1. - Tonight we talk to David Koechner.
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2. We will ask him about his short tenure
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3. on Saturday Night Live, which I think
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4. should've been much longer.
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5. Why that happened, how that happened,
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6. I have no idea,
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7. so I'll find that out.
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8. And, also, of course we'll
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9. look at his post-SNL career,
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10. which has been very successful,
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11. including both Anchorman movies,
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12. where he was Champ Kind.
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13. Remember that?
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14. - Whammy.
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15. - Whammy, and something.
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16. So, before we start,
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17. and I wanna get this over with quick
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18. so we can get right to David Koechner.
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19. - Uh-huh.
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20. Have you heard of trigger warnings?
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21. You ever hear of that?
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22. - Yeah.
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23. I've heard a little bit about it.
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24. - It's in universities now.
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25. I don't know where it started, but.
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26. - I think it started on blogs initially,
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27. but I think what it is, is—
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28. - Why don't you explain
to the folks quicker.
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29. A trigger warning is.
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30. - In my understanding,
I think trigger warnings
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31. evolved into universities,
at the start of a course,
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32. let's say for example
there's a course on feminism
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33. and there's gonna be topics that might be
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34. sore subjects for some, such
as rape that might come up
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35. throughout the term.
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36. And if there's a student who
may or may not have been raped
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37. or have had some negative
experience revolved around it
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38. or a close friend, then
it's important for the
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39. professor to sort of let the
class know that these are
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40. certain subjects that
might arise throughout
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41. the term.
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42. A warning.
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43. - You're saying if a woman has been raped
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44. that that would be a sore
subject for her.
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45. - That's just a
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46. - There's many more examples
that'd be better than that.
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47. - More examples.
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48. - There might be, you
might warn them about
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49. some racist subject that might come up.
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50. - Sure.
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51. - If there's certain racial ethnicities
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52. in the class.
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53. - Right.
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54. - Or you might warn them about
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55. violence.
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56. Let's say you're talkin'
about the war or something,
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57. and that person's father
lost a leg in the war.
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58. Anything like that.
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59. - Yeah, rape would be worse, yeah.
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60. Much worse.
- Trigger warning,
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61. the trigger warning allows the person
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62. to know beforehand, that sensitive subject
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63. is to appear in the
classroom of the university,
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64. and allow him to leave
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65. or her
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66. and get a fresh beverage
in the next room, so,
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67. I thought we should put
trigger warnings here
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68. on the podcast, 'cause sometimes
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69. - Makes sense.
- It gets a little
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70. controversial.
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71. - More often than not.
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72. - And sensitive souls
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73. might have a slightly
harder time digesting.
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74. - Agreed.
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75. - The material.
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76. So, trigger warning:
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77. I may use old-timey
slang from time to time.
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78. And it may make you feel disoriented,
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79. as if you are no longer in the cool,
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80. hip hop era.
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81. Just warning, see how this works?
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82. - Mmm-hmm.
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83. - Trigger warning: There may be repeated
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84. and partisan references
to the bestest and cutest
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85. little kitty in the whole world,
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86. Princess Kitty McMahon.
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87. So if you feel that that in some way
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88. disparages your kitty,
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89. then you shouldn't watch the podcast.
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90. That's a trigger warning.
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91. Do you understand how this works, Eget?
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92. - Definitely, of course.
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93. - Yes.
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94. Trigger warning: There
may be physical violence,
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95. some of which you cannot handle,
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96. and it's gonna be graphic,
it's gonna be bloody,
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97. but I do want to reassure you, most of it
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98. is directed at Adam Eget,
and is richly deserved.
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99. Trigger warning: I may mention
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100. some street names in Toronto.
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101. Now I'm not sure why that
should bother you so much,
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102. but a lot of people have complained.
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103. - I've noticed.
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104. - Yeah.
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105. Trigger warning: I may
not sufficiently buttress
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106. your self-esteem, and I regret that,
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107. but this isn't school.
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108. I don't have to do that.
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109. - Fair enough.
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110. - Trigger warning:
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111. I may use words like "buttress"
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112. which some of you will be offended by
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113. 'cause you don't understand the word.
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114. It doesn't mean the hole
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115. in the behind of your ass.
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116. Trigger warning:
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117. Some violence may take place
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118. that is not physical, but mental violence.
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119. For instance, Adam Eget,
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120. you are a disappointment.
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121. A disappointment to your family,
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122. a disappointment to yourself,
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123. a disappointment
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124. to your god.
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125. By the way, I saw that film
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126. that you recommended me,
that you called a fantasy,
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127. Shoah.
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128. Horrifying.
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129. Trigger warning: I may express enthusiasm
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130. about a commercial product,
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131. that will disturb some podcastees
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132. because the sentiment may
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133. extend
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134. into ecstasy,
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135. perhaps even rapture.
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136. Especially when it is a product as good as
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137. FutureAdvisors.
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138. FutureAdvisors
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139. when you don't know what
to do with your money.
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140. - You really don't like Shoah?
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141. - Shame.
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142. Shame.
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143. - Can't win 'em all.
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144. - Fantasy indeed.
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145. Back with David Koechner
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146. momentarily.
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147. What the fuck.
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148. - We gotta five dollar fun.
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149. - What's that?
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150. - Five dollar fun, right?
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151. - Five dollar, is that what that costs?
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152. You know,
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153. it wasn't me.
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154. You know David Koechner
our guest for tonight.
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155. When I was at Saturday Night Live
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156. I smoked a lot of cigarettes.
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157. I enjoyed smoking cigarettes
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158. and there was a 500 dollar
fine for smoking cigarettes.
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159. At the time, I was flush.
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160. And I would carry five
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161. crisp hundred dollar bills in my pocket
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162. and smoke, smoked,
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163. whenever the urge hit me,
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164. to smoke cigarettes.
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165. And
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166. our security guys would come over,
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167. "You can't smoke, you can't smoke."
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168. I'd go, "Here's 500 dollars."
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169. They'd go, "I can't take
500 dollars from you."
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170. I go, they go, "I don't
think I'm allowed."
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171. I go, "Okay.
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172. "Good for me."
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173. David Koechner, you know from The Office,
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174. Anchorman.
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175. You don't have to clap, it's ridiculous.
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176. Talladega Nights,
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177. Thank You for Smoking, with
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178. Aaron Eckhart.
- Eckhart.
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179. - He's a handsome guy.
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180. - Very, very good-looking.
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181. - And many, many more.
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182. That's what it sounds like.
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183. 'Cause of course there's
many, many more because—
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184. - There's a few.
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185. - You've done so, so much.
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186. Okay, we're gonna start
with Saturday Night Live
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187. - Yes.
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188. - Because I
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189. don't have really a theory
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190. on why you left Saturday Night Live,
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191. but I've always told everybody this.
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192. I've said,
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193. "The guy that they let go
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194. "on Saturday Night Live,
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195. "that was completely
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196. "unfathomable, was David Koechner,
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197. "because he was there one year."
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198. How many characters did he have?
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199. Gary Macdonald,
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200. The Fops.
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201. - Gerald.
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202. - Gerald.
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203. - T-Bones Tibbons.
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204. - Gerald.
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205. - T-Bones, T-Bones, yeah.
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206. - Okay, let's start again.
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207. - Alright.
- You say 'em.
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208. - Well, let's see.
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209. - This is one year.
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210. - The Fops,
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211. Gary Macdonald.
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212. - Gary Macdonald, my brother.
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213. - Your brother, T-Bones.
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214. - T-Bones,
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215. Gerald T-Bones Tibbons.
- Gerald T-Bones
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216. Tibbons.
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217. Ah, let's see, I did Pat Buchanan.
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218. - Pat Buchanan, did an impression.
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219. Thought ya did another character.
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220. - Another character, did I get it on?
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221. - Fightin' Jeb Down.
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222. - Fightin' Bill Downey,
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223. never made it to the show.
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224. - Oh.
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225. I always assumed it was because
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226. Jim Downey was the head writer, but
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227. now I know.
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228. - Yeah.
- It's your
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229. mother-in-law's.
- Never made it
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230. to the show.
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231. We got it to the table—
- It's your mother's
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232. maiden name.
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233. - Is Downey, yes.
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234. - Is Downey, that's where that came from.
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235. - Mmm-hmm.
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236. - My name's, that's me.
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237. - Remember me.
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238. - He'd have a picture, he was a
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239. kind of a punch-drunk.
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240. - Kind of addlepated boxer.
- Sure.
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241. - Yeah, yeah.
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242. What did you call him?
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243. - Addlepated.
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244. - An addlepated boxer.
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245. He talks like a guy
from a Joseph Mitchell.
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246. Okay, so there was a picture
of him in the bar you see,
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247. in his prime.
- He worked in the bar
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248. yeah.
- In his prime, yeah.
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249. - Yeah, but then he worked at the bar,
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250. he was a busboy 'cause the owner
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251. I think had made a lot of money on him,
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252. that was the backstory, and felt like,
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253. "I'm gonna have Bill
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254. "work here,
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255. "but Bill'll be a busboy,
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256. "just take people's plates."
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257. - That's right.
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258. - "Member me?
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259. "I bet you made money on me.
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260. "Forget about it.
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261. "My hands hurt."
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262. - His hands hurt, ah.
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263. I met a boxer who was
the heavyweight champion
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264. of Canada,
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265. and he was a guy that,
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266. he was famous,
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267. we loved him in Canada.
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268. He fought
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269. Ali
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270. and Norton,
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271. and Frazier,
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272. never went down,
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273. that was—
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274. - What's his name?
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275. - George Chuvalo, big.
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276. - Wow.
- Big white guy, you know.
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277. And, never went down.
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278. But he said
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279. the first thing that goes is the kidneys
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280. and then the brains,
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281. because they get ya in the clinch.
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282. - Yep.
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283. - And they punch your kidneys.
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284. - Yep.
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285. - God dang.
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286. - It's a tough game.
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287. - And you know, with all this
football and stuff, you know,
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288. let's get better helmets and stuff.
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289. You see movies from 50 years ago
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290. and at the end of the movie they go,
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291. "Boxing must be banned,"
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292. like that's the idea of the film.
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293. The motion picture.
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294. - Yeah.
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295. - But still.
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296. - It goes well.
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297. - Did you see Django Unchained?
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298. - Yeah I did.
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299. - Okay, you remember when
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300. Leonardo DiCaprio and the
boys were sittin' around
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301. watchin' the, ah, slaves
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302. - Yes, the Mandingo fights.
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303. - Fight to death.
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304. - Yeah, awful.
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305. - Yeah, awful, but
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306. isn't that what boxing is?
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307. - No.
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308. - You and your rich friends,
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309. you go to Vegas,
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310. you say, "Bring up those poor black people
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311. "from the ghetto."
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312. - I don't think that's the requirement.
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313. - I don't think that's the requirement.
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314. - If what's not a requirement?
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315. - That you have to be
African American to box.
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316. - You have to be poor.
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317. - Okay.
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318. It just so happens, I think,
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319. maybe because that's a way out for kids.
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320. - Yeah.
- Yeah.
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321. - But do you think it's cool that
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322. rich people pay money to watch two
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323. poor people fight to the death?
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324. - Well, if they're good,
they won't be poor anymore.
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325. Mayweather was one of the top
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326. paid athletes last year.
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327. - Yeah, yeah.
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328. And he lost it all on the Jaguars.
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329. - I thought we were going over my credits
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330. and you've lured me into a discussion.
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331. You put me on
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332. the side of the argument
- I'm tryin' to say—
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333. - Of a rich, white person,
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334. oppressing young, black males.
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335. - What would you say to this?
- Into boxing.
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336. I don't know how I got that.
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337. - Let me say this, too,
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338. before we get to your credits.
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339. - But before that.
- And why you shouldn't
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340. have been fired from SNL,
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341. but when you talk about rich,
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342. I look at the poster,
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343. for Anchorman 2, and what
do I see on the poster?
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344. Paul Rudd.
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345. Who else do I see?
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346. Will Ferrell.
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347. Who else do I see?
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348. - Steve Carell.
- Steve Carell.
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349. - Steve Carell.
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350. Who else do I see?
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351. David Koechner.
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352. Three multi-millionaires.
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353. - I'm not a multi-million,
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354. you think I'm really wealthy?
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355. - No, I said three multi-millionaires.
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356. - Oh three.
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357. Listen, folks.
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358. - And David Koechner.
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359. - And David Koechner.
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360. - The funniest guy in the fucking movie.
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361. - Oh, come on.
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362. - Now, do you ever look around
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363. and go, "What the fuck?"
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364. - There's no upside in that.
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365. I have a good time.
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366. There's no upside to going—
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367. - There is no upside to down.
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368. - There's no upside in
comparing your career
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369. with anybody else.
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370. - No.
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371. It's not a meritocracy,
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372. is it, sir?
- No.
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373. And no one's taking
anything away from you.
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374. - No.
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375. - Because you're in charge
of your own destiny.
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376. That's what I believe.
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377. - Well, if you're in
charge of your own destiny
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378. then it's not destiny.
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379. - Very good, Norm, you're right.
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380. But, I think you,
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381. you're a wordsmith.
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382. - Now, listen.
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383. I think, let's go back
to Saturday Night Live.
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384. - Alright.
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385. - 'Cause it was always a mystery to me
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386. why you were fired.
- Yes.
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387. I had my own theory, it's
a rather shallow theory.
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388. - I'd love to hear your theory.
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389. - You were bald.
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390. - Oh, that would not make it a,
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391. an issue.
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392. - The worst reason ever.
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393. - So you, after I wasn't renewed,
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394. my contract, you were just like,
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395. "Hmm."
- Yes.
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396. - "The baldness got him."
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397. - It was like, it was such a,
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398. it was such a crazy thing
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399. that I grasped on to that you were bald.
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400. You know what I mean,
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401. the way that
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402. conspiracy theorists go,
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403. "By god,
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404. "one disturbed 24-year-old
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405. "could not have taken down Camelot."
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406. I think the same way with you.
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407. - Was Oswalt 24?
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408. - He was
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409. a overachiever.
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410. - He looked older than 24.
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411. - He did, yeah.
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412. - Here's why I think I was let go.
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413. It was the first year that
SNL had had competition
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414. at late night, in that space.
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415. There's the first year of Mad TV.
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416. - Roseanne.
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417. - Roseanne was—
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418. - Had a talk show.
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419. - Then ah—
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420. - Stern.
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421. - Stern had a show that night,
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422. that same time period.
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423. It's the first time the
ratings had kinda slid
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424. and the first time that West
Coast had a lot of leverage
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425. on Lorne.
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426. So they just wanted changes.
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427. And I was it.
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428. - But you were the guy,
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429. I remember when we came in,
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430. it was you.
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431. Wasn't even Will,
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432. but the talk was all about David Koechner.
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433. - Is that right?
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434. - Yes.
- Wow.
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435. - And I think in the first year,
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436. you proved to be the good one.
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437. - I did well, I did well.
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438. I will say this.
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439. - Maybe another guy that
had that many characters
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440. in the first year of Saturday Night Live,
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441. barred Eddie Murphy.
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442. - Well I'll bet you Mike Myers did.
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443. - First year?
- First year?
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444. - Probably.
- Mike Myers's
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445. first year, nothing.
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446. - Nothing.
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447. Why do I keep getting put on this side—
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448. - You're not a bitter
man, you're not bitter.
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449. - On this side of these arguments.
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450. - Well, you musta been, at
that time you were a young man.
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451. - Don't get me
wrong, it hurt like hell.
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452. - It hurt, right.
- It hurt like hell.
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453. Here's what happened.
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454. So I was also told that some
of the West Coast people
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455. weren't fans of like, The Fops,
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456. and stuff like that, and
they expected The Fops
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457. to be a bigger breakout hit.
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458. And we talked about this
a little bit earlier,
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459. I figured out what to do with The Fops
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460. after I was off the show.
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461. - Yeah.
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462. - 'Cause we started on with The Fops on—
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463. - Weekend Update.
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464. - On Weekend Update.
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465. - Your fan club.
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466. - Yeah, fan club.
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467. So, originally the character was this guy
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468. I called Fagan who
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469. played in the musical,
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470. Oliver.
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471. And that was the character.
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472. And his whole thing was always,
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473. "Ah, have you seen, uh, my Oliver,
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474. "me in Oliver,
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475. "I play, ah, Fagan."
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476. 'Cause I had seen
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477. an ad in the Chicago Tribune
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478. for a touring
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479. company
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480. of the musical, Oliver.
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481. And the guy playing Fagan was standing
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482. in the back like this, like, "Uh."
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483. As if to say, it struck me as like,
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484. he's going, "Have you seen me, though?"
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485. And so I made up his backstory was that
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486. that's all he would do, is talk about him,
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487. he started as the Artful Dodger
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488. and he played that role all his life,
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489. and then when his father
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490. "Left the stage, he passed,
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491. "I adopted the role of, ah, Fagan.
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492. "Uh, have you seen it?
Copy !req
493. "Oh really."
Copy !req
494. So, and then Mark McKinney said,
Copy !req
495. "I have a character I think
would might pair nicely
Copy !req
496. "with your Fagan."
Copy !req
497. And then we just made them fops,
Copy !req
498. without any real drive or
idea of what they're gonna do.
Copy !req
499. So they appeared on your show
and they were fawning, right.
Copy !req
500. So they were courtesans,
Copy !req
501. but no one ever found the right idea
Copy !req
502. 'cause then we just got
thrown into sketches.
Copy !req
503. - Yeah.
Copy !req
504. - We did the intro with,
Copy !req
505. or the cold open with Alec Baldwin,
Copy !req
506. or the guest, whatever it was.
Copy !req
507. And then we did that thing with Spade that
Copy !req
508. made no sense.
- Made no sense.
Copy !req
509. - And then sometimes we'd
just be bare ass naked.
Copy !req
510. Now we did one sketch that didn't do well,
Copy !req
511. where we owned some antique shop,
Copy !req
512. or something like that.
- I remember that one.
Copy !req
513. - Yeah.
Copy !req
514. But what I realized later,
what should have happened
Copy !req
515. was, they were courtesans,
they should have been
Copy !req
516. trying to always go up the ladder.
Copy !req
517. So, after we met you, we
should have said, you know
Copy !req
518. "Would you introduce us to, ah, ah,
Copy !req
519. "Mr. Michaels, za za za
za" and so we tried—
Copy !req
520. - No, you don't want to
go right to Michaels.
Copy !req
521. - Well, we'd go to the host or whomever
Copy !req
522. and then try to get to Lorne,
Copy !req
523. and then after we got to Lorne,
Copy !req
524. we'd try to get to Bob Wright,
Copy !req
525. - Oh, yes.
- Who's head of the network.
Copy !req
526. And then after Bob Wright,
Copy !req
527. it should've been Jack Welch.
Copy !req
528. - Yes, yes.
- Right, and then—
Copy !req
529. - And the Koch brothers.
Copy !req
530. - Yeah.
Copy !req
531. I don't think they were
Copy !req
532. in the popular
Copy !req
533. idiom at the time.
Copy !req
534. - If you had
Copy !req
535. only given the show
Copy !req
536. Gerald T-Bone Tibbons
Copy !req
537. to me that'd be good enough
Copy !req
538. to put you on the show for a decade.
Copy !req
539. - Yes, should be.
Copy !req
540. Now, I told you earlier, too.
Copy !req
541. - Do you remember this?
Copy !req
542. I keep bothering you.
Copy !req
543. - That's good, I like that.
Copy !req
544. - Do you, this stands out for me,
Copy !req
545. but you have probably so many great nights
Copy !req
546. and I have so few.
Copy !req
547. But I went out with you to a bar one time
Copy !req
548. and I just
Copy !req
549. wanted you to be Gerald
Copy !req
550. for the entire night.
Copy !req
551. And by golly we had fun.
Copy !req
552. - Did I do it?
Copy !req
553. - Oh yeah, you did it,
Copy !req
554. and the funniest thing, of course,
Copy !req
555. was when you would go to girls
Copy !req
556. and talk to them,
ignoring their boyfriends.
Copy !req
557. How would that go?
Copy !req
558. - "Hi.
Copy !req
559. "How you doin', sweetheart?
Copy !req
560. "Ah, could you, do you
wanna buy me a drink
Copy !req
561. "or should I buy you one?
Copy !req
562. "Wow, you light up the room, sweetie."
Copy !req
563. - "Yeah, I'm with my boyfriend."
Copy !req
564. You be the boyfriend.
Copy !req
565. - "Yeah.
Copy !req
566. "We're all with somebody.
Copy !req
567. "Hey, why don't ya fuck off for a minute.
Copy !req
568. "Um!"
Copy !req
569. Did I do that alright?
Copy !req
570. - Ah well.
Copy !req
571. - Wow, I can't even remember that.
Copy !req
572. - And hysterical,
Copy !req
573. and not a drop—
Copy !req
574. - Did it cause any problems?
- Not a drop
Copy !req
575. of liquor in ya.
Copy !req
576. - Well, that was a rare night, then.
Copy !req
577. - Yeah.
Copy !req
578. Your father
- Yes.
Copy !req
579. - Had something to do with turkeys.
Copy !req
580. - Right.
- I was told.
Copy !req
581. A little birdie told me.
Copy !req
582. - He was a manufacturer
Copy !req
583. of turkey coops.
Copy !req
584. - Now can you explain to the folks at home
Copy !req
585. what a turkey coop is?
Copy !req
586. - It's basically
Copy !req
587. it's a
Copy !req
588. 146
Copy !req
589. compartments
Copy !req
590. on a 40-foot trailer
Copy !req
591. that you load turkeys into,
Copy !req
592. to take them from the grow out barns
Copy !req
593. to, basically, the processing plant
Copy !req
594. which is the slaughterhouse.
Copy !req
595. So my dad, we didn't deal with birds,
Copy !req
596. we just built the cages that
Copy !req
597. transported the turkeys
Copy !req
598. from farm
Copy !req
599. to
Copy !req
600. process.
Copy !req
601. - Isn't it interesting?
Copy !req
602. - Mmm.
Copy !req
603. - When you hear a job
you've never heard of
Copy !req
604. and yet, it's the job that.
Copy !req
605. - That makes
Copy !req
606. bread and wine for
Copy !req
607. a family of, what, seven?
Copy !req
608. - Ah, eight.
Copy !req
609. Six kids.
Copy !req
610. - Six kids.
Copy !req
611. - Yeah, with the parents.
Copy !req
612. I started working for
my dad when I was seven.
Copy !req
613. - Really?
Copy !req
614. - Yeah, he'd have us out there.
Copy !req
615. And he probably started work
for his dad when he was four,
Copy !req
616. and they had a milk farm.
Copy !req
617. - Four.
Copy !req
618. - Yeah.
Copy !req
619. They had milk cows.
Copy !req
620. So they were workers.
Copy !req
621. Catholics are good workers.
Copy !req
622. I'll tell ya that.
Copy !req
623. So, yeah my brother still has,
Copy !req
624. if you ever see turkey
coops going down the road,
Copy !req
625. if you see birds going down the road,
Copy !req
626. most likely came from Tipton, Missouri
Copy !req
627. those crates.
Copy !req
628. - That's where you're from, Missouri.
Copy !req
629. - Yeah.
Copy !req
630. - Mark Twain country.
Copy !req
631. - Two fathoms here.
Copy !req
632. - Say again now.
Copy !req
633. Is that a Mark Twain quote?
Copy !req
634. - That's what Mark Twain,
Copy !req
635. mark two.
Copy !req
636. Mark Twain.
Copy !req
637. - Oh, now, that's where the—
Copy !req
638. - Mark Twain!
Copy !req
639. - That's where the word
Mark Twain came from.
Copy !req
640. - Got it.
- On the riverboat.
Copy !req
641. - Two fathoms here.
Copy !req
642. - Yes sir.
Copy !req
643. You know his real name?
Copy !req
644. - Samuel.
- Ellen Cleghorne.
Copy !req
645. - No, I don't think that.
Copy !req
646. - It's something like that, right?
Copy !req
647. - He had it.
Copy !req
648. - He had it.
Copy !req
649. - Sam Clemens.
Copy !req
650. - Samuel Clemens.
Copy !req
651. Do you like, do you ever read
Copy !req
652. any of his work?
Copy !req
653. - Mark Twain?
Copy !req
654. - Yeah.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
655. It's, in the United States
Copy !req
656. it's required reading
Copy !req
657. in grade school.
Copy !req
658. - Well, sir, my son went to a school
Copy !req
659. here in
Copy !req
660. Los Angeles, California.
Copy !req
661. And I don't like when they teach
Copy !req
662. great writer's
Copy !req
663. minor work, you know,
Copy !req
664. they should teach him
the best work, right?
Copy !req
665. - Yep.
Copy !req
666. - So I went to the teacher, I said,
Copy !req
667. "Why are you teaching my son
Copy !req
668. "Tom Sawyer
Copy !req
669. "when
Copy !req
670. "Huckleberry Finn—"
Copy !req
671. - Life on the Mississippi—
Copy !req
672. - "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Copy !req
673. "drawing dust
Copy !req
674. "on the shelf behind you?"
Copy !req
675. "Oh, oh, it's because
Copy !req
676. "it's racist."
Copy !req
677. It's racist?
Copy !req
678. It's the least racist book ever.
Copy !req
679. It's anti-racist.
Copy !req
680. - Exactly.
Copy !req
681. - Goodness gracious.
Copy !req
682. The ignorance of people.
Copy !req
683. - Well, what happened to
the rest of the story?
Copy !req
684. That was it, she
Copy !req
685. said, "We can't
Copy !req
686. "do that," and that's it?
Copy !req
687. - She said, "The next
thing we're going to do is,
Copy !req
688. "we're gonna study Toni Morrison
Copy !req
689. "and she's rad."
Copy !req
690. - Wow.
Copy !req
691. - This is a private school
Copy !req
692. that I'm paying a lot of money for.
Copy !req
693. - Yeah, I get ya.
Copy !req
694. - You have five children.
Copy !req
695. - I do.
Copy !req
696. - And how
Copy !req
697. just supporting them,
Copy !req
698. how does that happen?
Copy !req
699. No I have one, and it's crazy.
Copy !req
700. - I work in show business.
Copy !req
701. - And you make a lot of money.
Copy !req
702. - I have consistent work.
Copy !req
703. So, that's how.
Copy !req
704. Yeah, and I haven't consistent retirement
Copy !req
705. payments yet, but.
Copy !req
706. - You never stop working,
Copy !req
707. well that might be a blessing.
Copy !req
708. - I won't stop working.
Copy !req
709. - You're gonna retire?
Copy !req
710. - No.
Copy !req
711. I won't retire.
- And ah
Copy !req
712. as Nixon said, "Drink too little,
Copy !req
713. "think too much."
Copy !req
714. - Is that a Nixon quote?
Copy !req
715. - Yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
716. Well, he said, the
unhappiest people he knew.
Copy !req
717. - Oh, that makes sense.
Copy !req
718. - He said, "People think
it's wonderful to get a car,
Copy !req
719. "and if you had two cars,
Copy !req
720. "wouldn't it be wonderful if
you had a golf membership.
Copy !req
721. "Well, wouldn't that be
the greatest thing ever?
Copy !req
722. "But for those of us that know,
Copy !req
723. "the unhappiest people
I know are the ones that
Copy !req
724. "drink too little,
Copy !req
725. "I mean drink too much,
Copy !req
726. "think too little,
Copy !req
727. "play too much bridge."
Copy !req
728. Anyways, we're straying.
Copy !req
729. - What's that from?
Copy !req
730. Is that from a David Frost interview?
Copy !req
731. - Yes, this is from
a David Frost interview.
Copy !req
732. - That's a pretty good Nixon.
Copy !req
733. - What is your favorite
project you've ever worked on?
Copy !req
734. - This.
Copy !req
735. - I mean on what?
Copy !req
736. - I wanna talk about Del Close.
Copy !req
737. - Favorite project I've ever worked on.
Copy !req
738. There's tons.
Copy !req
739. There's tons of 'em.
Copy !req
740. Recent one on this is not just a—
Copy !req
741. - So you don't understand
the word "favorite"?
Copy !req
742. - Wow.
Copy !req
743. Is this called Norm's hotbox today?
Copy !req
744. - You're right.
Copy !req
745. - No, that's fine.
Copy !req
746. - You're right, I feel like the guy that
Copy !req
747. threw Cool Hand Luke into the—
Copy !req
748. - Into the box.
Copy !req
749. - Yeah.
Copy !req
750. - I'm just tryin' to do my job.
Copy !req
751. - Come on.
Copy !req
752. - What was the last thing you,
Copy !req
753. that just came out?
Copy !req
754. - Cheap Thrills.
Copy !req
755. - Yeah, I wanna hear about that.
Copy !req
756. - I wanted to hear about it
Copy !req
757. 'cause I brought it up
Copy !req
758. in the makeup room.
Copy !req
759. - Yeah, but I brought
it up in the hallway.
Copy !req
760. - Did he?
Copy !req
761. Who brought it up first?
Copy !req
762. - You're the host.
Copy !req
763. - No, but I thought I brought it up first.
Copy !req
764. - The host is always right.
- You did.
Copy !req
765. - Okay, let's hear about Cheap Thrills.
Copy !req
766. - Cheap Thrills.
Copy !req
767. It is a sinister thriller
Copy !req
768. with dark, comedic undertones.
Copy !req
769. - Yeah.
Copy !req
770. - That's how I describe—
Copy !req
771. - And usually dark comedy is awful.
Copy !req
772. - You know, the thing is,
Copy !req
773. I don't describe it as a dark comedy
Copy !req
774. 'cause you don't want to go in this movie
Copy !req
775. thinking it's a comedy.
Copy !req
776. It's a thriller.
Copy !req
777. And there's some stuff that's funny.
Copy !req
778. When we were making it, I
didn't think there was gonna be
Copy !req
779. more than one or two laughs.
Copy !req
780. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
781. - And, I've watched it with audiences,
Copy !req
782. and they're laughing
the whole way through.
Copy !req
783. I think because it's so intense,
Copy !req
784. they need a release.
Copy !req
785. And remind themselves that
they're not in the picture,
Copy !req
786. they wouldn't do these things.
Copy !req
787. Myself and Sara Paxton
Copy !req
788. play a wealthy couple,
Copy !req
789. and we lure these two guys
who are down on their luck.
Copy !req
790. This is getting back to
your boxing metaphor.
Copy !req
791. Who are down on their luck,
Copy !req
792. and we have them play
these games for money,
Copy !req
793. and the games get more and more nefarious
Copy !req
794. as the evening goes along.
Copy !req
795. - Yes.
Copy !req
796. - So it's really intense.
Copy !req
797. - Sounds like an Agatha
Christie kind of a.
Copy !req
798. - No, it's not a whodunit.
Copy !req
799. If that's what you're getting to.
Copy !req
800. But
Copy !req
801. I loved doing the picture.
Copy !req
802. We shot it in 14 days, in 2012.
Copy !req
803. - Now when you say "picture"
Copy !req
804. you're talkin' about a
motion picture, a film?
Copy !req
805. - Yeah.
Copy !req
806. Motion picture.
Copy !req
807. A movie picture.
Copy !req
808. And we shot it in 14 days,
it felt like doing a play.
Copy !req
809. Everyone's really good in it.
Copy !req
810. Pat Healy, Sara Paxton, Ethan Embry,
Copy !req
811. and it felt like there was like
Copy !req
812. you didn't even have to act, because
Copy !req
813. they were giving you so much.
Copy !req
814. It's one of those rare moments.
Copy !req
815. I told them, I said,
Copy !req
816. "This is, something
special's going on here."
Copy !req
817. I said that the second
day 'cause it really felt
Copy !req
818. really unique.
Copy !req
819. - It's on DVD.
Copy !req
820. It's called Cheap Thrills.
- Cheap Thrills.
Copy !req
821. - And I read,
Copy !req
822. I go on MRQE,
Copy !req
823. which is Movie Review
Copy !req
824. Quest Engine, or some fucking thing,
Copy !req
825. but it tells every review of
a movie, if you ever want.
Copy !req
826. It's very interesting.
Copy !req
827. - Uh-huh.
Copy !req
828. - I do it after I see a movie to—
Copy !req
829. - That's interesting.
- To see if I
Copy !req
830. missed something.
Copy !req
831. But anyways, MRQE
Copy !req
832. everybody loves this movie!
Copy !req
833. Cheap Thrills.
- It's good.
Copy !req
834. - And it's on DVD.
Copy !req
835. - Yep.
Copy !req
836. - And it's got the
Copy !req
837. inestimable
Copy !req
838. David Koechner
Copy !req
839. in it.
Copy !req
840. - Ah, favorite movie—
- And three estimable
Copy !req
841. characters.
- One of my favorite
Copy !req
842. early projects I worked
on was a little film,
Copy !req
843. tell me, Norm, if you remember this one.
Copy !req
844. - Yes, sir.
- Dirty Work.
Copy !req
845. - Oh yes.
Copy !req
846. - We'll be back.
- You know, everyone
Copy !req
847. that meets you.
- In a moment.
Copy !req
848. - Does an impression of you.
- What?
Copy !req
849. - You're one of those guys that
Copy !req
850. you make such an impression on people that
Copy !req
851. everyone that meets you
does a Norm Macdonald.
Copy !req
852. - I don't care for any of
those impressions, by the way.
Copy !req
853. You know they say impressions are
Copy !req
854. the highest form of flattery.
Copy !req
855. - Uh-huh.
Copy !req
856. - Well, no, they say
it's the highest form of
Copy !req
857. flattery, yeah.
Copy !req
858. Anyways, imitation is the
highest form of flattery.
Copy !req
859. - Yes.
Copy !req
860. - Anyways, this is what I get.
Copy !req
861. I do a perfect year.
Copy !req
862. I go out and let's hear it,
Copy !req
863. "Hey, how ya doin', heh?"
Copy !req
864. I can do an impression of myself.
Copy !req
865. "Hey, what's goin' on, heh, heh."
Copy !req
866. That's surprising?
Copy !req
867. - I've never heard you say,
Copy !req
868. "Hey, what's goin' on."
Copy !req
869. - "Hey, what's goin' on."
- That sounds like you
Copy !req
870. doing an impression of
Copy !req
871. doing an impression of you.
Copy !req
872. - Heh.
Copy !req
873. - Alright, we're gonna be right back.
Copy !req
874. - After this.
Copy !req
875. We are back with
Copy !req
876. the only
Copy !req
877. David Koechner.
Copy !req
878. And in the break we were talking
Copy !req
879. and you told us a fascinating
Copy !req
880. little
Copy !req
881. tidbit of trivia
Copy !req
882. about the origins of the
Copy !req
883. expression "break a leg".
Copy !req
884. Share that with us.
Copy !req
885. - Should we recount it?
Copy !req
886. Well, it's from Shakespeare's time.
Copy !req
887. - Shakespeare.
Copy !req
888. - And at that time, we were talking about,
Copy !req
889. in Shakespeare, he often recaps
Copy !req
890. and recounts the plot
at the top of an act.
Copy !req
891. That's because crowds
would come in and out.
Copy !req
892. They'd leave.
Copy !req
893. They'd come and go, so
you wanna catch them up.
Copy !req
894. And then oftentimes crowds would just
Copy !req
895. not stay for the end of the play,
Copy !req
896. or they might stop it in progress,
Copy !req
897. not Shakespeare's necessarily but
Copy !req
898. plays of that time.
Copy !req
899. People would, you know, show their
Copy !req
900. distaste for a play,
and they'd stop the play
Copy !req
901. or whatever.
Copy !req
902. So—
Copy !req
903. - "Boo!"
- Yes.
Copy !req
904. - "Too many witches!"
Copy !req
905. - And then they can't go on, exactly.
Copy !req
906. And so they'd say "break a leg"
Copy !req
907. because that means if you break a leg
Copy !req
908. you're bowing, you're
only moving your back.
Copy !req
909. - Stand up, show the crowd,
Copy !req
910. and the folks at home.
Copy !req
911. - Break a leg.
Copy !req
912. Right, take a bow.
Copy !req
913. - Yes.
Copy !req
914. - You break a leg to take a bow,
Copy !req
915. and so that's basically goes,
Copy !req
916. "I hope you get to the end of the play."
Copy !req
917. - Yes.
- Yep.
Copy !req
918. - Wonderful.
- So, break a leg.
Copy !req
919. - It's a piece of trivia
that's actually interesting.
Copy !req
920. - That's true.
Copy !req
921. - Yeah.
Copy !req
922. Now, were you gonna tell
the Willie Nelson joke?
Copy !req
923. How did we get to that?
Copy !req
924. - Well, you said, we
were talkin' about jokes
Copy !req
925. and you said Daniel
Kellison, our producer,
Copy !req
926. said a joke about
Copy !req
927. well, it doesn't matter.
Copy !req
928. The Willie Nelson joke,
Copy !req
929. which many people know.
Copy !req
930. I told it to a very smart guy
Copy !req
931. 'cause I was just discussing with you
Copy !req
932. why
Copy !req
933. smart guys,
Copy !req
934. super smart guys
Copy !req
935. generally don't have a
great sense of humor,
Copy !req
936. and it's hard to
understand why they don't.
Copy !req
937. But, this might be why.
Copy !req
938. I told the Willie Nelson joke
Copy !req
939. to a very, very smart guy,
Copy !req
940. one of the smartest guys in the world,
Copy !req
941. and he just looked at me.
Copy !req
942. And so this is what happened.
Copy !req
943. So I'll tell the joke.
Copy !req
944. So the joke, as you know,
Copy !req
945. a guy's, okay, well you be,
Copy !req
946. I'll tell ya what, you be,
Copy !req
947. I'll be the smart guy.
Copy !req
948. - Okay.
- You tell me the joke.
Copy !req
949. - You tell the joke.
Copy !req
950. - No, I'll be the smart guy
Copy !req
951. 'cause I'll explain why I didn't—
Copy !req
952. - Oh, why you didn't get the joke.
Copy !req
953. - Yeah.
Copy !req
954. - What words do you not wanna hear
Copy !req
955. after you just finished
blowing Willie Nelson?
Copy !req
956. - I don't know, what?
Copy !req
957. - I'm not Willie Nelson.
Copy !req
958. That's the
reaction the guy gave you?
Copy !req
959. - That doesn't make any sense.
Copy !req
960. - Well, yeah, 'cause you're,
Copy !req
961. the only reason you're,
Copy !req
962. well one of the reasons,
I guess, you might
Copy !req
963. blow Willie Nelson, is
because you're hoping
Copy !req
964. to get a backstage pass,
or curry favor from him,
Copy !req
965. but then you mistakenly didn't
blow the guy you wanted.
Copy !req
966. - No, no, no.
Copy !req
967. It doesn't make any sense,
because you begin the joke
Copy !req
968. saying, "What do you not want to hear
Copy !req
969. "while blowing, while getting
blown by Willie Nelson."
Copy !req
970. - No, it's not
Copy !req
971. "while you're getting blown."
Copy !req
972. - What's the first sentence?
Copy !req
973. - The way it was told to me.
Copy !req
974. - First sentence of the joke.
Copy !req
975. - Yes.
Copy !req
976. "What words do you not wanna hear
Copy !req
977. "after you finish blowing Willie Nelson?"
Copy !req
978. - Yes, but you were never
blowing Willie Nelson.
Copy !req
979. - That's what this guy would say?
Copy !req
980. - Yeah.
Copy !req
981. That's the illogic that
he had problems with.
Copy !req
982. "But you were never blowing Willie Nelson,
Copy !req
983. "so you lied in the
first part of the thing."
Copy !req
984. - He's right!
Copy !req
985. - "So you couldn't
possibly hear that from him
Copy !req
986. "because that would be
Willie Nelson speaking."
Copy !req
987. - But, I know but it
wouldn't be Willie Nelson
Copy !req
988. because the guy said he was Willie Nelson.
Copy !req
989. - You would have to say, "When you thought
Copy !req
990. "you were getting
Copy !req
991. "blown by Willie Nelson."
- Yes.
Copy !req
992. - So anyways,
Copy !req
993. that's
Copy !req
994. some guys are so smart—
Copy !req
995. Do you like questions
from the Twitterverse?
Copy !req
996. - Sure.
Copy !req
997. - Well, I have a Twitter
following as you know,
Copy !req
998. 'cause I talk to your
wife, Leigh, often on it.
Copy !req
999. - Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1000. - And, uh,
- I will often—
Copy !req
1001. - And you come in sometimes.
Copy !req
1002. - I'll get in there.
Copy !req
1003. - You came in when I
Copy !req
1004. attacked Bret Easton Ellis
Copy !req
1005. for so savagely attacking
Copy !req
1006. the patron saint of Canada, Alice Munro,
Copy !req
1007. the greatest writer alive.
Copy !req
1008. You know, savaged by
this American philistine.
Copy !req
1009. Anyways, you stepped in, and—
Copy !req
1010. - I stepped in.
Copy !req
1011. Said, "Hey, hey, separate.
Copy !req
1012. "Now get back in it."
Copy !req
1013. - Could you imagine.
Copy !req
1014. - She was, was she the Nobel—
Copy !req
1015. - Good god, she won the
Nobel Prize this year
Copy !req
1016. deservedly, and Bret Easton Ellis,
Copy !req
1017. "Oh, she's not, she's overrated."
Copy !req
1018. Anyways.
Copy !req
1019. It would be like Beatle mania,
Copy !req
1020. saying The Beatles are overrated.
Copy !req
1021. - Right.
Copy !req
1022. - This guy, Peeweesherman300 is his name.
Copy !req
1023. He says, "In a few words, tell us
Copy !req
1024. "why Second City is so much better
Copy !req
1025. "than the Groundlings or
Upright Citizens Brigade."
Copy !req
1026. - Is it?
Copy !req
1027. - That's what he thinks.
Copy !req
1028. - He said, "Tell me why it is?"
Copy !req
1029. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1030. - I keep getting put into this situation,
Copy !req
1031. "Here is your argument, you must defend."
Copy !req
1032. The thing is, I didn't
make that statement—
Copy !req
1033. - Upright Citizen Brigade
and The Groundlings
Copy !req
1034. never had Del Close.
Copy !req
1035. - Right, well I will say this.
Copy !req
1036. - Tell us about Del Close.
Copy !req
1037. - Improv Olympics were Del Close is from.
Copy !req
1038. But I will say this, in response to this.
Copy !req
1039. I think the UCB is the
most important comedy
Copy !req
1040. theater in the country.
Copy !req
1041. Hands down.
Copy !req
1042. Right now
Copy !req
1043. the most important
current figures in comedy
Copy !req
1044. are coming from the UCB.
Copy !req
1045. It's the newest incubator.
Copy !req
1046. Although, I know that a lot of people
Copy !req
1047. came from Second City for the last
Copy !req
1048. round of hires at
Copy !req
1049. Saturday Night Live.
Copy !req
1050. But anyway.
Copy !req
1051. - For the last 30 years.
Copy !req
1052. - Sure.
Copy !req
1053. But a lot of those people
had studied other places.
Copy !req
1054. Not taking anything away from Second City.
Copy !req
1055. It's a great—
- So you and I are
Copy !req
1056. gonna talk about Del Close.
Copy !req
1057. - I'll talk about Del.
Copy !req
1058. You wanna answer this
question or talk about Del?
Copy !req
1059. I'll talk about Del.
Copy !req
1060. Del was one of the original
or the early members
Copy !req
1061. of The Second City,
Copy !req
1062. back in the 50s.
Copy !req
1063. And then he did some work in television.
Copy !req
1064. I think he had done a Get Smart early on,
Copy !req
1065. and then he started doing a lot of drugs.
Copy !req
1066. Oh, he wrote,
Copy !req
1067. "wrote".
Copy !req
1068. He, of course he would
have written it first,
Copy !req
1069. but he recorded a comedy album called
Copy !req
1070. How to Speak Hip.
Copy !req
1071. It was really
Copy !req
1072. interesting, 'cause—
- You've heard it?
Copy !req
1073. - Things do date themselves.
Copy !req
1074. - You've heard that?
Copy !req
1075. - Yeah, so he was
Copy !req
1076. a multi-talented actor,
Copy !req
1077. comic, all this stuff,
Copy !req
1078. he once did light shows
for the Grateful Dead.
Copy !req
1079. He hanging out with a lot
of interesting figures.
Copy !req
1080. And then late, then he got
a drug problem for years,
Copy !req
1081. and then later in life he needed income
Copy !req
1082. so a woman named Charna
Halpern hired him to teach
Copy !req
1083. at her
Copy !req
1084. school and theater,
called the ImprovOlympic.
Copy !req
1085. Now it's just called the
IO, 'cause she was in a
Copy !req
1086. embroiled in a legal
battle with the Olympics
Copy !req
1087. for years, so now she's
just calling it the IO.
Copy !req
1088. So, Del worked there, started teaching,
Copy !req
1089. and I had the great fortune
of studying with Del.
Copy !req
1090. And Del has influenced people from
Copy !req
1091. as far back as Bill Murray
Copy !req
1092. through my generation,
Copy !req
1093. like Chris Farley,
Copy !req
1094. Adam McKay,
Copy !req
1095. Tina Fey, Amy Poehler,
Copy !req
1096. Horatio Sanz, Rachel
Dratch, all those people
Copy !req
1097. had studied with Del.
Copy !req
1098. He was a remarkable teacher.
Copy !req
1099. Because he basically, you know,
Copy !req
1100. treated comedy like a
religion, in my opinion.
Copy !req
1101. It's like, this is as important
Copy !req
1102. as drama or anything
else, so you need to have
Copy !req
1103. as much respect for your comedy
Copy !req
1104. as you do for what you might, you know,
Copy !req
1105. for a major drama, stuff like that.
Copy !req
1106. But he'd teach improvisation
Copy !req
1107. and he always had an interesting
way of looking at it,
Copy !req
1108. whether it's, you know,
studying Greek gods and
Copy !req
1109. the first time I'd heard
about Joe Campbell,
Copy !req
1110. Hero with a Thousand Faces.
Copy !req
1111. He had a long suggested reading list,
Copy !req
1112. a bunch of psychology
books, stuff like that.
Copy !req
1113. And he'd also work with archetypes,
Copy !req
1114. like, you know, you can never be
Copy !req
1115. onstage empty, because if
you take on an archetype,
Copy !req
1116. whether it's, whatever, wind, fire, earth,
Copy !req
1117. let's say the as an archetype,
Copy !req
1118. or a personality as an archetype,
Copy !req
1119. you can always have something
to talk about onstage.
Copy !req
1120. And, another thing I got from it,
Copy !req
1121. if you took a property from anything,
Copy !req
1122. and animated that property inside you,
Copy !req
1123. you could always have something to do.
Copy !req
1124. Like if you said "mug",
what does "mug" mean to you.
Copy !req
1125. What is, order its properties.
Copy !req
1126. Can you tell me some of the properties
Copy !req
1127. a mug might have, Norm?
Copy !req
1128. I've lost him, I think he's asleep.
Copy !req
1129. - No, no, no, no, I can
tell you what properties
Copy !req
1130. a mug might have, but I
think you might be interested
Copy !req
1131. in the fact that this guy
used to jerk off punks
Copy !req
1132. under the Queensborough Bridge
Copy !req
1133. for 15 dollars a man.
Copy !req
1134. - Are you sure they were punks?
Copy !req
1135. Ah, how did we get there?
Copy !req
1136. So.
Copy !req
1137. - I would say a mug is
Copy !req
1138. hard.
Copy !req
1139. - Hard, okay, so.
Copy !req
1140. - Oh, I see what he did there.
Copy !req
1141. - So you could.
Copy !req
1142. - I get it.
Copy !req
1143. - I would say it's,
- No, it's 'cause
Copy !req
1144. - It's a vessel.
- Yes, it's, right.
Copy !req
1145. - Well, so you'd play
that property onstage.
Copy !req
1146. You're improvising—
- It's emptiness.
Copy !req
1147. - Oh, so, empty, you'd play an empty.
Copy !req
1148. - I would play empty.
Copy !req
1149. - You'd play empty.
Copy !req
1150. You could play hard.
Copy !req
1151. You could play porcelain.
Copy !req
1152. You could play something shattered,
Copy !req
1153. whatever you wanna take,
so in improvisation
Copy !req
1154. you get a suggestion.
Copy !req
1155. - Can I play one of the deadly sins?
Copy !req
1156. - Yes.
Copy !req
1157. You'd let that inform
what you're going to do,
Copy !req
1158. for instance.
Copy !req
1159. Pick one of the, your
favorite deadly sins.
Copy !req
1160. - Well,
- Gluttony.
Copy !req
1161. - I remember one time,
Copy !req
1162. a preacher that I used to
know when I was a young boy
Copy !req
1163. and he said, I was drivin' his bicycle,
Copy !req
1164. you know, here and there and here again.
Copy !req
1165. I was drivin' his bicycle.
Copy !req
1166. - What's going on?
Copy !req
1167. - I was gonna tell ya a story.
Copy !req
1168. - I know, but.
Copy !req
1169. - It has to do with this.
Copy !req
1170. - Okay.
Copy !req
1171. - And, he was a good man,
Copy !req
1172. pious man,
Copy !req
1173. and one day
Copy !req
1174. his bicycle went missin'
Copy !req
1175. so
Copy !req
1176. ma daddy
Copy !req
1177. said to him, "Burt," that was his name,
Copy !req
1178. we weren't Catholic, you
know, he used to call him
Copy !req
1179. the preacher by his first name,
Copy !req
1180. "Burt,
Copy !req
1181. "I think I know how to find out
Copy !req
1182. "who stole your bicycle."
Copy !req
1183. "How would I do it?"
Copy !req
1184. "When you're,
Copy !req
1185. "talkin'
Copy !req
1186. "when you're doin' yer sermon next week
Copy !req
1187. "you just go through the Ten Commandments.
Copy !req
1188. "You just go through the Ten Commandments
Copy !req
1189. "from one to 10,
Copy !req
1190. "and when you hit number eight,
Copy !req
1191. "Thou shalt not steal,
Copy !req
1192. "you look at the congregation,
Copy !req
1193. "and you'll see somebody,
Copy !req
1194. "see doin' this here, you know,
Copy !req
1195. "fiddlin' with his glasses,
Copy !req
1196. "that's your thief."
Copy !req
1197. "I'll do it," Burt says.
Copy !req
1198. So my daddy told me that story
Copy !req
1199. and I was, boy I was,
Copy !req
1200. I really hankering to see that
Copy !req
1201. speech that
Copy !req
1202. Burt was gonna,
Copy !req
1203. gonna say that day.
Copy !req
1204. So he goes through the Ten Commandments.
Copy !req
1205. Starts from one right down
to 10, now he gets to eight
Copy !req
1206. and speeds right through it.
Copy !req
1207. Speeds right through eight.
Copy !req
1208. My daddy said, "What the hell?"
Copy !req
1209. So, afterwards he get outside,
Copy !req
1210. "Burt, what in Earth happened?
Copy !req
1211. "Number eight was the
one you were supposed to
Copy !req
1212. "go, you know, supposed to,
Copy !req
1213. "why'd you speed through it?"
Copy !req
1214. Burt says, "Well, I tell ya why.
Copy !req
1215. "When I came to
Copy !req
1216. "number seven,
Copy !req
1217. "in the Ten Commandments,
Copy !req
1218. "thou shall not commit adultery,
Copy !req
1219. "by golly I remember where I might,
Copy !req
1220. "I put my bike."
Copy !req
1221. He was fucking Widow McClanahan.
Copy !req
1222. - Then it's not adultery.
Copy !req
1223. She's a widow.
Copy !req
1224. - No, but he's a man of the cloth.
Copy !req
1225. - Oh, he's a Catholic.
Copy !req
1226. He's a priest.
Copy !req
1227. - No, he's a reverend,
Copy !req
1228. but we have our, you know.
Copy !req
1229. - So that's how we got there from
Copy !req
1230. the seven deadly sins.
Copy !req
1231. Okay, okay.
- Yeah, so that's where
Copy !req
1232. I would inform myself, I would take,
Copy !req
1233. I'm trying, I was trying to take you,
Copy !req
1234. - You would tell a joke.
Copy !req
1235. - I would take lust.
Copy !req
1236. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1237. - Because that's what I had most for,
Copy !req
1238. lust for power,
Copy !req
1239. lust for money,
Copy !req
1240. lust for your glasses,
Copy !req
1241. lust for your hat.
Copy !req
1242. - You can play—
- Now that doesn't mean
Copy !req
1243. I wanna, for him, that doesn't mean
Copy !req
1244. I wanna fuck yer hat.
Copy !req
1245. - No, no, no, you don't
have to announce it,
Copy !req
1246. just—
- Lust doesn't mean you
Copy !req
1247. just wanna fuck something.
Copy !req
1248. - Sure.
- You could covet it.
Copy !req
1249. - What does lust mean?
Copy !req
1250. - You could covet something.
Copy !req
1251. - Covet.
- Yeah, covet.
Copy !req
1252. - Well, that's not it, but
Copy !req
1253. nice try.
- I think that's
Copy !req
1254. part of it, for sure.
Copy !req
1255. I have lust for a lot of things.
Copy !req
1256. - There's covetousness
in lust, you're right.
Copy !req
1257. - Okay, thank you.
Copy !req
1258. I've finally scored a point, I feel like,
Copy !req
1259. on the show.
- So would you ever
Copy !req
1260. do that, just take in
the back of your mind,
Copy !req
1261. - Yes.
- And just talk a regular
Copy !req
1262. conversation, but in
the back of your mind,
Copy !req
1263. you have, you're coveting something.
Copy !req
1264. - It gives you an intention.
Copy !req
1265. I can't remember if
I've ever used "covet",
Copy !req
1266. but it gives you,
- Or "lust".
Copy !req
1267. - An intention to play,
'cause in improvisation
Copy !req
1268. you're always, you know,
Copy !req
1269. you don't have script.
- No, I know.
Copy !req
1270. - All you have to do is listen to what
Copy !req
1271. the other person said, but
it gives you a point of view.
Copy !req
1272. So it helps drive the scene forward.
Copy !req
1273. - Uh-huh.
Copy !req
1274. - It's like having a secret.
Copy !req
1275. - Would you suggest this for any actor,
Copy !req
1276. improvisational classes?
Copy !req
1277. - Oh, sure.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1278. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
1279. - I think that's wonderful.
Copy !req
1280. - Good stage muscle.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1281. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1282. - Yeah, 'cause I did stand-up
Copy !req
1283. and it's kinda the opposite, you know.
Copy !req
1284. Yeah, I mean, you're
talkin' to the audience.
Copy !req
1285. You don't have anybody to talk to,
Copy !req
1286. you kinda have the audience,
Copy !req
1287. you're just keeping them at bay,
Copy !req
1288. you know what I mean.
Copy !req
1289. - You don't feel like you're in communion
Copy !req
1290. with the audience when
you're doin' stand-up?
Copy !req
1291. - Well, now I do, 'cause I
just speak to the audience
Copy !req
1292. but before that, no, it's, you know.
Copy !req
1293. I mean if you do it, a Second City show,
Copy !req
1294. and three minutes, four minutes,
Copy !req
1295. go by without a laugh, that's okay.
Copy !req
1296. Onstage doin' stand-up, that ain't okay.
Copy !req
1297. - Not okay, unless you're telling
Copy !req
1298. a really interesting story.
Copy !req
1299. - Yeah, yeah, yeah.
- Or, a nice joke about
Copy !req
1300. a preacher.
Copy !req
1301. - God damn, who doesn't
like them preachers.
Copy !req
1302. - You've got quite a stack of cards.
Copy !req
1303. Are we gonna get through all these?
Copy !req
1304. - Well, yeah.
Copy !req
1305. - "Oh yeah."
Copy !req
1306. He got very Canadian all
of a sudden, alright.
Copy !req
1307. - I did not know you loved
Creedence Clearwater so much.
Copy !req
1308. Is that just in there?
Copy !req
1309. - That's just in there.
- Oh, okay.
Copy !req
1310. - In Wikipedia.
Copy !req
1311. Look, I love Creedence,
but it's not to me like
Copy !req
1312. they're the greatest thing in my life.
Copy !req
1313. - Well, what I read, Lou Reed, Iggy Pop,
Copy !req
1314. Uncle Tupelo, are those some?
Copy !req
1315. - Yeah, sure, sure.
Copy !req
1316. - I mean you obviously
Copy !req
1317. - Big fan of Wilco.
- Have impeccable taste
Copy !req
1318. in music.
- Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
1319. - Did you get to see The
Replacements reunion?
Copy !req
1320. - I didn't see the reunion, I saw the—
Copy !req
1321. - Had you seen them before?
Copy !req
1322. - No, they haven't come, oh yeah.
Copy !req
1323. - Ah.
- Love The Replacements.
Copy !req
1324. - Very jealous.
Copy !req
1325. - I saw their last show in Chicago,
Copy !req
1326. before the, when they broke up,
Copy !req
1327. you know, the original time.
Copy !req
1328. Their last show, the
tickets were sold out,
Copy !req
1329. so I had this harebrained idea.
Copy !req
1330. - Why are you usin' that funny voice?
Copy !req
1331. - I'm tryin' to be like Norm.
Copy !req
1332. - It's funny when you say The Replacements
Copy !req
1333. because there was a band,
Copy !req
1334. right before The Replacements,
Copy !req
1335. that were called,
Copy !req
1336. The Guys Who Never Fucking
Thought They'd Be Replaced.
Copy !req
1337. And their career just plummeted while
Copy !req
1338. The Replacements went up.
Copy !req
1339. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1340. Well they never were as
popular as they shoulda been.
Copy !req
1341. in my opinion.
Copy !req
1342. - Absolutely, no.
Copy !req
1343. - They're one of the greatest bands ever.
Copy !req
1344. - Chrissie Hyndes.
Copy !req
1345. - Nope.
Copy !req
1346. - Great voice, though.
Copy !req
1347. - What are you talking about?
Copy !req
1348. - Christie Hyndes had a great voice.
Copy !req
1349. - Yes, but has nothing to
do with The Replacements.
Copy !req
1350. - Was I not sexist?
Copy !req
1351. I'm trying to bring a lady
into the conversation.
Copy !req
1352. - I don't know what's going on again.
Copy !req
1353. - I think women are hilarious.
Copy !req
1354. - Paul Westerberg.
Copy !req
1355. I do, too.
Copy !req
1356. - Haven't brought a what up?
Copy !req
1357. - Well, as a funny,
Copy !req
1358. I think women are really, really funny.
Copy !req
1359. - What does this have to
do with The Replacements?
Copy !req
1360. - He's trying to goad me into,
Copy !req
1361. bait me into another argument.
Copy !req
1362. - Exactly.
Copy !req
1363. - No, 'cause you're—
- Why do I have to
Copy !req
1364. take this side that I don't want to take?
Copy !req
1365. - 'Cause you're a comedy
expert and all of a sudden
Copy !req
1366. - I'm not a comedy expert.
Copy !req
1367. - You're Kurt Loder.
Copy !req
1368. I wanna hear about comedy and I think
Copy !req
1369. women are funny, and I'm tired.
Copy !req
1370. - As do I.
Copy !req
1371. - You do think women are funny?
Copy !req
1372. - Yes.
Copy !req
1373. - The Replacements were
one of the only two bands
Copy !req
1374. banned from Saturday Night Live.
Copy !req
1375. - Were they?
Copy !req
1376. - Yeah, I believe so.
Copy !req
1377. - I didn't know that.
Copy !req
1378. Anyway,
Copy !req
1379. the tickets were sold out,
Copy !req
1380. I had a harebrained idea.
Copy !req
1381. I called and said I was with
Copy !req
1382. a radio station
- You had a harebrained
Copy !req
1383. idea.
Copy !req
1384. Take off your hat and say that.
Copy !req
1385. Yeah, baby.
Copy !req
1386. - Ba, ba, ba, ba, ba, ba,
Copy !req
1387. bbbaaaaaaabbbbbbbbyyyyyyy, buh.
Copy !req
1388. Do you know what girning is?
Copy !req
1389. We're gonna talk in a second.
Copy !req
1390. - I know what girning is.
Copy !req
1391. - We're gonna take a break.
Copy !req
1392. - I know what girning is.
Copy !req
1393. - Annie O. Wants us to take a break.
Copy !req
1394. I called the venue and said
Copy !req
1395. I'm with a radio station,
Copy !req
1396. out of Columbia, Missouri,
and I got press passes.
Copy !req
1397. - Oh that's amazing.
Copy !req
1398. - Right up front.
Copy !req
1399. - That's amazing.
Copy !req
1400. - It's easy to get press passes if you're
Copy !req
1401. from a small place.
Copy !req
1402. - Yeah, yeah it doesn't happen anymore.
Copy !req
1403. That would never happen.
Copy !req
1404. We'll be right back.
Copy !req
1405. Annie O. is putting us on a break,
Copy !req
1406. and then we'll come back and we'll
Copy !req
1407. discuss girning, unless you want
Copy !req
1408. to get to your stack of cards.
Copy !req
1409. - Well.
Copy !req
1410. - This might be
a fake stack of cards.
Copy !req
1411. - No, no, they're jokes.
Copy !req
1412. - Okay.
Copy !req
1413. - Wanna do some jokes?
Copy !req
1414. - We gotta take a break.
Copy !req
1415. - After the break, jokes
with David Koechner.
Copy !req
1416. - And some discussions of girning.
Copy !req
1417. - We have returned and
Copy !req
1418. by "we" I mean my trusty
sidekick, Adam Eget,
Copy !req
1419. who you will see
Copy !req
1420. to the 'twixt
Copy !req
1421. of my left shoulder.
Copy !req
1422. In front of me,
Copy !req
1423. sits none other,
Copy !req
1424. when did you start the hat?
Copy !req
1425. I love it.
Copy !req
1426. - Ah, I started getting a little bit of
Copy !req
1427. pre-cancers on my head.
Copy !req
1428. - Good god, Christ almighty.
Copy !req
1429. I thought it would be a
nice, fun little thing.
Copy !req
1430. Okay.
Copy !req
1431. - This is a way, it
also protects the ears.
Copy !req
1432. - Yeah, that too.
Copy !req
1433. - I'm sorry my answer didn't please you.
Copy !req
1434. - No, I know.
- Now am I a 'twixt or 'tween?
Copy !req
1435. - Would you like a joke?
Copy !req
1436. - I would love a joke.
Copy !req
1437. - This is where we tell it.
Copy !req
1438. But before we do jokes.
- We're gonna do
Copy !req
1439. girning or not?
- Hey, somebody
Copy !req
1440. has to pay.
Copy !req
1441. Tell us about the five—
Copy !req
1442. - Points of comedy?
- Five points of comedy.
Copy !req
1443. - You know what, actually
Dave Allen Gruber,
Copy !req
1444. Dave Gruber Allen.
- Dave Allen.
Copy !req
1445. - Dave Allen, of The
Higgins Boys and Gruber.
Copy !req
1446. - Who you might
know as the Naked Trucker.
Copy !req
1447. - Naked Trucker, one time
we were out doing a movie
Copy !req
1448. on the road, and—
Copy !req
1449. - Dill Scallion?
- Dill Scallion,
Copy !req
1450. you're good.
Copy !req
1451. And we went to a Charlie Daniels concert.
Copy !req
1452. - That's 'cause I'm a
fan, I don't research.
Copy !req
1453. - Nice.
Copy !req
1454. And Charlie Daniels had
five points of integrity.
Copy !req
1455. - Five points of integrity, really.
Copy !req
1456. - Yeah, about music or
somethin' like that,
Copy !req
1457. it was kinda crazy, but, so Dave and I
Copy !req
1458. made up five points of,
Copy !req
1459. comedy's five points of integrity.
Copy !req
1460. And one of them, I remember being girning.
Copy !req
1461. Like, you can get it in,
Copy !req
1462. the things you must have in
your tool bag for comedy.
Copy !req
1463. - Yeah.
- Right.
Copy !req
1464. You know what girning is?
- I know what
Copy !req
1465. what girning is.
Copy !req
1466. - And you wanna tell
Adam E. what girning is?
Copy !req
1467. - Why don't you tell the folks at home.
Copy !req
1468. - It's the masterful
art of face contortions.
Copy !req
1469. - Ah.
Copy !req
1470. - Reh.
Copy !req
1471. Some people can girn really well.
Copy !req
1472. You take your bottom lip right.
Copy !req
1473. Daaah.
Copy !req
1474. That'd be girning.
Copy !req
1475. It's a lost art.
Copy !req
1476. - Yeah, there's a
lot of lost arts in comedy.
Copy !req
1477. - You should do a baaayyy.
Copy !req
1478. That'd be some girning right there.
Copy !req
1479. - Skeletonesh, skeletonesh.
Copy !req
1480. - Yes, Norm was describing—
Copy !req
1481. - Those are the ones that,
Copy !req
1482. those are the folks that survive the ages,
Copy !req
1483. I think.
- You're right.
Copy !req
1484. - Physical comedians.
Copy !req
1485. - Good, look.
Copy !req
1486. - Any physical comedy.
Copy !req
1487. - I'm with you.
Copy !req
1488. - What verbal comedy, you know,
Copy !req
1489. even Mark Twain,
Copy !req
1490. the funniest man ever to put pen to paper.
Copy !req
1491. - Two fathoms here, go ahead.
Copy !req
1492. - Not, it doesn't translate as well
Copy !req
1493. as Chaplin or Keaton,
Copy !req
1494. who did brilliant physical comedy.
Copy !req
1495. You hear a joke once, do
you wanna hear it 10 times?
Copy !req
1496. - No.
Copy !req
1497. - But, if you see a
guy runnin' down a hill
Copy !req
1498. with a million boulders chasin' him,
Copy !req
1499. that you can watch forever.
Copy !req
1500. - Lord of the Flies.
Copy !req
1501. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1502. - Let's get Piggy.
Copy !req
1503. - We gotta do a commercial,
Copy !req
1504. let's get Piggy, right.
Copy !req
1505. Simon, ooo, he was the good guy.
Copy !req
1506. Everybody loves Simon.
Copy !req
1507. Everybody loves the Christ figures.
Copy !req
1508. Never understood it.
Copy !req
1509. - I was so hoping we'd get to religion
Copy !req
1510. on today's show.
Copy !req
1511. - Are those reading glasses?
- They are.
Copy !req
1512. - Look how close they are to my glasses.
Copy !req
1513. - I know, very close.
Copy !req
1514. Where do you get yours?
Copy !req
1515. - These are not reading glasses,
Copy !req
1516. these are real ones.
- Oh they're not.
Copy !req
1517. - But let's, change glasses.
- So your choice is to
Copy !req
1518. spend a lot of money on that.
Copy !req
1519. Ah, these are, you have
a stronger prescription
Copy !req
1520. than I do.
Copy !req
1521. And a larger, uh,
Copy !req
1522. cabeza.
- I got a big noggin.
Copy !req
1523. I will bet ya it is.
Copy !req
1524. I bet that hat's small on me.
Copy !req
1525. - Yeah, I have a small head.
Copy !req
1526. - Let's check it out.
Copy !req
1527. - Hey, but not just up here.
Copy !req
1528. - Yeah, I know.
Copy !req
1529. What?
Copy !req
1530. - How would you know.
Copy !req
1531. - The head of your cock.
Copy !req
1532. Now check this out.
Copy !req
1533. - Burt.
Copy !req
1534. Now do a little bit of hat work.
Copy !req
1535. Ba, ba, ba, ba, ba, ba, ba, buuuuh.
Copy !req
1536. Adorable.
Copy !req
1537. Now that's something that
no one's going to remember
Copy !req
1538. anything in this interview,
except our hat work.
Copy !req
1539. - When you were a boy, did
you love physical comics?
Copy !req
1540. - I loved the Marx Brothers better,
Copy !req
1541. more than I did The Three Stooges.
Copy !req
1542. - Oh you did?
Copy !req
1543. - Yeah.
- Hmm.
Copy !req
1544. I didn't like the Marx Brothers.
Copy !req
1545. - There's a.
Copy !req
1546. - It's just an earthquake.
Copy !req
1547. - That's not an earthquake, it's a car
Copy !req
1548. rolling by with a lot of bass.
Copy !req
1549. Let's get to our next topic.
Copy !req
1550. - Okay.
Copy !req
1551. Ah, they're jokes, would
you like to read one?
Copy !req
1552. - I would be
Copy !req
1553. honored.
- This is a joke,
Copy !req
1554. David Koechner, that is ripped
Copy !req
1555. from today's headlines,
yesterday's headlines.
Copy !req
1556. - Alright.
Copy !req
1557. - The World Cup.
Copy !req
1558. World Cup fever.
Copy !req
1559. - Yes.
- Get some amoxicillin.
Copy !req
1560. - Ah, makes sense.
Copy !req
1561. The World Cup has arrived,
so if you're wondering
Copy !req
1562. why your local bar smells, it's because
Copy !req
1563. all of the dirty foreigners.
Copy !req
1564. Dirty foreigners.
Copy !req
1565. Let me try that again.
Copy !req
1566. Hey, Norm?
- Yeah?
Copy !req
1567. - Yeah, the World Cup's goin' on.
Copy !req
1568. - Yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
1569. - Hey, you go to the
local bar there, don't ya?
Copy !req
1570. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1571. - Local watering hole?
— Yeah, yeah, sure.
Copy !req
1572. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1573. Do ya ever wonder why it smells so much?
Copy !req
1574. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1575. - Hey, 'cause those dirty foreigners.
Copy !req
1576. - Oh.
Copy !req
1577. Frank Gorshin right here.
- Jingoism is alive
Copy !req
1578. and well, here on NM Live.
- Yes.
Copy !req
1579. - Next one.
- Know what jingoism is?
Copy !req
1580. - Ah, yeah, I believe so.
Copy !req
1581. - What does it mean?
Copy !req
1582. - Ah, it's hard to put into words, but—
Copy !req
1583. - It's hard to put into words?
Copy !req
1584. - It's like, um,
Copy !req
1585. it's not like nationalism, but it's ah.
Copy !req
1586. - It is very much like nationalism.
Copy !req
1587. - It's hard to.
- It is nationalism.
Copy !req
1588. - It's prejudice against
Copy !req
1589. - I'm gonna let you read this.
Copy !req
1590. - Others.
Copy !req
1591. - I thought it was more complicated.
Copy !req
1592. - Would you like to read that?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1593. This week, I learned—
- Oh, this week
Copy !req
1594. I learned, I'm sorry.
Copy !req
1595. Have you ever heard of
TYIL, This Week I Learned?
Copy !req
1596. - I have not.
Copy !req
1597. - Well, it's sweeping the nation,
Copy !req
1598. it's hashtagging faster than,
Copy !req
1599. but it's called
This Week I Learned.
Copy !req
1600. - Faster than something
that moves quickly.
Copy !req
1601. - Yeah, like faster than a freight train.
Copy !req
1602. This Week I Learned, it's a TWIL,
Copy !req
1603. so check it out some time.
Copy !req
1604. It's hashtag, TWIL, and people talk about
Copy !req
1605. what they learned that week.
Copy !req
1606. - Well, let's see what one is.
Copy !req
1607. - So, This Week I Learned, by Adam Eget.
Copy !req
1608. - You're invited back to the comedy table.
Copy !req
1609. - These are always fun.
Copy !req
1610. This week I learned, just because
Copy !req
1611. I masturbated to that picture of a guy
Copy !req
1612. falling to his death on 9/11 doesn't mean
Copy !req
1613. I have to share it.
Copy !req
1614. - Well, you know what.
Copy !req
1615. - Now, this is,
Copy !req
1616. this is fine, this is fine for a fella
Copy !req
1617. that during 9/11, you know, was in
Copy !req
1618. Costa Rica partying with his friends.
Copy !req
1619. I was walkin' through
the blood and the bones
Copy !req
1620. in a—
- So you were put off
Copy !req
1621. by that show?
- In Manhattan.
Copy !req
1622. A little bit.
Copy !req
1623. - I can't
believe you wouldn't.
Copy !req
1624. - And I had to get a new pants,
Copy !req
1625. 'cause the blood and the bones.
Copy !req
1626. - Just now, or back then?
Copy !req
1627. - Back then, I was ankle-deep
in blood and bones.
Copy !req
1628. - Ah, you went through the war, Norm.
Copy !req
1629. - Well, it was an attack on our country.
Copy !req
1630. A recent report stated
that there are over—
Copy !req
1631. - You're Canadian.
- 60, a recent report stated
Copy !req
1632. that there are over 65,
Copy !req
1633. active serial killers
Copy !req
1634. in the United States.
Copy !req
1635. What they don't know is,
Copy !req
1636. there's actually
Copy !req
1637. 66.
Copy !req
1638. That's just between you and me.
Copy !req
1639. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1640. - Oh Brides magazine's released a
Copy !req
1641. list of 11 ways to, well,
Copy !req
1642. do you wanna do this joke?
Copy !req
1643. - I'd love to be invited back
to the comedy round table.
Copy !req
1644. Brides eh,
Copy !req
1645. Brides magazine released a list of 11 ways
Copy !req
1646. to be a terrible bride.
Copy !req
1647. They include, don't interfere
with the wedding planner,
Copy !req
1648. don't lie about how much the
wedding cost to your family,
Copy !req
1649. and coming in at number one,
Copy !req
1650. don't fuck your husband's best friends.
Copy !req
1651. - Ah, yeah, that's the worst.
Copy !req
1652. - More than one, I mean.
Copy !req
1653. - We end the show now, David Koechner,
Copy !req
1654. are you familiar with James Lipton
Copy !req
1655. on the Actors Studio?
Copy !req
1656. - I am familiar with him.
Copy !req
1657. - And you remember the end of
the show, he will always ask,
Copy !req
1658. he will go, "These are 10
questions by,
Copy !req
1659. "some fucking guy."
Copy !req
1660. And they're famous questions, I guess,
Copy !req
1661. for dinner parties or something like that.
Copy !req
1662. I don't know where they came from.
Copy !req
1663. But you've seen this?
Copy !req
1664. - Sure.
Copy !req
1665. - So we decided, if it's
good enough for James Lipton,
Copy !req
1666. - Jimmy.
- Who is a pimp,
Copy !req
1667. then it's good enough for us.
Copy !req
1668. Did you not know James Lipton was a pimp?
Copy !req
1669. - No, I had no idea.
Copy !req
1670. - Yes, in France.
Copy !req
1671. I mean he said it.
Copy !req
1672. - Okay.
Copy !req
1673. - Look what I have in my hand.
Copy !req
1674. I had this in my hand
the entire interview.
Copy !req
1675. - Today I learned two things.
Copy !req
1676. - Maybe there's
a shelf down there.
Copy !req
1677. - Questions.
Copy !req
1678. - Alright.
Copy !req
1679. - So, the idea is they're
the same questions
Copy !req
1680. for every guest.
Copy !req
1681. What
Copy !req
1682. I don't want, like that question.
Copy !req
1683. - He does not like the first question.
Copy !req
1684. You ask which—
Copy !req
1685. - What's your definition of a heaven?
Copy !req
1686. - This show.
Copy !req
1687. - Would you rather be
murdered by a stranger
Copy !req
1688. or a loved one?
Copy !req
1689. - I guess a stranger, 'cause
Copy !req
1690. when you're murdered,
you didn't ask me why,
Copy !req
1691. I chose it, but, usually that's
Copy !req
1692. they're worse if you know the loved one.
Copy !req
1693. - Up close and personal.
Copy !req
1694. - Well, no, a loved one
usually it's a passion,
Copy !req
1695. - Yeah.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1696. And it's much, they can tell
Copy !req
1697. it's a much worse crime.
Copy !req
1698. - Yeah, why the extra 68th stab wounds?
Copy !req
1699. - Right.
- Yeah I got ya.
Copy !req
1700. - Yeah, just, you know, yeah.
Copy !req
1701. - If you got to pick them,
Copy !req
1702. this is kind of interesting.
Copy !req
1703. - Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1704. - But if you got to choose them,
Copy !req
1705. and you may, what was your last words?
Copy !req
1706. What would you like your last words to be?
Copy !req
1707. - "God, I was good."
Copy !req
1708. - That would be very accurate.
Copy !req
1709. What's your favorite
dessert, David Koechner?
Copy !req
1710. - Ah, probably a brownie
with vanilla ice cream.
Copy !req
1711. - Oh, by golly.
- A warm brownie.
Copy !req
1712. - Warm brownie.
Copy !req
1713. - Yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
1714. - Well, I got a lot of—
Copy !req
1715. - Who's your hero?
Copy !req
1716. - Who's my hero?
Copy !req
1717. Um,
Copy !req
1718. I don't really have a hero per se.
Copy !req
1719. - Don't have one, huh?
Copy !req
1720. - Well, I don't, there's
not a person I hold up
Copy !req
1721. as like, "Wow that's my hero."
Copy !req
1722. - Yeah, never had a hero?
Copy !req
1723. - Well, no, I mean, you know comedy-wise
Copy !req
1724. I would say like the Marx
Brothers or Monty Python.
Copy !req
1725. - Uh-huh.
Copy !req
1726. - Those guys.
Copy !req
1727. - Those guys are—
Copy !req
1728. - Dabney Coleman.
- Dabney Coleman?
Copy !req
1729. - Dabney Coleman's awesome.
Copy !req
1730. - All good choices.
Copy !req
1731. - Ah, but a hero.
- I like the troops.
Copy !req
1732. - How 'bout this?
- Would you rather—
Copy !req
1733. - How 'bout this, I'll say this.
Copy !req
1734. My wife.
Copy !req
1735. - Your wife, yeah, yeah.
Copy !req
1736. That was good after five minutes.
Copy !req
1737. - We can edit it down.
- This is a very good
Copy !req
1738. question.
- Okay.
Copy !req
1739. - And you don't have to
say this person by name
Copy !req
1740. or anything like that.
Copy !req
1741. But who has let you down
the most in your life?
Copy !req
1742. Seriously, seriously.
Copy !req
1743. Take a moment.
Copy !req
1744. Not everything has to be funny, David.
Copy !req
1745. - It's the person you're looking at.
Copy !req
1746. - Oh.
Copy !req
1747. - Well, I think we all let
ourselves down the most.
Copy !req
1748. No one else can let you down.
Copy !req
1749. That's your choice, you can't blame
Copy !req
1750. your failure or whatever on someone else.
Copy !req
1751. It's yourself.
Copy !req
1752. You've let yourself down.
Copy !req
1753. So it would be me.
- What a beautiful
Copy !req
1754. answer that is.
Copy !req
1755. Taking responsibility completely.
Copy !req
1756. What was the, I'm not gonna as you
Copy !req
1757. what's your most embarrassing secret.
Copy !req
1758. Why would you tell me.
Copy !req
1759. If um,
Copy !req
1760. mmm.
Copy !req
1761. - That's the chair.
Copy !req
1762. My most embarrassing
secret, I can't, I can't.
Copy !req
1763. I don't have any embarrassing secrets.
Copy !req
1764. - Do you eat at McDonald's?
Copy !req
1765. - I have eaten McDonald's before, yeah.
Copy !req
1766. - Do you like McDonald's?
Copy !req
1767. - On occasion.
Copy !req
1768. - How 'bout that pink
stuff, the pink slime?
Copy !req
1769. - Ah, I don't know much about it, I mean
Copy !req
1770. it was reported widely in the news
Copy !req
1771. in the last year.
Copy !req
1772. - Yeah.
- Uh-huh.
Copy !req
1773. I don't think it's only McDonald's that—
Copy !req
1774. - Oh, I don't think it is either.
Copy !req
1775. - It's a
Copy !req
1776. huge problem, is the
Copy !req
1777. amount of processing—
- A huge problem is
Copy !req
1778. that I had a punk band named Pink Slime
Copy !req
1779. and we fucking lost our recording contract
Copy !req
1780. after the.
Copy !req
1781. - I like it.
Copy !req
1782. A larger issue is the
amount of processed food
Copy !req
1783. we're all eating as Americans.
Copy !req
1784. - What is going on with that?
Copy !req
1785. - That's just a convenience.
Copy !req
1786. - Yeah, processed food, what is that?
Copy !req
1787. - Well, it's—
- I've heard of it.
Copy !req
1788. - It's got preservatives in it
Copy !req
1789. - Yeah.
- And a lot of salt.
Copy !req
1790. A lot of sodium.
Copy !req
1791. So, oftentimes a lot of
high fructose corn syrup.
Copy !req
1792. - And what does it do to you?
Copy !req
1793. - Causes diabetes.
Copy !req
1794. - Well, that's terrible.
- Hardening
Copy !req
1795. of the arteries.
Copy !req
1796. They're gonna amputate you're, uh, leg.
Copy !req
1797. - Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1798. Not always, sometimes you go blind.
Copy !req
1799. - Sometimes you go blind?
Copy !req
1800. - Yeah.
Copy !req
1801. - Sometimes both.
- Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1802. - And then
Copy !req
1803. at least you can't see
that you only have one leg.
Copy !req
1804. - You know what I like about this show?
Copy !req
1805. It's not afraid to take on the issues.
Copy !req
1806. Hard-hitting, with Norm Macdonald.
Copy !req
1807. - Do you eat well?
Copy !req
1808. - I try to.
Copy !req
1809. - You try your best.
Copy !req
1810. Do you eat whole grains?
Copy !req
1811. - Ah, well,
Copy !req
1812. I've tried to increase
the amount of fruits
Copy !req
1813. and vegetables I eat.
Copy !req
1814. - Fruits and vegetables.
- Fresh foods, yeah.
Copy !req
1815. Less processed foods.
Copy !req
1816. - You still slam back a few drinks?
Copy !req
1817. - Oh yeah.
Copy !req
1818. - Scotch.
Copy !req
1819. - I'll have scotch occasionally.
Copy !req
1820. - Bourbon.
Copy !req
1821. - Ah, I prefer scotch
to bourbon these days.
Copy !req
1822. - I thought you were a scotch man.
Copy !req
1823. - But, I'm more of a beer drinker.
Copy !req
1824. IPAs.
Copy !req
1825. - Oh, IPAs.
Copy !req
1826. What's that, international pale ales?
Copy !req
1827. - Ah, it's India pale ale.
Copy !req
1828. - India pale ales.
- Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
1829. - What do you like to drink?
Copy !req
1830. Other than fucking jizz?
Copy !req
1831. I mean, what do you,
Copy !req
1832. what alcohol do you like to drink?
Copy !req
1833. - Glenlivet.
Copy !req
1834. - Glenlivet.
- Scotch.
Copy !req
1835. - Yeah, that's a scotch.
- That's a scotch.
Copy !req
1836. - That's what he just said.
Copy !req
1837. - Yep.
Copy !req
1838. Inches.
Copy !req
1839. Scotch inches.
Copy !req
1840. - Oh.
- Oh.
Copy !req
1841. - That's the name of your band.
Copy !req
1842. - That's a good name.
Copy !req
1843. - Norm, is there anything
we didn't get to today?
Copy !req
1844. If you don't mind, I'd like to plug
Copy !req
1845. Big Slick in Kansas City,
Copy !req
1846. next weekend.
Copy !req
1847. That's the, let's see,
Copy !req
1848. the 20th and 21st, I believe.
Copy !req
1849. It's a charity for the
Children's Mercy Hospital
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1850. there in Kansas City.
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1851. You can donate online.
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1852. Go to Big Slick, they
have a CrowdRise campaign.
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1853. And donate under my name,
because we have a competition.
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1854. Myself, Paul Rudd,
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1855. Rob Riggle, Jason Sudeikis,
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1856. and Eric Stonestreet.
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1857. They're all from the Kansas City area.
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1858. And also, the National Kidney Foundation.
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1859. - Wait a minute, I put money into that.
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1860. - You did?
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1861. - Well I saw it on Twitter.
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1862. - You did, good.
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1863. - You put it on Twitter?
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1864. - Yeah.
- Yeah.
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1865. - Oh, @DavidKoechner.
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1866. Um also—
- Tell the people
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1867. what it's for.
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1868. - Oh, Children's Mercy Hospital.
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1869. In Kansas City.
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1870. It's a fundraiser, they do every year.
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1871. For the last five years.
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1872. This will be the fifth one.
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1873. And also, Komedy for Kidneys.
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1874. The 25th or 26th,
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1875. look it up.
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1876. I'll post it, on Twitter.
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1877. At the Laugh Factory.
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1878. - Awesome.
- With the great Bill Burr.
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1879. Will be doing some
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1880. comicals that night.
- Oh yes, Bill Burr.
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1881. - One of the best.
- Fantastic.
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1882. Oh, fantastic.
- Have you got
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1883. Bill Burr's show?
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1884. - No.
- You should
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1885. love Bill.
- But he's great, yes.
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1886. - He's the best.
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1887. - Funny, always funny.
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1888. Incapable of being unfunny.
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1889. - Yep, incredible.
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1890. - Now let me ask you this.
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1891. This is the question we
always ask everybody.
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1892. - Okay.
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1893. - And no one has yet disappointed us.
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1894. What is your favorite joke,
that you've ever heard?
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1895. - Oh,
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1896. there's two of 'em.
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1897. One is about a bear
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1898. in the woods, that keeps getting shot.
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1899. Do you know that one?
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1900. Am I supposed to tell the joke?
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1901. - Certainly.
- Oh boy, okay.
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1902. Alright.
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1903. There's a guy, a hunter, goes out
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1904. bear hunting, got a big rifle.
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1905. He's out there for a little while,
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1906. and he spots a bear,
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1907. and he gets in its sight.
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1908. Blam!
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1909. Bear goes down.
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1910. Guy goes running over hill and dale.
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1911. He's looking around, there's no bear.
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1912. And the bear gets, he feels these paws
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1913. on his shoulders.
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1914. The bear goes, "What the fuck
do you think you're doing?
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1915. "Coming in here, shootin' at me.
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1916. "I'm gonna teach you a lesson."
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1917. Then he
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1918. drops the hunter's trousers and he,
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1919. he rogers him rightly.
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1920. - Oh, how roundly.
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1921. - And, so the hunter was,
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1922. you know, quite embarrassed and then
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1923. he goes out and gets a bigger gun.
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1924. And he goes to the same area,
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1925. looking for that bear and he sees him.
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1926. Blam!
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1927. "I got him this time."
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1928. Bear goes down, he goes runnin',
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1929. lookin' for the bear.
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1930. Feels these paws on his shoulders.
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1931. He goes, "Un-fucking-believable.
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1932. "You come into my woods, again,
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1933. "And shoot at me.
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1934. "You know, I'm gonna
teach you another lesson."
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1935. So he drops the hunter's
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1936. trousers, and.
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1937. - Once again.
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1938. - Rogers him rightly.
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1939. - Yes.
- And roundly.
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1940. Next week, hunter comes
back with an elephant gun.
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1941. And like, "I'm gonna finish this bear.
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1942. "Once and for all."
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1943. He waits, it's cold now.
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1944. Sees the bear, blam!
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1945. He's sure he's got him now.
- He's got that bear.
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1946. - He's got that bear.
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1947. - I bet he does.
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1948. - He go lookin' for that bear,
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1949. no bear around.
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1950. He feels those bear
paws, on his shoulders,
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1951. and the bear says to the hunter,
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1952. "You don't come here
for the huntin', do ya?"
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1953. - He likes it.
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1954. We like that joke.
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1955. David Koechner,
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1956. has been with us the entire hour.
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1957. Good god, what a guy.
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