Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - Joe Rogan Experience Review of Ms. Pat
Episode Date: June 22, 2019Podcast 1312 with Ms. Pat Ms. Pat is a fantastic stand-up comedian that has had the craziest life you can imagine. Her stories are hard to believe and told with such honesty that I'm inspired by ...how brave she is. From her last conversation with Joe to this one she continues to amaze me. I really love her and how she's dealt with everything. Was an honor to review Ms. Pat.. Enjoy my review folks! Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Please email me here with any suggestions and questions for future shows..
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Okay guys welcome to another episode of the Jerry review today. It's Miss Pat's
episode 1312. Miss Pat's been on before. She's an hilarious stand-up comic and
not only that a hell of a character has had the most unbelievable start in life in
a really kind of sad way and Joe talks about it on the podcast
and mentions how sometimes he just thinks about what she's been through and I
remember the same thing, listening to her the first time, it's popped into my head
at different times like just some of the stuff that she's gone through, it's just
so extraordinary and crazy and how she's turned it around to be so funny and so chill and
just such a cool person.
It's absolutely fantastic anyway.
Yeah, let's start the review. So very, very funny Miss Pat.
If you guys are not familiar with her stand up, even after listening to Joe's podcast
with her, definitely check it out.
There's some great stuff on YouTube, really worth listening to. She's
just so funny. The way she just controls the crowd, she's just got such a
presence and she's like such a powerful voice that it just comes right through
and she can almost make anything funny. It just so much about her is
designed for a stand-up comedy, honestly,
like a voice spot on for it,
the way she can ramp up her energy,
she just makes the silliest connections between things.
I really enjoy her a lot,
and this podcast was no different.
Joe was cracking up.
It really is one of the funniest jerrys I've listened to
in a very long time.
So kind of recapping some of the things that she'd been through.
The first time she was on, she talked about how she was shot through her tits and a drug
deal and all these different kinds of crazy things.
In this one, she brings up more of the same.
You know that she had two kids by the time she was 16 and had them with a married man who
wasn't taken care of them or her. She was selling drugs very young which was
just pretty awful. Also when she got older, someone she knows left their kids
with Miss Pat. So she's been raising these other kids, which tongue and cheek
calls them her crack babies. She loves them to death. I know it seems like a shocking thing
to say to her, but I don't think she says it to them. She just references them and she
took them on a Disney cruise recently. So she's really doing what she can to make sure
they're her kids and the people around her don't have to have the same
Kind of life that she did and that's so admirable and just so wonderful and you hear it in a voice
I really thought so yeah really comes across as like she's
You know instead of hating the people that wronged her which is you know
Always are immediate reaction. She decided to forgive them and love them in a sense
and then bring that love to everyone else around her. And if that doesn't inspire
you then you're watching the wrong channel because that to me is just amazing
that you can turn that much hate and frustration into into something
good. I mean, she even talks about the rest of her childhood. She would like do some dog
fighting for Candy. She had a little dog and they'd fight and then fight other dogs and
then she get get some candy. I mean, she was she was only a little girl. She didn't
know any better. And a little girl in a tough situation, tough
upbringing, tough neighborhood. I mean, things must have looked really, really confusing.
I mean, very, very difficult. But like, you know, like I said, the sad parts of all these
conversations were broken up with just hilarious comments. I mean, I could I could barely keep up. She was talking so quickly and just so hilarious.
She just control. I mean, Joe didn't really need to do anything. Just sit there and say, you know, you're wonderful and I and it's so
inspiring that you got out of this and and that sort of thing.
Well, she talks a little bit now about living in a white neighborhood now that you know, she has money and
She talks a little bit now about living in a white neighborhood now that she has money and she lives in a more white neighborhood and some of the differences, cultural differences
that she points out are really fascinating.
They're very funny too.
When she gets into having it out with her son's friends about smoking pot and then I guess
some nude photos that would pass around, the way she handles it
just sounds, it's so hilarious.
I mean, it's unbelievable, but the contrast
that I really found fascinating is her mother told her
when she was brought up, the white people are better than her.
So she had been afraid of them.
Like during her childhood, a teen years,
she was afraid afraid of them, like during her childhood, a teen years, she was afraid of, you know, white people and like she would walk past them with her head down.
That's awful to think that any person or group of people would think that they would need to do that to anyone else. That's really sad. It really is.
And it's so nice that obviously she's able, like she doesn't do that now and she's able to pass that message on to her kids and be like look
We're all the fucking same, you know, it's
What did contrasting life her kids get to have over what she had to go through and
Joe even asked her what she would change about her past if she would change anything and she said no, I don't think so
It's what shaped me. It's like a no regret feeling, you know thought process and I love that
It's like yeah, it was all difficult. It was all awful
It all felt horrendous
but you know
This is a lot of times how we grow
Some people you know when they say it doesn't kill you, it makes you stronger.
Sometimes it does kill you though. Sometimes people kill themselves when their life sucks
that bad, but if you can make it through it, you know, and now she just makes this stuff
funny. She turns all these stories into hilarious jokes. And if that's not a great way to
do therapy, I don't know what it is. I mean that that should be a lesson
for a lot of people going through trauma. If you can somehow make a joke out of it, you
know, not to make light of it and not to say that it wasn't awful, but if you personally
could turn it into a funny story, you'll definitely able to work through it for sure.
I've kind of thought of that for myself, for my own standup, because it's
something I do and pursue. And we're always trying to write stories of the
funniest things, like the funniest things we can think of that happened. And
but then maybe that's not the way. Maybe it's more important to pick like the
most traumatic things that are happening, you and find what's funny in them. It's definitely empowering and it would definitely have shock value, so it's got and it's truthful,
so it does hit a lot of the elements of stand-up comedy. Maybe that's something I should think more about.
So thank you, Miss Pat, you've inspired me there. I appreciate it for sure.
She did talk about the some of the people that are wronged her, especially when
she was young, she was molested and some other things. She wanted for the longest time
an apology for it, which makes sense, right? You would. You think that you would. It's
probably still people I think about wanting an apology from, but she wasn't getting it
and she decided, you know what, I'm not gonna just sit there and be a victim of this.
I'm gonna forgive, I'm gonna forgive them so I can like wash my hands of it and that's what she did.
And that's such a powerful message and really nice and probably allowed her to make a lot of ground forward, I would imagine. And even with everything that she went
through aside, she's now able to work on those relationships. Like when she had
her youngest daughter, she was still very young too because I think she was
pregnant at like 12 or 13 or something. So she was still selling drugs at her
kid's school, which is nuts, but
she's like, this is what I do. She didn't know any better. She was just trying to figure
things out. But to now be able to come back and apologize and work with Adolton and build
that relationship, I guess Adolton outlives with her in Atlanta, and near her, and their
strength thing, that relationship. While at the same time she's doing all the stand-up comedy,
you know, and really pushing her career. I think even getting a TV show or is she may already have one,
it's really impressive. She's come so far and it's very, very inspiring. I'm kind of going on
about the inspiration, but it's there.
It's really important.
And not only that, I'm a big fan of her comedy.
I mean, she's just an hilarious fucking person,
but when you hear the rest of this dialogue,
you realize how important she is.
But yeah, check it out.
You know, listen to this podcast.
If you already have, then, then, you know, hit me up.
Let me know what you think.
I always love hearing from you guys and gals and I really appreciate the downloads as
always.
Thanks guys, peace.
you