Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - David Mandel Encore
Episode Date: May 8, 2023GGACP pledges its support for film and TV writers with this ENCORE of a 2021 interview with Emmy-winning writer-director David Mandel. In this episode, David joins Gilbert and Frank for a revealing co...nversation about the origin of classic "Seinfeld" gags (man-hands, "Bizarro" Jerry), the inner workings of "Curb Your Enthusiasm," the brilliance of Bob Einstein and Jerry Stiller, the ruthless humor of HBO's "Veep" and David's memorabilia-themed podcast "The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of." Also, Orson Welles gaslights studio bosses, Michael McKean sends up Robert Evans, Gilbert runs afoul of Kelsey Grammer and Billy Wilder (almost) directs the Marx Brothers. PLUS: Nerf Crotch Bat! In praise of Phil Hartman! Larry David blows a fuse! "Abbott and Costello Meet Al Pacino"! And...LIVE from New York, it's the "Planet of the Apes"! (thanks to our friend Andrew Buss) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your teen requested a ride, but this time, not from you.
It's through their Uber Teen account.
It's an Uber account that allows your teen to request a ride under your supervision
with live trip tracking and highly rated drivers.
Add your teen to your Uber account today.
Hear that, Quarter Pounder fans?
That silence is two friends enjoying the new creamy parmesan and bacon Quarter Pounder at McDonald's.
Because adding crispy bacon and creamy parmesan sauce to our 100% Canadian beef makes it impossible to have a conversation.
Try the new creamy parmesan and bacon Quarter P pounder today and discover how words are so unnecessary
for a limited time only at participating McDonald's restaurants in Canada.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast. And our guest this week is a director, producer, podcaster, memorabilia collector, an Emmy-winning comedy writer,
and a man who has listened to and enjoyed this very
podcast. So there goes any respect we might have had for the guy right off the bat. You know,
his outstanding writing and directing work from so many comedy films and TV shows include Saturday Night Live, The Simpsons,
Curb Your Enthusiasm, Clerks, Clerks the Animated Series, The Comedians, and movies like Eurotrip
and The Dictator, the HBO movie Clear History, and of course Seinfeld, for which he scripted or co-scripted memorable episodes like Bizar Veep, writing and directing several episodes, including the critically acclaimed finale.
way back at the Harvard Lampoon.
He's gone to direct and write for and work for dozens of comedy icons,
including Larry David, Al Franken,
Bill Hartman, Sasha Baron Cohen,
Lorne Michaels, Julia Louis-Dreyfus,
Martin Mull, and podcast guests
Michael McKeon and Bob Einstein, and the biggest star of all,
Gilbert Gottfried. He's also a comedy historian and a lover of Abbott and Costello and the Marx Brothers and a genuine horror and sci-fi geek who penned the classic
Planet of the Apes sketches on the Charlton Heston episode of Saturday Night Live, as well as the
Treehouse of Horror episode 23 Halloween episode of The Simpsons.
He's one of the authors of the two-volume Star Wars art, Ralph McQuarrie,
and he's an avid collector of classic movie props and artwork,
which he talks all about on his new podcast, The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of.
Please welcome to the show an artist with too many talents to list and a man who's enjoyed
a vastly different outcome from working with Larry David than I did.
David Mandel.
That's true.
Hi, David.
Hi.
Welcome.
So first, David, before anything else, say what a big fan you are and how many times
you see me.
I am a giant, huge fan.
I have been dying to do this show.
I have been inquiring how I might do this show with you guys.
I grew up in New York City.
I grew up on 70th and West End.
My folks are still there.
And I was always a comedy kid,
but I schlepped down to that horrible South Street Seaport
to the Carolines down there. I saw you down there for the first time.
Then I saw you again. I think I saw you twice. I saw once
down there and then twice in the Times Square one
at two different times.
I still have, actually, believe it or not, the VHS of your special, the Airstream trailer and the Flamingos.
And I know it like, I don't want to say backwards and forwards, but at least forwards.
I honestly do.
I just, honestly, a huge fan.
I make sure I listen to Stern when you're on.
Just, this is honestly, truly, this truly, I'm beyond thrilled to be here.
This is fantastic.
Too sweet.
You're too sweet.
This is all I want to talk about.
You know, fuck you and your career.
Just tell me how great I am.
That's fine.
Let's just talk about Humphrey Bogart's one-word impression in a hospital
when he's trying
to buy a stuffed animal in the
gift shop. Oh, Humphrey Bogart
in the post office.
Damn.
And Humphrey Bogart
buying a cute stuffed animal.
Nopey.
That's it. That's it.
My life is made. Gil, do you
even remember the name of that special?
The one with the filmmakers?
I think it was called Greetings from Gilbert.
There you go.
He's got a VHS of it.
Oh, and Humphrey Bogart telling you who his favorite of the little rascals were.
Dimey.
rascals were.
Dimey.
And I got one other one I want to ask
you about, which is because, again,
a huge fan. There used
to be on Sirius Radio,
Sirius XM, there was
one of these. We're on there.
There was some other show
that would interview comedians, and they
used to play this
clip of you getting interviewed where it was always like you being asked like who your favorite
person to work with was and your answer was bud abbott do you remember that answer
and they used to play that as a clip and i was obsessed with it because i could never find the
actual episode so all i remember was the bud abbott answer anyway so i'm truly dating myself
but anyway there you go do you remember doing that interview date you
do you remember doing that at all gilbert that interview on Sirius? No, I try to block out everything that I've done right after I say it.
Oh, I should tell you what this thing where I say in the intro that you had a vastly different outcome working with Larry David. So what happened is I did a pilot with Larry David called Norman's Corner.
And he wrote it.
And it was so bad that when they were trying to get Seinfeld on the air,
one of the NBC execs said,
and who's going to be writing this show?
And they said, Larry David.
And the exec said, wait a minute.
Isn't he that guy that wrote that piece of shit
for Gilbert Gottfried?
So I almost, that show was so bad,
it almost stopped Jerry Seinfeld's career.
It retroactively aborted the Seinfeld show.
That's okay, yeah.
Well, Arnold Stang's very good in it, Gil.
Oh, yes, yes.
I asked them to get Arnold Stang, and they got him.
He's a standout.
I couldn't believe it. I need to ask. I'm going to get Arnold's thing, and they got him. He's a standout. I couldn't believe it.
I need to ask.
I'm going to interview you.
What was Norman's corner?
What was the log line, as they say in the biz?
What was it about?
Okay.
Well, that was their idea.
When they originally started the idea, I was Norman, and I had a newsstand.
And they originally,
their first idea was at the newsstand,
the people who stopped by the newsstand
are all
comics who are
doing their bits.
Which sounded
horrible.
Were they doing their bits out of the
newspaper,
like Mort Saul style, like off of headlines?
Maybe.
Or maybe they just walk over and say,
Hi, Norm, I want some gum.
Hey, what about cab drivers nowadays, huh?
And so then Larry rewrote it,
and it was not salvageable.
What did you say about Larry when we had Susie Essman on the show, Gil?
Give David, and I'm sure he's heard this,
but give him a little background about seeing Larry on stage
and particularly that heckler story. Yes. Larry, you know, he went on stage angry just walking out.
You know, before they even introduced him, he was ready for a fight.
So one time, I remember in particular, he was on stage and he got into a big argument with this guy in a big fight back and forth.
And the guy says, oh, yeah, your mother fucks my dog.
And Larry said, well, I bet your dog doesn't enjoy it.
And you said to Susie that back then, and I think Susie echoed this, that you thought Larry would end up one of two ways.
Yes. Is that correct?
He would either be a multi-billionaire or he'd be sleeping on the subway.
We know the outcome.
we know the outcome when uh i was just gonna say i've heard different version not that i haven't heard that story i've heard some of his other fights but i've also i've never seen his full
stand-up i've only heard bits and pieces like um like where he sort of agrees with hitler about
magicians he hates magicians like that was a sec i know that
was like a like a hunk of his act and a couple other pieces and a jonah salk piece yes and we
used to he for a while i don't know if he'll ever do it he was thinking about maybe getting back up
on stage and doing stand-up again i don't know if he ever will but he's definitely every now and
then talks about it this is about as much as i can say. But I wonder if he ever will.
But I guess now he would have the less of an audience looking to fight with him, I guess, these days.
Oh, I'd say so.
But see, now it would be all over the internet saying Larry threatened somebody in the audience
and they got into a fish fight in a parking lot.
He would insult the audience, wouldn't he?
If they weren't smart enough to get the material?
Yeah, he hated the audience.
He said sometimes he would see them,
and even before he got out there, he just was like,
they're not going to like this, they're not going to get this,
they're not going to understand this,
and just get angry at them before he got out there.
Yeah, that's why Bell has stories like that too,
about watching Larry on stage.
I mean, forget about the stage, that's him.
I mean, we had this story, and I told this to Frank,
but I'll tell you, like, we were in New York to do Curb.
We did a back end of a season of Curb in New York,
and we went to Yankee Stadium,
and we go to the Yankee game.
You know, Yankees are winning middle of the game.
They put Larry up on the, you know, the Diamond Vision, and they play the Curb music.
You know, 50,000 fans just go, you know, just fucking crazy.
Like, oh my God, Larry.
Like, it was like the Pope was there.
They go nuts.
The game ends.
We're crossing the street to get to our car. The car's on the other side The game ends. We're crossing the street to get to our car.
The car's on the other side of the street.
We're crossing the street.
Some jackass drives by and yells like, hey, Larry, you suck.
And that's all he can remember from that evening.
Not the 50,000 fans and his music playing in Yankee Stadium.
It was just that one guy.
So, yeah.
music playing in Yankee Stadium.
It was just that one guy.
So, yeah.
Fantastic.
I remember walking down the street with Larry David on Lower Broadway and coming in our direction was this black homeless guy and his clothes were all, it looked like he had
pee and shit stains from years ago.
He looked like he had pee and shit stains from years ago.
And, you know, we both saw him.
And I thought, like, because I was getting known at the time. And I thought, oh, shit, he's going to come over to me.
And, oh, I love Problem Child.
Oh, I can't.
And he walks past me and throws his arms around Larry David.
And he smells horrible.
And he throws his arms around him and goes, Larry David from Fridays.
That should have shown up in a Curb episode.
Because that was the president of the network who greenlit Fridays.
Yeah.
Tell Gilbert, we were on the phone, David.
I was giving him some heads up about some of these things.
Tell the Ken Jeong thing, too, from Curb.
Oh, yeah.
That's Larry in character.
Well, you know, everyone's always like,
what's Larry like?
What's Larry's like?
You know, that's always the big thing.
What's he really like?
You know, I get a lot of that when I do stuff, whatever.
And, you know, what people don't understand
is most of the time, like, TV Larry says the things
that, like, real Larry thinks of
but doesn't actually say in real life
but, like, writes them down as a note and we make a a curb episode out of them. But then sometimes when we're shooting and he's
like in an argument or in a scene, he actually does get angry, but the other guy in the scene
has no idea. So a couple of years ago we were doing an episode with Ken Jeong and it was like
one of the first, it was before Ken Jeong was known he at that point i think he was still like a doctor but he was dabbling in comedy so this was one of his first
jobs and it was this scene where larry's dry cleaner has like he thinks the dry cleaner has
like stolen his like jersey and then he sees ken jong wearing the jersey and thinks that's his
jersey so he goes to get in a fight with him and the only thing you know because it's all kind of
ad-libbed was you know to ken jong was fight back. You know, you know,
you can you can fight back, attack me, you know, verbally. And so, of course, the scene starts.
But all of a sudden, Ken Jeong kind of gets to kind of like an age thing, which is a real like
that's the one thing you don't do with Larry. And so at one point he calls him like a George Washington looking motherfucker or something like that. At which point Larry
gets really pissed, but he's in the
scene. So he's really angry and we're all sitting there by the monitors going
uh oh, he's pissed. So Ken
thinks it's a scene, but Larry's fucking furious at him, kind of
screaming at him like you know what
are you saying therefore and it's like but he wasn't acting it was just that was larry it was
just real larry and that'll happen every now and then in a given season uh which was just always
really really funny yeah hilarious he's a method yeah method. That's exactly it. Method, yeah. Now, how much of Curb is written and how much is left for everyone to handle it?
It's kind of a, it's basically, we have like, the episode usually kind of is like a 12 or 13 page document, like an outline.
document, like an outline. And in that outline of each scene, there will be the key pieces of dialogue that need to be said for the story to go. So like the bigger pieces of dialogue.
And then usually from when we're talking about it, we've got other things that we've sort of
written down, but not put in the outline so that we get the, do the scene and as soon as we do it the first time
myself and the other writer guys we kind of rush in and sort of start pitching these as the stuff
we have written down as ideas so it's a it's a give and take it kind of like we hear the improv
then we kind of live rewrite on top of it and then they take what we've sort of thrown at them and
kind of improv off of that and then
sometimes a couple of takes in we'll go try something different or honestly i remember one
time we were uh we were doing a scene with larry and jeff and i think like jeff accidentally picked
up the wrong water and that became the scene because it was like i'm not going to drink that
now and then all of a sudden what was a a scene off of this little accident becomes this really funny thing about, well, now we've got to get two new waters.
It became this whole thing about the water.
So the whole thing just became this other thing, which was just pure improv.
That's sort of what's really interesting about it.
So you're ready to go with it.
You're ready to go with it if it happens.
Like I said, it feels like a live rewrite.
It feels like you're doing live TV, only you're not.
But yeah.
The late, great Bob Einstein was on this show.
Yeah.
And by the way, I was just going to say,
he was another guy who was obviously beyond hilarious,
but also occasionally would get Larry,
like real life Larry, annoyed at him
when they were doing scenes together.
To do it purposely because they had such an adversarial relationship,
Larry and Funkhauser?
No, I'm not sure that Bob realized sometimes that he was pissing Larry off,
like whether it was sometimes just the way he did something in a scene
or just little things that were bothering.
But one time, and I think I told you this story, Frank, in this we did the Seinfeld reunion episode.
And in the episode, Funkhauser shows up at the table read, I guess, uninvited.
And I remember TV. Larry is supposed to not be happy.
But then Bob basically wanted to tell Jerry a a joke in the scene which real life larry
i started to get annoyed that the joke was going on so long and it was that just killer joke about
um the ps your cunts in the sink you know that sure yeah yeah okay i mean it's just killer and
he goes on and on with the romantic love whatever whatever, whatever. And it's really long.
But, man, Jerry laughed for real because Jerry had no idea it was coming.
And Jerry laughs for real, and that's a genuine reaction.
And Larry went with it.
But if you look at the scene, Larry is genuinely annoyed that it's taken so long.
That's, I guess, it just was really funny to see.
We've got to go back and watch those, Gil,
just to see the real Larry losing his shit.
I remember
I used to
talk to Larry
and our conversation,
99%
of our conversation
was exchanging
our latest horror stories
on us trying to get laid.
Well, there's your show.
There's your show.
Exactly.
And I remember one story.
I think he was going to meet a girl at Tavern on the Green,
and somehow he accidentally sat down on a big pile of dog shit.
And then went in tavern on the green to sneak into the men's room to clean it off.
And I think they sent security in.
I'm surprised that wasn't a Costanza plot.
I know. That sounds like, I mean, that's't a Costanza plot. I know.
That sounds like, I mean, that's the thing, though.
I mean, you know, all the great episodes of both, I think, honestly, Curb and Seinfeld
were usually either, obviously, Larry's stories of his own, or, like, you would kind of get
hired by pitching your stuff.
You know what I mean?
Like, here's shit that happened.
Here are my stories about not getting, you know, with a girl.
And that's how you get hired, honestly.
Like, you get hired off of your sort of your real-life stories to some extent.
Or as a Carl Reiner method, in a way, the old Van Dyke show.
He used to encourage the writers.
What happened to you this week?
When I first got hired at the show, I moved from New York very suddenly.
I didn't drive.
I was, you know, taking taxis. Because, you know, I was from New York very suddenly. I didn't drive. I was taking taxis because I was a New Yorker. And I kind of got there and I was there for a little bit. And early on, at some
point, he was kind of like, why don't you go back to New York? You can go get your stuff and whatever
and it'll give you a chance to kind of think of stuff. And it did. It was like I got to go back
to New York. I got to kind of get my stuff and settle did it was like i got to go back to new york i got to kind of like get my stuff and settle some stuff whatever but like just even on that trip you know like one
or two odd things happened i kind of came back and just felt like okay here's some stuff that
happened that like you know like real stuff that was good like that would happen all the time we
would kind of take these little new york trips and then stuff that happened during the trips
would go into the show.
Are you talking about Curb now or Seinfeld?
Both. Seinfeld originally, but yes, Curb too.
Now, you wrote the now,
I guess it would be the infamous,
Puerto Rican Day.
Well, I'm going to stop there for one second.
I'm going to stop you for one second.
Okay.
This is true. This is all true.
We all shared the credit.
It was the second-to-last episode of Seinfeld, so all the writers, we shared the credit on the whole episode.
But what I was going to say is it happened to me.
I was driving back from Boston,achusetts with my college roommate and we dropped one guy off in the village
and headed on the headed up the east side and got stuck on madison avenue for four fucking hours
because of the puerto rican day parade we were trapped and the difference in the show was people
get out of the car but i couldn't get out of the car there was nowhere to go i couldn't leave the
guy i was with and i was fucking trapped in that stupid Puerto Rican Day parade, which, of course, became a hole to do.
But it really happened to me.
Hilarious.
That's the thing.
It really happened.
Hilarious.
What about man hands?
People would be interested to know where that came from, too, which is great.
From Bizarro Jerry episode.
She hates this, but I've told it publicly so i can tell it
again my wife i told you know i grew up in new york and i have i have the hands i've never done
an honest day's work in my life i have the the hands of a young baby prince basically they're
they're smooth and beautiful and my wife grew up in maine a farm, basically, and farmed and has rough, dry hands.
And she used to call them her farmy hands.
They're normal hands.
They're fine hands.
But they're rough.
She puts cream on them.
She calls them farmy.
And I basically, I took her farmy hands and turned it into man hands and we cast Kristen Bauer as the actress
and then literally had one of the grips
basically do the hands.
So it really was these just meaty paws
touching Jerry's face and stuff
and that's where it came from.
And that's what I mean by you sort of pull from your own life,
change it a little bit, make it a little worse,
and that's an episode of Seinfeld, basically.
Jillian.
Hi.
It's very nice to meet you.
It's nice to meet you.
She had man hands.
Man hands?
The hands of a man.
It's like a creature out of Greek mythology.
I mean, she was like part woman, part horrible beast.
Would you prefer it if she had no hands at all?
Would she have hooks?
Do, uh, do hooks make it more attractive, Jerry?
Kind of cool looking.
Listen, you're picking me up in White Plains tomorrow, right? Yes, yeah.
Okay, I got five huge boxes of buttons.
Right.
Well, if you need an extra set of hands, I know you can call.
Jerry!
George the Animal Steel.
George the Animal Steel, exactly.
What I always think when I watch Seinfeld, according to the script, there's not one Jew on the show.
It's such a jew on this show it's such a jewish show but the costanzas who are the ultimate in a jewish family are of course italian well i think they may have at one point
said half and half they might have he was italian which he wasn't, and maybe they made her Jewish.
I'm not.
Honestly, but yeah, so Jewish.
And Julia Louis-Dreyfus always came across like a Jewish girl.
We had Jason here.
We gave him shit about that, too.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this
any any stories at all about the the late great jerry stiller who we lost last year oh man he
the thing about him and a sweet guy just i mean obviously just yeah we have much much beloved
yeah yeah just such a sweet guy but and i don't think he would care if you said this.
You know, especially in the later seasons, you know, he definitely, like, struggled with his lines.
But it was sometimes out of those struggles that, like, crazy shit came out of his mouth.
of his mouth. And so there was one time where he was supposed to say,
he was talking about the condos that they're living in
and he's angry, I think, at the Seinfelds.
And so he's angry about phase two of the condos
at Del Boca Vista.
But in the scene, he's like,
Del Bica Baca and Del Bista Boca.
And honestly, we couldn't get through it.
I mean,ia was on the
ground jason was on the ground because he's just like del bico vista and you just and i mean it's
like i can't tell you how funny it was and honestly for most people that were on the show
and again none of i i don't pretend to have known him that well. I bet you that that Del Bicabista is like everybody's favorite memory of that period of his life.
God, it's so funny.
It sounds like Jason had genuine affection for the man.
He really loved him.
It's so funny that Jerry Stiller, late in life, had this whole second career.
Yeah, this renaissance.
Seinfeld, King of Queens.
Yep, he did.
He was bigger than ever.
He sure did.
Yeah.
Talk about Bizarro, Jerry, Dave, which combines your two passions, comedy and Superman.
Yeah, I mean, I'm a huge, I've been a, you know, I've been a, I was, I was, I've been a comic collector, you know,
probably all my life. And then when comic collecting didn't, wasn't nerdy enough,
I got into original comic art collecting, which are the hand-drawn pages of the actual comic book.
So I have a giant collection of that stuff that I, I love. And the, the, the, the Bizarro episode,
I love. And the Bizarro episode, which those sort of 60s Superman stories were my favorites, like where Bizarro or like there was the one where Superman split in half and he became there was a red Superman and a blue Superman. Or he'd shrink down and go into the bottle city of Kandor, just those real crazy sort of 60s stories.
But Bizarro was my absolute favorite and we i'd been working
on this idea of elaine sort of dating a guy that was actually sort of nice that like basically the
original idea came out of the idea of you know that kind of cliche of where someone says like
look maybe we should break up but let's be, and they don't mean it. The idea was, what if there was a guy that actually meant it?
They didn't want to date, but he legitimately wanted to be her friend.
And at the time, it was a little bit of a comment on Friends, the show, dare I say.
There's a line in there where someone says, who the fuck wants another friend?
It was sort of about who the fuck wants a friend? Like, it was sort of about, like, who the fuck wants a friend?
But the idea was this guy wants to be a friend.
And from that, I started to land on this idea of, like,
well, what if he's Jerry's opposite?
He's Jerry's bizarro Superman.
And when I pitched it like that to Jerry,
because that was the first season without Larry.
So it was the season where Jerry was kind of doing it himself,
with our help, but he was kind of running things.
And Jerry was a big, you know, not just a big comic guy, but also a Superman guy.
And the second I pitched it, he was just like, oh, yeah, run with it.
And really, like, things like, you know, even like at the end of the episode where there's a moment where they talk in bizarro speak and say, me so happy, me want to cry.
That was Jerry going, go for it. Just go jerry going go for it just go for it like
and just go for it um and i just it's you know i i for a i laugh for a while like you know like
you know we used to joke like like there'd one day be like these like like sort of seinfeld
conventions where jerry wouldn't be there and julia and you know jason and michael wouldn't
be there but it'd be like the guy that played the soup Nazi and the, you know, me who wrote the Bizarro.
That'd be our that's that's our claim to fame.
It'd be like the worst convention ever.
Larry Thomas, the soup Nazi.
Yes, exactly.
He's doing he's doing gangbusters on cameo.
There you go.
There you go.
And yeah, he's become a star.
you go and yeah he's become a star that guy gilbert tell uh tell david since he's such a superman guy who you voiced the character you gave i know the answer to this i know the answer
to this he knows oh you know i know yeah uh my she has big yeah exactly which for whatever reason
when i was a kid i always pronounce is just mixel plick but anyway i'll defer to you everybody has a different pronunciation and and also i appeared on a super boy at least two super boy
episodes that was live action oh i remember that show yeah yeah yeah as knickknack oh that's so
funny but no you're you're you're whatever however he pronounces it, because I love that version of Superman, the Superman animated show.
God, that was really, really good.
And you both wrote a comic book, too.
Oh, yes, I wrote one comic book.
What was your comic book?
It was one Superman comic book.
I think it's a Superboy, isn't it, Gil?
Yeah.
I don't know.
No, it's a Superboy was the TV show I appeared on.
This was the comic book was Superman.
I stand corrected.
I'm going to have to track this down.
Here's something I remember about the Superman comics that I don't remember the actual word, but certain ones would be, you know, they'd call it something like an imaginary.
Yes, an imaginary tale where it would be like, what if he married Lois and they had three super babies?
It would be like that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That always struck me as bullshit.
It just seemed like they ran out of stories at a certain point.
Yeah, you know.
I love whenever Superman got worked into Seinfeld,
like when he races the guy and the girlfriend is named Lois.
It's just great.
We also had, we got to ask you too, we had Pat Cooper here,
and you wrote the Friars Club episode with the jacket.
Did you interact with Pat?
I interacted a little bit.
I will admit, and this is where I regret it now is the honest answer of like, again, I know I'm the writer on the episode and all of these things, but I just couldn't believe we got Pat Cooper.
things but like i just couldn't believe we got pat cooper and like i was coyish and coquettishly shy and just didn't take advantage of you know talking his ear off i got to listen when he would
tell stories but i i feel like you know like like you know years later you just go god damn it why
didn't i make him like my best friend in the world and hang with him you know what i mean like i was
stupid but god he told just he you know every time we took hang with him you know what i mean like i was stupid but god
he told just he you know every time we took a break you know it was just him telling stories
i mean that was it it was just like yeah when he was on the podcast our our biggest job
was to try to get a word in yeah exactly you might, exactly. You might have dodged a bullet, Dave, by not becoming his buddy.
I know, I know.
But, you know, for a minute, for a minute, it would have been nice to have been his buddy.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you grew up, you know, you told me you grew up listening to comedy albums.
You grew up here on the west side, Upper West Side.
And your mom introduced you to all these comedy albums.
So a guy like Pat Cooper had to be a hero.
Yeah.
As well as Mort Sahl and Bob Newhart and all these people
you grew up listening to. No, exactly. It's like
and, you know, Vaughn Meter, First
Family, you know what I mean? Oh, Vaughn Meter.
So yeah, I got my
bag, basically, of my mom's
old comedy albums. And there was
Tom Lehrer and First Family
and Mort Sahl. And by the way,
I don't know if this is going to make you feel better or worse,
Gilbert. I used to go see Mort Sahl a lot, too, when he kind of had his various he would kind of
he would kind of do like every every four or eight years, like usually during a presidential year,
he'd kind of do like a little mini tour. And he had one joke that he used to update every like
four years and tell the same joke joke but change the names of the people
in the joke which i loved it was a joke about isn't there anyone in the party that isn't that
isn't like john kennedy yeah ted kennedy that was the joke but he would change the who was in it
each time it was always i don't know it made me me laugh that it was like his one joke that he kind of kept with him over the years.
You know, Mort's still with us, and Tom Lehrer's in his 90s.
I think he's 92 or 93.
I knew Mort Saul was alive.
I didn't realize Tom Lehrer was still alive.
Yeah, he's in his 90s.
He's in his 90s, yeah.
I mean, Vaughn Meter is, we've talked about Vaughn Meter on this show, Gilbert, a real tragic story.
Yeah.
But that album, you know, and it even holds up today.
Did you have the Alan Sherman records too?
I had a couple of the Alan Sherman with like,
because my mom loved all the camp stuff,
the summer camp like.
Oh, Hello, My Dad, Hello, Father.
Yes, that was it.
Yeah, sorry, yeah.
All that stuff too.
I wouldn't, we jump around,
but Gilbert and I were talking about
Saturday Night Live last week.
I love to torture Gilbert by bringing up his season of SNL.
Yeah, it was pretty—it was bad even by bad Saturday Night Live seasons.
It was still bad.
And they've had a lot of horrible seasons, but I think mine beats them all.
a lot of horrible seasons, but I think mine beats them all.
The ultimate test for Dave as a Seinfeld,
as a Gottfried fan,
is could you endure Gilbert's season of SNL?
Here's where I'm going to be.
This is going to be sad now.
I'm embarrassed.
I definitely watched it,
and yet I'm not sure I can remember
a single thing you were in.
So there you go.
Does that seem right?
Is that right? A right i'm very happy
about is that spot on well you know i'm i'm happy for any one of my bits from that season that
people have forgotten i heard you talking about your time on snl on another podcast david you
were saying that you you weren't great at the politics you weren't great at the politics. You weren't great at warming up to cast members or getting cast members on your team.
Gilbert feels that the writers were actually out to get him.
It's very possible, by the way.
They wrote to show how much me and the writers hated each other.
There was one sketch on the show where it was a funeral sketch,
and they wrote me in as the dead body in
the coffin did you have to stay with it was the camera on you yes i had to stay motionless you
know they could have gotten uh they they they could have gotten like a department store mannequin and it would have worked even better.
But no, they wanted me dead in a coffin.
And also they liked the department store mannequin more.
They thought he was a better cast member.
Talk about we just had Dana Gould on the show and we did a whole Planet of the Apes thing.
And we know you share our love.
You must know Dana.
Yeah, I know Dana well, and I know he loves all the things you love.
Yeah.
I actually had an idea, actually, and it's a little bit sort of Jerry-related,
but you guys maybe will appreciate it.
And I know Dana's now done his own Planet of the Apes stuff,
so I think I've missed the boat.
It's wonderful.
The talk show's wonderful.
I always had this idea that I wanted to film, but it was it was always like how do i do this how do i do this and
i never did and it was going to be sort of an observational comic on the planet of the apes
like so if you went to an ape stand-up club on the planet of the apes and it would be a lot of like
why do they call it the forbidden zone like that kind kind of a thing. Because if you don't want me to go there,
don't call it the forbidden zone.
It was sort of a Jerry Seinfeld riff on the apes planet,
but I never quite figured it out.
But yeah, no, Dana, Dana, Dana, Dana drops a,
I mean, you guys together must have been insane
because Dana's references are just beyond me the the the the guy
who played you know thug number four in some horror movie you know that worked the mummy's
henchman number eight and he knows that guy's name yeah it's one he's obsessive you know what
i just thought of as a possible guest if she's alive and if she's worked on anything else in her career uh the uh girl that
becomes the girlfriend linda harrison that are you thinking was that it was yeah i think she
want to play yeah who plays nova yeah yeah wasn't she wasn't she richard zanuck's wife yeah she was
somebody's girlfriend or wife somebody's girlfriend or daryl zanuck's wife daryl zanuck's wife or something like that? Yeah, she was somebody's girlfriend or wife in real life. Somebody's girlfriend or Daryl Zanuck's wife? Yeah.
Daryl Zanuck's young wife or something like that?
Yeah.
She's around, Gil.
Yeah.
Because I want to get her and I want to get Papillon Susu.
She's the Vietnamese girl from Full Metal Jacket.
So you know that's going to be a 90-minute- Maybe that's one show together.
Yeah, you want to party Vietnam?
You want to party Vietnam? You want to party Vietnam?
Yeah, I know.
I know who she is.
Tell us about doing the Heston thing.
Dana had a good experience of Charlton Heston.
And there you are in SNL, a young writer, and you have to pitch to the hosts.
You know, again, and I will actually – I give it actually a tremendous amount of credit.
I was actually thinking about this the other day, i still actually can't believe that like lorn let
me do this i mean i honestly i honestly can't because basically i pitched this idea that he
falls asleep in his dressing room at the beginning of the show and when he wakes up it's been you
know however many years he's got a full beard you you know, like the way he does in the movie.
He goes to sleep without the beard and he wakes up full beard.
And the show is now hosted and not hosted, starring all apes.
It's basically a sketch show of apes.
And they're doing some of the SNL sketches of the time, like the copy guy was great.
But it's apes.
And then once, you know, they do live from New York, apes and then once you know they do live from
new york they throw a net over him and they go live from new york it's saturday night take you
know take your stinking paws off me live from new york it's saturday night we roll into the credits
and we reshot the entire credit sequence with apes apes roller skating apes like looking at
the camera you know in new york city and it's So good. And it's starring General Erko, Cornelius, Zira,
and musical guest, singing human, Paul Westerberg.
And then for the monologue, it keeps going.
Two apes bring out Heston in handcuffs,
and it's an all-ape audience asking him questions
about how can you speak?
And I still and this was the other cool thing.
We tracked down this guy who I now know through collecting a little bit.
Guy named Fuller French who had bought all of the apes costumes at a Western costume auction.
And we flew him in with his costumes.
and we flew him in with his costumes.
And so all the background extras are wearing actual costumes from the movies and TV shows, which is just insane.
Yeah.
It's great to watch.
Frank was telling me that you have a separate apartment
for your collectible items.
It's my pre-marriage condo basically where by the way right now i have uh uh the half
statue of the lawgiver the ape lawgiver i have one yes the real one of those bless your heart
and an ape gorilla soldier uh mounted on a full mannequin so i have both of those things in my
collection yeah i i remember somebody sent me and I guess they were selling these or auctioning them off,
allegedly a piece of Bela Lugosi's cape.
Oh, like a little square kind of a thing?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And you kind of think, when I got that, I thought, well, wouldn't the entire cape be worth a lot more than ripping it into pieces?
So I thought, this has got to be bullshit.
Yeah, I'm going to say bullshit, too, because, yeah, why would you cut that up?
He's not really a collector, David, but he has some nice life masks.
He's got a Lon Chaney life mask.
What else, Gil? Yeah, Lon Chaney
Jr., Beto Lugosi,
Vincent Price,
and Al Pacino.
And Pacino?
Yeah, that was
from the movie
Heaven and Castellumina.
Al Pacino?
Tony Montana.
And one
time I
used to read Famous Monsters
a film line as a kid.
And they said that
Lon Chaney Jr. wasn't feeling
well and they gave an address
that you could send him.
And so I sent him a get well
card and
I got back like a
postcard sized picture of the
Wolfman and it signed Lon
Chaney on it. Not bad.
There you go. That's his only collectible.
Dave started his collecting
do I have this right kind of snatching
stuff from the Seinfeld set and
bringing it home?
Let's say is home? Ish.
Let's say ish.
Ish.
Ish.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Took a couple of things.
Took a couple of things, yeah.
Gilbert, you didn't take stuff from sets.
Just, you know, besides Perrier.
Well, I used to.
Cup of soup.
I used to every now and then.
I think I would, like, ask if I was wearing a suit in the show,
and they were all through with me.
I'd ask if I could keep the suit.
A couple of times, they let me keep the suit.
But you didn't take props?
Not props, no.
So you have nothing from Norman's Corner to show?
What, like an old magazine from the newsstand?
A copy of Look.
You don't happen to have the corner, do you?
Because I'm looking for the corner.
What was Heston like?
Dana had a good experience of him, man.
He was so great. What I honestly remember more than anything was on the first day where the host comes in on Monday, I don't know what was going on.
Normally, we don't really get to meet them until in the meeting and then afterwards.
But somehow, we ended up surrounding him a little bit, a couple of us like outside before the big first meeting.
And he told us this great story about the making of Touch of Evil,
about this trick that Orson Welles would do.
And maybe you guys know the story that basically Orson Welles,
like on day one would make the studio execs just insane by like not shooting not shooting not shooting not
shooting and then you know and i'm not i don't i'm not talking specifically about that opening
giant crazy shot of touch of evil but then he would do like some setup that incorporated a
whole bunch of setups so that they caught up in like you know one or two shots and then he'd just be like
see and he would kind of do that on purpose to kind of both make them nervous and then i guess
to get them to just completely back off and go away and he said wow he did that on touch of evil
um and and we were just you know standing there like uh you know and i managed that week i will say you know
you're talking about autographs of the wolfman i brought in a a french planet of the apes poster
i had him sign a touch of evil poster that i bought and a uh a three musketeers where he was
cardinal richelieu and i had him i had him sign that a great line from the movie where Richelieu says uh I think
he says it to Christopher Lee like on your knees little man or something like that I had him sign
that Charlton Heston and he was gracious about it huh so cool about I think he really I don't know
that's cool my sense of it was he seemed to dig that someone at the time I was pretty young that
was like my I think that was like maybe my second year on the show.
So I was like 22, 23 years old.
He seemed to appreciate how much I was into it.
So it was pretty cool.
Yeah.
When you were standing next to Charlton Heston,
did you get that feeling like I'm here with Moses?
This is unbelievable.
We did him.
I didn't write it,
but we did a Moses sketch that week where we made a Ten Commandments and he wore like a version of the costume.
And it was you. It was insane. You're like just staring at it's Moses.
I mean, there was no question. He looked like I watched that episode today.
He looked like he was game for anything. He was totally game for it.
Although I do believe what you are seeing now when you watch the rerun or whatever is more of the dress rehearsal.
He had a good dress, and when we hit 1130, he was tired.
Like, that was when you realized that's an old man.
Interesting.
And so I think in the in the
fixes that we went to dress a lot because his dress was fantastic that's that's my memory of
and again it didn't hurt anything he was so into it and so excited about it all but i do think we
did end up using more of the dress for that reason yeah i've heard nothing you know it's funny because he's got this reputation as a
rifle guy and all that but people have met him have nothing but nice things to say about him
and you hear stories like i remember reading a story you know he one of his later performances
was in that movie uh the tombstone you know the wyatt erp that they did with kurt russell
where like you know at that point like his knees were really bad and either he could
get on a horse, but had to do the whole scene on a horse or couldn't get on a horse.
There's some story like that where you kind of go, oh my God, that sounds like awful.
But I guess he was like great about it and was just like, put me on the horse.
I'll do the whole scene on the horse.
And he just did it.
And he just, you know, like, I don't know, just cool guy.
Just, it was.
By the way, by the way, Norm MacDonald's one of those apes in the Q&A section.
Yes, yes.
In the Q&A segment of the monologue.
That season we had done like 11 of those Q&A monologues,
and Norm was always in the crowd.
So this was also our own parody of our Q&A monologues.
And it was, you know, of course, Norm doing that kind of like,
so you can talk, huh?
What kind of ape are you?
And it'd be like Heston going, you know.
You're a damn mutant.
Yeah, I'm not an ape.
I'm a human.
Look, you're kind of a mutant.
Yeah, exactly.
We know Conan's infamous story of when George Steinbrenner hosted.
Did you have any experiences where you were pitching to a host
and it was just either you were shot down in flames
or it just wasn't going anywhere that you could talk about?
I didn't have anything that was like that miserable.
But I will tell you, I sat there when I believe it was Kelsey Grammer hosted.
You know, he was big on Frasier at the time.
Sure. And he's got
this... Big fan of Gilbert's, by the way.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy. Oh, really?
Yeah, tell him
when Kelsey Grammer
was on The View.
We did a roast when
Meredith Vieira left The View, and
Rosie was coming to
replace her, and we had Gilbert on the dais and Kelsey and Mario and a bunch of other people,
and Kelsey walked the minute he found out that Gilbert was going to be on the show.
I had to write a whole separate thing for him to tape and roll in.
He wouldn't sit on the dais with Gil.
Now I have to ask,
was this before or after the 9-11?
So this was early?
Oh, it was because of Gilbert mocking his wife's
maladies on Stern.
Well, the fart machine was working overtime.
He's never going to do this show.
We can tell you that.
Well, since he's not listening, you may enjoy this story.
Yeah, go for it.
So, you know, he's got this, like, fucked up life.
I mean, it wasn't just the wife.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
A lot of tragedy.
Someone in his family was, like, eaten by a shark or something or killed by a shark.
Like, he's got crazy shit in his past.
Yes.
And there's a shark like he's got crazy shit in his past yes and there's a shark involved and
they would always hand out this like i don't know like you know when the host here's this week's
host and they would give you like you know here's a bunch of magazine articles about him that of
course no one ever reads um and so i remember somebody basically pitching a shark attack sketch to Kelsey Grammer, who's like, I don't remember, brother was eaten by a shark.
Oh, God.
It was.
Oof.
Yeah, that's what I remember that, which wasn't me, thank God.
But yeah.
Go ahead, Gil.
He's had, I've read articles about him.
A lot of tragedy.
He's had nothing but horror stories.
Yeah, like crazy horror stories,
but then also these stories,
like he'll pop up,
like if you ever read Vince Neil
from Motley Crue's biography,
it's always like he's sitting in moon shadows
out in Malibu at midnight,
and the only other guy at the bar is Kelsey Grammer.
There's a lot of that too.
You know what I mean?
I'd like to point out.
He was very nice to me,
Gilbert.
Oh yeah.
He was always nice to me.
It was particularly nice to me.
He was a lovely host.
He actually,
he did a very good,
although not as good as yours,
Gilbert.
He did a James Mason impression for a 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea sketch
where the sketch was about
the fact that 20,000
Leagues is actually a distance
measurement and not a depth measurement
and everyone thinks it's a depth
measurement. And he played Nemo
and it was pretty good.
But not your Mason. That's all
I'm going to say. His Mason is...
Oh, and ever since this podcast has been, how many years has.
26.
26?
You and me?
It's been on a few years.
Cut of podcasts.
Seven years.
Just about, just about every episode.
And even before just talk shows, just about every episode, and even before just talk shows, just about every episode, I've told the story that Danny Thomas is most famous for.
Ah, yep.
His proudest story.
And so should I tell the story or do you want to because you
you tell your story we've got lots of versions of it this is gonna be exciting i've got like
three versions so you go first yeah okay i heard that danny thomas Thomas used to at parties, he'd lie underneath a glass coffee table.
Some one story I heard he would,
he would dress up as a priest.
I don't know.
I never heard that.
I never heard that variation.
I like that.
But then women would squat down on the table and take a massive shit on the table
as he was, as Danny Thomas was lying underneath looking up.
I didn't know it was at parties, Gilbert.
You added that.
Yeah, I never heard parties either.
I never heard parties.
Maybe it was by himself.
Maybe he wasn't that big a pervert. He just had it by himself.
He has to have some self-respect for God's sake.
So I'm going to tell two.
This is, Frank, I never told you.
This is two things.
I'm going to add a piece.
Go for it, buddy.
So there were two writers at Seinfeld.
I'll say their names.
They were older than me in the Lampoon.
Great writers. Gamal and Pross. Oh, they're legends. Oh, you know. Okay, great. I'll say their names. They were older than me in the Lampoon. Great writers.
Gamel and Pross. Oh, they're legends.
Oh, you know. Okay, great.
Tom Gamel and Max Pross. Apparently
early on in their careers when they were out
in LA, they went for a
very high-powered
meeting with, I think it was
Danny Thomas' lawyer.
They had no intention of
signing with him, but they felt they had to go because he was Danny Thomas's lawyer and they had no intention of signing with him but they felt they had to go
because he was Danny Thomas's lawyer I'm telling their story I hope they'll forgive me
and their story is they they sit through the meeting whatever whatever whatever and finally
gets to the end of the meeting and it's like anything else and they kind of go well they got their courage up we have to ask and the guy the guy
just stops them he does he goes what can i say the man built hospitals and that was what he said
that was apparently the response oh oh geez i met i met um sid melton you know sid the the actor I met Sid Melton.
You know, Sid, the actor.
He used to appear on, yeah.
Was he a guest at the parties?
No, no.
But he was on Green Acres.
He was on A Million.
Make Room for Daddy, too.
Yeah. Yeah. And so because he was, like, regular on Make Room for Daddy as, like, Danny's agent or whatever, I said, yes, Sid, the story with the shitting on the table, is that true?
And with a very uncomfortable, strained face, he nodded.
Yes. Well, so let's start.
Let's throw in the word allegedly. Allegedly. OK, allegedly, allegedly women would shit on Danny Thomas.
So we did we did an episode of Veep where Selena goes to oversee an election in in Georgia. So she goes overseas, you know, the way these like ex-presidents always go to, like, you know, make sure democracy is existing.
And of course, she's there really because the sort of the dictator who's trying to stay in power wants to bribe her.
And there's the scene where he basically is sort of, you know, just offering her, you know, the world and whatever. And we basically,
we did a Danny Thomas reference where basically, you know, and so it was sort of a combination of
that story where she basically goes like something like that's his, you know, am I, am I, you know,
that's his, you know, it's, it's sort of a, well... Well, I watched it last night.
He asked her if he makes the offer to make the donation to her library,
and he says, am I being clear?
And she basically says, like, it's as clear as Danny Thomas' coffee table
before the hookers.
Shit on it.
And she sells that line, God bless julia just just yeah hits it out of
the park and then and then and then basically it's sort of like she then and he goes really
and she's like well look what do you want the man built hospitals we sort of used the line
he built a lot of hospitals and then he goes ah i see the yin and the yang and yes that's what
kills me which is the best part and i i did not write the yin and the yang. And yes, the yin and the yang. That's what kills me about that joke.
I did not write the yin and the yang.
I don't even remember who wrote the yin and the yang,
but I love the yin and the yang.
So this airs.
This is on Veep.
We air this, at which point I guess we were editing some other shows,
and Julia calls me, and she calls me and goes,
I just got a call from the the daughter from marlo thomas
they want to talk to us or they want to talk to me and she goes i'm not doing this alone you have
to be on the call too you're a showrunner so take the bullet julie and i have a phone call with Marlo Thomas where, oh God, she sort of is sort of like
talking to us all about the fundraising for the St. Jude's Hospital and how, about how
she doesn't want the fundraising to get hurt.
And she's never heard this before.
And, oh, it was so, I wish I could have filmed that as a dvd extra it was so painful
just me and julia just like genuflecting to sort of try and apologize but not really apologizing
at the same time because yeah we would love that joke it's a joke we're the apologies
oh we're very sorry that you're shit on we're very sorry that you weren't able to sit at the coffee table at your house, that that room was off limits.
It was just a lot of like, oh, those hospitals are really great.
That call sounds cringier than the cringiest Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Full on Curb.
We're very sorry that several of his shirts were ruined.
We're very sorry that several of his shirts were ruined.
I mean, we've talked about it on this podcast for years,
but nobody's listening to this podcast.
You put it on national television.
It's H.K. Wright.
Balls of brass, my friend. I performed at a couple of St. Jude's hospitals.
Well, not anymore.
So I can talk about Danny Thomas getting shit on,
and I free reign.
That's the agreement I've made with myself.
You're grandfathered in.
That's perfect.
That's good.
That's good.
Grandfathered in.
I want to point out a couple of your other SNL skits that I love.
And Nerf Crotch Bat is just, you know,
just pure stupid
brilliant comedy. It's just anything you can do
to hit anybody in the crotch or the bat.
So funny, and so is
Crystal Gravy,
which I love. And I told Gilbert about
Philadelphia action figures.
That's my real favorite.
Which is just great.
I kept a couple of the action figures also, by the way.
It's just great.
For part of my collection.
Yeah.
The little kid saying, see you in court, sucker.
Well, the funniest part of this thing was, for those of you who can find it on YouTube
or whatever.
Yeah, it's great.
So it's these action figures, obviously, for Philadelphia.
And it's, of course, these characters that, like in the movie, are these very serious
lawyers and stuff dying of AIDS.
And, of course, they've got, like, laser swords and power nets and you know batmobiles and
all this kind of stuff and the commercial starts with the kid going you've got aids you're fired
no you're fired but boom and the little kid of course then looks up and asks the director jim
signorelli who was so good he goes oh he's good why are goes why are they firing him and we go well
because they think he has AIDS
why should someone be fired because they have AIDS
and it was just like
and then it was like what is AIDS
and then it was just like okay I'm sorry
I gotta leave the set because this is
you're six years old
I don't think I can
I don't think this is my place
to tell you.
Anyway, yeah.
So, yeah.
The detail, the commitment to the joke, as we all know, is very important.
That they built a miniature Jason Robards figure.
That the net and the Tom Hanks character fires a netting.
It may have been fired by Miguel, longtime companion.
Oh, it's fired by the
by the uh yeah the uh what is it yeah antonio banderas it's miguel so so so funny tell tell
us about writing for phil hartman you know we're talking about giving material to actors that hit
home runs and you've written for a lot of people who who know how to knock comedy out of the park
like julia i mean he i mean with him it was so incredible i mean you know you obviously he
used to go like you know on letterman he always would joke about pick a number and you know
letterman would go like 44 and he would pretend like he had a you know 200 different characters
and letterman picked number 44 but it was real i mean he just you know we did him uh when i got to
the show he was our clinton and so um when cl Clinton got elected, Al Franken and I wrote this, at the time, very big sketch of Phil as Clinton jogging into McDonald's because he was doing that in D.C.
He was kept jogging into different like fast food restaurants and showing up.
food restaurants and showing up and it was him explaining the warlords in mogadishu stealing food as he stole burgers off people's plates and ate them in the mcdonald's and he just would do this
devilish uh you know clinton impression you know that kind of like we're not gonna tell mrs clinton
about a lot of things you know that kind of with just this gleam in his eye and it was i remember in that sketch
he's eating all these like you know whatever they were i guess they were big macs and stuff and he
literally started actually choking on the live show from shoving these like you know uh and i
think he was a healthy guy and never ate mcdonald's food either and so he's eating this mcdonald's
food they start choking on it and god bless him
rob schneider in the middle of the sketch hands him a soda to drink to get him to wash it down
that was not planned but i mean phil was just just just yeah i mean as in yeah what you think he is
yeah exactly you've written for the funniest people on the planet i mean i want to add our
friend suzy essman to that list i want add, I don't think there's a funnier
human alive than J.B. Smoove.
I mean,
when J.B., I mean, you know, Curb was Curb, and then
we added J.B. to it, and obviously it became
this other thing, but we, with Susie,
and obviously everyone knows, obviously,
you know, her cursing and stuff, which is
incredible, but we did a scene with her once.
I don't know if you ever saw it. It was where
Larry's mechanic, like, doesn't fix the front seat.
So when women are sitting in the front seat, the seat's shaking and it's giving them orgasms.
Oh, and she has the orgasm.
And she gets in the front seat and Larry knows it's happening.
And she's moaning and he's screaming in pain at her orgasming.
And it's back and forth and back and forth.
And she is a monster in that scene.
And just,
she's brilliant.
Yeah.
She's brilliant.
We've known Susie forever.
Yeah.
And,
and since we're talking about curb,
there is a curb anecdote that you told me that involves my cohost.
I hope,
I hope,
I hope you will.
I hope you will appreciate this.
We did an episode of curb where Larry is in a place and a guy comes up to him and basically
says can you watch my can you watch my my computer a minute i'm gonna go to the bathroom oh yeah
he goes to the bathroom and then and then larry does it to another guy and it becomes this whole
thing it becomes whatever but the the guy number one who disappears and you don't really see again until the back
end of the show was
Curtis Armstrong from Revenge of the Nerds
and stuff, whatever. And he was great. He was super good
on the show. But I hope this means something good to you. When we finished
the episode, as we were walking away from being finished there was a moment where i don't even remember how your
name came up and larry just went oh fuck gilbert would have been so good in that part and unfortunately
it was in the can already but it was like fuck gilbert would have been so great in that part so
i i'm sorry we didn't think of it on the A side.
I apologize.
Oh, well, thanks for telling me that.
Yeah, I know.
I want to tell you about other things I didn't cast you in also, if that's okay.
I've got a lot of other things I didn't cast.
You didn't put them on Veep either.
Do you have any, like, gorgeous actresses who say,
boy, I wish I had fucked Gilbert
but I fucked
Curtis Armstrong but yeah no
you know what's so funny about that
is when Revenge of the Nerds
came out people
are coming up to me saying
there's a guy in that movie
who looks like you
there you go
well this leads me to thank you for not casting me you fucking jerk who looks like you. There you go. Yep. I get that.
Well, this leads me to a...
Thank you for not casting me,
No, it was my pleasure.
It was absolutely my pleasure, honestly.
Yeah, you should take that up with Larry
the next time he calls, Gil.
Josh Abelon, I got a question from,
a couple of questions from listeners, Dave.
Yep.
Josh Abelon, how did Gilbert end up
on the Clerks animated series as Patrick Swayze?
Well, it's a two-parter in a very good way.
So, number one, we did the Clerks thing.
I did it with Kevin Smith.
Good show, by the way.
Oh, I appreciate that.
And it was a series of things that happened, but it was connected to we were doing it at ABC, which, of course, ended up being a giant mistake.
We sold them the show and they were like in like last place.
And then they had Who Wants to Be a Millionaire on.
So they aired two of our episodes in the summer and never aired the rest.
But anyway, the Disney animation people were helping us.
And whoever the casting guy was at the time, think gilbert knew you because of iago i
think that's that was the connection and basically we were having all of this trouble with like legal
stuff where they were just like you know if people think this is really patrick swayze like we're
gonna get you can't do it you can't do it and it was like and it was like you fucking
assholes like why are you even making this show if we can't do all these things and it was just
like okay i know here's how we will make sure they're clear it's not patrick swayze guess who
we're gonna cast as the voice of patrick swayze gilbert godfried, and they still fought us. They were like, well, how are people?
Thinking Patrick Swayze and me sound identical.
But we ended up, we actually double used you because that motherfucker Jerry Seinfeld backed out at the last second. So you also did Jerry.
You did your Jerry impression as Jerry in an episode of Clerks also. I don't know. I think we threw that in at the last second. You did your jerry impression as jerry in an episode of clerks also i don't know
i think we threw that in at the last second you did your jerry which yeah i remember i did both
of those and i what the the line that makes me laugh in the um patrick's noisy one because it's
supposed to be he's pretending he works at the pet store yeah the pet store next door but he
takes it very seriously as as I remember it.
And he's pretending he's doing it for a part in a movie.
Right, but he's not.
He's just, no.
And at the end, his triumphant line is,
well, I have to go now.
I have to fly to Hollywood to do a movie.
I play an annoyed neighbor in an Adam
Sandler film.
So you guys got to work together
after all. Yeah, except sadly I don't think I was
anywhere near wherever Gilbert recorded
that, so yeah.
We will return to Gilbert
Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast but first a word from our
sponsor uh david mcconaughey says the veep finale was incredible i agree could david discuss briefly
uh consultations with actors or other writers that led to the brilliance of that finale
uh you wrote and directed the finale as we pointed out in our interminable intro.
You know, I guess I kind of always knew I was going to do it.
And obviously, the nice thing was, obviously, it's the end of a season.
It's the end of the show.
So there are all of these strands of things that I knew were going to go into it into it and of course people kept throwing more at me to put in which was great too
but uh it was just sort of trying to pay off like this idea and and this was this was what was so
hard about the back end of veep when veep started and you know the idea was like you know oh once
in a while this is like what this is what politicians are really like behind closed doors and all of this kind of stuff.
And then, you know, four years of Trump and there are no closed doors.
There's no you know, we did jokes early on about like what if the president tweeted and then we elected a guy, obviously, that was tweeting all the time.
So what Veep was ceased to be in some ways relevant or funny or even make sense.
Or in some ways it was almost sad because it was so much worse.
So because the world got worse, we kind of made Selena worse.
So it was really this culmination of what was she prepared to do to get power?
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah.
And it was very, I don't know, I don't want to say it was... I think a lot of times
you can always steal good
stuff from The Godfather and The Godfather Part
2, but it was very
Godfather Part 2. You know, like,
I'm going to kill the family to protect
the family, basically. Almost
right down to the shot where the door closes
and she's alone. Yes, exactly.
Our DP came up with, I give him that credit.
That's the shutting the door on
Kay. Exactly.
And she kills Fredo.
I mean, she kills...
And she kills Fredo.
How many kids did Julia
Louis-Dreyfus have during the
making of Seinfeld? I'll tell you a funny
story. She had two.
The first one was before me. The second one
was during me. The second one was
during me. And Julia didn't remember this. It came up a couple of years after the fact. But,
you know, we were all like, you know, like, I don't know, we were like, you know, 25. There
were a lot of writers that time. They were like 25, 26, 27 years old on the show. And when she
was pregnant, we pitched this idea. And I should I'm going to preface this for those of you listening i am an i i am
an overweight person i have dealt with weight my entire life so just to be very clear this is a fat
person about to tell this story we pitched this idea we pitched this idea that the way we would cover her pregnancy was we would just have Elaine get fat.
That was the idea that we pitched.
And I remember nobody wanted to pitch it to Julia.
No one had, like, Julia.
It was just like, oh, she's going to hate that.
And I think Jerry actually got up the nerve
and did pitch it, and she fucking hated it
and wouldn't, didn't, you know, just, like, no. But we told her about it years later, and she went, oh and wouldn't didn't you know just like no but we were told
her about it years later and she went i should have done that so to her credit later on she did
realize it was funny but she's such a brave actor she was she was constantly sitting on the couch
clutching pillows pillows boxes of cereal behind the kitchen counter there's a lot of times where
she's just does the whole scene behind the kitchen counter or the fridge door is open you know and
she's kind of like her head's out from behind she's always bending into the fridge and then
coming coming up and then bending back down yeah yeah just yeah it's a season of that yeah
she's a she's a brave actor.
I think of, and I don't think you wrote this episode, but you, you may have contributed
something to it is that the kicks is the terrible, the terrible dancing and, and, and, and her
commitment to that.
And then watching Selena, watching these Veep episodes, it takes a certain actor to make
you like them when they are so despicable.
Yeah.
And so monstrous.
them when they are so despicable yeah and she's so monstrous and and to some extent every time she was more monstrous or every time she did more it only encouraged us to go further do you know
what i mean because it's like yeah if she can be likable doing this well now we'll have her say
that do you know what i mean yeah it's uncanny that you, she never lost her likability in the,
in the show.
And she's.
I,
I just got a flashback.
Uh,
one,
the only time I was ever in Larry David's apartment when he lived in New
York was he had cable.
Okay.
And,
and there was some actress,
both of us had the hots for and she was gonna be on a movie
where she did a bunch of nude scenes i remember going over to his house and both of us
watched this actress naked that's a lovely anecdote. Yes. It's heartwarming. You can imagine Art Linkletter
telling that one. I got another question here from a listener. Sam Weisberg says,
yeah, you've said a comedy writer has to have a healthy ego.
When you were on season 20 of SNL, that was kind of an infamous season.
Yeah.
When they brought in the hired guns.
They brought in Jeannie Garofalo and...
Well...
What was it?
It wasn't just the hired guns.
Chris Elliott.
It was that they brought in all these people and got rid of nobody.
So the cast was like 20 people.
It was crazy, yeah.
Right.
He's saying, what was it like having to deal with the egos in that season?
You know, I will say this, actually.
To their credit, as hired guns, and maybe it was just where they all were at the time in their various careers,
they were all really good people.
careers they were all really good people i mean into some ways i think it was just a disservice to everybody because there just wasn't enough you know screen time where you just kind of go
yeah chris elliott did nothing this week or janine garofalo was in one sketch this week
or mckeon was like a good week for mckeon was maybe in two sketches was a waste of a lot of
top top talent that was really it and they never as much
complained as I guess
when I think back on it
I know they were unhappy I mean I don't want to put words
in their mouth but they were just unhappy
and depressed and Janine ended up
leaving like three quarters of the way through the year
she just I think had kind of had it
you got to do that great Robert Evans
sketch with Michael
McKeon was so good I mean I know you guys have had him.
He's so good.
He's brilliant.
And good on Veep, by the way.
Yeah, I mean, I was so happy he did it.
He did us a favor there, actually, because we had cast another actor who could come in
and was having memory line issues.
I don't want to say his name because he's still active.
Was it Gilbert Gottfried?
Gilbert something.
You know what?
Let's just protect his anonymity.
Gilbert G.
And he just couldn't do the lines.
No, I just want to be very clear.
At no point did we think of Gilbert Gottfried for that part.
You're welcome.
So it's a tradition. Yes. I try and do that for good luck on every one of my shows
and so we shot a day with this other guy and then tried to kind of reached out to michael who
basically his agent just said no and i thank god was i was able to email michael and more or less
beg him and he said yes and god he was so good but when he came or less beg him, and he said yes, and God, he was so good.
But when he came into SNL, obviously, you know, he'd been in the whole credibility gap and spinal tap and all those things.
Sure, of course.
And he brought with him these incredibly, like, wonderful impressions.
You know, he does an incredible Howard Stern impression.
He does an insane—
Good Vincent Price.
Vincent Price, that's exactly what I was going to say.
He does an amazing Vincent Price. And he did a really good adam west we did an update feature with de covny
where we did adam west and the the the the evans book had just come out but it was before
evans like documentary and all the evans fever had come along but we wrote the sketch it was a
talk show called the casting couch with robert
evans it's great it was just him you know all tanned up and basically you know trying to talk
to young ladies and get them to send him polaroids of them washing cars or you know with a very sort
of like 60s version of nudity kind of a thing. And it's just people calling the show saying,
I'm a cancer doctor.
You really need to go see someone.
I don't like the look of that spot on your nose.
And it's just basically...
Did you ever get feedback from Evans?
Lauren apparently ran into Evans like on the Paramount lot
and he liked it a bunch.
I think, you know...
Oh, great. Good.
I'll take it.
We got a Robert Evans story for you. We'll have to tell you off mic I think, you know. Oh, great. Good. There you go. I'll take it. I'll take it. We got a Robert Evans story for you.
We'll have to tell you off mic.
Oh, off mic.
Oh.
Yeah.
Uh-oh.
Let's talk about the podcast and collecting props.
Do you know Michael Giacchino, by the way?
I do.
I know him a little bit.
We have a mutual friend.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's got a holy grail.
Not a holy grail. He's got an Ark of the Covenant.
I've never seen his place, but I've heard tales, which sounds crazy.
The podcast that you do, The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of, which we talked about with your friend Ryan Condal,
is all about your obsessions. This show is about our obsessions.
And this is about your obsessiveness in collecting and the things that you pursued over the years all collecting but it's specifically about really
like prop collecting like the actual and you know and first episode we started with just literally
like how do you know it's real because that's what people want to know you know you're talking
about like is the cape real and things like that but yeah no it's about it's what we have the crazy
lengths we've gone i mean i like i hired a private eye once to help me track down a piece.
I literally hired from my daughter's preschool.
There was this wonderful couple, a lesbian couple, and one of them was a private eye.
And I was trying to track this guy down.
A lesbian private eye?
Lesbian private eye. There's your to track this guy lesbian private eyes starring Gilbert Gottfried
as the lesbian I would watch that I would play the sergeant in that
what what was the piece can you say yeah no I don't know if you would have any memory of this.
I was the exact right age, but when Star Wars came out in 77,
at Burger King, on different weeks, they had these four posters
that every time you could buy a soda, you could get either a poster or a glass,
a Star Wars glass.
And so you meet people of a certain age that still have these
Star Wars drinking glasses in their cabinets. And there was a guy whose dad worked for Coca-Cola
who had commissioned the art and had the original four paintings for these posters and glassware. And he had posted about it with only his first name,
that he lived in Atlanta,
and that his dad had once worked at Coca-Cola.
And I basically gave that information to the private eye,
and she tracked him down for me, and I bought the pieces.
There's a lesbian private eye.
Yes, to the lesbian private eye.
Don't leave out the most important part of the pieces. There's a lesbian private eye. Yes, there's a lesbian private eye. Don't leave out the most important part of the story.
So this is detective work, finding this stuff.
Yeah, I mean, it's an obsession.
I mean, it's taking the obsession sort of out into the world.
It's not just obsessing about it.
It's spending a lot of time talking about movies we love
and then reducing it to the props that make us think.
Because there's a lot of great movies that don't have props you'd want to own.
Sometimes costumes are just costumes.
You can think of a movie where it's like, if I owned Gilbert Gottfried's suit, but unfortunately that's missing.
No one can find the suit he wore in Beverly Hills Cop 2.
Maybe someone walked off with it.
But if I own that suit, it's a suit.
You know what I mean?
I'm not sure it's a special suit.
It's just a nice suit.
You know what I mean?
But you try and think of like, you know, again, we call the show the stuff.
If you could find the real Maltese Falcon, that's a prop worth owning.
You know what I mean?
I was just about to ask you.
Do you know anyone who actually owns?
There's one that got,
there's one or two that have been sold
that they claim were it.
The problem was there's this crazy cool story
that when the movie was finished,
they made a replica Falcon
and wrapped it up like in the newspaper
and the wrapping that Thursby delivered. I think it was Thursby
that the captain delivers it in, you know, and they tear it
open. And so it looks apparently just like
this. And there's no one that no one really knows. Is
it a thousand percent the real one? There's one that I think
they think matches a publicity
photo shoot of it's like bogey like like chest up with like a like the falcons like in a still
with him and i think there's one that matches that but no one's sure if that one was also used
in the movie because there were more than one. And this is the problem, you know, like Steven Spielberg has a has a rosebud sled, but it was a balsa rosebud sled of which I guess there were multiples that were used to burn them.
You know what I mean? Like the fire. So was it the one? No, it was one of many.
You know, so this is this is this is
the problem and what's so obsessive about prop collecting you know what i mean like so when you
can find the one like for example i have an indiana jones jacket but it's a leather jacket
with a scratch on it where i can match that scratch to the movie and go, there it
is.
That's my, that jacket is right there.
And so that's some of what the crazy level that we're looking for within the collecting
to kind of, what's what we call a screen match.
That's the holy grail, I guess, of collecting.
And that's what the podcast is about.
That is what the podcast is about.
But it's also about obsessiveness.
And our final episode of the first season, we just had our wives on.
And they talked about what assholes we are and how they hate our
collecting.
We should do that episode, Gilbert.
You guys should do that episode.
We should do that episode.
Very cathartic for both couples.
Yeah.
It'll be a six-hour episode.
You wonder about this stuff.
We had Dana on, and we were talking about the strict fat and stuff the stuff of the the you know what i'm
talking about the laboratory jeans but now it you know and the guy was alive when mel made young
frankenstein and they found him in venice got the special credit at the end of the movie yeah sure
but you wonder what happens to that stuff after the fact oh now where is that stuff today where
are these
props are they are they in garage are they in personal possessions are they you hear stories
of things like i mean again not on the level of that but you know iconic unto themselves but you
hear stories about like you know back to the future delorians just like rusting and rotting
on the uh on the universal lot you know they just would sit and the the tram would go rotting on the universal lot. You know, they just would sit
and the tram would go by them on the tour
and they just were sitting there
until they started to like basically rust and fall apart.
I mean, you know, again, that's the thing is,
you know, money and collectability has changed all of this.
No one thought anything about this stuff.
You know what I mean?
So what's your, go ahead, Gil.
I remember i heard a
story someone uh was over at a movie studio and they wanted to make room for something
and they were smashing all of these life masks of like legendary stars they were putting them
and throwing them in the dumpster
and shattering into pieces.
Well, there was probably
a lot of waste over the years.
And that reminds me
of the old Tonight Shows
being recorded over,
which you hear about
when Groucho hosted.
Right, so they could save tape.
Groucho was the guest
to save tape in those days.
So there's no way of telling
how many wonderful props
were destroyed or tossed
over the years.
There's so many incredible things that if
you just start going down a list of like great movies and incredible props you know like like
like like just for a second casablanca just to pick a an obvious iconic movie most of the stuff
that's out there from casablanca are like a chair from rick's cafe or uh you know like that's not
exactly when you think of casablanca you don't
think of the chairs do you know what i mean like that's not your that's not your dream prop and
that's you know just stuff got thrown away got taken who knows but that's the flip side is every
now and then something shows up that just you know blows you away where you just cannot believe
oh my god after all these years somebody had this you know
what i mean like that's the stuff that's just wild you know and with casablanca it's like people are
gonna once again have those kind of props like oh well this is the uh wine glass yeah exactly
exactly yeah it's a suit okay i'll take your word for it exactly yeah and then you somebody
will be taking they'll be getting props from Curb Your Enthusiasm.
They'll be looking for the flowers that Larry stole from Funkhauser's mother's memorial one day.
Here's a question for you.
You are a presidential historian.
You're a fan of Robert.
Amateur, yes.
An amateur presidential historian.
We're amateur historians here ourselves.
And you're a reader of Robert Caro. Yeah, Caro
can't get enough. What is your assessment of
Gilbert as Abe Lincoln?
It's spot on. I mean,
you know,
just, let me add,
I was also a government major at Harvard,
and I
really, I do feel
spot on. That's all I'm going to say, yeah.
Yeah, that was in Million Ways to Die in the West.
Yes.
And I think somebody owns the beard I wore.
There you go.
There you go.
Very collectible.
You know, $20 million.
Quick lightning round questions.
You're a Marx Brothers guy.
You're in a Marx Brothers documentary.
We're strong Paramount people here not mgm people where do you stand yeah i mean yeah yeah paramount yeah
when they were anarchists yeah i i always thought they got softened to me there are great moments
in a night at the opera of course yeah but. But it always looks like the beginning of the end.
It's like, first of all,
there's time between the jokes for people to laugh
and they're doing it to save this couple.
Yeah, I mean, the couple stuff in any of those movies, whatever.
But the early one, the couple stuff in any of those movies, whatever. But yeah, the early one, the pure you said anarchist, but yeah, the pure anarchy of just sort of like to me, it always felt like it wasn't even like they had shots. It was just like they were just trying to capture what they were doing. I don't know if that you know what what I mean? Like, it was just like, let's just get this.
You know what I mean?
Particularly the last two with Paramount of horse feathers and duck soup.
It's just insanity.
Yeah, just pure insanity.
Did you guys ever read about,
just my other biggie in this sort of movie world,
and again, not an original thought,
but we talked about this the other day.
I love Billy Wilder.
And in one of his biographies or something, he talks about a Marx Brothers idea that he had. Oh, yes.
Do you know this idea?
Yes.
It was a night in Hollywood, a day in Hollywood.
Yes.
Yes.
Something like that.
No, no.
The United Nations.
The United Nations.
Yes.
Yes.
Basically, it was going to be off the Khrushchev shoe band.
Basically, they were going to be arriving by ship and going to the UN.
And the sort of what, I mean, it's just as well they didn't make it.
But, yeah.
It had to be very early in Wilder's career because, I mean, Love Happy, I mean, Harpo can hardly, you know, walk 20 feet. No, they're, I mean, he said, like, he kind of, like, got really excited and then realized none of them could do it.
Yeah.
And it was just like.
And I remember I was watching one of those horrible, like, TV productions that would have Chico and Harpo in them.
that would have Chico and Harpo in them.
And I remember my son, when he was like about five or something,
said, is this supposed to be funny?
And so it was really.
Well, when Wilder was making Double Indemnity, what, 44 or something like that? And they were still active.
I mean, they were really winding down. But I mean, I don't think he had the idea to like, I don't know, they were still active. I mean, they were really winding down.
But I mean, I don't think he had the idea to like, I don't know, like 59, 60 is when I think he had the idea.
On the subject of feature films, I mean, you've written feature films.
You talked about, I heard you talk about a speed comedy that you guys pitched.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, a comedy loosely based, a rom-com based.
What is it in the days now,
and Gilbert and I had Ken Kwapis here,
the director Ken Kwapis,
we were talking about how you can't make movies,
you couldn't sell a movie theatrically
like Harold and Maude, like The Conversation,
like Tootsie.
Today, what's it like for a guy like you
who's still out there pitching features
i mean the honest answer is i don't really do features i mean i i do a feature only if hbo you
know what i mean if a stream you know what i mean like it just it doesn't exist well you wrote the
dictator and yeah but look at the years on those that's already at this point a while back at this
point i mean it's it's been a while. There's no comedy business,
certainly theatrically at this point.
That's what I meant.
It's just gone.
Yeah, there's no romance, anything.
Every now and then I'll think of a film
that I've seen in the theater
or a film I watch on TV,
and I go, wow, no way in hell
would that be in a theater.
And it's like the funny thing is also when a newspaper would come out, if anyone remembers newspapers.
From Norman's Corner.
Yeah, I would open to the movies.
As seen in Norman's Corner.
Yeah, I would open up to the movie section.
When was the last time a newspaper had a movie section?
But I mean, I was talking about this with one of my friends that I grew up with in the city.
And all we ever did on any given weekend on Friday and Saturday was we would go to see two or three movies depending on what opened.
And that meant two or three new movies
were opening every weekend.
And that's why, you know, if you said to me,
like, well, what'd you see that weekend?
It's like, we saw Best Seller
with James Woods and Brian Dennehy.
Oh, sure.
And then we went and saw The Lemon Sisters
with, you know, it's just like,
I saw just movies came out and I would go see them.
But were they all great?
No, but they came out.
You know what I mean?
Like they existed.
And I don't remember the last time that I knew what movies were even out there.
I have a script.
It's a kind of a romantic comedy that i think would be incredible
about a lesbian private eye but no one will no one will make it no one will do you know larry
and scott at all do you know karazowski and and and scott alexander i know them a little bit uh
they got it they got them they got a marx brothers feature script that's a great read. Oh, really? Oh, I gotta read that. When the lesbian detective
comes out, on the
poster we'll have
in brackets, and Gilbert
Gottfried as Sergeant
McCluskey.
You're gonna do Sterling Hayden's
character.
I will take
you out with this, Dave, because you
do listen to this show.
You know the kind of crazy shit we do.
Uh-oh.
And you are a fan of the original Adam West Batman.
By the way, Dana Gould's Adam West is pretty goddamn right on.
I've heard his, and it's really good.
But again, I'm just going to tell you, seek out McKeon's.
All right, we're going to get McKeon back and make him do it.
There's something about McKeon.
I'm just going to let you know, McKeon's got a really good one because of the distance that he puts.
Like, he says something, and then he pauses for a very long time before he gets to old chum.
And Jeff Garland has a good Adam West also.
He does.
We've got to get Jeff on this show.
Yeah, you've got to get Garland on this show.
He would be – yeah, you've got to get Garland on this show, yeah.
So last question.
We touched on the Danny Thomas scandal.
Yep.
What is your opinion of the Cesar Romero scandal?
Gilbert, we'll explain it to you if you're not there.
No, I don't think I know the Cesar Romero scandal.
Oh, well, let me see if I'm familiar with it.
Yeah.
Maybe look it up on Google and read me what it says.
We want Dave's take.
Maybe look it up on Google and read me what it says.
We want Dave's take.
Cesar Romero, of course, was famous as being a Latin lover.
And in real life, he was gay.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
And what he was into was he would gather up a bunch of boy toys and he'd stand there, he'd pull his pants and underwear down and bend over and his boy toys would fling orange wedges at
his ass.
Well, Dave, and that is why he was the best Joker of all of them.
Yes.
Of anyone that ever played the Joker, he is my favorite.
And now, when you watch those old episodes where he's the Joker,
and you know he's gay, and you go, oh, makes perfect sense.
Again, method, method.
It's method.
At this point in the show where you know we're doing things
to amuse ourselves for three almost 400 episodes and i just want to see the expression on the guest
face when he tells that story i honestly as i'm sitting here it just makes me feel better about
my orange throwing so anyway yeah and i also heard a variation on that story that one person said
Cesar Romero would stand ankle deep in warm water as they were flinging.
Oh, and then some people argue with me saying that it was tangerine,
which it was some kind of citrus.
Maybe a tangelo.
Maybe it could be a tangelo.
A clementine.
Yeah, but never a grapefruit.
That's where he drew the line.
We got a private eye working on it.
A lesbian private eye.
Yes.
Sergeant McCluskey says, listen to me, private eye lesbian.
You got to back off this Cesar Romero case.
It's going to hurt you.
It was that close to retirement.
We got to plug Veep for our listeners that have not watched Veep.
Shame on you.
Dave's wonderful work.
And also, we love character actors on this show.
What a wonderful group of actors.
No, that cast, I mean, I put that cast up against anything. Really wonderful people on that show. What a wonderful group of actors. I put that cast up against
anything, yeah. Really wonderful
people on that show.
And I had a card
for some of the names on that show I was going to ask
you about. Now I can't find my card.
And we want to plug...
I didn't know any of their names, so I
can't help you. No, the guy that
played... I gotta call this
guy out. The guy that played Roger Furlong this i gotta call this guy out the guy that
played uh roger furlong oh my god dan bacadal hilarious holy crap yeah we hilarious kevin
dunn and gary cole and and uh our friend pat and oswald turns up and martin mullen the great you
laurie i mean it's a it's also a cast of an all-time cast the the those crazy bacadal runs
you know which just get
really foul the writers are just like
like line up to write them in one year
we took one of these runs where he kind
of you know said something like you know
wipe the crusty jizz out of your hair
while you know blah blah blah blah blah
blah and we made a t-shirt a crew shirt
out of it to give out whatever and it was
basically like no one could wear the
shirt unless it was under
something. Cause it was just this, just foul run on the back of the shirt.
It was just kind of great.
Yeah. It's a, it's a great, we were talking before we turned the mics on.
It's a great show for jokes, for joke writing. I mean,
and it must've been cathartic for the writers to just to put an end for Julia
to say those things and commit to them the way she did. Yeah.
So everybody find that everybody knows your your wonderful work on Seinfeld and Curb.
Will you be involved with Curb going forward?
If Larry, I always, you know, like sometimes they send me one to read or I drop.
I, you know, before the pandemic, I swung by the office and I think I.
Oh, no, God, that was the previous season. Jesus, no, the new season, no. But the season that just aired, I had managed to go by early on
and kind of like threw something into one of the episodes,
which was really fun.
But unfortunately, the timing is always wrong.
They're always shooting when I'm doing something else.
So yeah, sorry.
That's too bad.
And we want to thank Andrew Buss, our friend who helped put this together.
And we'll plug the podcast because you're going to do a season two.
Yeah, we got the green light for Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of.
So please check it out on all your podcasts, whatever, whatever.
Yes, the podcast is called Stuff Dreams Are Made Of.
Give him a little Sidney Greenstreet since he's such a...
Yes, you are a character, sir. made of. Give him a little Sidney Greenstreet since he's such a Yes.
Yes, you are a character, sir.
I do enjoy
talking to a man who enjoys to talk.
I actually,
you're going to laugh, I do love, I do enjoy
talking to a man who likes to talk, was my
yearbook quote.
I love it. My high school yearbook quote.
I love it.
We've come full circle.
David, you're the perfect guest.
This was, guys, thank you.
Thank you so much.
Honestly.
Before I forget.
But thank you.
I just want to say that.
It was our pleasure.
Dream come true, like I said.
I just remembered a line, another one of my favorite lines in Maltese Falcon, where, like, the cops are there questioning them, and the stories are changing back and forth.
Oh, at his apartment.
Yes.
Uh-huh.
And Laurie puts on his coat and picks up his cane, and they go, where do you think you're going?
And he goes, I'm not going anywhere.
It's getting quite late.
Can Michael McKean do that, Peter Lorre?
I ask you.
David, a thrill and a kick, and, you know, come back often.
Honestly.
Because we could do hours with you.
Anytime.
Honestly.
I would honestly, anytime.
Again, this was a true dream.
And I'm sorry.
I'm going to gush one last time to end.
Gilbert Gottfried, truly, honestly, I have been a fan forever.
So I'm just going to end on that note.
And thank you.
This was really fun.
What do you think and I
really enjoyed doing that
episode I have I'm such
a big fan I love not casting
you in everything I do yeah
I saw Clint Howard
in a movie the other day he was in that movie
Ed TV and all I could think
of was Gilbert signing off with Clint when we
had him on the show. Tell your brother to go
fuck himself for never casting.
We have the most unique
sign-offs in the business.
It has been my
pleasure to never cast you, so
thank you. I am a
huge fan. It is my pleasure to never
cast you. Hey, good news. You're in the majority.
Good news. We just got Curtis Armstrong to play Sergeant McCluskey in the Lesbian Private Eye movie.
Good news.
All right, Gil.
I guess we should sign off.
Yes.
Well, this has been...
I was saying hello.
Yeah.
saying hello.
Yeah.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's
Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host
Frank Santopadre
and our guest
David Mandel
who will never
fucking hire me.
He's young yet.
No, I promise.
That's a promise.
Thank you, David.
We appreciate it.
Thank you. That was wonderful.
Okay, Malcolm. Bye-bye.
© BF-WATCH TV 2021