00:00Carlin did 16 albums, I'm on my 11th, and so I want to beat Carlin.
00:06I'll never beat Carlin in the sense of Carlin, but I, yeah.
00:08Was he part of your, because I love the Apatow, the HBO documentary on Carlin was terrific,
00:14and he had that epiphany where he said, I got to do, I have to do me, I have to
00:20be more
00:20substantive, and they have a great clip of Bill Burr talking about he and his friend
00:26were going to go sort of make fun of Carlin, and then they're like, what did we just watch?
00:31Did you have one of those epiphany moments as well?
00:34Yeah, but I, you know, it's funny, I remember back, not to remember, I remember seeing the
00:39old clips of him, like on an Ed Sullivan show, and he was just really goofy, and then when
00:44I was 12, when I was 12 years old, I loved comedy, I wanted to be a comic since I
00:47was
00:47five, I would sneak out while my dad was drunk on the couch, and I would watch Carson, because
00:52you'd like, you'd fall asleep with, and I would watch the comic, so what happened was
00:56I was 12, and I was coming home from, I was walking home from junior high, and I went to
01:00the library, our local library had two albums, they had Richard Pryor, that N-Word's Crazy,
01:04and they had Toledo Window Box by George Carlin, and they let me check them out, and I was
01:0912, and I'd get home, and I'm playing Richard Pryor, I've got my little, like, my little
01:1545 complete, and I'm listening to Richard, and my dad bangs the door open, and he just
01:20goes, what the hell are you listening to, and I go, it's Richard Pryor, who the hell
01:23gave you a Richard Pryor album, and he's mad, and I go, then let me check it out at the
01:27library, and he takes a long pause, and he goes, okay, like another adult had approved
01:33it.
Comments