Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Tom Segura. Tom Segura is a renowned comedian, writer, and director. During today's episode, we explore the neuroscience and psychology behind comedy, and we explore the creative process more generally. Tom shares his approach to capturing and developing ideas into narratives that are at once funny and thought-provoking.
We discuss the interplay between daily life observations and larger cultural dynamics when developing comedy routines. We spend a fair bit of time discussing the neurobiological basis of humor and what data and brain lesion patients have taught us about why we find certain ideas novel, funny, or exciting. We also talk about how this relates to the activation reward circuits in the brain and the seemingly automatic way that things are either funny or not funny to people.
suggesting that humor is like taste or smell. You really can't negotiate what works for you or what doesn't. We also discuss emotional contagion and how skilled performers like Tom become masters at reading, shifting, and dancing with the collective energy of crowds, whether in small comedy clubs or large arena shows. So if you're creative or you're curious about human psychology, or if you simply love to laugh, you'll come away from today's episode having learned a ton of useful information about the creative process and human nature.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero-cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, this episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Tom Segura. Tom Segura, welcome. Thanks for having me, cuz. We'll let...
People know who don't already know. Yes, we are related. Yes, we are related. People have asked me so many times the details. And I, you know, I was trying to like, because I learned about it, obviously, later that it was like my mom's great grandmother and your father's great grandmother were first cousins. They're both Basque, so northern Spain cousins. And then, you know, generations later.
Later, they moved to South America, yours to Argentina, mine to Peru, and that's how we're cousins. Yeah. I guess distant cousins. And my dad was on the podcast a little while ago. How did that go? Because I remember we talked about him coming on. It was great. I mean, he's a theoretical physicist by training, so we got to talk about physics, but we also got to talk about life, and I learned a lot from him. Did you? I learned a lot about him that I didn't know before. In that podcast? Yeah. Really? Yeah. I'll send it to you if you're ever suffering from insomnia.
I would love to listen to it. He's a theoretical. I didn't even know that. Yeah. Theoristic chaos theory. And now he's into quantum internet. Yeah. Jesus Christ. Where does he reside now? Northern California. Still working. Wow. Yeah. 81. Still working. Look at our different sides of the, your, your dad is a theoretical physicist and my mom plays bridge. Yeah. But you, but you can make a half, half court shot.
I saw the clip of you in Lethal Shooter. We'll put a link to it. Okay. Yeah. I mean, you're an excellent basketball player. I'm not. High level. Very high level. Did you play ball growing up at all? No, foot sports. Are you skateboarding? Foot sports. Soccer, skateboarding. I'm pretty coordinated with my feet. Well, the kid has been...
Argentine. You got to give it a shot. Yeah. Every kid where I grew up played soccer. Really? Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Obsessed. Were you good at soccer? I was all right. I played goalie. I like playing goalie or fullback. I like to wait back there and just stick people. That was fun. Maybe you should get into lacrosse or something. No, I like running. I ran cross country my senior year. You ran cross country? I did. Yeah. I was a little lighter than I am now. I'm like 210 now. It's probably 160, 170. Okay. Yeah. Like two mile races were okay.
I just did a 5K. Oh, yeah? Two days ago, yeah. How'd that go? I hated that I knew I had to do it. And so I just made myself, I was like, you know, you got to do it. It's going to suck. You trained for it. Well, the training for me is like just get in a bunch of three-mile runs, right? So, I mean, I would do them purposely at like,
a slow pace like try to stay as close to zone two cardio as possible just to get like used to the mileage and then we get there because it was it was our 5k like it was I put it on with Bert and Spartan Race and like it was a huge did a 5k
shirt off the whole thing of course what are you crazy weight vest weight belly i mean sorry bro dude yeah he was uh we give him a hard time because we're still trying to get bird to quit drinking or reduce his drinking i think he's reduced his drinking a little bit no okay
So, yeah, we did one last year in Pasadena. We did the Rose Bowl. And so this time we did Raymond James in Tampa. It was the Two Bears 5K. We had more than three times people sign up this year for Tampa. So we had close to 8,000 people there. And Jelly Roll came out, Jason Kelsey,
Tristan Wirth, like a bunch of, you know, John Feliciano, like all these football players and fun. And it was a very fun day, a very fun event. But here's the thing. Like the Rose Bowl, the path was like basically through the parking lot and then on these side roads in Pasadena. And, you know, they loop it out and then you cross back basically across this parking lot and you hit the 3.1. Yeah.
At Raymond James, I didn't know. They were like, oh, there's some inclines. I'm like, yeah, all right. Did we get there? It's all in the stadium. And the only way you're running 3.1 miles in a stadium is we're running through the corridors and then up the ramp. Well, the ramp is nine stories up. I mean, you're literally— One long incline. Bro, so you're doing like a quarter mile up, and then it would flatten out. Then you go down, you're like, oh, this is nice, and then you go up again. Yeah.
So, but I was just, I think when you're also running with people, you kind of get tunnel vision. Yeah. And it, you know, you see somebody, you're like, that person's ahead of me. Like this pig is in front of me right now. Are you competitive by nature? Yeah, I think so. And so like, I would, you know, like I definitely was like, I have to beat Bert. I have to beat John, my friend Feliciano. I was like, I have to beat these guys. They're both like, you know, fuck.
Fucking 300 pounds. I'm definitely beating them. And so that was just like in my head every time I would see, like think of them, I was like, you just have to keep going. And then Bert got beat by a guy in a wheelchair. So that was also kind of sweet because I beat both of them. Jerry, what's up? Shout out to Jerry. I think he had a little advantage because those wheels on the way down definitely pick up some speed. But on the way up, it's pretty, pretty bad.
You know, but but yeah, so like getting in those miles like was the just like the training for it. And it was it was a whole thing. And I don't like running like it's not you know, there's some things you like if you were like, let's go work out. Let's go live. I enjoy that. I don't enjoy running. But I guess that's the best. You like running. I love working out with weights. I've been doing that since I was 16. But I love running. You love running. Running three times a week, a long run, a medium run and a short run. What's a long run? An hour, hour and a half.
Long and slow every Sunday. And then in the middle of the week, a 30 minute run faster. And then one day a week, I do that kind of max heart rate VO two thing where I would go warm up, sprint, walk, sprint, walk, sprint, walk. Sometimes on the airdyne bike, but usually running. Yeah. I love running. In fact, I mostly lift so that my body doesn't hurt when I run.
I like being strong in the gym. Wait, have you always been into this? Yeah, since I was about 16, I started running. I had no idea. I just found I could just go and go. Probably have a lot of slow twitch muscle. And I'm reasonably strong, but I mean, if I train just for endurance, like if I...
start doing two long runs per week, I just feel like I can just go forever. Really? Yeah. It's probably just a genetic bias. What do you cover in that 60 to 90 minute run? Depends on how in condition I am. But, you know, you were talking about hills when I lived in the Bay Area. I used to do this run behind the Berkeley campus, the Strawberry Canyon Trail. And that's all
basically winding up, winding up until you take the long cruise down. I would do that with a weight vest. If I go from there out to Austin and on a Sunday, and then, then I can cover a lot of distance in a 60 minute run. But if I just train on the flat and you get kind of used to just kind of going long and slow. Yeah. So I don't know the exact distance, but it was not unusual when I was in graduate school to head out on a Sunday morning, um, just hydrated caffeine and do 10, 12 miles. Wow. But now it's probably more like
six, eight. Okay. Six to eight. But also with a weighted vest? Sometimes with a, I use a vest. They're not a sponsor, which it's fun to always mention things that aren't a sponsor too, because I love this weight vest. It's called an Amorfo and it fits pretty snug. It's not like one of these ones that looks like you're a suicide bomber or a cop or something. Yeah. Um,
it sits really close to the body it zips up um and it's got these like heavy ball bearings in it so it's only about 10 to 12 pounds yeah so it's not like a super heavy weight vest right but it's enough that when you take that weight vest off on a separate run you feel like a god i will say that like as much as i say i hate right the the fact that i made myself keep doing i was doing like daily runs almost like five days a week just of like getting used to the to the mileage
You know, obviously it becomes easier and then you kind of go like, OK, I can do this. But yeah, I think I get I get a lot of like mental anxiety about the running. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, Maui Nui Venison. Maui Nui Venison is the most nutrient dense and delicious red meat available. It's also ethically sourced.
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So that you, I don't know, do you get ideas while you run? Do you get ideas after you run more readily? Or are you just cursing the thing the whole time? I feel like it's a goal to let my mind drift. Because sometimes the negative side of it is like you're doing a run and your mind is like, this sucks. Right? And you're thinking about how much time is left. And that doesn't produce anything. And it's not an enjoyable thing. But like if the mind goes, if you can let your mind drift, right?
It's less about ideas. I feel like in those moments, you're kind of just...
you're off thinking about more like life, not like create creative thoughts, more like, you know, people and relationships and different. And like, that's kind of a nice place to be because then all of a sudden you're like, oh, you know, a couple of miles just went by. Yeah. There's something to be said for these states of wordlessness where you're not constructing things in complete sentences and there's no sensory input, like through a phone or through even, I do listen to podcasts or books when I run sometimes in the long run, but there's this idea that a
A lot of learning and creativity is about purging all the noise. And I find that those long runs, they just kind of come out of them just feeling like a bunch of clutter just got cleared. Yeah. More than I had some like insight during the run itself. Yeah. Incidentally, 90% of the effect of exercise on improving brain function when it comes to long, slow distance work.
is that it raises your level of alertness and arousal so you can do really great work afterwards. Yeah. High-intensity stuff has a bunch of other effects, brain-derived nootrophic factor, et cetera. But when you see, like, exercise improves brain function, exercise makes you smarter, most of that is by way of how exercise increases your level of alertness and kind of puts you in that nice state, like, oh, now I can sit down and focus. Yeah. My busiest days, like, sometimes I have, you know, a very busy day. If I...
start that day with a hard workout, I end up having no problem tackling that day. Isn't that wild? It is wild because like sometimes like I'll have a day where, you know, I have to arrive at my studio, let's say at 10 a.m. for something. And so and it's just like it's going to be
recordings, meetings, pitch meeting, you know, and then leave here, go to this thing. Like it's going to be the entire day. And if I get myself to the gym and I get in like a good hour lift, I come in and like, I'll notice everyone's like,
You look like you're in a good mood. And I'm like, yeah, feel great. And then I'm ready for the day. But if I don't do that, it's a different experience. Yeah, this is one of the real hidden secrets of exercise that I'm trying to make less hidden and less of a secret that Jocko clearly understands with his 4.30 a.m. wake-ups and workouts that you're describing now is that
I won't go into too much detail here because I want to ask you questions, but there's this phenomenon where when you move the large musculature of the body, so a resistance training workout, a run, probably any workout where you're doing some big movements or you're working hard in that workout, it triggers the release of adrenaline.
at levels that wake up your body, make it more willing to move. So people who don't have energy to exercise, exercise gives your body energy by way of adrenaline. And then that adrenaline acts on this nerve called the vagus nerve, which communicates to the areas of your brain that release dopamine and something called norepinephrine. It basically wakes your brain up also. So that morning workout that you're describing wakes up your brain and body
for something like six hours by changing the neurochemical state of your body and your brain. And so it's not a surprise that when you work out before a long day, that long day goes better. Yeah. Whereas if you...
hit the work of the day, you know, kind of fresh, you're generating the adrenaline drink from all that stuff. This is when people feel a bit more anxious, they feel a bit more irritable, they feel a bit more tired. So this whole concept of exercise gives you energy, that's how it gives you energy. It's not caloric energy. You still need to fuel, et cetera, but you're talking about neurochemical energy. It fundamentally changes the way you show up to everything else. The way that I always feel like is, you know, a lot of times when you wake up
you have what I would describe as like a fog. Oh good, it's not just me. So like that fog...
Sometimes, you know, you can, you carry it. Like it just, it's in the day and you're just kind of like, oh, there's this. But I always feel like that exercise just completely wipes it out. You know, where you're like, oh, like I'm actually alert now. And I don't feel that post wake up, just fog that sits there. That's my favorite thing to knock out. I love that. I've got this crazy thing that I do now. You can try this. I bought a 70 pound kettlebell. It's about a third of my body weight. And.
And I have it set in the hallway. So when I get up, because I wake up really groggy, really foggy, I grab that thing and I suitcase carry it to the end and back twice. And then I switch hands and I suitcase carry it back to the end and back twice. Just trying to like teach my body that it can do work right away. And I'm careful how I do it. But I find that now I wake up and I've got like, I think my body's anticipating that carry. Yeah.
And so I'm more alert from go. And I was like, ah, this is, there's something. Because your nervous system learns to anticipate things, right? Yeah, yeah. Because that phenomenon of setting your alarm clock for 7 a.m., you wake up at 6.59. Yes. What happened? Like, your brain is clocking things in your sleep. Dude, that has happened to me so many times. And I always feel like that's such a bizarre, like, also for, like, I'm not a big napper. Sometimes I'll be like, I'm going to lay down. Like, I have an hour window before I have to go do something in a hotel. Like, I'm on the road.
and i'll be like well just in case i fall asleep i'll set the alarm and i'll lay there eyes closed and i'll look as it's one minute before your brain's clocking it a couple of years ago where when people are in rapid eye movement sleep you're basically paralyzed the brain is very very active that's the phenomenon of rapid eye movement sleep it's a very bizarre brain state brain is super active body paralyzed but people can blink and they can um show some little like facial responses
If you ask them to do simple math problems during rapid eye movement sleep, you say, hey, what's two plus two? They'll, you know, blink with your, you know, wink with your right eye if it's
four, wink with your other eye if it's five. People can do math correctly in their sleep. They can answer not sophisticated questions, but the brain is tracking what's happening all around you. This is why taking the phone and putting it outside the room while you sleep, people sleep better. People say, oh, it's because of the EMFs. Nobody really knows for sure, but it's because your brain is anticipating picking up the phone even while you're sleeping. Wow. So there's, I'm hitting with a lot of data here, but it's
well known now that if you give students a test,
and their phone is in their bag in the room, they perform less well than if their phone is in their bag in another room. Seriously. This is true for adults too. Your brain is tracking sort of potential movements, potential thoughts, potential actions. Like the way brain circuits work is to create sort of dominoes of circuit sequences. So when you're up, for instance, you've gone on stage so many times to do comedy. Yeah. As you walk out, your brain is queuing up a whole library of things related to that without you realizing it. Yeah, yeah. It's all context-dependent behavior.
And when you get home, it's a different set of context-dependent behavior. So your brain is sort of like a magic library. I always think of this like as you get to a particular idea or thought or emotional state, the books change right in front of you to kind of match the set of things that you expect. So if your phone is in the room, your brain is operating that way even if you're asleep. That's –
Yeah. What's your writing process? Let's talk about comedy. That's I've been, I've got about a gazillion questions. I'm going to try and make them really succinct. What, what is your typical process of capturing you call them bits, right? Yeah. For standup. It's a bit. Yeah. What's your typical process of capturing ideas? Like do you, do you voice memo into the phone? Do you write things down? I've done pretty much every, every version of it. Voice notes, um,
Well, hi. Sometimes you listen to them later and you're like, holy shit. Are you a cannabis user? I mean, sometimes. I'm not like a heavy user. But a lot of times at night, if you take something and you go to sleep, you're trying to go to sleep, your brain's like, nah, I got ideas. Is that right? Oh, yeah. I haven't done cannabis since a long time ago. Oh.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. And then sometimes you listen because you're convinced. You're like, this is one of the most brilliant ideas. Have you ever had great ideas that stick? Yeah, I've had good ones that stick. Sometimes the wording's a little off, but yeah, I've had ones that I actually do enjoy afterwards. And then sometimes you're like, this is – you can hear yourself smiling. Like, you know, because you can tell someone's emotion. Mm-hmm.
So I can hear that I'm like, dude, then. Oh, because you're recording into that voice memo. I'm recording into my phone. So let me get the process. So you're heading up to sleep and you take an edible. Yeah. This is comedy school 101. Yeah, yeah. Hey, listen, you're the pro. And you go to voice memos. You're there, eyes closed, and you start riffing on something. Yeah, it's like you're – it feels like it's separate from you, right? Because like the right kind of, I guess, dosage –
of THC, it does make your mind run. And sometimes you can, you, you have less self-awareness. It's just like, right. Like the, the way I, the nice way to think about it is that your brain always puts things on a shelf for you to get through your day. Like things that make you uncomfortable even, right? Like there's things that you go like, I don't want to think about that. And then THC is,
I think in the right dosage just goes, here it is. Like it puts it in front of you. Sounds terrible. It can be terrible. Sounds awful. That can be like often what like too much is where you can get into like paranoia. But I think if you have a dosage that is not too strong, so it's not like uncomfortable,
It just lets the mind run. It's like stream of consciousness happens. And so when that's happening, I feel like you go, oh, this is a – it feels like a new thought or a new perspective on something. And you go, this is – it makes you laugh. You say, oh, this is an idea. I should take this on stage. Because I think for me a lot of the thing is here's the kernel of the idea.
And then it's not so much I'm going to write out long form how to do it. It's like, that's the idea. Take it on stage. So you don't actually write things out full form? No, I don't write them out full form. And then I just go on stage with the kernel of the idea that I kind of have a blueprint of like, well, here's what I'm sort of going to try to attack and then see what happens as I speak it. Because the other way that I like my favorite way to write
comedy for stand-up is through conversations. In other words, we're talking and I say something and I either go like, oh, I should say that on stage or I just find that I'm naturally riffing on it and like making you laugh and then I go, I should try that on stage because everything is like
It's either it's funny here. Is it funny there? That's kind of like how your mind operates, right? Like I, this is funny in this context. Is it funny in the performing context? But when you're trying new material, you're not doing that for a Netflix special. You're doing that. And it's the term working out. Like you go to, you work, go to the comedy club on a Tuesday night and you're, you're working on it, trying new material, seeing how it lands. You've never, uh, is what you're saying that you've never actually, um,
built out the bit you're building it out in real time in real time yeah yeah yeah whoa is that typical of I think there's like there's different you know camps of it right like also there's different so many different stand up is so popular that there's all these different styles and and like you know there's like set up punch guys like
what you would call almost like pure joke writers. Sam Murill, Dave Attell, Mark Norman. Those guys, I feel like, they do a lot of like, here is a... It's the economy of words. It's like clear premise set up and then boom, punchline. So it would be like, I'm thinking about Norman, right? I won't try and do one of his jokes, but I like Norman's comedy skateboarder too. Same non-biological first family. So he...
I've heard him do things like, so my wife and I were on vacation recently, this kind of thing. Like a setup where it's very clear. I mean, he clearly knows where he's going with this. Yeah. We're on vacation and we're picking out rooms. And then at some point there's a punchline pivot. Right. Okay. So there's like some of those are, especially when you feel like they're quite short, if it's like over quickly, that's going to a lot of times be something that you knew already.
I'm going to say it exactly like this. It's like the most traditional form of a joke. Here's the setup. Here's the punchline. And like, I've written jokes like that in standup, but I do a lot more, you know, long form, I think, like storytelling stuff. And so, you know, to write that all out, I feel like you almost...
You almost get in your own way because you're just like, because then what happens is what you write and what you say, it's never quite the same. So you kind of go through what you think is funny about what happened and then you take that on stage and then
You take that on stage and maybe in a room with like 80 or 100 people. And then, you know, that's the nice thing about stand up is you learn right away if that shit is funny or not. Like people are laughing hard and you're like, and that's what's such a rush because you go, this was an idea. This thing happened. You try it. It works. It's like it's a really euphoric feeling. And then if it doesn't, you know, that's when like kind of the...
I guess like the, the real work of it comes in. Cause then you're trying to figure out, you're like, especially if you're like married to the idea, if you're like, this is funny, but it didn't work. So then you start thinking about, did I, is there not enough information for it to work? Is that the problem? Is there too much? Cause we always say like trim the fat. Like,
Like if you have too much stuff in there that is not getting laughs, it's like maybe just omit some of this information, right? So that becomes like, okay, I'll go back. And instead of saying this is like useless information, it's not adding to what's funny or whatever. It's not adding to the story I'm telling. You start dropping that. And so you start experimenting. And then sometimes you just get into like, okay, is the actual line that I'm saying
the problem is it is it that that's not a good enough joke line and then you start experimenting with that and then sometimes you figure it out which is again like such an amazing feeling where you go this used to not work and now it works and then sometimes you just got to go fuck man it's just doesn't work you just have to abandon it yeah if something works or you feel like it's uh
beginning it's the start of a thread that could work do you end up writing it down for later like like you're cuing yourself like uh you know the walk with my son bit or something like that or it's just or it's all in your head uh well you kind of have it all in your head and then i was gonna show you like i have this that's i'll look at this like before i go on stage right which is like
Tom's showing, we can get a photo of this if he lets us. It's a bunch of Sharpie written single words. Gitmo, jail, teacher, duck, Huberman, just kidding. Augusta, kill my wife. Hitler, Tunisia, make shit. This is amazing. Yeah, that's a set list.
for an hour. If you think about the range of things in this relatively short list, as a partial representation of what goes on in Tom Segura's brain, you get a little... Well, what's interesting is another way I think comedians would look at it is you kind of start to go, these are 15-minute chunks. So when you do an hour, a lot of comics think of it as four 15-minute chunks, right? So you go like...
Okay, this is kind of like setting the table chunk. This is like a kid's family chunk. This is, you know, commentary on social issues or like things that I'm doing or consuming. And then your last chunk is like, I always feel like you want to get into like your, some of your more, yeah.
I don't know, wilder takes, like after the audience has gotten to know you and like trusts you, they're like, okay, is that way you can kind of like push it more the further into their set you are. Yeah. So you just kind of break it down. Yeah, very different, but I've done some lives and I have a, you know, four things I'm going to cover and then, but I don't know how I'm going to cover them. Jordan Peterson, when he goes out for his lives, I've been to them. He,
literally explores a topic in real time, walking back and forth across the stage for the first time. I know this because people verify that every night he does something different, even in the same city. He's exploring it completely in real time. And then other people's lives that I've been to, it's clear it's pretty scripted. They know exactly what they're going to say and when. They have a sequence, they have slides. And so I think it can be done any different number of ways
How long do you go during your waking hours without making or thinking of a joke? You know, that's a good question. I really feel like when you ask me that question, do you know the first person that I think of is actually Rick Rubin? And this is why. I remember reading that book he put out, Creative Act, and he was like, there's something about, I'm paraphrasing here, but about having your antenna up. In other words, you still put out jokes
Some part of you puts out the signal, so to speak, that you're not like going, I need to find something funny. But you're putting your brain in the mode of that, right? And you can also choose not to. And I think there's times where you go like, oh, I haven't thought of any like –
I haven't looked at anything with like a humorous perspective today or for whatever, how many hours. And it's almost like that can shift either by you consciously making an effort to do it or by the company you keep. Because like obviously if you're hanging out with comedians, people, it's like just by being around them, your brain just –
shift to like joke mode you know i mean like you're just you're thinking in turn in those terms or if you're working on something like you're right like writing a script or something your brain is like actively even when you're not trying to it's like thinking of that story and thinking of jokes for the story so the answer is like you know depending on the day it can be like all day you're just like joking joking joking and like you're just in my case like
you know, saying mostly like awful things. Cause that's what makes me laugh. I think, you know what I mean? Like whether it's with friends or family, um, just like trying to make yourself laugh really. And then there's days where it's like, you know, you're in like a completely serious mindset where you're like, nothing humorous is occurring to me at all. You happen to be married to a comedian. Yeah. Which probably helps your home life in the sense that, you know,
Has she ever been offended by one of your jokes? You know...
Early on, I remember we would have conversations where I was... It was more like the fact that I would... I remember I'd pitch a joke idea and she would be like, that's fucking awful. And then I told her, I go, you know, whenever you think something is awful, I know it's going to be good on stage. And she was like, that's horrible to say. I was like, no, it's true. If you have disdain for what I said, then I'm pretty confident that it's going to work.
And it was kind of like that. But no, for the most part, no. And she says wildly inappropriate and crazy, funny things like often way over my line. You know, I mean, not where I'm offended, but I'm like, Jesus Christ. Like, yeah, she says crazy shit, really crazy. Has she ever offended you to the point where you're like, you can't tell that joke in public?
Our family will suffer. No, I've never had, we've never had that conversation. Sometimes we have what makes this joke digestible conversations. We're like, we talk about a bit and we're like, and then this is, the punchline is like in this world. And it's like, okay, you got to find a way to say that that is going to be
digestible to the like so you actually look for like your own advantage what i mean is like you know as a woman i go like you can shit on women harder because you're a woman so like you should find your way into that bit from the perspective that like you're actually you know i mean like you're actually shit like i was like if you're a woman you can it's like a black comic can talk about
black people, right? Like that's, you're talking about your own. So like, we'll talk about things like that. Like you can, you can take this angle and then that, and then the joke becomes,
digestible. So we'll talk about like reframing material. And then to me, she's like, yeah, you're just a white guy. You can, apparently you guys can say anything. Oh yeah, really? On the other hand, comedians and what's allowed in comedy at a given time has a powerful influence on culture. Yeah. What you can say, what you can't say. Has any comedian ever been canceled for what they said as part of a bit? I mean, we've got these examples of these comedians
I consider them kind of sad instances where people kind of break down on stage, have an interaction with someone in the audience, and it really hurts their career, and it's super offensive. But that's clearly not part of the bit. Right. Has a comedian ever been canceled for, like, here was the bit, and they're done? I don't... I can't tell you that it comes to, like, the top of my head thinking about that. I know there's been, like... I remember there's a Canadian comic that... And Canada has some, like, bizarre...
to my experience, free speech rules. Oh, okay. I thought you were going to say comics. I was like, I always think of Canadians as so...
kind and well-behaved. And they have some amazing comedians. They also have some crazy serial killer stories up there, I discovered. Really? Yeah. I mean, this idea that Canada is just all like nicer Americans is not true. No, no. They're wonderful Canadians, but they're not all nice. No, for sure they're not all nice. No, there's some real fucking pricks up there. Yeah, I've met a few. But there's amazing, I mean, you know, obviously you think of like Norm Macdonald and
Mike Myers, Ian Bagg, like all these, there's really, really funny Canadian comics. But I remember that there was, not too long ago, I'm sure we could find it, there's a Canadian comic that like, he went after some woman in the crowd. Like, you know, shut her down, said something, like,
offensive, whatever. And he got arrested, you know, and like, yeah. Arrested? Yeah, yeah. Arrested and had to pay like substantial fines. This is like Lenny Bruce days. Yeah. It's really crazy. And this was not, I don't mean like 25 years ago. I mean like sometime in the last five years. Whoa. Yeah. So I know there are rules on, so that's like the first thing that I think of when you say that. I also just don't feel like when people talk about, you know, like cancel, cancel,
culture with comedians or like Elon's stupid fucking make comedy legal again, goofy shit that he said. It's like, what are you talking about? Like there is no, you can say whatever you want to say. The thing you're pointing, the thing you're really trying to talk about is the fact that like people react and you know about it, right? Like,
30 years ago, there were people that hated, I'm sure, Robin Williams and, you know, Carlin. Like, they hated them. The difference is they would just tell their friend, and if they really wanted to make a point, they'd get a pen and a paper and buy a fucking stamp and mail them a letter. Like, now you have...
Social media platforms and people can make videos and like go crazy and you just hear the noise. But that's not like humanity has changed. You just hear people telling you that they don't like what you did or that they don't think you're funny or whatever. It's not like they didn't that didn't exist before. But that's also because thanks in large part to Rogan, but to others as well.
Most comedians seem to control the venues in which they release their information. Podcasts. Yeah. Um,
You know, I guess you could be thrown out of a club and not be able to present your material there. But there's probably another one that you could open up and that's happened too. But podcasts, people will now release their own specials where, you know, it's pay to view. There's Netflix. There's a bunch of different venues where it doesn't seem like comedy is as centralized anymore, controlled by the major media houses. That is true. It's in complete control of media.
the comedians themselves. Like, you are... You can put up clips of you doing stand-up, you can make skits, you can do short films, you can do whatever, and you can release it and find an audience, like they say, you know? Like, have an audience come to you. But...
I just don't buy this whole thing that like, you know, you can't joke about that. You can joke about whatever you want, man. But not at work. I mean, if someone makes a joke or repeats a joke in, let's say, an academic setting, for instance, or the office place. No, your guy's world is the worst when it comes to that. The academic world is – Actually, it's interesting. In the last five to eight years, the academic world has actually, from this –
around this topic has become safer because the rules are very clear. They're what I call thick black lines, right? It's when things are murky that people got themselves in trouble. Sure. Right. So if you look 10 years back, it was really complicated. Um,
Now, everyone kind of knows what the standard is. Yeah. Might be uncomfortable for some, not for others, but they know what the standard is. It's very easy to adhere to a standard if you know where the fences are. Sure. Where it seems to be still murky is in the workplace. Like in the boardroom, you'll hear about, you know, like tech companies or in finance or startups, right? Because startups, when they're small, typically don't have an HR department. Yeah. The HR department is kind of the standards that you create. Yeah.
around the office, which could be a garage, right? So that's typically when things aren't well-defined is when there are problems. So yes, it's rigid in certain areas like academia, law offices, et cetera, but everyone knows what the rules are. I'm not saying it's good or bad. I'm just saying you know what it is. But I feel like we're talking about in comedy as a profession, like, you know, the...
You can joke about whatever you want, dude, but you can't dictate is how people will react to it. And if you're trying to say, like, because some comedians do this, where they go, this was the joke, and what I'm mad about and what I'm going to be vocal about and complain about is that not everybody liked it. You're like, yeah, that's not, I mean, that's essentially what they're doing. They throw a tantrum over the fact that some people are upset at the joke. You're like, yeah, that's how it goes. Like, either it goes really well,
or it doesn't. And you can't go, oh, see, I can't joke about stuff because look how they reacted. You're like, that's how this works. Like, what you can also do is completely ignore that. And if you want, double down on your joke. Keep going. Do a crazier version of your joke. But just be prepared that not everyone's going to go, that was the greatest thing ever. And that's what some comics do is they go,
I can't believe not everybody is applauding me on this thing. They'll liken it to cancel culture, which is insane. Right. Yeah, you have to be a professional, and part of being a professional is how it lands is as important as... You just have no say in that. I'm always fascinated by comics who will smirk or laugh a little bit at their own joke, and...
Assuming that certain jokes and bits work exceptionally well and you carry them forward from trying it out to Netflix specials or big venues, huge venues. You do huge venues. Humber do huge venues. Do you ever get tired of the material and worry that your response is not going to – that your amusement won't be there and therefore they won't respond to it? This is two questions woven, I'm realizing. Mm-hmm.
Do you think your own amusement with a joke has an impact on how it lands? That's question one. And woven in with that is how do you then work with the idea that every time you tell a joke, it might not be as funny as the previous time? No, those are great questions. Yeah, I feel like if I'm smirking or laughing at...
at a joke of mine. It's probably organic. I don't try to like manufacture one. You still want to enjoy the process of performing it. And when you lose that enjoyment of performing it, I do think
the audience knows on like an unspoken level. There's something about it that doesn't come across the same way. And yeah, you sense it. And I think typically what happens, what's happened to me over time is if you're on tour and you're kind of like your brain is like walking up to this bit, like you know it's next and you start to like internally go like, ah, this fucking bit. Like what happens naturally is you start to drop it.
And you're essentially listening to yourself. It's one of those – it's like the same way you go, I should – I don't like this person, right? You go like, I don't think I want to be friends with this person. And you kind of like don't return a text or you go, I'm not going to hang out with you. Slow exit. It's a slow exit. And what happens is you drop it. And the great thing about dropping it is your brain –
goes, hey, you have room for something now. And that room for something also prompts your brain to start thinking of new things. That's how you kind of come up with new material. But you have to, this is the danger, by the way, of these comedians. Sometimes there's these comics who are like really funny, really talented people, and they'll do, they'll have a 20-minute set, right? You'll be working in clubs, and you see them do a 20-minute set, and then they murder, right? They fucking kill so hard.
And then like five years later, you see them and they're doing that 20 minute set. And what happens is it's a, it's like a very natural thing that you just have to deal with is they have this great fear of
of not killing that hard anymore. So they don't stop doing that 20 minutes. And by not stopping, they just stop evolving and they stop creating. And they're just like, they're the 20-minute set guy. You go like, yeah, they have that great 20 minutes. And then it starts to get dated. And then, you know what I mean? Like Mbop.
it's exactly only a fraction of the audience will know what I'm talking about there was a song that was like the song for a summer you could replace Mbop with any like a song for a summer way back when it was everywhere and then the band just disappears because the one hit wonder yeah you have to like because you'll see the very best comics will do this and like
It's kind of something you have to wrap your head around. But then you – once you do this long enough, you go like, oh, shit. The most elite comics are completely willing to bomb at these workout shows. Not like at their hour huge show. But like at workout shows, super elite comics will go up there and be like, I'm just going to do – because they know –
That you have to be willing to eat shit to come up with something really good. And sometimes you'll watch them, like, bomb and your own insecurities flare up. You're like, oh, my God, this is horrible. Like, I can't believe, like, all these people are going to be like, you suck, you know? And these guys don't care. They don't care because they know that's...
They know you have to train to get stronger, basically. It's so beautiful. Yeah. You know, when Josh Waitzkin was on this podcast and he also did a conversation with Rogan, which is different. And if somebody's interested in this stuff, they should check out both because they're complimentary conversations. But Josh was this child prodigy, chess champion, and then went on to do a bunch of other things at extremely high level. He talks about the need and his lack of fear, which is very admirable for cutting ties with your previous self. Just being willing to say, you know what, like,
That was a NBA championship. He works with the Boston Celtics, so this is very relevant right now. But that was last year. We're a new team now. We're not the defending champions. Or musician had a platinum album, or this was a particularly successful podcast run, and just cut ties with it and be willing to just go completely now and future. You mentioned Rick. One of the things that I've benefited so much from being friends with Rick, in addition to the fact that I just adore the guy, is that...
He has so many stories about things from the past if you ask him, but he never brings that stuff up. You know, he'll indulge you if you say, tell me a story about Joe Strummer or something. He'll tell me. Yeah. But he really lives now and forward. Yeah. And I think it's the weight skin that says, you know, you don't want to be on the train of life. You want to be strapped to the front end, you know, experiencing space and time as it's unfolding, which is a very philosophical way to put this. But that challenge of cutting ties with your previous self to continue to evolve your craft
is so hard, but it's exactly what you're describing. I mean, like I had this rule, I had this rule early on that I think it was, I was just lucky that I told myself this, which is that I recorded an album, I think in 2010. And, you know, you kind of want to get like a special and a deal, but I didn't have one. So I recorded an album and I put out the album. And at that time, you know,
People are buying these comedy albums and you start starting to stream stuff. And you also physical copies are still a thing because this is like 2010. And so this was my first,
Work like I from when I started stand-up to this album. This was like the best I could do right? This was all that all my best stand-up and I put it out and like yeah I mean I had some marginal success with it like I was selling a lot of copies or whatever well I told myself that Even though I was not a ticket-selling comedian that everybody who was at a show had heard that album like that They all knew it which was completely not true but by doing that to myself I
It made me go, well, I need a new hour. Right. So that I was lucky that I thought that way because I could have stayed doing a lot of that album because those were like really, like really worked out bits that would just crush. But I was just like, I knew that like I wouldn't.
move on and evolve if I just kept doing them. And that was a thing that I did. And then the next thing I did was another album. And I did that again. I was just like, I got to like drop this stuff and move on. And that's, I think what helped me and a bunch of other comics who like now we're in the practice of like shooting specials. And then you just drop all of it and you go back to square one. But like that helps you
to continue being creative in stand-up. You have to just drop stuff. I love it. I think this pertains to so many, basically all creative forms. Yeah.
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when i was an undergraduate i was interested in what makes something funny the psychology and neuroscience of humor and there wasn't a whole lot of neuroscience on it at that time but um the basic takeaway from the literature as i recall was that
The listener thinks that a narrative is going one way, and then there's this surprise element, something you didn't anticipate coming. I think that characterizes a lot of bits and a lot of jokes. 100%. It's like, whoa, it's the pop. However, I've also seen you do bits and other people do bits where you're headed down a trail and I'm thinking, oh no, he's not going there, is he? And you go there and that's,
hysterical also. Yeah. So is there a name for this or how does it work? No, I think, I mean, you're right. The most basic necessity for, I think, comedy at a very baseline level to explain it or, you know, define it is the element of surprise, right? The surprise is like, so it's that thing. If you go, I know where this is going, you're not going to react the same way. If it gets you, it's, oh my God.
But that second description of like, is that person going somewhere? I think that satisfies something in human beings, which is somebody saying the thing that we all want to say.
And, and you, you, you can't say it. You can't say it. You can't say it in polite society. You can't say it at a, at a nice dinner function. You can't say it at work. And you're just like, God, I, this is what I think. And you know, other people think it. And then the guy's up there and he's going like, Hey, you want to hear some shit? Like somebody says it and everyone goes, this is, it's becomes a release. It's a release of like,
oh, he's saying the thing that we all wish we could say. And you're saying it, you know, it's a very particular thing because it actually is
It works because you're in that building too. It works because you all have the unspoken agreement that this is a place to do this in, right? It's still different. Like if I just walk up to you on the street and start saying that shit, you're like, Jesus Christ, dude, like you're a psycho. Lock him up. Yeah, but like in this context. So both things satisfy something, I think, in the humor realm, right? The element of surprise will always be something, like the unexpected, right?
But there's also this like condition I think we live with where we go, we all think this, but we can't say it. And that's a very satisfying thing when somebody says it. Well, I had the great benefit of getting a sneak peek at Bad Thoughts. Oh, yeah. Thanks. And it's amazing. People should definitely check it out. And I don't want to give anything away, but the second one in the sequence that I watched –
I thought, there's no way he's doing this. And it just kept coming at me. I was like, there's no way. Went to sleep last night. And this hasn't happened to me in a long time. I woke up laughing. Oh, yeah. Which is a wonderful experience. Yeah, it is. That's really nice. There are only a few states of mind and body that you wake up in and you're like, well, that was amazing. And I woke up laughing. So it's seated into my unconscious. So now I'm worried I'm going to say some of the things that you said. I hope you do. But one thing that occurred to me in watching Bad Thoughts
is that you're not just a phenomenal comedian, but you're also a really good actor. Oh, thank you. And a number of comedians seem able to act, which is surprising to me for reasons that don't make any sense to me. But, you know, if you look at
athletes often are terrible actors. I mean, some of the best acting that athletes have done is when they're playing kind of a buffoon or they're supposed to not be able to act well. I think of something like the Naked Gun movies. Shout out to OJ, right? To OJ, right? I mean, he's not a good actor and it worked because he wasn't a good actor. But you're a very good actor. Thank you. Did you train for it? I loved making people laugh. And the first thing I did in performing was
You know, I did like a play as a kid. I did an improv troupe at 14, which is pretty young to be in an improv troupe. I did that for like a summer. And my whole thing was I wanted to make movies. Like I had a plan when I was in college. I had the communications track, so we would do TV, radio production. And when we had video projects, I would always do like comedy things and everybody would be like, what are you doing? Why are you making this? Like you're supposed to be making like a...
a video about the soccer program, you know? And I'm like, I was like, this is about like a, this is a capsule you put in your ass and it freezes your shit. Like I would make like diarrhea commercials and they were like, don't do that. But this was the stuff that would make, I was like making me laugh and I wanted to make movies. And I just was like, you know, that was what I wanted to do. And then I moved out here and I, I had, I had learned, I knew that at the time some of these big comedy movie people were
were a product of SNL and that those people were usually products of Second City or the Groundlings. And since I moved to LA, the Groundlings were big in LA. It's the improv school and a performance plug they put on shows. I was like, that's what I'll do. I'll just go to the Groundlings. And I took some classes there and I got through a few levels, but I had...
I got into stand-up shortly thereafter that. Some of my improv friends were like, you should try stand-up. And I got so hooked by stand-up. And I also saw a path because I was also like, well, you have to make a living, right? And the actor's life to me is so unsettling with like, you're on a show. And then they're like, I don't have a gig anymore. Like to me, the fact that stand-up, even though it's very, very, very low pay,
especially like as you're getting into it, the fact that you can just like keep doing it, like to me, like made sense. It like soothed me. And I feel like, you know, I kind of stopped training as far as I did another acting class in L.A. at that time, like early on. But I always just wanted to keep doing it, you know. And so every once in a while I would make like a short film. Like I made a few short films with friends or like, you know, comedy shorts, you know,
And I auditioned for some things. You know, I did small parts here and there, but I never really got to do all the types of things I wanted to do. So this show became like this incredible opportunity where I was like, where are we going to tell this type of story, this type of story? Because it's essentially a collection of short stories is what the show is, right? And some of them are...
Self-contained, some of them are two-part, three-part, but it allowed me as an actor to play all these different roles, which was so fun. It felt like I was doing – the 20 years I didn't really act that much, I got to throw in all these different characters in the show. Well, you're a very fine actor. Thank you. As they say. I was like, oh, he's acting. This isn't just stand-up. Yeah. Stand-up is its own thing. Yeah.
In previous Netflix specials, but I've also seen you do these bits in smaller clubs, like at the Belly Up in Aspen. That's right. Smaller place. That's right. Where we just coincidentally wore the exact same clothing. The exact same thing. So same flannel, same jeans, same Adidas. It was really weird. That's DNA. We did not coordinate. That's DNA. That's DNA, dude. That's DNA. And the cosmic correspondence of the butterfly effect. That's, yes. I'm sorry. My dad was trying to explain to me at one point. Yeah.
You do voices very well, in particular the voices of your kids. I always think that when somebody impersonates somebody else, it's about grabbing the key elements, not the whole piece. They don't turn around and come back. Some people can just grab a few key elements of somebody, in this case someone we've never met. It was your sons. And
We feel like we know them and we're getting like what clearly are key features of their personality coming through. Do you practice those or you just observe and it just is kind of embedded in you? I think it's observed and embedded. And I think in that case in particular, because with your kids, there's this thing that happens where you talk about your kids a lot not on stage. In other words, you know, I'm talking to my sisters or I'm talking to a friend about the kids. So you're kind of like you get this extra –
Practice about them because they are so much something that you read people always are like, how are your kids? Right? And so you're just like, oh, I got home. This little shit came in. He was like, Hey, fucking pick me up. You know, like we, so you start like doing impressions. That's the little guy. Oh yeah. He sounds like a piece of work. He is a piece of work, dude. He is something else. He's like,
It's so funny. Sometimes we call him little Joe Pesci because he's just like, what the fuck? We're like, yo, man. Like, I don't say that in front of him. He's six. Oh, my goodness. He's six. And he's like, he's fucking with me all day, dad. Did he get that from you or from your wife? I feel like it's more her. I feel like she's got those Hungarian roots. Like, when I was a kid in our house, there was not a lot of cursing, dude.
Oh, no, I'd get whacked if I... Oh, yeah. No, I hit... You know, I think if I talk back, it only happened twice in my life. Yeah. I spoke back. I won't say to which parent. And I got hit. Okay. Nowadays, people are like, oh, he was beating up. I'm fine. Yeah. Okay? I don't swear at people. Yeah. Very often. It's an extreme circumstance. Yeah. So, okay. But he swears all the time, apparently. Dude. I mean, to the point where we're... I mean, like, I know people, whenever you talk about this, people are like, you're a bad dad. I'm like, shut the fuck up. Like...
You've never been around. Like these boys are, I have two little wild dudes. They're, by the way, I always share stories of like extremes. Like they're sweet.
adorable, loving, wonderful kids, right? But they're just two little dudes who like, I come home and they're like, it's torture time. They call it torture time where like, I lay down and then they just get to like, fuck me up. And then they'll think they're stronger than me. And I'm like, bro, like, let me, do you want to feel this? And then I just put them in like some crazy, you know, rap where they go, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. I'm like, yeah. How old's the older one? He's nine. He's nine,
Dude, I get home every day. He's like, check this out. He takes off his shirt. He's like, he flexes. He's like, I'm going to be so jacked by high school. I'm like, yeah, yes, probably. And he's lean. Like he's got like, he's got the body for it. He's going to like, we go to the park and he's just sitting there doing pull-ups and he'll bring weights.
He'll bring weights to the park. And you see like other kids. Dude, that's the age to start. There's an Instagram account of this guy. I'll dig it up for the captions. His daughter is probably 11. And she's doing pull-ups with a 45-pound plate and ankle weights strapped to her waist. Really? And she's doing pull-ups to the chest.
And she's not, you know, built yet. She's clearly before puberty and she's just, but just crew crew. I'm like, Oh my goodness. That you just imagine like the tendon strength, the joint strength going to be, um, yeah. And we'll gymnast perhaps. He's so into it. Talking about six packs. I feel like I could have a six pack soon. I'm like, yeah, sure. Keep going, man. He goes, why don't you have one? I'm like, just fucking, he's already busting your balls.
You told me a story once over dinner about your son learning piano. I don't know if you remember that. I think it was the younger one. And it was something like, you know, like, how's piano going? And you're like, and you're saying, he goes, it fucking sucks. You know, like, that's it. It sounds like that's his response. He's just, he's ready to pop back all the time. Always. No, he's completely ready. He, the funniest thing that he did recently was, they both go to jujitsu. Okay. And, yeah.
The older one's really thriving. Like he's, he has a skill for it, you know, he's, and he's doing it well moving up. And the younger guy, I mean, you know, he's like a puppy, like just a little, it started when he was five. Like they're just, it's just different, right? You're pretty young. And so we're, we're at class and he goes, I'm not doing this anymore. I'm like, what do you mean? He goes, I'm too busy, man. And I go, what? He goes, he goes, my schedule. I go, your schedule? Yeah.
I go, okay, tell the instructor. So that guy comes over, you know, and he goes, hey, how did you enjoy class today, Julian? And he was like, good, but I'm done. And he goes, what do you mean you're done? And he goes, I'm too busy, man. He's like, what are you too busy with? He goes, I have kindergarten, I have Spanish, I have drums. I don't have time for this. And I go, I'm sitting there like, this is insane.
And that guy goes, but you know what? You got to be strong in this world, don't you? And he goes, yeah. He goes, yeah, there's no option for being strong. So...
because you can't have the option to not be strong, right? And Julian's like, that's right. He's like, great. So I'll see you Thursday. And he goes, I told you I'm way too busy. And then he just was like, I'm not doing this anymore. I'm like, okay, dude. He's done. He's done. I mean, I also like. He can really advocate for himself. He definitely advocates for himself. I just, I've never been the, you know, the type where like you have to do these. Like, I feel like the fun thing about like,
a kid boy or girl with sports is expose them to a lot of sports and i don't want to like you know go you have to do these like whatever sport you like you can do that one clearly like this wasn't the one that drew him in enough and i'm totally fine with it it's like cool you want to try tennis you want to try soccer you want like i'll let them try all the sports i i want them to be in activities but i'm not gonna be like you have to do all these sports you know meanwhile they're
becoming comics in their mind. Oh, they're... Yeah. Both parents are comics. They're funny dudes. They are very funny. Yeah. And they love to laugh. And it's fun because you see kids...
When a kid says something that's genuinely funny and you start laughing, you see like that look in their eye. They're like, oh, that was, that's cool. Then you just try to like do it again. And if they do it too much, you're like, yeah, it's not funny anymore. You can't do it that much. Yeah. That is a perfect cue for me to ask what I was going to ask earlier when we were talking about when you are amused by something, you really delight in telling this bit. Yeah. It impacts the audience and how it lands. There's a...
very famous patient in neuroscience, probably the most famous patient. His name is H.M. We don't know his real name. He's dead now, but he had a lesion to his hippocampus, this brain area involved in memory. And he was studied extensively for decades. And most of what we know about human memory is from this guy. All the other stuff we know from mouse studies, a little bit from monkey studies. Wow.
So there's a very well-known study where you go in and he has no retrograde memory. He can't remember anything that you told him before. Like within a matter of seconds, he forgets it completely. And they've tested this every which way. Okay. Holy shit. His brain is now in a jar. It's been scanned, et cetera. But so the study goes something like this. You go in and you tell H.M. a joke and he laughs.
and he thinks it's very funny. Then you leave, you come back, and he doesn't remember who you are. This has been tested again and again. He's not fibbing, okay? And there are a number of ways that you can measure this, especially if you make it, sadly, like some survival-based things. Like you tell him the joke again, and he laughs again, but a little less. And the next time, a little less, and a little less. And eventually he's like...
Yeah, that was not really funny. Yeah. Same joke. He does not remember the joke, but there seems to be some unconscious memory of the joke, which I always found fascinating. So it's like, it's almost like that the narrative around something, we get saturated to it. We're all familiar with a friend at a dinner party that tells a joke and everybody laughs. And then they make the cardinal mistake, which is to tell the joke again at the same dinner. Mm.
And it just burns it. It burns it there and it burns it the previous time. So what do you, I mean, I'm not asking you to be a neurologist or a neuroscientist, but what do you think is going on here? Not necessarily in HM, the patient, but there's something about telling that funny punchline twice that you just, I feel like men, like guys seem to do this more. It's like, you got it. You nailed it. Do not tell the joke again. Well, every guy thinks he can fight.
Fuck is funny and can drive. Those are the four things that every guy thinks he's awesome at. And you're lucky if you're marginal at one, every guy thinks, you know what I mean? Every dude is like, I can do it. I can drive. I'm hilarious. I can fight chicks. Like every guy has this thing. And then the more self-aware ones go like, I'm not good at these. I'm good at this one. So I'll train. I, you know what I mean? Like that's cross train, cross train, man. You got to do them all. Um,
But the funny thing is when you were talking about HM, what I thought you were going to – the point you were making is that you go back in and it's not HM that is not laughing anymore at the funny thing. It's that the person telling is that you lose something because there is this thing in stand-up that is like a phenomenon. Like I don't have the answer to, but any comedian you talk to will tell you that this is true where you go and you say this thing, right? It might be like your opening thing.
Or it could be a couple minutes in and you say the joke, you tell the thing, and it kills. And you're like, fuck yeah, this is awesome. You know, like your brain just goes like, lock it in. And then the next night you go and you say it. And it gets laughs, but it's like it's a little less. And then this progresses, like you keep doing shows and it's like two months later and you're like, the thing's like not, it doesn't really work.
And you go listen to like – I think I'm saying it the same way. It's like there's this – like sometimes there's this thing where it's like a – there's like a magical quality of like if it just streamed out of you once. In this setting, in this room, at this moment, there's something about the way that you said it and the timing with which you said it that it –
evoked all this laughter and that for some reason this thing no longer connects and just it doesn't register and you you try to do the analysis of why that is the case and you you essentially just end up doing this she's like i don't know why but it just stopped being funny to all new audiences it killed over here it doesn't work here so interesting i'm obsessed with
Mainly two things, time perception and state changes in the human brain. We know so much about REM sleep and slow wave sleep. We know very little about waking states, like alert and focused. We have these terms, but there's so much more going on there. And so the question is this. We're at a club or a stadium and you're going to go on, but I go on first, which means my bit sucks. It just sucks because I'm not a comedian.
Someone else goes on, let's say Brian Holtzman, I find very funny. Yeah, yeah. He's good, right? When he's on, he's really on, he's very funny. Holtzman goes on and does really well. Yeah. Who do you want to follow? Holtzman. Because the crowd is in a state of being ready to receive the jokes? Exactly. Yeah, yeah. I feel like when you're newer...
the, probably the typical answer for most comedians would be like, I want to follow the guy that didn't do well. Right. Cause then like, I can save the day, but the longer you do it, you realize that's not actually like, you actually want the guy in front of you to do well, even really well, because it does generate this thing of like, this is what this is. We're at a place of doing this. It's jokes. It's fun. And, you know, we kind of,
you borrow the term ride their wave. Like that guy just created a wave and if you can jump on it, sometimes you have to reset. You have to like, you know, you're kind of letting the audience know this is a different thing, especially if they like absolutely murder. Like if they destroy, you're like, whoa, like you just kind of go, yeah, I'm a, I'm a new person. And the thing is you don't want to go like, I'm scared that,
that that happened. You just go, this is my thing now, you know, but, but you have them in the state of this is, we're here to laugh. Whereas the guy who just like ate shit, they are all like, what the fuck is this? And then, you know, they basically dug a hole. So then you go up there being, you're, you're now the person that has to like set the table and be like,
So I know that last thing felt like a fucking eulogy. So now I will try to get you out of feeling the way you feel and make you understand that it's joke time. You'll often start slower.
By following the person that did poorly, right? You think it's, oh, you're funny, it's now going to go well. You have to, like, cook it back up. So following the good comic is always the better choice. The NBA playoffs are here, and I'm getting my bets in on FanDuel. Talk to me, Chuck GPT. What do you know? All sorts of interesting stuff. Even Charles Barkley's greatest fear. Hey, nobody needs to know that. New customers bet $5 to get 200 in bonus bets if you win FanDuel, America's number one sportsbook.
21 plus and present in Illinois. Must be first online real money wager. $5 deposit required. Bonus issued is non-withdrawable bonus pass that expires seven days after receipt. Restrictions apply. See full terms at fanduel.com slash sportsbook. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. I'm thinking of giving toasts at weddings. Yeah. Like if somebody gives a really great toast, giving the next toast, you're saying, oh, that's a hard act to follow. No, actually, it's an easy act to follow. Yeah. Because everyone's just kind of basking in whatever just happened. Sounds similar. Sounds similar.
The state changes, whether or not we're talking about running or you're talking about cannabis or you're talking about –
And whatever it is, I mean, I find that so much of the creative process or the constructive process, science or comedy or whatever, is about accessing these states. And we learn how to do it through what kind of becomes an unconscious process, but you know how to get there again and again. And so much of becoming a professional is about going through the peaks and valleys of, you know, bombing and coming back. Totally. You know, so I'm curious before you go out on stage now, given the size of the crowds.
Is just the kind of memory of what's about to happen sufficient to put you in state? So the thing is, the longer you do it and the more shows you do, you've kind of performed in every state. Sometimes you have to remind – I like to remind myself that I'm at my funniest and I'm the best version of myself on stage when I have a silly mindset going. Meaning like just –
Just like goofing off, like being a kid almost. So if I'm backstage and I have you in there and I'm just saying, you know, I'm like poking you, not like roasting you, but like, you know, being silly. I can tell you. We're related. Yeah, just like being silly. I feel like that mindset is like the best version of me to go on stage. And you can forget it, by the way. I forget it all the time, right? Because I've performed tired, upset, sad.
sad, anxious. Like I've performed in every possible state, but I do like to, to tell myself like, Oh yeah, don't forget kind of like get yourself into this silly state. I also like,
Like, I'm kind of an introvert, right? Like, there's some true extrovert comics. Like, Buddy Burt's, like, a true extrovert. And, like, his green room before a show will have, like, 80 people in it. And I'm like, what? Like, I like my green room to have either just me or, like, two or three people. And, like, chill energy. But still, like, it's still loose, right? It's not, like, a serious thing. But, like, loose fun. And that gets me into the mindset of, like, this is going to be fun. I look over my set list.
You know, like I'll check in on, you know, you listen to like what the crowd's like and you're like, oh, they sound they sound hot. Like that kind of gets you excited. But I try to embrace that mindset of like, let's have like let's have fun. Let's have fun. That puts me in a in a good place as a performer on stage. Do you watch a lot of comedy like The Greats? I don't watch a lot of comedy shows.
I would say. Like, I... As a kid, I mean, I think the reason you kind of follow this path is because you're just such a huge fan of it. So, like, growing up, I watched a lot of the, you know, Evening at the Improv, Def Jam, specials, like, a lot of, you know... It was also, like, specials were truly special, right? Because there was, like, there was, like, six specials maybe a year. Eddie Murphy. Yeah. Eddie and Chris Rock and Carlin and, like, all those guys would, like, put out a special, I mean, once every...
few years and there was only a few places, you know, HBO was just like the place. And then Comedy Central became the other play. HBO was premium, like really elite, like huge, huge talent. And then Comedy Central was kind of everybody else. And then now the landscape's changed where, you know, we get,
I don't know, man. I feel like there's 300 specials a year, right? Like, cause you can release them on, they're on Netflix, they're on max, they're on Hulu, they're on Amazon, they're on YouTube. Like there's just, you're bombarded with, it's great in one regard for standup because it speaks to how popular standup is and it's so accessible and it's cool that so many people can put out their stuff. Um, but there's, it's just like overwhelming. So I'll only check out like, I feel like in the last couple of years, um,
I've maybe seen like two specials, you know. A lot of times I'll start a special, turn it off after like 10 minutes. I kind of want to see like what someone's doing. But I find it personally hard to finish a special. But I also find it hard to watch stand-up in the room like at a club or something. Like I get – I leave. Like I don't mean like I leave the venue. I just leave the room. Like it's just harder for me to –
I feel anxious. I think it's really about me internalizing what I feel like the feeling is on stage. Especially if it's not, like if it's really, really good standup, then I sit there and I go like, oh my God, and I enjoy it. But if there's like any bit of it that like,
feels like maybe that's not working or that guy's anxious or whatever. It reminds me of my own feelings on stage that are like that. And I don't want to be in that space. So I like, I get, I leave the room and I'll just go sit somewhere else.
I mean, so much of what we're talking about today, I just realized is emotional contagion. It really introduces this question. This is very reductionist thinking, but how much of the success of a bit or a joke is the emotion that the person telling it is carrying and how much of it is the actual words and content? It's probably that plus the rhythm and the timing. There's a lot of things. It's a combination of those things. Emotional contagion is real. You're talking about it as a comedian watching comedy and
It kind of permeates you. Is that what it's called? Emotional contagion. Some people are more emotional, emotionally permeable than others. Yeah. You know, we could put this on a spectrum. We could even put it on the, so what used to be called the autistic spectrum, like people who really contained in their emotions, like things don't get them, but people are at the far end of that spectrum. They have a sensory sensitivity, you know, kids that are really like, like,
severely autistic, you know, uh, the amount of noise in a typical room is overwhelming. It's overwhelming. Right. They actually have discovered that that's actually outside the brain that they, their sensory, um, endings are, are tuned differently to the world. They're experiencing the world very, very differently. Um, you have these certain people, um, get scared when they watch a movie and they, they jump when the, when the monster jumps out, other people are like less of a startle response. Um,
I get startled. I get startled. Yeah. Yeah. I think that it's natural to get startled. I think that some people just have very kind of flat affect and some people can kind of ride. It's like a seesaw. And for some people, the hinge is tight. It doesn't necessarily mean they're calm. Some people are just like pissed off all the time and the hinge is tight. Some people, they're happy all the time and the hinge is tight. Most people, that hinge can move. And so this thing of emotional contagion is largely, this is what's so interesting. It's largely fed through the way things sound.
somewhat through faces, but largely through the way that things sound. And then there seems to be, and not a lot's known about this yet, kind of a sixth sense where actually an energy in the room is,
can start to literally cascade from one person to the next. And this has been studied in animals with the fear response. You can literally take an animal, scare it, take it out of that tube, put another animal in there, and it will show a fear response based on something molecular in the air. Really? Absolutely. And hormones work within us, pheromones between two members of a species. Yeah.
They're clearly pheromone-like effects. We haven't identified what those pheromones are. Same thing can happen in crowds. You can get a kind of a hysteria. We do feel like...
you know, the best kind of experience as a comedian performing is where you feel like the audience is one, right? Like they are one. It's not 10,000 separate people. It's like this is all together. And that's kind of like when that's going as well as it can go, that is like an incredible rush. And the feeling is that like they do kind of mutate
it's like they started as 10,000 people and then they just kind of become this one thing. And you're kind of rocking this one entity out there together. Same way that like
The opposite when it's like really bad. It doesn't feel like, you know, you can feel like, oh, they are together in not liking this. This is one crowd going like, no. You know what I mean? Like that feeling is the opposite of like bombing beyond like emptiness that you feel. But you feel it like they are together. They're unified in how they feel about this. Yeah.
This is why some people, including me, fear going to theater. My sister loves theater. We go to New York in the fall for our birthdays. And because she loves theater, we go to theater. And if theater is great, it's, like, amazing. If theater is bad, like, it leaves me feeling bad for the people. Like, the tone in the room is, like, ooh, it's heavy. Heavy. It's not, like, just, like, turn off the special. It's, like, it's...
it sucks. It takes you to a lower place. Well, live is always, it's just such a different experience. You know what I think about? I don't know if there's any science to this, but I always sometimes think about the fact that I feel like comedy specifically as an art form might be the most involuntarily subjective, meaning that like, you know, if you look at like a photo or a piece of art, you might go like, I don't like that. And then I might,
educate you in some way about it and you kind of look at it differently and then maybe over time you go you know i actually love this painting right or like music is definitely one where you have like kind of an involuntary response but i have not cared for music and then actually started to like it more but i feel like comedy it's like it's not
You're not really thinking when you like, when you laugh hard at something, you're not like, oh, I thought about it for a while and I'm going to start laughing now. Right. Like you just, you laugh.
And if you don't laugh, you're just like, yeah, I don't find that funny. You don't usually come back and go, you know, now that you've talked to me about it, I'm going to start laughing. Like it really is this experience where you just, it happens without, so your kind of brain is telling you this is what's funny, right? Like it's happening like separate from you and there's no faking it. Like you're either laughing or you're not. If you laugh really hard, it's like this, it's this great experience, but you can't,
convince someone to laugh that hard a very important point that never occurred to me um i love art history um in part because i like art i've always liked art yeah but by taking an art history class i like literally fallen in love with certain artists in their paintings um and i i look at certain paintings completely differently now as you point out on the basis of what i know about
What the art represents, the history of the artist. Like if a joke isn't funny to me or a bit isn't funny, I don't care what the process was for that bit. I'm like, it's just not funny. It's just not. Yeah, it seems like it's one of the purest kind of yum, yuck or meh.
kind of things, which is another point of neuroscience. The nervous system has degrees of this, but it basically bins things very quickly into like, yum, like this is awesome or hilarious or whatever. Yuck, like, ugh, no. And kind of meh. There's not a lot of variation. Within each one of those bins, there's a lot of variation. Love, love, love, hate, hate, hate. But then, you know, but your brain makes a decision really quickly about yum, yuck, or meh. Right.
Right. And like, especially with different arts, right? Like, I mean, literally you look at the photo and your brain kind of tells you, right? Like, I just don't feel like most of the time you're not going to go back to that and have a much different response, right? I mean, with comedy, you're not going to have the response. Like, I also did Spanish art history when I was studying in Madrid. And they would take us to the Prado Museum and give us
Like our lectures in front of the pieces of art and you just yeah your brain starts to Not just appreciate you start to fall in love with the paintings and you go like oh I feel this differently that type of experience doesn't really Can't happen with comedy. I'm not gonna be like Start laughing dude listen to how this you know, I mean like it's just it is what it is your brain It's so quick
whether or not it makes you laugh. And if something's not funny, if you tell me he toiled on this for 40 years, I'd be like, well, then it especially sucks. It's really shit. Whereas if you show me a sculpture I might not appreciate, and you sort of explain what went into that, you can develop at least an appreciation for it. Well, look, this is interesting. You know, versions of this happen all the time, especially now because everything's shareable, where like your friend goes, check this out.
and you watch the thing and you're like okay isn't that the funniest thing you've ever seen you're like no they're like you didn't like that no
And that's kind of like how it ends. They're like, yeah, but, you know, he's saying like that he's late because he I'm like, yeah, it's not I don't I'm not laughing, dude. I don't want to tell you. And then they go, OK. But they had a different experience with it that you can't you can't like articulate and intellectualize the experience to someone where they go, oh, yeah, now I think it's funny. Well, I think this gets back to H.M. and this idea that there's a subconscious thing.
you know, just an unaware process that dictates whether or not something's funny or not. Yeah. It tickles our brain below the level of like,
precise understanding. And I'm so fascinated by this because as you point out, there just aren't other things like this. You could say this about people like, oh, liked this person right away, didn't like them. Yes. But in general, the more that we learn about people, this is why all the efforts to try and, you know, erase racism, for instance, the more you learn about a culture, the more you tend to like the people of that culture. Totally, yeah. Even if you were arch enemies for, you know, decades or hundreds of years before, this is just the way the human brain works. But with comedy, it's like a
Um, it's chem, it's feels like it's like chemistry. It does, you know, and, and of course you can say, well, you like, or don't like the comic, but I have to imagine that you, that you like it or not probably represent the, the like bad boyfriend or the abusive dad to somebody or the, uh, or the friend that they loved in college. Let's make it positive too. Or that the guy they like to be around. I mean, you, you don't know that people's relationship to you. You never know.
And so the humor may land or not land depending on like all sorts of unconscious stuff going on. So much. And you realize too that like you could have a joke about a teacher. You know what I mean? Like you're just like it's part of your bit. You're not thinking of that. And like you saying that has a ripple effect that you don't realize. To different people in the audience for dozens of different reasons, you could have just said the word teacher and the person's like –
You know, I am a teacher. And then that's pleasing to them. They feel seen. The other person hated their teacher. You know what I mean? They start thinking about like all these little things where you go like, I just said one word about this. And you don't realize that it triggers other thoughts in people's minds, you know. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. Last year, I became a Function member after searching for the most comprehensive approach to lab testing.
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Let's talk about crowd work. Yeah. Fascinated by it. Yeah. Very, very distinct aspect of the comedy experience. You know, I mean, at a big rock concert, I mean, the singer might like put out a fist to someone in the audience or even let somebody sing for a moment, but...
maybe let someone up on stage, but crowd work is like, you're really giving up a lot of control. Yeah. Right. If you ask a question, I mean, you have to be able to work off whatever comes back. Do you do crowd work? I mean, I, I feel like crowd work is just part of the arsenal of skills you have over time as a comedian. You have to be able to improvise. You have to be able to handle crowd work. You have to be able to write material. You have, you know, you have to be able to do all those things. I don't go up and do like,
crowd work shows. Like some people that are like, this is a crowd work show, but I've been doing standup like, you know, 23 years. And, uh, especially when you're in the club system, when you're an unknown and you're just doing weekends and people are drunk, like crowd work just becomes part of how you do it. Like you don't have an option to not
You could just not develop the skill set and then just die up there. But like, you know what I mean? It's like, it's a necessity. So at this point, like, I feel like I want to go on stage with like, I want to do X, Y, Z. I want to execute these things. I want to get these, these jokes out. I want to say these things. But you're never ever to the point where you go, and therefore I am removed from
from having to do any type of crowd, because crowd work is usually, it's a response to something happening. You're being heckled. Somebody's saying something. You know, there's this thing that like, if you're in a huge venue, you don't want to actually go like, hey, what's going on with you, buddy? Right? Because there's somebody up in the 300 section who's like, I don't know what's going on. But the other side of it is you cannot ignore the obvious, meaning,
If a fight breaks out, if like somebody throws something, if somebody is like screaming and you just go like, I'm just not going to, I'm going to act like that's not happening.
I'm going to keep doing stand-up, like, what I wanted to do. Then people go, like, this is weird, right? Because this person's ignoring the obvious. Right, you're no longer connected to them in the same way. Exactly. They know that, like, there's a disconnect now. Like, you're ignoring that? Like, so that's how, like, you stay in kind of having, you have to maintain the skill set. Some people make it more of an emphasis of their show, and there's, like, really, really good people at doing that. I feel like it's also, like,
It's more of like the DNA of New York comics too. Like that you'll see, I've always thought that like the level of proficiency there is really high in that scene.
more of a back and forth, you know, because the small venues, I go to the comedy cellar when I'm out there. I don't know if that's, it's still one of the main places. Oh, absolutely. That's a better one. Let me know. But my sister's always like, we're going to go to the cellar again. Yeah. Cellar's fantastic. And we have our favorite nights there actually were nights where it was pretty bad and we can laugh about that. Yeah. But there've been a few nights there where it just killed. Yeah. And actually there was one night and that's my sister, this happened.
Chappelle just like leaves Radio City Hall, shows up with his entourage and just like hops up on stage. Yeah. And just that only happens in New York City. Yeah. I don't think that really happens in Los Angeles terribly often. He's done that quite a few times. He just like rolls in. Yeah. He's done that in L.A. a number of times. He's done in San Francisco a bunch. Like I'm saying like it's pretty well known. You know, he'll come into the stores. That's his thing.
Yeah, he loves the stage and sometimes he'll be up there like legitimately like three or four hours. Yeah, we ended up going home because we eventually just called it a night and we were leaving and his team was like, you're really going to leave? We'd had enough, but it was just kind of unbelievable to me that this stage of his career that he was just going to wander in and start doing comedy. But I think it speaks to the intimacy of those small clubs. It does, yeah. I mean, it's still one of the few venues where like,
You can see greats. Like I got to see you at the Belly Up in Aspen. That's a small-ish venue. That was fun, yeah. Or you can go to a stadium. What's the largest stadium crowd you've done? It's more than, you know. The biggest crowd I did was like a little over 17,000 at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle. Yeah, so huge difference of scale there. Yeah. Not many public-facing things occupy those levels of scale there.
I have a question about kind of cultural standards and what's really funny. So if you look back to comedians where at a time where like cursing on stage wasn't allowed, like kind of pre Lenny Bruce. Yeah. Right. Is any of that comedy funny? Meaning, you know, now there's been this kind of expansion of kind of what, what you can say, even just cursing. And, and so like,
If we look at earlier, we were talking about working out. You know, like bodies looked very – like muscular bodies looked very different in films in the 40s. Like you'd say, well, that guy, that person isn't very big by today's standard, but you'd say they're very fit, right? Or she was very beautiful and very sexy in the 70s, but very different look than like 90s and 2000s. So standards change for what's considered ideal. Yes. The male one, by the way, is –
hilarious for the leading man of like the 40s and 50s. Oh yeah, they were very slender. Now they're like not superheroes. They'd be like slender and also like not even very well defined. And they'd be like, this is the stud of the, you know what I mean, of the movie, like a guy who's not wearing a shirt and you're like, this guy's not active.
No, this is like the stud of the movie. That's just a different time. Just a different time, different standard. And then, of course, you know, standards of women's bodies have changed sometimes more voluptuous. Sometimes, like, in the 90s, it was the kind of wafey look. And these things mirror what's going on in society to some degree. But if you listen to comedy pre-Lenny Bruce, pre-swearing, is any of it really funny to you? Well, to me, I feel like...
I would probably listen to most of that with like that mind of, because what happens with comedy too is to be fair to those people is you end up hearing so many versions of what they did. Things that are just derivative of other styles and types of jokes and types of performances that,
That by the time, like, if I heard this guy in 1945 doing these jokes and he's killing in this room, you know, I would go, I'd probably hear the joke and be like, oh, yeah, like, I know this joke. Like, I know 10 versions of that joke because I've heard them. So hearing it just doesn't make me laugh. Even though it's the original? Even though it's the original, yeah. Because I feel like that even happens with, like, well-known people.
Like, if... Like, I was born in '79, and so, like, my...
like exposure like i i missed i wasn't like really conscious and aware of like the prior era right and like he's like a god in stand-up he's considered the the the best comedian ever i mean by most it seems by a lot of people yeah you know he's on the mount rushmore of comedy he's definitely on the mount rushmore but i felt like by the time that i heard prior
I had heard so many people that were influenced by Pryor that hearing the original version wasn't like – it wasn't like I'm doubled over laughing. Like I'm hearing every other version. Like they're clearly inspired and, you know, taking from him. But so now I hear the original and I go like, oh, I get that that's the version of that. It can happen with comedy films too. It's like you watch Animal House.
If you hadn't seen it before and you see it now and you've watched a lot of comedies, you might just go like, oh, I get how this is the blueprint.
Because I've seen so many people take from this that now when you see the original, you'll be like, oh, you're like, yeah, but you don't realize that's the first time it was done. Like these jokes were done here originally. Everybody took from them, you know? So I don't think that I would probably end up laughing very hard at the pre-Lenny Bruce comic just for the reason I said, though, just because it's been done. I've heard so many versions of it.
so it seems with comedy unlike with music or poetry or books there isn't that much carry forward so for instance i mean i was very very young if and in some cases not born when the rolling stones were doing their great work or the beatles or elvis right um but that music is awesome yeah yeah that's so it the fact that many people have taken bits and pieces from those like you can't create
an amazing Clash song the way that Clash did. Like, they did it best. Right. And it will always, like, Death or Glory will be like, I don't care how many songs were derivatives of that, that song still kills. Yeah. And so comedy seems different. I think it's different in that regard. I definitely think it's different. I think that
You know, it's one of those things where like it's always shifting. Also, like what's funny has – it really is directly related to what's happening in the real time. Like in the time you're living in, you can see whether it's from stand-up or movies –
that were, like, very funny in 1982, in 1995, in 2007, that you go, it just kind of shifted, right? It's like it's not funny anymore. Like, and I don't just mean because it's not, like, politically correct. I just mean, like, there's this unspoken thing that happens, right, where, like, you're laughing at something and then you kind of go, like, hey, we collectively don't find this is just not funny anymore. So...
a lot of those things might even strike you as not only like not great, you might just be like, that is, that's not funny at all. Yeah. I once went to this thing in San Francisco around New Year's and they, they literally wheeled out. Is it like,
Henny Youngman or Benny Youngman or something. He was doing these knock-knock jokes. He was probably in his late 90s. He was forgetting the punchlines. But occasionally he'd nail one. Yeah. It was not funny. Yeah. It was almost embarrassing, you know, but you were like, wow, this guy still, like, thinks it's funny. He was still going. So there was some amusement. But you looked at the older people in the crowd. Yeah. And they were like...
Oh my God, it's bringing me back. Yeah. So you're like, oh my goodness. But you know, no one else was laughing. Right. But as you're describing, some people might look at some comedy. I'm not going to name names because I'm not versed enough in comedy, but from the seventies or eighties and be like, yeah, that's just kind of like raw, but like, it's not, it doesn't really do anything for me. I'll tell you, like, this is a very simple example, but like, I re I can recall that like 20 years ago, if a guy was in a club and there was,
two guys sitting there in the front row together or whatever, a lot of comics would be like, what are you guys, a couple? And that that would sometimes prompt laughs. People would laugh. They would be like, oh, they're a couple. And like today, if somebody was like, what are you guys, a couple? They'd be like, yeah. And everyone would be like, okay. Right? Like it would be like, it was considered like, oh, it's funny. You're implying that they're a romantic couple. And like, I feel like just the way society evolves is
Today, people would be like, and? Oh, yeah. I mean, growing up when you – I mean, I'm a little bit older than you are. Yeah. I remember like the first gay characters showing up in film and reality TV. It was like a huge deal. Yeah. Right? And then – so things have really changed. So what is – yeah, things have really changed. Like no one's ever been funnier than Eddie Murphy, ever. I think he's – like him and his –
prime of being funny. Like there's just nothing. He's a, he's a total prodigy once in a lifetime type of talent. Right. Like so funny. If you put like delirious on for a 21 year old today, they would be like, what the fuck is happening? Like it's, there's things in it that are just, they're just too dated now. You know what I mean? Like just concepts that are, he's still funny as shit, but like those bits will not land like they would in 83. They just wouldn't.
Let's talk about the darkness of comedy. I once had the experience of going to the comedy cellar with some friends and this guy got up there. I don't remember his name and it was super dark. I mean, it was like clowns with vans doing terror. I mean, it was just like so dark. And the only thing that was hysterical about it was the fact that he seemed freaked out by it too. Like what he was saying was like horrible. He was saying horrible. Horrible things that had gone through his mind. Yeah.
But the fact that he thought it was horrible was what was funny. Sure. And we're like, whoa. Like, we walked out of there just from like, we felt like we'd been transported someplace really unhealthy. Yeah. And I was like, man, I feel like I need a shower after that. That was intense and scary and like. This is my favorite thing, by the way. Whoa. And then we had the experience of running into him and his girlfriend later that night. Uh-huh.
And we were like, oh my God. And he just took off. He just like could not handle the reflection about what had just happened. Really? Oh yeah, no, he just, I'm sure he enjoyed the attention, right? He's a performer. So, but two things occur to me around that example. One is a guy who's really dark on stage, seemed like a very loving guy, at least out in public with his girlfriend. Almost always the case. Yeah. And the other one is that
Where he took us and where he went was so down in the dungeon. Like, I still kind of get a weird feeling in my body thinking about it. But his shock at his own words was absolutely hysterical and brilliant. And it was like, hey, let's go down into the darkness of human nature. I'm going to show you how dark it really is.
And I'm going to leave. And you're just like left spinning. And it still sits in my body. We're talking about that visceral experience. It still sits in my body. I don't know what to make of it. It's incredible, A, that first of all, that he can access it is great. It is as if you're talking about just like as the art form, like the best thing to do as an artist, any type of artist is I think acknowledge yourself.
And produce with the dark thoughts. In other words, don't act like they're not there because they're in everyone. And then put it into your art. In other words, if you go like, I want to fucking rob a bank, it's better if you're an artist to channel that into art, whether you write a story about it, you paint a painting, you write a song, you talk about...
you know, as a comedian, your fantasy of doing it than to actually do it. So it's actually, you're channeling it in the healthier option. And I also feel like 20 some years of doing this
Dude, the best people, as people that I've ever met, are the darkest comedians on stage. And the absolute most terrifying people are the super clean guys. Like, really? Yeah, dude, because they don't acknowledge the darkness. The darkness exists in all of us. The Dalai Lama has dark thoughts. Like, it's just... Jung said this. I mean, it's just the way it is. It's humans. It's human beings. Like, we all... Now, some of us have...
not as present and overwhelming dark sides and thoughts, but there is darkness in everybody. The thing is, I feel like what some of the clean comics do is the lack of acknowledging it means that that darkness has to come out in some other way. It just does. So how does it come out? Well, it might come out in their personal life. I mean, there's very famous cases of
Uh, don't, don't curse. And then, you know, you're doing some pretty dark things. Like that's, that's a real thing, man. That like, Hey, I'm going to talk about cookies. And where do you put your socks? I can't find my other sock. Like that's your fucking bit talking about socks. Okay. What are you actually really up to? Cause the thing is those guys, some of those guys, look, I'm not saying they're not fun. There's very, very funny clean comics. Some of those guys, uh,
are right on the line of like, man, if you would just acknowledge some of this stuff, it would be even funnier. Like you're just, and then you don't know how that darkness is going to show itself because it's probably going to show itself in a way that's not so pleasant. Yeah. I, I completely agree with you. I have a friend who's a very, very well-known musician. I won't say what genre and what I love about his music is it
encompasses every range of emotion yeah every range and i've seen him play to huge crowds and just get so pissed and i've seen him do love songs hate songs um revenge songs like just everything yeah but in person he's like the kindest yeah dude ever i mean that's and it's uh he's so grounded he and his he and his partner are like the sweetest people and she's got it too
She's an artist too. And some of her art, you're like, oh my God. And then you meet her and you're like, so kind, so trustworthy. So exactly what you're describing. They're in touch with it. They know how to channel it. Yeah. I think it's about doing that. And I think it's also a natural human instinct to not want to acknowledge or play with
The dark thoughts that you have, right? Like it's, you don't want to sometimes because you go, that's an ugly side. And I don't want to, I don't want to use that for my art or even acknowledge that it's there. But I think it's definitely the better way to go is to actually work with it.
A lot of comics die of drug overdoses. It's like not these days as much. It seems like there's now like the healthy comics. Yeah. And I don't know what the numbers are compared to music, like rock musicians or something. But if I compare it like science or I compare it like law, okay, one could say, you know, in law offices, there used to be a lot of drug use, especially in big cities and this kind of stimulants. But let's just focus on comedy for the moment. Do you think that comedy pulls –
from a group that has a larger percentage of people that are just struggling with inner turmoil and they rely on substances to kind of
or are the substances part of the creative process for people? Writers too. I mean, it used to be that many writers were drinkers. If you ever want to like a voyage through alcoholism, read about the habits of writers. Not all of them, but many of them drank a lot. A lot. A lot, a lot. Yeah. Amphetamines sometimes, but it was like drinking. It was like part and parcel with the writer's life, sadly. That's not the case now.
But, yeah, what are your thoughts about substances and comedy and comics? I think it's a combination of things. I feel like, you know, a lot of comedians, like that world, pulls from certainly people with traumatic backgrounds. There's a lot of mental health issues with comedians. There's a lot of clinically depressed comedians. There's comedians that come –
into it with like severe anxiety, for instance, severe depression, different mental health things. So usually even outside of comedy, if you're talking about people with this type of mindset, you know, these issues, you know, substances kind of come with that. People trying to regulate and deal with those issues. To also, you know, throw some more gas on that, you're talking about
an environment that is a nightlife environment where these things are kind of readily available. And it can, you know, it can be fun. It can make you feel like you're helping your art form by partaking in these things. And then it's really just like with most things, you just kind of, you see that some people go, oh, right now it's getting in the way.
And they kind of acknowledge that, like, I'm better off without this. And then some people are just too far gone in it, right? Where they just, they're addicts. They become, we have a lot of addicts in comedy. It's just one of those factors. Like, you just, you see it a lot. People that are
are complete hardcore addicts. So that coupled with mental health things and the fact that we're up late and we're with people that are also into nightlife, I think all that together, you get a lot of substance abuse. A lot. Why is cynicism so unfunny? Is it? I mean, I feel like cynicism...
presented in the right way, like a cynical person can be funny. I think what problems with cynicism is that it's really not ultimately, there's nothing
hopeful in it. Cynicism takes away any feeling that, like, things could get better. Yeah, like in the world of improv, the yes and. Yeah, yeah, that's true. I feel like cynicism, like, shuts it down. Well, that's true. In the case of improv, I'm just saying, like, some people have this cynical kind of take on things that are still, like, funny people. Mm-hmm. Um...
Yeah, if you negate a thought in improv, the whole thing is over. It just dies. You know, if you're like, it's hot. And like, I'm cold. You're like, okay, like, we're not really going to do this then. Like, you kind of have to like add to it. But that's interesting. Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, if you're a cynical, like a truly a cynical person, because I guess the thing you find in comedy is there's a lot of like faux emotion, right? Like the faux angry. You know what I mean? Like you put on this thing to sell your bit. You sell an emotion with it too. So somebody can like manipulate that cynicism with humor. But I think if you're genuinely a cynical person,
What you are really is usually someone that, like, actually people don't want to be around, right? Like, the very genuinely cynical person, another way to describe them is just negative. That's a whole buzzkill. Yeah. So you just kind of go, like, I don't want to be around that. I think ultimately the best mode to be in for comedy is, like, you kind of actually want to be, like...
You want, you know what I mean? You're kind of like, right? You're saying things that people want to nod along with. And if you're just like, shit's not going to work out, it never does. No one's like, this is fucking fun, man. Like, this is really funny. So that probably has some factor in it. I mean, yeah, you learn early on, at least I felt like it, that there's these really cynical comics that,
But the thing is, I'm not talking about like the faux thing in a performance. Like they are just like that. And you can feel the energy vortex that they are. And you kind of go like, I got to like not be around this guy. Because early on, especially, you rely so much on hope.
The fact that you signed up to do this thing that, you know, on paper, it seems insane. Like, were you going to tell jokes for a living? Were you out of your mind? I mean, that's what people would say to me. Like, they're like, were you crazy? I would say it worked out. I mean, I got very lucky in that it worked out. And you worked very hard. You worked extremely hard. I did work very hard at it. But that is a thing where you go like, oh, this is an insane path kind of to go down. Like, I can't have the guy who's...
Next to me, who's also a comedian, being like, this shit, you know, they're never going to pick us. This shit never works out. You're like, I can't have that mantra in my head all the time. And you have to like part ways with those people because they are like a virus, you know. They're a virus. Like, so, yeah, you're right in observing. Like, it's not funny. I think it's more like that it's just it's not productive to be around truly cynical people.
Along the lines of what we're calling emotional contagion, I realized I'm not aware of any kind of like duet comics. I know it sounds kind of silly, but in every other genre, like with music, right? People play alone. They play with a band. They play together. You offset voices. But maybe in comedy, stage comedy, that is, the audience is the other –
Mm hmm. Member of the calling to do it, which sounds so silly, but you get the idea. Yeah, that they're the one that you're you're you're resonating with and that you're playing off of and they're they're riding with you because I've had the experience of going to the comedy store. I was there last year. Tim Dillon did.
A bit. Well, he went out for like 20, he came out for 20 minutes and just murdered. And some of that's in his recent special. Just murdered. There was just, and he like crescendoed the whole crowd. And then just like in typical Tim, when I was like walked out, you're like, whoa. And you feel like you were part of something, even though you were a passive recipient of what was going on or participant. Yeah.
So maybe that's where it is. Have there ever been two people that get up there and kind of like riff? Yeah. Oh, yeah. And do it well? Yeah. There's a couple of twins that do that. Okay. Yeah. It's a good observation that it is like...
the audience is the other, you know, participant, right? It's you and the... But then, like, the Lucas brothers and the Sklar brothers are... They're both... They're twin brothers, and they go up there, and... Because I'm... You've probably done something about the twin phenomena. Like, how these guys operate, both of these sets of twins together, is... It is, like, an experience where you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa. The way... They don't go, like...
always like set up punch. Like the set up sentence can come half out of one brother and the other. And it's seamless. Like it's like, it's like when you hang out with, you ever hung out with twins and they really answer in unison, even though they're not looking at each other and they're saying like the same thing. Like that's how these guys work on stage. And it is,
You know, it gets you where you like you have questions afterwards. Like, you guys, like, how did you set that up? Because it's it's so seamless and they're literally like going back, back, back, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. And it feels like you had to go, hey, when I say and make sure you but it it's another level beyond that. Like they really flow together.
Even their talk over each other feels like it's perfectly done. Like this, you're hearing the end of this guy's sentence, the next guy steps on top of it, but you hear him clearly and back and forth. I have to check it out. Those guys are like, it is like a phenomenon to watch them work. It actually is really, really cool. I'm coming to the conclusion that by being an audience member in comedy, you...
one is experiencing a kind of an empathy with what the, the comic is experiencing. And that's kind of where we're getting here. Like I didn't plan this out, but, um, you know, you have to feel it. It's gotta be real for the, for the comic. The audience can sense that the delight, the, the silliness that you're bringing to it. Like so much of that is in, in the audience's nervous system as they're getting it. And, um,
And it's clear to me that like comedy is the one way. I mean, you could say it's about music, but like you said, so different because so much of it seems spontaneous. It does. And I also feel like, you know, my buddy Kirk Fox, he always, he's a great comedian. He always says this thing, like when he's on stage, he's like, I plan on being open, inviting, you know, hoping to leave the stage a better place.
you know, leave the room a better place. Like, but this thing about being open, inviting, vulnerable is like, it's a very real thing. Like you, you learn it as you do it. You start off pretty much operating in fear as a standup, right? You're terrified. You're terrified that it's, you're not going to do well. The longer you do it, you get more comfortable being up there. You realize that
If you're vulnerable, if you're willing to be vulnerable, which takes like effort and some, you know, some like courage, the audience senses this on an unspoken level and will go with you more places and will definitely laugh more and will be like basically be on your side. Right. If you don't learn to do that, it's a different type of performance. You're basically like.
Going up there was like, I'm the boss. You know, like if you're going up there, like I'm telling you what's up, they still might laugh at things, but they don't leave going like, I care for this guy, right? I empathize with him. And if you can learn to be vulnerable on stage, your performances will get exponentially better. And honestly, you'll get way crazier laughs. So interesting. The reason I love comedy so much is that, A, it lets me forget about the outside world. While hearing about the outside world,
And I think stage comedy is especially powerful. And before we sat down to have this conversation, we were talking about how like some people think, you know, they're like, oh, my friend is super funny, way funnier than any of the comics. But like a professional athlete or a non-professional athlete in this case, can they do it on stage? Can they do the dance? That's the thing. That is the main question is because sometimes, like I told you, people will be like,
You know, my friend Greg is hilarious. He's like one of the five. He's funnier than any of those guys on stage. And you're like, I believe you. And you might hang out with him and be like, this dude is hilarious. Like he's really funny. The difference is that can he do, can he be that funny when it's just him with a microphone in front of people and take who he is in real life and
and be that on stage. That's ultimately the goal for every comedian. Like, they say that, like, the longer you do stand-up,
Your goal is to be who you are offstage, onstage, right? Like it's because you it's impossible when you start. When you start, you are funny with your friends and you get on stage and, you know, you kind of freeze and you're trying to like convey this is who I am because you're what you're doing is you're going, this is how I see things. That's what you're that's what your performance is like. This is funny to me. I'm going to tell you how I see it. And that's why it's funny.
Some guys that are women, I'm telling like just people that are very, very funny offstage, just they can't do that to an audience. They're just, they're funny to be around in life, but they're not performers. I mean, there's an element to it that is like, can you get up in front of strangers and make them laugh? They don't know you. You have to convey who you are in a moment and make them laugh. That's a different thing. It's not unlike...
a guy that kills it at the YMCA when you play ball. And it's like, okay, well, like, let's put you in an NBA arena, right? Like, can you actually play with these guys? It's a totally different thing. Look, some can't. Everybody who ends up being a good stand-up was super funny to somebody offstage years ago, right? They just worked at it and they were able to translate it. Some people just can't translate it. Do you think it helps to really like people?
As a general group, you know, like you're trying to entertain people. You're trying to be entertained by your own entertainment. Like, do you think you need to like humans? That's an interesting question. I thought I could answer that quicker and I started to think about it because I started to think about the fact that like so many comedians I know, like so many go like, God, I hate people so much. You know, I mean, to put I'll frame it a little differently than that.
My theory as to one of the main reasons why Rogan is the top podcast in the world, there are several reasons, I believe, his work ethic, et cetera, but is because he has lots of different kinds of friends and he can sit down with intellectuals, he can sit down with comics, he can sit down with criminals. He likes the understanding and communication with different kinds of people. And when you...
know a little bit about him, like his, his life is filled with these people outside of the studio. So he's very comfortable in the presence of like anyone, you put anyone in front of him and he can be genuinely interested in learning from them and sharing with them in dialogue. He's genuinely a curious guy too. You can't, you can't fabricate that. You can't manufacture that. I agree. Whereas some podcasters, um, they're not that interested in what other people have to say. So they're not the best interviewers unless it's someone like
directly within their genre of interest. That's a good observation. So as a comic, I guess it depends on the range of topics that you explore in your comedy, perhaps. I don't think you can hate humanity and be a good comedian, right? I think, like, for sure, you have to genuinely love making people laugh. If you're going to be, like, successful at it, you have to have an obsession with doing that, like a literal obsession, because you go through these periods of,
on your journey of standup of being like, Hey, I, I don't have rent money. I can't, you know, I can't pay for anything. And you have the option, you want to go get a job and you're like, no, I'm going to keep doing like, you're obsessed. You're obsessed with it so much that you're giving up
Things that people would otherwise in your position be doing in life because you just are so in love with writing and performing jokes. Like, you know, you have an obsession. I do think you have to on some level, though, like I'm thinking about it, love people.
Because if you love making people laugh, you enjoy people. You know, you could still be, because so many comics are so bothered by so many things that people do. You know, that's like a very normal, like I'm very much like, I fucking can't stand these people. You know what I mean? Like always just like, look at this dipshit. He's bringing fucking eggs on the plane. Like, you know, like you're just like. Tuna. Yeah. He's like, you asshole. You're like Tupperware on the plane. Eat that shit at the gate. So like, you know, we're always like. You know what I mean? You're always just like.
Complaining. Complaining is part of being a stand-up. You're funny. If you never complain about anything, you're probably not funny. You know what I mean? You feel like humanity too much. Yeah, I feel like if... Here's the thing. If you go, I'm good with whatever, you're not a funny person. You can... You're funny if you have a...
you either love or hate something, that can be funny. You can love this and it can be funny. You can hate it and that'd be funny. If you're like, I mean, I'm fine. That's not funny. The mad response doesn't do too much. It doesn't do anything in standup. Yeah. So, but like, I think somebody that complains about people
can be very funny. You just, you can't be like, all people everywhere, I can't stand. Like that, that would be too extreme. There are all sorts of theories about how people's
kind of childhood issues or just their fundamental struggle like feeds their art in incredible ways. I think I saw an interview with Jim Carrey, who admittedly, I don't know much about his comedy. I was so busy in school when he was kind of through his reign of physical comedy movies. I've never seen Dumb and Dumber. I've never seen The Matrix. I've never seen Goonies.
sorry i just haven't i love stand by me i love other movies but i need to see those movies i just i'm busy i'm trying i got a lot of money last night at dinner i i just admitted that i had never i've never seen braveheart and i've never seen gladiator those are amazing yeah and i guess what i'm not gonna see him really no all right i'm just not i'm not gonna see him well clearly um just knowing a little bit about your children and the fact that they're related to you um i'm not gonna try and push you to do anything because clearly you guys are stubborn yeah um
So the question I have after seeing this Jim Carrey thing, he said, you know, his – the reason he did comedy is he wanted to make people laugh, to forget about their struggles. He had a chronically ill mother and he used to like throw himself down the stairs as a kid. I believe him. So physical comedy became his thing. How much do you think that really successful comedians –
tap into sort of a fundamental quest to resolve something. You know, you're trying to, whatever it is, fill in the blank. I don't want to fill in blanks for you. Yeah, yeah. No, I think it's, I mean, I can speak for myself. I think in my own case, I was the new kid a lot, right? I went to one school for...
first grade, one for second and third, a different one for fourth, a different one for fifth and sixth, a different one for seventh and eighth, a different one for ninth. And I switched again in ninth grade. So I was a new kid all those times. And I felt like whenever I arrived and I, you kind of like over time go like, you start to develop this muscle for like, how am I going to get someone to like me? And it was like, try to make them laugh, right? Like that became a thing is trying to make them laugh. I think
For me personally, there was also this, just my own insecurities. I think I felt like if I got enough people to laugh, if I became successful at making people laugh and like people acknowledged it, that I would no longer feel these insecurities.
They stick with you. And thank goodness because it sounds like it's the fuel for your art. I think it probably is. I mean, I just remember thinking like, you know, if I were to be like had a special and I got paid well, then I wouldn't have any self-doubts anymore. You know what I mean? Like you think that. Then I'll feel fulfilled. Yeah.
And then you get the thing and you're like, yeah, no, it's the same. It didn't go. I mean, you start to address it in other ways because you just realize that the accomplishment or whatever isn't the answer to that thing. But it is a thing that makes you, you think that it will make you feel complete, right? And it's not the case. And I think, I do think that like being a new kid a lot is something that
I'll probably never shake that kind of memory of just, it's, you know, when you're a kid, your social acceptance is so dominating. It's different as you get older, I think, you know, you're not, you're not like so concerned with like being socially accepted everywhere and you have a family and you're just like, this is my, my group. But as a kid, it's like, it's kind of everything, you know, and being new every time, like every new school year is like, that's kind of, it's kind of traumatizing. Yeah.
So it's the friction that creates the spark. I think so. And so you don't want to do too much therapy and resolve it. I mean, seriously speaking. I mean, I've done so much. Yeah, same. It doesn't never go away. It helps. You know, it helps in that like you have certain awareness of things now. Certain dots get connected. I love, I think therapy is phenomenal. I would not have traded any of the
therapy that I had. I'm a huge advocate for it. I think it's great. Yeah, it doesn't, you don't go like, same thing, like, now I'm done. Everything's fine. Like, it doesn't work like that. It's like taking Jordan's competitive nature away. You wouldn't want that. No. That was the friction that created the phenomenon that is Jordan. A lot of comedians, I spoke of myself, I think a lot of us fall under the, like, the banner of, to put it simply, please like me.
You know what I mean? Like, you just go, please, please like, I want you to like me. Because that's what you are when you're a new kid. And that's what you are when you walk into a room and, you know, you just go, I just want people to like me. And a lot of comics might not admit it like that, but it's definitely the case. You're just, you want to be liked.
Sounds pathetic, I think, but it's true. No, I don't think it sounds pathetic. It sounds incredibly open and honest. And I think it's going to be very helpful for people who seek to be comedians and just for people generally trying to think about how their challenge, that inner friction can create amazing things. And you've managed to do it over and over again. So maybe... You almost got me to cry. We talked about it. You almost got me to cry. I can keep going. No, no, no. Keep changing the topic. What's happening now? What's next?
Well, I know people use this expression, but it really truly was a dream come true to make the series. Like, for real. You know, I made no secret about it that, like, the reason I moved to L.A. was not to be a stand-up comedian. It was to, like, make movies and stuff. Like, that's what I wanted to do. So, like, getting the opportunity to make the show, it felt like I got...
paid to make like 15 mini movies for the series. And I mean, I've never had a more fulfilling kind of creative experience, like from writing to producing it to, you know, being in the edits and seeing this thing come together. So for me, it's like, it's such a thrill to have that experience and to be able to put that out as like something that I made with a bunch of great people. The difference stand up is like you're alone and like on a show or a movie, you're
You're with like a hundred other people. And it was an awesome experience. And I get to do some more of it. So I get to do like a movie this summer and another show I got asked to develop. So, I mean, I'm like over the moon that I get to do these things. It's like I get to do them 20 years after I thought I would do them. But I'm super grateful to have the experience. So, yeah, I'm most excited that I get to keep pursuing that because I feel like it's been –
Yeah.
comedy in general and I love what a deep thinker you are and at the same time how much you just pour yourself into your craft and enjoy it and your reflections are really appreciated and I'm a fan I'm also proud to have you as a cousin I
And look, I look to you as somebody who really understands how to also balance work and family and merge the insanity of life into a craft. And people really, I can just say, I speak for many, many people very confidently on this. People can really feel your benevolence, even when you're pointing out like the darkness and the ridiculousness of life.
of the human experience. So you make our lives better and I'm so grateful you came out here today. Well, that's very kind of you. I'm also, I guess I should say, I don't know if enough people tell you, but I'm also very honestly proud of you for what you've done. Thank you. Being a teacher is one thing, but being able to teach so many people and share, I always feel like the most generous person is the person who doesn't hoard information.
It's a natural human instinct where people have information about something and they just go, I'll keep this to myself. And so the fact that you share information
You teach so much. You know, I pick up things from you all the time, and so many people do. And then it's become this thing where, you know, now people are like, what, are you fucking listening to Huberman? And you're like, actually, yeah. My wife's like, what, did Huberman tell you to fucking take a shit right now? I'm like, yes. No, but I mean, it is great that you don't hoard information. You share it, and I think it helps a lot of people. Thank you. It's a labor of love, and for people that know me, as you do, it's the same on camera and off camera. So, yeah.
You're a great role model to me. I'd love to have you back to continue the conversation. I would love to. We'll do a five-hour one next time. Yeah. And I'm going to finish the rest of Bad Thoughts. Please do. It's...
Amazing. Yep. Thanks so much. All right, Tom. Thanks so much.
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