The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - #1868 Bizarre and Inane
Episode Date: May 22, 2024This week Dr. Drew is Zooming in from his lavish condo in New York City, and Adam gets right into Drew's recent appearance on 'Gutfeld!', alongside Bill Maher, and the comedy club curtain conundrum wi...th Mike August. Plus, Adam explains the in and outs of conceding and succeeding, and will Donald Trump be president forever? Leave us a voicemail: SpeakPipe.com/AdamandDrDrew OR Click the microphone at top of the homepage. Please Support Our Sponsor: CookUnity.com/ADS, or enter code ADS at checkout!
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Recorded live at Corolla One Studios with Adam Corolla
and board certified physician
and addiction medicine specialist, Dr. Drew Pinsky.
You're listening to the Adam and Dr. Drew show.
Yeah, get it on, got to get on the show.
Dr. Drew's more first-size-server, urban life, and he's got himself a big, big hiccup.
He's in New York City, and he's in his lavish unit there.
Lavish.
And what is that?
I was describing your apartment condo
to somebody the other day.
I said, oh, it's real nice.
It's not big.
I mean, it's nice, but it's not big.
And then I said, is it 600 square feet?
Like I was trying to think.
In that zone, it might be as much as 800,
but yeah, it's about six to eight in that zone.
It's all one bedroom.
The kitchen, living room's all the same.
It's all one area.
It's enough.
Yeah, it's enough for you.
Not for some, but for you.
All right, so funny Mike, August conversation on the way in
and then I wanna talk about you and Gutfeld, Bill Maher,
and that was kind of interesting.
I was watching the other night.
Super interesting, right?
Super interesting.
But wait, does our audience know the full Mike August,
all the details around how he thinks?
Well, he says things that are bizarre and inane,
and then you have to, sort of,
it reminds me of many years ago.
Well, okay, it's an impulse.
It's an impulse that people need to stifle,
but we've embraced it as a society.
And we need to probably work on it.
It's a young man's game, this impulse to provide answers that
don't make sense. It's a young man's name, a game, young man's game. It's a
women at any age game and it's occasionally an outlier older guy game
in Mike's particular case.
Does that make sense to you?
Yeah, oh yeah, because it does have a,
well it is essentially saying things
that you're uncertain of that actually are quite inane,
as you said, and then doubling down and tripling down
and insisting on your point of view, right?
Right, so it's a kind of a,
down and insisting on your point of view, right? Right. So it's a kind of a, to, to, all right, to, to put up an example, to give you like
it just a sort of, you know, extreme example. It's like somebody saying, um, Hey, I saw
you at, uh, at the event. We're at the event last night, and then somebody stole some food,
and somebody said it was you who stole the food
at the end of the night.
And then your first thing you say is, I wasn't there.
And then the next thing I say is,
I have a picture of the two of us on my phone from there.
And then you go, all right, well, I didn't steal the food.
And it's like, OK, but why is your first reaction just sort
of no or not or something?
And there's nuance.
It's very nuanced.
I keep track of them here.
There's some really good stuff.
My saying on my t-shirt, don't do your best, do my best
came from when I told Matt Fondelier
million years ago, it was a bunch of boxes in the,
bunch of boxes in the driveway here, the parking lot.
And I said, somebody, you know, I don't know,
Bryan Cranston or somebody was coming in.
And I said, Matt, why don't you clean up those boxes
before so-and-so comes pulling in? Let's make it look nice out there. And he said, Matt, why don't you clean up those boxes before so-and-so comes pulling in?
Let's make it look nice out there.
And he said, yeah, okay.
And then I pulled in and then the boxes were all there.
And then I said, Matt, what about those boxes?
And he said, I did my best.
And I was like, but you didn't do anything.
And he said, I did my best.
I said, okay, well, don't do your best next time then
because evidently that doesn't translate into boxes
being moved.
So just do my best.
And then there's just an interesting,
nuanced version of it with everything.
They just come back with an answer.
Now sometimes,
before you do, I want to-
It's not in their defense.
Sometimes they just blurt something out.
Yeah. Yeah.
So- Well, that's all I want to do a visual,
which is Mike's description of a, he was giving Adam to read.
This is my favorite one because it's so, it's such a great example.
I don't know why you love this one so much.
Because it's so visual and it's so extreme.
He essentially gave Adam a direction as to a building.
Adam is standing there going, which building is this? He goes,
just the cement one cement building, just a cement building.
And he, and I, Adam shows me a picture of that building.
It looked closer to the Disney concert hall.
It was a giant stainless steel building with stainless steel flaps everywhere.
And glass.
And it was just, and it was an architectural sort of, sort of oddity.
It was, you know, it was not a concrete building, not cement.
I'm sure cement was involved in the construction,
but you couldn't see it.
It was so funny to me.
That's what he thought.
And then he stood by it.
He tumbled down a little bit.
To be fair, he didn't, no,
he just stood by the cement pylon he was leaning against
that was holding up the stainless steel building.
But anyway, now here's an interesting one,
because there's two types of answers that are given.
There's the ones I get the most,
which is a leave me alone answer.
And then there's ones-
Which includes you're annoying.
Right, and then there's ones that try to make sense
of something, but they don't make sense.
Right, so I said, so in comedy clubs, frequently,
I'll go a little out of order here,
but comedy clubs will oftentimes, in the middle of the room,
somewhere around the middle of the room, somewhere around the middle of the room,
will have a big black duveteen curtain
that they can kind of roll out
that will cut the comedy club in half.
And the reason they do that is they have a club
that has 400 seats and 120 people showed up.
And they don't want the illusion of a half sold room
or quarter sold room.
And also when you're on stage,
nobody wants to stand on stage
and look at a bunch of empty seats.
So they roll this curtain out and it cuts the club in half
and they move everyone up to the front.
And so you have a club that holds 375 people and there's only 80 people
in the place, but when they roll the curtain out, it feels sort of a little more intimate
and a little less cavernous, you know?
Yeah.
So, we have Brad Williams tomorrow at the Irvine Improv, right? And so a few days ago, Mike says to me, they
got, we got 48 more tickets to sell. So, okay.
And then a few days later,
I find out that we're at 450 sold,
which should be sold out.
And the club says we got another 45 or 50 tickets to sell.
So I say, no, hold on a second. When we're at 400, we had 50 to sell. So I say no, hold on a second. When we're at 400 we had 50 to
sell, now we're 450 we have 50 to sell. So the club doesn't hold 450, it's got to
hold 500, right? So I research it and it holds 490. So I say, Mike, why did you
tell me when we're at 400
we had another 48 to sell?
I can't wait.
No, no.
He says, that's what the club said.
They said we're at 400 and we got another 50 to sell.
Okay, now we're at 450 and the club's saying
we got another 50 to sell.
He goes, yeah, well, I guess they're,
you know, clubs will find another 40 or 50 seats
if things are selling that well.
They don't wanna leave money on the table
and they'll figure out a way to stuff in another.
They'll put some seats out around the perimeter,
something, right?
Something, yeah.
So I go, huh, I'm just wondering out loud.
I go, I wonder where those extra 40 or 50 seats come from.
I mean, we're at 450,
we got another 40 seats to go to get to 490.
That's the capacity of the club.
I wonder where they put some seats out there,
some folding seats, like, they put them on the side.
He goes, no, no, they probably open up that curtain.
They take that curtain and they open it up
and then that frees up the seats behind it.
I said, Mike, they don't have that curtain
for 450 seats sold in a 490 have that curtain for 450 seats
sold in a 490.
That curtain's not in the back.
Right.
Of the, why would you have, why would you design,
look, the place holds 490.
If 450 show up, that's a full house.
When you walk out on stage, you'll see a couple of,
you won't even see the sporadic empty seats in the very back of the place. That's a full house. When you walk out on stage, you'll see a couple of, you won't even see the sporadic empty seats
in the very back of the place.
That's right.
There would be no possible reason
that you would put that duveteen curtain
in the very back of the room.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Yep.
That curtain's gotta either be in the middle
or a little even ahead of the middle.
Because if 300 people show up, you just go fuck it.
300 people show up.
We don't need to put a curtain up.
This a full house.
I mean, there's a crowd.
We're doing, we're fine.
It's at 160, you start to get nervous.
Yeah, like you, you know, look,
you can do shows where 75 people show up
and you don't, who the hell wants those people
in a room that holds 490? You know, that's where the curtain comes in you know but it was
just funny that his take was that curtain what it's a concept we're all
familiar with to place these clubs that curtain is in the vet would have to be
the very back and literally just be eight feet from the back wall of a car where there was 40 extra seats.
Right. But I got to tell you something.
To be fair to Mike, I explained to him that was an insane idea.
And what'd he say?
Yeah, okay. Like, I get it. Like, yeah, then why would they put a curtain? At least he understood it.
And he's learning. He's learning. I think he would have gotten two more rounds with you six months ago.
I don't know.
But I am guilty of that.
I'm guilty of it because your, your go to, because it sounds so familiar to me. I can't think of a particular circumstance where I've done it,
but it feels familiar to me to say something stupid and then go,
Oh, no, no, no.
Here you, you, you, your instinct is to figure out why you
said that, right? As you go to, oh, I must've, oh, it's the
curtain. I must be the curtain in the back. I was thinking I
was, you don't add the, I was thinking of, you just go into
this weird defense mode, which is a good thing for people to
be alert and on the watch for and not to do. Yes. Well, two things.
If somebody semi-accuses you of something,
don't initially just fire back anything at them.
Think about what they said,
and then think about if you were involved in it,
and then think about how you wanna answer them, number one.
Number two, if someone asks you a question about,
well, how or why, you also don't need to fire back.
You need to kind of think,
where did those extra 40 seats come from?
But the curtain is just a fire back.
It's not like Mike thinks it's the curtain.
No, he doesn't care.
He doesn't care, he just says it.
You know what I mean?
He just says it, exactly, so what is that?
And also, in all the travels, in all the rooms,
in all the hundreds and thousands of rooms we've played,
has there ever been a curtain that's been
in the very back of the room,
like six feet from the back of the wall?
No, no.
It literally doesn't exist because
it defeats the purpose of the curtain.
The curtain is to take 500 seats
and trim it down to 200 seats when 80 people show up,
not have 500 seats and trim it down to 460.
And the one I think of is the one
the old Carolines on Broadway,
excuse me, which was a huge curtain.
I mean, it went all across this big room and lopped off a bunch of
dining area and a big, big region of the, of the room.
And it's only, I, that's another thing too, is what is the purpose of this
thing? Like, like, you know, the curtain is big and it's an expense.
Yeah.
You wouldn't put it into it. It'd be like saying,
the airbag went off of my car. What happened? Would you run over an acorn?
Like, no, but that wouldn't be a good use of the airbag.
Do you know what I mean?
Like that wouldn't make sense.
Yeah.
Anyway, you with the Bill Maher in Gutfeld last night
as I watched it, what up?
What was that like?
Now, to be fair, I got a new cable system or something.
The recorder was not set.
I had to sort of stay up until midnight
to catch the second airing of it.
And I just watched like the first 15 minutes of it
and then conked out.
All right, well that's a commitment still.
Yeah. of it and then conked out. All right. Well, that's a commitment still.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
So, Greg asked me to join the panel, the four panel on the Gutfeld show for a big night
when he was in, Bill Maher agreed to come in and it's like, you know, Batman and Spider-Man
meeting there.
You don't know what might happen.
There was a good deal of anxiety about it. it's like, you know, Batman and Spider-Man meeting. You don't know what might happen.
There was a good deal of anxiety about it.
And there was the part you saw, Adam,
there were a couple of really kind of classic moments
because Greg was so nervous,
his monologue and his opening news reviews were sort of long.
And at some point, Bill Maher just jumps in and goes,
when do the other people get to talk?
Which was hysterical.
And, but here's the interesting thing. And I imagine you saw this.
They went at each other around Trump and his acceptance or lack thereof of the results of the 2020 election.
Right. Did you see that whole exchange. Yeah. That was interesting to me. I eventually jumped in on it when they hit a point where it was
clear to me there was going to, it was going to be an impasse.
This was not something that they were going to be able to
resolve or even talk about productively, but it hinged on
and this is what I want to talk to you about. A word, seriously
a word which was that Bill Maher is very focused on
Trump asking a aid to get 10,000 votes or something.
It was some tens of thousands of votes. Yeah. Find the votes.
I think he said, no, but Bill said, get right.
And Greg objected to that and said, wait a minute,
he didn't say get, he said find.
Right.
And this semantic question between whether or not getting
was in order to do so no matter what,
or find was some sort of organized crime speak for,
you better do it or else, however you do it, I don't care because you need to find them.
That's Bill's perspective on it.
And Gregg's was, find means they're there.
Just look them up.
See what you got.
There must be something going on where those haven't been counted or something.
And I don't see how you resolve that.
No, and then a bit, yeah.
And Bill's entire Trump sort of concern, fear, derange, whatever you want to call
it, him builds off of that.
So I don't know what, what to do with that with people that are sort of so
focused on that, nor do I know how to ask Greg to look at it differently either.
Well, here's what I would do. I would first say, who are we comparing him to, or what
are we comparing him to, like, historically? You know, Stacey Abrams lost an election and she
never conceded, and she never says she lost it. She just gets up there and says she was cheated out.
Of course, Hillary Clinton, ironically,
does the exact same thing.
Is there any other
president, nominee,
or anybody in politics
who, if they felt like they were slighted or cheated, which I'm
guessing a lot of them do, I mean I don't know I think Hillary Clinton feels
she was cheated, I don't know how exactly, I know Stacey Abrams feels
they're cheated, I mean the list goes back to the Kennedys and I'm sure long
before the Kennedys. Would it be beyond Hillary Clinton to call this person
and say, look, 11,000 votes and I win this election?
You know, millions and millions of people voted,
but as 11, can you find them?
Or whatever, by the way-
Can you find them is different.
Sorry, find or get.
Like, do you think that is beyond the Clintons?
I guess is the question. No, I do not. But he that sort of came up with Bill and he said essentially
Yeah, she didn't like it. She didn't want to accept it, but she did eventually she conceded
Well, I don't I've not seen a lot of I've not seen a lot of footage of her
Conceding,
but I mean, look, but there's,
so there's a new world order, which is,
and this flows into Chick Think a little bit,
which is, I would say, you know,
you'd say Trump's not gonna leave if he gets,
if he gets, yeah, but he left, you know what I mean?
And it's, and it sort of gets into that thing
where I was talking about, I was backing out of my,
the driveway and a guy, you know,
walked next to my car all those years ago
and he almost hit me at a certain point.
I just said, but I didn't, but I didn't,
you know what I mean?
Like you have to count that for something, you know?
That there was a January 6th with an armed insurrection to take over the government.
It's like, okay, they didn't.
It didn't happen.
They didn't succeed.
And then, and I'm not even sure they were trying.
You know what I mean?
Like at a certain point, there's a kind of a bottom line,
which is he was the president
and then he wasn't the president and then he left.
Well, and the same thing. And then their thing is, but he didn't want to do that or he tried
not to do that. That's like, yes that's how every everything works that way.
But then he did. So then they do this thing where they go, oh but this time
he'll have nothing to lose and I see these people on MSNBC and they're like, Donald Trump, he gets elected the next
time when his term's over and it's time to leave.
He's not going anywhere.
He'll be president forever.
And it's like, okay, he's gonna be 83.
You know what I mean?
When his second term ends, I mean,
maybe he'll be 82 and a half, maybe he'll be 84.
Like, I don't know, maybe he'll be 81 and a half.
He's gonna be in his 80s when his second term ends.
What do you mean, president forever?
Just wait him out.
Like, how would that work?
All right.
Okay, so we have to endure another three years.
Let's just say he won't leave.
Okay.
Yeah.
So now we have, but let's, but eventually, you know, he's in his eighties.
Yeah.
So we're just going to have to endure another, you know, five years of border security and lower taxes,
like cheaper gas, like what are we gonna have to endure?
Right.
Do you know what I mean?
Like it is a kind of an interesting thing where they go,
we're gonna have to keep this guys.
All right, but you know, the economy was pretty good.
And gas was, I'm here in California,
it's six bucks a gallon now.
So it was three bucks a gallon.
There wasn't wars in the Middle East, but all right.
Okay, I'll take a little more.
But yes, he will be in his 80s.
I don't know how he's planning on pulling it off
as an elderly man to not leave after his next term comes up.
I don't think he could pull it off,
but even if he could pull it off,
you saying he's gonna be president forever
is not that accurate.
But it was interesting to me
as it pertains to those sorts of comments,
but one of the things that Bill said
was the difference between Biden and Trump's vitality.
He was like impressed with his energy and vitality
and his quickness and these off teleprompter
He's making jokes at the podium. It's left-leaning podium. What the hell's going on here?
And that was interesting to me in the sense that he it's a concession to how debilitated
Biden is
Another interesting thing came up. I was talking to bill later and we're with someone and he, they were asking me like,
well, they said his doctor gave him a clean bill of health and so did his neurologist.
And I thought, Ooh, I didn't pick up on that.
Why does the president, the president doesn't normally have a neurologist.
Right.
Right.
And so why does he have a neurologist?
Isn't that interesting?
And he is very Parkinsonian.
I mean, that, those, that kind of weird, that kind of unsteady gait
he has and the slow movement away from the podium,
those are called Parkinsonian features.
So I'm suspicious that he might be on some treatment
for that.
And he does seem to have differing,
present differently in different times,
where he seems to be spun up sometimes,
and that could be medication.
So it's interesting. It's all very interesting,
but that vitality that they see sort of,
maybe it was what scares them.
It's going to last for 10 years or something.
All right. Well, I got to hit a spot,
but they look at him as a cartoon character,
not as a human being.
And so Bugs Bunny and Woody Woodpecker never die.
Unless you 70 Sam comes to town.
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All right.
What else are you thinking about, Drew?
Well, it was a really fun experience, I got to say.
It was a good show and it was really cool to see them together.
And the point that they made as the show went on was that they both were very interested in showing that people could disagree and still be friends.
And that the fact that that had become a novelty is disturbing to all of us. Um, and I was also thinking about,
I don't remember if I said it on the show or not.
I think I did.
Um, we're sort of talking about why people are so spun out.
And Kat said something on the show a couple of weeks ago
that actually made my hair stand up on the back of my neck,
where she was talking about, you know,
being upset with some of the excesses and the, you know, the,
the centralization of authority and things. And she said, she goes, you know,
some of us has not have not gotten over COVID yet, not meaning the illness,
what the government did with COVID. And I thought, Oh, she is, that is a,
that is an exact correct frame. It's just,
it's hard to get over what they did.
It's hard.
And it makes you feel defensive and wondering what's next.
And how do you how do you hold them accountable
so it doesn't happen so easily next time?
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I that's that's my exact reaction.
I mean, COVID was really not much
in terms of the big picture of life.
It just wasn't, I don't know,
you had a 99 point something survivability, whatever.
Anytime it's 99 point something,
it's hard to just turn it,
it's hard to call it a plague,
you know what I mean, historically.
I mean, what they did with COVID and the plague
is what they did with January 6th and the insurrection,
you know what I mean?
They just, but that's the government,
that's the government going at it again.
You know what I mean?
Like what the government did with COVID
is not really unlike what the government did
with the insurrection, which is-
And with Trump generally.
Right, right.
But let's just take those two thoughts here.
Yeah.
The insurrection slash riot or whatever, it happened.
Okay, it happened.
But what was the death toll?
And the answer is none. And then what changed
in government? The answer is none. And then COVID, does it exist? Yes, it happened. They
did the same thing with Trump, you know, with inject bleach as they did march, you know,
they wouldn't say march peacefully over to them. They said, you know, go over there and
fight like hell or whatever. They took all the Trump stuff, they twisted it up, they
turned it into something, they had committees on it,
and the committees were gonna cook the,
and doctor the film and produce it
so it looked like something it was.
They did with COVID the exact same thing
they did with January 6th.
It was really, January 6th would be a nothing burger
to most Americans. And COVID, minus being very elderly
and having multiple comorbidities, was really a nothing burger. It was a nothing burger to every
healthy teenage boy in America. Can we agree on that? Yes. It was nothing. It was nothing.
on that. Yes. It was nothing. It was nothing. My son was 14. It was nothing. It was nothing for him. And it turned out to be nothing and it was always nothing. And they would never
say it or admit it. And then they started bending themselves into pretzels about, well,
nothing to him. But then when he gets it, he's living with Nana and Pappy, you know, in the attic of their farmhouse in Italy in 1931.
You know, look, okay, he doesn't know his grandparents, you know, like, but that's what
they did, and that's what they do.
And that's why we can't believe them.
And we also didn't know that there were Shell Walenskis and the Fauci's and the whatever's name is
who's now saying six foot six foot Francis Collins yeah we didn't know
they were all in on it I thought it was the press at the time I didn't realize
the government that's crazy to me I, I was at a restaurant the other night and it had one of those old
stickers that be smart, stay six foot apart. And I was like, be smart,
be smart. Who's smart? Who's the smart one here?
Sticker still on the ground. Everyone just steps over it.
Go into corners of elevators.
Yeah. Yeah. this should be embarrassed
Everyone humiliated humiliated. I know and I I do think I listen what I tell you about Fauci
You started off with that. He's a good guy trying to do some good work
I said it's it's coming and it'll keep coming and it'll keep it every day
Fauci let me tell you about Fauci's trajectory.
It's gonna be the same as P. Diddy's.
It's gonna just keep getting worse.
It's gonna keep getting worse.
Every email, every text, every whatever,
alliance with this guy or meeting with that guy,
it's gonna go the same way.
You think it's gonna get better for him?
He was a deity.
He was a deity in this country.
He literally had religious candles made with him on it.
Where is he now?
I haven't heard anything from him.
You know what I mean?
And by the way, if all this stuff is trumped up,
then come up and say it.
Tell us all about it, Fauci.
All the Wuhan lab stuff, all the New York Times stuff,
it's sickening.
Well, that's the point that Kat made
that made my hair stand up, which is,
you just don't just get over that.
It's like, it sticks with you, man.
I hope I ever get over it someday.
Agreed.
All right, you can go to AdamKrohler.com.
I'm gonna be at Magoobie's Joke House in Maryland.
That's coming up, doing standup May 31st through the 1st.
I'll be at Jimmy's Club before that May 30th in Vegas.
Just go to AdamKrohler.com.
Be with Brad tomorrow night at Irvine.
Now expanded 490 seat theater.
Pull that curtain back.
Pull that curtain back.
Suppose this row,
the seats two rows deep, two rows deep.
You know, maybe in the back, but why?
Yep, they're moving the curtain there, buddy.
What do you got, Drew? All right, they're moving the curtain there, buddy. Uh, what do you got?
I next show.
I want to address hysteria and two words, action park.
And I'll explain how those things all hang together, but go check out my
rebel channel and doctor.com sign up there.
We'll see you then.
Until next time, man, call the doctor saying Mahala
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