1. - Hey Adam are you around?
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2. Adam?
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3. - Yeah?
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4. - Hey can you come in here buddy?
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5. - Yeah.
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6. Hey what's up?
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7. - Listen, Adam, I have
something to talk to you
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8. of sort of a delicate nature.
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9. - Alright.
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10. - You know Dylan?
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11. - Dylan, yeah, your son?
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12. - Yes.
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13. Have you noticed anything about his
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14. work ethic around here lately?
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15. - No not really.
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16. - You're telling me you
haven't noticed anything
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17. about my son Dylan's work
ethic around here lately?
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18. - Yeah I mean,
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19. I just didn't really think
it was my place to say.
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20. - You're telling me you haven't noticed
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21. he's a lazy uninspired bum?
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22. - Well I mean yeah he's pretty bad.
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23. - Really bad.
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24. I think he's the worst.
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25. He's never gotten a
single joke on this show.
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26. - He's terrible.
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27. - Yes he is.
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28. Adam, I've decided something.
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29. - What's that?
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30. - I'm gonna fire him.
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31. Give him the boot.
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32. - Really?
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33. - Uh huh.
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34. - Can't say he'll be missed.
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35. - But listen here now, he's a
very sensitive kid, ya know?
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36. And he's just young, ya know?
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37. The last time he got fired
he really took it hard.
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38. He was a cashier.
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39. - He got fired from a cashier's job?
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40. - Yeah.
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41. - Seems pretty hard to do.
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42. - He was embezzling a lot of money.
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43. - Oh, that'll do it.
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44. - Yeah, I still remember it.
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45. He cried for seven days straight.
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46. - Sounds kinda like a baby.
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47. I have no job!
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48. - Hey now wait a minute!
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49. The point is I wanna fire him,
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50. but I don't wanna break
his spirit you understand?
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51. - You know what you should try?
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52. - What's that?
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53. - Compliment sandwich.
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54. - Never heard of it.
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55. What is it?
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56. - Well Norm a compliment sandwich.
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57. It's a criticism, it's sandwiched
between two compliments.
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58. Hence the phrase compliment sandwich.
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59. - I think maybe I understand.
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60. So it would be like if I said
to you, you're a tall man,
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61. you're not a funny man
but I like your tie.
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62. - Well now I just feel like you're just
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63. trying to compliment sandwich me
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64. and this isn't about me
it's about your son Norm.
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65. - Just take a compliment
sandwich would ya?
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66. Geez.
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67. It's like a guy's never had
a compliment sandwich before.
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68. Okay scram.
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69. Hey if you see Dylan would
you tell him to come in here?
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70. - Good talk.
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71. - I gotta fire him.
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72. - Dylan!
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73. Your father wants you.
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74. - Hey pops, Adam told me to come out?
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75. - Oh yeah Dylan.
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76. Well uh listen, I gotta
talk to you alright?
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77. - Alright try to make it quick though
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78. 'cause I'm taking off pretty soon.
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79. - You're taking off?
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80. - Yeah I know.
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81. - The podcast is beginning in 10 minutes.
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82. - Yeah but I've been working hard all day,
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83. probably gonna head on out.
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84. - All day, you've been here 30 minutes.
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85. - Well you know what they say,
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86. last to come first to leave.
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87. - Nobody says that!
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88. - Oh I say it all the time.
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89. Almost every day.
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90. - Okay now listen.
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91. - Alright.
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92. - This is hard for me
to do but I gotta do it.
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93. Okay?
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94. Now uh, well first of all
I really like your hat,
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95. the way you have it backwards.
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96. - This old thing?
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97. - Yep.
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98. - Oh my goodness.
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99. I just grabbed this
you'll never believe it,
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100. walking out of the house today.
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101. Just grabbed it.
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102. Wasn't even gonna wear
it and look at that,
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103. changed my whole day.
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104. - Your work sucks.
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105. Dylan?
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106. - Sorry I was thinking about the hat.
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107. It was just such a nice thing to say,
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108. I really appreciate it.
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109. And you know what?
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110. It is a great hat.
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111. I'm just, I'm happy now.
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112. - I like your sweater.
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113. - Ah, the sweater too?
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114. Wow, same story.
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115. Walking out, felt a little
breeze, went in, grabbed it.
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116. - Okay let me try this again, alright?
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117. - Alright.
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118. - You're a good dresser.
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119. - Yeah, I mean.
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120. - You're work is absolutely abysmal!
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121. - Do you think I could be a model?
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122. - Do I?
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123. What?
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124. - I mean, I'm a good dresser.
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125. The hat?
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126. I mean it really says it all,
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127. and it means so much coming from you.
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128. - I like your shirt that's
underneath the sweater.
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129. - Yeah, no it's good, really
brings the outfit together.
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130. - Okay listen.
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131. Are those your jokes that you wrote today?
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132. - Yep, yep, yep
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133. - Okay.
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134. - Been cracking em out.
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135. - Okay, I am going to
prove something right now.
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136. Read the jokes to me.
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137. - Alright, I think you'll like these.
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138. Been working pretty hard.
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139. Remember kids,
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140. a stranger is just a
friend you haven't met yet.
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141. Unless he has candy in which
case he's probably a pedophile.
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142. - So.
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143. Maybe not that one.
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144. I'm on a seafood diet.
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145. I see food, and if it's a fish I eat it.
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146. - Meta.
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147. - Yeah, so.
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148. - I hate meta.
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149. - Someone once told me that
today is not opposite day.
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150. But that's exactly what they
told me last opposite day.
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151. - Math.
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152. - I crack myself up,
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153. I think that's what's important in life.
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154. A journey of a 1000 miles
begins with your first step,
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155. but ends with you
collapsing 1000 miles away,
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156. pry in some desert somewhere.
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157. - It's not that bad.
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158. Well, okay let me see these.
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159. - Here you go.
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160. You gonna use em on the show?
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161. - I'm not gonna use them on the show.
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162. Well let me start by saying that
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163. you're a wonderful dresser and...
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164. - Oh my gosh that's it.
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165. You know what?
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166. I have a reputation to uphold now.
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167. You've really inspired
me, the hat compliment,
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168. the shirt compliment, the
undershirt compliment.
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169. People are gonna start expecting me
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170. to look this good every day.
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171. And you know what?
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172. I'm gonna go shopping.
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173. - What?
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174. - Yep, I'm taking off.
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175. But I will need your credit card.
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176. - You'll need my.
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177. - Yeah.
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178. So, I'm gonna buy, you know,
pry a lot more clothes.
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179. Alright?
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180. Cool thanks and I'll
be back later this week
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181. and I'll bring you some
more of those gems.
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182. - Adam Eget!
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183. - Yeah?
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184. - Would you come in please?
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185. - What's up?
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186. How'd it go?
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187. - I just wanted to uh,
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188. I just wanted to compliment you.
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189. Yes, you have a very nice tie.
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190. And I like your shirt.
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191. - I just bought it.
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192. He liked my shirt.
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193. I'll go to Zara more often.
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194. It's chilly in here.
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195. Hey can I get some more water?
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196. - Our guest tonight for the full hour,
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197. Hollywood legend Carl Reiner,
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198. won nine Emmys and one Grammy award.
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199. - My mother would be so
upset because I won 12
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200. and she always used to get
upset if somebody wrote nine.
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201. And she used to argue with
the people in the park,
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202. "No he won 12."
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203. - He has won a dozen Emmy
awards during his career
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204. as a stand-up actor, director,
producer, and writer.
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205. Worked on Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows.
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206. Also the Steve Allen Show,
the Dick Van Dyke Show.
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207. Directed and co-wrote The Jerk
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208. and Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid.
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209. Played Saul Bloom in
Ocean's 11, 12, and 13.
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210. His books, I Remember
Me, and I Just Remembered
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211. are on Amazon.
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212. It winded me that, uh.
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213. - You did very well.
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214. - Thank you.
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215. That's more work than I've ever done
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216. and it's just what you've done.
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217. So, uh.
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218. - By the way.
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219. - Yes.
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220. - When somebody asked me
about you I said I always
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221. remember you as the man with
the perfect perpetual smile.
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222. You are a smiling person,
and that's true isn't it?
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223. - That's not good for comedy is it?
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224. - No it's wonderful.
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225. - It is?
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226. - It's wonderful, yeah.
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227. Because we're here to have fun.
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228. - I'm happy, you know?
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229. People go, comedians are miserable.
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230. - I know.
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231. - Are you, were you miserable?
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232. - On no, I'm a happy comedian.
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233. - Yeah, what about you?
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234. Well he's not a comedian really.
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235. - No, I'm pretty miserable.
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236. - He is a filthy bum.
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237. - Oh.
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238. - No.
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239. You know what he is, is,
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240. he's a comedy manager at the
world famous Comedy Store.
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241. - Oh really?
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242. - Yeah.
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243. - Oh, more people were
discovered at that Comedy Store.
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244. - Now they have the world
famous Comedy Store,
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245. they have comedy clubs everywhere.
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246. Woo.
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247. But uh, now a person can go
into comedy as a life choice.
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248. A career, a business.
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249. - Right.
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250. - When you started, such
was not the case I measure.
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251. - Well I didn't start in
comedy, I started as an actor.
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252. Actor.
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253. - Uh huh.
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254. - No I was 17 years old and
my, this is interesting.
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255. my brother found a little ad
in the New York Daily news,
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256. free acting classes for would-be actors,
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257. the WPA, Works Progress Administration.
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258. You know they say get the
government off the peoples backs.
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259. No that's were the people
belong, when they need help.
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260. the government wants to,
Franklin Roosevelt gave us help.
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261. Artists learn to paint,
not learn to paint,
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262. but made money, painting the
murals on the post offices.
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263. Musicians became musicians.
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264. And I went to an acting school
where, I was 17 years old,
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265. and it's 100 Center Street
New York, I remember 'cause
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266. I got married in the
same place years later.
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267. But there was Mrs. Whitmore
an old English actress
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268. who gave us acting lessons for free.
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269. Of course the WPA, the
government paid for it.
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270. The NYA radio workshop,
also government sponsored.
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271. I learned, 22 dollars a month they gave
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272. us as a salary to do radio shows.
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273. - Now how did your parents
respond to such a wild idea?
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274. - My parents were all for it.
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275. - Really?
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276. - They were so proud of, they...
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277. - This, what year was this 19?
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278. - 39.
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279. - 1939, war about to break out in Europe.
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280. - Yes, you know it's funny
when I mention Mrs. Whitmore.
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281. An old english actress
and I'll never forget
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282. the first day there, she
said, "We're going to learn
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283. "a soliloquy from Hamlet
but we're not going to do
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284. "the regular soliloquies, we
want everyone in the class
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285. "to learn Queen Gertrude's
speech at the death of Ophelia.
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286. "Boys and girls will learn that."
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287. You can wake me up in
the middle of the night.
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288. "There is a willow grows aslant a brook
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289. "that shows his hoar leaves
in the glassy stream.
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290. "There with fantastic
garlands did she come
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291. "with crowflowers, nettles,
daisies, and long purples
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292. "that liberal shepherds
give a grosser name,
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293. "but our cold maids do 'dead
men's fingers' call them.
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294. "There, upon the coronet
clambering to hang
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295. "an envious sliver broke
when down her weedy trophies
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296. "and herself fell into the weeping brook.
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297. "Her clothes spread wide and mermaid-like
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298. "at which time she chanted
snatches of old tunes
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299. "as one incapable of her own distress
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300. "but then the poor wretch was
pulled from her melodious lay
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301. "to muddy death."
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302. Now look at that?
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303. - Oh my goodness.
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304. - And I haven't said that in days, no.
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305. - It makes me want to wake you up tonight.
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306. Now uh this I what I was wondering,
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307. because I was telling you earlier,
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308. you know my son and I watch
the Dick Van Dyke show.
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309. And um I don't know where
I'll go with this, but hey.
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310. - No, you know what?
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311. Something, you said something
that when I wrote this book
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312. I Remember Me,
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313. "I'm often asked which of
the theatrical projects
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314. "I'm most proud of I answered creating
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315. "the Dick Van Dyke Show, hands down."
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316. - Uh huh.
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317. - And I put that in because
I didn't write anything about
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318. the show, but that show is the
thing that informs who I am.
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319. Because you know, it was about me.
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320. As a matter of fact one
of things about that show
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321. that thrills me more than
anything, young people come up
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322. to me, it happened then
when I first wrote it,
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323. and it happens now with
reruns, people say,
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324. you know I wouldn't be a writer if
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325. it wasn't for the Dick Van Dyke show,
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326. and these are young kids who are funny.
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327. And they never thought of getting up.
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328. They thought comedians are you
know, make it up themselves.
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329. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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330. - Somebody writes it for them?
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331. - Yeah, yeah.
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332. - But maybe dozens and
dozens of kids said back then
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333. and now, same thing, because the reruns.
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334. - There's a number of wonderful
things about Dick Van Dyke
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335. but one thing I noticed once
I got into show business
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336. was how true it was to the
backstage of show business.
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337. You had Mel Cooley the bum,
Alan Brady's brother-in-law
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338. that had the job for no
reason, and that really exists.
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339. And the star was an egotist ya know?
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340. - Yeah.
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341. - And what I really loved
was that the neighbors, uh.
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342. - Millie and Jerry Helper.
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343. - Millie and Jerry,
they all made fun of it,
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344. they didn't really like the show.
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345. - Yeah that's funny.
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346. Millie and Jerry were my dearest friends.
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347. They were Millie and Jerry Scholbaum.
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348. - Uh huh.
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349. - I named them after
them, from New Rochelle.
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350. It was all based on my
life living in New Rochelle
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351. but working in show business.
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352. - So did you have times when you
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353. had to write the school
play and sort of thing?
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354. - No, but I was always called
upon to do those kinda things.
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355. - But it's an amazing show.
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356. But about the Dick Van Dyke show also.
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357. It was, this is an argument I
always have with my friends,
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358. 'cause nowadays its all young kids on TV.
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359. Now when I was a young kid
I watched older people.
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360. I watched the Dick Van
Dyke Show, Get Smart,
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361. the Beverly Hillbillies,
which my high tone friends
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362. tell me was not a good show but I loved.
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363. And they were all old people you see?
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364. - I know.
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365. - And my son, I brought
him up on those shows.
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366. He didn't want to see an 18 year old.
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367. - The world has changed
there's no question about it.
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368. - You don't think that,
you don't think that
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369. it would still work with
experienced actors, comic actors?
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370. - Of course.
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371. - Yeah.
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372. - Anything that is quality always works.
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373. Real quality gets in there
somehow it sneaks in.
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374. - But if you take young
actors and young writers
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375. compared to experienced
actors and experienced writers
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376. which would be the better show?
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377. - I imagine the experienced writers.
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378. - I imagine so huh?
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379. - Or young brilliant writers.
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380. There are young brilliant
writers who have watched
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381. what has happened before.
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382. - It's copying, it's a copying machine.
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383. - I cannot not, not mention this.
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384. - Yes the JC in your tie.
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385. - Now Jesus Christ did not
wear a tie, we know that.
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386. - No he wore sandals.
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387. - So who else was JC?
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388. - Who else other than Jesus Christ?
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389. - Yes.
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390. - Jimmy Caan.
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391. - How about Johnny?
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392. - Johnny Carson!
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393. - That's right this is his tie.
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394. - No it's not.
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395. - Yes and in honor of him I
wore to your show because.
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396. - Because I'm the new Johnny Carson?
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397. - That's exactly right.
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398. - Holy cow!
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399. Wow have you read the
book by bombastic Bushkin?
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400. - No, I have it, it's lying on
my bed, I'm going to read it.
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401. Did you read it?
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402. - It was amazing.
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403. It makes you want to never have a lawyer.
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404. Because his contention
was, well he's dead,
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405. now I can write whatever I want.
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406. - Oh Johnny, I love Johnny.
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407. We played poker together
and I just loved him.
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408. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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409. Who was older?
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410. - He was probably, well I don't know,
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411. how old was he when he died?
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412. He must have been a little older.
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413. - Yeah.
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414. - I'm 92 now, I don't know.
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415. But you know Johnny, I
wrote a thing about Johnny,
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416. I was on his show 47 times,
his show, and that little
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417. chapter about him is
funny because Tony Randall
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418. lived in New York, was
on the show 79 times,
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419. that was a record, nobody
will ever touch that.
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420. - Yeah, yeah, because
he would, he would go on
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421. when he was 90 and do sketches.
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422. - But I remember in last
weeks he was going on,
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423. he invited me to be one the last,
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424. you know, Mel was the last I think.
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425. - Yeah.
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426. - He the very first one
and always the last one.
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427. But about the last week
I went on and I said
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428. gee ya know 47 times I
been on your show, I said,
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429. I know I'll never touch Randall,
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430. but I said 47 times
it's not a round number,
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431. I want to be able to say I
was on Johnny's 50 times.
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432. - Yes.
Copy !req
433. - So I said, would you do me a favor?
Copy !req
434. I really swung it on him.
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435. I says would you
introduced me three times?
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436. I'll come out three times
and I'll just show the.
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437. So he did, and here he
is I do my little dance,
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438. I came out and sat down
and he'd ask me a question
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439. and I ran off took my jacket
off and put it on backwards,
Copy !req
440. you know, inside out, and
he introduced me again,
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441. I did a different dance,
and we did it three times.
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442. The last time I came with it like Sinatra,
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443. carrying it over my shoulder, so I looked.
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444. But he was so sweet about that.
Copy !req
445. - That's awesome.
Copy !req
446. You know it's funny you mention Mel,
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447. you were talking about Mel
Brooks and Tony Randall
Copy !req
448. and yourself, all older now
but still hysterically funny.
Copy !req
449. Others not so.
Copy !req
450. Like for instance, Dick Van Dyke.
Copy !req
451. - No, Tony is not funny anymore.
Copy !req
452. - Tony Randall is dead?
Copy !req
453. - Yes.
Copy !req
454. You lose so much humor after you die.
Copy !req
455. He just lays there.
Copy !req
456. - That's true.
Copy !req
457. - But what are you gonna say?
Copy !req
458. - Okay I was gonna say
guys like Dick Van Dyke
Copy !req
459. or Sid Caesar, they don't seem funny?
Copy !req
460. You know, I know Sid Caesars also dead,
Copy !req
461. but uh, you know, they somehow
lost it for some reason.
Copy !req
462. Or maybe they chose not to do it?
Copy !req
463. - Well no, Sid was, Sid set
the template for everybody.
Copy !req
464. I mean there would be
no comedy without Sid.
Copy !req
465. Greatest sketch comedian that ever lived.
Copy !req
466. - What about Nora Dunn?
Copy !req
467. - Now you're talking.
Copy !req
468. But off stage none of these
guys, Dick, very serious.
Copy !req
469. - I'm talking about on stage.
Copy !req
470. I've seen Sid Caesar interviewed.
Copy !req
471. - Oh yeah.
Copy !req
472. Nothing.
Copy !req
473. - Sid, if Sid had to say
his name he could fumble it.
Copy !req
474. Tell him we has a German
astronaut, he could.
Copy !req
475. He was very shy about who he was.
Copy !req
476. He and Imogene never spoke,
they were both so shy.
Copy !req
477. - Wow, you wouldn't think that huh.
Copy !req
478. But off stage.
Copy !req
479. But if you said here he
is the greatest so and so,
Copy !req
480. he would come up with a character.
Copy !req
481. - And Dick Van Dyke I suppose
was never really a comedian,
Copy !req
482. but more of actor.
Copy !req
483. - Dick Van Dyke is the most
gifted actor I've ever met.
Copy !req
484. - That's why it always made
me laugh when I'd see the
Copy !req
485. Dick Van Dyke show and Dick
Van Dyke would be pitching,
Copy !req
486. I mean Rob Petrie would be pitching
Copy !req
487. something for Alan to do.
Copy !req
488. He would go no, he'll be a bowling pin.
Copy !req
489. And you go Alan Brady could never do that.
Copy !req
490. - I know, I know.
Copy !req
491. By the way everybody
thought that Alan Brady
Copy !req
492. was Sid Caesar, he wasn't.
Copy !req
493. Sid Caesar was a pussycat.
Copy !req
494. Alan Brady was a
combination of three guys.
Copy !req
495. Jackie Gleason, who has
never spoke to his writers.
Copy !req
496. They wrote the show and
put it under his doorstep.
Copy !req
497. - Oh, real son of a bitch.
Copy !req
498. - Never spoke to his writers.
Copy !req
499. Then there was a guy named
Phil Silvers who played.
Copy !req
500. - I love Phil Silvers.
Copy !req
501. - Yeah but he played a
character called, in Top Banana,
Copy !req
502. he played a combination of
Milton Berle and those guys.
Copy !req
503. So he gave her the template.
Copy !req
504. But Milton Berle was a guy who whistled,
Copy !req
505. yelled at everybody.
Copy !req
506. - Son of a bitch.
Copy !req
507. - But everybody thought it was Sid.
Copy !req
508. Sid was a pussycat.
Copy !req
509. - Now wait a minute because Phil Silvers,
Copy !req
510. You Never Get Rich?
Copy !req
511. I love Phil Silvers, now you're
telling me he was a bad guy?
Copy !req
512. - No no!
Copy !req
513. - He was playing a bad guy.
Copy !req
514. - He played a bad guy.
Copy !req
515. - I gotcha.
Copy !req
516. He made it, so that's the
guy who became Alan Brady.
Copy !req
517. - Uh huh.
Copy !req
518. - Alan was nuts.
Copy !req
519. Everybody said Sid was.
Copy !req
520. We went to lunch together for nine years,
Copy !req
521. so you know he had to be a nice man.
Copy !req
522. - Now I saw on Nick at Night
or one of those things,
Copy !req
523. they showed the first episode
Copy !req
524. where you were the star of the show.
Copy !req
525. - Well when I finished
doing The Show of Shows
Copy !req
526. somebody came to me and said
situation comedy is king now.
Copy !req
527. Horses and guns were in and so I uh,
Copy !req
528. they would offer some of them.
Copy !req
529. They weren't very good and my
wife in her infinite wisdom
Copy !req
530. said, why don't you write one?
Copy !req
531. I said I don't know.
Copy !req
532. And I remember this, I've
told this story before
Copy !req
533. but is it worth telling again?
Copy !req
534. 96th Street and West End
avenue, I talk to myself,
Copy !req
535. I recommend that highly, I
said Reiner, I never used
Copy !req
536. my first name, Reiner what
piece of ground do you stand on?
Copy !req
537. - But you're not a formal?
Copy !req
538. - No no no.
Copy !req
539. What piece of ground do you
stand on nobody else stands on?
Copy !req
540. Well I live in New
Rochelle, I work in New York
Copy !req
541. as an actor, writer on the Show of Shows.
Copy !req
542. Write about that.
Copy !req
543. So I wrote a show called
Head of the Family.
Copy !req
544. Oh and I got it picked up,
Copy !req
545. and Peter Lawford put
up money for the pilot.
Copy !req
546. And so I said well if
I'm going to do a pilot
Copy !req
547. I better have 13, I
better have more episodes.
Copy !req
548. - Peter Lawford?
Copy !req
549. - Peter Lawford, yeah, he put up the money
Copy !req
550. for the original pilot.
Copy !req
551. So I said, but other writers
are gonna come after me.
Copy !req
552. I better have a template for them.
Copy !req
553. So I wrote 13 shows in Fire
Island about six weeks.
Copy !req
554. I came and I did the first show.
Copy !req
555. It was okay, with Morty
Gunty and Silvia Miles
Copy !req
556. and a girl named Barbara
Britton played my wife.
Copy !req
557. Didn't work.
Copy !req
558. Put it aside, started writing
movies, Doris Day movie.
Copy !req
559. And Sheldon Leonard and Danny
Thomas saw these scripts,
Copy !req
560. my agent was, it was killing
him, the gold was lying
Copy !req
561. on his desk, so he offered it
to him, and they called me in.
Copy !req
562. - You knew it was good.
Copy !req
563. - Oh yes, I said it's classic, I never,
Copy !req
564. I poured my heart into it.
Copy !req
565. But I was so angry that
nobody, I said if they don't
Copy !req
566. want it they don't deserve it.
Copy !req
567. And so Sheldon called me in and he said,
Copy !req
568. we read your scripts.
Copy !req
569. I said Sheldon I don't want to fail
Copy !req
570. with the same material twice.
Copy !req
571. And here's a good impression, he says,
Copy !req
572. "You won't fail, we'll get
a better actor to play you."
Copy !req
573. And he suggested Dick Van Dyke.
Copy !req
574. - Sheldon Leonard, do you remember him?
Copy !req
575. - I don't.
Copy !req
576. - He was a tough old guy.
Copy !req
577. - He was a racetrack tout, he played on.
Copy !req
578. - Kind of a Runyonesque character.
Copy !req
579. - Yeah Runyonesque,
brilliant guy, brilliant.
Copy !req
580. - This is what I was gonna ask you,
Copy !req
581. can I ask you a question Carl?
Copy !req
582. - Yes, yes.
Copy !req
583. Can I give you an answer?
Copy !req
584. - I didn't know if questions were allowed.
Copy !req
585. - Yes, yes.
Copy !req
586. But you have to put in
the form of a question.
Copy !req
587. - Okay.
Copy !req
588. Now forget that.
Copy !req
589. I want to ask you about your
affiliation with Steve Martin
Copy !req
590. because Steven Martin was such
a moment of his generation
Copy !req
591. and you were of a previous generation.
Copy !req
592. I don't know how you guys hooked up.
Copy !req
593. - It was one of those great marriages.
Copy !req
594. Steve was maybe the best stand-up ever.
Copy !req
595. He was now playing for 46,000
people and he said this is,
Copy !req
596. he had it, he had it, he had it,
Copy !req
597. and he didn't know what
to do with himself.
Copy !req
598. So somebody offered him
this thing called The Jerk.
Copy !req
599. And they came to me because
they didn't have a director
Copy !req
600. and it needed a little work.
Copy !req
601. And he had never acted with an actress.
Copy !req
602. But boy this guy, he is
no question about it.
Copy !req
603. First of all he's a genius
writer, the book he wrote,
Copy !req
604. Born Standing Up, may be the
best biography ever written.
Copy !req
605. It's brilliant, and so sad.
Copy !req
606. - So far.
Copy !req
607. - Anyway, but the first day on the thing,
Copy !req
608. he fell into it so quickly,
nothing needed to be said.
Copy !req
609. - It was co-written by.
Copy !req
610. - By him and Michael Elias
and another, Carl Gottlieb.
Copy !req
611. And I put my three cents in,
directors have to do that.
Copy !req
612. You have to write 25% to get a writer,
Copy !req
613. but I didn't need credit.
Copy !req
614. The credit was that I was so
happy to be with that show.
Copy !req
615. - Did you like the anarchy of the film?
Copy !req
616. - Oh my god I loved
everything about the film.
Copy !req
617. I knew we were doing something special.
Copy !req
618. - Do you know who's, Where's Poppa?
Copy !req
619. - I haven't seen it.
Copy !req
620. - Oh I love that movie.
Copy !req
621. - Where's Poppa, that was
Robert Klane wrote that.
Copy !req
622. That was a brilliant piece of writing.
Copy !req
623. - When you were making the Jerk...
Copy !req
624. - Favorite line from The Jerk?
Copy !req
625. - Um, it's probably,
uh, god there's so many,
Copy !req
626. they're shooting at the
cans, that whole scene was.
Copy !req
627. - They're shooting at the cans.
Copy !req
628. - They hate those cans.
Copy !req
629. - And Emmet Walsh.
Copy !req
630. - Remember when his name
was in the telephone book?
Copy !req
631. I'm somebody!
Copy !req
632. - That's the greatest.
Copy !req
633. - My name is in the
telephone book, I'm somebody!
Copy !req
634. - This is just the kind of
spontaneous publicity I need!
Copy !req
635. - This is all Steve, he is this guy.
Copy !req
636. He is just brilliant.
Copy !req
637. He is absolutely brilliant.
Copy !req
638. If you want to read brilliance
read the, he did a book
Copy !req
639. on art, he's an absolute genius about art.
Copy !req
640. - I hate art I don't
know anything about it.
Copy !req
641. - Well you should look at a picture.
Copy !req
642. There's art behind you,
that's photographic art.
Copy !req
643. - Are you a connoisseur of art?
Copy !req
644. - Well my wife was a very fine artist.
Copy !req
645. My son Lucas is a fine artist
Copy !req
646. - Oh is he?
Copy !req
647. - And an established artist.
Copy !req
648. - So you understand art?
Copy !req
649. - I love art, I don't understand
it, but I do understand
Copy !req
650. the people who do it,
they just, they thrill me.
Copy !req
651. - Well let me ask you this.
Copy !req
652. You know they say like oh this is,
Copy !req
653. comedy is subjective whatever.
Copy !req
654. I don't really believe that.
Copy !req
655. I don't think comedy is subjective.
Copy !req
656. Because for instance, art,
you could show me an abstract
Copy !req
657. painting and then you could
show me dogs playing poker,
Copy !req
658. I would pick dogs playing poker.
Copy !req
659. - Yes.
Copy !req
660. - But I'm wrong, obviously clearly.
Copy !req
661. - No that's a very, that's a very,
Copy !req
662. punchline of a sketch where
Alan Arkin and the olds,
Copy !req
663. when they did the second city.
Copy !req
664. - Yeah.
Copy !req
665. - One of the sketches
they did was an art dealer
Copy !req
666. showing people, and that is,
as she says, is the so-and-so,
Copy !req
667. man's inhumanity to man and so on.
Copy !req
668. And the woman behind
says, I don't like it.
Copy !req
669. He says well madame you're wrong.
Copy !req
670. - But you don't think.
Copy !req
671. - No sir, you're wrong.
Copy !req
672. - You don't think that,
Copy !req
673. that there's any merit to that belief?
Copy !req
674. - What?
Copy !req
675. - That art is objective.
Copy !req
676. - Of course.
Copy !req
677. - Not subjective,
objective, in other words.
Copy !req
678. - You object to it.
Copy !req
679. - No I mean something can be
funnier than something else
Copy !req
680. no matter anybody's opinion.
Copy !req
681. - It's always in the eye of the beholder.
Copy !req
682. - But what if the beholder's an idiot?
Copy !req
683. - Then his eye's an idiot too.
Copy !req
684. - Wouldn't you trust your opinion
Copy !req
685. of what's funny over his?
Copy !req
686. - Oh you trust your own.
Copy !req
687. You know the best opinion?
Copy !req
688. There's one way you can find
out if somethings funny,
Copy !req
689. are you laughing?
Copy !req
690. There was a show called, a
movie that came out after the
Copy !req
691. Show of Shows was done called
Ten from Your Show of Shows.
Copy !req
692. I went to see it in the theater.
Copy !req
693. I remember the theater I was seeing it at.
Copy !req
694. And one sketch, which is considered one of
Copy !req
695. the funniest sketches
ever done since then.
Copy !req
696. Anyway I heard laughter in that theater
Copy !req
697. like I'd never heard before.
Copy !req
698. One was a high pitched screamy woman.
Copy !req
699. Wa-ha-ha!
Copy !req
700. Cackling.
Copy !req
701. And I realized that woman was me.
Copy !req
702. I was laughing with a laugh
I'd never heard before.
Copy !req
703. I'd never seen it, I was
in it, I was part of it.
Copy !req
704. But we never looked at the kinoscopes.
Copy !req
705. We did the shows, we did
the 39 shows a season,
Copy !req
706. and then 13 weeks off, came
back and did 39 for seven years.
Copy !req
707. - Unbelievable, we'll be back.
Copy !req
708. Hey what about this though.
Copy !req
709. Why does some comedy,
the Dick Van Dyke show
Copy !req
710. hold up for generations and others do not?
Copy !req
711. - That's a good question I
have a good answer for that.
Copy !req
712. I really do, you want me to answer it now?
Copy !req
713. - Yes of course, yes.
Copy !req
714. - When we did that show I knew
Copy !req
715. we had something very special.
Copy !req
716. I said this classic, I told the writers,
Copy !req
717. I said this a classic show,
it's going to go on way past us.
Copy !req
718. And I said so I want no slang in the show,
Copy !req
719. because a guy came in with
McMinnville and you know,
Copy !req
720. from the sword of the same name.
Copy !req
721. I says no slang.
Copy !req
722. I said a gun is a gun, its
not a gat or a rod its a gun.
Copy !req
723. I said we use no slang this
show will last a longer time.
Copy !req
724. - Oh that's interesting.
Copy !req
725. - And I was assiduous
about that and I knew.
Copy !req
726. - Yeah and you didn't know
who the president was.
Copy !req
727. - I knew we had something special.
Copy !req
728. - You didn't know the
governor or the president
Copy !req
729. or anything like that.
Copy !req
730. - No and we didn't, we
stayed out of that too.
Copy !req
731. - Because look at Murphy
Brown, can't be shown anymore.
Copy !req
732. - Is that right?
Copy !req
733. - Well because every second joke's
Copy !req
734. about Ed Meese, or Dan Quayle.
Copy !req
735. - Yes.
Copy !req
736. - No one's interested in that.
Copy !req
737. - Meese in Jewish means ugly.
Copy !req
738. Meesekite, means funny looking.
Copy !req
739. - Oh yeah?
Copy !req
740. - It's true.
Copy !req
741. - Really?
Copy !req
742. - Yeah.
Copy !req
743. - You knew that?
Copy !req
744. - I did.
Copy !req
745. - That's why I looked at you.
Copy !req
746. - Funny you don't look Jewish.
Copy !req
747. - Oh yeah.
Copy !req
748. He's a half a Jew and a
half a self hating Jew.
Copy !req
749. - That's called anti-Semite.
Copy !req
750. - An anti-Semite yeah.
Copy !req
751. He's a half a proud Jew and
half a virulent anti-Semite.
Copy !req
752. - Disagree.
Copy !req
753. - He's conflicted.
Copy !req
754. - Does he like the 2000 year old man?
Copy !req
755. - Oh yeah both parts of me do.
Copy !req
756. - I'm gonna ask you one question
about the 2000 year old man
Copy !req
757. then we're gonna go to a break.
Copy !req
758. - Okay.
Copy !req
759. - Would not it have been easier
Copy !req
760. to make him a 10,000 year old man?
Copy !req
761. - As a matter of fact I
was wrong making him a 2000
Copy !req
762. year old man because I asked him questions
Copy !req
763. that happened before 2000 years.
Copy !req
764. - Oh yeah.
Copy !req
765. - I asked him about Moses and I realized,
Copy !req
766. well it was my mistake.
Copy !req
767. Anyway that's my fault.
Copy !req
768. - We'll be back with the
great Carl Reiner momentarily.
Copy !req
769. - Back with the only Carl Reiner.
Copy !req
770. - How do we know that?
Copy !req
771. - That's true.
Copy !req
772. Well there's others with your name.
Copy !req
773. - Yes.
Copy !req
774. - But none with your body of work.
Copy !req
775. Oh, I have a thing for your body of work.
Copy !req
776. It's best body, that's all I could get.
Copy !req
777. I couldn't get best body of work.
Copy !req
778. - I love this, and it's so light.
Copy !req
779. I can carry it with me anywhere.
Copy !req
780. It's gonna go right next to my 12 Emmys
Copy !req
781. - 12, he has a dozen Emmys.
Copy !req
782. - This is my first best body.
Copy !req
783. - 12 Emmys and Johnny Carson's tie.
Copy !req
784. - Yes.
Copy !req
785. - And you got, looks like
Douglas Edward's tie.
Copy !req
786. Look how old that thing is.
Copy !req
787. Remember Douglas Edwards?
Copy !req
788. - What's he holding there?
Copy !req
789. - Huh?
Copy !req
790. - What's he holding there.
Copy !req
791. - I think he's holding
some sort of exercise.
Copy !req
792. Dynamic tension, remember Charles Atlas?
Copy !req
793. - Yes I do.
Copy !req
794. - Ernie Pyle.
Copy !req
795. - Yes, I know all those names.
Copy !req
796. - All those fellas.
Copy !req
797. Here's a question, for you.
Copy !req
798. And I only sense this, I
don't know if this is true.
Copy !req
799. But did Dick Van Dyke and Jerry Van Dyke
Copy !req
800. have any troubles between the two?
Copy !req
801. - No, they loved each other.
Copy !req
802. - Cause I always wondered
why, 'cause I was a devotee
Copy !req
803. of your show, and then three seasons in
Copy !req
804. all of sudden Jerry Van Dyke shows up.
Copy !req
805. - No as a matter of fact it happened
Copy !req
806. in a very interesting way.
Copy !req
807. Dick got a letter from his brother,
Copy !req
808. he was saying oh my brothers
working with so and so.
Copy !req
809. I said, your brother?
Copy !req
810. He says yeah, he was on
the road all the time.
Copy !req
811. And I asked when did you see him last?
Copy !req
812. He says not for two or three
years, he's always away.
Copy !req
813. I asked would you like to see him?
Copy !req
814. He said, I would love to.
Copy !req
815. I said well we'll write him onto the show.
Copy !req
816. Just tell me one thing about him
Copy !req
817. and I'll write a show about him.
Copy !req
818. Well he says, as a kid he slept walked,
Copy !req
819. he was a sleepwalker.
Copy !req
820. Don't say another word.
Copy !req
821. And I wrote a show and then
I called Dick and I said,
Copy !req
822. hey Dick I can't do it in one
show it's too big a subject.
Copy !req
823. Well can he come for two weeks?
Copy !req
824. He says, oh that's even better.
Copy !req
825. No he was so happy to see his brother.
Copy !req
826. They got along great.
Copy !req
827. - That's awesome.
Copy !req
828. My favorite or one of
my favorite episodes was
Copy !req
829. Morey Amsterdam's brother,
Phil Leeds played him.
Copy !req
830. You remember that one?
Copy !req
831. The Pool Shark?
Copy !req
832. - Do I remember?
Copy !req
833. - God I loved that one.
Copy !req
834. - I remember for many many reasons.
Copy !req
835. And one of the reasons was,
Phil Leeds was one of the best
Copy !req
836. comics in the world, one of
the sweetest human beings.
Copy !req
837. But during the McCarthy
era, Phil couldn't get work.
Copy !req
838. He was branded a communist
because he had left leanings.
Copy !req
839. And he couldn't work.
Copy !req
840. And gee I knew about
him and I knew his work.
Copy !req
841. And I had seen him in New
York, he was hysterical.
Copy !req
842. He was so sweet, never
did political humor even.
Copy !req
843. And so I said, he looks
like Morey a little bit,
Copy !req
844. I'll call him and I got him
out to play his brother,
Copy !req
845. a really bad-ass brother.
Copy !req
846. And after the show the
sponsors call me and said
Copy !req
847. that guy was great,
where did you find him?
Copy !req
848. I said he's a New York actor,
that's all I could say.
Copy !req
849. - You mean because he was
branded at that moment?
Copy !req
850. - Huh?
Copy !req
851. - The moment you cast him?
Copy !req
852. He would've still be branded.
Copy !req
853. - Oh sure, oh yeah, oh yeah.
Copy !req
854. If they knew that he was one of the guys
Copy !req
855. they would say you can't use him.
Copy !req
856. - Wow that's interesting.
Copy !req
857. I know nothing about the blacklisting.
Copy !req
858. But just as you said that,
Copy !req
859. were Jewish people more
likely to be blacklisted?
Copy !req
860. - Well I don't know about
that, but Jewish people
Copy !req
861. were more likely to be
considered liberals.
Copy !req
862. - Right.
Copy !req
863. - And so they'd be more vulnerable.
Copy !req
864. - Were you ever a communist?
Copy !req
865. - No, they called me and
said they knocked at my door,
Copy !req
866. nine o'clock in the morning on Sunday.
Copy !req
867. Two guys dressed like
that, in black suits.
Copy !req
868. - Have you no shame sir?
Copy !req
869. - Mr. Reiner, FBI, may we come in?
Copy !req
870. Oh absolutely gentlemen.
Copy !req
871. I'm in my shorts, I was just woken up.
Copy !req
872. They wanted to know if I knew...
Copy !req
873. - Explain to the folks what the FBI is.
Copy !req
874. - The Federal Bureau of
Investigation were looking for
Copy !req
875. communist infiltration into the arts.
Copy !req
876. They were sending people to jail.
Copy !req
877. By the way the guy who
ran the whole committee
Copy !req
878. was ultimately sent to jail
and went to the same jail
Copy !req
879. that the guys were sent and
they were so nice to him,
Copy !req
880. they really were.
Copy !req
881. Anyway that was his nip
of the part of the story.
Copy !req
882. - The FBI are at your door.
Copy !req
883. - They're at my door and I
decided, and by the way I was
Copy !req
884. on the Show of Shows
at the time and I saw,
Copy !req
885. oh here it comes.
Copy !req
886. And I had done liberal
things, I was a liberal,
Copy !req
887. and I had done liberal causes.
Copy !req
888. And they want to know this
is the question they asked,
Copy !req
889. I could not believe it.
Copy !req
890. They said, Sir, did you vote
for the American Labor Party
Copy !req
891. in the last election?
Copy !req
892. And I'm saying, they can't ask
that, it's a secret ballot.
Copy !req
893. And I said, yes absolutely didn't you?
Copy !req
894. And I decided I'm going to go with them,
Copy !req
895. they were charming, I'd out charm them.
Copy !req
896. They said why did you vote?
Copy !req
897. I said Henry Wallace, our Vice President,
Copy !req
898. he's a businessman, he
runs a strawberry farm,
Copy !req
899. we need a good businessman in there.
Copy !req
900. Everything, and I says,
you didn't vote for,
Copy !req
901. who did you vote for.
Copy !req
902. Anyway, that's the way it
went for a long time and then
Copy !req
903. they asked me questions
like, you once MC'd a thing
Copy !req
904. for Mr. Barsky, a fella
named Edward Barsky.
Copy !req
905. Do you know about him?
Copy !req
906. I says yes.
Copy !req
907. He said, you know he's a communist?
Copy !req
908. I says probably but he
says why did you do that?
Copy !req
909. I says well they asked me to MC something.
Copy !req
910. They were giving a big award
because he invented plasma
Copy !req
911. the thing that saved lives you know?
Copy !req
912. He did it in the fields
during the Spanish war,
Copy !req
913. the Franco war.
Copy !req
914. And with a motor from a
machine, from a car a jeep.
Copy !req
915. - Sure that's how I do it.
Copy !req
916. - He got plasma.
Copy !req
917. - Yeah he had plasma in there.
Copy !req
918. - I said saved thousands,
hundreds of thousands of lives
Copy !req
919. in the second World War.
Copy !req
920. I would you know, who
wouldn't be an MC at that?
Copy !req
921. Then they said,
Copy !req
922. you also MC'd a liberal
thing at Carnegie Hall.
Copy !req
923. Who asked you to do that?
Copy !req
924. And I said well I was in
Call Me Mister at the time,
Copy !req
925. a Broadway show, somebody asked me.
Copy !req
926. And I said Carnegie Hall?
Copy !req
927. Every kid actor, you have to play a violin
Copy !req
928. if you want to go to Carnegie Hall.
Copy !req
929. I didn't play the violin
I didn't sing so I would.
Copy !req
930. Gentlemen, and I said
this to them, Gentlemen,
Copy !req
931. if the FBI ever has a
big event I'm your guy,
Copy !req
932. I want to MC that event.
Copy !req
933. This is the way I went.
Copy !req
934. - Yeah I got ya.
Copy !req
935. - And then they asked me the question,
Copy !req
936. do you know any commies?
Copy !req
937. I said I'm sure I do.
Copy !req
938. They asked, could you name them?
Copy !req
939. I says commies don't go
around giving their names.
Copy !req
940. Oh do you know of any
commies in show business?
Copy !req
941. I said sure they're in every business,
Copy !req
942. you guys tell us that.
Copy !req
943. And they said would you give us any?
Copy !req
944. I don't know, they don't go
around telling their names.
Copy !req
945. And that's the way we left it.
Copy !req
946. And nothing happened.
Copy !req
947. - It wasn't illegal to
be communist at the time?
Copy !req
948. It was just, you couldn't work.
Copy !req
949. - I think the Constitution
says you're allowed to
Copy !req
950. think the way you want to think.
Copy !req
951. - Right.
Copy !req
952. But you couldn't work.
Copy !req
953. Do you ever think maybe
it's a little like racism?
Copy !req
954. - A little?
Copy !req
955. A lot like racism.
Copy !req
956. - No I mean if you're a racist.
Copy !req
957. - Oh yes.
Copy !req
958. - It's not illegal.
Copy !req
959. But you can't work.
Copy !req
960. - If you're a racist you can't work?
Copy !req
961. - Well Donald Sterling for instance.
Copy !req
962. - Oh yes.
Copy !req
963. - Do you think there's any correlation?
Copy !req
964. - Well he doesn't have to work.
Copy !req
965. - No he doesn't.
Copy !req
966. - You know the amount of money he has
Copy !req
967. he could live another hundred years.
Copy !req
968. - That's true.
Copy !req
969. But a serious question though.
Copy !req
970. - Yes.
Copy !req
971. If a man has a job and he is a racist,
Copy !req
972. should the job be taken away from him?
Copy !req
973. - No.
Copy !req
974. But his fellows shouldn't.
Copy !req
975. - Good news for him.
Copy !req
976. - Yeah.
Copy !req
977. - I'm not a racist.
Copy !req
978. - Hey you wanna hear some
questions from the twitter verse?
Copy !req
979. - Absolutely.
Copy !req
980. - Are you on twitter?
Copy !req
981. - Absolutely every day.
Copy !req
982. - Goodness can I follow you?
Copy !req
983. - Yeah, oh yes.
Copy !req
984. - What is your name?
Copy !req
985. - It's @carlreiner.
Copy !req
986. - @carlreiner.
Copy !req
987. How'd you come up with that one?
Copy !req
988. - My first twitter I
remember, it was a good one.
Copy !req
989. It was sometimes I'm beginning to worry
Copy !req
990. about my short term memory loss.
Copy !req
991. - That was the, oh.
Copy !req
992. - Sometimes I begin to worry about
Copy !req
993. my short term memory loss.
Copy !req
994. Sometimes I'm beginning to worry about
Copy !req
995. my short term memory loss, that was it.
Copy !req
996. - You asked how'd you
come up with that name.
Copy !req
997. I though he was talking
about his first twitter
Copy !req
998. and I was like that's a
really long twitter name.
Copy !req
999. - Real Ed McMahon over here huh?
Copy !req
1000. Step right in the middle of your thing.
Copy !req
1001. - Ed Mcboy.
Copy !req
1002. - That's your nickname from now on fella!
Copy !req
1003. Ed Mcboy.
Copy !req
1004. Anyways here are some questions
from the Twitter verse
Copy !req
1005. for Carl Reiner.
Copy !req
1006. Have you ever once in
a moment of anger asks
Copy !req
1007. bigyellow22, Have you ever
once in a moment of anger,
Copy !req
1008. Carl Reiner, called your son meat-head?
Copy !req
1009. - I have never called my son meat-head.
Copy !req
1010. My son Rob Reiner has one
of the best heads I know.
Copy !req
1011. He's one of the smartest people I know.
Copy !req
1012. - Oh my goodness,
what a body of work.
Copy !req
1013. - On any subject its amazing.
Copy !req
1014. I saw him on one of these shows where
Copy !req
1015. it had left wing, right wing.
Copy !req
1016. - I saw him on Politically
Incorrect once, brilliant.
Copy !req
1017. - Right, and there's no
matter what the subject is,
Copy !req
1018. bang he's there.
Copy !req
1019. And even his brother and
sister agree with this.
Copy !req
1020. - Very well informed.
Copy !req
1021. - I ran into him a few
weeks ago at a bank.
Copy !req
1022. And he was just
complimenting the Cadillac.
Copy !req
1023. And just he went off for
five minutes about everything
Copy !req
1024. he loved about Cadillacs,
asking what year it was.
Copy !req
1025. So I believe that, he clearly...
Copy !req
1026. - Ed Mcboy.
Copy !req
1027. - But Robbie has one those
cars that you plug in,
Copy !req
1028. you know get electric, yeah.
Copy !req
1029. - Oh yeah, a Tesla.
Copy !req
1030. - A Tesla yes.
Copy !req
1031. - My friend has a Tesla.
Copy !req
1032. - He's very big into
environment and all that.
Copy !req
1033. - Those Teslas are a nice
ride too aren't they?
Copy !req
1034. - Yes.
Copy !req
1035. - They're coming out next year
with a sort of an SUV Tesla.
Copy !req
1036. - Really?
Copy !req
1037. - Cause I can't get down
low in those sporty cars.
Copy !req
1038. Brittle bones.
Copy !req
1039. TylerKane08, that's the
fellers name from the Twitter.
Copy !req
1040. We can't all be Carl Reiner.
Copy !req
1041. - Or Tyler.
Copy !req
1042. - Your dad was a watchmaker?
Copy !req
1043. What the heck did they
give him when he retired?
Copy !req
1044. - Well he was self employed.
Copy !req
1045. - Oh he was?
Copy !req
1046. - Yes and he was...
Copy !req
1047. - Oh he also asked was he tightly wound?
Copy !req
1048. No I put that part in.
Copy !req
1049. - My father, when you
talk about my father,
Copy !req
1050. I write about my father a lot in a book.
Copy !req
1051. My father was five foot
three and my mother
Copy !req
1052. was five foot two and I
grew to be six foot one.
Copy !req
1053. I said Mom, Pa how did I get my height?
Copy !req
1054. Where did it come from?
Copy !req
1055. He says well your
grandfather, my father, Ufale.
Copy !req
1056. I said how tall was he, five six.
Copy !req
1057. But my father was also an inventor.
Copy !req
1058. He invented the battery clock
Copy !req
1059. and he invented a battery
that would last 100 years
Copy !req
1060. to drive a clock.
Copy !req
1061. He was a real inventor.
Copy !req
1062. He invented a thing that self-timed,
Copy !req
1063. it'd take your own picture.
Copy !req
1064. He was a really very,
very, very bright man.
Copy !req
1065. - Did he ever think of being in the,
Copy !req
1066. well that's creative so did
he ever think of being in?
Copy !req
1067. - Show business?
Copy !req
1068. No but when he came from
Europe he bought himself
Copy !req
1069. a violin because he loved the violin,
Copy !req
1070. his father took lessons,
and by using the book
Copy !req
1071. in libraries he taught
himself to play the violin
Copy !req
1072. well enough to play in an orchestra.
Copy !req
1073. The flute, the clarinet, he
was a real good musician.
Copy !req
1074. And very short.
Copy !req
1075. - So what are your biggest
memories in the war?
Copy !req
1076. What was the worst thing you ever saw?
Copy !req
1077. - In the war?
Copy !req
1078. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1079. Well uh.
Copy !req
1080. - Worst thing.
Copy !req
1081. - The worst thing I ever saw in the war?
Copy !req
1082. - Did you ever see a dead man?
Copy !req
1083. - No I didn't.
Copy !req
1084. - So you were blessed in a way.
Copy !req
1085. - No but I was in the
hospital for three months,
Copy !req
1086. I had pneumonia when I
was a radio operator,
Copy !req
1087. and I laid on my stomach
running a generator
Copy !req
1088. and getting frostbitten.
Copy !req
1089. I ended up three months in a hospital,
Copy !req
1090. watching dying people in the hospital.
Copy !req
1091. - Did you worry about your own mortality?
Copy !req
1092. Pneumonia was a serious thing back then.
Copy !req
1093. - No you worried about it,
but you, for some reason,
Copy !req
1094. stupidly you think you're
gonna get through it.
Copy !req
1095. You think your gonna be the
one where the bomb is gonna go.
Copy !req
1096. My brother.
Copy !req
1097. - You're worried about
the fella next to you.
Copy !req
1098. - My brother Charlie was in
11 major battles including
Copy !req
1099. the original battle in
North Africa against Rommel,
Copy !req
1100. 11 major battles, blown
up once, he came out.
Copy !req
1101. When they had the picture at Arlington
Copy !req
1102. yesterday, I was there at
Arlington when my brother
Copy !req
1103. passed away many years
ago when he was 83 years,
Copy !req
1104. and they gave him a 21 gun salute.
Copy !req
1105. This is a brother who
worried when he was a kid
Copy !req
1106. if somebody spit on him
he'd put peroxide on it.
Copy !req
1107. And here he is in the war.
Copy !req
1108. - Died a hero.
Copy !req
1109. - And when he told me once
after the Rommel invasion,
Copy !req
1110. he said for 37 days they never bathed.
Copy !req
1111. He said when I took off my
socks and shoes I hadn't
Copy !req
1112. seen my feet for 37 days,
I didn't recognize my feet.
Copy !req
1113. - Wow.
Copy !req
1114. - I mean that was a story.
Copy !req
1115. The stories he told.
Copy !req
1116. And he liberated Dachau.
Copy !req
1117. - Oh my gosh.
Copy !req
1118. - He told those stories
of him and his bunch.
Copy !req
1119. The stories he told,
Copy !req
1120. and he told them 25
years after it happened.
Copy !req
1121. I said, why didn't you ever tell about it?
Copy !req
1122. He says, I didn't want to relive it,
Copy !req
1123. every time I thought about it.
Copy !req
1124. Do you wanna here a horror story?
Copy !req
1125. In Dachau, when he liberated
Dachau, there was one skinny
Copy !req
1126. Jew left who was in charge
of doing things that they,
Copy !req
1127. he said they went into
the middle of the town,
Copy !req
1128. he said there was a stench in
the town that was horrible,
Copy !req
1129. but they went into town and
they got all the people out,
Copy !req
1130. people didn't know about the cremations.
Copy !req
1131. - Didn't know about it?
Copy !req
1132. - They didn't know about the cremations.
Copy !req
1133. And they got all the people
out of the buildings.
Copy !req
1134. There were a few survivors,
he says go in those buildings,
Copy !req
1135. the captain, the Jewish captain says,
Copy !req
1136. go into those buildings,
take what you want, get food.
Copy !req
1137. And they wouldn't go,
they were frightened.
Copy !req
1138. They went in the building and came out
Copy !req
1139. with a piece of bread and ate it.
Copy !req
1140. But the stench was so horrible.
Copy !req
1141. And this story he had
never told me for 25 years.
Copy !req
1142. He said what it was is they were caught,
Copy !req
1143. they knew the allies were
coming in, and the Nazis
Copy !req
1144. would get caught, they
took all of the people out
Copy !req
1145. of the Auschwitz, or
Dachau, and they sent them
Copy !req
1146. into the woods, put them in a pile
Copy !req
1147. threw gasoline on them and lit them.
Copy !req
1148. And they were burning and
it was the smoldering fat
Copy !req
1149. coming off bodies that was still being,
Copy !req
1150. they were all dead but
they were all being,
Copy !req
1151. that's what the smell was.
Copy !req
1152. When he told me that story I says.
Copy !req
1153. Is this a comedy show?
Copy !req
1154. What's funny about it is
there's nothing funny about it.
Copy !req
1155. That's funny.
Copy !req
1156. Look it I got the smile off his face.
Copy !req
1157. Oh my God.
Copy !req
1158. - Well no this is important things.
Copy !req
1159. Boy that Rommel was a tough old bird huh?
Copy !req
1160. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1161. - Wow.
Copy !req
1162. Now that really, does that
change your mind at all?
Copy !req
1163. About your opinions?
Copy !req
1164. - I had a bar mitzvah, again.
Copy !req
1165. A Jewish one, my mother and father.
Copy !req
1166. Both sides of the family.
Copy !req
1167. - Oh really?
Copy !req
1168. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1169. - Were you ever frightened?
Copy !req
1170. - Frightened?
Copy !req
1171. - That Hitler would win somehow?
Copy !req
1172. Did that cross anyone's mind at the time?
Copy !req
1173. - It never occurred to
me that Hitler would win.
Copy !req
1174. The fact that...
Copy !req
1175. - Only because he was evil?
Copy !req
1176. - You know the thing that
I think of all the time
Copy !req
1177. is that Hitler came to power
and somebody allowed him
Copy !req
1178. to come to power.
Copy !req
1179. And when I see people listening
to congressmen talk about
Copy !req
1180. things that can wreck our country.
Copy !req
1181. I'm saying why don't more people speak up?
Copy !req
1182. That's what happened in the old days.
Copy !req
1183. Nobody spoke up, everybody
went along with them.
Copy !req
1184. Go with the flow.
Copy !req
1185. You don't go with the flow if the flow
Copy !req
1186. is leading you into a sewer.
Copy !req
1187. - That's a very slow process
people just stay silent.
Copy !req
1188. - Wow, now I gotta find a
question from the Twitter verse.
Copy !req
1189. Wait a minute don't you have
Copy !req
1190. something in your book on Hitler?
Copy !req
1191. - Oh wait a while.
Copy !req
1192. - I remember leafing through it
Copy !req
1193. and seeing a picture of Hitler.
Copy !req
1194. - Oh wait, wait there is one.
Copy !req
1195. Oh yes, you know.
Copy !req
1196. - With the German
shepherd I believe.
Copy !req
1197. - Yeah there he is.
Copy !req
1198. - There is,
there's the feller there.
Copy !req
1199. His name is HV?
Copy !req
1200. - Kaltenborn.
Copy !req
1201. - A broadcaster.
Copy !req
1202. - In the 30s he was the first news person
Copy !req
1203. who did analysis of the news.
Copy !req
1204. Nobody did analysis just told
you news, but he did analysis.
Copy !req
1205. - He was like an old
timey Howard K. Smith.
Copy !req
1206. - I remember him only because
I didn't care what he was
Copy !req
1207. saying but I was like
six, eight, ten years old.
Copy !req
1208. But his rhythms.
Copy !req
1209. He had a very specific
way of haltingly talking
Copy !req
1210. as he spoke he chopped his
words in half and he made
Copy !req
1211. himself very interesting
to me as a little boy.
Copy !req
1212. I talked like him.
Copy !req
1213. Anyway so I for some
reason, I dreamt of him.
Copy !req
1214. And one of the things
I remembered later on.
Copy !req
1215. I was on the Jack Paar show
Copy !req
1216. and I thought Kaltenborn was on with me.
Copy !req
1217. And this is the story I remembered.
Copy !req
1218. On the show I thought he
was talking about Hitler.
Copy !req
1219. He mentioned the fact that he had.
Copy !req
1220. - There's Hitler.
Copy !req
1221. - There's Hitler.
Copy !req
1222. He mentioned the fact that
he had interviewed Hitler at
Copy !req
1223. Berchtesgaden in 1939,
before the big anschluss.
Copy !req
1224. And he says he was not a very nice man,
Copy !req
1225. he knew he was not a very.
Copy !req
1226. And then later on he said
that somebody saw him.
Copy !req
1227. This was another person
commenting on Hitler.
Copy !req
1228. He says he saw a dog,
bunch of dogs ran out,
Copy !req
1229. and Hitler had a
relationship with those dogs.
Copy !req
1230. He says it was a part of
Hitler he had never seen,
Copy !req
1231. it was the side of Hitler he'd never seen.
Copy !req
1232. And I remember screaming,
how 'bout the side of Hitler
Copy !req
1233. that killed six million Jews?
Copy !req
1234. I thought I was screaming it at him.
Copy !req
1235. I was screaming at the
set cause Kaltenborn
Copy !req
1236. and I were on Paar show but
two nights, a night apart.
Copy !req
1237. He was on one night and I was
actually looking at the set,
Copy !req
1238. and screaming at the set.
Copy !req
1239. And I had to Google that to remember that.
Copy !req
1240. I found out we weren't
out on the same night.
Copy !req
1241. Oh and I said that night
I hope I dream about.
Copy !req
1242. - The great June Allison.
Copy !req
1243. - June Allison.
Copy !req
1244. And I showed you what June Allison
Copy !req
1245. looked like in case you forgot.
Copy !req
1246. She was my favorite looking person.
Copy !req
1247. - By the way that dog he loved so much
Copy !req
1248. was the one he poisoned.
Copy !req
1249. To test out his poison
before he committed suicide.
Copy !req
1250. That's the only thing he
really did good, Hitler,
Copy !req
1251. is he killed Hitler.
Copy !req
1252. - Yeah, I know.
Copy !req
1253. - And with that we gotta go to a break.
Copy !req
1254. - When we come back,
jokes with Carl Reiner.
Copy !req
1255. - Back talking to Carl Reiner,
Copy !req
1256. the author of this book right here.
Copy !req
1257. Did anybody ever say you look
a bit like Jerry Seinfeld?
Copy !req
1258. - No, forward by Jerry Seinfeld.
Copy !req
1259. - I know I see that but look at your face.
Copy !req
1260. - Yeah well that
was how I looked at 20.
Copy !req
1261. - What do ya think?
Copy !req
1262. - Uh yeah a little bit.
Copy !req
1263. - Huh?
Copy !req
1264. - A little bit maybe.
Copy !req
1265. - It's the Semite in both of us.
Copy !req
1266. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1267. He claims he's part
Semite but I don't know.
Copy !req
1268. - Full, full, 100%.
Copy !req
1269. - Ha so this is where we do jokes.
Copy !req
1270. Would you like to do a joke Carl?
Copy !req
1271. You're a great joke teller.
Copy !req
1272. - Yeah I'd love to do a joke.
Copy !req
1273. - Okay here's a joke.
Copy !req
1274. - Okay.
Copy !req
1275. - Carl Reiner, the great Carl Reiner.
Copy !req
1276. So you can read ahead, you can just read.
Copy !req
1277. - No.
Copy !req
1278. A tractor trailer flipped over releasing
Copy !req
1279. millions of bees which stung
the driver hundreds of times.
Copy !req
1280. Speaking from the hospital
the driver said, no flowers?
Copy !req
1281. - Well you put a little
Yiddish in that one.
Copy !req
1282. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1283. - Oh I realize in therapy Carl
Copy !req
1284. that I am not afraid of
dying, I'm afraid of living.
Copy !req
1285. Oh no I'm afraid of dying.
Copy !req
1286. I had Larry King sit in
this chair, your chair.
Copy !req
1287. - No kidding?
Copy !req
1288. - A couple weeks ago.
Copy !req
1289. And he said, he's a younger
man than you by a dozen years.
Copy !req
1290. - Really?
Copy !req
1291. - As many as Emmys as you have,
Copy !req
1292. so the years that he divides you.
Copy !req
1293. But he thinks of death all the time.
Copy !req
1294. - You know there's a whole.
Copy !req
1295. - How 'bout you?
Copy !req
1296. - You know there's a whole
chapter in this book,
Copy !req
1297. how to tell of the encroaching.
Copy !req
1298. Oh look at this!
Copy !req
1299. You know I have.
Copy !req
1300. You asked about tweets,
there's a whole bunch.
Copy !req
1301. Put your money where your mouth is
Copy !req
1302. when the burglar break into your home.
Copy !req
1303. Put your money where your
mouth is and you'll get
Copy !req
1304. the tenth the interest
you would from a bank.
Copy !req
1305. There are a lot of those.
Copy !req
1306. - My favorite was a penny
earned is nothing to brag about.
Copy !req
1307. - A penny earned is nothing
to brag about, right.
Copy !req
1308. Some people just don't get
it while other people get it
Copy !req
1309. but just don't want it.
Copy !req
1310. That's not so good.
Copy !req
1311. Felons will be less
likely to commit crimes
Copy !req
1312. if our prisons served worse food.
Copy !req
1313. - Well now, what about these jokes?
Copy !req
1314. They're not gonna sound as funny anymore.
Copy !req
1315. - No go ahead, go ahead.
Copy !req
1316. - Well do you want to, you
don't want to do a dirty joke?
Copy !req
1317. - Absolutely.
Copy !req
1318. - There you go sir.
Copy !req
1319. - Okay.
Copy !req
1320. Police in Tennessee
arrested a teenage girl
Copy !req
1321. when they found a loaded
handgun in her vagina.
Copy !req
1322. When questioned her boyfriend said,
Copy !req
1323. I guess that explains why my
co, I can't say that word.
Copy !req
1324. I guess that explains why my
cock kept getting blown off.
Copy !req
1325. I don't get it.
Copy !req
1326. Oh god I get it!
Copy !req
1327. I made believe I don't get it,
Copy !req
1328. because that means I'm not complicit.
Copy !req
1329. - Two months later we still haven't found
Copy !req
1330. Malaysia airlines flight 370.
Copy !req
1331. This looks like the work
of the Joran Van Der Sloot.
Copy !req
1332. Do you remember that character?
Copy !req
1333. - Yes, no.
Copy !req
1334. - You don't remember him?
Copy !req
1335. - He's the one who,
allegedly, well he murdered.
Copy !req
1336. - How about this one Carl?
Copy !req
1337. - Okay.
Copy !req
1338. - A 28 year old med student is auctioning
Copy !req
1339. off her virginity online.
Copy !req
1340. For 300,000 dollars you can
have the worst sex of your life.
Copy !req
1341. That's good.
Copy !req
1342. - That ain't bad.
Copy !req
1343. That ain't bad.
Copy !req
1344. - Who writes these?
Copy !req
1345. - Oh well.
Copy !req
1346. How about this one?
Copy !req
1347. - I know who it was, you
know who writes them?
Copy !req
1348. Men in prison.
Copy !req
1349. - That's right.
Copy !req
1350. - A man in Chipata allowed
a hyena to eat his penis
Copy !req
1351. after being told by a witch doctor
Copy !req
1352. that would help him become rich.
Copy !req
1353. Is it me or does it sound like that hyena
Copy !req
1354. and witch doctor were in cahoots?
Copy !req
1355. - I think maybe they were in cahoots.
Copy !req
1356. - Who writes these?
Copy !req
1357. - Ah?
Copy !req
1358. - We should have this person
locked up and looked at.
Copy !req
1359. Or at least looked at.
Copy !req
1360. - Let's let Adam Eget read one.
Copy !req
1361. He likes to read sometimes.
Copy !req
1362. - Alright George Clooney is engaged.
Copy !req
1363. The rich and handsome 53
year old told reporters
Copy !req
1364. it's time for me to settle
down and start officially
Copy !req
1365. cheating on a heartsick
and disillusioned spouse.
Copy !req
1366. - I don't hear any laughter.
Copy !req
1367. - Well.
Copy !req
1368. - I love George Clooney so
much that he could do no wrong.
Copy !req
1369. He's just one of the good.
Copy !req
1370. - I can do a lot of wrong.
Copy !req
1371. - He's just one of the good
human beings in the world.
Copy !req
1372. - He is isn't he?
Copy !req
1373. Well you look, he put you in three movies.
Copy !req
1374. - With the things that he does.
Copy !req
1375. He and his father go into
Darfur, and going through Chad.
Copy !req
1376. At risk of being, to send food and shelter
Copy !req
1377. to people who are getting killed.
Copy !req
1378. He's really a man of the world,
Copy !req
1379. I mean a man caring about the world.
Copy !req
1380. - I don't know much about geo-politics but
Copy !req
1381. that is one cool name for a country, Chad.
Copy !req
1382. - Yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
1383. - Hey how about this one?
Copy !req
1384. - Okay.
Copy !req
1385. - This is a terrible
story the Nigerian schoolgirl.
Copy !req
1386. - The kidnapping victim in Nigeria
Copy !req
1387. are being forced to marry their captors.
Copy !req
1388. I'm glad to hear these
kidnappers are old fashioned.
Copy !req
1389. - In a way, in a way, I mean
they're getting married.
Copy !req
1390. This is another, a similar type of joke.
Copy !req
1391. - Some of the 200 Nigerian
schoolgirls kidnapped
Copy !req
1392. by extremists in Nigeria
have been forced to marry
Copy !req
1393. their kidnappers and worse than that
Copy !req
1394. they've been forced to laugh
at their husbands stories
Copy !req
1395. even after hearing them
for the umpteenth time.
Copy !req
1396. - You know something?
Copy !req
1397. It's very hard to make
a joke about those girls
Copy !req
1398. who are kidnapped when I
hear about those things.
Copy !req
1399. That is one of the worst.
Copy !req
1400. - It's terrible.
Copy !req
1401. And yet you got a big laugh out of yours.
Copy !req
1402. - I'm sorry I got, I was just thinking
Copy !req
1403. of Liam Neeson doing
that movie called Taken.
Copy !req
1404. - Taken, yes.
Copy !req
1405. - It's one of the best movies ever made.
Copy !req
1406. - I love Taken.
Copy !req
1407. - And I love comeuppance movies.
Copy !req
1408. Count of Monte Cristo is my favorite movie
Copy !req
1409. because the people, the
bad people get comeuppance.
Copy !req
1410. And in Taken, Liam Neeson
wipes the floor with the worst
Copy !req
1411. human beings in the world who have taken.
Copy !req
1412. And when I read about these
kids all I can think is
Copy !req
1413. Liam Neeson, send him in
and get these people out.
Copy !req
1414. - Also interesting though,
still that you got a big laugh,
Copy !req
1415. and he got nothing.
Copy !req
1416. - What?
Copy !req
1417. Yeah.
Copy !req
1418. I don't know how you're
still surprised by this.
Copy !req
1419. - I think people are being kind.
Copy !req
1420. - To you?
Copy !req
1421. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1422. - I disagree.
Copy !req
1423. - No if there's anybody to
be kind to it's this guy.
Copy !req
1424. Hey how about this?
Copy !req
1425. If I had a gun to my head and had to pick
Copy !req
1426. a vice presidential
candidate to have sex with
Copy !req
1427. I would choose Sarah
Palin, and Spiro Agnew.
Copy !req
1428. Remember Spiro Agnew?
Copy !req
1429. - Do I remember him.
Copy !req
1430. - Hot piece of ass.
Copy !req
1431. You know what I would like to hear?
Copy !req
1432. A poem.
Copy !req
1433. Do you have a poem sir?
Copy !req
1434. - I do not have a poem.
Copy !req
1435. - You do not have a poem?
Copy !req
1436. - Do you have a poem?
Copy !req
1437. - Do I have a poem?
Copy !req
1438. - You have a poem?
Copy !req
1439. - Yes.
Copy !req
1440. - Well I'm glad one of us has a poem.
Copy !req
1441. - Thank god.
Copy !req
1442. - You know as a manner of fact this poem,
Copy !req
1443. and by the way I wrote this
poem when I 20 year old
Copy !req
1444. in the army and I wrote it
Copy !req
1445. on a piece of paper which I had lost.
Copy !req
1446. All I remembered was the title.
Copy !req
1447. - How did you
know to archive yourself?
Copy !req
1448. - Well this one of the things
when I was writing this book
Copy !req
1449. I happened to find the little, the little.
Copy !req
1450. - Almond Roche tin?
Copy !req
1451. - This little thing I carried in the war.
Copy !req
1452. It was with all my letters in it.
Copy !req
1453. And I found this piece of paper in there.
Copy !req
1454. All I remember was the Ode
to the Buttocks Bountiful.
Copy !req
1455. - Ode to the Buttocks Bountiful?
Copy !req
1456. - Hell of a title.
Copy !req
1457. - And I remembered I'd written that.
Copy !req
1458. - Would you do us the honor of reading?
Copy !req
1459. - I will and I would not
have been able to write it
Copy !req
1460. had I not found it just
a week before I finished
Copy !req
1461. writing this book.
Copy !req
1462. Ode to the Buttocks Bountiful.
Copy !req
1463. I had written this to a girl
that I'd met in the army
Copy !req
1464. before I was married, a young
girl, a very lovely girl
Copy !req
1465. named Lois, I don't know her last name.
Copy !req
1466. - Not in American?
Copy !req
1467. - I hope she's listening today.
Copy !req
1468. - Is she an American?
Copy !req
1469. - Yes she is, I met her
in Laramie, Wyoming.
Copy !req
1470. And she did have a very lovely
backside and I wrote this.
Copy !req
1471. - Likely long dead.
Copy !req
1472. - I wrote this poem to her.
Copy !req
1473. - Wouldn't you say?
Copy !req
1474. - Pardon?
Copy !req
1475. - I said likely long dead.
Copy !req
1476. - Yes, yes, no no.
Copy !req
1477. Not likely she was younger
than I, maybe, maybe not.
Copy !req
1478. Ode to the Buttocks Bountiful.
Copy !req
1479. In any anthology of poetry carefully bound
Copy !req
1480. poems of love and hate
undoubtedly could be found.
Copy !req
1481. And wherever one deemed to look or to gaze
Copy !req
1482. up would pop Keats with
nightingale and vase.
Copy !req
1483. But ne're has there been
in verse or in rhyme
Copy !req
1484. an ode or sonnet to a curvaceous behind.
Copy !req
1485. To the laws of poets I will not abide
Copy !req
1486. but write as I will of the broad backside.
Copy !req
1487. To me this subject is as quite as dear
Copy !req
1488. as love and intrigue
was to Will Shakespeare.
Copy !req
1489. So to hell with convention
and the great bard
Copy !req
1490. I'll write as I will of
the hiney firm and hard.
Copy !req
1491. I do not extol of course any blasé ass
Copy !req
1492. but one that belongs
to a lovely sweet lass.
Copy !req
1493. A tush that is soft, rigid, and white
Copy !req
1494. not one flish, flabby, or slight.
Copy !req
1495. So to you dear Lois I deed must ordain
Copy !req
1496. you are the queen of afore said terrain.
Copy !req
1497. - Wow.
Copy !req
1498. You're like, you know what you're like?
Copy !req
1499. You're a renaissance man.
Copy !req
1500. - I sent that to her and she loved it.
Copy !req
1501. She really did.
Copy !req
1502. As a matter of a fact she
was a very very lovely girl.
Copy !req
1503. - You know what else is interesting?
Copy !req
1504. Bodacious behinds are
not all the in thing.
Copy !req
1505. - I know, I know.
Copy !req
1506. You know she made a trip
from Laramie, Wyoming
Copy !req
1507. to Bronx, New York just to visit my folks
Copy !req
1508. and tell them what a
lovely son they grew up.
Copy !req
1509. And she was a very lovely girl.
Copy !req
1510. I wish I knew her last name
and I wish she were still alive
Copy !req
1511. so I can thank her and say hello to her.
Copy !req
1512. - You are a multi-talent
though I did not know that.
Copy !req
1513. You are a Renaissance man.
Copy !req
1514. I would call you the
rich man's Steve Allen.
Copy !req
1515. Now I would call Steve
Allen the poor mans.
Copy !req
1516. - Steve Allen is the guy
who is responsible for
Copy !req
1517. the 2000 year old man getting on record.
Copy !req
1518. - Oh he is?
Copy !req
1519. - We did it at parties for
years, 10 years Mel and I
Copy !req
1520. did the 2000 year old man just for fun.
Copy !req
1521. And everybody said you
gotta put it on record,
Copy !req
1522. you gotta put it on record.
Copy !req
1523. And we said no this is only for Jews
Copy !req
1524. and non anti-Semitic Gentiles.
Copy !req
1525. And finally Steve Allen said
fellas if you don't do it.
Copy !req
1526. George Burns says, he saw it at a party,
Copy !req
1527. if you don't put it on a
record I'm gonna steal it.
Copy !req
1528. And Edward G. Robinson
said, put it on a record.
Copy !req
1529. He says I want make a play out of that,
Copy !req
1530. make a play out of that.
Copy !req
1531. That's what he said,
make a play out of it.
Copy !req
1532. I want to play the thousand year old man.
Copy !req
1533. I says 2000.
Copy !req
1534. I can play any age.
Copy !req
1535. It was Steve Allen said
fellas take my studio go wail.
Copy !req
1536. And we did we wailed for two hours,
Copy !req
1537. cut it to 47 minutes and there it was.
Copy !req
1538. - Now in that story Edward
G. Robinson's the funny man.
Copy !req
1539. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1540. - Steve Allen just let you use his studio,
Copy !req
1541. but it was you who created
the 2000 year old man.
Copy !req
1542. Not even Mel Brooks, you!
Copy !req
1543. - Yes, yes.
Copy !req
1544. - The great Carl Reiner has been with us
Copy !req
1545. for the full hour of a very special show.
Copy !req
1546. Thank you sir.
Copy !req
1547. - Thank you.
Copy !req
1548. - I appreciate it.
Copy !req
1549. - Thank you so much for being here.
Copy !req