Episode Transcript
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Thank you. Welcome to the Delvin Cox
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experience, the podcast which each week I'm on a one man
mission to another culture diversity.
I'm your host, Delvin Cox and with me, I have a special guest,
someone who accomplished comedian.
Apparently I just found out right now.
I think it's pretty cool. My boy, my new buddy, Kim Plaip.
How you doing brother? Hey man, Good.
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How are you? Good, good, good.
Your Your name is interesting tome to say the least.
OK, it's. Kleb, right?
No, it's keb KE. B Yeah.
Keb Keb pound. Yeah, that is a unique name.
It is, it's it's not my, it's not my government name.
Yeah, it's not the name. It, it, it, well, it's a
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nickname. Pound is actually my last name.
Good, good laugh. But thank you.
And but Keb is a, is, is a nickname that when I started to
do anything in entertainment when I was younger and in my
more vulnerable years, I, let's just say I had a wide vocabulary
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and, and my mother didn't appreciate it that much.
So I started going by my nickname to differentiate the
two. You know, my mother is a is a
fine church going individual andthen and I went to religious
school for 14 years so. How did that work out?
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Oh, it's affected me, you know, it's it's, it's affected me and.
That is the answer most people can look at that affected me.
So yeah. Won't say it it was positive or
negative. It affected me indeed.
It it has it, it made, I'll tellyou this, it makes me very
difficult to argue religious, you know, history with because
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I'm knowledgeable of it, becauseI had to go to school for it.
But it also probably the best thing it did was allow me to
think for myself, you know, and yeah, and allow me to, to make
my own, my own opinions, you know, on things.
But but yeah, I'll tell you this, anybody and anybody who's
been to a religious school for ayear, I'm talking when I say
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religious school, man, I'm talking uniforms.
I'm talking Chapel every morning.
It was Episcopalian. If you don't know what
Episcopalian is, it's kind of like diet Catholic.
And it's just, it's just a different type of experience
than I never went to boarding school that I would gather it
would be something like that. It's very, especially this is in
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the 80s. So it's very, you know, a Thora,
you know, big on authority, you know, big on do what I say or
we'll kill you, you know, kind of deal.
Basically the worst part of the old.
Yeah, the worst parts of the OldTestament.
So it, it, it just, it just, youknow, discipline before
anything, you know, I mean, thatwas back when they could hit
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kids with a paddle and that was back in a, in a, in a different
time than today. Yeah, very much so.
I think when I was in school around that time, they just
ended it. Sure.
But I remember that era like, Ohyeah, retrospect.
That isn't something we should be doing in school like that
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all. Right.
I mean, it was back in the day where like, like my kids don't
fear me. Like they know that if I get
upset with them, there's probably a good reason, but
they're not like at home going, Oh my God, dad's going to come
home and he's going to kill us. You know, I remember feeling
fear of my father, you know, just like when he was coming
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home, it was like an, and I, I'd, you know, I'd messed up, I
got in trouble or whatever. It was like an event, you know,
And I, I just, I, I, I, I can remember that feeling now.
My dad was born in 1934, so he was very military.
Very. You know.
Do what I say. Different era guys.
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Very, very different era guys now.
I mean the, you know, say what you will about those kind of
guys, those kind of guys could teach you a lot because they
they were taught to do things for themselves.
So they didn't take cars to the,you know, shop.
They try to fix them themselves,you know?
I was having that conversation the other day with somebody and
how like me, myself, I have a lot of people, my generation
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know how to change a tire, know how to change spark plugs, know
how to change oil. And I talk to kids now.
They're like, do what now? We don't do that.
I'm like, these are things that were like a essential for like
growing up, like you ever lived until you like got straight on
the road with your car. I guess I got to figure out how
to change this tire or figure out how to get some gas or
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something like that. That's like part of like growing
up. I will tell you this, we could
cripple an entire generation just by changing all the cars
back to stick shift. You're not lying about that.
That's very true. But by, by everybody making a
rule like, hey, we're going to write in cursive now, you know,
I mean, we could, we could cripple a generation.
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I still write in cursive. Yeah, yeah.
Like like on the on the off chance that I have to write a
check, it's in cursive. I still write in cursive all the
time. Like that's how I was talking
like. You know, yeah.
So I mean the the generation I, you know, and I'm not here, I'm
not calling them soft by any mean because they have their
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own, you know, thing. But I'm just talking about a
time before the Internet, you know, and and things that that
could be missed because of the lack thereof of technology.
But like I remind all my son, I remind my son all the time.
It's like see a phone in your hand that your generation loves
so much. Somebody in my generation
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invented it, you know, So beforeyou call us dumb, you know,
you're, you're doing that. You know generations feed off of
one another. That's true.
That is a very great point that you know, the previous
generation helped build the nextgeneration and so forth and so
on. So.
Sure, and if it weren't for the generation before me, we would
all probably be speaking German.Yes.
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You know, so. Yeah, so you know, which I'd
love to remind people from France all the time, you know,
but if it weren't, that's, that's a funny story.
I was in Bermuda and it was around September 11th, 2001.
And these French guys, they are from France.
I don't know if they're French, but they're speaking French.
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And they were, they saw me and my ex-wife sit down and they
were speaking French when we walked in.
But then they started speaking English and they were talking
junk about how America deserves what happened on September 11th.
And so my ex-wife looks at me and she goes, before you go talk
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to them, can I leave and go outside?
And I said, yeah. And I went over there and I
said, you know what? I I come from a, from a country
that everybody is entitled to their own opinion.
We actually appreciate differentopinions, you know, if we could
talk about them. Yeah, Yeah, nicely.
But but, but you guys are not saying nice things about a
country that I love dearly. And so I'm just going to say
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this. If it weren't for the United
States of America, you guys would be speaking German right
now. It's crazy that people would say
things like that just out the. Blue.
Yeah, they said it because we sat down.
I mean, because, you know, if you've ever travelled abroad,
you have a big sign on yourself that says I'm American, you
know, so. But we were just in in the
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beginning of July in Victoria, Canada.
And that was on July 4th actually.
And that was interesting. We had gone on a cruise to
Alaska and which is excellent. If you ever get a chance to go
to Alaska, go. Yeah, that's really cool.
But we were there and I mean, the minute we went to like a
restaurant, they, they could tell we were American, you know,
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and I'm like, Canada and Americaaren't that different.
Not really. They're not.
You know they can. They can tell.
Lately, it's been feeling different, but they're not too
different from each other. They're like they they
historically been like cousins, almost.
Yeah, you know, my, my thing is,and I was telling somebody on on
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the cruise that was from Canada and I was like, look, man,
you're, you're a person and I'm a person just because we live
across an imaginary line, you know, and then, you know, it
shouldn't matter, you know, who's president, who's, you
know, was president, who's goingto be president of, of whatever
country. I mean, everybody's just still
people, right? I agree.
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Yeah. So, yeah, because I mean, like,
you know, you know, if you're American, no matter what side of
the aisle you're on, if you're American, they associate you
with Trump. Yeah, you know, or associate you
with Biden the other way, you know, and and it's such a that's
why I don't talk about politics.Yeah, I don't talk about my
show. I don't talk about my podcast.
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Well, I have podcast a minute long.
I'll talk about much, but I'm going to.
Say your podcast is pretty shortly, I don't know what's
going to get in. By design, by design.
But you know, it's just if you talk about politics, you got to
pick a side, you know, and, and I'm not picking a side.
I think both sides are dumb. You know, I think there, there's
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good parts about both sides, badparts about both sides.
So rather than, you know, argue about it, you know, over I just,
I just don't talk about it, especially, you know, in, in my
ACT. Especially in my ACT.
Yeah. And I'm not the only comic that
I'm not the only comic that doesthat.
Yeah. I, I've, from my experience,
I've always had people always kind of like give their opinions
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and talk about the, the political landscape and how they
feel about things. But I, I try to always be
neutral because I like to hear people's conversations about it
and just their thought process and what they think about the
situation, how they interpret it.
And it's always fascinating to hear as I have each one of these
persons. There's not a political podcast
by any means, but you know, people come on here who are
political as I have these peopleon here, their whole different
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perspectives and how they see life always fascinates me.
I think that's the whole interesting aspect of how one
person can see this character asone way another person can see
the same situation and see it incompletely different light.
And I always that that part fascinates me because it it kind
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of just the way our country. Well, I guess a lot of countries
are shaped like that. I don't know.
I think the one thing that's lacking from this is not a
political says, it's a people statement.
One thing that's lacking is people listening to people.
You know, social media has made things so you know, you get to
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say what you want to save it. I mean, you're not going to
listen to anybody. And it's turned into just a
shouting match. That is true.
That is true. That's one of the things I I
hate about social media, the fact that everybody social media
has given everybody a platform, but no one's willing to listen
to their platform. Like I we're going to we're
going to give you a platform so you can sit out there and yell
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at the ether, but we don't care what you have to say because
we're going to stay in broaden on our point.
Whether it's fiction, imaginary,it doesn't matter.
We're just going to go at what we.
Think sure. I I, you know, and really, are
you going to really change anybody's mind?
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You know, Yeah, maybe, maybe not.
I mean, yeah, that's I think podcasting is a is a awesome.
I've been doing it since 2018 and I think it's a, a pretty
cool medium to, you know, give people, you know, voice and,
and, and if you've got somethingto say, whether it be, you know,
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comedic or whether it be my podcast is a part of a, a
podcast network that has all kinds of different podcasts on
it. I mean, you know, self help,
religious, you know, political, sports, movies, comic books, all
kinds of stuff. And, and, and you know, you'd
listen to those guys and everybody's got like, you know,
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like something to say. They weren't just me that
started a one minute podcast trying to make fun of podcasts.
Yeah, which is which is how the stupid is here.
The stupid. Issue when it started, we we
going to get to that in a minute.
OK, But as always, let's start the podcast off at the five for
five. OK.
Five questions, 5 asks to get the ball and clip.
Are you ready? Yep.
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Question number one, since you do the Stupid History Minute
podcast, right, what is the stupid thing you've done in
under a minute? What the the the stupidest?
Episode No. The stupidest thing you've done,
you yourself has done in under aminute.
All right, so I was 14 years oldand I was strolling the streets
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of Jacksonville, FL and I was bored.
We didn't have social media backthen, so I wanted to get chased.
So I threw a rock through the back of a Jacksonville Sheriff's
Office police cruiser and and I was on 180CC Honda, you know,
little sport motorbike. And I was like, you know, I can
outrun him. Well, I found out that I could
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outrun him, but I could not outrun his radio and come to
France. And so that is the dumbest thing
that I have ever done. That is.
Kind of funny though. That is something that indeed I
cannot do in my happened in quite different class.
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That happened in in 1989, Yeah. So.
That's fun. That's a good answer.
That's a good answer question #2.
OK. Give me your top five television
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characters. Top five television characters 5
Rick Grimes Walking Dead 4 Jessepinkman Breaking Bad 3 Dexter
Morgan Dexter 2 Walter White Breaking Bad one Tony soprano
The Sopranos I. Like your list?
I like that you just had it off off top of your head too.
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Yeah, like I said, I watch a lotof TV.
Yeah, a lot, a lot of streaming shows.
You know, I, I mean, we could dohonorable mentions in there too,
but those are. Probably I'll give you honorable
mention. OK, 00 and another honorable
mention, Sheldon Cooper, The BigBang Theory.
OK. Yeah, so I'm a huge Big Bang
guy, you know, like, like I, we do trivia nights just for Big
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Bang, you know, it's, it's it's dumb.
I can never get into that show. I don't know what it is but so I
cannot get into it. Yeah, I probably watched it 10
times all the way through all 24seasons or all twelve seasons.
Oh, you watch it. You are a really Big Bang Theory
fan. Yeah, there's stupid stuff that
I know on that thing, like the name of a minor character's
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boat. You know, it's just, I mean,
it's just stupid. And then if, like, I go on like
a podcast and they quiz me aboutit and and I don't know
something, I'll go find the episode where I didn't know
something and now I know it. Yeah, because they'll they'll
try to stump me hard. I'm kind of like that a little
bit with Seinfeld. I may have watched Seinfeld.
That's another one. A lot.
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The only one from that era I don't get into is for some
reason I just can't get into friends.
I I don't like friends at all. Yeah, I, I just can't, I can't
it, it comes on at nickel at night.
I, I have Nickelodeon on and, and Big Bang comes on at
midnight, but Friends is on before that.
So I'm always waiting for friends to go off so I can fall
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asleep to Big Bang. I'm glad you mentioned
Nickelodeon. OK, my question #3 for you.
OK. 'Cause we're close to the same
generation. Sure.
What is your favorite Nick at Night show?
Oh wow, I mean can can you go toold school like?
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I would say anything that came with a Nick and Nick at night.
I mean, what came at Nick at night?
Did they leave it to Beaver? Was that on Nick at night?
I want to say yes, it was on the.
Tonight the old, old school, youknow.
I can tell you the shows I remember from my generation,
Nick at night. There was Mr. Ed, there was Carl
54, Where are you? There was the monkeys.
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There was What was the show withthe monkey?
Wait, it was the BJ and the bear?
No, the one with the monkey withthe Detective I.
Don't remember I. Can't remember that it was that
show. It was perfect strangers.
It was full house at one point in time.
I remember when those are on network TV.
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I want to say I Love Lucy was onat one point.
It was a lot of shows on Nick atnight.
Yeah, black and white. Oh, you know what?
No, you know what was on Nick atnight?
The Honeymooners. Yes, they were.
It was on Nick at night. Yeah.
I'll go with the Honeymooners. That's a good answer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Jackie Gleason, you know, the
original him and Lucille Ball, the original stand up comics
that they met. They made TV stars, you know,
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before it was popular. Yeah, Jackie Gleason and Lucille
Ball are just integral in television history.
Let's just. Say they're they're legends.
Legends in so many different ways.
Sure. Question #4 OK give me the
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dumbest cartoon character. The dumbest cartoon character.
What's funny is we're going through cartoons right now and
stupid. I know the dumbest cartoon
character that is going to have to go with Wile E Coyote.
He keeps getting, he keeps getting schooled by the
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Roadrunner. Wile E Coyote is interesting
because he is smart enough to make the trap, but the trap
never works. Ever.
He's getting constantly schooledby the by the Roadrunner, you
know, so going to have to, I don't know if that's if that's
dumb. I mean, Elmer Fudd's kind of up
there, you know, But if you go to Looney Tunes, you know, I we
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could go all day long on on on, you know, dumb ones from, you
know, Transformers or whatever. But but yeah, I'll go with Wile
E Coyote do. You think we're going to
actually get to see that active versus Coyote movie?
I I I don't know. It would be cool though.
And the concept of it is interesting.
Yeah, it, it would be cool, but I don't know.
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Yeah. I don't believe like a movie's
coming out until like it's like 6 months from the release date
and we've got like a trailer, you know, because I mean, how
long have we, we heard about Superman, you know, and that.
Was. A minute and so you know, how
long have we heard the FantasticFour?
So you know, all this like Avengers doomsday stuff that you
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can see on TikTok and on Facebook or whatever, you know,
I'm not going to believe it until we have an honest to
goodness trailer, you know, and I know the the ending credit
scene for Fantastic Four, I'm not going to give it away for
anybody that hasn't seen it, butit does allude to Avengers
doomsday. But yeah, we'll, we'll, we'll
see. So anything that's been like
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talked about, you know, which I mean, they talk about cool stuff
all the time, you know, talk about Beverly Hills Cop 5, you
know, and you know, I'd, I'd love the Beverly Hills Cop
movies. I don't care.
The everybody thinks the third one sucked.
I liked it. Did you watch the 4th 1?
I did on the day it came out. What did you think of it?
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I thought it was a good, you know, they try to retcon a bunch
of the, the bunch of three. I mean, you know, Eddie Murphy's
in his 60s, you know, So what kind of action movie?
I just watched that one with himand Pete Davidson.
I forget the name of it. But you know, what kind of what
kind of action movie can you getwith a guy in there in in his
60s? You know, I mean, they did the
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they did the best they could, but I, I just wish, I wish Eddie
Murphy would do stand up again. I really do.
That would be good. Yeah, I really wish he would
just do stand up again, but you know, he's filming the new Pink
Panther movie right now. Why?
Because like what? He he is the new inspector close
up. That is weird.
Yeah. All right.
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So the 5th question since you bring this up, sure.
We're. Going to play a quick game, I
guess you can say it's F Mary kill, but it's not F Mary kill.
It's OK you're going to kill stealing that you're going to
kill kill a show off kills me going for good.
You're going to bring back a show, OK?
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And you're gonna kill. You're gonna bring back one?
OK. And you're going to spin off a
show. There we go.
OK, the, the show that I'm goingto kill is Law and Order.
It's been on incredibly too long.
You know, it's hard. It's hard to come up with new,
new stories. They're just kind of regenerate,
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regenerating those. So that's the show I'm going to
kill. Not SVU.
That's that's a good one. I forgot Lord order still comes
on. Yeah, it's.
Still. On.
It's still on. Like, why is it still on?
Yeah. Yeah, it's still a.
Good answer. Yeah.
So we're going to, we're going to do away with that.
What was the second one? You got to bring back one now.
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I'm bringing back WKRP in Cincinnati.
Wow. Yeah, that's what I'm bringing
back. I love.
I love that show. Yeah, I'm bringing back that.
You know John. I like the answer.
Yeah, I'm bringing back WKRP in Cincinnati and I'm going to spin
off. Before you, before you spin off
the show, I'm trying to figure out how this would work today.
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Are we going to set the show in today's era, or we're going to
still set the show when it happened?
I think it'd be interesting to set it now because, you know,
back then it was a failing radiostation that switched from like
elevator music to Rock'n'roll. So, so you could, what you could
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do now is you could set it in a setting now with a failing radio
station, but it's failing now because everything's gone to
streaming and nobody listened inpodcasts and nobody listens to
the radio anymore, you know, so they would have to come up with
like a shtick to get people to listen to the radio, you know,
(23:58):
'cause then if you're in a car, I mean, if you're like me, it's
either Spotify, Pandora, Apple Music, or I'm listening to a
podcast. You know, you're driving down
the road, you know, got got an hour to kill.
Let's listen to a podcast, see what somebody's got to say.
I'm. Checking now 'cause I was
curious like is, is everybody from the show still alive?
(24:19):
I would find it, I think. Howard Hesman's dead.
Didn't he die? I think so, yeah.
Yeah, I, I don't know. I feel like you can bring back
most of the cast I would say. Yeah, or you can bring back the
the living. Lonnie Anderson just died like a
couple months ago. But I feel like you could bring
(24:40):
them, but you could like have new characters and bring them
back and like make cameos of them.
Tim, were you still alive? Oh man, I love Tim.
That's that's Venus Flytrap. Yes, I love that guy.
What other show was he on? He was on another big show.
He. Was on a few shows.
I want to say it was a smart guy.
No, it was Sister. Sister.
(25:01):
That yeah, that's what he was on.
He was on Sister Sister, he was on the Simon and Simon and it
was, I think he was on That 70s Show too.
Yeah, what a great character Venus Flytrap was, you know,
Yeah, that's if somebody asked me what's my all time favorite
sitcom, That's it. I had the box set, I mean, and
then the Thanksgiving episode. If you're on my social media,
(25:23):
you'll see it every Thanksgiving.
I. Have not watched that show in 20
years. Yeah, I didn't watch it again.
I've watched it in a little while.
I remember liking it a lot though.
Les Nessman is one of the greatest characters ever
created. You know KRP.
In Cincinnati. Yeah, I mean, what a.
Great. Theme song, yeah, that's back
(25:44):
when every show had the great theme song, you know, Hill
Street Blues, you know, I mean, you know, remember Hawaii 5, O
Knight Rider, Dukes of Hazzard, you know, I mean, just just
these great theme songs. Dallas, that's another one I
had. I had the box set of Dallas and
my dad owned all the VHSS when and then when he passed away,
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they're like, we're going to sell these.
And I'm like, no, you're not. Yeah.
And I'm. I'm keeping them and.
I have a few of those so that I know I have the A-Team, I have
Knight Rider, I have the greatest American Hero.
The A-Team Did you see the movie?
Yes. OK, I love that movie.
I, I the, the movie of Bradley Cooper and Liam Neeson and all
(26:29):
them. Yeah, it's good.
I, I love that movie, especiallyspecifically the guy who played
Murdoch. And I was just like, why can we
get, you know, a reboot of The Naked Gun and I can't get an
A-Team 2 that is good. I mean, can I just get these
guys playing those characters? I mean, I thought Ray and Paige
Jackson did a good job. He.
Did a good job. I mean, I just like, why can't I
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get, because that was kind of like the setup of why they're
the A-Team. Why can't I get like, you know,
and bring the van back? Because they crushed the van
like in the first of the of the movie.
And I was just, you know, back when, you know, the cars were,
you know, characters of the show.
Yeah, that was a big part of TV.Yeah, the car, I mean, Magnum
(27:11):
Pi, you don't remember Tom Selleck, You remember the car?
Yeah, Yeah. And I mean, you know, the the
cars were were it's like that old Steve McQueen movie with
with him in that bullet that Yeah, that 1969 Mustang.
Yeah. Bullet Yeah, very well.
(27:33):
They tried to recreate and gone 60 seconds but Nicholas Cage is
not Steve McQueen, no. He's not.
He's Nicholas Cage. Yeah.
All right. What?
What show are you spinning off doing a spin off of?
OK, so they, they kind of already did a spin off of this
show. The spin off I'm going to do is
of, of Breaking Bad, but I I'm not going to spin it off.
(27:54):
And do you know Walter White or anybody from his family or Jesse
or anybody from his family? But you remember Skinny Pete and
his buddy Badger. Yes, I do.
I want a comedy with those two. OK, I like that idea.
Yeah, I want a comedy with just the cause.
Those guys are like just have slapstick comedy written all
over them. Like Beavis and Butthead.
(28:15):
Yeah, I mean, yeah, let's just see him go because, you know,
Skinny Pete was smart, but he hewas, he was, you know, just just
the high all the time. And I just think it would be
funny. I like that idea and.
Because they were the kind of the Comic Relief of Breaking Bad
because it could get kind of serious here and there.
Such a good show. But yeah, Skinny Pete and
Badger, you know, even call it that, you know, I mean, yeah, I
(28:39):
just think that would be funny to keep that Breaking Bad, you
know, with the with the movie they did about Pinkman and then
Better Call Saul, which was a great character.
I think that that they could continue that universe going
with with, you know, just a 30 minute comedy shift, you know.
I like that idea. That's a really good idea.
(28:59):
Yeah. Skinny Pete and Badger.
I like it. Yeah, I just, I, I was so, I, I
loved it so much when in the El Camino movie, The aftermath of
what happened to Breaking Bad, when, when they brought Skinny
Pete and Badger back and I was just like, I was just like, ah,
there they are. El Camino's not a bad movie, I
enjoyed it. No, I enjoyed it.
(29:21):
Yeah. Yeah, it's Vince Gilligan.
He he doesn't do bad stuff, you know Better Call sells good.
Yeah, it is really good. I mean, ironically, it lasted
longer than Breaking Bad did. Yeah.
Yeah, I want to. Think about it.
You know. Let everybody know about your
podcast. OK, I have a one minute podcast.
(29:43):
The reason that it's one minute is because I listen to a lot of
podcasts. I have since podcasts been
around. I had I went to school for
history and I I love it. However, every history podcast
known to man on the face of the earth since the beginning of
time is way longer than it needsto be.
(30:04):
They also love to beat things todeath, like the JFK
assassination. And they like to tell everybody
who they are. It's like they're back in the
1950s and they're Walter Cronkite.
And they're I'm Walter Cronkite,you know, and all this.
They say their name 150 times. So the way this all started was
(30:27):
I wanted to do, I was on a podcast.
I don't know if you could see itbehind me, but think says
Unfiltered. I was on a podcast called
Unfiltered. It was a collection of me, a
comedian with a, with an ordained Baptist minister and a
devout Catholic. OK, so and it was, it was called
(30:47):
Unfiltered and people were like,but it's a really interesting
dynamic. This sounds like the punchline
for a joke. No, yeah, it's not it, was it?
Was a comedian a pastor? Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, a comedian, a pastorand a Catholic walk into a bar.
But, but it, it, it, and it wentwell.
We, we, we still do things the three of us, but it's more
(31:10):
sports related now and a like that.
I used to be here locally at Jacksonville.
I used to be on sports talk radio.
So how, how I kind of got into the the podcasting thing.
But anyhow, so I was on that show and that show is a very,
it's just what it's called. It's unfiltered.
I mean, it, you cannot let a child listen to it.
You know, it, it can get it can get kind of rough and it could
(31:33):
go in every direction that, you know, you can go.
And so I wanted I wanted to create like a podcast that like
my kids could listen to. And at the time it's 2018, so my
daughter's 15 and well, then I was 21.
So my daughter see, she was bornin O 4.
(31:55):
So she was in high school. My son was in middle school.
And so I was thinking about thisthing and I was like, Hey,
podcasts are like really long. And so I'm thinking about doing
a podcast that's a minute long. Yeah, or just really short.
And I was like, nobody does that.
You know, every, the shortest one that I ever hear is like
10-15 minutes, you know? And I was like, and no one does
(32:18):
a minute. Like, we'll keep it like at a
minute or a minute and 1/2 or something like that.
And then she goes, my wife literally goes, that's stupid.
And I was like, that's what we'll call it.
And she goes, what did you talk about history?
And she goes, well, what type ofhistory can you get done in a
minute? And I looked over at the kitchen
table and there was a ninja blender box sitting on the
(32:40):
kitchen table. And I said, the very first
episode is going to be the history of a blender.
And we're just going to do everyday items that you find
around your house or in your caror at work, or we can even do
like everyday topics like moviesand TV shows and you know,
things like that. But it's going to be simple, you
know, and, and she's like, well,how many you're going to do?
(33:03):
So I did, so I did, I created the stupid history minute.
I recorded 30 of them and I put them out all at once like
Netflix does, right? And I put them out thirty of
them all at once. And about a month after,
somebody DM me on Twitter and they're like, hey, are you going
(33:23):
to do any more of those stupid history minute things?
And I said, I wasn't planning onit.
They're like, we think they're really cool, you know?
And I said, OK, so I talked witha couple of people who are
podcasters too. And they're like, yeah, you got,
I think you got kind of got something going here.
And so I did 50 more, but this time I did it daily.
(33:44):
Like I scheduled them out daily.And so one would go out every
day. And after the 50 were over, I
mean, you got to look at that's,that's, you know, the better
part of two months people, more than one person was like, hey,
where's my stupid history minutetoday?
Hey, where's my stupid history minute today?
(34:05):
You know, I can't, I can't, you know, one guy even text me.
It's just like, I can't start myday without my stupid history
minute like that. And I'm like, OK, and, you know,
I just kept finding it. So I created like a website.
I didn't know what to do. So I created like a website and
I put it on the website. I said, look, if you got a, you
know, an idea for an episode, shoot it to me.
(34:26):
People started shooting things to me.
So, you know, that's kind of theway it went.
And then when we get good ideas,my my daughter wanted volunteer
hours, so she worked on the show.
She does most of the research, you know, for the episodes, you
know, now we've got kind of a team that goes through it.
We, we, we have, I don't know ifyou could see my hat, but we
(34:47):
have merch now. And I made it literally all
started from me wanting to make fun of history podcasts.
And there's all 1200 episodes, almost 1200 episodes now.
That's amazing. That's amazing.
What What I find fun about your show is 1 is a minute long and
well, it's a little longer than a minute, but it's funny because
(35:08):
you get the intro. Yeah.
You get like an then you get theshow for a minute and then
before you're like, oh, it's already over so.
You know, you know what's funny about?
So it's I still treat it like like a joke, you know, and it's
kind of it has incorporated itself into my life.
(35:31):
Like I thoroughly enjoy doing it.
You know, I, I like how it's kind of brought me and my kids
and my, my wife's a teacher, so she can, like, we wrote a, a
book called the Super history book and they were major helps.
I mean, I know my name's on it, but they were major helps.
And, and, and that because we, the joke about that is that, you
(35:52):
know, you're, you're reading thehistory of a paper clip, but it
reads like a history book, you know, So, and that was the hard
part about it. But it, it's incorporated itself
into my life to where I went from, you know, just trying to
make fun of podcasts to, to where I'm kind of, I, I'm
(36:12):
incredibly proud of it and kind of very anxious to where do we
go from here? In what, what haven't we done?
Because if you notice, if you goback to the catalog, I've never
repeated an episode ever. You know of the same thing, you
know, I've, I've run out of holidays to cover because I've
(36:33):
covered them all already, you know, So it's, I mean, it's,
it's, it's, it's a fun time. I never thought anybody and I
don't really mess with it every day.
I record once and we record oncea month.
It takes, you know, a couple weeks every month to kind of do
the research and try to figure out what we're doing.
(36:53):
But we're we're into like seriesnow, so we'll do cartoons one
month. Last month we did what we do
last mascot sports mascots July,but the conspiracy theories next
month we're doing serial killersbecause it's Halloween.
I was going to ask you, how longdoes it take you to record an
average episode? Well, an episode not long
(37:17):
depending on how many times I can it takes me to get through
it. We do a month.
It takes about 3 hours to do a month worth of episodes.
You know, because you know, you could be working on one episode
and we time it to where when we write the copy of it, it's it's,
(37:37):
we have words. We have words in there that we
have to put. We don't have to put in there,
but we, we have a list of words that people have emailed us and
be like, we hate, hate it when you say this word.
And we're just like, we're absolutely going to continue to
put that word in there. Yeah, one of them is beloved.
That that's probably the most common one.
They're like, I hate it how Kemps is beloved.
(37:59):
OK. We're absolutely.
We try to put in every episode, but sometimes it doesn't fit.
But yeah, like you can be recording one episode and like,
get to the last sentence of it and mess it up.
Yeah. So you don't want to go back and
edit. Takes longer to edit that out
and re record that one line. Then it would just do the
episode over again, you know, But we, we produce them as we
(38:22):
go. So it's like record one, produce
1. We have a template.
We throw it into, you know, shape it out, make sure you
don't have background noise or anything like that, and then up
and then upload it. Yeah.
So we go as we go so we can get a whole months done.
We typically do them on Sundays when I, if, if I'm out of town,
(38:44):
when I get home, typically do them on Sunday, you know, late
afternoon, early evening, you know, wrap it up, you know,
second to last weekend or last weekend or the month, you know,
like we're, we're recording, I'll be in Atlanta this week.
So the next weekend, that's whenwe're recording October.
Well, for those who don't know, why are you going out of town?
(39:07):
I'm, I'm going to do a corporateevent and in Atlanta, GA for a,
a, a, a comedy yeah, group that that I'm a part of.
We did corporate events for corporations and networking
groups, business groups and things like that, that want to
have, you know, a party for their employees or a get
(39:29):
together. And basically we make fun of
their company, you know, or their, their group.
We did one for not too long ago for a a networking group called
Business Networking International.
And if you ever been a part of Band I, then you know that they
have rules that they follow. And we just basically made fun
(39:50):
of those rules, you know, for two for two hours.
They loved it. They ate it up, you know?
Those who don't know, Clem's a stand up comedian.
Yeah, I don't consider myself a podcaster.
I consider myself a comedian that has a podcast.
Yes, yeah. So how long have you been a
comedian for? Roughly 20 years off and on.
(40:10):
Yeah. I started in 2004, you know, as
I was a writer for a comedian who is still in the circuit.
And I don't know if he wants me to say his name, but no, it was
1 Dave Chappelle, but not not that.
Not that big. Not that big.
Yeah. Yeah.
But it wasn't Chris Tucker. Yeah.
(40:32):
We're. Just going to name all the black
comedians I know. And you know this man?
Yeah, I knew it. You know?
And no, but he he's he's local. He's what they call a featured
comedian. He's not a headliner.
And. And and neither am I.
Neither am I, by the way, No, Karen Top's a headliner.
(40:53):
I've actually, I've actually methim.
Oh. You met Karen Top.
Yeah, yeah, he's he's, he's not.He's a headliner.
He's got a. Residency bet about him.
He's pretty. He's pretty muscular.
Yeah, he's got, he's getting, he's getting.
He's just like, all of a sudden he's getting old.
But yeah, he's a he's got a residency in Vegas.
(41:14):
But I think it now when the I don't, I don't know what hotel,
but he he's out. He's out there in Vegas.
You know, most of this prop guyshere, him, Jeff Dunham, people
like that. But and I was writing for him
and then one night at a show, they had a opening and some guy
didn't show up. And so he said, hey, can you sit
(41:35):
in here? And I was like, yeah, but I'm
going to tell him my jokes that you tell badly.
And, and that's kind of where itstarted.
You know, a couple, a couple months go by, somebody caught, I
caught somebody's eye, you know,and they're like, you know,
you're unique, 'cause I, I make fun of, I make fun of me, you
know, I, I talk about stuff thatgoes on in my life, you know, I
(41:56):
talk about, you know, stuff that, that, that I grew up with,
you know, the, the, the story ofthrowing the rock through the
cop car that's a little dressed up, you know, just just these
stories. So it's, it's very unique.
I don't talk about politics. I don't talk about, you know, I
do talk about religion, but I don't like crap on any religion
(42:17):
other than I kind of can be construed to give Catholics a
hard time, you know, but they kind of asked for that, you
know, let. Me ask you a question Sure, I'm
super interested in this 'cause you brought up that you wrote
jokes, you helped write jokes for a comedian.
Is that taboo for comedians? Because I know in hip hop, if
(42:41):
it's a ghost writer, if someone who ghost writes lyrics for a
rapper, that's like a big taboo.Like you can't be considered
like AMC like you know that people do it, but they they take
you less seriously because OK, you didn't write your own raps.
That's like a big no no one rap.Is it the same with comedy?
Not yet. Yes and no.
(43:03):
OK, so comedy, the taboo is stealing jokes.
It's like if I go to if I go to an open mic and I tell a joke
and then you think you told toldit different and then you go on
stage elsewhere and tell it and you know, could get could get
back to me. Like, that didn't really happen
locally, but if, like, I would like I did a set in Seattle, you
(43:24):
know, I could have easily taken,you know, a Florida comedian's
jokes and told it in Seattle as my own.
But now with, like, social mediahow it is and everybody's got a
camera in their hand, you know, so that that's the taboo.
They're right. Like writing jokes for people,
like comics trade jokes all the time.
Say, hey, man, you know, you could probably tell us better
than I can. But what?
The minute you do that, it's their joke.
(43:45):
You know, it's it's not your joke, your joke anymore.
The one thing that. But people buy jokes all the
time. Yeah, I don't.
They buy jokes. Yeah.
Like that was the thing. Like, yeah, it's a thing.
So you, you have people who are good writers who either don't
have the, for lack of a better term, don't have the balls to
(44:06):
get on stage or just aren't goodin, you know, stage fright just
aren't good in front of people and, you know, can't, yeah.
Don't have a, you know, stage persona per SE to to do that.
So they, but they like writing comedy, you know, it's fun, you
know, and it's, I mean, it's really fun hearing somebody tell
(44:26):
one of your jokes, you know, Butthe minute you give it away,
it's not, it's no longer yours. Interesting.
You know, so, but I, I don't want to say it's taboo.
I think personally, if you're a comic, you should write your own
stuff. Personally, you know, I don't, I
don't Now I have a, you know, some friends be like, hey, maybe
you should. Yeah, I'll tell them a joke and
then maybe you should tell it this way.
(44:48):
Yeah. Or maybe you should add, you
know, this. And I don't really consider that
that's just them helping out a friend.
Yeah, that's like pitching it up, like helping with the joke,
Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
And so, I mean, it's just like everything you got to like, you
know, like somebody who is, you know, writing a song, you know,
they've they've probably changedit 50 times before they record
(45:10):
it, you know, so, yeah. But I I hadn't heard that about
about the hip hop game. Oh, it's a big deal.
Like rappers who don't write their own rhymes and lyrics.
They like when you're like a real rapper, rapper, like we're
like like a like a Nas or a Jay-Z or Smiles who's highly
respected. People get like the hip hop
(45:32):
community gets very upset about that.
So let me ask you a question about that.
So do you you know this beef between Kendrick Lamar and
Drake? Yes, I do.
I know very much. So do you think that that is a
real beef or it's just a big time marketing scheme?
Oh, it's definitely a real beef.Oh yeah.
It, it, it, it's a, it's a real beef that started off as
friendly competition, I guess you could say it.
(45:55):
And then it became, you know, when once you call someone a
pedophile, it becomes something else.
It becomes something else immediately then.
So yeah. Yeah, I it would have been a
genius marketing scheme. Yeah, 'cause they're both,
they're both laughing all the way to the bank.
Yeah, they are. They both make a lot.
Of money? Sure, sure.
But. Hip hop's very competitive
(46:18):
though, That's the whole thing. It's very competitive, like like
sports. Hubble Sport.
Yeah, Yeah. But, you know, I wish, you know,
in the in the comedy world that,you know, it would be like
everybody bands together and and, you know, helps each other,
but it's, it's not it's competitive world.
Yeah. Yeah, I can imagine like.
(46:39):
Just just like any entertainment.
Depending on the level you're at, it get can get more and more
competitive. Yeah, and you kind of got to be,
I mean, I, I don't want to say complacent, but you know, be
happy for where you are. You know, you, you see these,
you know, young guys come up andI'm just like, you know, comedy
evolves as you get older and you, you have just more life
(47:02):
experience and, and to, to, to make fun of or to, to go off of.
And, you know, people who are 22, you know, I mean, they don't
have the life experience of I just turned 50.
So yeah. But I do admire their ambition.
(47:22):
Let me let me ask you this. This is a a interesting question
for you. Have you ever seen someone come
into a comedy club and you see them in their early stages, like
that guy's going to be somethingbig, and then he turns around
like, sure enough, that guy's somebody big?
I have his name was Gabriel Iglesias.
Oh yeah, that's pretty cool. Yeah, I probably, it's right.
(47:48):
It was six O 5 O 6:00 somewhere in there and he was doing the
punchline in Atlanta and there was like a, like a comedy
contest and yeah, I was trying out for it.
And there's this guy there who was overweight, you know,
Hispanic guy. And I, I mean, he had me in
(48:08):
stitches, you know, and I look, man, I listen to jokes all day
long. I try to write, you know, two or
three jokes a day. And so it's very difficult to
get me to laugh out loud when you're trying to.
It's very, it's got to be reallyfunny.
And he was really good. And then the next thing you
know, he's on TV. That's crazy.
So you saw him in the earlier stages of his career?
(48:30):
No. When he had hair, yeah, yeah.
Before he lost all the weight, which he hasn't really lost
much, but he used to be really big.
Yeah, but that has to be pretty cool, almost probably inspiring
to see somebody who you see in the beginning stage come up and
you're still like, I don't know,baby.
Another, another one, too, wouldbe a guy named Ron White.
(48:53):
Yeah, he's part of the blue. I mean, very early on, no one
knew who he was, you know, and he was just doing the club
circuit. Yeah.
No one knew who he was. And I was just like, watch this.
This dude is going to be, somebody's going to find him.
You know, somebody's going to find him.
And if you do it long enough, but you got to be committed,
man. I'm, I'm talking about, you
(49:15):
know, 2300 bucks a week for, youknow, you know, 10 years.
You know, not everybody can be, you know, like I chose to do,
you know, local and, and, and, you know, corporate gigs which,
which don't pay much, but I alsohave, you know, a professional
life, you know, and because, youknow, we got to, we, we have to,
you know, pay for kids to go to college and stuff.
(49:37):
Yeah, that's that's really expensive.
You know, so, but I mean, and asyou said, I don't know if you've
ever watched stand up, but it's getting, you know, I mean, there
are people in their 70s, almost 80s don't stand up now, so.
I I think that's the cool thing about stand up is stand up is.
Anybody can do it. Anybody can do it as long as you
have a story to tell and you want to bring it to the stage.
Man, just be funny and be entertaining.
(49:59):
Have something to say, you know,it's like, it's like people ask
me, you know, why did I, like. I was a big Eminem fan.
And I said simply because, you know, he had something to say.
Yeah. That's why I like Kendrick
Lamar. I think he's funny, you know?
That's a good point. Yeah.
I just. I think he's funny.
I, you know, I can't really get into Drake, you know, too much.
(50:20):
I tried, you know, But Kendrick,Kendrick Lamar, I think it's
hilarious, you know? I'm, I'm glad that you kind of
like, as you, as the person who's who's older, like I said,
you know, 50s, you're still pushing it down.
You, you take inspiration from Eminem, Kendrick Lamar, because
you see them doing their thing. And I Eminem thing kind of
(50:41):
touched me because Eminem now he's, he's older now.
Yeah. His, his daughter is like an
adult with kids. And I know, I know you remember
that. Like, hey, you remember her
being the little kid. And now she's grown and.
Hasn't, man? And now it's like, hey, I think
hip hop and comedy kind of has this kind of parallel thing
(51:03):
where they both kind of are verysimilar in a way.
Yeah, you, you got to have something to say.
And I think both, you know, look, man, I, I, I grew up in
the 80s through the 90s, huge 90s hip hop guy back when, you
know, I'm, I'm talking, you know, the ones I listen to, you
know, the Digital Underground, you know, I mean, you said 90s
(51:27):
hip hop to people and they all think it's Vanilla Ice and
Hammer. It's not, you know, I mean, you
name, I mean, I was trying to explain to a 35 year old what 2
Live Crew was the other day, youknow, I mean, just the stuff
like that, the morphed into, youknow, Eminem and, and, and stuff
like that. But it's, it's all about having
(51:47):
something to say. It's the last bastion of free
speech that we got. Yeah.
Because you can't really, you can't get up and, and, and I
mean, I mean, but this is as real as it gets.
Kendrick Lamar went to the SuperBowl and did not like us, right?
Super Bowl, you know, and and. That's unheard of when it comes
(52:09):
to hip hop. Right.
That would be like Dave Chappelle standing at the Super
Bowl and telling his juicy smolier set, You know, I mean,
it, it, it, it was just, you know, that just doesn't happen,
you know, and, and people were like, you know, I was at Super
Bowl party up here, like, oh man, this, this thing sucks.
They're like, what do you think,Kev?
And I'm like, I think it's great.
(52:30):
I I think it's funny, but I follow this type of stuff.
Yeah, You know, I thought it wasgreat.
I thought it was unique. I think it brings something
interesting to the table. The best videos to watch are the
are the react videos to when when he he he started that
sound. There's just like there's like,
I cannot believe he's doing this.
I thought there was no way he was not going to.
There's no way, you know, and I was.
(52:53):
The biggest, arguably the biggest song in the world at the
time. Yeah.
Oh yeah, yeah. The people are going to like
he's going to do the song. Yeah, I mean, and if I'm like
scrolling through YouTube or whatever and it's on there, I'll
watch it, you know, 'cause they,they'll just.
And it was the tease of it up until then, you know, that that
made it even even greater. I, I just thought it was genius,
(53:14):
you know, to do that. Whoever's idea that was, whether
it'd been his or or his promoter, I mean, needs a race,
You know, I, I thought, you know, I just thought, you know,
and the, the things that he was wearing, you know, not like a
bunch of people, you know, againat the party, I was like, oh,
man, this sucks. They should have gotten Taylor
Swift. Man, shut up.
(53:35):
Exactly. Yeah, let's see enough of her.
Let let me ask you a question. Do you ever think we'll get to
the point where we see maybe a comedian perform at the Super
Bowl? I would like to, you know, it's
funny you should bring that up there in Gainesville where UF
is. No, sorry, those who don't live
in Florida, the University of Florida, you know, for Gator
(53:57):
growl is like a big, you know, kind of pep rally before
homecoming. And they always have a comic,
you know, and they fill the stadium.
That's 80,000 people you know and.
When you said that, I thought like, you know, I'm like, that's
not actually not a bad idea. Yeah.
But you don't necessarily have to have an artist like a singer
or a musician not there performing.
(54:18):
I bet you Dave Chappelle could do it.
I I only think you would have toget like the big you.
Know neighbors might be. You know, Dave Chappelle, you
know, Rock could do it. I mean, somebody, you know, but,
you know, depending on what channel it's on, then, you know,
if it's on NBC, then they're going to want to get Jimmy
(54:39):
Fallon to do it. And that's probably not a good,
you know, place for him to do it.
He probably wouldn't do it because he respects stand up so
much. But it would have to be
somebody, you know, plays a ring, you know, Kevin Hart, you
know, could do it. You know, somebody like that.
Yeah. But, but I have a feeling you're
going to see a Taylor Swift Super Bowl halftime.
(55:01):
Oh, that's definitely happening sooner rather than later.
That's definitely happening. Yeah, could, could be this year.
Do you remember well, you, your community probably remember
this, remember this very well, the 11 colour halftime show.
Yeah. And the whole story behind that,
How? Maybe you haven't done a stupid
(55:22):
history minute on that one yet, have you?
No, I haven't. The whole ideal of a Living
Colour TV show actually startingthe Super Bowl halftime show
because originally they wanted them to do the Super Bowl
halftime show and they didn't doit.
They just did their own thing athalftime.
And then the next year, the Super Bowl got Michael Jackson
(55:44):
do their show. Yeah, which is arguably the best
halftime show ever. Michael Jackson.
That Super Bowl had probably thebest.
That was the Whitney Houston Star Spangled Banner too, you
know. And then the Cowboys killed the
Bills for I can't remember if that was Cowboys Bills One or
(56:05):
Cowboys Bills 2I. Think it was 1.
Yeah, I think it might have. Been because I think because if
I remember correctly, the Super Bowl halftime show used to be
just like a band comes out, likea marching band comes out in
Blaze and that was it. And then 11 Color did their
thing that Super Bowl halftime show and that true, like
millions of people watching it. Yeah.
(56:27):
And they were like, well, we, wegot to do something like this
next year. Like they were like, Oh no,
we'll do Michael Jackson now. I Tell You and Living Color is
one of the shows and Living Color, Married with Children and
Beverly Hills 921 O are the shows that made Fox.
You. Know I, I, I, man, I, I could
(56:49):
sit here and probably talk with you in another 4 or 5 minutes
about the characters on in living color.
You know Wanda, you know the Damon Wayans, the the movie
guys, you know Fire Marshall Bill, you know that were such
better characters than Saturday Night Live.
I agree. You know, and I don't know if
you ever saw the the reason thatDamon Wayans got fired from
(57:12):
Saturday Night Live. I did see that.
I saw him talk about that. Where where he played a cop, but
not the way they wanted to wanted them to.
You guys don't know, just go YouTube it, you know, and it's
funny. But but yeah.
So basically a no holds barred Saturday Night Live, you know,
and and they always had good musical guests.
(57:34):
This is like, it's like, do you remember the Arsenio Hall Show?
Yes, I do. It was.
It was. Way better than after that.
Yeah, it's way better than like it wasn't, I want to say it was
better than Carson or David Letterman or anything.
It just had different guests andit had guests that like I was in
high school at the time, so it had guests that I was interested
in because I was in high school.Yeah, it.
Was you know. Catered to a younger generation
(57:56):
of people that felt cool. Yeah.
I mean, I mean, and it was, it was incredibly diverse, you
know, I mean, he had Bill Clinton on there playing the
saxophone. Yeah, you know, I mean, and that
got people into wanting to vote,you know, and.
I'm surprised they haven't brought that show back.
Arsenio Hall, Yes, Yeah, I mean,well, what's Arsenio?
He's got to be pushing 70 now, right?
(58:17):
He's in the. 60s he's in the 60s.
You know, he was just, I mean, he looked pretty old in coming
to America too, you know, but but yeah, I mean, just just
there's nothing like that that caters to.
I mean, maybe there is. I don't want, you know, I try
not watch network TV because I don't want to give people the.
People would say today people would say it's Jimmy Fallon, but
(58:41):
it's not the same. It is not the same as our city.
All show was shows like that. No, but yeah, late night TVI
have a feeling it's going away. Yeah.
I mean, everything's going to golike John Mulaney, if, you know,
he's a stand up, he has like a show on Netflix and I think the
(59:04):
streaming is just going to take over network TV sooner or later.
The only I'll tell you this, thebiggest thing that's keeping
network TV alive is sports. I agree they're trying to take.
That away? Yeah, They're trying to put it
on Amazon or put it on you know what?
They have the Chiefs in the Chargers the other night on
YouTube. Amazon, YouTube.
(59:26):
What is it? CBS 2.
Well, they started putting, I'm a huge baseball plus, yeah,
Paramount Plus. I'm a huge baseball fan.
They started putting Friday night baseball and Apple plus,
you know, and so now I got to pay for another string because
I, I don't miss, I don't miss many Braves capes, not many, you
know, you know, So I, I don't, if I'm not watching the game,
I'm keeping a, an an eye on the score, you know, so but, and,
(59:51):
and, you know, I'm, I'm, I like,I, I have a glutton for
punishment. So I like, I like, I root for
the Jaguars Heavy because I'm born and raised here.
Oh, sorry to hear that. So I like punishment, you know,
and, and I went to school in Gainesville, so I'm a big Gator
fan, so I like punishment there,too.
Nah, they lost Saturday, Yeah. They that.
(01:00:14):
Was ironically to USF. Yeah.
You know, so, but Jaguars won yesterday.
It's more than I could say for the Dolphins.
Yeah. Dolphins, yeah.
That's who we were rooted for before we had the Jags, man,
where everybody here was a Dolphins fan.
Interesting. Well, Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans.
I mean some, but that's, that's a cross there.
(01:00:36):
It's, it's more of like a kinship with I-95, you know?
Yeah, that makes. Sense and and the Bucks are over
there, but I'll tell you this Mike the World Series that I
want to see is the Braves versusthe Braves because if the in
that World Series I'll go to every game yeah, I'll just try
traveled up and down 75 from Atlanta to Tampa.
(01:00:57):
That would be good. Yeah, yeah.
You know, that's my dream. My dream Super Bowl or the
Falcons versus the Jaguars. Happy.
We're going to get it too. Yeah, yeah.
But with my luck, they'll play that game in like LA, you know,
they will play it somewhere around here.
Yeah, 'cause you, I mean you guys in Miami, you get the the
(01:01:18):
Super Bowl all the time, like once every 3rd year or whatever.
Yeah, it's been, yeah, it's beena while since we had one, but we
we usually get one. Atlanta gets it often.
Tampa gets it often. We got a Jacksonville got it
once, you know. Yeah, we got, we got it once.
It was like the first time it'd been cold, you know, in late
January, because it's usually like didn't really get cold
(01:01:40):
here. It's like there, you know, I
mean, it gets colder than here that it does there.
But I mean, never really like cold cold.
My wife's from Pittsburgh. She's like you guys, you guys
don't know what cold is, you know, so.
Well, this has been a great conversation buddy.
Yeah, man, yeah, I I had a greattime.
I like your show a lot. Thank you, I appreciate you man.
(01:02:01):
Let me know where to find your show at.
You can find it probably the easiest place at on Twitter.
It's that stupid minute. It's on Apple everywhere you can
get podcasts. I mean, if you're an Apple or
Spotify or whatever, any, anywhere you can get podcasts
distributed to to more than you know, at least 50 on there.
(01:02:24):
You could, you could find me at stupid minute on Twitter.
I also have a personal one, but my personal Twitter is very
different. And if you, if you on my
personal Twitter, if you don't want to know the answer, don't
ask the question. You will get a very honest
answer. But that's mainly what I get on
if I'm like complaining about a sports game or whatever, but
(01:02:45):
it's, it's, it's very different.And if you have a idea for an
episode, go to stupidhistory.net.
You know, and you could submit an episode there.
I'll give you a little shout outon there.
And but we're we are put every episode for the rest of the
years already already booked. So you know you're going to be
(01:03:05):
after after the first of the year.
I highly recommend this month's episodes on the cartoon shows
because I'm a big cartoon fan aspeople know, and they've done
just in the Pussycats, they've done my one of my favorite all
time cartoon shows, Dungeons andDragons.
They've done Thundercats in there, some really cool ones in
there. So definitely check those out.
(01:03:26):
Highly recommend. And we got the good ones coming
too. I have some really good ones
coming. Definitely.
And as always, Delvin Cox Spirits, we are out.
Peace.