- 47 minutes ago
George Clooney and Adam Sandler have a chat over a cup of java at the Corinthia Hotel in London. The Jay Kelly co-stars talk through their first gigs and the “choking” pressure of auditioning—and Clooney’s tip of “auditioning like an athlete.”
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00Where do you want me Georgie? Oh, I don't want you anywhere man. You're going on that side because apparently that's your good side
00:05This is my good side, but it's not grey. I want you to look a little nicer
00:10How do you say you have three grey hairs and they're all on your shirt?
00:14Hi everybody
00:16Where did we first cross? George, the first time we ever had conversations was at SNL. Yeah, it was the baths is where we first crossed paths
00:33That was a little quiet. We didn't say nothing to each other. Nobody spoke. We both ignored
00:38What was that? We weren't even really facing each other
00:40And then no, it was SNL
00:44SNL you were hosting. It was if Farley was there then. Farley
00:50Spade, Schneider, we all loved you. You came in you were funnier than all of us. Yeah, we played basketball night
00:57Remember that was a Tuesday night you were commanding the court
01:01Well, you played better than all of us. Farley was
01:04Farley was
01:06Struggling to stay with you, but you he was a better basketball player than I thought
01:09Yes, yes, yes, I thought was coming in. He was actually pretty good. He and that wasn't his sport. He was football player and
01:16Kevin Nealon. Yes, waste of height
01:19But he can put in a layup you can put a layup a waste of height really come on
01:23He was a big boy, and I know you know what I saw some old footage Kevin was is on tour with me
01:28Oh, yeah, and he showed me some old footage of him. He was a college quarterback
01:33Oh, well that there you go
01:34And he was and he was taking hits and he would show me like three or four great passes and then him getting taken down
01:40He's like my guy Mike Joe Burrow getting taken down every five minutes
01:44So we met in in New York. This is like
01:481996 I would say yes, and then I always remember you I
01:53Was Lorne you and me got to go to a Knicks game together. That's right. We said we watched the game everybody
02:00Was staring at you there was a you you at that time
02:04Clooney was I was very famous then quite famous sure it was the start of the and and it's been a you know
02:11It's been a decline decline since but I stayed watching you as you sailed as I as I floated away
02:17I remember I was nervous about hosting the show because I'd never done Saturday Night Live before and I got there the week before and I wanted to see the
02:26Saturday night before uh-huh and the host was Deion Sanders and he was also his own musical that's right
02:32That's what he's saying like must be the money. Yes, right
02:34He hosted I remember and I told Lorne that I was nervous
02:37Yeah, and he said you'll be alright and I was like I'm nervous nervous about doing so I'm watching that show and Deion singing must be the money
02:43Yeah, and I walked up behind him as I was watching and Lorne standing like that watching I said, I'll be fine
02:49I remember both those shows buddy, and I remember you were very you were very calm your monologue was calm
02:57That was everything now. I have let's thank you
03:03I've done that's my mother
03:06What actors when they go on the show don't understand is that because you have to build sets for the routines and you do you work on more
03:14Routines than you actually air, uh-huh, so you probably have nine
03:18Bits and maybe you're going to use seven so they've got to build these sets and you're kind of throwing these pieces out
03:24They don't worry about the opening monologue at all because they don't have to build a set minute
03:28Yeah, and so but the only thing the actors who are coming on the show care about is the opening monologue
03:33That's because that's what you get judged. Yes. Yes, yes
03:35And so you see there's just panicked about like well. Yeah, what about this? That's you know?
03:40That's why you see guy stand-up comedians who host a show are the most confident at that spot. Yeah
03:45They like I got my eight-minute chunk
03:49When was the last time you hosted I only hosted one time maybe five years ago only one only once I
03:56It's scary. It's scary. Do you think that they are they're just mad at you and they're disgusted with me? No, they're always nice to me
04:02I just I was I had little bits
04:06I would do throughout the years like a weekend update or maybe a little partner skip but the only time I hosted was once and it is a
04:15before they introduce you and you're backstage and you're alone ladies and gentlemen, you are losing it right when you
04:24Is it different hosting than it was being a regular on the show?
04:28100% I didn't want to I liked
04:30Being on the show and maybe being in two skits maximum and that when you're in every skit your head is spinning and you're you get confused
04:39Well, there was also a funny thing that was happening was that this is at least at this point
04:44Kind of a lot of those skits would turn out to be movies a couple of skits you do so when you get there on
04:50I guess it's Monday on Monday for the table reading they start reading skits and each of them
04:56We're like trying to retrofit a skit that they thought might get become a movie that's true on to the actor
05:01So there was a lot of like trying to figure out what you were
05:06Best at doing for the host unit to host so it was really what was your best skit that night? Do you remember?
05:12I don't I actually don't remember the one I loved was we did one with Farley where
05:17We were at SeaWorld and we all just kept getting blasted so yes
05:20I was just because he's so funny. Yeah, he was so like oh, oh, that's right
05:26And I remember somebody was standing with a bucket. They're just
05:30Hitting him with water so when you started out. Yes, were you did you start out as a stand-up?
05:38The goal was just to be an actor, but I
05:41Think yes, and my first move was when I was very young 17
05:46I started stand-up and then and how how what's that mean? How do you do that? I I it was my brother
05:52Was going to boston university, and he told me about a stand-up club like an open mic
05:56I open mic night and he got me a number when I was a senior in high school and
06:00Went to town and did it and didn't do well
06:03But I got excited about it
06:04Did you before that were you considering being an actor was that a thought or not it wasn't really a thought until
06:11Until college applications and they it kept saying major and I would say to my brother
06:16What would it what should I measure? He goes you should be an actor that was kind of how really yeah
06:20Is that what you applied for I wrote wrote actor? I applied to nyu
06:27Carnegie Mellon and like four other schools and you got into a community college something
06:32I didn't get it daddy, but I went anyways
06:36No, nyu for some reason I got in there and and it was kind of pre
06:41Before nyu was the great school. Yeah now
06:44It's like so hard to get into but I think I was I just got it snuck it. They felt sorry for you. They felt bad
06:49They like never heard a guy with that much of a
06:53Unsure quality my first television gig was showtime at the apollo. Oh, you're kidding. No, I got that wasn't an acting gig
07:00Well, I was a stand-up. Oh, I was I was 18 got on there and that was a big deal
07:05They gave me a limousine to get there. I would like to see
07:08It was kind of rough. I think if you look it up, you'll see that it's it's a wasn't my smoke
07:14Yeah, how about you? Well, because well, but I mean I want to finish this for a second because
07:19The difference between being an actor being a stand-up is night and day right the the
07:23The both of them risk humiliation, right? That's why that's why people don't really do it
07:31And it's hard to succeed is because you know, you'd rather jump out of a foxhole than be humiliated
07:36Yes, but the risk for I always think of it as like actors and then singers and then stand-up comedians because
07:45With an actor you do a job and maybe they react maybe they don't if you do that's if it's theater if it's a movie
07:51You don't even see it for a year. Yeah
07:54As a singer you get a reaction pretty quickly obviously if you're in an audience that's true
07:58There's a stand-up. There's only one way this works
08:01Right either they laugh. Yeah, yeah, or they don't either you win or you lose there is no less blame and you less
08:08Ability to blame others. Yes, and you also have to be like well
08:11I was going for a dramatic turn and that's true, you know, and so that it seems to me that one to me
08:16Always takes more balls
08:19You know, I think the only thing I had going for me back then was how young I was and I didn't even understand when I did badly
08:28Oh, right
08:28I didn't even get it. I was just like I
08:31Think something was wrong with the audience that night. I did not ever take cool. Did you blame the audience?
08:36I blame the audience and I last the last person I blamed was myself sure
08:41Well, that should be the regular that that's how I enjoy that's how we live now
08:44Yeah, I believe in that because I think that's a I think blame anyone but yourself in general
08:50That's a how to how to survive a marriage
08:53Yes, blame anyone but yourself, right? How about you?
08:57George you your first gig
09:00first audition first kind of thing
09:03First I mean it was a very weird thing because I was I was a kid in kentucky and I had a an aunt who was well-known rosemary
09:10Clooney, and she had a couple of kids who were actors particularly her oldest son miguel
09:14Ferrer was a rare kid
09:17But I'd never met Jose Ferrer who was an oscar winner wow
09:21My aunt rosemary come to kentucky three or four times, so I only knew her a little bit
09:25Okay
09:26They were that they were the sort of hollywood family that I was always very
09:29Jealous of I felt like they were living such a
09:32Glamorous of course, you know my buddies with everybody. Oh, yeah
09:37Superstars tons of things with her singing with frank and
09:40Yeah, and my dad was an anchorman
09:43And before that he had the talk show called the nick clooney show in cincinnati, ohio little little market
09:48Yeah, and it was low budget place and so in the summers
09:52I would go and I'd be of you know, I'd be a
09:55First ad I'd like cue the cameras and suffer my dad at 11 years old. That's nice
09:59And I would even earlier than that I would play
10:03It was live television and so they do commercials
10:07On live tv so it'd be for husband's potato chips wow things like that and I would be I would end up having to do like if it was
10:15uh
10:16Easter they had an easter bunny outfit
10:19I was like nine years old my dad would put me in the easter bunny
10:22And he would interview me like you know yeah, so it's a big day easter bunny
10:26And I'd always have a cigar. Yeah, it's a big day for me, and you know, and then I was pretty cool
10:31St. Patrick's day, and I'm in a leprechaun outfit at 10
10:35And you played it as a straight guy
10:38Well, no, I had to like st. Patrick's day. I do that bad
10:41You know that each arms right you want to teach you 20 today, you know, that'll come back to haunt me
10:47um
10:47But it was but it wasn't acting it was just
10:51You know it was just being a kid yeah, I'm playing and really how it was making my money from the time. I was about
10:5913 till 18 was
11:02Uh cutting tobacco, you know, that's all right. It was like for three dollars an hour and then rosemary
11:09Uh, I'm sorry miguel my first cousin came to kentucky to do a horse racing movie
11:14Uh-huh, and uh, and I was uh, I was walking horses at uh, at river downs
11:21Which was a kind of an old beat-up racetrack, right in near cincinnati
11:25And they were going to go down to keelan which is a beautiful one in lexington
11:28And uh to show they were going to shoot and I and he and he got me a part as an extra
11:34Aha, which I and all of a sudden I'm on a set it was right. It was exciting
11:39Yeah, and he just goes you gotta come to california be an actor and I was like
11:44Okay, yeah, exactly. I got in my beat up, you know, monte carlo with rust all over it
11:49And I drove to california was it the next day that you did that
11:53I remember walking in to tell my mom and dad that I was leaving college and I was going to go to yeah, you know
11:59I was going to go to california be an actor and my dad was like you're an idiot and he was pissed
12:03Oh, he was pissed right because he wanted me to get an education and he wanted me to he also
12:09Knew how hard it was and he kept saying yes. I remember one point
12:13He said I don't think you have the smarts to be an actor now. You realize that's really not a prerequisite
12:19And then I then I uh, I mean I drove out there
12:23I stayed with rosemary for a couple of months and then she kicked me out
12:26And then I slept on the floor of a closet a buddy of mine and wrote a bicycle to auditions for about two years love that
12:31And then started to get some work and one of them and the first movie I got
12:38We talked about it was uh this thing called grizzly 2 in budapest with laura dern yeah, that's right
12:43She was 15 that's right and she's 20 and charlie sheen yeah
12:48And a bunch of other actors, you know and the movie never came out because it was really it's one it ended up being a scam
12:54You know it's these hungarian dudes, and they were just like we went to hungary while it was still a communist country
13:00And then it ran out of money. They couldn't fly us home. So charlie and laura and I were stuck in
13:06Budapest for like two months like doing nothing sure man, and then we finally got home and uh, and when we got home
13:13Charlie like got platoon
13:15Yeah, and laura was doing mask and all these you know
13:20She was doing all these cool and I got the facts of life
13:22Uh-huh, you know a little huge. I was thrilled. Yes. Yes. You know that have a
13:28That show was massive. Yeah, it was a big hit that should have been running a long time at that point now
13:33We just came on as the you know
13:36You you did you go out with somebody in it? No, not really?
13:39I think people think I did but I was just the next-door neighbor yeah, I gotcha
13:43It was a these kind of you were a little older than the girls on a couple years older they they spun
13:48I was like 22. Yeah, they spun me off not really spun me off
13:53But it was embassy television. It was owned by norman lear
13:56And I was doing a sitcom called
13:59er
14:00Sitcom right 10 years earlier with right with ellie gould and wow and moody and conchata feral
14:06I love music ace, but I don't listen to it when I'm supposed to be doing other things
14:11You're too hard on yourself doc
14:13And the show got cancelled after a year
14:16And then I went on to the fax a lot. That's so crazy, but I do remember back then when you got something
14:25It was forever your connection. You loved everybody on the show. They became such good friends of yours
14:31I remember people asking me how much money you get and I'd be like, I don't even know I didn't I didn't care
14:36I was just like I
14:38Can't believe I'm getting paid to do this that was so that wasn't that was one of those most amazing things was
14:44Because you would do it and had done it for free. Yeah, yeah, yeah
14:48And all of a sudden somebody gives you a check for twelve hundred bucks. Oh, that was you're like
14:52You couldn't believe oh my god
14:54I did a commercial when I was young. Oh, those were very holy cow was that that was a whole different thing because they went in
15:00Thirteen week intervals if you remember. Oh, yes, so you do a commercial renewing and they renew it
15:06Yeah, and if they renewed it you get I actually went in
15:10This will make you I went in I was so bad at auditioning for commercials. Oh, right
15:14Yeah, me that me too
15:15And I went in for a Doritos commercial and the casting director when you read the breakdown. Yeah
15:20It said this guy's young and hip and funny like
15:25Like ace on er on the sitcom er I was ace on the sitcom er wow
15:31And I went in to read and the guy goes okay. This guy's like young
15:34And I was like, I'm ace on er and he's like, okay, go with that guys
15:40And I auditioned and I didn't get it
15:44He didn't even get myself
15:46That's amazing
15:47That's how bad I was at the audition
15:49You would choke. I was a choker too, man
15:51Were you?
15:51I would get I would choke right when I walked into the waiting area and like in our movie and saw the other guys
15:58Auditioning they looked a little like we all kind of had a similar vibe, but yeah
16:03They had more confidence. I just failed right when I saw everyone else. I was like, oh, shit
16:07They're better than me, man. There's also that moment where
16:11When you test for a pilot because the pilots where you can make that's right
16:15Yeah, because that's a pilot for to be a regular in a series
16:18Uh-huh and you show up at the audition and there's five other guys testing
16:23Yes, the first thing they do is they put a contract in front of you
16:26Let's say you're gonna make seven thousand dollars a week on the show
16:29Yeah, but the contract will be for thirty five thousand dollars for the pilot, right?
16:34Uh-huh, that's right
16:35And it's sitting there and you have to sign it
16:37You have to make the deal before you go in and test
16:39Wow
16:40And there's five other guys are signed that same piece of paper
16:42Yeah, and you're sitting there going
16:45This is it's you're so
16:46Life-changing life-changing
16:48It's life-changing money and you know
16:50Ninety nine times out of a hundred you don't get it
16:52Oh, yeah, man, I got a pilot one time
16:56I didn't even know what it meant
16:57I was on a pilot it was called the marshall chronicles
17:00Oh, I remember the marshall chronicles
17:02Excuse me, is this asset to review class?
17:05Yeah
17:07Do I sit anywhere or what am I in?
17:09Usher?
17:11It was it was um uh I remember Joe Bologna's son was on it and uh
17:18I got it told all my friends I got I'm on a tv show
17:23And I didn't understand what a pilot meant
17:25I didn't know about things getting picked up
17:27And I just remember every time I go home
17:29They'd be like
17:30When it was that
17:31When are we gonna see that?
17:32I'd be like, I don't know
17:33I don't know but it's on
17:34I did it
17:34They're out
17:35Are you sure you did it?
17:36It's like 100% man
17:37There's some website now that'll show pilots that didn't get picked up
17:41Oh, I see
17:42Because I did 13 pilots
17:44You did
17:45Yeah, I did pilot after pilot after
17:46So you were good, you got good at auditioning
17:48Later on I got better at auditioning
17:50Yeah
17:50Well, you know what happened?
17:51I'll tell you a funny thing
17:52I was bad at auditioning and fear
17:55Yeah
17:55Would be my reason
17:56I'd get in and I just
17:57My chest would tie in
17:58Same thing, yes
18:00And I wasn't getting anything
18:01And then I kind of went back to
18:03I said, you know
18:03If you boil everything down
18:05I'm a jock
18:06I'm an athlete
18:08And I needed to think of it as like an athlete
18:10Because when I first started playing ball, baseball
18:14You'd get up the plate and you'd be like
18:15I just want to hit the ball
18:16I just want to touch the ball
18:18Don't make me look like an ass
18:20And then after a year or two of
18:22Learned getting a little more skill
18:23And a lot more confidence
18:24Then you'd be like
18:25Do I want to go to left field?
18:26Do I want to go to right field?
18:27Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah
18:28Do I want to get that way?
18:28Do I want to pull it?
18:30And most of that
18:31A little bit of skill
18:32But a lot of it was confidence
18:34That's right
18:34And so I had to readjust the way I thought of auditioning
18:40Like an athlete
18:41That's great
18:42And just go, okay
18:42Now it's not, you know
18:44I hope they like me
18:45Or I hope I'm going to get the job
18:46It's just going to be like, you know
18:47They'd be lucky if they had me
18:49That's amazing
18:50And it changed everything for me
18:52That's not easy to do, man
18:54Well, because you start to realize that
18:57Now that I've directed a bunch of films
18:59You know, every time an actor comes in
19:01You're praying they're there to answer your question
19:03You can go home
19:04That's true
19:05But when you're an actor walking in
19:06You're just like
19:07I'm going to fail, yeah
19:08They're going to hate me
19:09Yes, yes, yes
19:11That same thing with stand-up
19:13Was the confidence
19:15If I went on stage and I went
19:17These are good jokes
19:19I'm going to say
19:20The crowd is there to have a good time
19:21Let me do it with them
19:23And then it went well
19:24When I walked in with these people
19:26Going to not like me
19:27They owned me immediately
19:29They saw that in your eyes
19:30And then you had a bad, bad night
19:32Really?
19:33Because, you know
19:33I remember seeing certain stand-ups
19:37When I was really young
19:38Yeah
19:39And there would be a couple that could come out
19:40And just stand there
19:42Unbelievable, yes
19:43And you're laughing
19:43Yes, yes
19:44It's like you're ahead of them
19:46Of course
19:46And you're in on their inside joke
19:48And that was
19:48I remember thinking
19:49That must be the greatest feeling in the world
19:51Yes, yes
19:52Especially for a comedian
19:55When you get hired
19:56You have to do a certain amount of time
19:58And a guy who can just get on stage
19:59Or a woman who can get on stage
20:00And do nothing and kill
20:02Not only are they killing
20:04But the time's taken away
20:05They feel so happy
20:07They're like, all right
20:07That was four minutes
20:08I didn't say anything
20:09Oh, so you have to eat up a certain amount of time
20:11You gotta, if you get booked for either 20, 45, an hour
20:16That's on
20:16The people who booked you
20:17They are thinking about that
20:19The first time you worked with Noah was on what?
20:24Meyerowitz
20:25Meyerowitz
20:26I met Noah years ago
20:28And I loved his movies
20:30Like, you know
20:31I saw The Squid and the Whale
20:33And I was blown away by that one
20:34Was that the first movie you saw of his?
20:37I think so
20:37It was for me
20:38It was, right
20:39Kicking and screaming, I remember
20:41Mm-hmm
20:42The Francis file later
20:43Yeah, oh yeah
20:45His stuff was
20:47Ridiculous
20:47I loved it
20:48And all the stuff Stiller did with him
20:49One day, Stiller, like five years ago
20:52Said, let's get lunch
20:53And so the three of us sat down
20:55And then
20:55That's what Meyerowitz
20:56And then
20:58He did a few others in between
21:01He kept it going
21:02And then he called me about doing this one with you
21:04And sent it to me
21:06And I got excited
21:08That was, you know, funny when we were doing
21:11When we were doing Jay Kelly
21:12There's a scene where
21:13You and I
21:14And Giovanni
21:16Yes
21:16Have to run about
21:17Like 300 yards
21:19More than 200 yards
21:21Yeah
21:21Full tilt
21:22Yes
21:22Across the field
21:24You started us off by going too fast every time
21:27Well, but the silly part was
21:29He goes, I need you to go fast
21:30I'm like, okay
21:31So we start running, you know
21:32And because Noah's a guy who really does do like 30 takes
21:36After like 10 of those running
21:38Oh, yeah
21:39I was like, you know, I'm 64 years old
21:41That's right
21:41I can't run full tilt
21:42All of us
21:43Giovanni went down hard
21:45Take one
21:46Take one
21:46Yeah
21:47He went down
21:47And then had to run a few more times
21:49After with a slight limp
21:50And then
21:51And then finally he came to me and he said
21:54Now I'm tired now
21:55You know
21:55It's like take 12
21:56And I'm like, beat
21:57And he's like
21:59I said, what are you not getting?
22:01What do you need?
22:02And he goes, I need you to run faster
22:05And I was like, okay
22:06And the shot was like this high on me
22:08That's funny
22:09And so I'm running as fast as I can, you know
22:12Yeah
22:12And so all I did was I just started pumping my arms faster
22:15So I just started going like this with my arms faster
22:18And he came back and goes, that was so much faster
22:21Yeah
22:21My legs are still like
22:24Yeah, we were sore the next day if I remember
22:27Yeah, a little bit
22:28That was a good one
22:29That was when me and you were sitting between takes
22:31And on the railroad tracks
22:34And whipping rocks
22:35Throwing rocks
22:35What were you trying to hit?
22:37I think this is a guy thing
22:39Yeah
22:39That like
22:40Anytime you can throw rocks at an object
22:42Like we'd set a can up
22:44Yes, yes
22:45And then we'd just start chucking it
22:46That was exciting
22:47That was more exciting
22:48Oh, do you know what we were doing?
22:49Yeah
22:50We were throwing things in the air
22:52Oh, that's right
22:53And trying to pick them out of the air
22:54That's right
22:54Somebody would throw a rock up high
22:56And try to hit the other rock
22:57Yeah, that was
22:58That actually was a skill
22:59That's what we were doing
23:00But we also had basketball almost every day
23:02Yes, we shot around right in front of our two trailers
23:05We played hoop
23:06We just, we enjoyed a baseball catch here and there
23:11There was a little baseball catch with even Noah's kid
23:14I haven't played baseball in a while
23:16That was the, that was my favorite sport growing up
23:18And us having a catch was traumatic
23:21You brought two gloves
23:22You hooked that up for us
23:23I went, it's funny
23:24So I just did the speaking gig in Cincinnati, Ohio
23:29And back in the day I had a couple of tryouts for the Cincinnati Reds
23:33And so I was in Cincinnati a couple, three weeks ago
23:36And the owner of the Reds was there
23:38Uh-huh
23:38And he came out
23:39And first he comes out
23:41And he found my 1978 scouting report
23:45Which is the funniest thing you've ever heard
23:47It was like it said
23:48Fast
23:48He's a decent fielder, he's got decent speed
23:50He's got a shit arm
23:52Oh really?
23:53Yeah
23:53But you had a good arm
23:54I was 16
23:54I mean, at that point
23:56You know, you're not throwing like you did later
23:58But you have a gun on you
24:00And I do
24:00And you're fast as shit
24:01Well, but
24:02Compared to those guys I wasn't
24:04Oh yeah
24:04But I thought I was
24:05You know, I thought I was
24:06Right, right, right
24:06I had a hat
24:07I thought I looked at the part
24:09But then he goes
24:09And then he stands up and he says
24:11But since you didn't make it
24:13And he gave me a one day contract
24:15With the Reds
24:16Oh, that's pretty bad
24:17And then we got into the playoffs
24:19For the first time
24:19So I feel as if
24:20You did it for all of Ohio
24:23Perhaps I may have really
24:24For Chrissy Hynde
24:26You did it for the pretenders
24:27I did for the pretenders
24:28Yeah
24:28Yeah, that's true
24:29What else can we talk about?
24:31Do you remember
24:31When you got your baseball hat
24:34Growing up
24:34My father used to say
24:37Stay with the flat brim
24:38And I'd say
24:39But no, you gotta bend it
24:40No, you bend it
24:41You bend it
24:41I would fold mine over
24:42Yes
24:43Put like a crease in the top
24:45Yeah
24:45And sometimes you put little creases on the side
24:47On the side
24:47Kind of like rounded
24:48Kind of hooked you in
24:50Yes
24:50Kept the sun out of your head
24:51I thought I was looking good
24:53My father always said
24:54What are you doing to your hat, man?
24:56Really?
24:57Keep it flat
24:58Oh, no
24:58He'd say like
25:00The old Brooklyn Dodgers
25:01Used to keep it flat
25:02So he'd get mad at me for that one
25:04Really?
25:04Well, it was funny
25:05Because when I was growing up
25:07The worst thing you could have
25:08Is like
25:08Clean, white, brand new tennis shoes
25:11Oh, that's right
25:11So the minute you got them
25:13You'd take them out
25:13And rub them in the dirt
25:14Exactly
25:14And your mother would yell at you
25:15Yeah, yeah
25:16And nowadays it's just the opposite
25:18And we're cutting there
25:19You guys
25:20Oh
25:21You pulled this so hard
25:22Good
25:23That was nice, George
25:24Maybe our best thing we've ever done in our life
25:26Better than the movie
25:27Oh, maybe even better than like
25:29Even saving people
25:31Like the woman you pulled out of the bus
25:33That was on fire
25:33Yeah
25:34This is better than that
25:35Thank you
25:35Yeah
25:36I guess I'll see you there
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