The Adam and Dr. Drew Show - "Diamond" Dallas Page, Judd Apatow and Jo Koy (The Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics)
Episode Date: December 2, 2023On this episode, "Diamond" Dallas Page stops by to talk about his career, yoga and the meaning of life...Judd Apatow makes a guest appearance and the hilarious Jo Koy joins the fellas and has jokes fo...r days!
Transcript
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Welcome to another episode of the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics.
I am your host, Big Brother Jake, a.k.a. Jake Warner.
My government name.
Let's get it cracking.
Up first, episode 548 that aired on March 30th, 2017.
Legendary wrestler Diamond Dallas Page stopped by to talk about his career, yoga, and the meaning of life.
I could be lying, but find out for yourself.
Diamond Dallas Page in studio.
Good to see you, my brother.
Great to see you guys.
Look how high he made my mic.
Well, we knew you were tall, drink water.
DDP Yoga.
This stuff is amazing.
And the app is available on iTunes.
And it's just a great story.
I don't know if you saw the doc, the resurrection of Jake the Snake Drew, but it is, boy, talk about a transformation.
So Diamond Dallas Page was beat up by many, many years of wrestling, and so are many other guys by many, many years of wrestling.
And it's probably the most unnatural thing you can do to your body.
I mean, honestly.
When you fall for the first time, like, you got to fall flat, right?
The first thing you want to do is bring your arm back.
Like, that's what everybody does.
You start falling off your chair, you bring your arm back.
When you bring your arm back, you're going to whack your elbow or throw your shoulder out.
So they make you, like, do, like, the craziest thing.
Like, the guy's on all fours, and you bring your hands on his back, and you get your feet up in the air, and then you just fall.
Right.
I went to wrestling camp once with Jimmy, and I remember doing a whole bunch of unnatural stuff.
Jimmy, if you see that bit,
he got thrown at the end
and he got jacked up.
He did not get up quickly.
No, I felt bad for laughing.
It made for good television.
But yeah, it is one of these things
where it is
unnatural and
people look at it as
this sort of violent ballet or something.
But these guys are taking a beating.
That's it.
I mean, what's natural about ballet, though?
Walking around on your tiptoes, man.
But it's an art, you know.
And really what we do is an art because we're trying to get you and just get that element of disbelief.
Like those two, like me and Randy Savage.
Oh, yeah, the macho man.
You know that guy.
Snap into a Slim Jim.
Like he was amazing.
And he was a god for years.
When me and him wrestled together, we were the Feuded Year in 1997.
And I'd have people come up to me all the time and go, you know, I know it's wrestling.
A lot of that stuff's fake out there.
But you and Savage, you hate each other. I loved him. Yeah, but I hate him's wrestling. A lot of that stuff's fake out there. But you and Savage, you hate each other.
I loved him.
Yeah, but I hate him on TV.
It's like the Andy Kaufman thing.
Right.
We want to talk about a group, though, Drew.
I mean, you hear about NFL interior linemen and you hear about the abuse of painkillers and the life after the NFL and so on and so forth. But I don't know anyone who has a worse batting average in professional wrestlers in terms of drug abuse, joint stress.
You know, I mean, these guys, I more than it's funny because you think, well, football, now there's a sport or whatever.
But you take football, you take baseball, you take basketball, you take bull riding, you
take boxing, you take MMA,
you take any sport, and you
show me the average guy 10 years after
he got out of the sport, I don't think
there's any guys worse off physically
than wrestlers. Well, first of all,
we have no season. I remember being
when Whoopi had
these Hollywood squares. So
I was out for one of those.
And someone's like, hey, DDP, when's your season?
When's your off time?
When I'm injured.
And when you're injured, you got to take pain pills and go out.
And like, see, today, the WWE's wellness, and I'm not blowing smoke.
I'm shooting here.
They have the best wellness program of anybody because you can't even take a pain pill unless
it's like it goes right through them.
But back in our day, that's how we did that.
And Jake in the movie, you know, he's addicted to everything.
One night we're out.
I became like Jake's gopher.
Like I would do it whenever Jake because I wanted to learn from the master.
And one night we're out after working and he throws a Percocet in his
mouth and he chews it up. And I think it's a Percocet, but I'm not positive because they
taste horrible. Right? So I said, Jake, was that a Percocet? He goes, yeah. I go, why would you
chew that? Those taste like shit. He said, it goes right into your system. I've seen you take
a few. How many are you taking today? I don't know, nine, 10, like not
even thinking about it. Like that might've been 15 or 20. Right. And I said, why are you taking
so many? He said, they lose their potency after a while. So remember I'm 36 years old at the time.
I've just started. Like I started at 35 and a half. I'm thinking I need those things to work.
And the reason why they don't work
as well because you mix them with the booze they don't work as well because you get you get tolerant
to them over time and you just have to escalate the dose until you stop breathing and then you
die that's it so we have a lot of guys diamond alice page basically um you know how do you keep
the weight off well then so then it becomes this horrible negative cycle, which is your joints are killing you, so you can't move.
So you put weight on, and now it's more stress on your joints.
So how do you keep the weight off?
How do you exercise?
How do you get mobility back when you don't have mobility and so ddp yoga came about which uh i just think sort of ingenious because that was
the only way guys like you and a lot of these other guys who are essentially bad you couldn't
hit the treadmill but you know for me it was all out of necessity because i'm that guy who wouldn't
be caught dead doing yoga the first 42 years of my career in my life period but when you start
wrestling so late i i'm the first guy to ice my body no one in professional
wrestling iced their body for years and they're watching me do it put the ice on my knee wrap it
up put it on my back what are you doing um taking down the inflammation right and they laughed at me
i mean they had a lot of fun with me on that today trainers they got it all but back then when i got to 40 and my career took off in 1996
i was on 270 nights a year hitting the mat and it would be the equivalent of the main event mat that
i was wrestling in five six car accidents in a match and my body is taking a serious beating but
the adrenaline of that 22,000 people
and just you're living the dream at a whole different level,
and it got to a point where now I'm like top guy in the world,
and I blow my back out.
I just signed a multimillion-dollar three-year deal.
I don't get paid if I don't wrestle.
So three different spine specialists told me my career is over.
Now, this is where ddp yoga comes
from and depression you know the whole deal but i pull myself out of that because i don't stay
depressed i get depressed but i don't stay there i find that way to attitude of gratitude to get
myself out of that hole okay what are we going to do and i was married at the time and she was like
you really need to try you. It could help you.
She knows how I feel about it. So reluctantly, I went down and she showed me a cup. No, I'm not
doing that one. Nope, not doing that one. And I find the power yoga. Okay, I'll try that.
I can't do anything. I can't do the moves. I'm so inflexible at the moment. And I keep doing it
though. And I figure out the modifications.
And in less than three weeks, I start to feel a significant difference. Now I'm doing the rehab
too. And I've had both shoulder surgeries, both knee surgeries. So I know a little bit about rehab
and breaking up scar tissue. So I mix the rehab with the yoga positions. Then I throw in old
school calisthenics, slow burn movement because I can't go up and down.
I can't hit the weights. I'm doing them on my knees. The pushups where I lower for three,
hold for three, come up for three, lower for three, hold for three, then go into cobra and
down dog. Eventually, I get off my knees. Eventually, those three second become five,
five become 10, 10 become sets of 10. My body's getting stronger. Like I can feel like I'm going to get back in this ring less than three months.
What is today?
No, DDP yoga.
I'm back in the ring.
I feel the same way.
I tell you, I feel about yoga the same way I feel about medic meditation, which is everybody.
It's easy to make fun of, but everyone would benefit from it.
And we talk to people all the
time who are like i'm supposed to get back surgery or i'm whatever and it's like just start getting
into yoga start stretching start start something but anything but just go under that knife the
worst thing man and the hulk has had eight back operation now the guy who i've been reaching out
to today big time though tiger woods one of the greatest athletes we know ever, greatest golfer.
He has had bad back problems, and he's had three operations.
Like, if I'd have got with him before he had that operation, I know I could turn it around because I just know what I'm doing, and it's figured out a way to.
I don't – I mean, it's weird, but I do – look, I don't have back problems with everybody we've talked to that has them.
I just don't know anybody who wouldn't benefit from this versus the knife.
You had them when you were depressed, remember?
I did.
I did have them when I had a combination of being depressed and working on a roof all day.
And you'd fall off a scaffolding with a power saw.
No, I haven't.
I have not had a back ailment since I started doing what I wanted to do.
That wasn't wrestling.
I was doing comedy, so I didn't have to worry about it so much.
But, boy, there's a couple things with the back.
When I hated my job and I hated it with a passion, I would wake up Monday morning at 6.15 and go, I can't turn my head.
My neck felt like it was filled with poison.
That's what it felt like.
People say, what do you feel like?
I felt like there's poison in my neck. If you stand behind me and say, boo, I have to walk around to see who you are.
I'm not going to turn my head.
And Drew knows I'm not a puss.
I have like a high pain tolerance.
And I was immobile.
And I was young and strong.
It's just that's where my mind was at.
And the second I met Jimmy, the second I got on the radio, the second I started doing
comedy, I've never had another.
And I've continued to box and be active and do stuff.
The way this stuff is really perpetuated today is with the painkillers.
Right.
It guarantees it.
As you said, more than two weeks.
We were talking about that the other day.
More than two weeks of painkillers, you're on.
It's game on now.
Yeah.
I was so poor and whatever, I didn't even have an aspirin at my house.
If my neck didn't work, I'd just lay back on my futon and hope to die.
That was it.
Been there.
But, again, yoga's right up there with like
meditation like if everybody just carved out a few minutes every day to do a little this and a
little that we'd have a much better society and everyone's back would be better i can sign on to
that welcome back and thanks for tuning in to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics.
Up next, we go to episode 447 where the one and only Judd Apatow made a surprise appearance
and it was funny because it's Judd Apatow.
Come on now, take a listen.
Judd Apatow?
Yes, sir. Hey, Judd,atow? Yes, sir.
Hey, Judd, how you doing?
I'm doing good.
You know, I was on Twitter because, you know, I'm addicted to Twitter.
And it said you're taking calls, and I thought I'd call in and find out how not to be addicted.
That's very funny.
We had Bean call in last week.
I talked about it today on KROG.
Of Kevin and Bean.
I don't want to be a one-upper,
but Alec Baldwin called in once
doing the same thing.
So evidently there's a lot of celebrities
that are just hanging around on Twitter.
See, Trump is right.
Twitter's a great communication mechanism.
Oh my God, it's totally ruining my life.
I do the same thing
every night. I'm in my room
and I'm on Twitter and
then I'll go to my 14-year-old daughter's
room and she'll be on Twitter
and I'll go, get off of that! It's ruining your
life!
And I check the tweets I got
while yelling at her for being on
Twitter and then that cycles for hours.
Do you get horrible tweets also? Like the rest of us, or are they pretty nice?
I love the horrible tweets.
As soon as someone tells me to screw off, I'm like, here we go.
It cannot be anti-Semitic enough for me.
I love it. I love it.
I was thinking about it, I think, because I want to dominate.
I like knowing I'm smarter than somebody.
So if they're awful to me, I'm so happy.
Is it, Judd, and don't let me graft my personal feelings onto you, but tell me if this rings true at all for you and Drew.
The part where they go, hey, you're dickhead and your mom eats bad pussy or something.
I go, I don't care.
But the part where they misquote you, you when they go you said this what about that you're such a hypocrite
and you're like you're always talking about this and you're like i'm never talking about that like
the part where you're misquoted or misunderstood that gets me does that get you, Judd? Well, what gets me is when they criticize me
and they're correct.
Oh.
We'll be debating Donald Trump and they'll
go, well, your movies are eight
minutes too long every time.
Well, Judd,
I probably shouldn't
give, I should not
tell people this, but since I've said it
ten times, I'll say it an 11th.
I told people all the time, if you want to screw with me and somebody recently did this,
I read a review of some movie I did on Amazon.
I go, if you really want to get to me, here's how to do it.
Don't go minus 10 stars.
I hate that guy and I wish his kids would die.
Go.
I'm a big fan.
Usually love all his stuff.
This wasn't his best effort.
Two and a half.
Oh, brutal.
That's the most brutal, right?
Because the minus 1,000 stars, you go, we just got to hate her.
Yeah.
Here.
Better to start with, I normally like Judd's work.
I hate that.
Yeah.
I love that.
It's painful when they're accurate, and then somewhere deep in your soul, you know they're right.
Yeah, that's where they get you.
I'll give Judd, by the way, a little plug.
Judd Apatow and Friends, Largo Theater.
Oh, that's tonight.
No, no, no.
It is tonight.
Yeah, it is tonight as you hear this.
Judd, who are the friends and what are you doing?
And I know you started, well, I should say when you were doing Trainwreck,
we were talking about you getting out and getting up and doing stand-up, I believe.
Is this part of that?
Yeah.
You know, I've been doing stand-up, uh, consistently for about the last two and a half years.
And I do, uh, benefits at Largo once or twice a month.
And this one, it's a 10 o'clock show with an old friend of mine.
I'm not allowed to say who it is, but you know who it is.
Uh, Adam Sandler.
Well, I can't say. Who knows? Maybe it's Rob Schneider.
But you know who it is.
Judd's such a sweet guy.
By the way, Judd, you know what?
I was thinking about you the other day, and the reason I was thinking about you is I have a movie that's coming out, another documentary.
And I'll get you a copy if you like.
And I think you'll enjoy it.
Very well, yeah.
And I was just thinking, geez, it's weird.
You sit around, you know, all these guys, you know, like Jimmy Kimmel has six million Twitter followers.
And I was sort of sitting around going, well, we're going to do this movie on our own.
But I said, but there's probably a few people I could reach out to and ask them, hey, could you just shoot out a tweet?
You know, let people know where to go to get the movie or whatever it is.
And I was doing a stand up show in New York.
And I asked Judd at the time if he could do a little shout out, a little tweet out in my in my behalf.
And he was like, absolutely.
And I was just sitting at my desk thinking about what a mensch Judd Apatow is.
Just the other day just popped into my head.
So you don't have to reply to that.
Just let it wash over you, Judd.
Well, I think that's the most fun thing about Twitter is out of the blue, for no reason at all,
I can aggressively promote Todd Barry stand-up days.
That's right.
And you must get – how many followers do you have, Judd?
I'm
1.7 million.
So that's a lot. Drew, you got
a lot. Yeah. What do you got?
3.2. 3.2.
But if he shoots a tweet out right
now, no one will answer him.
No, they'll answer with a bunch of hate.
With a bunch of hate. I only have
500,000 and I must say, I don't get much negativity,
but if I go on Jimmy Kimmel Live and I do the angry tweets thing,
they'll find them.
They always have a baker's dozen to choose from.
I feel like I've muted everybody that doesn't like me.
You know what?
It's funny you said that.
I thought I'd put up a new policy and start blocking these people.
They find tremendous joy in it, and then they inspire 50 other people to start firing at you to try to get blocked, too.
Oh, really?
I was just like, come on.
I've never blocked anyone.
I don't know how.
I blocked one person about three days ago, and I've just been under fire ever since.
Drew, you like it, though.
I get very little.
Like, it used to be I would say something negative about Trump, and I'd get hundreds of tweets.
And now, like, nothing.
One guy.
Judd, other than the live show, I mean, your guys always got 10 projects going at the same time.
What's next?
What's coming out next?
What should we look forward to?
Well, the main thing right now is I produced an off-Broadway show for this great comedian, Chris Gethard.
And it's called Career Suicide.
And it's about
his life. It's a one-man show
and he talks about his
alcoholism and his mental problems
and his suicide attempts.
But it's also really funny
and very relatable
to people who've just had serious
mental issues.
Sounds like a laugh.
It's kind of oddly hysterical because he just has a funny perspective,
and he's really reaching out and opening up about it.
So you can get tickets to that at careersuicideshow.com.
But it's great.
He got a rave in the New York Times.
He has a talk show on the Fuse channel.
He's really great.
But, Judd, that's kind of
becoming your thing, and I don't mean that in a put-you-in-a-pigeonhole kind of way, but taking,
you know, Amy Schumer and taking her life and taking all her foibles and then putting them
out there in a comedic way. Yeah, I mean, I like to be the first person to try to figure out
how to crack the code on how somebody would be in a movie or a TV show.
It's not as much fun to be the 20th movie for someone.
It is sometimes with certain people.
But it's really fun if someone's never starred in a movie to go, how would they be a movie star?
Like, why would I want to see them?
What is it about their life that they should talk about?
You know,
that is the most fun, I think.
That's interesting.
Well, and being, I don't know, I shouldn't say, you know, but fairly responsible for
this phenomenon known as Amy Schumer. Like, I mean, obviously she was out there, but I
think Judd played quite a pivotal role in her career.
Well, she is so brave in her writing.
You know, very few people, when I sit down with them to work on a script,
have the courage to really dig deep into their emotional issues
and come up with a comedy about them.
And that's why I think the movie came out so well,
because I said to her, what's your issues?
Why are you having trouble meeting a nice man and having a healthy relationship?
And she just told me, and then she put it in the movie.
Well, I was just watching it on cable and laughing the other day,
and it's got quite a nice rotation on, I don't know if it was HBO or Showtime I was watching on,
but anyway.
Hey, so Judd, I'll tell you what, since you got stuff up and out and coming around and stuff, why don't you come around and do my show and do Drew's show and come in and do it in person when you got some time?
I'm happy to talk both show business and all of my physical problems with Dr. Drew.
Right on.
physical problems with Dr. Drew.
Right on.
Judd, I will have my assistant Matt send you out a Blu-ray of the new documentary.
I think you'll enjoy it. I have to ask a cryptic question that I was going to get pissed off about,
but that last thing you and I were talking about, any change in that?
No, sadly no.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
Got it.
That's a rough one.
And I got a new one to talk to you about.
All right.
Give me a call.
Yeah.
I will.
Adam doesn't let me communicate with the world until he's done with me.
So it'll be a couple hours now.
Yes.
Okay.
All right.
Take care, guys.
Thank you, John.
We'll be right back with more of the Adam and Dr. Drew Show classics.
We are back with the final clip of this episode, so let's get right to it.
We check out episode 317 with the great Joe Coy.
Yes, that dude's funny as hell.
He joined Adam and Dr. Drew, and the laughs didn't stop.
Here we go.
Joe Coy in the studio.
Good morning, sir.
One of our favorites, Joe Coy.
He's got a new podcast, Coy Pond, everyone.
That premieres this Tuesday, March 15th on Corolla Digital.
Subscribe now on iTunes.
First guest, Angela Johnson.
I'm guessing it's Angela.
Yes, it's Angela.
Okay.
She was on your show. She has that crazy nail salon bit that's got like 50 million. Oh, yeah. it's Angela. Yes, it's Angela. Okay. She was on your show.
She has that crazy nail salon bit that's got like 50 million.
Oh, yeah.
She's great.
Comedian Angela Johnson.
That's that Angela.
I'm obsessed with her spelling of her name.
And always say to anyone, just write Angela the way God intended Angela to spell Angela.
Because I'm looking at...
Now, it's got to be Angela, but you can look at it, Drew, and tell me what that...
Here's the problem.
We're living in a world of insane names.
Angela.
Yeah, what I'm saying is we're living in a world of made-up names.
Yes.
Which is now...
Here's what people don't really realize.
Drew, you tell me this.
Yeah. When you bring this up, it affects that.
Yes. I just had a conversation with Gary where I said, like, if we got a plug and the plugs says Friday, just say tomorrow.
If it's tomorrow or Friday slash tomorrow. Yeah. And he said, yeah, but it's Friday. And I said, yeah, but oftentimes we have this problem where we take the plugs from an Adam
Carolla show from three days ago and we slide it in.
And then it turns out where I go tomorrow or Friday and someone goes, oh, no, this is
Saturday.
Sorry.
No.
So what's it do?
It puts a thing in your mind.
Where you doubt everything?
Where you just have a little kernel of doubt about, did that happen?
Are we doing this?
Yeah.
Now, it didn't happen.
But now that we're living in a world of made-up names, when I see A-N-J-E-L-A-H, I think, well, maybe this is a made-up name.
Could be Sheila.
Sounds like Angela, but it could be something.
So I would like names to be just like words.
Yeah.
Like you just have a way to spell them.
I hate it when I sign autographs and it's a basic name and then you misspell it because you're misspelling it by writing it the right way and then they sigh.
Like you were supposed to know that it wasn't spelled that way.
I had a girl, her name was Amy. A-I-M-E-E.
That's the one where I thought, oh, we've gone off the rails.
But Amy was spelled A-I-M-E-E.
That's a true story.
I spelled it A-M-Y, and she went like this because it was on a T-shirt, and she went,
oh.
I go, what?
She goes, it's A-I-M-E-E.
I go, no one spells it like that.
Why did you tell me this when I grabbed the Sharpie?
Why do I give you a new shirt?
Why do we need two Bryans, an I and a Y?
Why?
Split right down the middle, by the way.
Split right down the middle.
Exactly.
If somebody says, make this out to my son, Brian, or my grandfather, Brian.
Well, grandfather's with an I.
For sure. If somebody says, make it out to my friend, Brian. Okay, I'll make this out to my son Brian or my grandfather Brian. Well, grandfather's with an I. For sure.
But if somebody says make it out to my friend Brian, okay, I'll go here.
I'll flip a coin.
On the coin, I'll have a capital I on one side and a Y on the other, and I'll just go right at that way.
Because I have no idea.
Because we have decided to take a name, split it right down the middle, and do it too.
Catherine with a C, Catherine with a K.
With a Y, R-Y-N-I-N-E. Carl. Carl with a C, Catherine with a K. With a Y, R-Y-N-I-N-E.
Carl.
Carl with a C, Carl with a K.
Mark.
Mark.
Mark pisses me off.
Mark pisses me off, too.
It's got to be a K.
What?
Yeah.
Well, first off.
Because it's Mars.
If it's with a C.
It's insane that we have two different spellings for the exact same word.
Yes, word. I'm calling it a word. You're calling it a name. I'm just saying it's a word. It's a word. At a certainings for the exact same word. Yes, word.
I'm calling it a word.
You're calling a name.
I'm just saying it's a word.
At a certain point, it's a word, and it's Brian or it's Mark.
And then I like this part, too.
I like when they get a little fluting about it, and they go,
you think I look like a Mark with a K?
I'm Mark with a C.
And it's like, no, you're Mark with a D, which is douchebag, you asshole.
Like, what are you talking about?
Go ahead and put that in your bit.
Put that in your routine. I like when people do that. You can have that one.
But they literally go,
do I look like a Brian
with an I? And it's like, I don't know what you
look like. I've never seen you before.
There's not a particular look with that name.
There's not a particular I-Y
look. Or if there is, I'm not perceptive
enough to pick it up.
Maybe we can get Uri Geller in here and he can figure out how to fucking spell your name.
Drives me insane.
What is this, Drew?
It's retarded narcissism, right?
Yeah.
He starts the names, though.
The parents, right?
The parents, yeah.
I've got this kid.
It's a special kid.
It has a special name.
You know, I make up a name because he's so special.
I will tell you this.
It started with sunshine and, you know, stupid crap like that.
But at least you can spell that.
Yeah.
Now there's something.
Autumn.
The point is this.
The black people do it, but it's just you don't know how to spell their name.
But then they still sigh.
It's like, ugh, it's Sonequa with a Q.
But they don't apologize.
They go all the way to the end zone with it.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. So that's the way to the end zone with it. Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So that's fine.
I have no problem with that.
No, look.
That's a way to correct.
See, some people do it to correct you.
Yeah.
Yeah, but the parents are the ones setting the kid up for that, right?
Yeah.
They've ruined their kid, and now they were ruined, and now they're going to ruin their kid.
So a lot of people just give crazy names
so they can explain to you
how to properly spell their name.
It's right up there real quick.
When you go,
when you go,
a horrible thing happened
or a rape victim,
rape survivor.
It's just correction.
The left, angry left,
likes to correct.
Yeah.
Here's somebody that does need correction, which is our friend on it.
As far as performance, unique products, expertise from professional athletes.
MCT oil dumped in my coffee this morning.
Oh, yes.
Every day.
100% pure coconut oil derived.
Quick, healthy energy.
And I'm telling you something.
If you have metabolic syndrome, it helps with weight management.
Good in coffee, shakes, smoothies.
Alpha brain.
True. You say you have metabolic syndrome, it helps with weight management. Good in coffee, shakes, smoothies, alpha brain, hands is focused, mental drive, memory.
Drew, you say you have metabolic syndrome. I do.
What is that? It's high blood
pressure. It's sort of insulin resistance,
high blood pressure, hypercholesterolemia,
central obesity, they call it. You put your weight in the middle
of your body. And it's a certain
metabolic type. And I've noticed
that... Nah, that's in your head.
On Warrior Bar, Buffalo Meat Bar
with 14 grams of protein, 140 calories based.
You're going to love this, Adam.
Lakota Sioux recipe.
Lakota recipe.
Yeah, I'm more of a Choc-Tam.
Maniche.
Right.
Paprika.
Maniche.
Alpha-ti-ti-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ti.
We're just talking about it.
That's what I'm hearing from our last show.
Yes.
All right, try them and more.
Go to Onnit.com slash Adam, and you will save 10%.
Onnit, O-N-N-I-T.
Get Onnit.
Onnit.com slash Adam.
Joe Coy is going to be in Treasure Island in Las Vegas coming up March 18th, so that's
just around the corner.
And many dates, you can go to Joe, J-O, and then Coy, K-O-Y.com.
You can go to Joe, J-O, and then Koy, K-O-Y.com. I don't mean to keep playing the race card on this one, on the name thing, but I will say this.
The Chinese, they just keep it to Chang and Lee.
That's it.
It's like they have like four names to choose from.
You don't see a Chinese guy going, no, it's Chang.
No, listen.
C-H-A-I-N-G.
I-N-G.
The Asians do the opposite, which is they go, and your name was Mitsuk, and now it's Sue.
Because, or Sally.
You went from Mitsuk to Sally.
Why'd you go from Mitsuk to Sally?
Because you want to come here and work and get along and get going in life.
And people not pronouncing your name is troublesome.
Yeah.
And listen, it's why Mike August is my hero.
Why?
Why is Mike August Adam's hero?
Why would we hate him as hero?
Why would we hate this hero?
It's certainly not his replies on his emails when you say, are we doing this on the 29th or the 31st?
And he replies with, yep.
To be fair, sometimes he'll reply, excellent.
Yeah, sometimes he'll say excellent.
It's not for that mike august is my hero because mike august's last name
is spelled his real last name is t-a-m-e-r-i-l-l-o yeah i-e-l-l-o i-e-l-l-o and guess who got tired
of trying to tell people how to spell his last name? Mike August did.
Guess whose middle name is August?
Mike August.
So Mike August, I go through life with that guy because every time we check into a hotel,
every time we go on the road, every time we get on an airline flight, every time we just
walk through life and you'll just see him.
Now, at the airport, because of security, it's got to be his name.
But everywhere else, he comes in and he goes, you have a car waiting for us?
Yeah.
Name, Mike August.
August is in the month.
And then he hangs up the phone.
Now, if it was Tamarillo.
All day.
It'd be all goddamn day and it'd be confusion.
So guess what?
Mike did it for Mike, just like mom and dad of mitsuk
yeah did it for little mitsuk who's now called sally because we can get the f on with our lives
yeah and we can be successful and for some reason as i've said it marginalizes people
and that you don't know it you think you're carving out some unique whatever uh we did an episode of catch a contractor black family and the daughter had a crazy name
do you remember i have no idea i think i think it was either sizzling or nachilla Those are two of the worst.
That's bacon.
That's bacon.
That's a Phil Henry joke.
That's a Phil Henry joke.
I give him credit for that.
I'm crying right now. My eyes sizzle.
So stupid.
That's all for this week.
Thanks for listening to the Adam and Dr. Drew Show Classics.
I've been your host, Big Brother Jake,
host of the Big Brother Jake Podcast on the Podcast One Network.
Remember to check back each week for new episodes.
And while you're at it, don't forget to like, subscribe,
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Deuces!