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You're listening to Nick DiPaolo on the Riotcast Network, riotcast.com. Hi kids, how are you?
Yeah, it's Monday again.
You're welcome for the bonus show, by the way.
I, uh, no, that was, uh, I gave it two shows last week because like I said, we had our
best month download wise and, uh, you kids have been very faithful to me.
Very nice.
It's a beautiful thing.
Still haven't made a dime doing this, and I don't know what all the excitement's about.
But I have a cocaine connection through Pittsburgh with Henry Hill that I'm hoping he handed in his will to me.
And I'm going to make it flourish.
I'm going to get as many young kids hooked on fucking the crazy white junk.
Anyways, hey, you know who i get with me today
my buddy uh this is a guy i grew up with um he was best friends with my brother-in-law who married
my sister darlene and uh you see his name in one of my specials at the end i thank a guy named bob
murphy that's that's not him but there there's another guy named Greg Zook who I thank
because this guy's really the reason I get into comedy.
He came to my house with what is now my brother-in-law, David.
I was back in like seventh grade maybe,
and I thought he was the funniest fuck.
He may be not now, but he was then.
And now I'm busting balls.
Exactly.
But it's retired it's a retired cop greg zook oh thanks thanks
for having me here in your beautiful studio you said sarcastic it's awesome no really actually
i'm impressed um but uh yeah so real quickly and we're not gonna go real quickly mike dowd i had
him in here we're not we're not gonna do this do a cop thing because he's not here to defend.
But you know, whatever he did, the guy, you know, he took another direction.
I took the right direction.
I got a pension.
I didn't do time.
Good for him.
God bless him.
I hope his kids live to be a thousand.
So it was grandchildren's.
But just a fucking rat.
But other than that, he's a nice guy.
No, no, it's just one a different way.
But that's it. That's all I have to say. I know i i want to turn this into a whole fucking thing either but uh i i remember you uh
this is my first memory of you coming to my house again i'm probably in sixth grade maybe maybe you
were in sixth grade and i was probably like 10th sophomore I was probably a sophomore in high school. Well, we're playing hockey downstairs in our basement, me and my brother and some other kid.
And Zook comes down, my brother, and he jumps right into the game.
First of all, we're playing with street hockey sticks in a finished basement downstairs, except for the floor wasn't finished.
Yeah.
And you're like, I don't know, what, 5'7", and I'm 6'2", and I probably weighed 190 back then.
I made some stupid joke, though.
I was like in sixth grade, and I go, yeah.
I don't know.
You were complaining because you hadn't scored.
And there was a kid, Mike Little, who was like a great street hockey player.
And I go, yeah, well, that ain't exactly Fred McMurray checking you, which makes no fucking sense.
But you laugh for fucking 10 minutes.
And I go, oh, this guy thinks I'm funny.
And then we bonded over the three stooges for the next 10 years.
And Zook scores a goal again in our finished basement.
And he raises a stick through the finished ceiling, the drop ceiling my father put up.
And that was one of the many fucking things you broke
But the funny thing is
About like scrolling around your basement
When we were kids
Is your old man
Like being a detective
Leaving and saying
None of that street hockey shit
When I'm gone
Right
And he'd like leave
He went across the street
To my Uncle Ernie's house
Yeah he'd leave and hide for like 10 minutes
We'd be looking around
Next thing you know
We'd break out the pads
No he came downstairs
And said put the shit away
You've already broken
A lamp and all that shit
And we go okay
You know my brother's friend
Mike
We put the shit away
And he goes
I don't want to fucking
You know
And we waited about ten minutes
And then we look up
And like the
You know
You got the windows
They were almost underground
I see his face in there
Like
Well yeah But he went away for about a half hour.
So we broke out the shit again.
Exactly.
We broke out the pads.
My brother had fucking pillows duct taped to his legs for pads.
We're using like a golf ball that can put your eye out.
And we sawed off some of the hockey sticks.
Yeah, we have real hockey sticks.
I see.
And so, yeah, we put all the shit away.
The old man leaves.
And, like, fucking next thing you know, he comes.
We hear the door open upstairs.
We can hear his feet.
He comes downstairs and goes fucking crazy.
Oh, he goes berserk.
And cracks me.
Gives me a nice cuff to my ears still ringing.
A cuff to the side of the head.
But the funny thing is.
And you just stood there with your stick.
I'm standing there with my stick in my hand.
And you might as well have been your dick.
Exactly.
But the funny thing is, I'm almost an adult.
You're just a kid.
He must have been looking at me like, what a shithead I am.
I still wonder why he even let me in your house after that.
And one of my brother's friends was known for his body odor.
He never, he wasn't big on deodorant.
And my father goes, it smells like a fucking homeless guy's sock.
And someone cracks me in the head with a nice fucking slap.
That was Big Nick, though.
Big Nick,
I think I might have mentioned this
in some of my first podcasts.
My old man,
you know,
he was a little bit strict.
And remember my sister, darling?
Tell my fans about the party
she would have at our house
on the weekends.
Remember?
My parents went out every weekend,
every Saturday night. And like like your father knowing that like like every boy in town knowing that your
father was insane we'd be at the party like you know waiting hoping he never came home to kill us
well he was known as big nick yeah he was known as big nick because and i told this story i i know i
told it here on one of the podcasts.
My sister was dating this kid with blonde hair.
This is my youngest sister, Donna.
This kid, Brian, had blonde hair down the middle.
He was like Axl Rose before Axl Rose was Axl Rose.
And my sister, everybody wanted her. She was gorgeous.
My sister, Donna, no one could understand why she was with the bad boy.
Anyways, we're at a football game, a high school football game.
And, again, I'm not even, I'm probably maybe in junior high at this point.
I can't even remember.
But this kid's at the football game and gives my father the finger.
Yeah.
And my father, remember he chased him outside the stadium.
Now, everybody in the bleachers are looking outside the stadium as my father chases his fucking kid with long hair.
Exactly.
And he catches him by the back of the fucking back of a 100-yard run and slaps the kid across the...
Yeah, and nothing happened.
Nothing happened.
Everybody cheered, I think.
People were clapping for him.
They stopped watching the game.
He said, fuck you to my phone.
But the party, Darlene's parties were notorious.
She'd have half the high school there.
This is my older sister.
And who's the kid that fell and broke his ribs in my driveway?
Remember he passed out? Yeah, no. And on that same kid that fell and broke his ribs in my driveway? Remember he passed out?
Yeah, no.
And on that same night, I'm riding home.
Who was it?
I can't even remember who it was.
Not Kidger.
No.
It was a big kid.
Handsome guy that you went to school with.
What do you got?
Fucking epilepsy in the brain?
It's all right, though.
Are you fucking kidding me?
I don't even know your address.
What was the guy's name?
I can't even think of it.
Handsome guy.
He was in your grade, you dummy.
No.
Not Scott Kidger.
No.
Roger Swanson, probably.
Not Roger Swanson. I don't fucking know.
I'm going to get my brother in on the line.
I remember looking out, though, and David and another guy got him by his feet.
He's unconscious.
Yeah.
And he ended up breaking his ribs.
Nobody called.
Nobody called.
Plus, he was alcohol poisoning.
That same night I'm
riding home on my
bike.
Yeah.
That like down this
big hill to David's
house.
I'm spinning around
and you know how the
wheel stop.
I catch the back of
my leg.
I open up a gash in
the back of my leg.
I'm not shitting you
to the bone.
And now you know my
old man is nutty as
your father was.
Yeah.
Greg's old man was a
the head of the state police.
My uncle was, but he was a captain.
What was your dad, a captain?
Yeah, my father was a captain.
He shook my hand.
I remember you introduced me to your dad.
He literally, I almost started crying.
I was in like sixth grade.
He crushed my hand to a point.
He had hands like fucking I am Kate.
Patrol were wicked sly to talk.
David couldn't even hit it
Yeah so good
Tell me
So anyway
It's funny how
The nuttier your father is
Yeah
So I'm like drunk off my ass
Literally
I look back
I can see like the bones and shit
Like when I move my leg
I can literally see
Like the motion of
Yeah
And shit
Yeah
He don't say a word
He gives me a towel Like wraps it up, puts me in the car.
Literally, we never speak about it again.
We never speak about it again.
He didn't say a word.
They went in, they stitched me up,
stuffed the thing full of that yellow stuff.
Went in the car, went to bed,
woke up about 2 o'clock next afternoon.
Come downstairs, he looks at me.
Oh, the old man?
Yeah, he just looks at me Oh the old man Yeah he just like
Looks at me like
You know
Like if that happens again
I'll kill you
And never spoke about it again
Yeah the old man
Your old man used to
Scare the shit out of me
But see that
That was the good old days
See when
You could get a
Crack
You could smack a
You could smack your daughter's boyfriend
Get away with it
Yeah exactly
When you get a good crack
And that was the end of it
You didn't have to You know go to counseling and all that good stuff.
I'm going to fucking smash his fucking face in.
Yeah, that's what he said, actually, about Dave, because he brought me to the party.
But here's another fond memory I have of you that cracked me up.
So Zook comes over.
Now, my parents have a bunch of people there.
We're watching the Olympics on a Sunday afternoon.
Zook comes down.
What were you weighing at that point, Zook?
I don't know.
Probably.
Take a guess, shithead.
This isn't fucking Wheel of Fortune.
Jesus Christ.
Was I big?
Yeah, you were obese.
Probably like 325, 350, right around there.
Right around.
Yeah, at least.
So just picture the 350-pound guy.
By the way, he's 5'6".
No.
No, he's actually like six, too.
But but you're sitting there.
My parents introduced you to the Marindolas and then to everybody else is like three other couples.
OK, this is 30 seconds after you introduce everybody.
We're sitting and watching the Olympics and somebody's on the high dive board, you know, with a speedo on.
And you go, my ain't those fucking scant.
Mr. Tracy, God bless him, the late Jack Tracy, who passed away last year.
I remember him fucking turning purple.
And Mr. Marindola going, who is this fucking guy?
And then you had about 40 other cracks that, you know, were just.
Me and Zook, we bonded over the Three Stooges, early Dennis Miller.
Early Dennis Miller.
What else?
Hockey.
National Geographic.
That was big.
What are you talking about, National Geographic?
Well, you know, they had some funny stuff on there.
I'm not going to get into that.
Oh, you mean the magazine.
No, I mean the show.
I'm not going to get into it.
There was no show back then, stupid.
Oh, there was.
No, there wasn't.
No, there wasn't.
Dope.
It's the magazines.
I know what you're driving at.
Not, not.
Show cryptic.
Not, not.
That, not.
I actually agree.
Wild Kingdom.
Wild Kingdom.
Remember Wild Kingdom?
Yes.
With fucking.
Mutual of Omaha.
We used to always go out.
The guy would always have his buddy.
He was like. What was the guy's name?
Norm
My brother's name
Was like his stick man
No
What was the guy
Who was the host every week?
I can't even think
This is like you're listening to a fucking
This is geriatrics week
Yeah
Marlon Perkins
Marlon Perkins
Mutual of Omaha
Wild Kingdom
And he had like a Like a boy Friday or a man Friday.
His name was Norm.
And remember how he'd say,
I'll stay in the van while Norm sees if the lion's still chewing on the carcass.
And he'd have to go within two inches of it.
He was always like the front man.
That's true.
You did have about 20 minutes on that.
I used to think the poor guy.
Marlon never put him Away
You know
In harm's way
Yeah
It was funny
40
50 years ago
Yeah keep bringing up shit
That 22 year olds
Won't listen
Hold on
Let me fucking
I gotta face that fan
Towards me
It's 112 Celsius
In this motherfucker
You might feel this.
I hate the fucking summer, by the way.
Did I mention?
I've had it.
I mean, I piss and moan, but, you know, it's enough.
It's 400% humidity.
It's like fucking Nam here.
By the way, folks, I updated my pond.
It looks terrific.
Oh, you're kidding me.
I threw a few things in there, and next, you know, a couple hundred fish came to the surface,
sucking up air, and two dead turtles.
No, I threw in this natural shit.
Oh, that's unbelievable.
We had the Guatemalans pull all the shit out with that giant rake that I sent away for,
and then we threw the...
I got this stuff, this stuff that's eco-friendly, and you know what?
It worked.
I did it for a month.
You could fucking drink out of it now.
Very eco-friendly.
Nessie's in the fucking pond. Nessie that's a lockneck monster greg what do you get a hair lick you're choking up on a podcast for christ's sake you did you did
radio yourself you stuttering prick you what was it great you had a cop net show i had a show a
radio show that was actually on radio yeah look it up copnet.com the shows are still up
there we were on the air for 11 years now you could talk a little on twitter i don't know i'm
checking your okay levels here we weren't we were on the show for we were on the air for 11 years
we syndicated in 158 different markets and actually we're talking about really back yeah
150 different markets and yeah we were on wnbc How come you're in a bathing suit from the 80s now and a fucking shitty T-shirt?
Well, you're syndicated.
No, we actually were on WNBC from 1 a.m.
WNBC?
WNBC, the biggest a.m. channel in the world.
Okay.
From 12 o'clock at night on Saturdays to 1 o'clock Sunday mornings.
And that's where we drew every dime that we made off the show.
Me and Greg are known for our negative energies.
We get together.
We create a black hole.
We had a Tony Robbins concert.
And a fucking ceiling would cave in.
Yeah, Tony Robbins would have a stroke if we went to one of his.
We went to a camp.
My parents used to rent this camp up in Maine.
And we had a notorious 24 hours.
We weren't even there 24 hours.
Greg clogged the toilet.
My father was fucking going, we got lost with a boat.
My father goes, you got to tell the story.
Yeah, my old man goes, we went with him.
It was around the other side of the lake to put the boat in, you know, ramp down.
And then so he took the boat on the water across to the lake and he said you guys bring back the car on
the trailer again we've been in this we've been in the state of maine for 30 seconds not really
our fault it was like 19 we really didn't pay attention no you know a couple of us were high
uh well so drunk off my ass i know you were and And me too. So my old man goes, yeah, bring the trailer back to the camp.
And cut to two and a half hours later, they think we've been eaten by beers.
We're in the fucking woods going down dead end roads.
And we would have to take the trailer off manually.
And fucking, because you couldn't, we couldn't back it out.
We couldn't turn it around.
We literally have to pull the trailer off Reset the car And put the
We did that like ten times
I know
It was really embarrassing
And then we heard
Thurman Munson died
No that was
That was a year later
I don't know
That was earlier actually
Yeah
But
So
So we had been there
About an hour
Greg had clogged the toilet
We get lost
With the
With the fucking trailer
And then we're standing outside
Oh my old man Wanted to go water skiing Jesus And believe it or not We get lost with the fucking trailer. And then we're standing outside.
Oh, my old man wanted to go water skiing.
Jesus.
And believe it or not, he trusts me and Greg.
I'm driving the boat or vice versa.
You were driving the boat.
Greg's driving the boat.
You know, I'm in charge of the fucking, the tow rope.
My old man wipes out, you know, because I get him going like 58 miles an hour on skis.
Guy's like a 48-year-old man.
You were kicking the throttle forward.
I did.
I had both hands.
I was leaning on it with my weight.
I'm trying to fight him off.
And so my old man wipes out.
And you know how, if you guys are familiar with water skiing, you bring your circle,
the boat around, so you got to bring the tow rope close to the guy who's in the fucking one.
I'm not.
And Zook's got about eight beers in him, and fucking was trying to bring the rope to my old man and you
back it up. Literally.
I don't know why we would be backing up. We couldn't
get it close. Anyways,
my old man's
got the rope in his hand, the handle.
It's nice and taut. All of a sudden, bing! I see
the thing fucking...
Bing! Greg backed over
it. The propeller cut the rope. Of course.
My old man's yelling.
You can hear it echoing through the lake.
You fucking assholes.
What's the matter with you?
Souls, souls, souls.
You fucking assholes.
And remember he looks to his right and there's a snake.
Remember there's a snake.
He goes, come get me.
Literally.
And then after that, I come to turn around.
I almost beached the fucking boat into the people's camp next to him.
He wouldn't talk to me for like two days.
Well, then, no.
But then the next morning, bad weather comes in.
You and I are outside down by the dock.
And my old man spent some good dough on like two beautiful rafts, like two-man rafts.
And he goes, bring those up here.
He thought they weren't tied down. He goes, bring them up
into the fucking house.
We popped both of them.
We drag them up over rocks
like fucking more.
That was a total of, yeah,
I'd say 36 hours we did that.
The old man wouldn't even talk to me.
And then I accelerated as we got older, too.
Every time we get together.
Well, yeah.
Beginning here.
Yeah.
I came here via New Jersey from.
Oh, yeah.
Greg.
Greg was up in Massachusetts.
Yeah.
You're up here.
Ten minutes from your house.
Yeah.
He's in he's in my hometown.
They know where I'm from.
He's from my hometown.
He's up there.
I'm talking about this week.
Last Tuesday.
He says this is around nine o'clock he says i'm really i'm leaving around 9 15 from danvers and he goes uh thing says i'll be
there at like 12 30 yeah okay sure enough it's now quarter or two no fucking word of him i'm
looking at my wife this mama luke then he then texts me going, I should be there by, you know, in a half hour.
That was at 2.15.
Now it's 10 of 4.
He's still not here.
What the fuck happened?
Well, like I said to you, Nick, my brother gave me a Magellan, but I didn't know it was.
Why is everyone so fucking stupid?
Why aren't more people interrogating like me?
He was was What happened
I go to Nick
My brother gave me
A Magellan
Which he actually did
A Magellan folks
A Magellan
A Magellan
That's what
From 2009
That's a GPS
It's a GPS
Like from literally 2009
And I go to Nick
And apparently
It belongs to Magellan
And he told me
To go fuck myself
2009
I thought I was older than that
It was like 2009
Fucking that might as well be
1910 in comparison
Technology wise
Yeah good point
But he blames it
On the Magellan folks
I
Well I
Literally came through
Yonkers
To come here
I was in downtown
It sent them past.
It sent them. I live in northern Westchester.
I don't want to fucking give away where I live
exactly. But he should have come in
like on 84 to 684
in that area. Some reason he's on
95 to the Bruckner.
It took him all the way around.
But this
is what bugs me. I said, did you come in on 84?
You go, yeah. And then 10 minutes minutes later you go, no, it was 95
He doesn't even know
This guy was a cop
He doesn't even fucking know where he was
I wasn't responsible
Bonnie Fife?
I wasn't responsible for directions
I set things up
Somebody drove me
Long story short
Long story short, he should have been here at 1230
You know
At night He gets here at about30, you know, at night.
He gets here at about quarter before 10 or 4.
And does it surprise you, even a little bit, actually?
Seriously.
Well, yeah.
That one did.
Yeah.
But, yeah.
So that was Tuesday.
He's still here.
I don't know how to get him out of the fucking house.
Call in at 1-800.
Like I said to Nick, I was going to leave after three days because you know what they say about company.
What?
After three days, it stinks.
And after seven days, you've got to throw it out.
It's just like fish.
It's like pussy, you mean.
Oh, it's like.
What?
What?
Help me. Help me.
Help.
I just know.
What?
I got to tell the...
Go ahead.
I retired recently, right?
From what?
From the Miami Police Department.
From Miami Police Department.
I've been a lawyer.
He was a detective, a sergeant detective.
I got a law degree.
And I know you're going to say on Twitter, why don't you talk? We're not going to do the whole. We already... It just happens that I was a lawyer. He was a detective, a sergeant detective. I got a law degree. And I know you're going to say on Twitter, why don't you talk?
We're not going to do the whole.
It just happens that I was a cop, and I went and got a law degree.
Now you get a law degree.
How many times did you pass the bar?
Four.
I took the bar four times.
As a matter of fact, there's a sandwich near there.
Didn't you get lost a couple times?
Yeah, a couple times.
You couldn't find the?
The first two times I got lost on the way to Tampa.
I actually used to go up to the food thing in between sessions,
and they go to the regular.
It was a roast beef sandwich and a Diet Coke.
I'm not shitting you.
There's a street name after me in front of the Tampa Convention Center.
There is?
Really?
Yeah.
What's it called?
Shithead Avenue?
No, it's called Stupid Cop.
I should have fucking kept watching Everybody Loves Raymond
instead of going to law school.
Boulevard.
But you're doing a lot of pro bono work on that
Yeah, that's all
You know
I love doing that stuff
Do you?
Yeah
What are you, a bleeding hot layer?
Get out of my house
Yeah
I like doing that stuff because
As the generations get younger
They have less understanding of people
Literally A kid just came coming back from Iraq Who got into Mouthy with a cop And as the generation gets younger, they're less understanding of people.
Literally, a kid just came coming back from Iraq who got into Mouthy with a cop, and the cop actually arrested him.
And I defended him for free.
And then they want him to drop the charges.
I go off on the judge, and the judge actually says, well, there's going to be no court costs and fines.
That's what I can do.
The judge was pissed.
She was actually pissed because they weren't doing nothing. She was pissed at who?
At the prosecutor.
I'm like, you can't cut this kid a break.
Let him go.
He just got back from Iraq.
So the judge was siding with you?
Oh, yeah.
She took my side because you're actually not supposed to do it.
You're not supposed to directly address the court.
Female judge?
Yeah.
Black female judge?
63 years old.
Are you sure you didn't drain this up in a Law & Order episode?
Yeah, no.
It might have been a CSI Miami I was an extra in.
I'm not sure.
There are no white male judges anymore.
No, it was a black female judge.
No, there is one.
That's what I just said.
There are no more white male judges.
There's two.
There's two?
Yeah.
No, there's a few.
Well, you know, the demographics in Miami are conducive to the ethnic.
So did you win that?
My dear. I know I didn't the only thing that you didn't get court costs on a fine other than that
He screwed he was gonna be in the military eight years and I gonna throw him out
And that's kids and I told you a little
Shithead kids 22 years old right that right out 24 right out. How old was the cop?
The kid the cop the kid the cop how
old was the cop like his age you would think they'd bond right like they were like late 20s
28 that's what you mean when you say they don't have any they don't have they don't have respect
for each other all right i mean can you imagine maybe he's jealous because imagine being like
this kid's going over to afghanistan you're doing your part here right you're keeping america safe
and then you get into shit with you can't no it's petty no you're right it's generational i mean we get petty and
but i mean at the end you might think you say that was what you know i was fucking stupid i'm
gonna leave it alone but you know i did stupid shit when i was a kid anyway who don't who the
hell knows did you yeah no give us an example okay no no it was this Vietnamese No no no That used to clean my pool And
No
I'm still trying to think
Of the guy that passed out
Not that it matters
It's killing me too
Yeah
It's making me
Because there was always
Like controlled mayhem
At your house
Yeah
And somebody would always
Be near death
And come home
Well not always near death
But yes
There were a lot of people
Choking on their own puke
And stuff
But the thing of it was though
We could drink our senior year, which was a great idea.
Oh, the age thing?
Yeah, it was 18.
Well, I remember those parties.
Me and my brother would be in our bedroom, like watching the Bruins and the Canadians or whatever,
and somebody eventually would find a way in and give me and my brother like a 16-ounce beer.
Not me, though.
Anyway, actually, believe it or not yeah our senior year that everybody could drink and that's where it really
stepped up and and the following year what was it just passed that law it passed in 70 it passed in
july of of 70 nice lucky 75 and it was in 77 they pulled the law but you were still grandfathered in so i
was a bouncer you had me like a string theory mathematician to figure out who could drink and
who couldn't yeah because there was a gap between now being 21 yeah the manager would have to put
a sign up because we were too stupid to figure out who could drink and who couldn't what happened
uh i'm eating dinner one night again i think i'm in high school at this
point and uh i'm at the table i'll never forget this you look in the you look in the front door
of my uh my parents house that you look in the window and your face i didn't recognize you
one side of your face was caved in oh my god you're gonna fight with somebody mcdonald's
i was mcdonald's m I remember McDonald's feeling my senior year.
You know how I hit the gym, I get down to like 190.
Yeah, from 350.
From like 310.
I'm feeling all quick and shit.
And we start getting lip from guys that are like in their 30s.
You what?
Start getting lip from guys that are like 30-year-old guys.
I'm like 18.
You know, going back, fuck you, fuck you, you this is a mcdonald's and beverly beverly mass so i take a milkshake and bounce it off
throw it out the guy i drill him i hit him right in the side of the head and then i go up well how
did it start just back and forth words like we were too close to that car something stupid yeah
yeah when he starts mouthing and i I'm like, oh, fuck your mother.
And the next thing I know, I have a full milkshake.
And I drill him.
I hit him on the side of the head.
These are like grown men to me, right?
Drill him in the head.
So they're like in their 30s, and you're like 18.
Yeah.
And I'm 18, you know, feeling my oats.
Yeah, I was like.
But I give him a diversion, and he like, it throws him off.
I hit him with an And he like It throws him off I hit him
With an asshole shot
From the moon
Puts him out
I'm standing around
Next guy comes up
He swings at me
I hit him with a shot
Then somebody
Then the next thing I know
I'm laying on the ground
And this
Kid went to high school
With his father's like
Waking you up
Slapping me in the face
Hey wake up
Hey wake up there champ
He's saying
This is a cop now
They've just seen the whole thing.
Apparently,
some guy that was like 6'6", came from behind
and like hooked one
and hit me
in the side of the face
so hard.
They must have fucking
done some number to you
when you were down, too.
Oh, yeah.
No, no, no.
They put the boots to me, too.
Yeah, I'd never seen...
I almost spit my food out
when you looked in the window
of a...
First of all,
I go, who the fuck's that?
But it was right down the middle
It was like Phantom of the Opera
You know they blacken out
One side of his face
Literally
The side of my face
Was four times
The eye
Everything
It was like
You could hardly see your nose
Because your face was so swollen
And your mouth was all droopy
Like Stallone
Yeah
Jackie Stallone
But that night,
this just
shows how different things were then.
I think, wait a minute,
I think we have audio of it.
The fight, yeah. Now, I'll start by
making a mountain fold on each corner.
Folding the corners into
the center of the paper.
Touche, Captain Blood.
Touché, Captain Blood.
This is how it started.
Exactly.
Greg, language, please.
What do you want? If you'd move, perhaps I could reach the chess set.
And if I don't, what the fuck are you going to do to it?
You don't intimidate me.
Here comes the milkshake.
You're lucky she's here, you little prick.
Isn't that what you said to the kid?
Naturally.
You're only tough when there's an authority figure nearby,
so things don't go too far.
Here comes the milkshake.
Oh, how the mighty have fought.
Here, the milkshake. Hear the milkshake?
Bill Sipko's dad came in with his nightclub.
And then you had it to my house.
What'd you film that on?
I'd never seen it, but your face was like 11 different colors.
Not just black and blue.
It was green, yellow.
And it was like that for a couple weeks.
Let me tell you what.
I have been hit hard in my life numerous times.
Right.
And there's one thing.
I actually boxed in 1997.
I'm not kidding you. And I had this whole time.
You can look it up.
You guys from New Jersey out there, look up Allie Ridgway in the Hall of Fame.
Trained me.
Allie Ridgway?
Allie Ridgway fought kids.
And what Hall of Fame for what?
He's in the...
For boxing.
Bad boxing training?
No.
He was a super, like, welterweight.
He weighed like 126 pounds.
Fought Kid Chocolate, who's a famous fighter.
Kid Chocolate?
He's a rapper, isn't he?
Kid Chocolate.
Kid Chocolate?
I'm serious.
What are you saying?
Chocolat?
Kid Chocolat?
That's when that movie came out.
We made a joke about it.
Excuse me. Excuse me. Kid Chocolat? That's when that movie came out. We made a joke about it.
Excuse me.
Kid Chocolat?
You folks that are listening.
Seriously, what was he known as?
No, he was the heavy, the welterweight. What was his nickname?
Kid Chocolat?
No, that was, yeah, Kid Chocolat chocolate that was his last name no yeah it's
who he fought he was the the super welterweight heavyweight champion in the world he went like 18
rounds with him with four ounce gloves really those gloves you work out with yeah that's what
were they wearing back yeah this isn't the freaking my winter gloves have more pain yeah
exactly yeah this isn't like this is like in like in the late 20s, early 30s.
Because this guy at the time, now this is going back to like in the 80s.
Yeah.
This guy is literally like 80 years old.
He lived to be like almost 100.
We used to talk to him in a nursing home.
Yeah.
But he used to always say to me, he'd look at me and go, oh, what a shame.
And he cursed like a sailor.
He's a fighter, Greg.
He's from the streets.
He said that like you were training with fucking Bernie Madoff.
But no, this is what he used to always say.
His wife would come up.
Excuse me.
No, but I got to tell you a funny story about it.
Because he'd be like, come on, get your fucking laptop.
Yeah, fucking.
And he would literally talk like that.
And his wife would come out.
Allie.
You're a little loud, dude.
Jesus.
Am I?
Yeah, if you're going to fucking yell, fucking back off the mic. Okay. Go ahead. His wife would come out, Allie! You're a little loud, dude. Jesus. Am I? Yeah, if you're going to fucking yell, fuck it back off the mic.
Okay.
Go ahead.
His wife would come out and yell at him, like,
Allie, watch your mouth.
And he'd go, Jesus Christ, Mary, I never swore to her I met these guys.
You know how those cops are.
They're always cursing.
Cursing.
Was he Irish?
Yeah.
Or did he have a stroke?
I couldn't figure out the accent.
But he talked like that.
His name is Ali Ridgeway.
He's in the New Jersey Boxing Hall of Fame.
And he trained you.
And he trained me to go play.
And he used to say to me.
Because you could hit.
He used to say to me, too bad your hands are so slow because you've got a head like an anvil.
And he goes, you've got a head like an anvil.
And he goes, you'll left hook or down an oak tree.
Literally, that is what he used to say.
Because I was.
He said the same thing to Steve Martin when he's training him for a movie.
Yeah.
I was no Ronda Rousey, but I could throw a left hook.
No.
Well, you hit me.
We used to fuck around.
And you hit me with a forearm one time.
You know, I used to run up
and fucking punch you
in the back of the,
you know, head or the neck
out of nowhere.
Yeah, good old days.
But you hit me
with a forearm once.
I literally went
in the bathroom downstairs.
I had to sit on the toilet
trying to catch my wind.
I had the door shut.
I was like,
Remember how hard,
that's like we screw around now punching at each other. Yeah. Remember how hard we's like we We screw around now
Pudging at each other
Yeah
Remember how hard
We would drill each other
And shit
When we were growing up
Enough about our sex life
Yeah what
No
No I know
And we can't do it anymore
I know
Now I can't do it
It hurts me
I have bruises in the morning
Ah
Greg's had
Major hip surgery
And
I've had major
Shoulder surgery
And It's really sad Yeah sad What are you gonna do Who ever thought Major hip surgery and I've had major shoulder surgery.
And it's really sad.
Yeah, it's sad.
What are you going to do?
Who would have thought this is how it all would... Well, it's not come to an end yet.
We're still doing lots of things.
I told you it was all going on.
I want to talk about when you did...
Greg actually did stand-up.
Nothing funnier than a cop doing stand-up, huh, folks?
No, he's living down in Miami.
And you actually...
I talked you into it Over the phone
Yeah no
I came to see you in Tampa
It was 1991
I came to see you in Tampa
How can you remember this
It's amazing
I remember everything
I can't find his way
To my house
Or the GPS
Yeah but that's why
I took the bar four times
Because I'm a
I have useless knowledge
In my head
Okay so when
When did you decide
First of all
Me and Colin Quinn
Did a couple benefits
Was that before
You were a comic
No that was like during During In the early 90s You Colin Quinn did a couple benefits Was that before you were a comic?
No, that was like during During
In the early 90s
You and Quinn did a bunch of
We came down, did some benefits
Yeah, that's how I met Quinn
There was a cop that we raised the money for, right?
Yeah, Hawk Miles
Yeah, he died of cancer young
Good kid
But you went up on stage with a puppet
Was that the piggy puppet?
Yeah, Sergeant Porky And you did the background for him But you went up on stage with a puppet. Oh. Is that the pig puppet?
Sergeant Porky.
And you did the background for him?
He's got a, this is in front of all cops, by the way, so we weren't making fun of him,
but he had a puppet, a pig puppet.
Yeah, like a rubber pig. A rubber pig.
It really looked like a pig.
A roast pig.
Yeah.
Like the kind Black Lives Matter was pushing out.
Right.
No, but it was a puppet.
Like the kind Black Lives Matter was pushing out.
Right.
No, but it was a puppet.
And I'm in the back offstage with a microphone providing the dialogue.
Saying the most heinous shit you've ever heard in your life.
Right?
And I'm going, oh, don't say that.
Yeah.
It was like a Jeff Dunham and Peanuts type of thing.
It was like a Jeff Dunham.
Who was that guy?
Bacon on a stick we were doing.
I'm in the, yeah.
But I had no idea what he was going to say.
And he's saying. Was I doing providing, wait, was I providing the voice of the puppet?
Of the puppet.
Right, that's right.
And you were saying the most heinous shit.
It was killing.
And absolutely destroying the room and making this pig noise.
It actually ruined the night because it was so funny.
You couldn't Nobody could top it
Everybody
Ate their shit after that
And we
Because we just kept going on
People were standing
All like we were geniuses
I can't even repeat this stuff
We had a VHS tape
Of it
We actually have
Somewhere
If Andy can find it
My wife has that program
That converts shit
Into digital
Oh you'll be
You'll be
Yeah
I have the I have the VHS tape But Colin Maybe he can find them. My wife has that program that converts shit into digital. Oh, you'll be glad. Yeah.
I have the VHS.
But Colin did a few benefits for Greg.
Went down there on his own.
And this is when Colin weighed about 225 with a goatee.
And he looked like a cop.
And they loved him.
Oh, my God.
They frigging loved him.
So how did you, when was your first, I can't even remember the first time.
I came and saw you in Tampa.
We were screwing around.
And you said you wanted to go up.
I don't want to mention names.
You remember who it was with.
Gary.
Gary Valentine.
Gary Valentine.
Yeah, but you didn't go on.
No, no, no.
That was where it started?
Yeah, we had that comedy condo.
You said, yeah, we were like...
Oh, Gary Valentine, yes.
He said, you know what?
Gary, yeah, he had. Gary. He said, you know what? He goes, because he was.
Gary, yeah, he had a hot broad with him, and we went back to the condo.
And I brought back a waitress, and he went in one room, and then we switched.
It was square dancing. That's why I love Gary.
And I'm sitting in the middle, drunk off my ass, eating a foot long.
Right.
Not a guy.
Greg's eating a sub by himself in the living room.
Laughing, like giggling like a little girl.
Okay, so how does that translate to you doing stand-up?
Because even Gary was saying, he goes, because we were like jabbing at each other.
And we're ripping him in the ass.
He's ripping him.
All right.
Move the story forward, Edith.
Jesus Christ.
So I went on.
I went up on the stage.
My first joke. I'm bullying my guy. I went up on the stage. My first joke is about.
I'm bullying my guest.
I'm doing, I'm actually doing fat jokes, you know, like a guy's measuring me and he's
whistling around the world in 80 days.
That was my first, that's my signature bit.
So the guy.
My first signature bit.
The guy was gay, the salesman.
Obviously, right.
And he's got the tape measure out.
Yeah, I do.
Well, I don't, I hate going to big installment stores, you know.
Slow it down. So I hate going to big installment stores, you know. Slow it down.
I hate going to big installment stores because when the guy's measuring on waste, he's whistling around the world.
Oh, good one, Greg.
Listen to the punchline.
Excuse me.
Excuse me.
Hey.
America, get ready to laugh because I'm going to punch this one.
What was the punchline?
And then I look down and say, you might not be such a wisecracker.
He was a wisecracker, actually.
No, you didn't.
No, I didn't.
I said, you might not be so fucking wise there because I might eat you.
And he looks up and goes, promises, promises.
Holy shit.
Buddy, dang, that was my, I still get to laugh.
What was your stage name?
Greg Kirkman.
Greg Kirkman.
He went by.
Look up some of them.
Can we, if we Google to get, we find any of these?
Oh, no, because it was, thank God it was before the internet.
It just missed the internet.
Yeah. Because remember, you still always ask.
I'd say, I'm doing 10 minutes tonight.
You'd go, whose?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So how long did you do stand-up?
I did stand-up.
A couple years?
I actually did it for like three or four years.
I actually had a solid like 17 and a half minutes of Hackney stuff based mostly on what you said,
but, you know, just repainted it, took the edges off and filed it down a little.
Said it was mine.
It was really good.
Greg Kirkman.
Oh, there's people out there.
The name's synonymous in Miami with bad comedy. Piled it down a little. Said it was mine. It was really good. Greg Kirkman. Oh, there's people out there.
The name's synonymous in Miami with bad comedy.
It wasn't at Uncle Funny's? Was your home?
No.
Uncle Funny's.
Coconuts?
What was the home club?
My home club was Coconuts.
And Uncle, but Coconuts with Ann.
I never did Coconuts, ever.
Yeah, because you would.
I know Artie did, and a lot of,
you know, Bob Levy.
I would hear these horror stories about it.
They were usually
doing the improv, and they snuck in a
show over there or two for the extra money.
Well, that was Artie. Bob Levy
would book a week at the coconuts.
That's what I'm saying. But I would get
bad reports even from Bob Levy about the
You know who's the king of coconuts? Get her done. That's what I'm saying. But I would get bad reports even from Bob Levy about the... You know who's the king of coconuts?
Get her done.
What's the one...
Larry the Cable Guy.
Dan Whitney.
Dan Whitney.
I used to...
I opened for Dan Whitney a hundred times.
Well, that was like his first club.
And when he was a stand-up comic.
And the thing of it was...
You opened for him?
Did you?
No, I would be emceeing for Whitney, right?
Yeah.
And Whitney would go up there, eat his own shit.
I'm not kidding you.
I know.
No offense.
And then he'd do the cable guy at the end and kill.
I know, blow the roof off.
I mean, literally, people would give him a standing omen.
I know.
I guess he put two and two together.
Well, what he did was, he told me, I've discussed this many times with him, he'd call into radio
stations all over the country.
He'd stay up all night calling West Coast, you know,
and he'd literally got a relationship with about 150 stations as the Larry the Cable guy.
And became in every radio, which is brilliant.
I mean, he goes on, you know, after doing it for a year, he goes, I'm coming to your town.
Right, but the thing of it was, like, me being a nobody in comedy,
I'm just thinking, like, not as a comedian, because I'm not a comedian.
I'm not a blow in comedy. Yeah. I'm just thinking like, not as a comedian, because I'm not a comedian. I'm not a blowjob hack.
But I'm thinking to myself,
why doesn't this guy do the fucking cable guy
through his whole act?
And I don't want to say it to him
because he's like a middle
and I'm just hosting.
Yeah.
I'm getting the 25 bucks,
you know,
which I declared every time,
of course,
with the IRS.
Yeah.
But seriously,
and who else?
I mean,
I saw everybody,
Bobby Slayton.
Of course.
That's my point.
It's a chain thing.
But Larry the Cable guy,
you know,
Dan Whitney,
as you know,
as real name,
I work with him
up at Cal Lone.
Yeah.
I think I was the closer.
This was,
you know,
late 80s,
early 90s.
I think I was, I might be wrong there. I can't remember. I think I was the closer. This was, you know, late 80s, early 90s. I think I was, I might be wrong there.
I can't remember.
I think I was closing.
But then I work with me a few years later down in Florida.
And I get back to New York.
And I might have mentioned this too.
I get a tape in the mail.
A porn, VHS porn tape.
I put it in.
You know, it just says, here's some porn.
Had a great time this weekend. You know, I put it in You know Just says Here's some porn Had a great time
This weekend
You know
I put it in
And
It's this lady
I'm not exaggerating
She's like 600 pounds
Being banged
From behind
By some guy
And I'm watching it
Like for a couple minutes
And all of a sudden
The guy looks over his shoulder
Somehow he dubbed his head in
Yeah
And that's before
You could dub
I remember
I don't know how he did it
I don't either It was like floating Yeah it was like floating It was his face And he's looking over his head in. Yeah, and that's before you could dub. I remember. I don't know how he did it. I don't either.
It was like floating.
Yeah, it was like floating.
It was his face.
And he's looking over his shoulder at me.
Yeah.
Look, I remember that.
That was like a notorious tape.
I brought it to Catcher Rising Star for like, I brought it to Catcher Rising Star for two
months in a row, you know, giving it to my friends and bringing it to my comedian friends
and then somebody kept it.
Yeah, you couldn't even send it via email.
So somebody could really do him in with it. Oh exactly but you actually get her done vhs but but
now nice and like he was a middle then and then i remember he he came back around a few times oh
yeah it was like then he came back as larry that he's playing the improv sold out for like a yeah
from monday to well like i said he he developed a relationship with that character with morning zoo shows all over the country.
Nicest guy in the world, too.
He's a great guy.
Nicest guy in the world, too.
He, that's the last roast I did for Comedy Central.
It was, you know, the Larry Cable guy.
And the only reason, he requested me personally.
Oh, yeah.
You know, and that's when I had to end up closing
But that's the kind of guy I was
But never like
You know because
You know when you're emceeing
In the comedy world
You're one inch away from the next jerk
That's gonna emcee
And get the 25 bucks
And you ain't gonna get your
To do your stupid 15 minutes
That still suck
Never were good
Never were gonna be good
But he was the type of guy that, you know.
Encourage you?
Encourage you, you know, probably wrongly.
You know, that's how nice he was.
He's really tormenting you.
Yeah, go ahead, Greg.
I think you have a future on this.
Yeah, you guys go, look at this fat cop.
He's going to have a heart attack.
No, but you were funny.
But again, you were funny.
You know, again, people can't translate it to stage.
Right.
You know.
I mean, to this day. You know. It's funny.
To this day.
Falling down the stairs.
I brought Mr. Zook here to Colin Quinn.
Him and Quinn have a relationship since, you know, back when Quinn started doing those benefits back in the 90s for you.
Yeah, the 90s.
Early 90s.
And they talk on the phone now and then.
And so Greg's a huge Quinn fan.
So we went to see Colin's show again.
I had already seen it.
I read the book.
New York.
What the fuck's it called?
New York Story?
Yeah, New York Story.
This is the second time I've tried to plug it.
I've seen it.
I've read the book.
New York Story.
The book is called The Coloring Book, a comedian's way to solve race.
But anyways, we wanted to see Colin's one-man show, which ended yesterday, by the way, last night.
Last night.
But it was great.
He got a standing ovation Saturday night.
After that, we went out to eat with Quinn.
Yeah, if you want to see something that sums it all up nicely.
And in a good way, too.
Even Libel can't get mad at the way he's done it.
Well, yeah.
I mean, you know, it's just the truth is the truth.
But this is the funny story.
This is how I met Quinn, because you guys were living on Venice Beach right next door to each other, right?
Who?
You.
Quinn used to be at your house a lot.
Quinn never went to my apartment.
Here's why.
No, but I'm telling you.
Quinn has never been to my apartment on Venice Beach, but go ahead.
Well, somewhere along the line
He answered the phone one day
In Los Angeles
Yeah
Yeah okay
I was probably on Doheny
Yeah
This was years after Venice Beach
This is how I
With Quinn
And I'd talk to him
He'd go oh you're the cop
Down in Miami
And we would literally talk
For like two or three hours
You know cause
Yeah he loves the cop shit
And I'm getting home at 11
You know
At night
I'm pumped up
I ain't gonna go to sleep
And he's fascinated by race and cops and prison.
Yeah, and cops and stuff.
So we literally, like, start talking.
Then he gives, you know, his number.
And we literally, like, me and you used to be, you know.
Yeah, then he got tired of me.
He told me.
Oh, yeah.
This guy keeps bugging me.
No, he called.
And the thing I don't do to Quinn is call him.
He never said that.
He never said that.
Well, because you guys are from the call you and shut your phone off two seconds after
you.
Apparently, that's running around New York.
Shut your phone off?
What are you talking about?
No.
You and Quinn.
Yeah.
You can call me and literally I can push it automatically.
That's Quinn.
Call back and he won't answer.
He doesn't answer.
That means he doesn't want to talk to you, Greg.
Well, why did he fucking call me?
He calls.
Quinn will call you. You do the, why did he fucking call me? He calls me. Quinn will call you.
You do the same thing. You'll call me.
Literally, I'll push the button. I guess we both really don't like you. The secret's out.
Well, good. Then don't fucking call me.
I never did that to you.
I've never called you then hung up when you called back.
No, not hung up.
You just don't fucking answer.
Making me out to be a fucking rat.
No, you just don't answer. I'm telling you.
I just don't answer?
Literally.
Because I'm probably banging my nanny.
There you go.
Apparently, Al-Qaeda just...
Yeah, so Quinn yeah, Quinn is...
Always contacts Greg for stories.
Well, because, really, because Quinn is enamored with my friend Al,
who's like this crazy guy from Charlestown.
Charlestown, that would be South Boston.
South Boston.
Charlestown, that area.
Yeah, well, basically, you either became a cop, a priest, or a crook.
Or a crook.
And this guy became a cop, and a damn good cop.
Damn good, are you kidding me?
This guy's got a nose
Like a middle linebacker
He's got what?
He's got a nose for the ball
Like a good middle linebacker
A what?
A nose
A nose
He's always in shit
Shootouts
Chases
Literally
This guy
Some people
You know like in football
Everybody
Somebody always lands on the ball
He's the guy that's in the middle of the shit
All the time
I know he enjoys it
Well we
I took Quinn.
Quinn rode with him for like a week.
And he couldn't, you know, he says Al was the funniest guy, one of the funniest guys he's ever met.
And then, like, then him and them went back.
And then just that relationship has been going on for what, 22 years?
Yeah.
No?
Yeah.
I call him.
He lets me, you know.
It's kind of a, I always feel bad because, you know, he's famous.
I'm nobody.
What do you mean?
You did two years opening for Larry the Cable Guy.
Don't fucking sell yourself short.
Don't sell yourself short
Don't sell
I wouldn't do that
Nicky
You know me
But no
But
And then during
Like 9-11
Greg
Greg by the way
Greg Zook
That's his first name
Greg by the way
Came up here
Yeah
And
Were you with other
Miami cops
Yeah
I was with
Eight from Miami
From Miami
And one from the city
Of Miami
Pepe Gonzalez.
Nicest guy in the world.
No kid chocolate, would you? No kid chocolate.
He's been dead for years.
So, yeah, Greg came up with the
other cops right after, like a
9-12 to clean up, right? Yeah.
We were staying there, working down there.
I'm tracking asbestos through his house.
Yeah, I was living in Astoria. Greg would
come back glowing green and sit at my kitchen table and hand me a piece of Italian bread.
They pulled my drinking card like in the late 80s and I couldn't drink.
These guys, we would work 12-hour shifts.
We'd get home at 7.
They'd drink till like 10 minutes of 7.
We'd get in the van and these guys would be all fresh drinking coffee.
I slept eight hours.
I finally had to come to your house to get some sleep
So I'll probably, my liver will be gone in a few weeks
But yeah, Greg would come out to Astoria and stay at my place
And then go back into the city
Now we were on the West Side Highway the other night
And you're, well what about the people, people are out there
This is right after, days after
West Side Highway, and you people that live in New York can verify this
24-7, all that shrubbery there that
led median strip you mean strip that had into there yeah they actually put lights up there
because well they because it was going on 24 7. there was literally people i'm not you
one day we were riding in and we had like a 16 passenger van that the city of new york gave
yeah gave us to come from the hotel there. Literally people throwing rose petals at us
saying, God bless, screaming
like we were Romans coming home
from conquering Spain or something.
Where the fuck do they find roses in New York?
No, no, no.
Not off the homeless people.
Remember that whole thing
was like, they take the, literally,
it's funny, you observe
people putting flowers, they take the that literally i know it's funny you observe people for flowers they
take the flowers at then literally throwing and then 14 years later the them
at the you know on wall street not the same people was their kids oh they're kids that's why
i'll never be fooled again but that's what you're saying so the people that would throw on rose
petals and praising you guys their kids grew up to be snotty occupied wall street yeah i'm guessing
because it's pretty close
to the same area.
I'm not kidding you, Nick.
Well, no, I'm asking.
I have never in my life
felt so, you know, right.
Like, I picked the right thing
to do by being a cop
for those, like, 14 days.
Right.
Where I would have fresh kills,
finding slivers of bones
and shit.
Yeah.
I remember you telling me
the story.
In hazmat suits.
Then you get a year later, they're sending you a paper.
People have been dying from, have you been coughing blood lately?
And all this shit.
And see, there's people that died over that.
And literally 14 years later, they're spitting in their faces.
And some of those guys were there.
Yeah. Short there. Yeah.
Short memories.
Yeah, they'll never be fooled again by that.
Next tragedy, I'll be up in Cooperstown.
So you'd say you wouldn't help up?
No, fuck them.
Let them help themselves.
Oh, you mean the kid?
I get what you're saying.
Yeah, the fam.
Not all of them, obviously.
But I mean, Quinn was down there.
I remember running into Quinn.
I got waited on by De Niro.
Eddie, you name a band.
Kevin De Niro?
Yeah.
The waiter at the...
No, the kid over at Denny's.
Kevin De Niro.
Robert's cousin.
What do you mean De Niro waited on you?
De Niro used to come down there.
I remember seeing him on the news.
He was always on. During shifts.
Right. Oh, and feed you guys. And literally we'd be sitting down and be coming by with
a big pot. You want some more mashed potatoes?
I'm not kidding you. You name a star.
And did you go, no, that's enough. He goes, no more. No, that's
enough. And you flip the table over.
You call those carrots? I'd say,
look at them. They're all mashed up.
They're wet. I knew he was down there
doing stuff like that that Nicky was like
being in Hollywood
I know
there was big games down there
I didn't see Tim Robbins down there
no
exactly
but like
literally like
you'll see
this is funny
like Blondie was up there
singing
Blondie was
are you serious
you name a group
during lunch
like on Friday
cause we never
when you came back we we sat at the table.
You go to bed, I'd fucking be out hacking it up.
Oh, yeah, I know.
Doing dick jokes at the cellar.
You were only there for a week or two weeks I was there.
Right.
Because you went on the road.
Yep.
But we haven't really talked about that.
No.
Quinn was one of the first guys to do a show after.
Right.
I mean, it was just so hectic
And you were like working down there
You weren't like
It wasn't like hey how's everybody doing
No I know
I told this story about Pepe
We run into
What's his name
The guy that looks like De Niro
Now look I'm losing my mind
The guy that looks like De Niro
Cause he's got a great ass What's his name The guy that looks like De Niro. Now, look, and I'm losing my mind. The guy that looks like De Niro?
He's got a great ass.
What's his name?
What the fuck was that?
What was that?
He looks like Burgess Meredith?
What the fuck was that?
That's my impression of... Who was that?
He's got a great ass.
The Godfather.
Everybody always confuses him with De Niro.
Marlon Brando?
With the goatee.
He's been in a million cop movies.
You just said the Godfather.
Was he in the Godfather?
He's in the Godfather.
How come I can't remember?
He's got a great ass.
What the fuck?
Let me tell you that. We're going to figure this out. No, no, no. Always question with the Godfather. How come I can't remember? He's got a great ass. What the fuck are you talking about? Let me tell you that.
We're going to figure this out.
No, no, no.
Always confused with the...
The movie Heat, right?
Pacino.
Pacino.
Jesus Christ, you really...
Sorry.
No, no, no.
I think you did inhale some of that shit at Ground Zero.
I know I did.
You hear the way I cough?
For Christ's sake.
He's got a great ass.
What was that?
How would the duck?
Is that what you're talking about?
No, there's a scene.
I'm going to back up.
Go ahead.
There's a scene in...
You can get on the mic a little more.
There's a scene in the movie I just mentioned.
Look at him.
I'm scared because I'm on radio.
You're not, though.
This will never be the light of day.
Of course it will.
Of course it will.
Pacino is chasing De Niro in heat, right?
Yeah.
And then the guy turns into a rat because his wife calls up on him and says,
he's going to...
And Pacino's talking to him.
Yeah.
And he goes, I don't know why I get into this.
He goes, me and bronze.
He goes, I don't know. Every time I this. He goes, me and bronze. He goes, I don't know.
Every time I get with one, they screw me.
Why is that?
And then he goes, because she's got a great ass.
Who says that, De Niro?
Pacino.
I mean, Pacino, no.
Go find the clip.
It's really not worth it, Greg.
No, it's a good.
It's impressive.
It's way better than my.
You sound like Burgess
She's got a great ass
She needs a manager
She's got a great ass
A million dollars
Find that thing
And that's exactly
She's got a great ass
It shits lightning
It's gonna grab thunder
But she ain't got no log of me
She's got a great ass
But she ain't got no log of do I
I'm telling you
It's one of the best
Was he down there?
No but she knows This is a story I'm gonna you, that's one of the best. Was he down there? No, Pacino's not.
This is a story I'm going to tell you.
Yeah, could you get to it, Edith?
Picture, now picture Cuban kids from Miami.
Yeah.
Fucking face shit.
Now, I'll do the same thing.
Hey, I just let the time.
Cuban kids from Miami, like in their 30s.
They grew up on Scarface.
We're leaving, walking out, like, covered in shit.
Here comes a golf cart.
Stops.
Pacino gets off.
Comes over us.
Either he's the best actor or he's the most sincere.
He goes, look at you guys.
God bless you.
He's shaking all our hands.
These kids grew up on, Scott.
Now you've got 11 cops.
He signs
I still have my hard hat
Was this in Miami?
No this is at Ground Zero
What are the Cuban kids doing at Ground Zero?
They're all cops that came with me
They're like in their 30s
You just said Cuban kids
Well to me they were kids then
Because they were much younger than me
Because they came along with us
So they were freaking out
They're freaking out
Because it's square face.
You know, it's to them.
That's like, you know, that's our godfather.
Yeah, exactly.
Eleven cops.
We're all standing.
He signs all our helmets.
He's like, look at you guys.
And of course, they're going, I will say it.
And he's doing all that.
Of course, because they're young.
I'm smart enough.
He goes, he's doing say hello to my little friend. They're asking him to say he's doing all the lines Of course, because they're young. I'm smart enough. He goes, he's doing, say hello to my little friend.
They're asking him to say he's doing all the lines, everything they have.
Is that right?
I swear to God.
That's unbelievable.
I swear to God.
He's doing all the lines.
They're hugging him and shit.
Every one of us, they actually gave us cameras.
Has one of those throwaway cameras.
Do you think out of 11 cops, we took one freaking picture?
And nobody believes that now.
You probably did in those paper cameras.
You get in a minibar.
No, nobody even did.
They were so enamored.
Enamored by them.
Because I kind of like stepped aside because, you know,
they're like 10 or 11 years younger than me.
And they were like, you know, they were just so in it by seeing a star.
You know, I've been around guys like you.
But I heard it ended kind of awkward.
He goes, say hello to my little friend.
He pulls out a picture of Muhammad Atta.
Excuse me.
He pulled out a stuffed animal.
That's unbelievable.
But that's, I mean, he was the most,
and now he was there all the time.
Pacino was?
Yeah, he's a New York boy.
So was De Niro, too.
And De Niro was there all the time.
Of course.
It hit them right where they breathe.
And what's her name with the head to pieces?
Larry Storch, not so much.
Yeah, no.
No, William Frawley.
He wasn't there.
He's dead, I think.
No, but, and like, you name, you name like somebody famous.'s dead, I think. No, but you name somebody famous.
I mean, in the early going, they were thick.
And as time goes on, it went on for almost, what did it go?
About eight months.
At least.
At least.
Yeah, because they just actually had the...
I was going to go to it in May.
It was the 15th anniversary
Of them shutting down
Ground Zero
But you didn't
You told me you didn't go
Because the
Coconuts were having
Their 25th
Yeah
It was because
Larry the Cable Guy
Was doing a tribute to
Get Her Done
Or something
I don't know
That wasn't funny
No but
It was
It was amazing
When I
And that's what I say
Like you know With me and directions, that's why.
Yeah.
But going down the West, I do know because all the morgue ships were there.
Yeah.
But unfortunately, I mean, there was, unfortunately, after that thing crumbled, I mean, the most I ever saw was a sliver of bone like the size of a pencil.
It was horrendous.
No, they're still finding, they're still finding.
I remember, honest to God, I'm talking a year and a half, two years ago.
I read in the paper they found more.
Oh, yeah.
But that's my life.
I've been getting into that for so long.
But it was because it was.
Well, no, you've lived an interesting life, man.
I mean, cop for how many years in Miami?
33.
33 in Miami.
And Miami cops get paid a couple hundred more, right?
Because of the hazard.
I got a nice.
He took me.
Greg took me and colin quinn and
i probably i mentioned this actually right when i was talking with mike dowd last week he took us
through liberty city in his cruiser at two in the morning yeah this isn't this isn't like the early
night that was like in the early 90s yeah my 90s yeah little problems is that is that oh somebody
andy said My wife She said
I don't know how she found this out
That they were
Tearing down the pork and beans project
Yeah yeah
No it's gone
Pork and beans is gone
Pork and beans is gone
And the matchboxes
They called them
Because they look like
Most of those places
Are they gone now
They're gone now
What's there now
Like parks
Oh really
Actually things are going better there
I mean
That's North Miami?
That's Central Miami.
That's Central.
Because actually, Liberty City is called Central High.
But it was fucking frightening.
People spitting at the cars.
That's UOM.
That's what made UOM national championships 15 times or however many times.
What did?
Central High.
That's half the talent came out of Central High, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, because they used to recruit all over the country and then...
What's his name?
I'll never remember.
I can't even remember Pacino's name.
I was panicking on a podcast.
I can't understand it.
Schnellenberger.
When Schnellenberger came to town?
Howard Schnellenberger.
Howard Schnellenberger came to town.
And he actually said, he goes, I don't know why everybody's going out of the country.
He goes, from what I see, the best football players in the whole country
are in a 10 square mile of the Orange Bowl,
which is where Central Iowa is.
Is that what he said?
Is that what he said?
He did.
Yeah.
Well, they were probably afraid to go to those neighborhoods to recruit.
Seriously.
I wouldn't doubt it.
But Schnellenberger looked like that type of guy that wouldn't be afraid.
He looks like a plantation owner.
Ask anybody that played for him.
Him and, of course, the guy that went to Dallas.
I can't remember his name.
It's the brain.
The guy that went to Dallas.
With the three rings.
Urban?
Michael Urban?
No, the coach.
The real flamboyant coach.
Oh, Jimmy Johnson. Jimmy Johnson.amboyant coach with the stupid-
Oh, Jimmy Johnson.
Jimmy Johnson.
Ask anybody to play for those two guys.
They're revered.
They're like-
I mean, you say something bad about them-
Oh, I know.
They knock you out.
I've seen documentaries.
They still send their praises.
Oh, yeah.
You saw that thing with that 30 for 30 about them?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
They changed my image.
Well, we'll wrap it up here.
But no, but that's why I wanted to have you on.
This guy made me fucking one of the guys you see one of my first specials in the
credits it says uh thanks to bob murphy he was another kid i went to high school craig's four
years older than me but i mentioned zook and the credits and and uh you guys are the reason i you
know that's all we did when we got together and And like I said, we were big Dennis Miller fans when we were younger with the references.
We loved that type of comedy.
And the Three Stooges.
Unites any teenage guys.
But, no, I thought, you know, now you passed the bar.
You're a lawyer.
I mean, you've done a lot of shit.
And it's funny because you were on the West were in the west with you on the west coast
and i was coming home all hyped up from working is why we talk i talked to for you would it'll
be to like 12 one o'clock to me like four in the morning but we literally would be on the phone
five like four hours right because we're all you were coming home from gigs i come home from gigs
all wound up i come home from work all i'm living in'm living in L.A., and my phone rings, and it's like, let's see, it was probably 5 in L.A. time,
and around 8 o'clock New York time.
Greg goes, I'm listening to Howard Stern, and he's talking about you right now.
This is how I met Howard.
He goes, he's talking about you right now.
I had just done a Tonight Show a couple nights previous, my first Tonight Show. The night you had done it that night.
I'll tell you a story, and this is what's weird.
I never listen to the radio in the morning, right? In the house.
I always have it on the car. That morning, I had plugged in
the sound system to watch a movie, so it was still on, and when I unplugged it,
Howard Stern was on. When I pulled the stuff out of the speakers, this is just by him.
I hear him going, ah.
And then his nose kept getting high.
You were doing that thing about Triscuits.
Triscuits.
Your nose getting dried up.
And of course, I had watched it.
I called you 40 times before you finally answered the phone.
That's true.
I kept calling you and calling you.
And I'm like, he's talking about Nick.
And calling you. Howard was trying to, he's talking about Nick. And calling you and calling me.
Howard was trying to, he couldn't remember what my name was.
He was describing the bits and Greg recognized my name.
And he's going, does anybody know who this guy is?
He was doing this thing.
He goes, because he got up because he couldn't sleep.
He couldn't sleep.
He couldn't sleep.
And he goes, the TV on, his wife.
And he goes, and I never watch comics.
But he said, I actually sat down and watched this kid. And I never watch comics He goes But he said
I actually sat down
And watched this kid
And I go
He's talking about Nick
I called you like 40 times
You finally
You're like
What
Yeah
You're like
Who died
So I call
He goes
Greg goes
He's talking about you right now
So I call
Hang up
And I call
How it started in the show
And Gary answers
Or somebody puts me through to Gary
And I'm literally on hold for
like 25 minutes but i'm more than happy to wait and then and next thing you know i'm on i'm on
the phone howard stern live on his radio show and i i remember the moment i'm pulling into a
warehouse we're using because there was a narcotics man listening to you going he's on the howard
stern show it was the same with 9-11 remember when 9-11 happened i called
your phone 150 times telling you yeah but when you lived in queens you could see yeah outside
my bathroom window which was shut for some reason it was always open i go look out your window and
you finally yeah there was like 19 messages and yours was one but uh yeah the whole stern thing
was uh that's funny and and and uh greg came when I did my first Letterman and took a picture of me under the Letterman sign.
And he's been, like I said, one of the reasons I get into it.
And a crazy bastard who has been in shootouts and an interesting, funny dude.
And he's been at my house now for almost a week.
I've been here for like three months now.
Tell me about it.
She just gave me tuna for sure.
I can feel something coming on.
Oh, great.
Don't force it.
Let me just play this real quick.
We were watching golf yesterday.
20 years ago, me and Greg were watching golf.
And when Tiger was in his peak.
And I was down in Florida doing a gig.
We were at a hotel watching golf,
and the play-by-play, one of the announcers goes,
these greens are really, what did he say?
He goes, look at the way the greens are eating up those balls.
Yum, yum.
Yeah, yum, yum.
And we just cackled for like a half hour because it was so stupid.
So then we're watching yesterday.
We're watching yesterday.
We're watching, you know, the Players' Champion, whatever, the PGA,
the final major of the year, whatever.
And once again, one of the announcers makes some fucking weird.
I don't know.
We're cracking up.
Here it is.
I'll play it into the microphone for my bump. What? What did he say?
He goes, oh, that music is going to have a go at it today.
Oh, smack it in that sand.
I know he sounded like he was getting all perverted.
I don't mean that.
Anyways. Anyways
What the fuck
Smack it out of the sand
Smack it out of the sand
So we'll be fucking cackling
All of an hour for the next
It'll be on my tombstone
Alright Gregory
I gotta do a few plugs here
Thank you for doing it brother
He's a good friend
And I love this guy like a brother.
And his whole family, man, just amazing people.
Brother Norman, also a state troop, right?
Norman?
Homicide.
Homicide.
And Peter, who's just a world one.
His brother went to Colgate, and he's one of the...
He just hangs around at the country club now.
He's one of those guys. No, but he was unbelievable.
Brilliant guy, actually.
Come see me this Friday night in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
It's the Music Fest Cafe at the Steel Stacks.
I did it a year ago, and I actually loved it.
I hope it is good this
time and then the following weekend i'm doing the laughing skull in atlanta the 27th 28th and 29th
heard good things about that it's like an intimate room and then september 17th through 19th laugh Laugh Boston, September 25-26, Governors in Levittown, Long Island,
and October 17th, the Gramercy Theater
right here in New York City.
That's it, kids.
I think that's it.
Greg, anything to add?
I just wanted to, I've already charted a private chat
to see you at the Laughing Skull.
Have you?
Atlanta, yeah.
No, I haven't.
Supposed to be a good room, actually.
Oh, it is.
I went by it when I was in Atlanta.
You went by it.
That'll tell you a lot.
Okay.
No, there was people laughing outside.
All right, kids.
I will see you next time.
I think I'm forgetting something, but it doesn't matter.
I don't know.
Good night.
Good night, everybody.
I love
you for helping me to
construct my life.
Not a tavern,
but a temple.
I love you
because you have done so much
to make me happy.
You have done it without a word, without a touch.
Fuck you! Fuck you!
You have done it by just being yourself.
Perhaps, after all, that is what love means.
Perhaps after all, that is what love means.
And that is why I love you. guitar solo guitar solo you