Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Mini #238: Tales from "The Carson Podcast" with Mark Malkoff (and Phil Rosenthal)
Episode Date: October 17, 2019This week: The flamboyance of Monti Rock! "The "magic" of Uri Geller! Johnny locks horns with "Saturday Night Live"! Mark (finally) lands Doc Severinsen! And Phil discovers the infamous "Jack Frost" s...ketch! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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PC makes any culinary adventure an on-budget breeze. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, Colossal Obsessions.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and this is Gilbert and Frank's amazing Colossal Obsessions
with Phil Rosenthal and Mark Malkoff.
You like the way he says your name?
It's okay.
Malkoff.
It's okay.
Malkoff.
Yeah.
The Malkoff Vul You like the way he says your name? It's okay. Malkoff. It's okay. Malkoff. Yeah. The Malkoff Vulcan.
The Flying Malkoff is my favorite act on Ed Sullivan.
Yeah, they were really good.
They were great.
They were prolific.
Mark has been, Phil has graciously agreed to stick around for 25 minutes.
I think we have, how much time are you giving us?
I actually can't get up.
And Mark
is here. Mark has done the show before.
He is the host of the wonderful Carson
podcast. Phil has been on that
show. So has Gilbert. Gilbert has been on the show.
I was on the show, and
last time I was on,
he ends the show,
and he's wrapping up his stuff.
He says, oh, I just want you to watch
one thing. And he showed me a clip of Carson's monologue where he mentions me in the monologue.
And his jaw dropped?
Yeah.
I couldn't believe it.
I mean, Gil's like, can I get a copy?
Can we watch it again?
And I was like, of course we can watch it again.
And then I was able to get, yeah, Dara a clip through the Carson people who have been
very, very nice. But yeah, it was one of those
things where I asked
you if you thought Johnny ever mentioned you and you said
you didn't think so or you weren't sure, but you didn't
think so. But the context.
Yeah. And this is why
I hate the Jews.
Oh.
Oh, those Jews
say they've been holding me down for years.
Because you were getting so much press.
You were getting so much press.
Hey-oh!
I'm with you, Johnny.
Yes.
You see what you've wandered into, Mark?
You know, I'm just going to take it all in.
Nothing worse than Jews, Johnny.
Nothing worse.
You know my agent's name?
Goldberg.
Hey-oh!
That's a Jew.
Bombastic Bushkin was a Jew.
Yeah.
You are right, sir.
He still is one.
He still is one.
I'm pretty sure he, yeah.
You know, I've not known Gilbert to be starstruck,
but he was in this particular case.
Bushkin?
No, with the fact that Carson mentioned him.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, for Gilbert to actually...
I think he was like...
The one time he was out of character.
Well, you were out of character a little bit,
but you just...
Yeah, I couldn't believe
that you actually cared about something.
Yeah.
I'm just joking.
I was joking about that.
You've heard about my parenting skills.
Yes, I've heard.
You're going to get better.
There's always room to improve.
Yes.
I heard you interviewing
Phil about his Carson
experiences
you talked about
the one night
I think it's only one night
that Ed was bombed on air
yeah that was true
that was the one time
do you remember this
it was definitely
a running joke
I remember that clip
I saw that clip
it was a running joke
that he was always bombed
which wasn't true
and it was the one time
where Joan Embry
was gonna be
was a scheduled guest
on on that and johnny at one point just says you know you're not fooling anybody um because ed
basically says he's like you know i went to see joan embry um doc did you never saw and he's like
johnny says it's okay it's all right it's all right it's all right ed it's fine and he's like
laughing and we always imitated this in the room.
Ed.
Oh, Raymond Reier's room?
Yeah.
Ed was like, but don't say.
And he just dragged.
That's it.
The end of the line.
That clip.
Don't say.
It showed an evil streak to Johnny Carson in that he was taking advantage.
He let him hang himself.
Yeah.
I wouldn't make the argument that Ed was the one that was interjecting.
Carson was, if you watch, it was trying to introduce Joan Embry,
and Ed kept interrupting him and chiming in on things.
And, yeah, that's when Johnny just kept trying to do his intro.
But, yeah, I guess maybe he enjoyed that a little too much.
I don't know.
Yeah, you could see he was enjoying it.
It was a roast where Johnny is saying hi to everybody on the desk,
and he says, Ed, you big bag of shit.
There's also that ad he does for a feminine hygiene product.
Yes.
Now, let me tell you what happened.
Johnny, do you know about this?
No.
Do you want to set it up?
You can set it up.
Well, you set it up because you know it better than I do.
What Johnny would do is he would get these advertisers and he would make these internal videos on the side of the Tonight Show that would only be for the company.
And, you know, back then it was mostly men.
So, it would go very off color.
Yes.
So, he was talking, was it, what was he talking about when he was
doing the tampon? Was it a tampon?
It was a feminine hygiene spray.
And then he starts riffing and saying stuff
we can't say, well, we probably could say it here.
You can only say it on this show. He said, cunt away.
Oh, great. It was actually
that off, I think. Yeah, something like that.
But no, he would do, there's another
recording of it. There's another one online,
but he would do, yeah, he would do it and these these people would love it there's no youtube they
they knew that no one was ever going to see this um but a couple were leaked but yeah that was like
the one time where carson we are would break yeah i'm amazed phil rosenthal didn't know that story
that's a good story it's floating around now did jonathan, did Jonathan Winters ever confront Johnny Carson on blatantly stealing?
Oh, very good.
We talked about this.
Yeah, we talked about this.
To my knowledge, I think nobody confronted him.
And I think that when we were talking or somebody that if the guess was is that people were too nervous because they didn't want they wanted to keep doing the show.
too nervous because they didn't want,
they wanted to keep doing the show.
I mean, Steve Allen,
with Karnak,
he was doing a bit,
which, you know,
Johnny thought was a,
he said it was an old vaudeville act.
But everyone was too,
like Jonathan Winters loved going on Carson.
Near the end,
he didn't do it that much,
but no one confronted him,
as my knowledge,
like did,
like I mean.
Wasn't Art Fern
sort of a Gleason thing too?
Oh yeah.
And Gleason went on once, but he never, and Reggie Van Gleason, it's, what's that? Was like Reginal of a Gleason thing too oh yeah and Gleason went on once
but he never
and Reggie Van Gleason
it's uh
what's up
was like Reginald Van Gleason
yeah
yes no it was
it went 100%
and Ant Blabby of course
and there was
one of the other
was it one of the
Smothers Brothers
I forget
but he was doing something
I just think that Johnny
was so powerful back then
it was the only game
that no one
no one's gonna risk
um
not getting booked on that
show. Actually to
defend Johnny
I think he loved
those bits and wanted to do
them. So they were homages?
I don't think even homage didn't even enter into it
it's like we're all in show business
and we're all playing
and so he wanted to play too
I know that I'm the guy who's supposed to just ask the questions,
but I want to play too.
And that's why he would go and do, I think that's why.
That was the spirit of it as I took it.
At the same time, I'd be pissed if I was Jonathan Winters
and you're doing my act.
I find it strange that, you know, Carson would do occasional interviews
that to my knowledge, no one ever called him out on it.
Like just asking him
um you know you're doing these characters that have been done before and nobody ever challenged
him on it in the press because he would do he would occasionally do these interviews and uh he
hated didn't like doing interviews but yeah that's isn't that amazing that no nobody would brought it
up to him or no critics that i'm aware of ever. Well, maybe behind closed doors, but I doubt it.
Jonathan Winters is kind of a loose cannon.
Oh, he was the best.
You can imagine him saying something.
Oh, my gosh.
You never know.
Yeah, maybe him, but he was, oh, my gosh, was he funny on par in Carson.
But he told me when I was on the phone with him that, by far, Carson was the best.
Because somebody I was with thought it was par, and he's like, no, Carson 100% was the host.
Yeah.
The best.
You finally got Doc.
You've been doing the show for how long, and you finally got Doc Severinsen.
We've talked to him.
I've talked to him on the phone a bunch of times.
I heard the show.
It wasn't bad.
Well, I was going to say, let me tell you about this.
Let me tell you.
His memory is good.
So I've talked to him on the phone for four years trying to get him to do this, and he
just, for whatever reason, he's like, just email this person and it never happened. So finally, uh, the very wonderful Jeff Sottsing,
who's Johnny's nephew, who should be a guest here. I mean, he was a producer on the tonight.
So he's the one that, that could, that told doc. And then, um, I'm at the gym. Okay. I, I, and I
see that it says doc Severinsen on my cell phone. So I get off that and I'm huffing and puffing.
And he's like, Mark Malkoff.
I'm like, yes, Doc, what's going on?
He's like, I'm ready.
I'm like, yeah, I'm going to come to Tennessee.
We're going to sit down and record.
He's like, no, you don't understand.
We're doing it right now.
And I said, see, Dirk Diggler.
And I said, Doc, I'm at the gym.
He's like, well, every good reporter has a pencil and paper.
And I said, Doc, I'm not a reporter. And what I said is doc, um, I, you know, I'll get on a plane. I'll come see
you. He's like, no, we can't, we can't do that. He, you know, he's doing better now he's tours,
but he was having some, some health issues at the time. And I was like, okay, we'll do it in two
days over the phone, which I didn't. He's like, no, we're doing it right now. And I was like, okay, Doc, we'll do it.
Can I have 20 minutes?
He said, sure.
So I sprint home sweating.
I'm interviewing Doc without a t-shirt,
without just sweating.
And I did a little research a couple of years ago
and I printed it out.
Luckily I had it and I just winged it.
I just winged it.
And he's a really nice man.
I really like him.
I think it was just not meant to be,
but I finally did get Doc Severinsen,
which is not an easy interview.
None of that came across.
It came across quite naturally.
Yeah, I don't usually interview people
just in my shorts, but things happen.
And you listen to this show.
You've been on the show.
I love it.
He does deep dives.
You got Uri Geller.
You got Sir Monty Rock.
Oh, gosh, in Vegas?
He was an interesting character.
He did two hours on a guy
who parked Johnny's car.
I know.
It's fascinating.
Monty Rock.
Did Monty Rock have enough career
to talk for 90 minutes?
Oh, my gosh, absolutely.
I mean, Travolta.
He was in, wasn't it,
was it Saturday Night Fever?
Was that it?
I can't, I remember his hit single.
Disco Tex.
Monty Rock was on, well, he was like practically a regular on Merv Griffin.
Yeah, he lived on Griffin and did Carson appearances, I mean, all the time.
I think he did.
He told me he did X amount of Carson appearances, and I kind of was like, are you sure?
He's like, well, those are reruns as well.
So it was cut down in half but
yeah he did a lot
dozens and dozens of
appearances and you
got Pete Barbeauty I
mean you went in for
the deep dives you
didn't find the
potato chip lady you
know what she does
not alive anymore but
I just found out that
no excuse you know
what I found out
yesterday the polka
lady in the
anniversary clips the
polka lady what's her
name she's still alive so I'm going to try to get to her.
Fascinating.
No, she had the accordion.
I always felt like, I mean, to me, Orie Geller, he just struck me as a showman, like David Copperfield or anybody.
Yeah, it was his act.
Yeah, and it was his act. Yeah, and it was his act. And I felt like Carson just like really just went to fuck him over.
Johnny Carson, if anybody was claiming that they did something,
and Kreskin was telling me this story about how during a commercial break,
Orson Welles said, I'm guest hosting on Monday, and I'm going to do a Kreskin.
And Johnny said, what did you say? He's like, I'm going to do a Kreskin. And this is did you say? He's like I'm going to do a Kreskin
and of course this is what Kreskin
told me and I did the research and it is true
that Monday when
Johnny was off he snuck into the
studio and nobody could tell
Orson Welles to watch him and he had
a stooge in the audience and that's how he did the trick
and Johnny at that point
he's never doing the show again and he never did the show
Johnny was that pure about
Oh yeah, he was like that with
Magic because he was
Carsonian.
Talk to James Randi.
I mean anybody that would claim
in retirement
he'd watch Larry King
with Sylvia Brown
and he psyched
because he was fascinated
because he didn't believe
any of them.
I mean he was just
a curious, curious guy
and like he'd put James Randi
on as the first guest.
I mean the A-lister would go um after
him and he just anytime there was something he didn't think was authentic he would politely
challenge it i would say with what he was with geller he was he was definitely polite like carson
was always polite on his best manners he would actually ban people from the show people that
are surprising if they were not polite i mean that was the most one of the most important things but yeah the geller appearance is hard like who who got banned
okay so a bunch of people got banned i'm only going to mention a few people rex reed did the
show dozens and dozens of times still around yeah i see him on the upper west side um so what
happened with him is doris day was on and i i watched the clip i studied these by the way the
last appearances when they are not allowed back.
And he takes like a minute
and is just conversing with Doris Day
and not acknowledging Carson.
And then the camera shows Johnny
and he's like staring into the camera,
like what's going on.
And a lot of times Johnny looks like he's joking
and he's not upset,
but I studied this stuff and I can tell.
And he was so upset that Rex Ray never did the show again.
Wow.
Bizarre.
I remember hearing a story.
It's like Charlie Callis used to be like on just about every other Carson show.
He did the show a lot.
A lot.
And then one day the producer was talking with Carson and saying,
okay, we're lining up for next week.
I guess we can have Charlie Callis back.
And Carson just goes, no, we've had him enough.
That was very similar to Rich Little,
who did the show 80 sometimes, guest hosted and went on the show.
And it was Rich Little that one day they were just like, he's done.
Our mutual friend, Peter LaSalle, told me that it was just so repetitious.
He would always do the same.
And I like Rich Little.
He's been so nice to me.
He's been here.
Basically, they said that he would do the same impressions every time he was on.
It was basically the same thing.
And I said to Peter, but the audience loved it.
He said, yes, they loved it, but we felt it was repetitious.
And if you will notice,
shortly after Rich Little was not being booked,
Johnny started doing Reagan
because that was Rich Little's thing.
And if you look at the timing,
because I said,
I was talking to Peter,
I was talking to Rich Little.
I said,
studying this to me,
it looks like the timing is this,
that they got rid of you
and then just right away,
Johnny did the Reagan thing.
He did that Who's On First bit where he was Reagan.
I take back the thing I said before about he just wants to play.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fuck you.
No, that's cold.
Yeah.
That ain't.
Yeah.
The other person on that show.
That is.
Yeah.
Whose job was it?
Obviously, Johnny didn't do the throat cutting.
Whose job was it to get on the phone?
Or did they just ghost them?
Did talent coordinators.
There's like Peter Lasalle, who, again, we're friendly with, would tell me it was so hard for him sometimes to go out to restaurants.
Because you had all these, like, Jack Carter, all these people, like, you know, like, why am I not getting booked?
All the older comics and stuff.
Wow.
Yeah, it was definitely hard.
There's never a reason?
Like, they never know the reason?
There's not a reason. They went down know the reason? There's not a reason.
They went down to 60 minutes
and then Buck Henry stopped.
But I will tell you this,
I couldn't believe this,
but it's true
and I did the research as well.
He loved Carl Sagan.
He was one of the guests
where Johnny would take Carl Sagan out to dinner.
They would be on the phone
in the dressing room.
Johnny was into astronomy
and just really curious.
And he stopped doing the show in 1986. And I always wondered why Carl Sagan decided to stop doing the show.
And it wasn't. I looked at the appearance because somebody tipped me off. It was an NBC publicist.
And he corrects in the middle of the interview. And Johnny's all about being polite and manners.
Johnny says something and Carl Sagan interrupts him and corrects him on
something.
And you just see Johnny make kind of like make a small joke at it,
but there's something in his eyes.
There's something in his eyes.
And that was it.
That,
I mean,
he was never on the show again.
I mean,
the audience would not be able to tell.
Welcome to we hate Johnny.
Yeah.
I think,
you know what?
I think that's what,
I think that's why.
Listen,
man,
I think that's why Dave Letterman that's why, I think that's why
Dave Letterman
would always say
everyone was so
nervous over that
because you didn't
want to be
the guy.
They'd hear these stories
about these guys
that would come in
and you just never,
never knew
and if it's one little thing,
you were gone.
He was kind of like,
I guess,
Ed Sullivan
used to have that.
Well,
he had absolute power
and he wielded it.
Yeah. But the politeness was one of his top things.
Is this true about Freddy DeCordova,
that Johnny requested some time at the end of the show
to talk about his son?
Yeah, that was...
You know this story?
Yeah, you can tell it.
I told it last time.
You know it.
What happened is Rick Carson was a photographer and he died.
And oh my gosh,
I mean,
Carson didn't do the show and rightfully so for like a month or so.
And somebody I've,
I've heard when he walked in that first day back before the tonight show,
he just Johnny and just like people couldn't believe how they were.
They questioned whether he could do the show that night.
And he,
he went out and at the very end, yeah, he knew whether he could do the show that night and he he went out
and at the very end yeah he he knew it was built into the show they did a few minutes to set up um
talk about his uh son and passing and um thank people that have written him letters and uh really
emotional and he wanted to show some of his son's artwork for photography and that that did get on
and what happened is and Bill Zamey's
another guy that has studied this too.
You can see this one little look, Carson,
off camera, is where, when he was setting
up the whole, the
photography
over the, yeah, the photography that Fred DeCordova,
I've heard two versions. One, he gives it the
wrap it up sign, or
he gets on the phone with Bobby Quinn,
or Bobby Quinn. Well Quinn I will say this
to Johnny Carson
I will say this
talking about his son
I will say this
they did not edit that show
almost ever
it was done in real time
unless Della Reese
got sick in the middle
of everyone
and collapsed on the floor
when she was guest hosting
they would stop
but almost never
would they stop
but something like that
I mean once he did that
Jeff Sadzik told me
it was one of the rare moments
he actually saw Johnny upset.
I mean, people I talked to with Carson, his assistant I talked to for five years never saw him.
When you say upset, do you mean emotional?
Yes.
Or do you mean angry?
Angry.
Yeah.
And upset.
And just really hurt.
And the thing with Carson, and I think you guys know this, I know this because I've done the research,
is once Johnny felt that you had wronged him or that there was something unfair or you
weren't loyal to him, the relationship was over.
Joan Rivers.
It was over.
We can talk about the Rivers.
The Rivers thing, though, has way more than what the public knows about.
I mean, there's a lot more to it.
Peter LaSalle, she tried to get Johnny's producer, Peter LaSalle, to come with her to Fox.
She tried to steal Johnny's producer Peter LaSalle to come with her to Fox she tried to steal Johnny's producer
and also after
she did her press conference she started saying
all these things about how my ratings were higher than
Johnny's and all these things
Barry Diller told me
he told me that he
told Joan you have to tell
Johnny you have to because she always said Fox
wouldn't let her and
for whatever reason Johnny and it's like,
okay, Johnny's cue card guy. He has a company and he also did the cue cards for Joan Rivers show.
And he went to Johnny and it was like lost in translation. He said, Johnny, I have this
opportunity to do cue cards for Joan Rivers, her late night show on Fox. And Johnny said,
oh, you want to do Joan's show? Go right ahead. And was like, really upset. He's like, no, Johnny, you don't understand. It's my company.
I'm loyal to you. I'm going to stay here. But my company, other people would have an opportunity
to do Joan's show. He's like, oh, they have to. Oh, that's great. No, they should do it.
And it was all about how they went about it. And they sat him down. I have this opportunity to do something and he
was all about that. But again, if he
perceived any disloyalty,
you were done. I mean, I've talked to these
people before and it was
yeah, you weren't coming back.
We will return to Gilbert
Gottfried's amazing colossal
podcast after this.
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Tennessee sounds perfect.
So, Phil, we established that as a kid you would lie in bed.
Yeah.
Make sure your parents didn't know.
You'd turn down the brightness on the TV.
You'd have the little TV in bed.
I could barely see it.
Right.
Under the covers.
Just sneak the car for a show.
A five-inch black and white TV under the covers with me.
Every night.
Some boys had Playboy magazine.
I had this.
See, now, I used to do that with the TV for old monster movies.
There you go.
You'd sneak a little TV into the bed with you and turn down the-
Well, I mean, we had the one TV.
Did you like being scared or they weren't scary?
They were just fun?
They were fun.
Yeah.
And it's like there was the one TV we had that was in the living room, and I would turn
it on.
I was practically pressing my nose against the screen to hear it.
Because you don't want them to hear.
Yeah.
And I would watch.
Oh, one time I remember I was watching The Invisible Man with Claude Rains.
And you're going, I can't see it.
man with Claude Rains
and you're
going,
I can't
see it.
And at
first,
my mother
came out
in the
middle of
the night
and she
was telling
me to go
to sleep
and I
didn't want
to.
I wanted
to watch
The Invisible
Man.
And I
remember she
made me
a plate
of crackers
and butter
and a
glass of
milk.
Wow.
You eventually got caught by your parents sneaking cars and a glass of milk. Wow. High-leavened choice. Yeah. Wow.
You eventually got caught by your parents sneaking Carson shows.
I did.
Yeah.
They beat me severely.
Now, why don't you tell us those stories?
One beating was so bad.
Who were the must guests?
I mean, did you just watch every night regardless? Or was it like Rickles or Steve Martin?
I think there was a gold tier and the king was Rickles.
And then Burt Reynolds.
Rodney.
Rodney, Buddy Hackett.
You know, the ones you knew it was going to turn into a party.
You did what I did, which was go through the TV list and you're like, who's going to be on?
That's right.
But Burt Reynolds, you were never disappointed.
I remember.
Never, ever.
Yeah, that's true.
With Rodney, it was like he was doing a TV special every time.
I heard, correct me if I'm wrong, that he was really annoyed when Bob Hope dropped by.
Yeah.
Oh, that's right.
I don't think he had a lot of love for Hope.
He was definitely still still it's Bob Hope
but you know Carson could have easily said
we're not booking him anymore but he said
it's Bob Hope we have to do it
it was also the company
it was NBC
he was there I'm taping across the hall
and he was there to promote
the special that was going to be on the next night
he's also a stockholder
by the last appearance though I mean he was having trouble hearing the special that was going to be on the next night. He's also a stockholder. By the last appearance, though, I mean, he was having trouble hearing Johnny,
and it was just hard with the communication.
And there's a bunch of reasons why Carson retired,
and one of them is because he didn't want to be, you know,
he thought Jack Benny, and especially Bob Hope, stuck around too long.
But there's the other reasons.
When it went to 12.35, 11.35, rather he was furious,
and he felt that slighted.
Those five minutes.
Those five minutes.
And then the other, another key thing was Robert Smigel's Saturday Night Live sketches
where they show Johnny as out of touch.
Oh, the car song?
Yeah, I mean, the car song.
We were just doing it.
He actually liked that.
Oh, yes.
With Phil Hartman going, yes, car song.
You know it, right?
Dana Carvey?
Yeah, he actually liked the Carcinio one.
He liked the Carcinio one,
but there was one in particular,
because of music rights,
it's not online,
but I remember watching it.
Who was doing Carson?
Dana Carvey.
Dana Carvey.
And Phil Hartman.
So the moment he saw
that he was being made fun of
by the younger generation,
he was like,
I'm out of here.
Yeah, Leno was telling Carvey
that, yeah,
he was walking through the hall once,
and Johnny was like,
if they're going to make fun of me,
I'm going to leave.
And the sketches, and I like
Robert Smigel, and I think he's probably the greatest
sketch writer ever. He's brilliant.
But, you know, it was one of those things where
Lorne Michaels would get calls,
he basically gave his
writers free reign, and
Rick Ludwin would
try to talk him out of it but uh
if be diplomatic but um rick ludwin would have to go down to the basement and tell johnny you
know that they might be doing a sketch they're gonna at least do a dress with one of your
sketches and he said you know i don't find them funny but go ahead you know we make fun of people
but i don't find them funny wow but the carcin Carcinio one was fine, but the other one was
Arsenio Hall, Chris Rock is already
Arsenio Hall saying,
there was something, oh, Johnny's looking at the card and he says,
it says here that your ratings are higher
than us and you're very well
close to taking over our show.
And it was that thing right there
wasn't true, and that's
what infuriated Carson. Wasn't he
sore at SNL from the get go
because the best of Carson
got bumped from Saturday nights
and he was
he was probably
making money on those
Carson didn't want
to give up
remember the reruns
on Saturdays
before SNL
yeah
Carson's whole thing
was so wrong
Carson thought
that the show
there was actually
too much
it was too much
so the only reason
SNL was there
is because of carson and dick
ebersole and lauren michaels had to fly 27 year old dick ebersole 29 lauren they get in carson's uh
uh office and and carson just wanted to make sure that the host wasn't going to be doing a political
monologue that they were gonna like gonna have the same type of music and once carson found out
that they were not going to do like they were going to have rock and roll and stuff
which is Carson and Fred DeCordova did not their thing
that Johnny gave the blessing
and then once New York Magazine came out
with Chevy Chase and it's not Chevy's fault
where it said
this is going to be our success
we're talking about him being Johnny's successor
Johnny did not like that
he said he watched
nobody wants to be replaced.
Yeah, I mean, the press, you know, he would read the press.
He would read Tom Shale's reviews.
He would read the books that were not nice to him.
And I don't understand why somebody would do that.
But yeah, he's an interesting guy.
He's definitely not what Joan Rivers or Bushkin.
He's definitely a complicated man on different levels.
Just from talking to hundreds
of people that knew him. He was in retirement.
Everyone thought he was J.D. Salinger.
He was out with you having lunch.
He was with the writers having lunch.
He was with Dave Thomas having lunch.
He kept in touch
with a bunch of staff members from New York.
He would get together and email with them.
But you had the lunch with him.
He was completely gracious and great.
And I couldn't believe that I was getting to meet him.
I walk into the office and it's wall-to-wall magazine covers.
One magazine.
Him on the cover.
TV guide.
Wall-to-wall.
Floor-to-ceiling. His power. TV guide. Wall to wall. Floor to ceiling.
His power.
TV guide.
Unbelievable.
I asked his assistant, who was his favorite guest?
You know the answer?
I do, and I talked to her, and it was actually, I think, Jeff Satzig's assistant.
Because she said that never happened.
So I don't know if it was Johnny's assistant.
Who was his favorite guest?
I couldn't believe it at the time.
Yeah.
Randy Travis Travis How bizarre
I asked her about that
she said no
it must have been
there were a couple of assistants
There were so many guests
that got him excited
like Steve Martin
Well of course
I would have thought like Pete Fountain
Buddy Rich
He loved that music
he thought it was great
he loved having
I don't
I said come on
to her
she said my hand to God Maybe she den having... I don't... I couldn't... I said, come on, to her. She said, my hand to God.
That is his hand.
Yeah, maybe she denies it.
I don't know.
But, yeah, you wouldn't think with Randy Travis.
But, yeah, he was...
I know he loves Steve Martin.
He did.
And they were still keeping up the poker game
up until Johnny Gatsby.
Well, he buried that with Chevy.
Chevy was in that poker game.
Oh, yeah, they were totally fine.
I mean, they actually spent time together.
They were fine.
It was just...
As you noticed,
nobody in the original cast of SNL went
on when they were on SNL
other than, I think, Chevy, but he wouldn't
have Gil Radner. He did not like the show.
They made fun of him in the 70s, and that's
why. And then Dana Carvey
got banned from the show because of the Smigel
sketches that he participated in that he didn't
write. And yeah, no
one from SNL was allowed, except I think
Dennis Miller was allowed one time after that,
but everyone else from SNL was not welcomed.
But you know what? You can't
be the old guy who
just doesn't like the noise the kids are making.
Yeah.
It's an every business. It's inevitable.
By the way, there's things that
certain younger people do in comedy
that isn't my thing also.
Right, of course.
But that's how God made it.
Yeah.
And we're supposed to, you know, be replaced.
He had a thin skin.
He's a chaplain at the same problem.
Of course.
It always got me when you'd see, like, Bob Hope and Lucille Ball on a special,
and they'd be doing a sketch where they dressed up as hippies.
Right.
Making fun of the kids.
In beetle wigs.
Yeah.
Oh, my gosh.
They're so out of it.
One of your listeners told me to watch the Bob Hope special,
the one from 1976.
Was it called Joy?
Joy's.
We're going to send it to Phil.
And I watched it.
You have to see that.
It's scary.
I watched it.
It's scary.
It's a whodunit where he basically just got everybody, I mean, Jamie Farr and Jerry Colonna,
everybody who was alive and threw them into this thing.
And there's a murder that happens at Bob Hope's mansion.
And they have to find the killer.
Can't laugh.
And it starts off with the funniest joke is the title.
It starts off with the funniest joke is the title because at the time, the biggest movie in the country was Jaws.
It's Jaws. So this is comedians.
It's Jaws.
J-O-Y-S.
That's horrible.
Yeah.
And of course, to give it the little Jaws water motif, the dead body is found in a swimming pool.
Whose show was this?
It's a Bob Hope special.
It is so clumsy.
It's god-awful.
You must see it.
It's the clumsiest thing.
And you've seen Jack Frost.
You've seen where he's propped up.
He's doing the Christmas special.
I'm telling you, when you get out of here, I'm telling you, when you go look up Bob Hope Jack Frost, he's singing.
He's dressed up as Jack Frost with a little pointed beard and an elf.
Yeah, and an elf outfit.
How old is he?
He's got to be 86.
And Dolores is doing the heavy lifting.
She's singing.
You've seen this?
No.
Oh, you've got to see it.
It's on YouTube.
You have to.
Okay.
And it's like, it looks like Dolores' revenge for all the times that Bob Hope fucked around on her.
Oh, my God.
Because Bob Hope looks like a corpse.
Yes.
You'd swear they dug him out of the ground and nailed him against the floor.
But he had three shows left in the deal.
Right, three shows left in the deal.
Listen, Bob Hope was going to his airport,
the airport,
just for people to recognize him.
And he just needed it.
He needed the public.
He just needed people in retirement.
And it's in the song.
It's going to be me.
It's going to be me. No. It won't happen.
It won't happen.
It happens to everybody.
It won't happen.
She's singing.
Yeah.
Doing all the singing.
And every now and then there'd be a cut.
He's so nice.
Yeah.
And Hope would go, that's right.
Oh, no.
They're jump cutting him around the side because he can't move.
Wow.
So he's magical.
So he has to go from spot to spot.
But they're just doing it optically.
They're just doing it with jump cuts.
I think that's how they edit the voice, by the way.
So you told Johnny, you tried to get him interested in doing a big highfalutin roast for charity?
I thought this was a great idea.
Johnny's been off the air for eight years, and what if there was an
HBO, maybe even live, roast
of Johnny? Think of the comedians who
wouldn't do it. You can't. Everyone would do it.
And you could raise a billion dollars for charity.
It would be the greatest charitable event in history
and probably the highest rated anything in television history.
He goes, I'm not coming back.
He goes, you got to know when to get the fuck off the stage.
That's what he said to you.
He would get offers.
He would get offers and he would listen to them.
And he almost did his club act.
David Steinberg was doing a small act.
It was not advertised, and Carson was really considering in 94 doing one.
But he just got cold feet, and he's like, no, I'm done.
Who was it that was?
But he would come on Letterman once or twice still.
Once he didn't speak.
Right?
He had a line, but the audience was so, the applause, he didn't get his line out.
But no, you're right.
He would call in sometimes and do bits.
Call in and also write for Dave.
Yeah, Dave was using his jokes.
He was using his monologue jokes.
He loved just writing and sending them in.
And once in a while, Dave would do them.
And when Johnny passed away, Dave did a monologue.
And at the end of the monologue, he goes,
I want you to know that every joke
I just told was
Johnny's. That's great I remember that.
Yeah. I remember when Jack Benny died
and Johnny got very emotional
in 74. Yeah they said
around the office he was emotional and around the
office they said it was just a horrible
day. I remember.
Because he was
if I'm wrong he was the sweetest greatest be expected. Love Benny. If I'm wrong, he was the sweetest, greatest guy.
Everybody loved Benny.
That's what I heard, yeah.
That's one celebrity we've never heard anything bad about.
No bad story.
What about George Burns?
Not really.
I've never heard anything bad about him.
A little bit of philandering, I think, but that's the worst of it.
How did you guys part company? I remember hearing a story that when Gracie died,
Burns was at the funeral and the reading of the will and everything,
and Burns went to Hillcrest afterwards,
and Georgie Jessel's there, and he says,
you know, Gracie didn't leave me
anything in the will.
And Jessel says, well, that's because you fucked everybody in town and Gracie North.
Oh.
Wow.
That's the only thing we heard about.
Yeah, I did not know that.
Yeah.
But he wasn't in Hope's class.
I did not know that.
He wasn't in Hope's class. Alleged. As far as an adulterer. I did not know that. He wasn't in Hope's class.
Alleged.
As far as an adulterer.
I've never heard that.
I don't think it's true.
So you brought Ray to the lunch?
Ray was at the lunch?
And when you guys said goodbye to Johnny,
obviously you're sky high in some way.
You're meeting a hero.
He grabbed my dick.
Did he?
Well, I noticed Shecky was very kind to you too on the show.
He was not so kind to us when we had Shecky.
He, I was doing a thing at the Friars Club.
And I remember because Joy Behar was there.
She was just in the audience.
And I went on.
And I did very well.
And I was getting laughs and then
after me was supposed to be
Shecky Green
and instead Joy Behar they
introduced and I thought that's
weird how come they
bumped him
and it turns out that I didn't see
all this they were telling me that
he flew into a rage
at my act saying I was in the Navy.
I never heard language like that.
Awesome.
And they said –
That's, again, the old person resenting, not appreciating or liking the young.
Must be.
This made huge news.
I read about it in the newspaper.
I mean, it was a huge deal.
He took a swing at Freddie Roman.
Yes.
Yeah, it was a huge deal.
I remember.
On his way out the door, reading about
Hickey. It was great, because it was
like that
Broadway Danny Rose type thing, because
I remember, you know,
Freddie Roman was there, all
upset, and
oh, what's
his name? By the way, at the Friars Club, they never heard
this language? At the Friars. What the hell?
Mickey Freeman? No, no.
Yeah, I'm surprised I thought that.
No.
Stewie Stone.
Stewie Stone.
By the way, it's the dirtiest place on earth.
They never heard this language?
Stewie Stone said to me,
Oh, that Jackie, he's a fucking idiot.
But he was very nice.
Mark charmed him.
He gave me dinner.
I sat down with him and his wife.
Unexpected.
I said, do you want to sit down?
And they fed me.
And we were in his living room, and he was all out performing.
I mean, he was really nice to me, but he told me he hates your guts.
Yeah.
Oh.
He did not.
No.
The Buddy Hackett story.
He doesn't hate you.
People should go to listen to your episode with Shecky Green just to hear about Buddy Hackett jumping on his back and pulling a gun on him.
Shecky Green was incredible.
Freddie said that Buddy pulled a gun on him in the elevator.
There you go.
Who did?
I heard you doing one of my jokes and he pulled out a gun.
Yeah.
Pack and heat, Buddy.
Shecky's okay with you.
He really is. Well, you know, Sheck, I think what I thought and what most people confirmed is I think what he really was going through, he has like a crippling stage fright.
Yeah.
You talked about that.
So he used you as an excuse to get the hell out of there?
Yeah, yeah.
I think he got scared.
We got to wrap.
Well, wait.
He's got to plug his throat.
I want to mention on SiriusXM, they're going to be doing a Johnny Carson channel starting October 1st for the month of October.
And they're going to be using some of my audio clips from the Carson podcast.
And then on some of the comedy channels throughout October, I'm going to be hosting a special, Johnny, with some clips.
Wonderful.
We'll plug it on Facebook, too.
And the new podcast is great, Persistence 360.
I've been listening to it.
We talked about it outside.
Sum it up.
What's the elevator pitch?
Oh yeah.
I just talked to people that went through brick walls,
like Phil Rosenthal.
It was just one roadblock after another and they kept going and,
uh,
all to get on this podcast.
No shit.
Yeah.
So I talked to a bunch of like,
we were talking about like Don, Don Roy King, who
directs Saturday Night Live, who just won an Emmy again.
We have Michael Emerson, some show, we have a bunch of...
Very inspiring.
Yeah.
Yeah, Don Roy King found his dream job in his 50s.
Yeah, so we talked to a lot of people in different fields of entertainment.
We definitely get the entertainment and, yeah, persistence.
I'm very impressed by your passion, my friend.
Oh, thanks.
And the way that you reach out.
Very few people as great as Mark Malcolm.
He's just great.
He loves what he does, and it comes in a nice cross.
He's a sweet, nice boy.
He is.
We should all be nice boys like Mark Malcolm.
Well, I can't.
Get going.
Come on.
I can't top that.
Gilbert is just looking.
Instead of filthy animals like Gilbert.
Gilbert's laughing at me.
Feral dogs.
You want to sign off, Gilbert?
I'm Gilbert Gottfried.
This is Sp- and I'm here with...
A Jew, yes!
Yes!
I never liked those people.
We're here with anti-Semitic Jackie Gleason.
Yes!
We're here with anti-Semitic Jackie Gleason.
If I owned a hotel, I wouldn't let them stay there.
No, that smells like a Jew.
Who's been here?
Okay. I can't even talk.
Okay, this has been Gilbert and Frank's amazing colossal obsessions.
Yes.
And we've had Phil Rosenthal.
I've heard of him.
Watch me get the name wrong again.
Mark Malkoff?
Lovely.
Gilbert, you did it.
Oh, my God.
I have to say, you won't remember me tomorrow on the street when we see you.
Who is here?
Mark Milkshake?
Yeah.
Or Phil or me.
Thank you, boys.
Now, as you know, the San Diego Zoo is one of the finest zoos in the world.
And we've had this young lady on the show very often the past, I guess, seven or eight years.
She's been appearing with us. About nine years.
Hmm?
About nine years.
Right, yeah.
Several plus several would be about nine.
You said seven or eight.
No, I didn't say seven or eight. I said several. Then you said seven or eight. And I said it's nine. Nine about nine. You said seven or eight. No, I didn't say seven or eight.
I said several.
Then you said seven or eight,
and I said it's nine.
Nine, nine, good, thank you.
Some of the animals...
Some of the animals you had as babies
are now ten years old.
That would be about right.
Remember the animals that did something funny on your tie?
Yes
Those little lions, the little baby lions were one year old
That's right
They are now treacherous and ferocious ten-year-old animals
Okay
Anyway, Joan Embry is here tonight
And she's now 32
That's right.
Joan is an animal handler and a trainer.
And you really think you're fooling everybody, don't you? No, no, no, no.
I'm just here to do my best to help you.
I know that.
And she does her three horse shows a day.
Did you know that?
At the animal park.
Boy.
What? What the animal park. Boy. What?
What an exciting idea.
Would you like an army
cot or something? Maybe just a
kind of catch up on a little
nappy poo? Just might snap you right out of it.
I love Joan. I'm the only one who went
down to see Joan. Doc has never seen
her. You've never seen her. I went
to the wild animal farm. It's all right.
It's okay.
But you're upsetting me. No, no.
I don't want to upset you. I went down. Jonah and I
I know you did. That's all right.
Don't say
No. What?
I know her. I went down there.
I know you did.
I know you went down there.
I held a baby gorilla. I couldn't go with went down there. I held a baby gorilla.
I couldn't go with you that week.
You held a baby gorilla.
Good, all right.
And let's get her out here quickly.
With you, welcome, Joanie.
Give her that frat colossal obsessions Give me that fract, colossal obsessions
Give me that fract, colossal obsessions