Interesting. Yeah. Because that Superman versus the Mole Men, that movie, is very creepy. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:35 And very dark. And there's that episode where they keep hearing somebody in the background that they can't find screaming, help me, I'm drowning, help me. That, as a kid, that kept me awake at night. And then at the end, spoiler alert, it's a parrot that learned to say that. And it flies in at the end and says, help me, I'm drowning. Help me. I was like, whoa, that is so fucked up.
Starting point is 00:39:11 It is creepy. Were you a Twilight Zone guy too? Did you watch Twilight Zone? Sort of, yeah. On the creepy scale. Now, do you remember when Superman in the series was responsible for someone's death. Oh, you mean when he put the couple on the mountaintop when they found out his secret identity?
Starting point is 00:39:33 What? No. But he didn't kill them. They fell trying to escape. They fell to their death trying to get down the mountain. Yeah, he put them on a mountaintop. Yeah. But it's basically like putting a baby on a ledge and saying, I didn't throw the baby down the mountain. Yeah, he put them on a mountaintop. Yeah. But it's basically like putting a baby on a ledge
Starting point is 00:39:47 and saying, I didn't throw the baby out the window. There was a couple that discovers, a married couple that discover his secret identity. I don't remember this at all. And he has to put them out of circulation. He has to put them away from society. So he flies them to this remote mountaintop and he says, I'll be right back with food and clothing
Starting point is 00:40:02 and he's going to make lodging for them. While he's gone, they say, let's get out of here, and they try to make their way down the mountain, and they both fall to their deaths. Very disturbing. That is disturbing. Because you're going, Superman, kill those people. This bothers you all these years later.
Starting point is 00:40:20 Oh, here's something. I don't care how fucking moral the superheroes are supposed to be. Wouldn't one of the superheroes have killed Hitler? Oh, well, that's been going on forever. In fact, they did a story like, all right, this is how Superman would solve World War II. this is how Superman would solve World War II. And he goes and he just plucks Hitler up and he plucks Stalin and Mussolini and just hauls him before a world court
Starting point is 00:40:52 and that's kind of the end. It was this wish fulfillment thing. Yeah. But they, I mean, they went there. Yeah. Well, he's got a theory that if you have Superman in the Justice League, what is your theory?
Starting point is 00:41:02 That you don't need anybody else? Superman, he flies, he's bulletproof, he shoots lasers out of his eyes, he can do everything. Super strength. What the fuck do you need the other superheroes? Why do you need Green Arrow, for instance? Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:41:20 To sell more comics. Because he's hot. I mean, again, I don't know how geeky you want to get. As much as you can. We're going to change the name of the show. One of Superman's... I mean, there's Kryptonite,
Starting point is 00:41:36 but then there's also magic. That's a weakness for him. Ah, yes. And if there's any kind of what we call magic involved, he's powerless against that. And believe me's any kind of what we call magic involved, he's powerless against that. And there's, you know, and believe me, the writers of Justice League over the years used to have to think up all these crazy
Starting point is 00:41:51 scenarios for all of them together and doing this and doing that. And there was a really interesting one at one point where, if you think about it, the core of Justice League, there's only two members who don't actually have superpowers. Batman's one of them, and Green Arrow is the other.
Starting point is 00:42:12 All the others have some kind of strange super enhancement. And there's some predicament where this wizard or whoever creates some sort of thing, and I'm paraphrasing here, this wizard or whoever creates some sort of thing, I'm paraphrasing here, and zaps all the members that actually have superpowers with some sort of ray. And it was a brilliant idea. Like, the only two members
Starting point is 00:42:34 that could do anything to save them were the ones that didn't have superpowers. So, you know, it's a good logical question for something that bears no logic. See, all these things are haunting you, Gilbert. He's putting them to rest.
Starting point is 00:42:48 It's very disturbing. He's paying you a public service. And did George Reese have a bit of a pot belly when he was doing Superman? Or was that stuffing? Stuffing. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:43:05 I thought he sort of cut a fine figure. But are you thinking of Adam West? Adam West did have a potbelly. They always made fun of Adam West for having a potbelly. Yes, he did. And you know who Adam West beat out for the Batman role? Ty Harden was one guy.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Lionel Wagoner. He did a screen test. Oh, man. And as a, well, again, as a gay child, I would see Lionel Wagner
Starting point is 00:43:32 on Wonder Woman, but before that, he was one of the company players for Carol Burnett, and he was the sort of token hunk, and at the slightest
Starting point is 00:43:44 provocation, she would have him come out without a shirt on. And I was just like, you know, my mom was like, what? What? What are you looking at? Nothing. Nothing. And when I found, and it was only years later that I found out, like, he could have been Batman. I'm like, oh, man.
Starting point is 00:44:03 The screen test is online. The screen test is online. The screen test is online. And, I mean, we're so used to Adam West now, it's kind of hard to, because, I mean, Lionel Wagner, as easy as he is to look at, doesn't really have any personality. No, West
Starting point is 00:44:18 West brought something to it. Yeah, West brought that kind of winking to the camera. Yeah. That was fun. It was, yeah. By the way, I'd like to surprise our guest. Gilbert didn't know about this at all. Did you know there was a project in the works,
Starting point is 00:44:34 Batman Meets Godzilla, that they found in William Dozier's files? Shit. And papers that he had donated to the University of Wyoming? A 22-page treatment. This is how deep this research is, Chip. And was that going to be a movie? and papers that he had donated to the University of Wyoming. A 22-page treatment. This is how deep this research is, Chip. And was that going to be a movie?
Starting point is 00:44:50 It was a Toho project. It was going to be a movie. And it was written by the writer of Mothra vs. Godzilla. Oh, man. That's one you wish had been made. Well, not only do I wish, but I also had not heard that. Yeah. Which is embarrassing.
Starting point is 00:45:06 Do you remember there was one? I think it was Japanese King Kong versus the robot. Oh, Techno Godzilla. Was it Mega Godzilla or Techno Godzilla? Yeah, it was weird. They build a robot. Mega Zilla. To kill Godzilla. But they make the robot look like Godzilla for some reason.
Starting point is 00:45:25 Right. There's no point to it. Well, that's like your bit about the castle where they built the lever. Yeah, I always say like in those movies like, oh, that lever blows up the castle. It's like, yeah, when they built the castle, they needed a lever to blow it up. Yeah, just in case. The architect put it in. I'll send you this. This was supposedly
Starting point is 00:45:51 a Toho project, and there's a 22-page treatment. That would have been so great. What exists. Yeah. I don't know. Apparently Batgirl turns up in it, and they fight a villain who controls the weather. Oh, what did you think about the Wonder Woman series?
Starting point is 00:46:08 The TV series? Yeah. With Lyle Wagner. Well, Lyle Wagner was Steve Trevor. So that, you know, my dad could watch Linda Carter's boobs bounce all over the place and I could watch Lyle and Wagner. I was
Starting point is 00:46:24 thrilled with it. I was thrilled with it. I was thrilled with it. One of the interesting things about it is that it started on one network as a period piece, as a World War II show. Then I think it moved to CBS and became
Starting point is 00:46:39 in the contemporary world with no explanation. I think what was amazing about that is she just looked perfect. And I think a big part of it is, you know, the characters look a certain way on the page,
Starting point is 00:46:53 obviously, but then when you try to translate them into three dimensions, sometimes it works, but most of the time it doesn't. But she, there's something about her that looks perfectly natural in that outfit. And the outfit was absolutely faithful to the comics. She was well cast. And what do you think of the current Giggles Gazoo or whatever?
Starting point is 00:47:14 Giggles Gazoo? Giggles Gazoo. That's a Hebraic pronunciation. Gail Godot. You're so bad. She was an answer in the crossword puzzle the other day. It's Heroic Gal. She's very good.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Which was a good clue, because Heroic Gal. Ah, they mean her name. And the answer was Godot. I think she's terrific. I think she's absolutely wonderful, and I think they did a brilliant job. My big beef as a fan is, why on earth would you set that movie in World War I? Oh, I know.
Starting point is 00:47:51 We'll put Wonder Woman in all quiet on the Western front. That's interesting. Why? That's interesting. She's completely born out of World War II. And I like it most because she's a hot Jew piece of ass. Yes. Yes, she is.
Starting point is 00:48:07 She's in the category of Natalie Portman. Natalie Hirschloch. Yeah, yes. Thor's girlfriend, Natalie Portman. There you go. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:48:16 Didn't you ever wonder why the God of Thunder fell in love with a nice Jewish girl from Massapequa? It's like, what? What? And R It's like, what? What? And Ringo's wife,
Starting point is 00:48:30 Catherine Bach. Yeah. He's also obsessed with Jewish Bond girls. Yes. There was also... What? What's her name? The English one.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Seymour. Jane Seymour. Oh, Jane Seymour. And in one of the current Bond movies... She was in Live andour. And in one of the current Bond movies, in one of the current Bond movies, they have an Israeli Bond girl. Carol something. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:48:55 Do you know the guy that... I think that's great. I think that's wonderful. Hello, Gino. And there were two that I could think of Jewish Bond villains. Wait for it, Chip. He's at the edge of his seat. Dr. No was Joseph Wiseman.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Very good. Okay. And the other. You'll never get it. An African-American Jew. Yes. What? Yes. African-American Jew. Yes. What? African-American Jew.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Nipsey Russell was a Bond villain. Yafit Koto. You know that actor? I do. I know him from Alien. Sure, Midnight Run. Yafit Koto's a Jew. Well, man.
Starting point is 00:49:47 Yeah. Well, great. He must have converted. I think that's terrific. This is the shit he cares about. Yeah. Talk about watching the original Batman. You said you watched it with your dad. Yes, I did. Let's talk about all the Jewish villains on Batman now. And all I can
Starting point is 00:50:03 think about is that he's circumcised. That's awesome. We like that. We like that. Now, obviously, this is a question. Obviously, the show worked on several levels.
Starting point is 00:50:20 It did. But though you would become a designer later in life, you were not aware at that age of the pop art component of the show. No, but I think it definitely had an effect on me and the way I design. Because the way they used to tilt the camera, it's like every, when you tilt the picture plane, it literally creates a sense of tension that you wouldn't have otherwise. Okay, while you were answering that, I thought of a Jewish Batman villain, Otto Preminger.
Starting point is 00:50:56 Yes, that's right. Very good. That's right, Mr. Freeze. Yeah. Well, Eli Wallach's a Jew. Oh, was he? Yes. Sure.
Starting point is 00:51:02 He sure was. Of course. And he was also Mr. Freeze. That's right. Oh, he was Mr. Freeze, Eli Wallach? Yeah Jew. Oh, was he? Yes. Sure. He sure was. Of course. And he was also Mr. Freeze. That's right. Oh, who was who? He was Mr. Freeze? Eli Wallach? Yeah, they both were.
Starting point is 00:51:10 Yes. Yeah, no, I knew he was a Jew. He can't be anything else. It's like saying, gee, Myron Cohen, I'm not sure he could be. By the way, this Batman Collected book, which now, I'm sorry you said is out of print, but our fans are going to try to find it. You can.
Starting point is 00:51:30 It's all over. How did you, I mean, this, first of all, this is a great picture. Yes. I love your stories, too. I love this picture where you're wearing the Batman puppet on your hand. Yeah, my mom made those, too. Right.
Starting point is 00:51:42 And there's the story from when you were sick and your dad got you the nightlight. Yeah. it's true it's really sweet there's some nice stories in the book but how did you come by all this stuff i mean i know some of it you had like the cape some of the stuff was in the family but god um you couldn't have owned all this stuff no uh when we were doing that or when i was doing that it was this god 1994 95 um there were two people besides myself that had these massive batman collections and one was in kenosha wisconsin and the other was in cincinnati and so how did you know of them oh dc because this anytime you do something like this it has to officially go through DC Comics.
Starting point is 00:52:26 Right, okay. They have to have the stamp of approval. Oh, it's the Bat Radio? And they knew. They knew people that did, and I knew as a fan that nobody had done a book like this before. So, which is, and I, you know, I cheated and put a lot of like the original art from the comics in it. I mean, it's ostensibly, it's supposed to be about the collecting the toys, but it's great more than that.
Starting point is 00:52:47 It's great. I mean, I was obviously born in 61. So obviously I was into this series too. There's the Aurora model, Gilbert, which we've talked about. We've talked about the Aurora monster models.
Starting point is 00:52:56 I used to put the monster models. I did too. There's the, there's the Batman one with the original instruction, the original instructions with the original instructions, with the parts broken down. Isn't that fantastic? Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:53:09 But to have that, oh, to still have that in that Corgi Batmobile. Yeah, the models I have. Look at this. Yeah, I used to have Frankenstein, the Wolfman, Dracula, the Invisible Man, Jekyll and Hyde, The Hunchback. Well, his father had a hardware store. Yeah. And did he sell the models in the store?
Starting point is 00:53:28 Sometimes he would sell them. Other times we'd get. I remember my mother, because I was in love with those models, I guess she got them probably two for the price of one because they were together. They were taped together. Bride of Frankenstein with were together. They were taped together. Bride of Frankenstein with the witch. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:49 Then the Bride of Frankenstein one was really really cool because it was so intricate with the machinery and she's on the slab and all of that stuff. I remember that. There was a Jekyll and Hyde one too. Yes, I had the Jekyll and Hyde. How do you say his name?
Starting point is 00:54:07 Jiro Kawada? Jiro. Jiro. Still alive. Yes. Yeah. He is. Wow, born in 35.
Starting point is 00:54:13 Yep. And there were manga versions of The Invaders and The Time Tunnel? Now that's... This I found. That's outside of my... Okay. Okay. My purview okay but tell me about the just tell me about the discovery because this is a key thing for you
Starting point is 00:54:32 the moment that you kind of discovered that batman had a whole life in japan which you said was like being a beatles fan yeah it was really amazing um it was like being a beatles fan and realizing that they recorded an album in tokyo and kind of left it there and never released it in this book. There's, there's a section which is all Japanese toys, but even at that point, I didn't realize that there were also comics and there is a, an amazing Batman artist named David Mazikelli who had done a,
Starting point is 00:55:01 um, he did a sort of fellowship in Tokyo drawing comics in the early 90s and somebody told him about it and then he told me. But they had never been reprinted. So we had to go and it was nuts.
Starting point is 00:55:18 Like, buy stuff on eBay in the early days of eBay. Is Japan still into Batman with all the different variations and incarnations the early days of eBay. Are they still, is Japan still into, into Batman with all the different variations and incarnations of the character? It comes and goes.
Starting point is 00:55:30 Yeah. Because you've made several trips over there. I have, yeah. I think it's more niche over there. You know, a movie comes out
Starting point is 00:55:39 and then they kind of get excited a little bit and then it sort of goes away. By the way, Robert Butler, I did a little research, Gino knows this, who directed the Batman pilot and the star trek pilot is still with us at the age of 90 oh gee so we just we have to track him down uh if he's uh if he's able to be interviewed wow talk a little bit about another book that you did and gilbert was fascinated by
Starting point is 00:55:59 this as i was which is jack cole and the story of Plastic Man. Okay. And you did this great book with Art Spiegelman. So Art Spiegelman, who's a friend of mine and who I work for. And a Jew. Wow. And a Pulitzer winner. He's several Jews.
Starting point is 00:56:22 What do you think of that? He's like a little army of Jewish people. Do you know Art Gilbert? I went to SVA. I know Art a little bit. He's amazing. First of all, when I was in college,
Starting point is 00:56:42 I started reading Maus, M-A-U-S, in installments. And then when I started working at Knopf, which is part of Random House, and there was Pantheon, and then Pantheon published the collected Maus. And then that was a huge milestone in graphic novels and comics, and they created a special Pulitzer Prize for him. And we sort of eventually got to know each other a little bit well he was a huge Jack Cole fan and Plastic Man and lo and behold
Starting point is 00:57:13 one day whenever that was you know the New Yorker comes out and Plastic Man is on the cover which was just so bizarre and it was a painting by Art and he had written um a lot you know a big long new yorker article on the life of jack cole and uh and you know it being the new yorker they could illustrate it a little bit but not that much it was very prose very prose heavy
Starting point is 00:57:40 and so um the head of dc comics at the time a woman named jeanette khan uh he has impeccable comic timing doesn't he much like james khan yes different spelling yes uh i believe if I'm not mistaken I think she approached Art about saying let's turn this into a book and so he said yes and then brought me on board to design it
Starting point is 00:58:15 and it's really it's really you know it's quite amazing but very sad this guy but he also Jack Cole as you know I mean he kind of he But he also, Jack Cole, as you know, I mean, he was brought on by Hugh Hefner to be the staff cartoonist at Playboy. You'd recognize his stuff from Playboy.
Starting point is 00:58:33 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Single panel gags. And he was, I don't know, raised in this very straight-laced sort of upbringing and was married. And I don't think they had kids, but he shot himself at, I don't know, in his 40s? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:51 It was very strange. In a car on some dirt road. Yeah. And so obviously there was some, and he left a note saying how sorry he was, but for what he'd never said. Well, the note, and it's in your book, is you reprint the note that he sent to Hefner.
Starting point is 00:59:05 Yeah. Which is fascinating. Yeah. You know, saying, please don't blame yourself for this. You're a great guy to work for. Yeah. And what a talent.
Starting point is 00:59:13 Yeah. Incredible. And it remains a mystery. Yeah. And I guess it always will. Yeah. I love that character. Yes.
Starting point is 00:59:20 Because it was also one of the few combinations of sort of superhero daring do and gags. Yes, it was very funny. It's very funny. And they've tried to develop a movie over the years. You'd think it would practically make itself.
Starting point is 00:59:32 You really would. Well, they incorporated some of his powers into Mr. Incredible. Yeah. In The Incredibles. Yes, that's right. Into his wife. Yeah. Oh, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:59:43 I'm sorry. And you were describing like covers of books and movie posters. And you said something really interesting that you like the street signs, like the crossing signs, the electric crossing signs that would have a hand and a number next to it. Yes. I did a book for the TED Talks. Yeah. They started a book in print, and they wanted me to do a talk, but then also turn it into a book.
Starting point is 01:00:20 And it was about sort of in design, but also in your life, like it was about first impressions, but also like, when should you be clear and when should you be mysterious? And so I go through in different examples of that. And I just remember when they introduced those street signs here that, you know, okay, you have 20 seconds, 19 seconds, 18 seconds to cross the street before you get run over. So it tells you exactly
Starting point is 01:00:54 because remember before, it's just a flashing hand. You have to guess. And I'm the sort of person who's always late and always in a hurry. And so, you know, now you have this thing that says to you, this is exactly how much time you have. So that to me was an example of clarity that's like really, really important. And then you redesigned one of those horrible subway signs.
Starting point is 01:01:20 Oh, he also redesigned a horrible Amtrak ticket. Wow. Which I loved. You showed that horrible sign that you look at in every train station, and I go, that might as well be another country. Yeah, yeah. And you redesigned it, and immediately I go, okay, so the E train is running on the A track. It's like they refuse to do a simple declarative sentence with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Instead, they do this bifurcated chart thing.
Starting point is 01:01:56 Like weekend, time, train, thing. It's crazy. And when you say I redesigned it, yeah, I redesigned it for the book. It never went any farther than that. And it should have. It was so clear the way you made it. Well, you'd think they'd at least change it or something. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:14 I also will direct our listeners to buy your chip book, just to see how you redesigned that Amtrak ticket. Right. Which used to drive me crazy. Yes. But the fact that you feel compelled to streamline these things and simplify them and make them,
Starting point is 01:02:28 I mean, that's a service. Making them easier for people. That was a, the Amtrak ticket, and this is going back a ways because now you get your ticket on the phone, but that was for a magazine called McSweeney's. Oh yeah, sure.
Starting point is 01:02:42 The McSweeney's Literary Quarterly, Dave Eggers. They just said, we're doing a travel issue and we want you to here's two pages think of something to do and I take Amtrak
Starting point is 01:02:52 all the time there's gotta be a book idea in that in just going through life redesigning things that are poorly designed
Starting point is 01:03:00 well that's kind of a little bit what the Ted book is okay and that's called Judge This the Ted's talks are very. And that's called Judge This. The Ted talks are very funny, by the way, and I know people have told you that you
Starting point is 01:03:09 should try your hand at stand-up. Well, you know, I'm a frustrated stand-up comic, yeah. Have you seen him live? You and me both. Yeah, but you're a success at it. And like you, I hate the new Penn Station, and I share a love for the demolished Penn Station. It's so sad.
Starting point is 01:03:30 Yeah. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast after this. Can I ask you questions from listeners? Please. We have one from your friend, if I can find Dan Reba's question. Okay. But as I say, here it is. He's a genius and a friend, so many things to talk about.
Starting point is 01:03:54 He designed the Jurassic Park logo for Crying Out Loud. He has very informed opinions about the origin of Lucy in Peanuts that he may be willing to share. Does this mean anything? Well, it's no big secret, but that's, that was Schultz's first wife. And that's their,
Starting point is 01:04:10 that was their, the tenor of their relationship. I've read that. That was the dynamic. Yeah. I mean, that's not a big secret. That he felt that he identified with Charlie Brown being kind of dominated by a woman.
Starting point is 01:04:20 Yeah. Yeah. That's interesting. By the way, the David Michaelis story where you, you, you, where everything went wrong. Yeah. Yeah. That's interesting. By the way, the David Michaelis story where you, you, you, where everything went wrong
Starting point is 01:04:28 before you got to design the cover of the book is also fascinating. Yeah. And he, it's weird and sad and it's an amazing story. We don't have to go into it,
Starting point is 01:04:39 but it's in the book. Yeah, it is. You want to tell it real quick because it's fascinating. I just tried to be as diplomatic as possible because Jeannie Schultz is a dear friend and I
Starting point is 01:04:47 was sympathetic to her, but they hired David Michaelis to do the official Charles Schultz biography because Michaelis did a biography of Andrew Wyeth and did a spectacular job because he's a brilliant guy. And Wyeth was one of Schultz's
Starting point is 01:05:04 great heroes. And so they thought, okay. And so David Michaelis, who's, you know, a reporter, great writer. I botched his name, I apologize. That's alright. Threw himself into it. Took six years to do it. Interviewed everybody. Everybody gave him
Starting point is 01:05:19 complete access to everything. And he writes this big, massive biography. It lands on their desks with a thud, and everybody gets a courtesy read. And about a quarter of the way into it, they're like, oh, this is great. This is brilliant.
Starting point is 01:05:36 And halfway into it, it's like, what do you mean he had an affair? And then it just sort of goes on from there. It's a warts and all book. It's a warts and all book. It's a warts and all book, but the warts aren't all that... No. There's no great revelation there. But except that he was depressed, well, of course he was
Starting point is 01:05:55 depressed. Like, how could you read Peanuts and think that that was not the work of somebody who was often very melancholy? I mean, it's just... It's the thing that attracts you to the strip in the first place when you're that kind of kid. The melancholy and the longing. So the family tried to stop the book
Starting point is 01:06:09 from being published. Legally, they could not, but the only thing they could legally do was prevent him, me, from using any Schultz imagery on the front cover. So now he's got to design the cover of this book, Gilbert,
Starting point is 01:06:20 and he can't use Schultz's signature. I mean, in fact... that was going to be the cover of it oh i was going to do that right right right type on it right and which is charlie we're in an audio medium so we'll describe no idea what it's true it's just the charlie brown squiggles the two eyes the the sideways nose and the little mouth and the little tuft of hair yeah is what chip's referring to yeah it's reductive. And anyway, it ended up just being a yellow field with a black zigzag
Starting point is 01:06:49 going across it and his name. And that was actually all you really needed. It's a fascinating too, we'll recommend this book as well, but it's also, it's fascinating which is called Only What's Necessary Charles M. Schultz and the Art of Peanuts. But you really get to track well but it's also it's fascinating which is called uh only only what's necessary charles
Starting point is 01:07:06 m schultz and the art of peanuts but you really get to track the the development the evolution of the characters yeah they they gave me complete access that's great and i'm not i mean i throw in my opinion here and there about you know but it's all about the art it's not about it's not about the life i'm not i'm i mean i mean the life gets thrown in there but the life. I'm not... I mean, the life gets thrown in there, but I'm not conjecturing on well, he must have felt this or that. It's just like, well, you know, he tried a go-kart in this one, and we never see a go-kart again.
Starting point is 01:07:34 Sure. I didn't know he had attempted, and Gilbert didn't either. We were looking at it before you got here, that he tried his hand at adults. An adult strip, and a strip that was completely separate from peanuts. How long did that last the adult well there's there was
Starting point is 01:07:50 there were two Sunday strips and this well again nobody can see but if you I promise we'll be a video podcast next time we have you back Schultz tried and he tried lots of things that he just decided didn't work, but they had to go to press with. For the two of the Sunday strips, they were continued, and Lucy was in a golf tournament.
Starting point is 01:08:20 And for some reason, and Charlie Brown was her caddy, but all the other players were adults. So you only see them from the waist down. Pardon me. So you get this kind of, you know, kid's eye view of them. And that lasted for two weeks, and then that was it. He never tried that again. It's interesting. It's also interesting that there are things in the book that he never meant to be seen or published
Starting point is 01:08:46 and the family was okay with that they were I mean they have to well they were definitely okay with it or that book wouldn't exist
Starting point is 01:08:52 I think you know but they were very supportive it's a wonderful book as is your other Peanuts book very supportive what
Starting point is 01:08:58 oh as far as superheroes go yes how did the Hulk's pants stay on? Chip, you have to answer for the entire superhero industry.
Starting point is 01:09:12 As a gay child, I asked myself this all the time. Please, please split those seams. You wanted to see his green penis? Oh, my God. Yes. I wanted to swing on it. Are you kidding? Oh, man.
Starting point is 01:09:36 Like, obviously, you haven't seen the new movie. No. But, well, one of the schticks is that Bruce Banner and the Hulk basically meld into one being, which is now called Smart Hulk. So it's sort of like the Hulk, but he's not angry all the time. Which basically
Starting point is 01:09:56 means he's like the sexiest man on the planet. At least for me anyway. It's like, oh my god. Oh my god oh my god we'll save the Cesar Romero story for the end because I'm sure he hasn't heard it but this is a question I'm sure you've been asked
Starting point is 01:10:17 do you have a favorite Schultz strip? a favorite because I have a favorite that defines the characters for me Charlie and I used to talk about this like a single strip Charlie Kochman you mean yeah Charlie Kochman
Starting point is 01:10:32 my wonderful fabulous editor who also knows Gilbert just to catch our listeners up and discovered Jeff Kinney discovered the wimpy kid guy yeah discovered I mean that exists because Charlie we always default to the very first strip you do yeah be kid guy. Wow. Yeah. Discovered. I mean, that exists because Charlie.
Starting point is 01:10:46 We always default to the very first strip. You do. Yeah. I think it's Shermie and Patty. Shermie was a lot more prominent in the early strips. Yeah, but see, things like that evolved. And when Schultz decided, well, I don't have any more ideas for
Starting point is 01:11:02 Shermie, then Shermie would just go away. And all of a sudden there's Pig Ben. But, no, it's just the two little kids on the stoop and panel one oh here comes Charlie Brown good old Charlie Brown Charlie Brown passes
Starting point is 01:11:18 out and the final strip the final panel Shermie says how I hate him that's that that sums it up yeah and that's how peanuts begin that's the tone yeah i mean i see your point really like who did that now i remember there was the superman series that and and this shows my mind is gone. The cartoonist, the Batman,
Starting point is 01:11:49 not the Batman, the Popeye creator. Why was his name... Oh, his name went out of my head. What the hell was his... No, no, no. Okay, now you're thinking of the Fleishers? Fleischer!
Starting point is 01:12:02 Oh, he was the animator, but they were the animators. Not the creator. Yeah,? Fleischer! Okay, okay. Oh, he was the animator. Fleischer. But they were the animators. Yeah, not the creator. Yeah, but Fleischer was the one who designed the art for the Batman. No, you're thinking of the Superman. Not Superman! I'm getting it all confused! Fuck me. No, but I'll just take over for a sec.
Starting point is 01:12:21 Yeah, okay. I wish you would, Chip. But you do it weekly. Max and Dave Fleischer Max and Dave Fleischer had this incredible animation studio. They were trying to rival Disney. And they adapted Popeye.
Starting point is 01:12:37 And before that, they adapted Betty Boop. And they did very early what's called rotoscoping, which was they would have actors, they would film the actors and then draw over them. And so what became DC Comics, they wanted to rival Disney with a cartoon for Paramount. They went to the Fleishers and they said,
Starting point is 01:13:01 we want you to do a series of Superman shorts, short cartoons, subject for, for movie theaters. And the Fleishers actually didn't want to do it. And, and I'm condensing the story. So they said, okay, but it'll cost you $200,000 an episode because they figured, all right, that's our way of, we don't have to say no. And we just get out of doing it. And Paramount said, yes. right that's our way of we don't have to say no and we just get out of doing it and paramount said yes and so now they were stuck doing it and those are some of the very best cartoons that anybody they really are they're great they i i like them and and that's another thing they did
Starting point is 01:13:38 betty boop which was one of the most deranged cartoons. She was very sexy. And her boyfriend, I heard, originally, they were all animals. Betty Boop was like a girl dog. And she had a dog boyfriend. Okay. And then when they made her a real woman, they kept a boyfriend as a dog. So Betty
Starting point is 01:14:06 Boop is going out with a dog in it. And plus her head is just giant. Yes! Yes! Giant. Teeny little body and giant head. And they have her doing these sexy dances and I remember they had one, she's doing a sexy dance on stage
Starting point is 01:14:22 and the entire audience is different animals hooting and hollering and applauding like a strip show. Here's another one from a listener, from Cedric Wilson. What is, as a collector, what is Chip's holy grail? People ask you this a lot. Oh, God. An item he most regrets missing out on. Huh.
Starting point is 01:14:46 That I don't have? Yeah. Because you've got the, we should tell people you've got in your apartment, the Batcave. Right, right. You've got a collection of this stuff. Yeah, I've got a bunch of stuff. Yeah, cool stuff. Oh, jeez.
Starting point is 01:14:56 Get back to us on that. Yeah. I don't have, because they're so prohibitively expensive now, but I don't have any of the costumes or props from the show. That would be really, really cool. But, you know, hundreds of thousands of dollars. We know somebody who can get you a utility belt. Really? We'll talk.
Starting point is 01:15:18 All right. Greg Anderson, who is Chip's Batman artist? Who is his Batman artist? Maybe he has a top two or three. You're Neil Adams guy, aren't you? I was. Oh, you were. Until I met him.
Starting point is 01:15:30 Oh! Sorry, I brought it up. And I avoided it because I heard that he's not a nice person. All those meeting your heroes is treacherous. Meeting your heroes. And I was at a convention once and he was there and he was at a table and there weren't many people. And I thought, all right, I'm just going to introduce myself. And I don't know, this was six years ago, six, well, Mr. Adams, I told him my name and he said, oh, I know you. You do some really good work, but you also do some really bad work. Oh.
Starting point is 01:16:14 And I was like, well, Mr. Adams, could you tell me what some of that is so that I can improve? Wow. Oh, well, I can't really think of anything right now, but yeah, no, I've seen some stuff that you do that I can improve. Wow. Oh, well, I can't really think of anything right now, but yeah, no, I've seen some stuff that you do that I really can't stand. Ouch. Is he slipping?
Starting point is 01:16:32 Is that the problem? And I was like, wow, all right. Well, it's been so nice to meet you. Okay, so the answer is not going to be that. No, I was a huge fan as a kid. I mean, you know, obviously Frank Miller. Frank Miller. But even more, the gentleman who I mentioned before,
Starting point is 01:16:51 who worked with Frank Miller on something called Batman Year One, which is a guy named David Mazzichelli. And incredible. He only did one story, but it's just perfect. It's just absolutely beautiful. I like the guy, the Brit, who illustrated your graphic novel, and his name is escaping me. Dave Taylor.
Starting point is 01:17:09 Dave Taylor. Nice work. Brilliant. Brilliant guy. Nice work. Nice look. That's all done in pencil. I was not familiar with his work before. What else you have for this gentleman, Gilbert? Oh. Anything else? No. I just I'm trying to think of other...'re still on fixated on whole penis
Starting point is 01:17:28 uh he has a story this is a uh this is of course uh we'd like to think of it as a wait before i hollywood urban myth because we were talking about me as m Jess Picklick. Yeah. Could everybody, can anyone out there go to my Twitter account, Real Gilbert, and tell me all the things I've been as Miss Jess Picklick in? You want them to do that now? Yes, I'll wait. No, because I don't know other than Tim Daly, but I know I've done it a bunch of times. Did you ever play a character called Toy Man? Toy Man. That was Knick Knack.
Starting point is 01:18:11 Oh, that was Knick Knack. That was the master of toys. Okay. Right. Now, okay. Cesar Romero, best known as the Joker. Gay. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 01:18:24 This is our big closer, Chip. Okay. No, there's nothing wrong with that. And he... Okay, best known as the Joker and Joker with a mustache on their paint. Damn that mustache. So in movies, he was, you know,
Starting point is 01:18:44 a Latin lover and romanced the ladies. But in real life, what he was into was gathering up a bunch of boy toys, and he would stand there. He'd pull down his pants and underwear and, I guess, bend over, and they would fling orange wedges at his ass. And some say he stood ankle deep in warm water. That's the only variation. Also, I've gotten arguments that it was tangerine wedges.
Starting point is 01:19:23 I've gotten arguments that it was tangerine wedges. Who among us can say that at some point we all haven't yanked down our pants and our underpants and been pelted with citrus? I mean, come on. Not me. I can't. Now, please. I wouldn't single on. Not me. I can't. Now, please. But there's got to be. I wouldn't single him out for this because we've all been there. We've all had that phase.
Starting point is 01:19:54 I want you to know that everybody who's remotely associated with Batman has heard this. He said this to Adam West. I'll never work again. He said it to Julie Newmar. He said it to- For real? Yeah. Yeah. He said it to Julie Newmar. He said it to... For real? Yeah. He said it to Lee Merriweather. Really? And I say it to people who have no
Starting point is 01:20:11 connection to Batman. I said it to the author of Schindler's List. Who preferred limes, by the way. who preferred limes, by the way. Yes, Chip! Oh, Chip, we've got to plug the books. This would be a terrible time to thank Lisa Birnbach
Starting point is 01:20:34 for introducing us. She's deeply, deeply backing away from all of this. Another wonderful book that you, True Prep, Lisa's book that you designed. Yeah, she was a childhood hero of mine. We love Lisa and we thank Lisa for setting this up. We got to plug the books. The Charlie Brown book. This wonderful Batman collected book that you can't get because it's out of print.
Starting point is 01:21:06 This one is in print Shazam the golden age of the world's mightiest mortal yep I'm going to tell people to get the wonderful Plastic Man book
Starting point is 01:21:14 that you did with Art Spiegelman also out of print which is wonderful and by the way I'm a third of the way I'm a very busy guy Chip
Starting point is 01:21:21 yes you are I'm a third of the way through your novel okay through the cheese monkeys and I'm enjoying it okay very much Chip. Yes, you are. I'm a third of the way through your novel. Through the Cheese Monkeys, and I'm enjoying it very much. And we'll talk when it's finished.
Starting point is 01:21:29 I would love to. What else is coming up? What else have you got to plug? Oh, God. What else do I have to plug? Will there be another manga? Did we say anything? Well, I'd like to do a super manga, but that's all tied up in legal crap. But I bet you a lot of those lawyers are Jews.
Starting point is 01:21:46 I bet they are. I have this big Marvel book that's just out now called Marvelosity. Oh, that's the one with Alex Ross. With Alex Ross. Wonderful. Yeah, I've done two books with him.
Starting point is 01:21:57 He's fantastic. We should have Alex on here. Oh, that would be hilarious. He's a universal horror guy for sure. Oh, did you see his? Yeah, have you seen his universal horror drawings? Oh my God, Gilbert would go crazy. The cartoon art, he does these painterly superheroes.
Starting point is 01:22:12 Oh, they're beautiful. He's a very gifted illustrator. You have to get them. You have to get them. You can buy them as lithographs. He painted them in black and white and did just about everybody. But he sort of reimagined. You'll love it.
Starting point is 01:22:25 Love it, love it, love it. Okay. And would you look at Gilbert's drawings and see if he should be institutionalized? Sure. Well, look, it's just been an incredible treat. Did you have fun? Yes. And I've been such a fan of yours for so long. And when I
Starting point is 01:22:45 used to listen to Howard Stern, I mean, you would be one of the highlights, definitely. How about that? And we do Groucho Marx. Give him a little Groucho. Yeah. Okay, it's Groucho, and I've just hit on him.
Starting point is 01:23:01 Okay. You know, once I was on a show and a homosexual, his name was Chip. And he was back in my day. Homosexuals were men who had sex with other men which meant they could have oral sex
Starting point is 01:23:31 which would be the mouth of an appeal alright it's like a dream come true you've got to keep that in don't edit that out we'll leave it in for you sometimes they have anal You've got to keep that in. You've got to. Don't edit that out, please.
Starting point is 01:23:45 We'll leave it in for you. Please. Sometimes I have anorexia. All right. And what would that be? I don't understand. One person back in my day, it was called anorexia.
Starting point is 01:24:02 You mean like a building? Yeah. And it was inside it. You mean like a building? Yeah. And it was inside it. In the end, I can't believe it. This is the strangest Batman tribute show in history.
Starting point is 01:24:19 And certainly the darkest. Well, I don't know. Happy 80th Batman. Yes. Chip, thanks for doing this, man. Thank you, guys. This was a lot of fun. Oh, God. Come back and play with us another time.
Starting point is 01:24:34 I would love to. Okay. Well, I don't know. He's a homosexual. I don't want him playing with me. You want to sign off? We didn't even talk about Saul Bass, which is a whole other... I know you were at the Saul Bass event.
Starting point is 01:24:47 Yes. Yes, we're Saul Bass fans. And you know he made the shower scene. He did? The entire thing. Oh. Yes. Saul Bass.
Starting point is 01:24:57 Okay, we can't stop now. Saul Bass directed the shower scene. That's impressive. He did? Yeah. Wow. Yep. And, you know... scene. That's impressive. He did? Yeah. Wow. Yep.
Starting point is 01:25:09 And, you know, for another episode. Uh-huh. We'll leave that as a cliffhanger. Okay, this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre and a man who took time out of his busy schedule to confirm that the Jews, that's right, the Jews created superheroes, and he'd still like to swing on the Hulk's team. Chip, this is one of the strangest episodes we've ever done.
Starting point is 01:25:44 It is strange. And now I can't link it to my elementary school fans anymore. They'll have to wait until they're 18, and then we can link it. Thanks for coming in, bud. Shit, kid. Thank you, Chip. Can I put my clothes on now? Yes. can I put my clothes on now? yes ΒΆΒΆ I'm going to go. Web and social media is handled by Mike McPadden, Greg Pair, and John Bradley-Seals. Special audio contributions by John Beach.
Starting point is 01:27:11 Special thanks to John Fodiatis, John Murray, and Paul Rayburn.

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