This Past Weekend - 4-10-17 This Past Weekend #17
Episode Date: April 10, 2017Theo got electrocuted. Hole enlargement. Debbie goes down. Takes callers.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Transcript
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What's up you little crispy dicked armadillos, huh?
How you guys feeling today, man?
It's Monday.
Are you ready?
What you been doing?
You been smelling your own breath, huh?
You been smelling your cousin's breath?
You ever done that, dude?
Get close by your cousin mouth and...
Mmm, that's air incest, bruh.
You ever thought about that?
You ever thought about that?
Mmm, that's air incest, bruh. You ever thought about that? You ever thought about that? Mmm, that smells so naughty. Should we tell uncle? Should we tell uncle? You guys ready? You guys ready for this past weekend, man? I'm ready, dude. I got electrocuted, bruh. Let's get into it. Welcome to This Past Weekend.
This Past Weekend. This past weekend. What's up? How are you guys doing? How are you ladies doing?
Thank you guys for joining me. It is Monday, April 10th.
And I'm feeling gratitude right now, man.
I got electrocuted.
I'm just going to start there. I got electrocuted.
And I don't know if you've ever been down this road with electricity, but it's a violent force, man.
I mean, it's like Poseidon just kind of just finger banged your butt.
You know, that's how I felt. I'm going to tell you guys what happened.
But that's how I felt. I'm going to tell you guys what happened. I hadn't been electrocuted. I was young. I was young.
I was a boy.
And I was a young boy.
And I was, I grew up near a fairground.
And a fairground is a place where the fair comes.
And they have animals there when the fair isn't there.
And people show animals and stuff like that.
4-H people.
And it was a big field.
And once a year, 4-H people. And it was a big field.
And once a year, the fair would come.
And it was not far from our home where we lived at.
So me and some of the other boys from the neighborhood,
my friend Clark would go over there.
And before the fair would open up for the public, they had a day where they would let us ride the rides.
And they charged just maybe a quarter, I think, or 50 cents to get in.
And you could ride as much as you want as the rides were being put up and functioning.
And in hindsight, I think they were kind of just experimenting with us.
But we didn't see that.
We just saw it as a deal because to get a regular wristband for the big fair day,
it was about $8.
And we didn't usually have that money, so we would go the day prior
and we'd get out there.
And they had a lot of miscreants and ne'er-do-wells out there.
And, you know, men that were running from the law and women that kind of looked like lesbians, but that probably weren't lesbians.
Non-practicing lesbians, maybe.
And we'd get on the rides.
And I got on a ride. my buddy clark was this kind of
odd boy he had some issues um his he hated sound he hated sounds um he hated all just sounds man
so he would often you know wear something extra on his head to kind of keep the sound out of him.
And I don't know why he was like that.
Everybody's got their thing, and he just wasn't keen with sounds.
He was more you whispered around him.
He was just a gentle.
He was gentle when it came to the airwaves.
And so he'd often have an
extra hat on or, you know, some couple of muffs on his ears, or, um, he'd have his head kind of
wrapped up in something, you know, wrap an extra cloth or something around his head, uh, to keep
things quiet around him. But we get onto the rides and, and it was pretty good, you know, I mean,
some of them, it was the first run. Um, you know, some of the cages would pretty good you know i mean some of them it was the first run um you know some
of the cages would have you know birds would have nested in in some of the different pivots and
joints of the rides like the zipper and the tilt to whirl um the gravitron i remember the gravitron
as well i'll tell you a story about that in a second. But so I was getting
off of something. I think it might've been the tilt to whirl. And it was one of those rides where
when you get off the back, you know, there's, you can hear a generator kind of really just rumbling.
You can hear a generator really rumbling and, and I'm getting off and I was holding onto the rail
and then I held another rail.
And at that point, I completed some type of a circuit, you know, some sort of loose energy that wasn't being used by the ride.
And it started using me.
And I remember just like my neck got real straight and everything I knew just felt alert. And I remember this man was
like a tall black man. Um, and everybody was tall to me because I was a child, but he could have
been a basic heighted, basic heighted black man. He was like, you got to get off the ride boy.
like, you got to get off the ride, boy. And I was like, I can't let go, you know? And he thought that I was, um, you know, uh, uh, take an issue with him or that I was, um, you know, just being
kind of a, uh, just a little cunt, you know? And so he put his foot on my back and basically just
kicked me off the ride, not kicked me, pushed me with his foot on my back and basically just kicked me off the ride.
Not kicked me, pushed me with his foot.
And there is a difference.
Some people are always saying they get kicked, but sometimes you just get pushed with somebody's foot.
And thank God he did, dude, because it was kind of rude of him.
But thank God he did because I don't think that I would have survived.
But I hadn't been electrocuted since then, since we'd been out there experimenting on these rides. him but thank god he did because i don't think that i would have survived um but that was i
hadn't been electrocuted since then since we'd been out there you know experiment on these rides
the gravitron i remember they had a man in there who looked like slash from guns and roses
and when the when the uh that was the one where you went in and you laid against the wall
and then it spun you know like you were in the dryer and and it spun, you know, like you were in the dryer and, and it spun and the whole,
your, the board you were leaning against would go just start to just levitate against the wall.
Um, you know, like you were really just on the last cycle of, uh, of, you know, of a load of
laundry. And, um, and at that point you couldn't move hardly,
you couldn't move your neck or anything. You just had to really look just straight forward.
And they had a DJ in the middle of rock and roll man, and he'd be in there playing rock and roll.
And I remember this guy was hit, you know, had a bit of the pervert in him and he would, uh,
he would kind of show his wiener while we were
spinning and it was and it was weird because you didn't i remember we never discussed it
because you were always or i personally felt like i was always unsure if i was just spinning so fast that I was, that I was like seeing wieners or something that I was seeing, you know, adult body pieces.
And, and, but now as I've gotten older, I know what happened.
And that man was showing, was showing out.
And that wasn't right of him to do that.
I think he was just being like a party guy, you know, but that was the Gravitron because you
couldn't move. You couldn't look and see if everybody else was seeing the same thing. So you
didn't know if, if everybody saw it and people, I guess, were maybe scared to talk about it.
And then Clark, you didn't discuss things with him that much because he liked to be silent. You know, he liked to just
be kind of by himself. But anyhow, that was the first time I got electrocuted when I was young.
And then until now, I'm okay. I want to say that. I had a lot of well wishes, people reaching out,
you know, checking in on me. Somebody asked how many volts it was.
And I'm going to answer that.
I don't know, bro.
I don't know if that's what you ask.
I'm not like a tachometer or whatever.
I don't know.
I'm not trying to set a fucking record, dude.
I got electrocuted by electricity.
And I'll tell you what happened.
I had a comedy set on Melrose Avenue in West Hollywood.
And afterwards, I was walking a few blocks, and they had a food truck.
And I don't like food trucks, man.
You know, for people out, everybody in L.A. and all these cities are like, oh, food trucks, food trucks.
But then they'll make fun of people who are picking up animals on the side of the road, like the area where I'm from.
And they're like, those people are fucked up.
Like some hillbilly grilling something in the back of his truck.
But you're eating out of a fucking truck,
dude, you know, like, I've never eaten sushi out of a truck, you know, like some kind of damn creep,
you know, like some kind of just damn fucking calorie lurker, you know, so I don't like food
trucks, because I don't, I don't like to eat when somebody's cooking something right next to the gasoline.
I mean, the gasoline in a truck is eight feet from the fucking griddle.
You know, like, I don't eat around that shit.
So anyway, I've had a personal issue, I guess.
And I'm sorry if I'm a little fired up, dude.
I mean, I didn't expect this and it's just been a long few days.
So anyhow, I saw this food truck
that was selling lobster,
lobster rolls,
which I don't give a fuck about those either, dude,
to be honest.
And so I, you know,
though I was being myself
and they're selling lobster rolls
and I thought they were out of jurisdiction.
You know, I didn't know that food trucks were allowed to operate on this certain avenue out here in West Hollywood.
So, you know, being a nosy SOB, I wander over because I'm thinking that these people need to know my point of view, you know, like, oh, you guys are selling crab or,
you know, seafood out of, you know, out of a proper jurisdiction, really.
And in hindsight, that was my fault. I should have minded my own business. And kind of around
the back of the food truck, they had this, you ever seen like one of those electric things on
the wall, like just something, an outlet. They had a huge one of those on the ground.
And I just kind of wasn't paying attention.
And like a huge one, like, like, I don't know if you've ever seen a, like, I think there's a movie.
Maybe it could be Home Alone where the boy is dancing on a, one of those pianos that's on the floor, like with the big keys.
They have it at FAO Schwartz.
They have it at a fancy toy store in New York City
where you can step on the keys and make the sounds.
And they're like $3,000.
Rich kids have them, I guess.
And it was like that, man.
It was that big.
It was that big of an outlet.
Just a big outlet.
And it had a bunch of cables coming out of it.
And I stepped on it.
And I felt like I kind of got straight.
And then I just got literally crumpled to the ground.
Almost like if you've ever seen one of those videos where they pour some type of liquid over a Coke can or something and it just crumbles.
That was me, man.
I was like kind of crumbling, but one of my legs was staying kind of straight.
And I was scared, dude.
It felt like the devil was just grabbing me down, you know, and I didn't know what was going on.
And I realized that I was in unsafe territory.
And thank God it just didn't last for too long.
You know, it was probably two or three seconds, which you don't think is long.
You know, I mean, if you're a bull rider, you know, they're supposed to stay on for eight seconds.
That's so, you know, me riding an outlet for three seconds isn't a big deal.
But when you are unexpectedly start surfing electricity, basically, riding the lightning, it's real, man.
It gets real pretty fast.
And so I was scared, dude. I didn't know if I was going to,
I didn't know if I was going to die for a second. You know, for one of those seconds,
I probably thought that I was going to die. Um, uh, anyhow, I went home. Um, the next day
I went to the doctor and I went into the doctor's office and this things got even worse in there.
I went into the doctor's office and he kind of like pushed on my ribs from the front and back
and made me like turn to the left and right because there was this sharp pain in my ribs
and they ended up figuring out that there's a muscle in there that got damaged. It's called an intercoastal muscle.
And I don't know if maybe the electricity kind of all met up right there in my body.
But it hurt, man.
And this guy was like squeezing on it.
It made it hurt even more.
I lost my breath.
I thought I was going to die in the office.
I thought I was going to die.
He pushed on it, and I couldn't breathe. And he I was going to die in the office. I thought I was going to die. He pushed on it and I couldn't breathe.
And he's like, what's wrong?
And I'm like, I can't breathe.
And he's like, well, what happened?
And I'm like, he had just done this to me.
I had been able to breathe when I was in there before.
And I'm like, I feel like, you know,
like I'm going to be killed, you know?
And so he's like, just take the smallest breaths you can.
Anyhow, fast forward,
I slowly breathe myself back to neutral.
They laid me down for a while.
They gave me a Toradol shot in my butt
to get some of the muscles to relax and for a little bit of relief.
And then the dude says, I suggest you don't sleep alone.
And I'm not sleeping with anybody right now.
I'm bedding up by myself.
I don't even have a cat or anything.
So I'm thinking, well, now I got to some fucking muppet uh to bed up with me
you know like I I don't want and then I'm torn because it's like well what if I get some type
of fucking you know some straight up fucking you know just animal some female you know just
just some girl that's out in the grind squad.
I don't want some last minute.
Chick laying up in my bed.
What if I die?
What if I die in my sleep?
Then everybody's like.
He's fucking sleeping with this chick.
Maybe that's a silly thought.
My brain started racing.
I got very scared.
Anyhow.
I've been recovering from electricity, man. The dude's
like, find somebody to sleep with. And I just braved it out and slept alone. And here I am,
man. I got electrocuted, but I'm still alive and I'm living to tell about it. And I'm happy you
guys are here for this past weekend. The news. Let's get into the news. Oh, also, I know I was going to,
I was going to do a video where I answered more questions this past week. And once I got
electrocuted, that went out the window. So, because there's just things you can't do, man.
I mean, I've been, it's been hard to move this part of my body. There's a lot of pain right here in my ribs.
I've been jacked up.
I've been what I would definitely refer to as jacked up.
So I'm just happy to be alive.
I'm feeling a lot of gratitude.
And here we are.
Thank you guys for joining me.
Thank you guys for all the support.
This is on iTunes.
If it's Monday morning, later in the day, it should come up on YouTube.
If you want to get onto the YouTube, you can check it out there.
We also do a This Past follow-up where we'll check in with somebody who called in for suggestions,
and we'll put those calls, smaller segments, onto the YouTube as well. I didn't have any music to kick off the episode this week
because some people apparently can't get the YouTube
in certain countries if there's copywritten music in it.
So I'm trying to figure that out.
We'll get past that hurdle.
I'm doing the best that I can.
And thank you guys for bearing with me.
The news.
Syria bombing. I saw that I can. And thank you guys for bearing with me. The news, Syria bombing. I saw that dude sent a couple of missiles over to Syria. And one thing that I felt was some nostalgia
because it's been a long time since America had like, since America like bombed something,
you know, that we heard about in the news really at a,
at like at a large scale like that. And it reminded me of growing up. It reminded me of
like in the, you know, in the eighties, nineties, two thousands, even early two thousands,
when that was just an everyday practice, you would hear about it all the time during the Gulf War.
You were constantly hearing about bombing, so it wasn't a big deal.
But it had been a long time, and so that really kind of made me feel a little bit of nostalgia.
I don't know if some of you guys felt that or not.
I thought there was an interesting video online on CNN where they'd found a guy in Syria
who was grateful for the bombing,
or for just the show of force, just because there'd been a lot of atrocities happening over
there, and he felt like nobody had been helping those people, and so he was very grateful to the
administration and to the U.S. military, and I thought that was interesting because you don't see a lot of that from the news these days.
What else?
Sergio Garcia.
Sergio Garcia won the Masters.
I thought that was pretty awesome.
I watched the last round.
Beautiful course, man.
I went to the Masters once a long time ago.
And one thing I remember, they had ice cream sandwiches there for only $1.50.
And that's a beautiful price
if you're at a sporting event
to get something for that price.
And I felt like that was great.
And I just remember,
I wasn't a huge golf fan.
I think this guy Mike Weir won it the year I went.
Or Billy Weir.
Billy?
He might have been a British man.
But I remember those $1.50 ice cream sandwiches.
Had about nine of those.
And I saw the hottest chick I've ever saw, some lady named Debbie, fall in the mud.
Because it was a rainy time.
And a lot of the women are wearing high heels and just kind of giraffing about.
Just like long animals. And this bitch of the women are wearing high heels and just kind of giraffing about, you know, just like long animals.
And this bitch hit the mud.
And that made me feel pretty good, to be honest with you, dude.
To see, you know, when Debbie goes down, that shit made me feel pretty damn good.
on that shit made me feel pretty damn good.
Reminded me in high school, I remember one time I hit,
I'll be honest, dude, I hit a hot chick with my car.
And I don't know sometimes in hindsight if I did it on purpose or if I could have not hit her,
but there was something in it felt pretty damn good, dude, to just equal the playing field that I felt at the time.
Maybe I felt low of myself.
And to see a pretty hot chick take a forward escort to the femur, whatever that is, to the hip, that shit really kind of warmed me a little at that time.
But I do also want to apologize to that young lady.
I think we're out of the jurisdiction of time
where there can be a lawsuit.
But at the very least, I should come to terms.
I might have to make an amends there.
What else, dude?
But I thought it was cool.
I thought it was beautiful.
I always wanted to take my stepdad.
I got emancipated when I was about 14 because my mother and I were not I'd still love to be able to do that to afford,
to be able to afford to do that one day.
I hope I can get to do that.
It's one of those things that kind of plagues me
where it's something you want to do but you never get around to it.
Sometimes I worry that I'm not going to get around to it,
but hopefully I will.
What else,
man? Let's see what else is happening. I haven't been watching the actual news very much, dude. I
keyed in for the serious stuff because I'll say this, dude. I hate the fucking news, bro. I hate
it, man. And I'm sorry if I'm antsy or fired up. You know, I got electricity inside of me. And I feel like the news,
it's all negative.
Everything on it,
I feel like America's a much better country
than the news makes us out to be.
All they focus on is the bullshit.
I feel like they're responsible
for more racial bullshit in this country
and more racial division
than any human or group of people could be.
Sometimes I wish they'd take these newscasters and the networks that sponsor them and bring
them up on charges because some of it is just bullshit. We're better people than a lot of these
news networks let on that we are. I strongly believe that. What else happened this past weekend, man?
I just was feeling survival.
I felt a lot about survival
and times where I didn't know if I was going to make it.
I had another near-death experience.
I ate a bunch of quarters when I was a child.
I ate about $8 and a little bit of change,
maybe in quarters.
And it was all changed,
but I don't know how much over $8
that I actually ingested.
But I took in a good deal of money
and they had to go in and get it out of me.
And I remember that being,
you know, I was very scared.
I think from what I gather talking to my mother, I had become envious of a piggy bank. And that's a natural thought for a
child to have, you know, that this pig can have money in it and I want to save money, you know.
I was very money conscious as a child. We didn't have much money. So the money that I had, I wanted to hold on to.
But I remember being scared about that.
Another time, I guess I had to go into the hospital.
My the hole on the end of my penis wasn't wide enough.
I had a just a very small opening at the end of my penis.
And they and I could piss like a damn, I mean, dude,
I could piss. I mean, I could piss, bro. I could piss into a bird's mouth if the branch was only
about seven feet up. I mean, I had, I had something special. I felt like, but it started to cause a
lot of pain because as you get older, I guess you
can hold more liquid and you're trying to spray more liquid out of your body. And I remember that
causing a lot of pain and I had to go in for surgery then to get a larger penis hole. And
thankfully that worked out okay, but I remember a lot of fear being around that.
I remember a lot of fear being around that.
Another time I was very scared for my life was when I had appendicitis.
I had appendicitis.
I was playing baseball on a very shitty team called the Cubs.
And they didn't let me play.
They put me out in the field.
They had one boy who was out in the field one time and ate a couple of mushrooms,
psychedelic mushrooms that were growing out there.
This kid named Big Charles.
And I don't know if he's ever really been the same kid.
So this was before a lot of the fields, you know, that maybe they properly took care of them.
Or, you know, maybe cows had been on them at certain times. times and you know uh and we were dealing with the repercussions of that uh big charles ended
up using a lot of drugs um and i'm not going to say that's where it started as a right fielder
but i don't think that that's far-fetched what else man but i had been playing for the Cubs, and we were horrible. And I was feeling some stomach pain.
I went up to bat and got hit by a pitch.
That was my big move.
Couldn't swing the bat well, but would often get hit by the pitches.
And I got to second base, was in severe pain in my side,
and between second and third base, I fell down, hit the dirt.
And we had a huge, thick, just a gristly coach.
They didn't make a shirt that could fit him.
Sometimes it seemed like he would have a shirt,
but then some towels kind of sewed around the bottom of it, or have an apron on as well to hide some of himself because he was just all body, all gut, you know, all just fatty triceps and gut.
And he was screaming at me.
He ended up actually, I think, getting accused of being indecent with children.
And he never did anything to me, but he did get accused.
I know that.
And I'm still friends with two of the guys.
I actually just did an investment with one of the guys who he tried to make some sweet gestures towards.
who he tried to make some sweet gestures towards.
But anyhow, I'm coming through second base,
and I'm heading towards third, and I hit the dirt, man.
I'm in pain.
My appendix is ruptured or whatever,
and I'm laying on the ground,
and this dude is screaming at me to round the bases.
And I can't round the bases, dude.
I can't round the bases because part of my body is busted open on the inside. And he came out and was dragging me to third base, this coach. And at third, I couldn't do anything else. I stayed on the ground. I remember holding on to the bag as he tried to pull me down towards home.
as he tried to pull me down towards home.
The referees or whatever they're called, umpires, were angry.
Other people got furious.
And, I mean, it didn't matter.
We lost the game anyway.
We lost every game by 10-run rule.
But I remember that being a really trying time.
And then I ended up in the hospital for a few days because I had a ruptured appendix.
And I was very scared of that.
So, anyhow, that's what's going on, man.
This past weekend, I didn't have much happen because of that right there.
I do want to let you guys know coming dates.
I have the punchline in Sacramento, and that is April 21st through 23rd.
May 25th through 28th, I'll be at the SideSplitters Comedy Club in Tampa, Florida.
And Tampa's an old pirate town.
If you haven't been over there, a lot of Spanish moths, hookers, a lot of, you know, Florida's known for just being,
it's really the appendix of America in that it just, all the gutter and the real trauma really
just kind of gestates down there.
So it's definitely a place for a good time.
And then June 1st through June 4th, I will be in Pittsburgh at the Pittsburgh Improv.
If you want to support the podcast, you can go to theovon.com slash store.
We got some good shirts on there.
We got some artwork.
We got some new stuff that will be coming up on there this week.
As well, later this week, I got a new album that will be online of my early work.
It's a classier version.
And it's just all the early stuff.
So I'm excited about that.
All right, man.
We got some great calls
that came in. I want to thank everybody for being a part of this journey with me. When you guys call
in with questions or concerns or thoughts, I mean, I learn a lot as well. So I'm glad that you guys
are helping me. I want to thank also my buddy Adam, who's out there. There's a guy named Adam who I've never even met who gives me advice about this podcast.
There's a guy named Cameron who does the artwork who I've never even met in person who does the artwork.
There is a guy named Sher, who masters the audio.
He's been doing it at 6 a.m. the past month, and I've never met him.
And so the joy that I'm feeling just from, you know, the kindness of people,
it's really awesome, man.
And I want to say that I feel it, and thank you guys, and we're in this together.
And whatever we're doing, let's continue to do it.
Thank you guys so much for the support.
All right, let's get into some calls here.
I want to thank you guys for hitting the hotline.
That number is 985-664-9503.
9 5 0 3 and that uh you can call in and leave a question or a comment anything about you know that you might need some uh you know some some guidance if it's something i can relate to i'll
relate to it uh any basic life suggestions that i can offer i will try to offer all right guys
let's get into some of that we had some great callers call in here we go what's up theo i'm calling it from northwest
arkansas northwest arkansas baby that's uh quartz country and um little abner i think little abner
from that area uh onward on one of your podcasts you did a couple weeks back, you were talking about how whenever you grew up, you didn't really have very many relationships with men whenever you were a kid.
That's true. My brother moved to live with my grandparents when I was young.
So I was in a room just with an empty bed across the room, and my father was very old.
bed across the room. Um, and my father was very old and some of the other, they had some adults around us. Some of them were, um, you know, some of them were pedophiles. I talked about that.
Uh, one man kept combing his hair all the time, you know, like he just, just, he had some issues
onward. I'm like the opposite. Uh, pretty much all my relationships were with with dudes and
all my friends are dudes and has very many like girlfriends and because of
that it's kind of hard for me to talk to a female that's a little difficult to
to not force conversation whenever I'm talking to girls. I can relate to that, man.
I remember when I was young, I could not talk to girls.
I just felt embarrassed.
I couldn't talk to girls that I liked.
That was the toughest part.
I was just afraid.
I just had this thing built in my head that they hated me
or that they just did not like me.
And I remember one time, this girl I was just in love with as a child, I remember that I spit in her hair.
Because I was so pent up with wanting to just tell her that I liked her maybe or something that I couldn't.
So I just gathered every bit of genetic ability, liquid ability in my face
and just deposited it onto her head one time.
And I ended up getting suspended for that.
Onward.
I'm a little better at it now than I used to be.
I started going to a lot of festivals and and honestly, it's taken a bunch of ecstasy.
The best time I can talk to women is whenever I'm rolling my tits off on some good, good molly.
And because of that, it's helped a little bit.
I'm a little better at carrying on conversations.
But I was just wondering if you've ever had that problem and if you have, how you kind of got over that.
All right.
So we got a gentleman in Northwest Arkansas.
I love the fact that Arkansas, you just,
you assume people don't know any location in that state.
So you just sort of label it as an area, you know,
almost as it's like, you know, like it's part of space or something.
But I appreciate the call, man.
First of all, if you're using drugs to talk to women, I've been there.
You know, I, you know, I used to think that using cocaine would make me like a party guy.
And it can help.
It can help for a while.
But the kind of girls I was meeting were just straight drug Muppets.
And kind of chicks that would wear those Ewok things on their head
with the long bands coming out of them.
And candy necklaces. Ad you know candy necklaces adults
wearing candy necklaces and playing in the desert you know and wearing fake furs and dressing up
like foxes like dirty foxes and you know doing you know just you know hiding ecstasy and acid
inside of their bodies and boofing i remember this this one girl was, boofing is a thing
where you put cocaine in a straw and then you blow it into somebody's buttocks or butt,
right into their butthole, really, into the hole in their butt. And so, yeah, it was,
using drugs was cool for a little bit, but after a while, you can devolve where you're just using drugs.
And that can get a little scary.
So I'm not saying it's a bad idea what you're doing, but if your expectations are to continue to carry that behavior on,
you might run into some issues where you're just doing drugs by yourself and there aren't any girls.
And that can easily happen.
That can easily happen, man.
It sounds like you've got to find some comfort in talking to women.
And I used to, I mean, dude, I went through a time where I was so nervous to talk to women,
the only thing I could use were
like shitty pickup lines you know garbage ones um you know they had the one are you a polar uh
are you a polar bear because you just you know I'm a polar bear I'm about to break the ice
you know that garbage you know verbal and then I used to have this one line, in hindsight, this shit is horrible.
I was like, let's play Hiroshima. I'll lay on my back and you blow the shit out of me.
So that was, but I mean, that's where I was. I was at a point where personally, I couldn't
find a comfort level where I could speak to women.
And how to get through that, I would find you have to get through it,
and you're going to have to practice.
And what I would practice is listening.
I'd practice listening, man.
I think you could be thinking, because I personally used to think
that I had to start the conversation every time.
Sometimes you can just listen.
Just listen.
I mean, a lot of women,
all they want is a man to listen to them
and to care.
And I think if you start with that,
with the listening,
then you'll eventually find spots
where you can interject
and offer
something to the conversation, you know? And also, if you're, it's, and you can just try
things also, if you want to try little things to talk to a woman, I would try little things like,
I like, what kind of candy do you like? You know, shit that like a five-year-old
would say. Because all it's about is starting the conversation. You don't need to think or worry
three or four steps in advance. Just say, hello, my name is so-and-so, you know. Just little things
like that are really the starters. And we got, you have to get
your self-confidence up because if you were thinking that women don't like you, then they're
just going to sense that, you know, because the thing is they probably do like you, you know,
they probably do. And you just have to find some ways to be comfortable around them.
So comfortability will lead to communication. So if you can get to
being comfortable, you're going to be in a good spot. Now, you also, man, if you get hooked up on
the drugs and that, you're going to start weaning yourself off of that. If the only way you can
speak to women is at a rave on ecstasy, dude, that might not end well. So I don't know if you need to put on some house music
and suck on a clarinet or something at the house
or start to wean yourself off of that behavior.
So you can create some regular behaviors
where you're actually communicating to women
in a regular way, man.
And you can find a girl that you already know
and it doesn't have to be one
that you're sexually interested in.
And just communicate.
Just listen.
Practice, bro.
You know, practice.
And also, you don't want to be in a spot where you just take any girl that will take you.
And you know, for years I spent time in that place.
Where I would just, any girl that would take me, I would accept, you know, I would take.
Even if she didn't have some of my values or qualities or anything, I just felt so less of myself.
And I'm not saying that you feel this way about you.
myself and I'm not saying that you feel this way about you, but I felt so less of myself that I just felt like I wasn't worthy of someone who was good for me or who I was good for.
I was just hopefully worthy of anyone.
And that was not a fun place to be.
And you end up with people that you end up with being
in a match that's not a real match, you know, because you want to end up if you want to end up
with a woman. And if you're looking for something long term, you're going to want to find a woman
that's real. And if you don't always have to agree with girls, you know, if they don't have your vibe,
dude, then screw them on to the next one, you know. But just don't make your vibe, dude, then screw them. On to the next one.
But just don't make your... If you can get in your head that you have value and you have worth, which you do.
You do, bro.
You sound like a pretty legit dude, man.
I'd probably go party with you, bro.
I'd probably do a couple bumps and put on a wig and let you practice conversation on me.
You know, but you don't want to end up with someone who doesn't deserve you just because you're afraid to to.
You're afraid to feel like someone does deserve you.
So I don't know if any of that helps, man, but I hope I could relate a little bit.
And yeah, be easy on that drugs, man.
Maybe use a placebo.
You could try that.
You could try using a placebo.
Maybe just fill your mouth with a little box of Good and Plenty's and see if you meet a girl on that.
Hide a couple of lifesavers under your tongue and see if you meet a girl on that, you know, hide a couple of lifesavers under
your tongue and see who you meet, you know, and you can practice talking to sisters too, man.
Sisters love to chat, beautiful, dark skin girl. Um, and, and it's good practice, you know, uh,
and you might meet a beautiful sister that you fall in love with. You know, you might be the
next Gary Owen, uh, or the next Bill Burr,
who are both, you know,
great, confident men.
Good luck with that, man.
Let's check out another question here.
Hold on.
Hey, Theo.
I got a question for you.
My name is Jose.
I live in New Mexico.
Jose, New Mexico.
I'm going to say this gentleman could be Latino.
Thank you for calling, sir.
He might be our first Latino check-in.
And I'm grateful to have you, brother.
Onward.
And, yeah, I just got a question for you.
I just got out of a relationship.
And I'm noticing one of my biggest problems is I'm a jealous motherfucker,
and I don't know how to get past that shit.
It's kind of a hindrance to my past relationship because it's not like I'll go out and beat a motherfucker up or anything like that.
He said it's not like he'll go out and beat a motherfucker up, so he's not doing that.
But he did just refer to himself as a jealous motherfucker.
So that sounds pretty jealous.
That sounds pretty jealous, you know, onward.
I don't know.
I just feel like, I don't know, like,
I just, I'm not in control of some of the things
that happen in that sort of situation.
This past relationship,
I had an extremely beautiful girlfriend.
She didn't believe that any guy she met, that they were trying to get into her pants.
I tried to get to her, but I just wasn't getting through.
I'm a guy, and I know how guys work, so that always came to bite me in the ass in the end.
Yeah, man, i'll say this it's hard uh
if you're just telling your girlfriend that you know that's it's just not going to resonate well
you can warn her but you know beating that into her verbally it's not going to help because
jealousy equals insecurity.
And when women sense, when they see that you're insecure, it makes, there's, there's naturally
women are not, are going to have trouble being attracted to insecure men.
I've been jealous, man.
I have been jealous.
I'll tell you about my jealousy in just a second.
Let's, let's finish up the call here.
Yeah, man. If you have any
advice
or anything I should do to
kick this jealousy shit, man. I don't like it.
I don't like it.
Cool. Keep up the good work, man.
Podcast is the shit. Okay, he wants to kick the jealousy,
man. Well, I appreciate you calling in, Jose,
because that's a brave thing to admit, and it's a
brave thing to recognize.
I was extremely jealous of past girlfriends, dude.
I was so insecure.
I had one girlfriend.
I ended up breaking into her apartment and putting Nair, which is a hair removal care, into her shampoo bottle when I found out
that she had been doing sex with another man. And I think some of that could have, in hindsight,
been deservant. That's also out of the jurisdiction of prosecutable offenses now.
That's been about 15 years, So I'm safe to discuss that.
But I was extremely jealous of that girl.
I was jealous.
I remember one of my first girlfriends,
she'd lost her virginity to someone else, right?
And I'd lost my virginity to her.
And I know losing your virginity,
it's not a big deal anymore. But at the time when I was young, it was a big deal.
You know, when I was at that, you know, first sex age, you know, early sex ages.
And I remember I was so jealous for some reason that she hadn't lost her virginity to me. And
this seems like a crazy thing for me to talk about. And I don't
know if this can relate entirely to your issues here, but I just kind of, in a weird way, I like
held it against her. I was just so jealous of, why not me? Why didn't you wait for me? But this girl didn't even know. We weren't even a part of each other's lives.
So I was so insecure about myself as a man and about being a good boyfriend or sexually confident that I, you know, wanted to somehow erase any other sexual instances that she'd ever had.
You know, and I wanted to do it by, by making her feel
bad, I guess. And that's just bizarre. I mean, that's because it's unrealistic, you know, there's
no way to go back in time and change things. And you can't, that's not, you know, that's not
something that can happen, you know? So it was just me just finding any way I could to make her feel bad.
And I figured if I was making her feel bad, then I would have some type of control over her, I guess.
You know, and it's sad to hear myself say that now because I don't behave that way anymore.
But, you know, when I was younger, I certainly did. And I would just get extremely jealous. Where were you?
Where you been?
What's going on?
You didn't call.
You didn't text.
And I was just so insecure.
I was so unconfident.
I didn't have the ability to be.
I didn't have any self-confidence.
I didn't have any self-confidence at all.
But what I could have done and what I recommend or what I suggest is that if you know what your jealous behavior is, which it sounds like you do, then if you start to feel that, do the opposite.
Do the opposite action.
Now, that action might be do nothing.
That action might be instead of writing, where the fuck are you? Write, I hope you're having a nice evening. But if you know what one of the actions is that's part of your issue, then doing the opposite would be the correct thing. And a lot of times it's going to be do nothing.
A lot of times that's going to be absolutely do nothing.
And I remember it got to the point sometimes where if somebody would ask me,
how do you feel about this girl?
The only feeling I even had was jealousy.
Like I'd be in a relationship for a couple of years
and my main feeling was jealousy.
Like it wasn't, oh, I love this girl.
It was like, oh, I'm just jealous.
I'm so caught up in myself.
You know, I'm so caught up in using anything I can to keep her because I felt insecure.
Jealousy comes from fear.
You know, it comes from the fear of losing someone.
It comes from the fear of thinking that, you know that your friends are going to think you're weak
if that person leaves you. Jealousy comes from fear, man. So you got to find some ways
to cure that fear. There might be some self-help groups out there for jealousy or for anger
management where even if you got into one of those or went to a couple meetings, you might be able to
hear someone who can relate to your story or share your story with some men in there where they can,
you know, they'll have a similar, where they can relate and share some information with you, man.
But you also have to have reasonable expectations. So next time you feel like being jealous,
try being supportive. I mean, it's going to be hard, but just be supportive of it. You
know, imagine, start to imagine that instead of your girlfriend is doing something wrong,
that she's doing something right, that she cares, that she's out, you know, doing whatever she's
supposed to be, you know, is normally, you know, doing as part of her daily life, and that she's thinking about you in a positive way.
Start to imagine that a healthy connection can actually happen, and that's going to start to
create some confidence, I feel like, inside of you. But some of that really comes from
self-confidence and self-worth and just feeling insecure. So I wish I knew more to suggest to you,
but I can certainly relate, man.
I mean, I was just, I didn't know what else to do.
I didn't know how to express
how much I cared about these women.
The only thing I knew how to express
was that I felt like I had to control them
and I would use, and that was often fueled i was
often fueled by my jealousy um so i don't know i hope some of that you know can resonate a little
bit uh let's let's check in with another call here hey theo thanks for the podcast man dude it
is awesome thank you so much bro you bet man bet, man. You're welcome, dude. Thank you for listening.
I got a question here. I live in Boston right now, and I'm thinking about going out to LA.
Man, it just seems like that's the place to be. How long have you been living in LA?
I don't know. I'm just thinking about doing that move. So just give me some pointers or not. Well, do. All right, man.
How long have I been living in L.A.? I've been living in L.A. for about 14 years, man.
And I'm going to say, I'll give you the positives and negatives from what I think. This doesn't have to be anybody else's feelings.
think. This doesn't have to be anybody else's feelings. LA is lonely to me. LA is a lonesome city. There's very little sense of community. A lot of LAers, a lot of freaks and dreamers.
Then I'm not saying these are bad people. I'm one of them. It's a lot of freaks and dreamers,
Um, it's a lot of freaks and dreamers, creeps, uh, weirdos, you know, it's LA. It's like this, it's like that porch light that's on that bugs just flock to, you know,
there's a lot of beautiful bugs out here and a lot of real seedy centipedes out here.
And you spend a lot of time in your car.
People talk about traffic, traffic disconnects humans, okay?
You sit in your car, your best friend, a coffee, dude.
You better have some good cafe.
My buddy.
Because your best friend will be a coffee.
You spend a lot of time in your car.
So that time, you can't spend it with other people.
So there's not a strong sense of community.
A lot of people move here to get what they want and then to go.
So you're never like, oh, there's tons of pride in Los Angeles.
They don't have that.
Also, there's a lot of fricking, there's a lot of posterity.
You know, it's like all the bars shut at 1.30.
You know, everything just looks good here.
But the reality is that that's what it's supposed to be for.
There's lights, there's cameras.
We want to capture everything looking awesome, you know.
So you don't get a lot of sense of how it feels really.
There's a lot of people raising their, raising their kids in
like small apartments where the kids don't have room to really get out and explore.
Uh, people care more about animals here than they do about other people.
Um, you'll see, uh, you know, you see a, you know, a disabled Bishan, that thing will have
95 caretakers in a minute.
You know, you see a dude, you a dude beating another dude with an axe,
people will just be videotaping it.
There's just not as much care
for other humans here
as much as there is for animals.
A lot of people have service animals.
A lot of people don't even have friends here.
They just have service animals.
I saw a lady the other day
had maybe six service dogs, dude. What the fuck?
Is this some kind of service Iditarod you're in, lady? Are you sledding? How much service do you
need? And it's just a lot of people that are just disconnected, I feel like, from reality.
You see a lot of Latino women caring for white children.
If you go to a lot of the parks here,
a lot of lovely Latino, motherly type of women,
while a lot of the parents are off working.
It's a lot of both parent work cities.
A lot of both parents work here, which is fine,
but I'd love to one day have a wife that doesn't have to work, that can work if she wants to.
She's an equal.
But I'd love, I think having a mother at home is important.
I think it's one of the things that we're missing a lot.
So there's a lot of disconnection here with that.
There's a lot of gay dudes out here fighting over Instagram likes.
I'll put that out there.
There's a lot of disconnection, man.
There's not a lot of sense of community.
There's a lot of lonely people.
Lonely people, dude.
It can be a very lonely city.
I feel like those are a lot of things you get out here in Los Angeles.
Everybody has a, you know, people have dogs or it's a lot more important.
That's why animal rights is so huge here because people don't know how to even relate really to other people.
Now, those are some of the things that I find about LA that are probably negatives.
Positives, anything can happen here, man.
You can have friends of all types.
Like, it's baffling.
You know, I have so many, I know I am,
you know, I know so many amazing
and wonderful talented people.
There's so many talented people
that I get to work with at the comedy store all the time
or that I, you know, that I cross paths with in different professions.
I mean, some of the most talented people in the world.
So that's, I mean, when I look through my phone,
I'm like, wow, I'm just so blessed to know so many
just superior and unique people.
So you have tons of unique people here
that you wouldn't be able to know in other cities.
The weather's priceless. It's great. I mean, it's always great. It's so great that you don't
even think about the weather. I've never looked at a weather report, ever. Been here for 14 years,
never looked because 99% of the time, it's exactly the same. With that said, it's also like Groundhog's
Day where you don't have any seasons. You don't know what's going on. I mean, it's exactly the same. With that said, it's also like Groundhog's Day
where you don't have any seasons.
You don't know what's going on.
I mean, it could be May.
It could be December.
It's all the same.
You start to miss, I start to miss a lot of the seasons, man.
You know, you miss the colors.
You miss a night of rain where you hear it outside
and everybody's more calm and things slow down.
You just don't have that here.
Holidays.
It's so diverse here that nobody gives a fuck what holiday it is.
You know, you don't see any decorations
because one decoration is going to offend another ethnicity
or another religion.
And so that, to me, isn't fun, you know?
I mean, you know, I like more of a smaller area vibe
where everybody, if it's
Christmas, you decorate for Christmas.
Who gives a fuck if some people don't
celebrate Christmas or some people
don't celebrate this or that? Let's decorate for everything.
You don't see a lot of that, man.
The only time you know when it's a holiday is when you
walk into a CVS.
What are some other positives?
The beach is right there. The water's cold
as fuck. They don't tell you that bro
it's freezing it's dirty
but I was raised in dirty water
so I don't mind that
but I would like it to be a little bit warmer
would I come to LA again
if I could come out here
you know I've been really blessed man
it would be hard for me to go back and say, you know, I've met so many great and wonderful people that I feel fortunate to have in my life.
So, yeah, I would.
I would move here again.
I think it's worth trying.
I think it's worth trying anything new.
I think new things can come out of making a move like that.
I think it's brave to move.
There's a lot of times where I wanted to move to New York City,
but I wasn't brave enough to do that.
And sometimes I feel bad about that,
looking back on my past.
And I still can.
And I tried to last year.
We've been out here pitching some shows.
But I feel like, yeah, I feel like I would do it again.
If you want to do it, man, I say do it.
If you can afford it, you're still young enough where it's not going to, you know, if one year isn't going to kill you and it's going to be a unique experience, do it.
A city that I would recommend definitely living in, though, is New York City.
I mean, you're already in Boston, so that might be too close for you.
But anyhow, those are my feelings on it man
I appreciate you guys
joining me this week for this past weekend
I'm not going to have any music on the way out
today for you guys
I don't know what's happening to me these days
I'm just fucking falling apart
but I shouldn't open my loud mouth
I shouldn't have went over to that
to the lobster truck and let them know what I was thinking.
They didn't need to know.
It was a Mexican woman working
in there. She didn't even fucking
knew what I was talking about.
So,
for me to think that these people are selling food
out of jurisdiction when I don't even know the zoning,
that's
just sheer ignorance.
So, what the fuck am I talking about?
But I'll say this, man.
I love you guys, and I appreciate you guys listening.
Let's hit the hotline again.
Next week, I want to talk a little bit about family, man.
If you have a family, what's it like these days to have a family?
Is it hard to be a man and to run a family, to stay in that every weekend and week out.
I didn't have much of a vibe for that when I was growing up,
but I see now that my brother runs a household, he and his wife,
and they manage to do a pretty good job,
and that's been a good example for me recently in my life.
But also it scares me, man.
It scares me to think that that could be part of my future. It makes
me want to just kind of stay in my zone and my little safe spaces and, um, and, and be afraid
of starting a serious relationship or of starting, you know, heading in that direction. You know,
sometimes I don't want to grow up and I don't want to, uh, I don't want to take that harder road, you know, but I'm,
I'm hopeful that, that I'll be able to, but I don't know. So I'd love to hear from you guys
about, uh, if anybody has, you know, is dealing with a family, what that's like, uh, you know,
some of the pitfalls, if you want to hit the hotline, you can also hit the hotline with anything else you have, and we might get into it.
That number, again, is 985-664-9503, hashtag BasicLifeSuggestions.
Thank you guys very much for joining me on this past weekend.
You guys be good to yourselves, huh?
Won't you try that?
I bet you deserve it.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm Jonathan Kite, and welcome to Kite Club, a podcast where I'll be
sharing thoughts on things like current events, stand-up stories, and seven ways to pleasure your
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Charmaine. I'll take a quarter pounder with cheese and a McFlurry. Anyone who doesn't listen to Kite Club is a dodgy bloody wanker. Do you know what I mean?
I'll take a quarter pounder with cheese and a McFlurry.
Sorry sir, but our ice cream machine is broken.
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