Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out - Mike Answers Your Questions About Comedy
Episode Date: March 11, 2024This week Mike responds to listener questions. How many of your stories are true? Who is your dream guest? What is your greatest piece of comedy advice? All these and more. ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, it's Mike Birbiglia.
We are experimenting with a brand new format this week
where I just answer questions.
They're submitted to me on my Instagram account,
at Birbigs, and I'm joined today
with two of the producers of Working It Out,
Mabel Lewis
and Gary Simons.
And we're going to answer
some questions
about comedy
and podcasts
and process
and all the things
that I like to be a nerd about.
And it's really fun.
I think you're really going to dig it.
And if you do like it,
let us know.
Email us at
workingitoutpod
at gmail.com
and maybe even with your question for
the future and we'll try to include it on a future episode. I'm out on tour right now on the Please
Stop the Ride tour. We just moments ago added a fourth and final show in Toronto, a fourth and
final show in Washington, D.C. Get the best seats now.
This week, I will be in Jacksonville, Florida,
as well as Orlando, Florida.
We'll see if Jacksonville goes better than it went last time.
Last time I was there was with the Thank God for Jokes show
in, I think, 2015,
and received a very odd user review on Ticketmaster
that I posted on my Instagram about the profanity of the show,
which is not, if you know my comedy, not really a staple of what I do, but this person felt that
way. So I'll be in Jacksonville. I'll be in Orlando. I'll be all over Colorado, Aspen,
Beaver Creek, Fort Collins, and Denver. Then I'll be in Tulsa, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio,
and Denver. Then I'll be in Tulsa, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Austin. I'll be at the Moon Tower Comedy Festival, which I love. I think I was at the first one ever. And it's gotten so
big. And there's so many great comics, including Roy Wood Jr. and Rosebud Baker, like Maddie
Weiner, a whole bunch of comics who've been on this podcast recently. Then I just added a third show at the Chicago Theater,
one of my favorite comedy venues in the world. That's on April 27th in Chicago. I'll be in Los
Angeles, Troy, New York, Rochester, St. Petersburg, Florida, Miami Beach, Florida, Atlanta, Charlotte,
Richmond, DC, like I said, Niagara Falls, at the OLG stage at Fallsview Casino.
Then I'll be in Sag Harbor, which is at the Bay Street Theater,
this gorgeous little theater in the Hamptons in July for four shows.
So all of that's on burbigs.com.
The best way to find out about pre-sales and on-sales and added cities
because I'm about to announce probably about 25 new cities
on the tour for the fall.
I'm having a blast out there.
All of it's on verbigs.com.
And today, I will answer your questions
with my producers,
Mabel Lewis and Gary Simons.
Ooh.
Ooh, working it.
This whole podcast,
and you might listen to it every week or not,
it's produced by myself.
I always say this at the end of the podcast and the credits, by myself,
Gary, who's with me,
Mabel, Peter Salamone,
and Joseph Rubiglia.
It's the five of us.
But then there's sound mixers. There's a ton of people, but the five of us. But then there's sound mixers.
There's a ton of people, but the five of us are the people
who are editing the thing every week,
essentially to make sure, correct me if I'm wrong,
to make sure this show isn't boring.
Yeah.
Well, I think that relates to one of our questions,
maybe to start it off.
We're 123 episodes in as we're recording this.
So GiaMama21
asks, who's your dream guest
to have on the podcast?
You guys probably know, right?
Bo Burnham.
Yeah, I'd love to have Bo.
He's the most requested guest.
Bo Burnham is by far the most requested guest.
And Bo, if you're listening, we'd love to have you.
I'm not sure you've responded
to any of my emails
in the last six or seven years.
But I like you very much
and I love your comedy.
I think David Letterman.
Oh, yeah.
And I think Jerry Seinfeld
for two different reasons.
David Letterman was the person
who gave me my big break,
which is I performed
on The Letterman Show
when I was a wee child,
23, 24-year-old kid.
Yeah, 24-year-old kid.
And it was a change of my life.
Made me a touring headlining comedian.
It was crazy.
And I want to thank him.
And I want to sort of pick his brain about comedy theory
because I think he's a really, really rigorous comedy theoretician.
Jerry Seinfeld, similar reason. I think Jerry Seinfeld is the most rigorous comedy theoretician.
When I was starting out driving around the country in my mom's station wagon that I put 140,000
miles on in my 20s, I listened to over and over again, an interview of Jerry Seinfeld called On Comedy.
On Comedy, Jerry Seinfeld, it was a compact disc that went in my mom's car. And so many things that
he says in that interview are things that I repeat to other people as advice. And I should point out,
like when I'm answering questions or giving advice, it is all just sort of maybe.
Maybe this is true.
Trying my best.
This is what I've experienced.
It might be totally different for you.
I always try to qualify any advice I have with that because nobody knows anything.
And it's also like whatever works.
No, totally.
And I think that connects to one of the advice I hear you give a lot that I love is like,
you always say, nothing is anything until later.
And so it's like, you actually don't know what's going to work.
It might not work in the moment, but it could be the thing.
Yeah, it's interesting.
It's Jack Antonoff, who did the original theme music for the show, and I think is going to come on the show to talk about his new album which is so
so good but I think you know
he and I get sort of caught up in this idea
of like we both started
on the road at the same time like I was
traveling around in this beat up station wagon
he was driving around the country
in a van with his
buddies in this band called Steel Train that's when we
met we met like almost 20 years ago
and we always talk about this thing of like,
there's no substitute for like driving around the country in a van
and like being in a station wagon and playing in front of like bad crowds.
Like crowds of people who don't like you that much.
Trying to win them over.
Yeah.
Figure it out.
That was one of the questions we got,
which was how often do you perform for a group of people that aren't your fans?
Sometimes I'll perform at corporate events.
I did a dental convention recently.
I always say to people,
I won't sell out, but I will lease.
I will rent myself out for a day
if no one's filming it.
I'll do dental conventions Ed Milken Vengeance
or this company or that company
and they'll have me come in
in like their annual event.
And I mean, no one knows me at these things.
If anybody, a fifth of the audience maybe.
And they're definitely not there for comedy.
A lot of times people speak,
they're in from all over the world. People speak 10 different languages and, you know,
they're on their lunch break. It's in the middle of the day. Like they don't,
they don't really come to see comedy. And like, so then you have to sort of win them over.
And I kind of love it. I kind of like relish it. Like there's something about winning over a group of people and, like, kind of, like, the risk of, like, maybe I won't.
Yeah.
That would be hard.
And it's, I mean, I've opened a few of those corporate gigs where it's, like—
Oh, my gosh, yes.
Because, Gary, of course, if anyone's seen me in the last year, you've been opening for me for almost exactly a year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, approaching a year. And it's like doing those ones
were probably the ones where I've gotten the most,
like I've worked out most of that pain of like,
okay, when it doesn't work,
you got to keep going and don't ever say,
I think you told me after one of the shows,
you were like, don't ever say die,
which is like, just like don't call out
what the experience of it is.
And it's like, if it's not going well,
you just keep doing the material,
you keep trying, you keep going.
You don't say, oh, you guys don't get it,
you don't like it.
Never say die.
What's funny, that was actually a thing
that Seth Barish really convinced me of
because early in my career,
if people listen to Dog Years,
which is out of print now,
it's like a self-released album
that I did in the early 2000s.
And I played this for him and he loved it.
And he loved like that.
He loved the delivery, whatever the material.
But he was like, you call out that you're bombing
or that a joke doesn't work so much.
And it makes me think about it too much.
It makes me evaluate everything you're saying joke to joke.
So it's like,
that's a success. That's a failure. That's a success. And before that, I wasn't evaluating it. I was just kind of taking in the experience. So the moment you say like, well, that joke bombed,
it's kind of like this thing where people go, oh, we're supposed to judge it like that? Okay,
from now on, I'll think about it through that lens. Yeah. Mike Karp asks, what's your favorite
joke you've ever written and your
favorite joke someone else has written?
Oh my gosh.
Favorite joke I've ever written.
I'm like looking at the joke cards on the wall
which some people think are set decorations.
Oh, so many questions about those. Oh, really?
They wanted to know if there's like a system
like does yellow mean X?
Yeah.
Does green mean X?
The answer is sometimes and sometimes not.
Yeah.
So right now, not.
But like down the road, it'll be a thing where I go like, well, this group of greens are about love and relationships.
And this group of yellows is about family. And this group,
you know, this is about, you know, medical issues. That's like, I'm just thinking in relation to like
old man in the pool, for example. And then what I do is I'll put it up on the wall and I'll realize
by color coding it, oh man, I'm going to the family stuff a lot. We're in familyville for a long time.
And it actually helps me kind of like unpack the
whole thing in like a different way. And I start to think like, oh, well, how could we get some
more oranges or greens in that space so that the, you know, ideally, like with all these shows,
with these solo shows that I write, you never want people to be bored. It's kind of similar
to the podcast. The whole point of the shows is to
keep people interested and on their toes and not to get ahead of it. So a lot of times like the
color coding is to make sure that it doesn't become monochromatic thematic. And that's why I do it.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So favorite joke you've ever written, favorite joke someone else has written.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So favorite joke you've ever written, favorite joke someone else has written.
I think my favorite, I think my favorite joke of mine isn't because it's still funny to me, but that it was like a big breakthrough in my artistic process, which was when I was like 22
years old, I wrote this joke where I say, um, my girlfriend is a little bit older than I am. So
she's starting to think about having kids, which is sad because we're going to have to break up.
I've decided I'm not going to have kids until I'm sure nothing else good can happen in my life.
And the reason why that's like a very meaningful joke to me is that I said it offstage to a friend, my friend Chris, and his, I think
his wife at the time, or his girlfriend at the time became his wife. And they were laughing
really hard at that. And I was thinking to myself, huh, that's not a joke. It was just a truism about
my life. It was just a thing I felt, but they were laughing as
though it was a joke. And I was like, oh, maybe jokes are things that are somewhat true and
somewhat ridiculous. And so that was why I think that that's really meaningful to me. And then
one of my favorite jokes around that time, I was actually opening for Jake Johansson
over the course of like seven days, one of my favorite comed around that time, I was actually opening for Jake Johansson over the course of like seven days.
One of my favorite comedians of all time.
And he had a joke.
It's, I think, one of the most economic jokes I've ever heard.
And it was, so I fell in love.
Fuck.
So, count it.
So I fell in love.
Fuck.
Yeah.
Six words.
Yeah.
I thought you were going to say the Mitch Hedberg joke about rice.
Rice is great if you are really hungry and you want to eat 2,000 and something.
I love that.
No, I think that's great.
I mean, the joke of Mitch is, and of course I loved that. No, I think that's great. I mean, the joke of Mitch is, and of course, I loved Mitch.
I'm obsessed with Mitch.
I mean, I have to say, like, I have to stop myself from talking about Mitch sometimes
because it becomes weird.
You're just like, enough.
You're kind of like, enough with the Mitch Hedberg stories and whatever.
But my favorite joke of Mitch's is is I was writing a letter to my dad
and I was going to write
I really enjoy being here
but I accidentally wrote rarely
instead of really
and I still wanted to use it
so I wrote I rarely drive steamboats dad
there's a lot of shit you don't know about me
quit trying to act like I'm a steamboat operator.
And then usually he'll go, all right, all right.
I love that joke.
The reason, and Jenny and I have a really deep relationship with that joke
because sometimes we'll say to each other,
quit trying to act like I'm a steamboat operator.
Because it's a joke about being misunderstood.
I think a lot of times in relationships,
you feel like the person's misunderstanding you
and it's someone as close as your dad or your wife
or your girlfriend or your boyfriend or whatever.
And you're like, he's driving me crazy.
Quit acting like I'm another
thing. No, I love that
and I think that brings up
this is like almost the most asked
thing which was sort of the balance
between
truth and embellishment.
Like the thing you were saying, like it's something that's true,
but it's also something that feels ridiculous.
So people were interested,
what's the line between truth and embellishment?
And does it matter?
And if the New Yorker did an investigation of you,
what would they expose?
So when the Hasan Minhaj piece came out,
I got a lot of text messages that said,
I really hope you sleepwalked through that window.
I didn't know that was funny.
And I did.
And there's more to come on that.
I was just in Walla Walla,
so I'm going to talk about that over the next year a bunch.
I uncovered a lot there.
The Hassan thing is tricky.
It's like I completely support Hassan.
I think he's a great person.
I think he's a great comic.
I think that the question that that piece
should make people wonder is why did you write this? Or what are we doing?
Yeah.
Where's the journalistic integrity in taking apart something that was an autobiographical art form like stand-up comedy
where we all kind of know that it is often a confabulation of stories and jokes and ideas
that are not precisely journalistic.
And if they were precisely journalistic, that person might write for The New Yorker
or The New York Times.
And maybe this person from The New Yorker really wanted to be a comedian.
Who knows?
I don't know anything about them.
But it just felt very unfortunate
for the state of journalism for me
to see that that was their preoccupation.
And so in relation to my own,
where's the line for me
I think everyone has their own line
you know it's like
that line is not my line
Austin's line is not my line
I think that there's some people
who exaggerate or confabulate
or conflate
stories and timelines
like he did
I think some people do it like I do
I think some people do it like I do. I think some people do it way more,
you know, I'm not going to call out Cat Williams on my podcast, but
I don't want to get, I don't want to go down that road. I love Cat Williams. I don't want to be in
his next interview. I don't want to be mentioned. But I do think like there are certain comedians
where you just go, oh my God, their stuff's way past what Hassan was doing in relation to what is the truth and what is, you know.
And then there's people who are probably precise to the word in terms of you could fact check them to the word.
So it's like the spectrum of that is all over the place.
You know, with Old Man in the Pool, Sleepwalk With Me,
a lot of times it's condensing time.
You know, it's saying three months later this happened,
two weeks later this happened.
Because there's a certain narrative rhythm
that occurs when there is causality
within events that occur when you're telling a
story. And if you say, six years later, this happened. But then two months after the first
thing I said, this happened. And a day after that, this happened. Oh, okay. Six years later,
you know, and then you're like, people are like, I'm not following.
Because your responsibility as a storyteller is actually to entertain.
That's one of the secrets.
Yeah.
Is people aren't going to see a comedian because it's precisely journalistically what occurred in their lives.
It's the illusion of that.
But I don't, like, I'll give you an example of something I wouldn't make up.
I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
I reversed the type 2 diabetes.
For me, and again, everybody has their own mind.
I wouldn't make that up because there's something about it that feels weird to me.
It's like, well, that's misleading.
If someone has diabetes and they're trying to reverse it,
they're like, well, Mike reversed it.
And then I would feel terrible if they were using me as the model.
Because I could see someone using me as the model for that.
I could see someone being like, well, he did it.
He figured it out.
Then I can do it.
And it's the only reason I'm comfortable telling that story
is actually did reverse, that's an old man in the pool.
Right.
It did reverse my type 2 diabetes.
What's the Birbiglia expose?
What would it be?
I'm trying to think of what it would be.
Can you think of anything?
Well, it may be like the thing that is a sort of a sincere question
to a joke or sincere question to a joke
or sincere answer to a joking question,
but it could be the thing Ira Glass called you out for on this podcast,
which is that like...
Episode 100.
And you've said to me in the past, which is like,
you're most relaxed on stage and everywhere else in your life,
you don't feel that way.
Completely true, yeah.
And Ira pointed that out on episode 100. He goes, you know, you don't feel that way. Completely true, yeah. And Ira pointed that out on episode 100.
He goes, you know, you're so calm on stage
in some ways it's misleading.
And I'm like, it's not intentionally misleading.
It's how I feel on stage.
I feel calm.
The conditions are controlled.
The next question is from Linz Paula Voi.
I think there might be a comic
their question is
the critique for my sets is that
they always seem to be too over rehearsed
slash pre-written
do you have any recommendations
yeah it's a great question
it's like I mean my whole
my whole thing is just like
do it in your own words
you know what I mean
write the joke memorize the joke,
and then kind of forget the joke.
Don't do the lines.
So kind of like say the joke, but don't say the joke.
Say it in your own words.
Say the idea.
Say the feeling behind the joke.
The idea behind it, but don't say the hard,
like these are the nine words that are the joke.
Deirdre Jean asks,
which of your comedian friends is your harshest critic?
Oh, man.
I used to have dreams that David Cross was criticizing my jokes in my dreams.
And I used to have dreams that David Letterman
was criticizing my jokes in my dreams.
And then I think Seinfeld.
I think those are the three people who used to inhabit my dreams.
They really don't anymore.
So you're two dream guests and David Cross.
Yeah.
And I think I told David when he was on the podcast.
But harshest critics.
I mean, I think like usually what I find is, you know, one of my collaborators is Joe Birbiglia,
who has worked with my brother
and worked together
for 20 something years.
I usually can tell,
he's a tough laugh.
I can usually tell
if he laughs at something
that it's going to work.
I agree.
Do you find that too?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I feel like a lot of the jokes that he laughs at initially
are the ones that end up in the show
because for context,
you'll read him jokes to silence all the time.
I really do believe you have to have
different types of friends,
some who are comics, some who are not comics,
who are different types of laughers
and you kind of know what their deal is on the laugh front.
Yeah.
Speaking of guests we've had on the podcast,
Alan Gary asks,
which podcast guests were you most nervous to talk to?
I'm always nervous.
Yeah.
I think that's a funny detail that people might not expect about you.
Yeah, I'm always nervous.
You're always so nervous before the podcast,
but you're not before you go on stage. Am I irritable? I don't snap. You're always so nervous before the podcast, but you're not before you go
on stage. No, you're not. No, no, no. Is this a toxic environment? This is the expose. Do it right
now on camera. No, but I think that's interesting is like, I would say, tell me, tell me if you
think this is wrong. You're more nervous before a podcast interview than you are to go on stage for
a thousand people. Yeah. Yeah. I think I thank her. Why?
There's another person involved and I just don't, again, it's out of my control. I don't know how it's going to go. So you look at like our Please Don't Destroy episode, which I loved.
I don't know what they're going to be like.
I've never met them in person.
I love their comedy.
I don't know what it's going to be like in person.
My memory of your most nervous is maybe Malcolm Gladwell.
I was super nervous for Malcolm Gladwell. I was super nervous for Malcolm Gladwell.
I get more nervous the more the person has created.
So in other words, like for Malcolm Gladwell,
it's like I'm reading all of his books or I'm rereading them
or I'm, you know, I'm always reluctant to have guests
whose body of work is too big
because I don't want to be the person in the conversation who, you know,
they go, well, when I made the glistening orange,
and I'm like, yes, the glistening orange, you know what I mean?
But I don't know what the movie is or whatever, you know what I mean?
Like, I hate that.
Yeah, yeah.
It'sM Miriam asks,
what's the most fucking annoying note
that makes you want to die every time?
Oh yeah, this is from Miriam
who wrote a play that I saw
and I loved at Edinburgh Festival this summer
called Strategic Love Play.
But she says,
what's the most fucking annoying note you receive?
I think like the hardest note But she says, what's the most fucking annoying note you receive?
I think like the hardest note is when people go like, I don't like this character.
Because we're not supposed to necessarily like characters.
And I think it's like, it feels like a trap that we're in right now.
This idea that we're supposed to like characters in movies and plays.
Like if you think about any Shakespearean play,
you're not thinking about the character's likability,
you're thinking about their watchability.
Like, is this interesting to watch? Is it, this character is undergoing challenges
and tribulations and like, is that worth watching?
Is it watchable?
So like, weirdly, like the thing that irks me,
has irked me the most over the years
is when I'll do like a solo show,
like the thing that really sticks in my craw about my my show the new one um was when people would say
you know seems like he's a jerk or whatever it's like well yeah I I'm admitting a fault faults and a confession of a thought. And if we're not interested in what people's
deepest confessional thoughts are, then I don't think we're at shows for the same reason.
And it's a tricky thing because it's like, maybe that's an aesthetic.
Maybe that's just, we have different aesthetics,
me and those people who criticize things for that reason.
I always tell young comics, like, write about what's wrong with you,
not about what's right about you.
Secrets only. This is for you.
Pete Holmes and I talked about how, tell the audience your secrets.
Tell them the thing you're embarrassed about.
Tell the audience your secrets.
Tell them the thing you're embarrassed about.
Tell them the thing that, you know,
when you just lost a family member,
the darkest thought that you have at that moment,
that you'd be embarrassed to tell people.
That's why we go to art, isn't it?
But I don't know.
Maybe I'm wrong.
Whenever I see people say that, I go,
oh, I guess we're in it for different reasons.
You know what I mean?
I guess I'm not here to tell you what you should enjoy about art,
but that's definitely not what I like.
Yeah.
Riley Thomas Bova asks,
who would win in a fight, Novak or Edelman?
Oh, yeah.
Good question.
Great question.
And so common a question.
It's Jacqueline Novak and Alex Edelman,
two comedians who've been guests on the podcast and whose I produced the original production of both of the shows.
Be unlikely, the fight.
One of the most unlikely.
I think it would be a fight of passive aggression.
Yeah.
If you're going to force them, it would be physical.
There's some kind of cage match scenario where Novak and Edelman are in a room together.
The two things you should know, Alex is a better athlete than he lets on.
Sometimes on Instagram,
he'll have videos of himself shooting basketballs
before the show, and it's like,
he's pretty good. He's a pretty good shot.
So he's a little more athletic than you'd
guess. Okay. His brother's an Olympic
athlete.
Novak's probably scrappier
than you'd think.
Well, when she was on the podcast,
she talked about walking on stilts
and how she could walk on stilts.
So it's sort of like...
That's a great example.
There's sort of hidden...
There's hidden talents.
No, no, there's hidden talents.
I think both of those people are just scrappy
and I would not put money on that fight.
Yeah.
Because I think it could go any which way.
All right.
Matt Burke 299 asks,
what lessons have you kept from Georgetown Improv?
I mean, I have to say like,
and you were Georgetown Improv.
Yeah.
And you were UChicago Improv.
I think one of the things the three of us
probably have in common
from just being college improvisers
is you, at least I should say for myself,
I view everything through the lens of like,
yes and.
I try never to say no, but.
It's genuinely a weird thing about you,
which is like you really, like weird as in beautiful,
like you really do care what anybody thinks.
Like you think, you sort of think
that you get to a certain level and it's like,
okay, like my close confidants are Ira Glass and Seth Barish and all those people.
And so those are the people you confer.
You genuinely love to hear all opinions about the work.
It drives people nuts, though.
Sometimes my collaborators go nuts.
Ooh, name names.
Ira.
Okay.
So when we were making Sleepwalk With Me, the movie, we were arguing over the ending.
There were two alternative endings
that we had cut different versions of.
And so then it would be like,
we'd show it to a group of friends
and people would have this take on it.
And I'd be like, oh, that's really interesting.
And then like, you know, another friend of mine,
a film director would come in
and she'd have a different take.
And I'm like, oh, that's really interesting.
A film director would come in and she'd have a different take.
And I'm like, oh, that's really interesting.
And Ira was just like, you're infuriating to work with sometimes because you just listen to everybody.
And you just like, and Ira, of course,
and I'll defend him to the death on this,
he lives and dies on this weekly
This American Life
schedule. They have to make
every decision by Friday at
4 p.m. for that
full one-hour documentary
show, which is as good
as or better than
99% of produced
documentaries that take place over five
years.
You know what I mean? The level of expertise and proficiency that that show has is so extraordinary
that when he sees me kind of like dilly-dallying over,
well, this person said this, I think that's a great point.
I sometimes am insufferable in terms of how much I will kind of like talk through a point
that a lot of times my collaborators think is resolved.
But I think you have a good question that you ask people when they come see your shows,
which is you say, where were you bored?
Because often it's like the thing they'll cheat what they didn't respond to so much,
but it's sort of a safe question to ask.
Oh, yeah, yeah, that's a good one.
There's always trick questions
because your friends will always tell you they like your show.
Or not.
A lot of times they'll either love it, hate it, whatever.
But I think a lot of times what you want to do
in terms of getting feedback from people is trick them
into telling you how they really feel about something
by just saying like,
hey, were you ever confused?
Was there any part that was confusing?
And they go,
and they'll go like,
I didn't understand the swimming thing.
And then they'll go,
wait, why is the swimming thing in the show?
And then you go, oh, okay.
Now I know you really feel about the show
that five minutes ago you were like,
it's great.
That,
that's sort of like the,
were you confused?
Where were you confused?
Where were you bored?
Are,
are two very good like trick questions
for getting like real,
because what you want
is the people's real feelings
about what you're doing.
If you,
you can all day get people to tell you what you're doing is good.
Yeah.
Just friends to say it's good.
That's actually not super helpful.
Yeah.
Like specificity, when were you most in?
When were you least in?
Is like way, way more helpful.
All right.
Brian McComedy asks,
how do you deal with young comics
who are delusional about their
experience level?
Oh.
Yeah. I mean, I always
say that. That's like a line from Sleepwalk
with me, the original show, which is to be a
comedian starting out, you have to be a little bit delusional
because you have to convince yourself it's
going well when it's really not going well
because otherwise you'd never get on stage
again.
You just think,
I guess human beings don't like me.
You have to tell yourself
like, oh, that was pretty good.
The delusion is honestly
it's how much delusion gets you
to do it again because
the repetition of the thing
that makes you any good,
which goes back to the Jack Antonoff thing.
We always obsess over this thing of like,
the thing that young comics or musicians or whoever,
a lot of times their questions have to do with like,
how do I not do the work?
Yeah.
How do I just hack this thing?
To my knowledge and Jack's knowledge, there's no hacks. Yeah. How do I just hack this thing? To my knowledge and Jack's knowledge, there's no hacks.
Yeah.
The people we notice who stick around, they just stick around.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm trying to think of a good example of this.
When I was in high school one summer, my parents weren't around much,
and they moved to a new town.
I didn't have any friends.
And I just decided like, I'm going to like just go down the street to this like public tennis court and just hit serves every morning.
Because that's what I heard Pete Sampras did.
Yeah.
Was there ever a more Mike Birbiglia story?
Yeah.
That I'm going to do this because Pete Sampras did it.
I heard Pete Sampras did it.
And so it was like Pete Sampras apparently,
and I don't even know if this is true,
it might be apocryphal at this point.
It was like Pete Sampras, every morning before he even practices,
he hits 90 serves.
So I was like, well, I'm going to get a bucket of balls and I'm going to go to the public court and hit 90 serves. So I was like, well, I'm going to get a bucket of balls,
and I'm going to go to the public court and hit 90 serves.
Next thing you know, I won a tennis tournament.
I literally won a tennis tournament.
And my parents were away.
My parents were gone.
I was in high school.
And I was at this tournament.
All the super helicopter-y parents were all there rooting on their kids.
And they were so mad because I won the tournament.
And my parents came home.
They're like, how was your weekend?
I'm like, I got a trophy.
From what?
Oh, this story is so my kid.
I don't know.
I won this tennis tournament.
They're like, you did?
I'm like, yeah.
Yeah.
Wow.
But hitting the serves.
You got to hit the serves.
You got to hit the serves and to connect it back to what you were saying before,
like that's the delusion.
Like the delusion is I'm going to do this because Sam Price did it.
But it's like – but that is the thing.
I've worked with you for five years, and that is the thing that still shocks me,
which is you are legitimately delusional.
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
You'll come into the office and you'll be like –
we can cut this out if you don't want to say it,
but you'll come into the office and you'll be like, this is can cut this out if you don't want to say it but you'll come into the office and you'll be like
this is going to be a talk show and there's going to be makeup artists
and we're going to buy
the unit and we're going to
turn it into this thing and I'm like
your mind is just like running wild
and it's like that delusion is real
that's the thing that takes you to the ideas
and it's called manic depression
and it's diagnosed very simply.
You'll be diagnosed within 48 hours if you go in.
Yeah, it is something of an illness.
But I do think you have to hit the serves.
And I think if you hit the serves, you'll be surprised how good your serve is. So this is an experiment. Join the mailing list.
Follow me on Instagram at Burbiggs.
The next time I post a thing asking for questions,
chime in with your questions.
Thanks everybody for their questions
and just supporting the podcast.
Like more, the thing about this podcast
is it started out as a pandemic baby
and then it's become this thing
that I feel like bonds me with all of you listeners
who come out and see the shows and saw the Broadway show
and then saw the Netflix special or saw me in England or Iceland or whatever.
And it's like, thanks for being a part of it.
Yeah.
Thank you guys.
Gary and I have to write our expose now.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
For the New Yorker.
Yeah. What do you guys have so far? I have to write our expose now. Oh, yeah, yeah. For the New Yorker. Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
What do you guys have so far?
I wasn't going to say this on air,
but you don't work out five times a day.
Well, I was thinking... Five days a week.
Five days a week.
Five times a day.
Five times a day.
Five times a day.
Working it out, because it's not done we're working it out because there's no
we don't have to start making jokes