THE ADAM BUXTON PODCAST - EP.221 - TIM HEIDECKER
Episode Date: February 26, 2024Adam talks with American comedian, actor and musician Tim Heidecker about early Tim & Eric influences, making non-comedy music, Bob Dylan, and antagonising the alt-right.This conversation was... recorded face-to-face in London on 25th March, 2023.Thanks to Séamus Murphy-Mitchell for production support and conversation editing.Podcast artwork by Helen GreenRELATED LINKSOFFICE HOURS (YOUTUBE CHANNEL)ON CINEMA ON THE HEI NETWORKTIM HEIDECKER'S WEBSITE JOE ROGAN SPOOF (OFFICE HOURS LIVE) - 2021 (YOUTUBE)TOM GOES TO THE MAYOR - 2004 (YOUTUBE PLAYLIST)TIM AND ERIC SEASON 5 MOST UNDERRATED MOMENTS (YOUTUBE)THE BEST OF TIM AND ERIC AWESOME SHOW (YOUTUBE PLAYLIST)AN EVENING WITH TIM HEIDECKER - STAND UP SPECIAL - 2021 (YOUTUBE)MY BEATLES HELL - 2004 (ODD BOOKS WEBSITE)LENNY BRUCE by BOD DYLAN - 1981 (YOUTUBE)SPALDING GRAY DINNER SCENE FROM TRUE STORIES - 1986 (YOUTUBE)CANNIBAL THE MUSICAL (TRAILER) - 1993 (YOUTUBE)BRIGSBY BEAR (TRAILER) - 2017 (YOUTUBE)DELIA DERBYSHIRE AND DOCTOR WHO THEME - 1965 (YOUTUBE)WENDY CARLOS AND HER MOOG - 1970 (YOUTUBE)THE MAKING OF TRON - 2002 (YOUTUBE)NORTH NORFOLK TODAY: BEST BITS - ALAN PARTRIDGE'S MID MORNING MATTERS - 2010 (YOUTUBE)LIMMY - LAPTOP - 2011 (YOUTUBE)BEST FAILS OF THE YEAR - 2023 (YOUTUBE) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I added one more podcast to the giant podcast bin
Now you have plucked that podcast out and started listening
I took my microphone and found some human folk
Then I recorded all the noises while we spoke
My name is Adam Buxton, I'm a man
I want you to enjoy this, that's the plan.
Hey, how do you do, podcats? It's Adam Buxton here.
I do all right, thanks for asking.
I'm walking up a farm track in the east of England.
It is a cold, blustery day.
Angry-looking clouds moving fast above me.
My dog friend, Rosie, did not want to come on the walk today.
No effing thank you way she was coming out.
We got a few metres up the track, and I just started feeling like a bit of a creep for making her come out. She was clearly
not into it so I just walked her back. She is now with the person she likes most in the Buckles
household which is my wife. She is curled up by the fire while my wife does law things. Anyway, look, don't despair. We're
going to have a nice time together. And right now I'm going to tell you a bit about episode
number 221 of the podcast, which features a rambling conversation with American comedian,
actor and musician Tim Heidecker. In my mind, this is
a companion piece to the last
podcast,
which featured a conversation with Fred
Armisen.
There's a few connections. They're
friends, Fred and Tim,
and my
conversations with them
both took place the day after
seeing them perform live in the same venue.
Anyway, here's some Heidecker facts for you.
Timothy Richard Heidecker was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania in 1976.
Guess he's living there in Allentown.
It was at college in Philadelphia that Tim met Eric Wareheim, with whom he has worked ever
since as Tim and Eric. The duo got their TV break in the early 2000s after sending a tape of
material to Bob Odenkirk, who, along with David Cross, created the influential comedy sketch
series Mr. Show, and of course later starred as lawyer Saul Goodman
in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul.
In 2004, the first series of Tim and Eric's crudely animated show,
Tom Goes to the Mayor, aired on Adult Swim,
a late-night block of programmes on the Cartoon Network
aimed at older and possibly drug-addled audiences.
Shows made for Adult Swim often featured content that was experimental,
transgressive, improvised and surrealist in tone.
It was an aesthetic that Tim and Eric helped define
and they honed it with Tim and Eric's awesome show Great Job.
Over five series and a couple of specials that ran between 2007 and 2010,
Tim and Eric's awesome show featured sketches, characters and parodies
that gleefully emphasised the strangeness and artificiality of most ads and TV shows,
especially when they've been quickly and cheaply produced.
shows, especially when they've been quickly and cheaply produced. Every convention of TV camera work, editing, vision mixing, sound and visual effects was twisted and exaggerated. And along
with Tim and Eric's artfully awkward and stumbling line delivery, the result was a kind of joyful
weirdness that frequently tipped into the grotesque and nightmarish. This is some incredible analysis of Tim and Eric that
I've written here in my notes. Outside of his projects with Eric Wareheim, Tim has acted in
films like Bridesmaids, Ant-Man and the Wasp, Jordan Peele's Us, and he played the dislikable
lead in Rick Alverson's indie film The Comedy. In 2012, Tim and fellow comedian Greg Turkington,
also known as misanthropic entertainer Neil Hamburger, started On Cinema, a web series and
podcast ostensibly parodying movie review shows in which Tim and Greg play bickering versions of
themselves with hilarious and faintly unsettling deadpan naturalism.
He's very good at his unsettling deadpan naturalism, Tim.
Over the years, On Cinema has evolved into an alternate world
with spin-off films, TV series and even elaborately staged court cases
involving Tim and Greg and other characters from the On Cinema universe,
all of which can be explored on Tim's Hi Network website, H-E-I Network.
There's a link in the description to that.
In addition to all that, currently Tim is doing a show called Office Hours.
That's a weekly call-in show that can be seen on YouTube.
Again, link in the description to the channel.
And that's hosted by Tim and his friends and longtime collaborators DJ Doug Pound
and video artist Vic Berger. In Office Hours, Tim is more or less himself, at least when taking calls
and talking to in-studio guests. and he frequently expresses straightforwardly sincere positions
on politics and other topics. But occasionally, the Office Hours team will produce a spin-off
video, he can't resist the spin-offs, in which Tim plays a version of himself that's far closer
to someone like Joe Rogan. In fact, in 2021, Tim and a couple of comedian pals filmed themselves
waffling inconsequentially
about the kind of topics Joe Rogan might waffle inconsequentially about.
And then they looped the footage they shot so that the fake podcast episode
ended up lasting just under 12 hours.
There's a link in the description.
My conversation with Tim was considerably shorter,
and Tim was not, as far as I could tell, in character
he was very friendly and warm, it was lovely to see him
I'd met him one time before that
in Los Angeles in 2017
he came along to a bug show that I did out there
the Bug Bowie Special
and he came along with John C. Reilly
aka Steve Brule
from Tim and Eric's Awesome Show
but this conversation was recorded a.k.a. Steve Brule from Tim and Eric's Awesome Show.
But this conversation was recorded in March of last year, 2023,
the morning after I'd seen Tim performing at Hackney's Earth Venue.
And the show that I saw was in two halves,
the first of which featured Tim in character mode as a boorish stand-up comedian
doing an edgy snowflake bashing Netflix-type special.
And then after the interval, Tim returned as himself with his band, The Very Good Band,
and played a set that included tracks from his albums Fear of Death, released in 2020,
and his last album, High School, released in 2022. That's the one that he
did with some help from Mac DeMarco and Kurt Weill. There were also covers that night and
numbers from the 2013 comedy album Urinal Street Station by Tim Heidecker and the Yellow River Boys.
The next day, as well as talking about music and what it's like for a comedian like Tim
to write non-comedy songs,
I asked Tim about some of his early cultural influences,
how he's adjusted to parenthood and middle age,
and how he deals with the occasional fan
who's disappointed to find
that Tim isn't part of the alt-right.
I'll be back at the end for a small waffle slice,
but right now,
with Tim Heidecker.
Here we go.
Ramble chat,
let's have a ramble chat.
We'll focus first on this,
then concentrate on that.
Come on, let's chew the fat
and have a ramble chat.
Put on your conversation coat
and find your talking hat
Yes, yes, yes
La, la, la, la, la, la, la
La, la, la, la, la, la, la
La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la
La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la
Go, go, go, go, go Isn't it great where people like us are doing this now with the tech?
Do you like that aspect of it?
Not my favorite.
It's stressful.
Luckily, I have people now to help me do it.
You can do it. But you can do it.
You can do it yourself.
Oh, absolutely.
But I mean, I've always been a DIY guy.
Yeah.
And that's how I used to do TV stuff with my comedy partner, Joe.
Yeah, same with me.
But is that how you got started?
Were you doing everything yourself?
Yeah.
I mean, Eric and i were in college together
in film school definitely didn't think of ourselves as comedians yeah but we're funny
like we've enjoyed making each other laugh and um but you were being pretentious artists yes
i mean in high school we were watching you know quentin Tarantino and Scorsese and all the greats of the sort of 90s indie film scene.
And yeah, I wanted to be filmmakers.
Comedy at the time to us was like Seinfeld.
No disrespect to that, but it just seemed like a million miles away and it wasn't what we were interested in but we after we'd done the pretentious stuff
on the weekends we'd drink a bunch of beer and make prank phone calls and do silly weird little
art experimental things that were funny but weird and we kept doing that and that was the stuff that
seemed to get more attention than our serious artwork, you know, whatever that was.
And it just kind of gradually shifted into that.
After college, we were just kind of lost.
Eric was working as a wedding photographer, videographer, going off and shooting like bar mitzvahs and weddings and stuff.
And I was working a desk job.
And we would just get together and make stuff and you know like you said we had some
rudimentary home consumer editing software that was just you know computers were just starting to
be strong enough to do it so what year was this like maybe 2000 so is that digital then or are
you still using tapes it's digital at this point i think it's just well uh it'd be like high eight tapes maybe yeah it'd be still tapes
but it was like digital quarters yeah right so yeah we were just playing around and we had
eventually made up enough stuff that felt funny enough to us to kind of spread it around and
we didn't exactly know what to do with it but we were playing uh we would show it the first thing
we ever got going was like one of our very early things like in a museum like in a art space in
philadelphia you know just like playing on some tv somewhere so we were like kind of in that weird
art world more than the comedy world so i moved to new york out of college to try i actually tried a
little stand-up comedy it was like a lot of false you know what was your early stand-up comedy like
well it's it was a weird it was very andy kaufman inspired it was weird and subversive whatever it
was like anti-comedy if you will which i don't like that term but it was a
counterpoint to everybody else that was doing regular stand-up self-consciously un-mainstream
yeah yeah very and also not ready yet you know not there yet and the other thing that i didn't
understand i think about comedy was i thought i had to do something totally different every time
i did it which was maybe a good thing as you're sort of figuring stuff out,
but it just got to be too stressful to figure out,
what am I going to do next week?
I've got to figure out a whole new act.
So I just stopped and kind of retreated and got a job and played music
and lived in New York and had fun.
Yes, it's weird when you realize that most stand-up comedians
are just working on about 15 minutes of stuff
and they do it over and over and over again for about a year.
And I thought that would be a terrible thing to do.
Yeah.
I didn't understand how you could possibly get enjoyment out of doing that.
But now I get it.
Now I actually do that with my stand-up, is as you know not it's a character it's not i mean it is stand-up comedy but there's
something about doing it every night that i've found a way to it is fun and it is different
every night and you can you know play with it and improve it hopefully or react and change it
you know based on the reactions and stuff so i get that now but um but back then
you were just thinking this is not sustainable yeah i didn't have there was it wasn't going
anywhere and then who were you channeling when you got together with eric i mean who i mean did
you have people in that you admired that yeah we loved mr show bob odenkirk and david cross so we loved their
mostly their filmed bits their commercials or you know parodies i you know i loved kids in the hall
which funny i saw robert popper last night at the show and i was talking to him and he's like we
don't know the kids in the hall here yeah that's what it did used to be on yeah they showed it in
the 90s yeah but it was big in my growing up.
So there was that.
There was more like also just like David Byrne was a huge inspiration for like his movie True Stories.
We loved.
Yeah, I loved that too.
Yeah.
And there's moments in that.
Who's the guy that did Swimming to Cambodia?
Oh, Spalding Gray.
Spalding Gray.
Like we loved him in that movie and then watched all
his stuff and yeah all his funny hand movements yes we just ripped that off like we just took that
right off of that scene that great scene where they're at dinner yeah and he's kind of conducting
it yeah yeah yeah that was big you know the coen brothers i think their earlier movies were
inspirational the way they had characters that were not people you'd see in movies all the time.
And then actually, when I moved to New York, a friend of mine had gone to England for a semester or something and came back.
He was a big tape collector.
And he came back with this gold tape, not literally gold.
It was just full of gold.
It was full of gold.
It had the day-to-day, and it had jam, and it had the other one, Brass Eye.
Yeah.
And we passed that around a lot.
We watched that a lot.
That's funny that you came back with that tape.
Around the same time, the hot tape over here was the South Park, the first South Park special.
Oh, yeah. Definitely. Yep. I loved those guys.
I loved their movie that they made, Cannibal, the musical.
Oh, yeah.
I thought that was inspirational.
There was definitely the feeling that there were subversive, young, do-it-yourself comedian brains out there that wasn't brick wall stand-up comedy for the masses
and we were gonna do we could do something kind of cool and artistic that was also funny yeah
and so did eric carry on being the kind of technical point man yeah with the editing and
yeah yeah i think for a while he did and then we got very lucky early, relatively early. We were like in our late 20s.
But we had sent our early stuff to Bob Odenkirk, who was not a household name.
I don't know if he is here, but he's... He is now.
He is now.
Yeah, but back then he was...
But back then he had done Mr. Show and he had done some other things.
But we loved him and knew him.
But he was not a famous person.
But he saw our stuff
very early on i sent it to him he loved it it's unbelievable because if you look at it now it
feels very primordial um and called us and became sort of like our mentor and was just really wanted
to know who we were what was our scene you know you know? And we were like, we don't have any scene.
We're just these two friends.
And we came out to LA and he introduced us around.
And same time Adult Swim was starting to come out.
And through a few phone calls and stuff, we got one of these to them.
And they ordered a series of Tom Goes to the Mayor.
So then when that happened, we hired a couple people to do the
editing and do the art. And did they, was it quite easy to explain the sort of aesthetic to them?
I guess it was. We didn't seem to have to. I remember if you look at the original one,
it's basically two stills of two guys and it's photoshopped with this filter on it and a very
crude drawing in the background. And we got the deal and talked a little bit about how it was going to what the show was going to be
and sort of fairly deep into that process we're like do you want it to look like this you know
like are you okay with like i we didn't even know we're like should it just be a regular cartoon
and they're like no no we like that style. Whatever you guys want to do.
Were you playing music around that time?
Not really.
I mean, I would write music for the show with another guy, Davin Wood.
And that was kind of my department.
Sometimes Eric and I would both come up with something or the bones of something. So I was doing music, but it was not the music I would end up doing later.
I was just funny, you know, like you do, like just goofy stuff.
You're a very good singer.
I didn't even realize.
I mean, I knew you could sing.
Yeah.
But until last night, seeing you live, playing with your band, the Very Good Band.
Yeah.
And they are very good.
I mean, it sounded great.
You've got a good sound guy but everyone can really play
yeah including you and i mean you're good on the piano you're good on the guitar and have you ever
taken singing lessons then no i it's a good idea and i'll tell because i kill my voice how do you
hear first of all the yelling from the stand-up character yes is very hard and then the singing
is less actually less hard on the voice
but there are a couple numbers where i really go for it i go for the robert plant sure yeah i don't
know who it sounds like but it's the growl high growling and you've got a scream belting cover
of victoria by the kinks as well yeah which i was singing along with victor so that's that's pretty
high up there so i think i should take singing lessons just to be
able to do it better every night but i've got my routines and my little warm-ups and then
not talking after the show is key which is the sad part of it because yes i do the show that
as you could tell seemed probably like a lot of fun to me you know it was like a very jubilant joyous and kind
of triumphant night you know it just all worked it was this thing that we've been working on for
a long time and the crowd was really great at the end of the show you had to go to the green room
and be like thanks everybody you know great work that's a great show and i and i want to be you
know drinking and talking loud over the music and but i have to just
be very serious about it yeah and uh and i've been doing that but you know vick burger is in the band
and he was on cloud nine backstage yeah he couldn't believe it i mean it's really this is the first
big tour of like this he's ever done and to have you know a thousand people like cheer for you for
him specifically yeah you know that's just exciting that's a that's a moment to remember
he was really good he was high and but i've been doing this long enough with eric we've done tours
and stuff where you do unfortunately i think you separate that feeling a little bit. Have you always been so disciplined, though?
No, I mean, the first time Eric and I went on tour,
we did this little club tour after the show had been out.
And it was, again, kind of a new idea, at least in America,
to tour a TV show, you know,
that we were going to use it as like a promotional device,
do sketches from the show.
I don't think, there were a few people who might have done it.
And this is an awesome show.
This is an awesome show.
And we did a couple shows on the East Coast.
And then after New York, I had lived in New York, so I went back to do the shows, a bunch of friends there and stuff.
And I didn't understand monitors.
I didn't understand controlling my – and the show, a lot of it was me yelling at the audience.
And then we did the show.
And after the show went out to some bar,
you know,
drinking and talking in some loud bar for an hour or two,
woke up the next day and I had nothing.
Like my voice was gone.
And it was so scary.
I'm like,
I'm on,
this is my job.
I'm on the road.
And really the main thing I'm doing is talking.
And I just blew it.
You know, I just like blew my voice out.
So it came back like the next day and I kind of faked it that night.
But I still think about that every night I come off stage.
I'm like, don't do that again.
Yeah, that's alarming.
And then every morning I wake up after a show like today, I go,
no, no, no. Okay, i'm still good yeah yeah i mean you're looking incredibly well are you sort of on a health dying regimen you're not dying i hope no but are you like are you off the booze and
stuff like that or i uh i've for since i guess 2020 i came back Eric and I did a tour the day before the pandemic hit we
finished our tour so it was like whatever but I was pretty heavy around that time and it was a
good time to make some lifestyle changes yeah and the only thing I really did was I did this
intermittent fasting which is I just don't eat till noon i don't eat after six
and i took like lots of long walks mostly to kill time because there was lots of free time
and so from noon till six you're just eating and i'm just bagels and donuts and pot roast and
everything no i mean i just i kind of just cleaned up my i don't i never was a big drinker but i
guess i i didn't drink as much because after
you you're not eating you don't drink as much and long walks and long walks and and i found the long
walks to be such a great creative thing like i know on your podcast you go out for big country
walks yes and i find if you can do that people say what do you do about writer's block or what
do you do about come up with ideas?
If I'm like working on something and I'm stuck, I don't put headphones in.
I go down and start walking down my hill on the street.
And, you know, it's just the blood flows and I just get ideas.
Something pops up.
So I found those to be very helpful.
And yeah, weight just kind of came.
I also think like, I don't know the science of this this but i feel like you get older and like your metabolism changes and i think that's part of it
but yeah it just started working and kept at it feel good yeah yeah i can't do that show that you
saw with an extra 30 pounds yeah you know i wouldn't make it i can barely make it now like it's hard on the body
yeah i'm sure no it's really impressive but your voice was amazing i was so knocked out by it like
thank you how strong it was and um what a beautiful instrument it is oh thanks i i'm very
so i mean all singers are self-conscious about their voice. Most I've heard lots of people, you know, John Lennon hated his voice.
And yeah, everyone, I don't think I'm a great singer, but in the live world where it's loose
and the band is behind me and I'm all warmed up and I think I can do a pretty good job.
Yeah.
It looked so fun and you're so at ease.
What's impressive about the new record about high school is that you do sound so at ease what's impressive about the new record about high school yeah is that you do sound so at
ease like i'm always very interested to see how comedians especially make that transition how they
go about making music especially someone like you whose aesthetic is so particular yeah and you're
kind of playing with perceptions of you as a character and whether you're irony right whether
you're sincere whether you're sort of meta all of it's being played around with so how do you
approach music did you think hard about it or did you i mean you had an early incarnation
as a musician as a sort of more straight ahead comedy act. Yeah. Well, you did a sort of straight ahead comedy album, right?
Yeah.
We've done a few of those.
And it's been a process of figuring out how to deal with that.
First of all, like, I started listening to music that kind of fit in the middle of that,
which was, you know, Randy Newman.
Yeah.
Somebody I knew when I was a kid, and I knew who he was was and everything but I'd never really listened that closely to his records you know
to the 70s classics that he made and when I listened to those it clicked to me that was like
he's doing similar things you know he's playing with humor and irony and character work but he's
also making really good music and pretty sad music often.
And I thought that could be something I could try.
But I knew that, yes, of course,
I had built 10 years of this identity obfuscation.
10 years of mind fuckery.
Yeah, which was really fun and still is.
Yeah.
And then I just thought,
well, this is just
another layer of that but it's another challenge for the audience to be like oh we're getting this
other side of this person that i thought i knew and i say this a lot but i think if andy kaufman
hadn't died he would eventually have had to do something else besides hiding behind irony i think i mean it
just would have gotten old yeah and i think if i just stayed in a character or removed and and
sort of fucker fucking people uh fucking up you know whatever fucking uh fucking fucking people
everything that would just be exhausting for everybody it'd be obnoxious you know yeah but that's your stock
in trade you're you're an obnoxious genius yes and i still give myself permission to do that
whenever i want but to and eric and i were very strict about interviews and appearances and stuff
that we were going to be kind of we're not going to sit and
talk about like we're talking now yes yes yes for a while and now we've both kind of just been like
well who cares so i don't know and i also just you get older you the things that you thought
were funny when you're younger aren't quite as funny anymore and you know you just you uh
want to explore other sides of doing stuff.
So do you think being a parent has changed that as well?
Well, yes, I think originally I didn't think that was true, except there's a period when
my daughter was born where, A, I started writing more serious songs because I think I had things
to say about my life that were kind of interesting to me.
But there are some check it
out episodes that heavily feature diapers and i thought that's where those ideas were coming from
i think a lot of men wearing diapers and some baby stuff but yeah i don't know i certainly i
have two kids and it's definitely you know the older you get the the more you feel it and yeah the more i try to be
more grateful and empathetic towards the people around me and not not expect as much and i mean
the 2020 album was called fear of death yeah so was that a genuine sense of mortality that you
were wrestling with at that point yeah definitely i think it really snuck up on me but as we get into our 40s and 50s you start realizing
that it's going to happen yeah it's profoundly frightening right you know and it it's like
oh this could happen at any time and i don't think you have that feeling when you're younger i mean
a lot of i didn't didn't think it was anything to worry about. And so it snuck in, and then it just comes from the unconscious.
Like a lot of the songs I write,
I don't think too literally about them as I'm writing them.
They just kind of come out.
And then you go, oh, that's what I'm thinking about.
And then you can think more consciously about it
and write more specifically about that subject,
which is the same with high school.
It was like,
I started singing, buddy, I've been thinking about you. Okay. That's interesting. What is that? Who am I? You know, you don't, I don't know. It's like a mystery. Who am I thinking of? Oh,
I'm thinking about this guy that I went to high school with who died. And that becomes just this
little, then you go, oh, this is about my high school days you know it's good it's true it makes you think about things that you wouldn't have thought about if you hadn't
just sort of blurbed out this little piece of unconscious writing yeah i heard you saying
somewhere that that process of remembering first your friend yeah unlocked a whole slew of memories
yeah things that you hadn't thought about for a long time
yeah i had a similar experience when i was writing a book a few years ago and going back over old
diaries and things like that and it's quite weird how you can unlock very specific memories isn't it
i'm sure it's some kind of i'm sure there's a technique for it but like conscious remembering
is good we don't think about this stuff all the time right but i hadn't thought about kurt vonnegut in a long time or i didn't think about
how influential he was to me and then i think thinking about my teenage years thinking about
i have one song on the record called what do we do with our time and it was it's really just sort
of like well what was i doing you know like I didn't have a computer, really.
I didn't have a cell phone.
You know, so it's like, what were those hours spent doing?
And so I was thinking about that.
And oh, yeah, I used to read.
I still read, but that would be one of my regular activities, read books.
Do you listen to audio books?
I don't because I don't have the I do sometimes.
I'm listening to the Rise and fall of the third Reich.
Okay.
Fun.
And it's mostly to give me nightmares before I go to sleep.
Yeah.
But mostly,
yeah.
To like,
it's kind of boring cause it's very detailed,
you know,
it's like going into the day to day,
but I do it usually to kind of fall asleep.
Right.
But cause I don't have the attention span to listen to people read as much as I do read, read.
I read rock biographies.
So do I.
I got the greatest book from a fan last night.
Yeah.
A rock book that I've been looking for.
I've only heard about this book.
I'm going to show you the cover.
My Beatles Hell.
And it's, is that Photoshopped?
Yes.
It's a Photoshopped image of a smiling older lady
in front of an image of the Beatles.
Yeah, and let me read you the back of the book.
I mean, this was like written by Robert Popper
or Neil Hamburger or something.
She was the secretary for Brian Epstein.
Oh, right, so it's a real person.
It's a real person.
The Tragical History Tour of Beryl Adams.
I love the name Beryl.
Beryl Adams was Brian Epstein's first secretary
as he forged his musical dynasty
and molded the Beatles into the world's most successful pop band ever.
She was once married to the homosexual cavern disc jockey Bob Wooler
and counted among her string of lovers Epstein's biographer Ray Coleman.
Those are the two first bullet points.
Beryl disliked
John Lennon intensely
regarding him
as an overbearing bully
and always knew
that Paul McCartney
was a much smarter cookie,
the guy with the staying power.
That's kind of fucked up
to say, right?
And then,
this is good,
she was arguably
the first woman
to manage a pop band,
the Kirkbees,
who could have hit
the big time
if handled right.
They weren't and didn't. I love they weren't and didn't and she's the manager apparently it's crazy one of the best
bits of the show for me last night was you in the music section so a reminder that the show that I
saw that you're touring currently the first half half an hour, 45 minutes or so,
you're doing Tim Heidecker as a obnoxious sort of right-leaning,
bro-ish comedian.
Yeah.
And then you go away and come back with the band
and you play your own numbers.
And it's a mixture of, you know,
you'll include some wee-wee songs in there as well.
But there's a section where you go over to the piano
and start talking about bob dylan yeah i think i did realize that you love bob dylan i know you
did a couple of parody songs a while back yeah but um tell me about the bob dylan bit that was
one of the funniest things i've ever seen the bob dylan bit is the most fun and surprising
every night for me because it's one of those comedy
things like I don't really even know why this works I know why I think it's funny but the fact
that the audience is there with me is a miracle to me you know it's just amazing but it's a song
that I tell the story on stage it's a song from an 80s record from Bob called Lenny Bruce. And it's
about the comedian Lenny Bruce. And listening to the song at home, it just struck me like what a
absolutely strange and stupid song it is. But it's also very pretty. You know, it's like a pretty
ballad. So I just play the song and stop and talk about the song. But it has these great lines.
One is, you know, I rode with him in a taxi once,
only for a mile and a half.
Seemed like it took a couple of months.
And you're just like, that's not a nice thing to say.
I can't, it's not a nice thing to say about somebody.
Your Bob Dylan impression is very good as well.
I can turn that on.
What's the secret of the Bob Dylan impression?
Well, I like to do him as a, when Bob's older,
he kind of speaks with a little bit of sass to him.
That's right.
It's a bit, it's like he's on theme time radio.
It's all the theme time radio stuff.
I can't do the early stuff at all.
Because the cliched Bob impression in the early days.
Is this, right?
Like that, all the time.
Yeah.
But now he sounds a bit like Chris Rock.
Yeah.
Oh, that's right.
That kind of staccato delivery.
Yeah, or like Wolfman Jack or just this radio voice.
And what's funny about the theme time radio is he's clearly reading what he's saying.
So there's this reading it for the first time on the air kind of attitude about it that's really funny i don't know if i should say this but
one time i met lenny kravitz backstage yeah that's like ira glass isn't it that kind of i'm pretending
that you're just thinking off the top of your head yeah yeah but you's clearly written yeah much as i like uh ira glass yeah and did you read
the philosophy of modern song bob dillard i have it i've scanned it i'm not fully through it that's
a good audio book oh that's what i should get yeah yeah i think the one criticism well i mean the book
seems uh crazy yeah like his little monologues in front of the songs or some of it i mean i love his writing
uh loved his memoir but there is a problem i mean it's whatever he wants to do i don't really care
but there's like one woman yeah yeah this book it's like come on but i don't think there's anybody
in his life that's telling him anything that he doesn't want you know that i don't think there's
anybody checking him.
And there's a lot of people like that, which makes, like, when you get older,
you've got to be careful, especially in that level where you're just like,
do you have anybody, like, gut-checking you on anything?
No.
So it's like, dude, put a Joni Mitchell song in there, you know?
Yeah, it sort of seems perverse at a certain point.
I appreciate that he's drawing on a, well, it's mainly songs he loved as a youngster.
Yeah.
And obviously there were going to be a lot more men around then than there were women.
So it's not like he's made a self-conscious decision just to.
To exclude.
Yeah.
It's not like he doesn't like women.
Yeah.
But yes, you sort of think, as you say, there's so many others that he could easily have included.
Uh,
it would have been,
but whatever.
Yeah.
But it is,
I mean,
I was going to say though,
he does a lot of the audio book and the monologues are really quite funny.
And yeah,
there's a couple that do make you think,
Oh,
come on,
mate.
What are you doing?
Where he just sounds like a sort of guy who's fed up.
You know, he's been listening to a few podcasts.
He thinks this whole woke thing's gone a bit far.
Right.
And he's just a bit fed up.
And these old guys, too.
Yeah, they get bit by the conservative thing.
Yeah.
It's inevitable.
Talking about Bob Dylan being a grumpy old guy.
And there's a lot of them around these days who get to a
certain point and they're just like oh come on it's got it's all gone too far this is ridiculous
and you know i imagine you like me have a small part of you where sometimes you do feel like oh
come on yeah yeah we're not allowed to say that now yeah it was like last week we weren't allowed
to say the other thing and that was perfectly fine and now it's right you know but you do your best to kind of check your privilege and
move on yeah you know i think that's all it is yeah exactly but i remember you being more political
about seven seven or eight years ago or something when the first stirrings of all that was starting
a little bit and when things were starting to get a bit alt-righty in the comedy world yeah and you push back a little bit in a fairly straightforward way yeah you know
in a non-ironic way yeah you did a song called the cuck song yeah yeah it's a yankovic version
of uh i'm a rock oh yeah there you go i am a cuck yeah well yeah i was getting it bad and it was very uh it was a little scary at times but as
soon as i kind of was i mean when trump i've been goofing on him for a long time but when he really
started coming about couldn't resist you know mostly through twitter but just like god damn it
this guy is insane you know and this movement is insane to me and and scary but also really funny like Trump is
the funniest person especially when back in the days when he was on Twitter oh it was the greatest
I mean it was not intentionally funny of course it was just absurd I couldn't imagine anything
more absurd than this guy and so I would just goof on it and I wasn't I mean I would occasionally tweet stuff
that was sincere or platforming somebody that was promoting some progressive things or you know
supporting Bernie Sanders at a certain point whatever it was and I just got became the target
of this and so did a lot of people not me. But I think there was this moment when, because Eric and I's stuff could be, first of all,
it's very apolitical in a lot of ways, except that it wasn't because a lot of it really
was about American consumerism and capitalism out of control.
It was buried in there, but it wasn't Jon Stewart.
It wasn't coming from a current events political place.
So it really wasn't any way to know where we were politically necessarily.
And so that small community of young men, probably a lot of them were fans of our show.
And then to see me come out and be a general progressive man.
Someone with a social conscience yeah that i've always
kind of been i mean certainly since college so it shouldn't have been a surprise and it probably
wasn't a surprise for most people but there was this sense of like and this was a time when obama
is in the white house and you know the middle left is the party in power. So I understand that the young, disaffected, I hate politics,
I'm losing my country kind of white, young, suburban kid is going to feel ostracized by that
and then see these comedy weirdos that they might have identified with not be that. I can understand
some of them being disappointed or losing them as an
audience or something but then they've took it too far where they're sending death threats and
oh really yeah i mean i don't know how serious any of it ever was but it's like
that stuff you see the trolls send you know that you're going to get sent to the gas chambers and
you know if i ever meet you i'm going to beat the shit out of you and you know i just get that from time to time and that's on social media on social
media yeah and i uh i loved twitter because i thought once i sort of came out of my shell and
wasn't just the guy from tim and eric i could say whatever i wanted and it was like oh this is great
i can say stuff and then I could like interact with
the audience in a sort of safe way, because it's not them coming over to my house or calling my
phone. But I could, you know, get their immediate feedback, or they could be, my audience is really
funny. You know, a lot of them are really funny, and creative. And so I could tweet something,
and they'd be funnier than my tweet. You know, I tweeted about the summer tour I'm doing in the States the other day.
And it was like three or four tweets about the tour because there was pre-sale and there's
it's on sale now.
And, you know, a couple of reminders and somebody tweeted like, you should only tweet once about
this.
And if people come, they come.
And if they don't, well, too bad.
about this and if people come they come and if they don't well too bad now that tweet i love and i retweet that with a okay sorry about that yeah because the great
fans that follow me are really funny and they're going to now be really funny about that they're
gonna jump on that and like oh wow what a great free
master class in marketing and advertising you know like that kind of stuff uh so there is something
fun and funny about getting a look into the mind of some of these weirdos out there but i'm sure
there's an immediate visceral negative feeling when you see negativity directed towards something you've made.
Of course.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, the thing is that I would say the majority of people who are getting frustrated, like not the extreme ones, like the extreme ones, I don't know what the hell's going on in their heads.
But the majority of kind of irritable, negative chatter is just coming from people who feel a bit pissed off and disempowered.
Yeah.
And they're just typing before they think.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
And I think a lot of people end up regretting things they say.
I had it happen the other day that somebody wrote to me.
I did an interview and somebody brought up Chappelle.
And I've been critical of him and his anti-trans
stuff. And I was very honest and said, I, you know, this is just me. I've just never really
been a fan of his. I don't, I didn't like the Chappelle show. I certainly wasn't going on
writing negative things on YouTube comments about it. It just wasn't me. It wasn't for me, whatever.
I kind of was saying that and somebody wrote me how mad they were they did this woke
interview and that just because he's against things now you hate him and all this stuff and
I just said what I said to you it's like in that interview I'd said that but I'm reiterating hey
he just never was really my style of comedy and this person wrote back I'm so sorry I didn't
realize you would actually read this I was out of my mind and just as long like
i love you and please forget what i said and all this stuff so it's sort of like you can break
through to people and and i agree people write things in the heat of the moment without thinking
about the consequences and they don't think that i'm actually looking at any of this stuff yeah a
lot of the time so i think that's the thing still even though you know evidently people are
interacting and reading all this stuff people still feel that's that one of the dangerous
things about social media i i guess is the is that disinhibition effect even though you're aware
right people are reading this stuff it does get to people you're asking about my weight and i would
post pictures where now i've lost this weight and years for years people would make fat jokes about me because I was a little chubby in the face you know and I
wasn't ashamed of my body I've never been ashamed of my body if you see awesome show I'm very exposed
in a lot of that show yeah but now that I've lost weight people say are you sick you look like shit
you look old and it's like would you ever say that to somebody in person at a bar yeah on
the street would you come up to me and say no so that should try to be the rule you use it's like
now do i say mean shit to ted cruz yes i do but i i try not to yeah much anymore would you ever do
a master class video we eric and i Would you ever do a masterclass video?
Eric and I were going to do a fake masterclass.
Of course we were.
Of course we were.
There's no way we could do it for real.
Yeah.
I don't think I've ever seen a full one.
But I mean, I'm sure actually Eric was telling me, he's like, actually, they're really good.
Some of them are really good. Some of them are good, yeah.
But a lot of them are not.
Right.
I think Ringo's is probably not very good.
Ringo's, I didn't even know he'd done one. I think Ringo's is probably not very good. Ringo's star.
I didn't even know he'd done one.
I think he did one, yeah.
Wow.
And then what are you sort of enjoying in the comedy world?
Do you find it difficult to watch other people's stuff?
Yes.
I'm terrible.
People always ask me, what are you watching?
What's good?
The Alan Partridge From the Oast House podcast.
Yeah.
That does it for me.
Like, that is exactly my sweet spot.
Yeah.
I got to keep a better list of what I'm actually like.
Because, I mean, I don't know.
There's so much to watch from the past that's good.
There's not a lot of comedy in America right now.
Like my kind of comedy, like weird comedy or or high concept comedy the sort of overwhelming thing
is the netflix stand-up specials yeah and they all tend to be lectures fairly similar yeah lectures
they're lectures from older established comedians that have been around for 30 years telling
you exactly what you're supposed
to think about things yeah and from their bubble perspective which isn't connected to the real
world at all so i don't care about anything they have to say you know so why would i tune in
um i'm watching that i guess i'm watching uh bad sisters with the sharon horgan show oh yeah i
haven't seen that yet very good very and it's And it's like a murder, but it's funny.
But yeah, I'm not watching a lot of stuff.
I'm not.
Mainly immersed in the Third Reich.
Yeah.
That's some funny stuff.
It's classic stuff.
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Hey, welcome back, podcats.
That was Tim Heidecker chatting to me there.
Very grateful indeed to Tim for making the time while he was in London last year to waffle briefly in the description of today's podcast.
You will find all sorts of links.
Tim is one of the more productive comedians out there
office hours etc and there's a link to the office hours joe rogan spoof they did in 2021
there's a playlist of bits and pieces from tom goes to the mayor which was
tim and eric's very first show back in 2004 for Adult Swim.
As far as Tim and Eric Awesome Show,
I've put a link to a compilation that is currently up there
of underrated moments from Tim and Eric's season five,
which some fans feel was one of the best seasons, the final season.
I was watching it the other night, in fact.
We had friends round.
And after supper, we were playing clips off YouTube.
And I played some clips related to the talk that I did with Steve Davis,
the snooker champion, at the Norwich Arts Centre last week.
The Arts Centre was hosting an event called Synth East, which was several
days of synthesiser related business. And as part of that, I was on stage for 45 minutes
or so chatting with Steve Davis, who, as well as being very good at snooker, has for the last decade or so got into modular synthesizers.
And now he's part of a band, a three-piece, called the Utopia Strong,
who tour around playing kind of far-out progressive music with Steve as the Eno of the group.
And Steve also DJs.
He had a radio show for a while in the 90s and beyond
where he played kind of alternative and experimental music.
He's also very into his soul.
So anyway, we had a good chat,
but I had my laptop on stage
and I was occasionally calling up clips from YouTube
that I had come across in the course of preparing a little bit for
meeting Steve. And I found some really nice clips of synth pioneers, including Delia Derbyshire,
who was part of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. And they, of course, most famously created
the Doctor Who theme. There's also a couple of great clips of Wendy Carlos. Wendy
did the music for A Clockwork Orange. She did these computerised versions of classical
pieces, which were quite controversial at the time, because people felt that, well,
some people felt that she'd sort of removed the soul that you get from an orchestra, a live orchestra, and they found the electronic sounds too harsh and robotic.
But of course, when you hear them in Clockwork Orange, they work so well.
David Bowie used to come on to a lot of that music from Clockwork Orange, I think, back in Ziggy Stardust days.
They would play that before the band came out.
And then I didn't realise that Wendy Carlos also did the music for Tron.
And anyway, when my friends came over, we watched Delia Derbyshire and Wendy Carlos
and then we watched a bit of Tron, which my friend hadn't seen before.
And she was so knocked out by it.
I mean, it is an incredible piece of work, Tron.
It's not a brilliant film as far as the actual story goes
and how much it makes sense and how interesting it is,
but it's like an art film, really,
at least the parts inside the computer, so to speak.
The first section of the film is just out in the real world.
But once you get into the computer, it's this amazing look that they create.
And it's partly very early CG to create the backgrounds and some of the animation in there.
very early CG to create the backgrounds and some of the animation in there.
But then there's also a lot of stuff which is created by filming the actors in black and white in these groovy costumes that incorporate sort of circuit board designs.
And then they painted, they hand painted the frames to make everything glow in a computerized fashion, a kind of neon computer glow.
It's just extraordinary and it looks beautiful.
And then you've got Wendy Carlos' music on there as well and the result is this very strange effect that's never really been matched partly i suppose because it's totally
impractical i think it took ages and was incredibly expensive and then the film didn't do very well so
they thought right won't do that again but how amazing that it was done for disney anyway so
we were watching all that stuff and then I went out of the room and my wife
wasn't too interested in Tron because she used to watch Tron a lot when the boys were little
and they would watch Tron. So my wife ended up watching Tron. I went out to the kitchen to make
some tea and when I came back, my wife had commandeered the laptop, and everyone was watching Epic Fails.
They're good fun for a while, but usually after about 20 minutes or so of Epic Fails,
you start feeling dirty.
And then we had to go somewhere else for our entertainment.
So I thought, well, let's try some Tim and Eric.
So we went for Tim and Eric's most underrated moments
from season five and I was thinking this probably isn't going to last very long but actually we
ended up watching the whole thing it's pretty good but there's also sorry that was a long tangent
there's also links to other things that me and Tim just talked about
uh link to Bob Dylan's song Lenny Bruce,
so you can hear what Tim was deconstructing.
Link to the scene from David Byrne's film True Stories
with Spalding Gray monologuing at dinner.
Made me quite nostalgic watching that again, actually.
I do love that film.
Link to a trailer for Cannibal the Musical. uh link to a trailer for cannibal the musical
and link to a trailer for quite an odd film that tim pops up in along with quite a lot of other
american comedians called brigsby bear from 2017 i saw mark commode giving it a very
lukewarm review saying some of it's just about okay and there's some interesting
stuff but too quirky I think. Fair enough it is very quirky but actually for me it was just the
right side of quirky. It's about a bloke who lives out in the desert with his parents, a bit like Dogtooth.
They won't let him out of the compound.
They told him that the world outside is desolate and the atmosphere is poisoned.
And they teach him what they think he needs to know with this show called Brigsby Bear that they have filmed themselves.
It's like their own educational
kids show that they have made to show their son. Anyway, I think once this kid gets out into the
real world and his parents are no longer there, he feels the need to carry on the Brigsby Bear
project in order to bring some closure to his life. I saw it on a plane.
So you've got to be careful of movies you watch on planes, don't you?
Because your judgment has been clouded by chocolate and red wine and altitude.
But I enjoyed it.
All right, podcats.
Whoa! Oh, man.
I just nearly stood on a pheasant that launched itself.
I'm going to head back, check in on Rosie.
Thank you very much indeed to Seamus Murphy Mitchell
for his production support and conversation editing on this episode.
Thank you to Helen Green. She does the beautiful artwork.
Thanks to everyone at ACAST for all their help keeping the podcast show on the road.
But thanks most of all to you.
And I really do appreciate you coming.
I think we should have a hug.
Come over here.
Come on.
Great to see you.
Go carefully out there.
And until next time,
that we share the same out all space, bear in mind that I love you.
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Give me a little smile and a thumbs up. Give me a little smile and a thumbs up. ស្រូវានប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប់ប� Thank you. you