The Nick DiPaolo Show - Joe List | Nick Di Paolo Show #1233
Episode Date: June 30, 2022NYC detectives retire. West Hollywood stupid. Joe List interview....
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🎵 Oh yeah!
How are you folks?
Welcome to the Nick DiPaolo Show on a filthy Thursday.
State of Georgia. Great show today. Later on, Joe List. Very funny comic from Boston. He co-wrote a movie with Louis C.K. that
I have a part in. It's premiering tonight in New York. That's right. I'll be there. And I'm here right now, I'll tell you.
Technology, huh?
That was Japanese.
Anyways.
Thank you guys for watching.
It's been a great week of contributions so far.
Thank you all who have donated
and who keep this show rolling right along.
Please take a moment, go to nickdip.com to contribute.
Enjoy the show and have a great Fourth of July weekend.
That's an order.
I can't believe it's the Fourth of July.
Oh, my God, my wife's birthday is on the 6th.
I'm going to you, Mr. Savannah.
You can tell me.
This guy knows where the ghosts are and the bodies and all kinds of slave shoes.
Anyways, let's get right to it, I guess.
Thin blue line getting thinner.
Again, this is New York-based, but so goes New York,
so goes most major cities, and this is the heart of the world, really.
More than 100, 100, I say, NYPD detectives have retired in June alone.
And another 75 plan to put their papers in next month.
Bye-bye.
As many become frustrated by revolving door justice and rules that hamstring them.
And the Big Apple officials and detectives told the New York Post,
how'd you like to be out there risking your neck for not much pay, by the way, and arresting somebody who's
dangerous?
And then you see him collecting his crap the next day, his property and back out on the
streets.
And you know what?
They take it personally, the criminals.
That's why they're criminals.
They see you.
Seriously, think about that for a second.
Unbelievable.
criminals. They see you. Seriously, think about that for a second. Unbelievable. That's going to have a major impact on investigating crimes. Detectives and Dominant Association President
Paul DiGiacomo said, the detective squad's down now as we speak and are investigating more cases.
The numbers are way down. It's going to have an impact on public safety, of course,
but the Dems don't give a shit.
Danger, Will Robinson.
Danger, no Will Robinson.
You know why?
Because they don't have to deal with it.
The Pelosi's of the world, all of them, on both sides,
surrounded by security with guns.
The left, surrounded by guns and want to take yours away
and letting scumbags on the streets.
It's just all too obvious.
So far this year, listen to all too, it's too obvious.
So far this year, listen to this, 250 detectives have retired this year, leaving the total number at about 5,600, which is nearly 2,000 less than 20 years ago. There were 794 detective retirements
during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020,
and that number dropped down to 395 in 2021.
Sources said that 100 retirements in just one month is a large number for the NYPD.
It's a large number for the goddamn post office. The Post also reported early this month that cops in general were leaving the force in record.
So what's funny is they wanted to dismantle the cops.
You know, the far left BLM jerk offs want to dismantle the cops.
And what's fucking hilarious?
It's working.
Not the way they intended it to do.
You know, who's going to risk their neck for that?
There's cops who have to go another two years to get a full pension,
and they're like, fuck that.
Because in that line of duty, a lot can happen to you in two years.
At his NYPD walkout ceremony at the 105 Precinct Station House Tuesday,
Queens Detective Jason Caputo, 51, said he had had enough.
Here he is.
I love this job.
It's time for me to go.
It was very good to me.
I just, I'm done.
That's all.
And I appreciate everything that was done for me.
It's funny.
He struck a nice tone there, but then you read the article.
You know, this is what he says, by the way.
To know me is to know I love the job.
And you do. You have to love this stuff.
You don't go, I don't know. I guess I'll try it.
To know me is to know I love the job in and out,
but it's not the same job I joined, said Caputo,
who's leaving after 18 years in the NYPD and thus not getting his maximum pension, which kicks in after 20 years.
The no bail law was a big thing with me, he said.
It's not even really crime fighting anymore.
You arrest somebody for assault, too, with a weapon, and then the person is back at the precinct getting
his property the very next day.
I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore.
And again, I'll remind you, they don't get paid squat.
If anybody should be getting paid a mil a year, a half mil, honestly, they have the
only line between us and scumbags.
And you saw when the riots going on,
people spitting at them, getting right in their face while de Blasio jerked off watching.
I'll never understand the look. They're not locking anyone up anymore, he says,
even those with records. He says, pay your debt to society. You broke the law. Caputo said he
also worried about making arrests and running
into problems with city laws,
such as the ones prohibiting
officers from putting pressure on a person's
diaphragm. Yeah, let's
handcuff them some more.
And then they're personally responsible
when somebody gets hurt now. Why would you ever
want to go into that job? And now you've seen
the results of this type of policy.
It's creepy. It's almost like school teachers, you're going to have to jack the pay up. You know what I mean?
And because who's going to want to do that? Things you do on the street, he says, can affect your
whole life. You know, like the guy that choked out Eric Garner and things go wrong. And I'll
always be a cop in my heart, he says.
And I believe it.
Yes, sir.
Because people have a passion for that.
My buddy Greg Zook would tell me, you know,
he got shot at in a goddamn kitchen restaurant.
And he was there in the 80s in Miami
where the whole Scarface thing was going down.
But it's New York City.
It's the biggest city in the country.
And law enforcement
is dropping out like flies.
That is not a good sign, ladies and gentlemen.
That's East Coast
stupid. The next story is West Coast
stupid, which to me
is the best
kind of stupid. A trendy
Los Angeles county community
has voted to reduce
law enforcement funding,
get this,
despite escalating crime
that was up 137%
earlier in the year
in public backlash.
Why is everyone
so fucking stupid?
Why aren't more people
interrogated like me?
That was that guy Yang
Remember in the debates
Nick that's horrible
Horribly funny
The budget for the next two fiscal years
By the way I lived in West Hollywood
I didn't know
I lived on a street called Sierra Bonita
And um
I thought it was Hollywood
But I guess it was less
That's the apartment that Mitch Hedberg wrote a joke about me.
He used to play his guitar, and he'd have people over,
and I'd bang on the wall like the old man that I was.
And he wrote a joke about it saying,
I can't hope there's no handle on the side.
Come around.
It was pretty clever, whatever it was.
But yeah, that neighborhood.
I used to watch drag shows, drag queen shows,
on the roof of the building at night next to me.
One night, me and my wife were in bed.
I lived on the bottom floor in the back of the building.
So there was an alley right outside my glass doors.
One night, me and my wife were in bed.
We hear smash, glass.
It's getting louder, more glass breaking.
Things busting.
We're like, what?
I thought somebody was coming down to kill us down the
alley. And it turned out it was a gay couple
building across from us having a
fight. And the guy was throwing
everything out of the fridge.
And it was landing down on my
back door.
Jaws of mayonnaise, wine
bottles, and then there was some gay
magazine, Blue Boy. Me and my
wife,
no, we didn't know. We were behind the bed. I didn't know if somebody was coming in.
I called the cops. They show up, and they had a good laugh about it. The budget for the next two fiscal years, that's kind of West Hollywood, by the way. I used to like it. I walked down a street,
and the gay guys loved me before I looked like this. Next two fiscal years, we leave
West Hollywood with up to
five fewer Los Angeles County
Sheriff's deputies on patrol.
Weehooville reported?
Weehooville.
What is that?
The budget was approved by a narrow 3-2 vote,
which amazes me.
There were two people who actually had the brains
to be against this.
Mayor Lauren Meister dissenting. Well, she's the mayor for Christ's sake.
Didn't she ever say anything? As well as Councilman John Erickson. I don't know how
politics at the municipal level works and I just don't. Most, there's the two people that
dissented, which is kind of scary. You got the ghost of Phyllis Diller and this guy, Boomer Sison's cousin.
Fucking Captain Toothbrush Head.
Guy's an oral B with a necktie.
Most of the residents and businesses I have heard from are opposed to cutting the sheriff's budget.
Exactly.
If that's a fact,
tell me,
am I lying?
That's what Mayor Meister says.
So you're the mayor. Don't you have a bigger say?
Doesn't your opinion hold more weight?
Anyway, that's what she told Fox News.
They are outraged that people
and organizations from outside our city
are dictating
to the city council how to run our city are dictating to the
city council how to run our city.
Well, stop it then.
You're the fucking mayor.
Stop sticking your head in a cotton candy machine and get something done.
The narrative that we can have either sheriff or social services or either sheriffs or unarmed
security teams is false.
Over the past few months, residents and business owners
have voiced opposition to cutting the police budget
amid a crime wave across the country.
It's really quite simple.
Mayor Pro Tem Seppi Schein,
who I think should be put to death because of her name,
Seppi, Seppi Schein, oh my aching stem,
amended the,
if you're as bad at making decisions
as your parents were,
amended the budgets
to reallocate funds
for sheriff's deputies
to the block-by-block program,
which staffs, listen to this,
unarmed security ambassadors
who provide the city
with supplemental law enforcement services.
What is this, England?
They're basically social service workers.
Yeah, they're going to be a lot of help
when a guy with a knife breaks into your party.
You've got to be.
It's not going to be long before you all kill yourself.
That's right, Seppi.
Because you're all crazy.
Look at Seppi.
And you can project it back on me.
Look how happy Seppi is.
She's like, I'm fucking off the couch.
Erickson said he worries about the trajectory
of the plan that was approved
and the timeline with which it can be implemented.
Oh, God.
You fucking people.
That's him, huh?
You have no idea how to defend a nation.
Community safety is our number one concern,
he told Fox News.
What I've heard from countless residents about how they want to feel safer, that involves
comprehensive planning and something that is not just drawn out over a decision. Well, that's
typical West Hollywood. It's kind of scary when this guy is the only one of the only sane minds
in the room when it comes to law enforcement.
But that's West Coast.
What can I tell you?
Hey, guys, I'll be back in Florida at the Palm Beach Kennel Club on Friday, November 11th.
That's Veterans Day, and it's about a week after the midterms,
so there'll be plenty to talk about for sure.
This will be my second time at this venue, and I did.
I had a great time.
It's owned by the Roonies, who own the Pittsburgh Steelers. Anyway, you can get tickets now by going to
nickdip.com and clicking on tour. You'll also find links there for my dates in Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, and New York this coming September. As you know, my guest today is Joe List, very funny comedian who co-wrote a movie with Louis C.K.
that I am in also that we shot up in upstate New York last summer
and had a ball.
And here is a trailer of the movie.
It's called The Fourth of July.
I had this thing again where I thought I ran over a guy.
Did you run over a guy?
No. I was on the phone, which I I know is bad I shouldn't have done that. Who were you on the phone with?
My mother.
You coming up on what two and a half years? 3 November. Listen you show up
late I haven't heard from you you're teetering either lean forward take the
next step or lean back fall down a flight of stairs.
When do I get to that point?
Well, I've been sober about three years.
No, I'm talking about the point where I'm speaking in bumper stickers.
I'm going to Maine on Tuesday.
I'm going alone.
I have to go and confront my parents and say all this shit that's been destroying me.
I have to go say it.
It's time.
All right, sounds good.
Going home sober always tough the folks will push your buttons
hell they even installed them.
Hey Needledick!
Oh!
What's up?
You want I kill in this bottle tonight kid?
I don't drink Kevin. No no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no, no, no, no. Smell that. How are you, his uncle? You guys look the same age. We were drinking buddies since we were 10 and 12,
but he's a quitter.
Hey, Mom, Dad, I need to talk to you guys.
So talk.
Here we are.
I've been grappling with some issues.
I wanted to talk about...
You never showed me, like, love.
Sorry, hon.
What?
Play nice, everyone.
Oh, yeah!
How dare you!
Perhaps if you'd been a better wife!
Knock it off!
Alright, alright, alright, alright.
Go, go, go!
Dude!
You take it too far.
Oh, shut up. Who's asking you?
What's the family stuff you're going through? What's happening?
They're drunks, they're assholes.
Honestly, I can't even believe I'm in this family.
Every time you go to Maine, you say you're gonna confront your parents.
And when you come back, you always tell me that you're having too good a time and you don't wanna ruin it.
You don't think I'll do it?
I hate it here.
What kind of people are you?
What kind of people are we?
Bro, you got to make this right.
I get you working out your thing,
but just go say you're sorry.
I'm not sorry, Mark.
By the grace of heaven, you're in this family.
And we know like every chick you welcome home to roost,
we know that when your foolish dreams leave you dry,
it's your family you will need.
That was crazy.
Which part?
I'm very excited.
My guest today feels like family to me.
This guy opened me for a few years.
Now he's kicking ass.
One of the finest stand-up comics.
His latest special was this year's material on YouTube.
It's already got a couple million views.
He really has become one of the best comics around.
And him and Louis C.K. co-wrote a movie called The Fourth of July,
which is premiering tonight.
And I'm excited to have him on the show. The Great Joe List. of July, which is premiering tonight.
I'm excited to have him on the show. The Great Joe List.
Joey, what
is going on, my friend?
How are you?
On the internet.
You cut out.
Oh, I know. Is there a
delay? Is it like you're in Kiev
on a building being bombed?
The 10-minute delay.
Don't you love seeing a little kid being blown up in a bassinet?
And then the guy's like...
Well, I think it's Zoom.
If two people talk at the same time, it mutes everybody.
Okay, well, I'll try not to talk over you.
You should take down Springsteen.
That guy is an anti-cop jerk-off.
Anyways, back to the show.
Nice.
He's my favorite trumpet player.
Listen.
We're working.
Well, Eddie Vedder's next to him.
I don't think you're going to like that any better.
No, Eddie Vedder's great.
I'm learning guitar, Joe.
I'm learning guitar, man.
Remember I sang you the national anthem?
Oh, yeah.
We're going to put that in the movie.
I know.
I don't know what happened to that.
I do.
I suggested it. And I'm way better now. I can do the Canadian national anthem. But
where was I going? How does it feel, Joe? Seriously, I am very excited for you.
Real quick, I'll give the background how I, you know, because not all my fans know that I met Joe
and Boss. You told me it was 14 years ago. Yeah. In fact,
we just had an anniversary.
It was,
um,
no,
it must've been more than 14.
It was Oh six.
It was June Oh six.
It might've been today.
It might've been June 29,
2006.
I know.
And I got no flowers,
nothing from you.
Well,
you're getting them tomorrow.
Last year we went to Fuddruckers.
Remember we had the snuck in the wine.
Um,
yeah,
that's 16 years. I met him,
okay, he opened for me at the Comedy Connection
in Boston in Faneuil Hall, and
he was funny.
I said, this is a good-looking
nerdy kid. The nebbishness.
No, seriously. But you were. You were a handsome
nerd, and you had this nebbish
way about you, which I liked.
It's sort of like a Larry David of your generation.
And even I could see that, even through the 20 Heinekens at the time, that there was something
there. Joe liked to pound them, man. And anyways, fast forward, he opened me all over the country.
And then I said, I would call Joe on a Tuesday morning at like 10 in the morning. I'd go,
this is when I first met him.
And he'd be when he first moved to New York.
What are you doing?
And what would you say to me, Joe?
Do you remember?
I don't know.
Eating a box of macaroni and cheese.
Eating mac and cheese and watching Goodfellas and having a beer.
Watching Goodfellas for like 130.
And I'd go, for the love of God.
And I didn't realize how much
he liked his sauce. A few times I came off
stage, he was passed out onto the stage.
I said, we're going to help this kid.
But there was always something there that was
definitely, I saw, I'm proud of it now because he's
one of the finest stand-ups in the country.
And
so we went on the road. We had a good time, right
Joe? You love college football?
I always think about Appleton.
When we did Appleton, they had like an air show in town.
So every hotel was taken.
So we had to share the condo, which was fucking the hardest I've ever laughed in my life.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, that was when Chris Rock called, texted me and said, you want to go to a Yankees game?
And I said, I can't.
I'm at the Skyline Comedy Club in Appleton.
Him and Jerry were going to a fucking Yankees game. And I said, I can't. I'm at the Skyline Comedy Club in Appleton. Him and Jerry were going to a fucking Yankees
game. And I'm watching Joe.
Joe ate a box of mac and cheese. It was for
like four Haitian families. That's what
it said on the back. And he ate it like he
fucking inhaled it.
No, it was great.
We went everywhere together, except for the
West Coast, because you wouldn't fly past, I think,
Cincinnati. That's right. That's fly past, I think, Cincinnati.
That's right.
That's where I drew the line, Cincinnati.
It's funny.
You even say Cincinnati.
You and I were there when Big Poppy hit that home run.
Remember when we got back to the hotel?
It was a playoff game.
It's the one when the guy flipped, Torrey, what's his name, flipped over the wall, and the cop was like this.
Remember, we saw it.
We ran back.
Yes. Right? I'm sure my fans out in seattle enjoying this story um but we yeah cigar bar in philadelphia but here's the
one that remember i just told carl of this you and i are minneapolis sunny day saturday whatever
trying to kill time there's two of the most butch lesbians walking down the street we're walking
towards them and what tell them what street. We're walking towards them.
Tell them what happened.
They're walking towards us. We're walking towards them.
As they walk by, you went, fellas?
I fucking lost it. It's the hardest
I've ever lost in my life.
I kept walking and I look back. Joe's like 15 feet
behind me, literally holding his gut
doubled over.
I thought I was just being nice.
I'm not homophobic.
I heard they like that.
One of my favorite ones.
Remember in Philly, we went to see.
I tell this story all the time.
We're in Philadelphia doing helium.
And you looked at it and you go, hey, I heard.
I don't know.
My wife said something.
King Tut is here.
And I go with two just fucking idiots.
And I go, oh, yeah, I'll go see King Tut.
That sounds like something. We walk over there. We're like,'re like oh we'll see king tut he'll kill some time the guy's like
tickets and we're like no we want to buy tickets the guy's like this has been sold out for two
years you fucking retards we're walking up there like we're gonna buy snow cones
we walked from our hotel by the way it was about 111 degrees Kelvin or Fahrenheit.
And we were both having heat stroke.
Remember?
We get all the way up there all sweaty and shit.
The guy almost laughed.
I thought I heard King Tut himself giggling in the background.
Fucking, we thought we had to just buy a ticket to like a Pauly Shaw movie.
So, but it gets even better.
Remember, Joe?
So we turn around and we walk to some frigging mall, the white one in Philly,
and we go in there.
Do you remember, Joe?
There was a display of people making, not sculptures, whatever, with soup cans.
It was a soup can sculpture, yeah.
Like a pyramid. That, yeah. Soup sand.
Like a pyramid.
That's right.
Do you remember?
Yes.
There was a guy having a skyscraper made out of Campbell's soup.
And of course, we came up with 19 Campbell's soup jokes.
And we were like, this is better than King Tut.
Oh, no, it was fucking hilarious.
The guy was like, no, you had to get your tickets six months ago or whatever.
There was like a line out the door.
There was like 5,000 people in line.
We're just fucking idiots.
It's like going up and, you know, it was like walking up thinking we're going to cut in line to see the Pope.
You know, fucking.
Oh, he's here.
Get out of the way.
But no, it was fun.
Oh, dude, we had fucking.
And he loved.
Here's one of the reasons, by the way, I'm talking to Joe Liss, the great comic, and who's the lead,
the star in this movie, 4th of July, premiering tonight, as we're shooting this ahead of time,
premiering tonight at the Beacon Theater in New York. You gotta be. I am so, you know how I am,
man. I've known you a long time, and I burst with, let's be honest, comics are dicks. Your
friends do well. You're like, eh, nice going.
You turn around, fuck him.
I'm way funnier.
That's how most of us are, you know?
But with Joe, there are certain people you love,
Colin Quinn, Attell, who deserve to fucking be famous.
That's how I feel about Joe.
I can't believe, we'll get to when we went out to Montana
and you ordered chicken parm, whoever the fuck it was.
I was just telling that story, too.
The limo, the guy picked us up in a limo.
And you're like, I can't.
Like a stretch limo. It was like a 48 passenger limo.
And I told him, no, I can't show up in a limo.
I can't.
What are we doing?
A theater?
It was a theater.
The guy was a huge fan of yours.
Yes.
And so we booked like a 17,000 seat theater in Great Falls.
The population was less than the capacity of the theater.
Was it Wyoming or Montana?
I always confuse the two.
It was Montana.
Great Falls, Montana.
Great Falls.
You know, right away I knew him.
Like at the airport.
Remember we're going down the escalator and they have a stuffed beer, you know,
standing next to the escalator and shit.
I'm like, oh, Jesus, fake pheasants hanging in the gift shop.
Jesus Christ, what are we walking into here?
But I hadn't worked with Joe in a while.
Joe, you know, Joe, I said, go, you know,
I hadn't worked with you, right?
Was that when we kind of reunited after a year or so?
Yeah, that sounds right.
And he comes on stage.
I was fucking in shock.
I mean, you were funny, but you come on stage, your posture was different.
You're standing straight up, sober as a judge, with a whole new half hour I had never heard of great shit.
Oh, thanks.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, no.
Well, I think I was drinking for a while there and i
couldn't get in the way uh yeah i remember i tell this story all the time it was like a valuable
lesson when we did that appleton weekend yeah i was sitting watching tv yeah and we shared a house
i remember looking you were like in the bedroom in like your underwear with two notebooks open
listening to a set like i don't know you're transcribing what your writing process was but i was like oh i think that's why he's better than i am well he's like trying
can i be can i be honest you were like working and i was like oh it was like an alarm went off
my head i've just been going up and fucking around well let me let me be honest with you
first of all i wasn't my underwear i was sketching you i had a hard-on like you wouldn't believe
i was doing a caricature of joe at the I'll be honest again, and I'm not kidding.
I think that might have been the last time I had a notebook open,
and I'm not shitting you.
I still try to listen to my sets, but I can't.
I don't.
Everybody says you have a book in you, Nick, and I believe them.
I don't have the discipline that it takes.
I talk to Gutfeld and these guys that write books.
I just would rather be watching UFC,
which is a horrible thing to say when you're a comedian.
No, it's hard.
I'm watching tennis all day.
I just want to watch sports.
Sports are, I shouldn't have said tennis.
It's your show.
I should have said hockey.
I watched hockey.
I'm a big hockey fan.
But, you know, the tennis tournaments,
the NHl playoffs
end then the wimbledon starts the fucking red sox are going i'm like i don't want to leave the house
ever but i gotta say you must be putting pen to paper the last few years because he's got a special
on youtube that it just came out called this year's material which is it's again you'll see
why he's one of the better comics in the country.
And it's already got over a million views, whatever, in a month.
I put you up there, 1994.
It's got 1,200 hits.
No, honestly, so, I mean, you're prolific.
I remember you and I having a conversation.
You were like, ah, I just put my last special.
I don't know what to do.
I don't, I remember this was like probably seven years ago already you were nervous that you didn't have more material and uh and you've been pounding them out since what do you know it's hard
so you forget and then you have to just it took a long time to accept that like oh i'll keep
coming up with stuff i guess but you know how you mind your like childhood and after a while
you're like i don't have any more stories i got a story about fucking mispronouncing a word in fifth grade. It's not hitting
Yeah, I can't stretch that into a seven-minute bit
Yeah, no, but
Like you said somehow you find a way and then I saw you like on Conan I couldn't believe how polished
Joe was like me were a jeans guy and a shitty, you like on Conan. I couldn't believe how polished Joe was like me. We're a
jeans guy in a shitty, you know,
Metallica t-shirt, a pearl jacket.
And then I see him on Conan. He's got like this
really nice suit on shoes.
Right?
Used to be barefoot, right?
Well, you know the story about my shoes.
I did Letterman,
which you came to, which meant a lot to me.
I tied his necktie, by the way, to Letterman.
That's the kind of connection I have with him.
I spent all my money on the suit.
I went to J.Crew and got a suit.
It was like $1,000.
It was like my last $1,000.
And I said, I got $100 left for a pair of shoes.
And comedians Ryan Hamilton and Gary Gellman, very funny guys,
they were like, you can't spend $100 and wear a $1,000 suit. So they took me out shoe shopping, which was very nice.
And you still used flip-flops with the suit. What an asshole.
Well, the camera's usually waist up.
That's so weird, Joe. When I got my first Letterman, what a time. I sound like Henry Hill.
It was a glorious time. I had no girlfriend. And I had some money.
Pipes Peek was a pimple.
Pipes Peek was a pimple.
Greg Rogel was a middle act.
First thing I did, I walked out of some boutique shop in the village.
$1,000 suit, $800, $900 suit.
The shoes.
And I was so excited.
I didn't really have the money at the time.
I didn't give a shit.
How am I going to go on Letterman wearing a fucking members-only jacket?
And so, yeah, I did the same thing, and I see Joe on Conan and stuff.
I go, the material is new and polished, and people, Let me ask you about the podcast.
What is it? Tuesdays with Stories?
Yeah, you got it.
Tuesdays with Stories.
Yeah, it does well.
You and Norman, right? Well, how couldn't it?
That's two funny MFers
right there. Oh, thanks.
Can you not swear on this show?
I know. What am I doing? What a fucking...
What a cunt.
That's too much Letterman talk. What a cunt I am.
You're right.
You know, it's so funny you picked up
on that because I'm trying to...
We're remarketing, repackaging
my show and I've been trying to give
like a tone down.
You know, I'm the only
guy I know that manages like, can you not say cunt
11 times? And I'm like, well, come on.
I said, come on.
I know how to temper my act.
So yeah, he caught me kind of in TV mode.
Now you shit in a girl's shoe once.
Is this correct?
Anyways.
Yes.
Yeah, that's what he said.
That's the truth.
Dallas, I'm talking to my producer.
He quit drinking one night he shit in a girl's shoe at her apartment.
I didn't even quit after that.
I kept going.
There was like two more years after that.
I drank that night.
The next night, I was like, I might as well keep going.
He drank the baguette.
Oh, my God.
I've never gotten that call.
But you know, you have a relationship with comedians.
I remember I called all the comedians. I was suicidal. I suicidal i was like dude i shit in a girl's shoe i pissed
in her rug i fell through a table and every comedian's like that's fucking hilarious yeah i
know i know luckily there's a guy named colin quinn who was worse than you as far as drinking
a lot of people wouldn't believe because you know colin as he is he's been cleaning sober for 30 something years he saved a bunch of people and colin used to wake up he said on a train like
heading to pennsylvania literally right and he would beat people up can you imagine quinn um just
out of his mind it's same with joe joe would joe handled it know. But when I got off stage some night, like we went up to Foxwoods.
Was it Foxwoods?
Who are the drunks that own the – I love them, by the way.
A Comics up in Foxwoods.
Remember?
I come off and you and like the owner who's a severe – well, he likes to drink.
Him and Joe having like a – you know.
It was sponsored by Jack Daniel's Honey that night.
That Jack Daniel's Honey.
That's right.
We always drink that. It was delicious. Jack Daniel's honey that night. That Jack Daniel's honey, that's right. We always drink that.
It was delicious.
Even I liked it.
I come off him and the owner have about 11 empty shot glasses in front of them like they're having a contest.
I remember when we were at Foxwoods right after Geraldo died and Andy, your wife, saying,
you know, I want you to stay.
Don't fucking take pills, you fucking idiot.
And I go, I've never taken pills in my life.
She goes, Nick told me you did last week.
And I was like, fuck.
I was like, damn it, you rat.
Yeah, but I said it was Advil PM, I said.
I said, Joe's a nervous wreck.
He can't sleep, although you don't take that shit
with a bottle of wild turkey.
I heard it's bad for you.
But yeah, Joe pulled an Amber Heard
and left a grumpy in some girl's stilettos.
A grumpy.
That's my favorite word ever.
It's the best.
Joe, I go online,
I see at the Comedy Cellar.
I hardly do much stand-up, I've got to be honest,
because there's no scene down here.
And I explain to my listeners all the time,
you gotta be working on your shit every night.
It atrophies, it's like a muscle,
you don't use it, it atrophies.
I'm lucky enough to be able to go off the top of my head
after not being on stage for three months,
but again, then I listen to it, I go,
ooh, that was fucking brutal, but people were laughing,
I don't know what I was doing.
What I'm trying to say is I drink like Joe used
to now.
But are you getting
a lot of
from the last special? Are you
people saying,
you know, you seem to have a...
You told me you're selling tickets, right?
Yeah, people are coming out now. It's like, you know, you know there's always in show business you're always looking at the other guy
going well he's selling fucking way more tickets but yeah now i'm starting to hit bonuses and go
into percentage deal and people are showing up it's very exciting and uh you realize how much
you were getting fucked before and it's good no because the first one i had i hate myself come out
during um covid and that's got like seven million. And then the new one just has like a million. So and they came out a year and a half apart from each other. So that's people are finally showing up now. And then Norman has like fully blown up and Sam Morrill. And so they, Mark and I do a show together and Sam will plug my shit all the time. So it's all happened. But you know, in the days you did you know fucking uh carson the next day you were huge now you got to do 75 podcast and and as you
used to say throw your cat in the fire and put it on youtube yeah exactly that's what i try to tell
my my managers like look we need you to open this show like three or four not completely but you
know kind of clean tv funny minute and i go said, that's going to grab their attention, really?
I got a lady having an abortion
at the Walmart fucking
frozen food section, and her kids are
putting on TikTok. How am I going to compete with that
shit?
But you know how to do that.
What's Mark Norman,
what's he play? I know he probably sells
on clubs in a second.
Is he playing small theaters?
I'm afraid to ask at this point.
He's doing theaters now.
He's doing the thing where he's selling out clubs and adding shows and selling all those out.
He's too big for clubs now.
So now he's doing some theater.
I think he just did the Vic.
He did two at the Vic.
How big is the Vic?
That's in Chicago.
I think it's 1,000.
Yeah, we're doing the Vic with the movie on Saturday.
Very cool.
I sold 1,100 tickets in Minneapolis at the Pantages Theater.
That was my top.
Of course, I get greedy.
I try to go back there 11 nights later.
Who would have guessed?
I was there with you.
I did the Pantages.
I remember that.
That was a big deal.
Remember?
Busted over 1,000 tickets? Then we went out with
the greatest comedy owner in the world,
Lou... What was his name? Reed?
No. Lou... Lee.
Lou...
What was his first... Lee.
His last name's Lee. Louis Lee.
Louis Lee. Louis Lee.
Lou Lee. That's his name. Lou Lee.
Lou Lee. And remember he bought us steaks
and all kinds of crap.
I was shithoused at that dinner.
Yes, you were.
I remember you throwing up in my gravy.
What a fucking nightmare.
Let me tell you something.
I like a chunky bit.
Come on now.
What's that?
Is that a Colt 45?
No, it's liquid death.
It's the canned water.
Canned?
Liquid death?
Yeah.
How old do I sound? No. Why is it called liquid death if it's just oh it's the water's from like flint michigan no
it's murder your thirst that's their campaign making water cool has a skull on it murder your
thirst those commercials are phenomenal murder your Your Thirst. Joseph Mengele
came up with that. Remember for Hitler?
He used to tease the Jews
with the Heineken bottles.
Anyways. It's good shit.
Look at that. Murder Your Thirst.
It's great for alcoholics.
I feel like I'm back in high school.
No, I was going to say, talking to the
great Joe List, by the way,
it probably feels like you're drinking a tall boy. Oh, I drink like I'm back in high school. No, I was going to say, talking to the great Joe List, by the way, it probably feels like you're drinking a tall boy.
Oh, I drink like 48 of these during a hockey game.
I piss every whistle.
Pissle.
Which is hard to do in hockey, man.
Did you watch the playoffs, by the way?
I watched the whole thing.
I loved it.
Me too.
Nathan McKinnon looks like you're playing a video game
and you eat a fucking flower and you become super fast or whatever.
Yes.
My brother said, I knew McKinnon.
I hadn't seen much of him.
They play in the West.
My brother goes, watch this guy.
It's like a man among boys.
He's so
fast and light on his skates and and uh whatever i don't want to blow most people don't like hockey
they'd rather watch the nba where teams exchange baskets for three and a half hours before it means
anything jesus christ the other thing me and joe and why i love to have him on the road means
college football yes fanatic and joe had a great quote about, remember we used to discuss,
how can people not like college football?
And you said, even if you just like sports, I don't understand.
Remember you said how you wouldn't think college football was unbelievable.
Yeah, no, it's the best.
College football is the best.
I mean, the band, the women, the play.
I mean, I always say everything that's different from college to NFL is better in college.
The hash marks being further apart,
one foot in bounds.
I mean, they used to have the two-point conversion,
all that shit.
The NFL eventually adapted,
but all that stuff is better.
The pass interference rules are better.
It's just better.
It is.
It's like, why don't you keep the rules consistent?
They're going to go to the NFL.
The only problem when I watch college football,
I spend half the time trying to pause when the cheerleader's doing a cartwheel.
I spend like 20 minutes and look down, it's 4-0.
Dallas, who's your team?
Auburn Tigers.
Auburn Tigers.
Wait, did you go to Auburn?
No.
My producer went to Auburn.
Oh, War Eagle. War Eagle.
War Eagle.
War Damn Eagle.
War Damn Eagle?
Yep.
Really?
True Auburn, man.
The other rule I hate in the NFL that is better in college is you have to be touched down in the NFL.
To me, in football, if you slip and fall on the ground, you're down.
In the NFL, you can just crawl up the field.
Oh, I like that. See, no, I like just crawl up the field. Oh, I like that.
See, no, I like being able to get up and run.
No, I don't like it.
I mean, the quarterback backpedals and just fucking falls on his ass,
and he gets to get up and throw it downfield.
Yes, nobody touched him.
No, you can't fall down.
What are you, my fucking mother, going down the steps?
It's a wet field.
I'm trying to cover a guy who runs a 4-1-40.
Yes, people are going to fall down.
I like that.
I played both.
I played the NFL.
I was with the Eagles for about six months.
Remember, Joe?
Of course.
By the way, War Eagle is my mother's screen name now.
I have no idea what the fuck that means, but it seemed kind of funny.
I guess that's about it, Joe. I can't wait to see
you tonight.
I'm pumped. To see you tonight
at the event.
Real quick, the rules, plus one,
I'm bringing Andy, but she has to get a
ticket at Will Call.
You just had me laughing on that
group text when you said,
my wife's in the movie, but I don't have her as a plus one.
No.
So, yeah, Andy finds her way to her seat,
and then you'll meet her in there.
But what are we doing before?
We're taking pictures,
and I'm walking the red carpet.
I got a nice Donna Karan number,
something off the shoulder.
Yeah, I think we just hang out
in the back and stay close because some of
these cast members, they're not exactly good
hangs, so we got to buddy
up. What do you think? I'm going to wander over
with...
They're all very nice, except for
Courtland Jones. She hates me for some reason.
No, I think she's flirting.
Boy, she... You know what?
Jesus.
He's right, maybe. It's like a... I mean, I think she's flirting. Boy, she... You know what? Jesus. He's right, maybe.
It's like a...
I mean, I...
A grade school thing?
Yes, but...
You know what I mean?
When you flirt in grade school,
her equivalent of flirting
is like kicking a kid in the balls.
She's really...
She texted me last night
and goes,
you're the fucking worst.
With no emoji or nothing.
I go, why am I the fucking worst?
We're like oil and water. But you know what?
We threw a Nerf football around for about an
hour. I'm throwing
as hard as I can. Dart's at her. She's catching
me like she was freaking
Mark Bavaro. I've never seen anything like it.
So yeah, no, I'll stick near you.
Who's the guy, by the way, that played
your dad?
Oh, Robert Walsh.
Robert Walsh.
I couldn't remember Robert's first name.
I know Dot.
I know Paula, right?
Yeah.
The mother?
Tara, Paula.
Tara, Courtland, Tony V.
What's Murph's first name?
You call him Murph.
His name's Chris Walsh.
Walsh.
God damn it.
I'm so sorry, Murph His name's Chris Walsh. Walsh. I always... God damn it. I'm so sorry, Murph.
I mean, Walsh.
You had me crying.
You're like, hey, Murph.
I was on the floor.
It's so stereotypical.
It's like, you know, an Italian guy.
Hey, how you doing?
Anyways, yeah.
So anyways, Chris Walsh, who can tell a story in like two seconds flat.
It's amazing.
Yeah, that's it, I guess.
Thank you so much for doing this.
Yeah, thank you.
We'll break this into 11 parts.
Give the fans about a minute and a half each day.
I can't wait, Joe.
I can't wait either.
It's going to be fun.
I just went on the website.
It says 2,800 and something seats.
Oh, I don't know. Maybe
we had to kill some seats for the cameras.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's what I was going to say.
How much, so do you know how many tickets
have been sold or whatever?
I think, I believe the last update
it was like we've sold
1826
out of 1990.
Wow. Something like that. Yeah. It'll probably
you'll sell them all probably.
Yeah, it's going to be fun.
It's going to be weird.
I mean, it's going to be weird
if people hate the movie
because they'll watch it
with like a thousand people
that hate it,
but I think they'll like it.
Please.
They know we're there.
They fake it.
I've done a few of these
like in Sweeney's movies.
Every time it didn't get a laugh,
I'd stand up and go.
Are you excited to see yourself?
Have you ever seen yourself on a big screen?
No, no.
I mean, I've seen this movie 40 times
as we edited it together.
But not on the big screen?
No, I've never seen it on the big screen.
I'm very excited.
It'll be fun.
It's going to be a great time.
I'm looking forward to it.
I am too.
And then we'll get with Joe Renton at Canoe.
We're going to go up the Hudson to Boston, right?
The next day.
A sprinter van. A sprinter van. It's going to be up the Hudson to Boston, right, the next day? A sprinter van.
A sprinter van.
It's going to be so fun.
I'm almost jealous.
Joe's like, yeah, me and Louie will cover it.
What kind of money is this kid making?
Joe, thanks a lot, man.
I'm one of my favorite people in comedy, and I will see you.
Yeah, we'll have a ball tomorrow night.
I can't wait.
All right, man.
I appreciate it.
Love you, Joe.
All right, that is it. Before I go for the week, I want to thank the tomorrow night. I can't wait. All right, man. I appreciate it. Love you, Joe. All right, that is it.
Before I go for the week,
I want to thank the people who contribute to the show financially.
It keeps us alive.
Paul Tazi.
I'm seeing new names.
Paul Tazi.
How's that for a great Italian name?
New Jersey, of course.
John Melton.
Sicily.
Steve Standley.
Scott Brown.
I wonder if it's the politician.
Joseph Safar. Joseph Hirsch, Marcos Mazzari, Douglas Young, Matthew J. Spencer.
Thank you guys so much for contributing.
And that's it for the week.
I can't believe it.
That is it for the weekend.
that's it for the week.
I can't believe it.
That is it for the weekend.
I'm going to have a ball with Louis C.K., Joe Liss,
and my buddies and everybody in that movie.
Hope you guys have a great, I want to say, 4th of July weekend?
Yeah.
Yeah?
4th of July weekend.
Oh, my God.
We're almost to football season already.
Don't forget to contribute to Patreon.
This is important.
Thecomicsgym.com.
Go to nickdip.com.
Don't forget cameo.com if you want me to roast somebody.
And shoutout.fans.
It's a cameo thing, more patriotic.
I can say hi, whatever you want.
That is it, right?
You guys think I'll say it? You're very welcome.
We'll see you back here next week.
Again, have a great weekend, everybody. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, guitar solo Thanks for watching!