#I like how Mike always has his dog bobble head
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Ogh I just finished MotorCity⌠yeah I totally get it now
#that animation#how can I go back to watching stuff after being absolutely fed#also wow theyâre good at giving their characters backstories#if this came out now? people would be eating it up#what a cool aesthetic#and world#wowee#itâs got such fun tropes too#I love Mike#but wow I didnât expect to like Chuck so much too! I liked the episode#Fearless#that gave him some good attention#the Duke is my favorite villain haha#I like how Mike always has his dog bobble head
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SnK Vets Autumn/Halloween cosy head canons
Hello my lovely followers I hope you are enjoying Autumn (or Spring if youâre the other side of the world!) and this Halloween/Samhain season. I decided to write some Autumn/Halloween cosy head canons for the Vets. I hope you enjoy!
Erwin
Erwin is a massive fan of big cosy sweaters, snoods and anything thatâs warm and feels like home. This means as well as him indulging in wearing such items, heâll also buy them for you. Definitely the type to buy matching sweaters for him and his partner.
Really enjoys horror movies, the kind that actually scare you and stay with you for days. He doesnât jump or hide behind a blanket, he enjoys the thrill of it and will continue to talk about the film for ages afterwards.Â
Will carve a pumpkin for Halloween but does one which is anything but ordinary - very arty or floral. Might paint it a different colour like pink or teal.Â
Likes going on walks to admire the autumn colours - despite the colder weather he still takes a picnic basket complete with Elderflower wine and a red & white checked picnic blanket.
LeviÂ
Thinks Horror movies are silly but secretly they do scare him.
Enjoys baking warming foods like spiced apple crumble and beef stew.Â
Makes the home very cosy and puts up very traditional/vintage Autumn/Halloween decorations. Then will proceed to moan a little about how cluttered everything is.
Gets cold very easily, has a hot water bottle which he takes to bed but doesnât want anyone to know.
Enjoys Autumnal walks and a little bit of foraging for useful and tasty ingredients for his and Erwinâs cooking. One time they found truffles and he didnât stop talking about it for days. However, he prefers the walks later in the day when thereâs less people around.Â
HanjiÂ
Loves Halloween - gets dressed up and not just on the day itself. They probably have several different outfits which they wear on the lead up to the big day.Â
Puts together bags for the kids - not just sweets or chocolate but little party bags full of sweeties, chocolate, candied apples, toys, stickers and more.
Definitely went trick or treating when they were too old to be doing it as they didnât want the magic to end.
Throws awesome Halloween parties where everything is decorated, thereâs games, themed food & cocktails.Â
Has hot chocolate pretty much every day and always has it with loads of cream, marshmallows etc.Â
Has horror movies on repeat and a Halloween/Autumn playlist which is pretty much the soundtrack to the Hanji household for weeks.Â
NanabaÂ
Enjoys the baking part of Autumn/Halloween as well as all the crafts. Will make things that take a lot of time but are well worth the effort.
Makes a cross stitch of a pumpkin and hangs it on the wall - it stays up after Halloween.Â
Makes her own costume for the Halloween party.Â
Loves Pumpkin spiced lattes.
Goes for a lot of long walks in the countryside, will always kick leaves and jump into puddles when she can (and when no one is looking unless itâs one of the vets)
Has a bobble hat which Erwin brought for her one year.Â
Knits several small pumpkins which she places in the window.Â
Uses Autumn and the cooler weather as an excuse to get stuck into a book sheâs been meaning to read for ages.
MikeÂ
Like Erwin he loves the cosy part of Autumn, wearing big sweaters, snoods and gloves.Â
Owns a lot of clothes that are mustard, brown, green and dark orange so that he looks like an embodiment of the season heâs in.
Autumn always inspires him to write poetry and doodle in a notebook which he carries around.Â
Sometimes he joins Nanaba on her long walks, sometimes he prefers to go on his own so he can listen to the sound of leaves crunching under his boots, the birds in the trees etc. and just be one with the world.
Loves foraging for Mushrooms - he and Hanji have been known to pick the âmagicâ variety and have a little fun - which Erwin finds hilarious and Levi thinks itâs irresponsible.Â
Tells terrible Halloween based puns to kids when they come trick or treating at his.Â
Has a dog that he loves taking with him on his walks - takes a lot of photos of said dog with his little pumpkin bandana on and always lets him swim in the river.Â
Loves putting up little homely/vintage autumn decorations and carves a few small pumpkins too early on.Â
When he gets home from walks he loves snuggling up under a blanket and drinking coffee with brandy in.Â
Moblit
Doesnât really like the cold but he does enjoy warm, cosy socks and the excuse to have tasty drinks and food.
Helps Hanji with the planning for the Halloween party and is the one to step in if he thinks things are getting out of hand.
Always worries on Halloween that theyâll run out of sweets for the children, no matter how much they buy.
Enjoys curling up in front of a fireplace with a good book and reading quietly.Â
Likes to watch the rain come down outside the windows, heâll happily sit and watch it for an hour just alone with his thoughts and his cat.Â
#snk vets#aot vets#Erwin Smith#levi ackerman#Hanji Zoe#Hange Zoe#Nanaba#moblit berner#mike zacharias#Mike Zakarius#miche zacharias#Halloween#Autumn#headcanons#cosy#my writing
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Hi! Hi! Hello!
[crowd continues to cheer]
Hi! Hahaha, how are you? Thank you, thatâs very nice of you, thank you.
[cheering fades away]
Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thatâs so nice of you, I hope youâre having a good week, thank you for being here! I, uh, am doing well myself. In a couple days Iâm gonna turn 29 years old and Iâm very excited about that. I was hoping, uh, by now that I would look older but that didnât happen.
[light audience laughter]
I donât look older, I just look worse, I think. Honestly, when Iâm walking down the street, no oneâs ever like, âHey, look at that man!â I think theyâre just like âWhoa! That tall child looks terrible!â [slowly turns head with shocked expression to pantomime someone looking at him walk by] [audience laughter] âGet some rest, tall child! You canât keep burning the candle at both ends!â
You ever seen on âAmericaâs Most Wantedâ when they age a photo of someone? Just take my kindergarten photo and yellow the teeth and put bags under the eyes and be like âThis is what he would look like nowâ [puts hand in front of him as though he were showing someone a picture]
[audience laughs]
I was a very nervous kid, I was very anxious all the time when I was younger. But whatâs nice is that⌠some of the things I was anxious about donât bother me at all anymore. Like, uhhh, I always thought that, uh, quicksand was gonna be a much bigger problem than it turned out to be.
[audience laughter]
Because if you watch cartoons, quicksand is like the third biggest thing you have to worry about in adult life, behind real sticks of dynamite [holds up one finger] and giant anvils falling on you from the sky [holds arms slightly away from body and looks up]
I used to sit around and think about what to do about quicksand! I never thought about how to handle real problems in adult life. I was never like, âOh, whatâs it gonna be like when relatives ask to borrow money?â [audience laughs]
[John turns head sharply to the side] Now Iâve gotten older, and not only have I never stepped in quicksand, Iâve never even heard about it! No oneâs ever been like, [slight Brooklyn accent] âEy, if youâre cominâ to visit, take I-90 âcause I-95 has a little quicksand in the middle. [moves hand in circular motion] Looks like regular sand, but then youâre gonna start to sink into it.â [lowers hand to gesture sinking]
[audience laughs]
I was nervous all the time, but I had a good family, I have wonderful parents. A lot of guys my age Iâll hear them say this, theyâll go, [slightly lower and slurred voice] âEvery day I think Iâm becoming more like my dadâ. I think Iâm becoming more like my mom? Because I- I was watching that show âAccess Hollywoodâ and one of the reporters said, [switches mike to other hand and imitates facial expression and voice of a reporter and bobbles head while speaking] âUp next, weâve got an exclusive interview with Sandra Bullockâs former husband Jessie James,â and out loud, I went, [slightly higher and harsher voice] âEuch! This oughta be good!â
[audience laughs and John nods curtly]
Thatâs pure mom.
[a little more audience laughter]
My parents are both lawyers, they are BOTH lawyers, and sometimes they would be like lawyers with us when we were kids. I remember one time I was in bed, and my dad came in and he said âGood night, John! Did you brush your teeth?â and I said, âYesâ, But hereâs the thing. [light audience laughter] [John smiles mischievously] I hadnât.
[quickly turns head with serious expression] But who cares? I didnât have, like, a job interview or anything. So my dad comes back and in a couple minutes holding my toothbrush [raises his arm up by his head as though holding a toothbrush] He says, âJohn, is this your toothbrush?â and I said âYesâ, and he said, [moves hand with emphasis with every word] âSo we agree that this is your toothbrush?â
[audience laughs]
But he said, âJohn this toothbrush is [looks down and looks up quickly] bone-dry.â Yea, like he looked down and he said [looks down and looks up quickly] âbone-dryâ. [audience laughs]
He said, âYou lied to me!â and I said âDad, [holds up a finger] I did not lie, I said that I brushed my teeth, I never specified that I brushed my teeth tonight! [points to the side slightly behind him] And if the court reporter reads back my remarks, you will see that I did not perjure myself.â
My momâs also a lawyer, she was a different kind of lawyer with us when we were kids. My mom was more like Nancy Grace. She would just make wild accusations all day long and wait for something to stick. [audience laughs]
My mom would blame me for things that happened on the news. [dramatically turns head to the side while smiling] That is true.
I woke up one morning when I was a kid and my mom was standing over my bed and said, [vibrates head dramatically on italicized words and speaks in a slightly higher and more frantic voice] âI just heard that Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Al-Fayed have been killed in Parisâ
[turns on his heel and takes a couple steps to the side]
Like I had something to do with it! I was like, [defensive tone] âMom, I have been here all night. You can feel the TV, itâs warm.â Luckily, I had a good alibi since I was in Wisconsin and 12.
[audience laughter]
My brothers and sisters and I had this babysitter named Veronica when we were kids, and I was [hushed tone] in love with her. I was in love with Veronica. She would babysit us on Saturday nights.
[return to normal volume] And in my head, when I was a little kid, I thought that Veronica was like 25, 30 years old. I was just talking to my mom the other week, I found out that when I was 10 Veronica was 13.
[audience laughs as John wears a confused expression]
So why was she in charge? All she could do was dial the telephone a little better than I could.
13 when Iâm 10? Thatâs just like hiring a slightly bigger child. That would be like if youâre going out of town for the week and you paid a horse to watch your dog.
[audience laughter]
Like, [turns head as though looking up and a horse and holds out hand as though holding a piece of paper] âAll right, here is the number where weâll be, [maintains eye contact with imaginary horse and moves hand to gesture lower to the side] and hereâs where we keep the dog food, [moves hand up to pet imaginary horse] and youâre a horse.â [audience laughs] [John continues to move arm in dramatic sweeping motion to show petting the body of a horse] [hushes horse] âShh shh shh shh shh, shh shh shh, shh shhâ
[turns towards audience and lowers arm] Why do people do that? People always shush animals. Theyâll go, [mimes petting a large animal] [speaks in soft voice] âHey, shh shh shhâŚâ [turns sharply to face audience with a cheeky expression and bobbles head, speaking in a matter-of-fact high pitched voice] Theyâve never spoken.
[as the audience laughs, John walks slowly to the side]
I always wanted to live in New York when I was a kid, Iâm so excited that I get to live in New York. I saw New York City in a movie when I was a kid, it was called Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. It is a sequel, [audience starts clapping] Yeah, how about that movie? [audience laughs lightly]
It was a sequel to the movie Home Alone.
[starts speaking in a hushed tone] I remember in that movieâââoh, the kid in Home Alone 2. He gets into a stretch limousine on 5th avenue with a large cheese pizza and I thought, [turns head upwards and outstretches arm and yells] âTHIS IS THE HEIGHT OF LUXURY!!â
[light audience laughter]
Now I live in New York and Iâm psyched, [turns head to the side with dubious expression] but that is a stupid movie title. [turns head sharply] Lost in New York? The streets are numbered. Howâd you get lost in New York?
[turns head with condescending expression and tone of voice] I know itâs kind of stupid to complain about a movie that came out 17 years ago, but I wasnât a comedian back then. So I have to do it now. I wish Iâd been. I wish Iâd been a Def Jam comic when that movie came out. [aggressively] I would have torn it to pieces! Be like, [imitates a âghettoâ manner of speaking and voice with increased volume and paces back and forth quickly] âYou seen this shirt? You seen this Home Alone 2: Lost in New York shirt? Itâs a grid system, motherforker! [audience laughs] [John raises his eyebrows and whips his head to the side and begins speaking more rapidly] Where you at? 24th and 5th? Where you wanna go? 35th and 6th? 11 up and 1 over, you simple bench!!â
[audience laughs and applauds]
[John returns to his normal voice and demeanor and raises an arm in a sweeping motion]
Thatâd be my big joke. Thatâd be the closer. If I was a Def Jam comic when that movie came out. [weakly holds up a finger] But alas, I was not.
[turns head after every comma] I think the bullying that young people have to go through now is really rough, I really sympathize, âcause I was bullied when I was a kid. When I was in grade school, I was bullied for being Asian-American. Aaaand, the biggest problem with that⌠is that I am not Asian-American. [presses lips together tightly]
[light audience laughter]
But when I was younger, [turns head quickly and says while laughing] and this is absolutely true, people thought that I might be Asian-American. [turns head with serious expression and holds his hand at eye level] I have pretty thin eyes, I had very thin eyes when I was a little kid [sweeps hand down from top of head to eyebrow then moves it straight horizontally] and I had straight black hair that I wore in a bowl cut. And from the ages of 3 to 8, people thought that I might be a young Chinese person.
On the first day that he met me, the guy that is now my best friendâââhe met me the first day of kindergartenâââhe went home that night and said, âPapa, today I met a boy with no eyes.â [audience laughs] [John smirks and sways his head with swagger] And that was me.
Kids would make fun of me in middle school. Kids would call me a âchina manâ, which of the racial slurs has got to be the laziest. [audience laughs] That is just pushing two words together, [dramatically shakes head with eyes closed] no work was done there.
[speaks in an incredulous tone] It was very confusing to me because Iâm not Chinese, no one in my family is remotely Asian. I mean, we take our shoes off when we come inside, but that was more of a carpeting thing that anything else. [light audience laughter]
Hereâs how bad it got, though⌠I remember when I was in junior high, we had this music appreciation class that we never appreciated. And they took us to hear some classical music once at a symphony orchestra. So we go to a symphony orchestra. In one of these classical pieces, there is a moment where they [pantomimes hitting something with his arm] bang a gong, and every time they banged the gong, all the kids sitting in front of me would stand up, turn to me, [places hands together and bows deeply] and bow like that. [audience laughs] Which is some racist-ass bullshirt, but also [turns head with impressed expression] incredibly well coordinated for a group of 13-year-olds.
13-year-olds are the meanest people in the world. They terrify me to this day. If Iâm on the street on like a Friday at 3 PM [moves hand with emphasis on each word] and I see a group of 8th graders on one side of the street [points to the side and then dramatically moves point towards the audience] I will cross to the other side of the street. [moves pointing finger with emphasis on each word] Because 8th graders will make fun of you, [changes point into an âokayâ with his hand and continues to move it for emphasis] but in an accurate way.
[speaks with a spiteful tone and expression] They will get to the thing that you donât like about you. They donât even need to look at you for long, theyâll just be like, [uses high obnoxious voice and shuts eyes while doing a goofy dance] âHa ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha ha ha! [sharply turns to side and points with alert and mocking expression] Hey, look at that high-waisted man! He got feminine hips!â
And Iâm like, [John moves to side where he was pointing and screams in a high but gravelly voice while shutting eyes tightly and moving fist and upper body down in unison for emphasis] âNo!! Thatâs the thing Iâm sensitive about!!!!â [audience laughs] [John straightens up and turns to the side and pouts]
[John returns to regular demeanor and expression and paces the stage in silence for a moment, smiling at the audience occasionally]
When I was a boy, I was also confused with a woman sometimes over the phone, because before I went through puberty, I had a voice like a [stands up on tip toes and makes voice slightly higher] little flute! [audience laughs]
I was once on the telephone with Blockbuster Video, which is a very old-fashioned sentence. Andâââ[audience laughs] It is! I was on the telephone with Blockbuster Video⌠thatâs like when your gram would be like [narrows eyes and covers upper teeth with his lip while bending over slightly, yelling in a high obnoxious voice] âWeâd all go play jacks down at the soda fountain!â [turns to the other side] and youâre like, [holds hand out in exasperation and narrows eyes while bending over slightly while yelling in a rude manner and shaking head slightly while speaking] âNo one knows what youâre talking about, you IDIOT.â
[John straightens up and audience laughs]
[looks an audience member in the eye] You know how you talk to your grandma? [turns and holds up hand at about shoulder height] So⌠[John freezes his pose for a moment while waiting for audience to finish laughing] [lowers hand to side and turns slowly] I was on the phone with Blockbuster, and Iâd called them a couple of times in one day to ask about a movie, and I called for a third time. I said, [holds up hand to ear to pantomime holding a telephone and speaks in a very high nervous voice] âHey, yeah, I-I was just calling to see if you had Addams Family Values yet,â [returns to normal demeanor] and the guy at Blockbuster went, [holds up other hand to pantomime a telephone and speaks in a very low aggressive gravelly voice while shaking head and hand for emphasis] âHey lady! Iâll tell you when we get Addams Family Values!!â
[returns to normal demeanor] But look, I wasnât offended as a boy being confused with a lady, I was offended as a lady who was getting pushed around by this chauvinist ashole that works at [mockingly] Blockbuster video, talking to me like Iâm some floozy⌠[with confidence] I am a proud Asian-American woman [audience laughs] and you will treat me with respect! [audience applause] I am a tiger mom!
[turns towards audience with dramatically serious expression and tone of voice] Now when people make fun of me, I deserve it. Uhh, I do. [nods] When people get mad at me now, itâs my fault, when people get mad at me on the highway thatâs all my bad, Iâm a terrible driver, I know nothing about cars. [regretful] I meant to learn about cars, and then I forgot. [audience laughs lightly]
Nothing that I know can help you with your car ever. Unless youâre like, uh, [turns head side to side as though looking for someone while pointing behind him with his thumb] âHey Iâve got a flat tire, does anyone here know a lot about The Cosby Show?â and then I could be like [hunches over slightly and walks with swagger with a comically âmature expressionâ and low voice] âOh, perhaps I could be of some assistance.â
Iâm one of the worst drivers Iâve ever seen, and I just want you all to know that if youâre ever on the highway behind me, uh, [colloquial yet condescending tone] I hear you honking and I also donât want me to be doing what Iâm doing. [audience laughs] I donât like that Iâm in that lane either, and I sure would like to get out of it! [audience laughs]
I was on the highway in Texas recently which was like a highway filled with 13-year-olds. [uses hand to represent his car and slides it to his left] And I was in the far left lane and then it turned into a U-turn only lane and I started to make a U-turn [turns hand inwards] [begins speaking rapidly and with urgency while shaking head] but then I panicked because I didnât wanna make a U-turn! So I put the car in reverse [pulls hand back to where it previously was] and then merged right back onto the highway [turns hand to his right and pushes it forward] [returns hand to microphone]
The best thing about that was that after that, cars were pulling up and [turns head to side while pantomiming steering a car] looking over to see who just did that piece of shirt move, [audience laughs] expecting to see like [straightens up and speaks with emphasis] a 100-year-old blind dog whoâs texting while driving and drinking a smoothie, instead they see a 28-year-old healthy man trying his best. [audience laughs and claps lightly]
Itâs wrong to make fun of people, you know, but itâs so fun sometimes. [voice becomes increasingly low and hushed as sentence goes on] Iâve written for some TV shows, and, you know, on a major TV show you have to be careful about what you say about people âcause a lot of people get offended, or so it has been explained to me.
I was onceâââIâll tell you this, I was writing for an awards show once, and I got into some trouble. I wrote a joke for this awards show that had the word âmidgetâ in it. And someone from the network came down to our offices and he said to me, âHey, you canât put the word midget on TV,â and I said [turns head and gestures to himself with his hand] âI sure would like to!â And he said, [turns to the other side and points finger and speaks more aggressively] âNo! âMidgetâ is as bad as the ânâ-word.â
[turns head towards audience] First off, no. [audience laughs and John chuckles] No, itâs not! âDo you know how I know itâs not,â I said to him, âis because [gestures back and forth to himself and the imaginary other person] weâre saying the word âmidgetâ, and weâre not even saying what the ânâ-word is! If youâre comparing the badness of two words, and you wonât even say one of them⌠[nods head with energy] thatâs the worse word.â [audience laughs]
[accusatory and incredulous tone] Also, I donât mean to gloss over what, like, little people have been through in this country, but you cannot compare the plight of midgets to African-Americans. That is outrageous! Midgets were never enslaved, [widens eyes and uses a dramatic tone] unless you count the Wonka factory! [audience laughs]
So we get into this argument, weâre going back and forth, he goes [points and speaks sternly] âYou canât put that word on TV,â [turns to face other side and points while whining] and I said, âI want to,â and he said [outstretches pointing arm and moves it for emphasis] âIf you put that word on TV, there could be a protest of midgets on this building!â [turns dramatically and leans over] and I said, âPromise?â [audience laughs] How tempting would that be?
I donât mean to complain about censorship at all though, because as you probably have seen by now, you can basically say whatever you want on television. Itâs ridiculous. You can say anything you want! And if you donât believe me, you should watch a little program called Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. [audience applause] Yeah. A show that I LOVE, because on that show you can say the grossest things youâve ever heard in your life. No, you canât say like the âfâ-word, you canât say that on Special Victims Unit, but people walk around on SVU going like, [walks to one end of the stage and quickly turns on his heel and walks with purpose while looking at the audience and imitating Ice-T] âLooks like the victim had anal contusions. [audience laughs] [points over his shoulder with this thumb] Yo, looks like we found semen and fecal matter in the victimâs ear canal.â [audience laughs]
Those are two real things that I heard on Law & Order: SVU at 3 in the afternoon, [audience laughter] both spoken by Ice-T. [audience laughs and John laughs as well, causing his voice to crack] Ice-T is a detective with the special victims unit, he handles New Yorkâs most sensitive cases.
I love Ice-T on SVU. He is fantastic, heâs awesome. Whatâs so great about him is that heâs been with the SVU for like, mmm, 11 years now, but he still treats every case like itâs his first in terms of total confusion. [light audience laughter and John chuckles] Sometimes theyâll be in the middle of an investigation and Ice-T will be like, [impersonates Ice-T and wears a skeptical expression while darting eyes side to side] âYo, you telling me this dude gets off on little girls with pigtails?â Itâs like, [condescendingly] âYeah, Ice. [tightens lips and nods] Heâs a pedophile. You work in the sex crimes division. Youâre gonna have to get used to that.â
[looks at front row audience] You know how they try and tie in, like, current events to every episode of SVU? [looks up] So there was this episode I saw a while ago that was about sex addiction, âcause a lot of celebrities have come out as sex addicts. So the episodeâs about sex addiction. There is a scene in the episode where the other detectives are trying to teach Ice-T what sex addiction is, [with emphasis] and it takes a couple of minutes. [audience laughs]
And finally, Ice-T gets it, [sharply jars upper body backwards while framing his face with a hand] and they cut to him in this close-up and he goes, [darts eyes side to side while impersonating Ice-T] âOh, I get it. [looks straight on with wide eyes] You mean like when someone drinks too much, or snorts cocaine, or bets the house on the ponies?â
[nods while smiling and speaks in a amiable tone] I was like, âYeah you got it, man.â [audience laughter] And I was psyched that Ice-T understood so that they could continue with the investigation, but I couldâve watched another four hours of Ice-T just naming examples. [sharply jars hand up to frame his face] Just that close-up and Ice-T like, [impersonates Ice-T with a wide-eyed expression, looking side to side after each sentence] âOr like when some smokes too many cigarettes? Or like when someone shops too much with credit cards? Or like when someone plays too many scratchy lotteries? Or like when someone eats too much chocolate cake? Or like when someone eats too much chocolate cake and then barfs it up?â
[makes talking motion with hand] And he would just keep talking and it would slowly fade out and say [flicks hand forward] âExecutive Producer: dink Wolf.â [audience applause] Thatâd be my ideal episode. Thatâd be a good one.
I saw this SVU a little while ago, I saw this episode of SVU, and Dean Cain was a rapist⌠[suddenly looks surprised and holds up hand with a defensive explanatory tone] ON THE SHOW. [audience laughs] And there was a scene where they do a line-up with Dean Cain and four other guys and they bring in this woman whoâs gonna look at the line-up, and itâs her behind the glass and they open the curtain [pantomimes opening a curtain] and sheâs standing with the two other detectives. [hushed tone] And I knew she wasnât gonna say this, but part of me was hoping she would just be like⌠[squints and looks back and forth from towards the audience and to the side with a puzzled expression] âIs that⌠Dean Cain? [audience laughs] [John points towards the audience and nods before turning towards the side again while nodding] forking Dean Cain? [shrugs and nods] Thatâs pretty cool.â
I also watch this show called Cold Case Files. On Cold Case Files, they solve old murders, and itâs really interesting â cause what I learned from it is that it was really easy to get away with murder before they knew about DNA. It was ridiculously easy. Like, what was even going on back then? What was a murder investigation like in 1935?? One cop would just walk in and be like, [speaks sharply with an old-timey accent] âDetective! [points over his shoulder with his thumb] We found a pool of the killerâs blood in that hallway!â and he would just be like [low voice] âHmmm⌠gross! [audience laughter] Mop it up. Now then, back to my hunch⌠[holds chin with hand and looks around the floor] HmmmmmmâŚ. Look for clues. [stands up straight and looks into the audience with a confident expression and speaks with purpose] Iâll tell you what weâll do! [chuckles] Weâll draw chalk around the body is. That way, [narrows eyes and looks side to side and speaks with a suspicious tone] weâll know where it wasâŚâ [audience laughs]
A couple years ago, I saw this movie called Public Enemies with Johnny Depp, it was about old bank robbers and stuff. Hereâs how easy it was to get away with bank robbery back in the 30âs. As long as you werenât still there when the police arrived, you had a 99% chance of getting away with it. To the point that, like, those old bank robbers, they take credit for the bank robberies! Like, they come running out of there and theyâre like [jumps up and squats while pretending to hold a gun, speaking in an old-timey accent] âHa ha ha! And if anyone asks, you tell em it was Golden Joe and the Suggins Gang!â [pantomimes shooting to the side with his imaginary gun] And then they like shoot âSugginsâ into the side of the wall. Itâs like, what, were bullets free back then? And they donât even disguise themselves! [stands on tiptoes for emphasis] They dress up for the bank robbery. Theyâre rolling in there in, like, [walks a few steps with swagger] big suits and hats like theyâre going to church in Atlanta. They make a day of it! [audience laughter and applause]
[John walks around for a while, steps over his microphone cord and looks into a camera] [mumbles to the crowd while gesturing to the camera] I donât know about that. [camera moves side to side] [John laughs nervously] Oh ho ho! Oh good, it has a mind of its own. [camera moves up and down] [audience laughs] Thatâs very reassuring. No, no no no⌠[John walks away from the camera] I donât like robots⌠[waggles finger by his head] thinking of things. [audience laughs, and John paces for a moment]
[looks himself over] Hope you donât mind that I dressed up. It was my first communion today so I decided to come right from it. [audience laughs] I was a very good first communicant.
Thank you for coming to this show by the way, I really do appreciate you coming to a thing because you didnât have to, and itâs really easy not to go to things. [light audience laughter] It is so much easier not to do things than to do them, that you would do anything is totally remarkable. [audience laughs] Percentage-wise, it is 100% easier not to do things than to do them. [slowly turns head with excited expression] And so much fun not to do them! Especially when you are supposed to do them. In terms of, like, instant relief, cancelling plans is like heroin. [audience laughs] It is an amazing feeling. Such instant joy.
Kids donât like that. Kids always wanna do stuff. Kids get angry, they go, [mockingly high and whiney voice] âAw, we didnât do anything ALL DAY.â You ever ask an adult what they did over the weekend and they say they didnât do anything, their faces light up. Be like, âWhatâd you do this weekend?â [puts hand on hip and looks down and speaks softly] âI, um, I did nothing. [looks up with bright expression] I did nothing at all. [looks down] Did we do anything? [looks back up with epiphanic joy] No, I didnât do anything.â [light audience laughter]
People especially donât wanna do their jobs. Iâve found that out recently too. I have a friend named Megan, sheâs an elementary school teacher and I was out with her one night and she was drinking like a monster. And I said to her, [holds out arm and looks to the side with a confused expression and an accusatory tone] âDonât you have to do a shift at school tomorrow?â And she went, [closes his eyes and slurs his words] âAhh, Iâll just show a video.â And I was like, [shocked but excited expression] âThatâs why teachers show videos?â [audience laughs] She said this, she goes, [closes eyes and slurs] âYeah, I donât wanna work!â And I was like, âYou know the kids donât wanna work eitherâ and she was like [closes eyes and slurs] âGood!â [pantomimes taking a shot]
I, uh, really doâââI was psyched to do it in New York. Uhh, Iâm really happy to live here and was glad that we could do it in New York City. And, uh, Iâm not sure how you all got here tonight, um, but I did wanna say this, Iâve never been, uh, killed by hit men so I donât know what itâs like in the moments just before youâre killed by hit men, but I bet itâs not unlike when youâre on the subway and you realize that a mariachi band is about to start playing. [audience laughs] Just that brief moment where youâre reading and youâre like [looks up from imaginary book with a pleasant expression and tone] âOh, a guitar player. [looks down and then back up] Oh, another guitar player. [looks down and then back up] Oh, an accordion playerâââ[expression changes to a cartoon-like dread and surprise and he speaks in dramaticised slow motion] OOOHH NNNOOOOOâ [audience applauds] [John begins imitating mariachi music] [sings with a slightly slurred and lower voice] ⏠This is the loudest thing in the world! [audience laughs]
[low and almost mumbling] Uh, I was really excited a lot of people, uh, showed up. They told me that it was a big theater and I thought that no one would come. So thank you for coming. I wanted to, like, take ads out in the paper. Like, beâââyou know, do something to a tot so I get in the New York Post or something. [light audience laughter]
Uhh, the New York Post is my favorite newspaper. I think itâs great, I read it every day. I like reading the New York Post because reading the New York Post is like talking to someone who heard the news, and now theyâre trying to give you the gist. [audience laughter and applause] Itâs like, youâd get the same amount of information if you grabbed someone on the street and you were like, [pantomimes grabbing someone by the shoulders and shaking them violently, yells shrilly] âWHAT HAPPENED TODAY?â and theyâre like, [throws arms out with a shocked expression and speaks in a low voice with a New York accent] âThereâs a perv in Queens!â Youâd be like, [pantomimes tipping a hat] âAll right, thank you.â [audience laughs]
Or rather, itâs like someone read a better newspaper and now theyâre trying to text you everything they can remember. [moves thumb to pantomime texting] [audience laughs and John chuckles] Doesnât have to be right, just has to be short. I really do love the Post, I read it a lot and thereâs a hierarchy in the New York Post. Uh, different people that they like [gestures hand up at head level] and different people that they donât like. [gestures hand down at waist level] Uh, and if you pay attention, [moves hand down from head to waist level in segments] you can start to identify some of the rankings that they have.
Um, the number one thing that you can be [holds hand up and head level] in the eyes of the New York Post is an angel. An angel is a child who has died. That is the best thing that you can be in the eyes of the New York Post. The less amount of time you live, the better⌠in the eyes of the Post.
After that, [moves hand slightly lower] under an angel is a hero. [lowers arm to his side] A hero is any man who does his job. [audience laughs] Youâll a lot of times see headlines that are like, [announcer voice] âHero Tutor Teaches After School,â and youâre like [shrugs and uses a low voice] âYeah.â [shrugs] [audience laughs]
[holds up hand at chest level] Down towards the bottom of the spectrum, there are pervs. Pervs touch tots, [moves hand slightly higher] tots are angels who havenât died yet. [audience laughs] [points behind him] There are no children in the eyes of the New York Post. [chuckles] Youâre either a tot [points next to him at shoulder level] or youâre dead and youâre an angel. [points next to him at head level]
[turns on his heels toward audience and holds up a finger] I did leave one out, sorry. [turns back towards his imaginary chart and gestures from chest level to slightly higher] Above perv is a bozo. [audience laughs] A bozo is any man who cheats on his wife. [bobbles head and speaks out the corner of his mouth with an old-timey accent] That guyâs a bozo! [audience laughs]
I remember seeing a headline when Tiger Woods cheated on his wife and it says [mocking announcer voice] âTiger says heâs sorry, but Elin says [turns sharply and speaks with emphasis] âBeat it, bozo!ââ [audience laughs] No, she did not. [audience laughter] She is from another country. And even if she was from this country, no one has said âbozoâ in 1,000 years. Who was your source on that, New York Post? Some tiny old lady that chain smokes all day long? They met her in a parking garage and they were like [squats down and speaks with excitement] âMadge, give us the scoop! What did Elin say to Tiger?â [turns and squats lower, pantomiming smoking a cigarette while squinting and speaking in a low gravelly voice] âEh, she told him to âbeat it, bozo.ââ [audience laughs and John straightens himself up]
Iâm feeling good tonight though, I got a massage recently. Went to a spa to get a massage, [chuckles] I went into the room to get the massage and the woman there told me to undress to my comfort level. Those were her words, she said, [bends over slightly and speaks in a gentle feminine voice while doing a âcalm downâ motion with his hand] âIâm gonna leave the room, you undress to your comfort level.â [quickly straightens up and turns] So I put on a sweater and a pair of corduroy pants, and I felt safe. [light audience laughter]
Iâm trying to, in general, take better care of myself. Iâm trying to stop smoking, Iâve smoked since I was 13 years old. I started when I was 13 years old âcause I stole 2 cigarettes [holds up two fingers] from my older sister and I hid them in a shoebox under my bed with a copy of Cosmopolitan Magazine. [light audience laughter] And one day, my mom cleaned under my bed, and she [hushed voice] found the shoebox. I came home from school and my mom was standing there holding it and she said, [pantomimes holding a box and stares forward with an accusatory look and speaks with a loud sharp voice] âHey mister! I found your treasure!â [audience laughs]
[waggles his finger] And I never liked the way she phrased that, you know, âcause that made me sound like the worldâs lamest pirate. Like, a guy whose treasure chest is two cigarettes and a womanâs magazine. [audience laughs] And my dad came home from work, and my mom told my dad that she had cleaned under my bed and found a shoebox with two cigarettes and a Cosmopolitan to which prompted my dad to ask, [low deadpan voice] âHow does John know how to make a cosmopolitan?â [audience laughs]
Iâm trying to eat better. I was out to lunch with a friend and I got a chicken sandwich and the waitress said to me, [light casual voice] âOh, youâre getting a chicken sandwich! Well that comes with a choice of either salad or fries.â Those were the choicesâââsalad or fries, the two most different foods in the universe. [light audience laughter] Thatâs like saying, âWhat kinda day do you wanna have? [raises arm to side] Do you wanna be active and go to the bathroom and stuff, or [gestures to the ground] do you wanna lay on the floor moaning?â [audience laughs] [mockingly casually] âOh, youâre getting a chicken sandwich? Well with that, you can either [gestures fingers as though counting] go for a jog or smoke crack cocaine.â [audience laughs lightly] [mockingly light and slightly feminine] âOh, huh, well⌠[moves hand in circular motion to gesture to imaginary table] if I get a plate of crack for the table, [outstretches hand to imaginary person] would you have some? Youâd have crack if I got a plate of crack? Yeah, okay, yeah weâll take an order of crack.â [light audience laughter]
[suddenly turns and speaks with purpose] Sometimes when people order fries, [playfully] they act like itâs a little adventure. Theyâll be like, [turns to side and speaks in a feminine voice] âShould we get a plate of fries for the table? [looks side to side] Should we do it? Should we-should we share some fries? [nods] [returns to normal demeanor and turns toward audience] They gotta make sure that everyoneâs onboard with it, itâs like [outstretches arm to gesture to imaginary table and returns to feminine voice] âIf I get fries, youâll have a couple, right? If I get fries for the table, youâll haveâââ[bats hand at imaginary person and speaks playfully] I know youâll have fries if I get friesâââshould we do it? Yeah, letâs be bad! Câmon, letâs do it, all right, [looks up and behind as though speaking to a waiter, speaks with confidence] weâre gonna take a plate of fries!â [return to usual demanor] Itâs like a group of couples agreeing to do ecstasy together. [audience laughter]
I have a girlfriend now, uh, myself, which is weird because Iâm probably gay based on the way I act and behave and⌠[audience laughs] have walked and talked for 28 years. [light audience laughter] [shrugs] I think I was supposed to be gay. I think, like, in Heaven they built, like, three quarters of a gay person and then they forgot to flip the final switch, and they just [gestures pushing something] sent me out and it was like, [turns to one side] âYou marked that one gay, right?â and it was like, [turns to other side with shocked low voice] âOh no! Was I supposed to?â [audience laughs] and they were like, [slightly lower and frazzled voice, looking side to side] âOh man, well thisâll be a very interesting person. [audience laughs] [lighthearted playful voice] Thisâll be a very silly person.â [audience laughter]
I was definitely gay when I was a little boy. [light audience laughter] A lot of little boys are gay. You know, theyâre very [sways arms and legs] flowy and they have [chops air with hand] very hard opinions on things. [audience laughs] I donât mean that I was a sexually active gay man when I was a little boy, thatâs not what I mean. When I was a little boy, I was more like a 67-year-old gay man [slowly and gently tosses hand in front of him] thatâs kind of over it sexually, you know. I was just like an old queen, I would just come out of the recess yard and be like, [closes eyes and dramatically sweeps arm to the side, speaking in a high slightly drawled voice] âEveryone get outta my way, [audience laughs] I just wanna sit here and feed my birds.â [audience laughter] The gym teacher would tell me to play kickball and Iâd be like, [narrows eyes and speaks with a slight drawl] âYou want me to do whaaaat?â [turns head and chuckles] [audience laughs]
Real quick, this happened pretty recently, I was in a restaurant near here in the West Village and I was at the urinal [gestures in front of him as though there were a urinal] and an old gay man came in the bathroom with a walker like this [squats slightly and pretends to have a walker] and he said this to me, he went, [closes eyes and leans back slightly, speaking in a high voice with a New York accent] âIâm either having a drink or I have to pee, youâre livinâ the golden years, kid, not me,â [stands up straight with amazed expression] like, he spoke in rhymes, it was crazy. [audience laughs] It was such a weird interaction that I wasnât sure if it actually happened. I came out of the bathroom and I asked my girlfriend, I was like, [points behind him with a confused expression] âDid you see, like, an old man follow me in the bathroom?â and she was like [looks down slightly and speaks with a slightly higher voice] âJohn, [looks up and turns head suddenly] that bathroomâs been closed for forty years! [audience laughs] [John shakes head up and down to make his voice fluctuate] Whooooooaaaa!!! Whoooooooaaaaaa!!!! [audience laughter]
Where was I? Iâm not gay, but I might be, and I have a girlfriend, aaand sheâs a female person. [chuckles] [audience laughs] Itâs going very well, I love her very much, and so a few months ago she was like, [moves hand in a circular motion and speaks deadpan] âOkay, itâs going well, so now I should meet your parents.â Because that what people do when a relationship is going well. They meet each otherâs parents, and Iâve never understood that. Iâve never been with my girlfriend and thought like, [slow suggestive voice] âOh, honey, tonight is going great, but do you know what would make it perfect? [audience laughs] Charles and Ellen Mulaney. [audience laughter] Come on! [chuckles] Letâs get them in the mix. Weâve been going pretty hot and heavy lately, I think itâs time we bring in two older Catholic people.â [audience laughs]
My girlfriendâs a female and I had all these friends that were female. So when I started dating her I was like âoh great, theyâll all get along⌠no.â Not even a little at the beginning. I donât want to make any generalizations about women because I donât know shirt about women, but if there is one thing Iâve learned in my personal experience is that I think women can be friends with each other, (In a hesitant tone) but I think it can be tricky sometimes when you force women to hang out with each other. I think that sometimes doesnât work.
Like, I donât think that you could ever put together a heist with women. Does that make sense? Oceans eleven with women would never work! Causeâ two would keep breaking off and start talking shirt about the other nine. Or not even talk shirt, just say weird passive aggressive things while they break into the casino.(Pretending to break into a safe with a stethoscope) Just be like: âaww, I love how you just wear anything.â
(Audience Chuckles)
My girlfriend is wonderful though. I listen to everything my girlfriend says. I donât mean she bosses me around, I just listen to everything she says because before I had a girlfriend, I never had someone whose always standing next to me (Steps to the side and acts as if someone is currently standing next to him) who can just point out obvious things that are happening.
Like weâll be in a restaurant and my girlfriend will be like: âyou ordered your food an hour ago. It should be here by nowâ and Iâm like âyeahhh it should!â Itâs like having a lawyer for everyday life. Sheâll be like: âthe bus driver shouldnât talk to you in that wayâ and Iâm like: âno he shouldnât!â (As he waves his arms around as if in confidence). Before I had a girlfriend, I had no standard of how I should be treated as a human being. You could do anything to me and I was just like a young Motown singer. I was like shiny and dumb and easy to trick. Iâm like (in a Motown/black accent): âaww man, youâre gonna give me a whole hundred dollas for all of my songs? Where do I sign Mr. Berry Gordy?âAnd now when Iâm not with my girlfriend you can still do anything to me. I can tolerate any treatment.
Like I try to travel alone sometimes you know and Iâll put up with anything. Like ill book a ticket on some garbage airline. You know I donât want to name any actual airline so lets just make one up and so lets just call it delta airlines. So Iâve got my ticket at âDelta Airlinesâ(Does air quotes) and I show up at the airport. âCan I get on the plane now please (figuratively hands ticket to fake person)?â And their like (In a maniacal irritated tone): âNO! ITS BEEN DELAYED 9 HOURS! (Spits)â and I go (Like a child) âOkayyyâ and I go to the bathroom. Then I come out of the bathroom and I go(Like a child): âany updates?â and they go (In a maniacal irritated tone): âyeah, we took off while you were in the bathroom. BECAUSE WE HATE YOU. Now take this meal voucher that doesnât work, GO! FETCH! (As if he pretends to throw a stick for a dog playing fetch).â And I go (Like a child): âOkayyyyyâ and I go over to the Wolfgang puck express and am like(Like a child): âCan I have a sandwich please?â and they go (In a maniacal irritated tone): âNOOOOOOOOO!â and I go(Like a child): âOkayyyyyyâ and they go(Like a bully at school): âYouâre a little fat girl arenât you?â and I go(Like a child): ânoooo! Noooo!â and they go (Like a bully): âSay it!â and I go (Like a child): âIâm a little fat girl.â And then I go over to the Delta help desk, which is an oxymoron and I go(Like a child): âCan I please go home on an airplane?â and they go(In a maniacal irritated tone): âNooooo! In fact, weâre gonna frame you for murder! And youâre gonna go to jail for 30 years!â and I go(Like a child): âWhy are you doing this to me?â and they go(In a maniacal irritated tone): âBecause weâre Delta Airlines: life is a forking nightmare!â But with my girlfriend she would be like: âLetâs see if Southwest has any flights?â So itâs better⌠(Audience laughs and claps lightly)
My girlfriend is a Jewish woman, which is I did on purpose. (Audience laughs) Uhhhh, that sounded creepy. I donât mean like: âahhh I got one!â(Pretending to grab someone) I mean I⌠I⌠Iâm not Jewish, but Iâve always liked Jewish people. I just like them a lot. And I really like dating Jewish women. Theyâre great! Because I think what a lot of people have in relationships is communication cause guys donât know what women are thinking. And with Jewish women you donât have to guess what they are thinking. They will tell you. Yeah, this is going to get playfully anti-Semitic so just allow it to go there. Iâll get in trouble, you wonât. I really do mean this though I⌠I really admire that Jewish people, in my own personal experience, have, are very up front with their feelings. Theyâre very⌠theyâre very vocal about their thoughts and feelings and I just think thatâs really admirable.
You know, Iâm Irish, and Irish people wont tell you a thing. Irish people keep it so bottled up you know? Like the thing with Irish people is: âIâll just keep all my emotions right here(Points to heart) and then one day, Iâll die.â Like in Ireland itâs like(In Irish tone): âoh your boy, he died.â And itâs like(In Irish tone): âAlright bury the boy, do it bury the boy. Burry the boyyyyy.â (Audience laughs) Irish people donât want comfort. Look at a sweater made in Ireland. Its like a turtleneck made out of âBrilloâ pads. I used to date gentile women and⌠(Pauses)⌠(Audience laughs)⌠I dated this girl she used to stare out the window all day long and Iâm like, whatâs wrong (In a sarcastic playful tone)? And sheâd be like: âyou wouldnât even understand if I told you.â (In a pissed off tone) What the fork am I supposed to do with that?!? (Audience laughs)
My Jewish girlfriend and I donât have to guess whatâs wrong! She comes in the room andâŚ(stutters) and then we can move on from there. Thatâs what I mean. Sheâs very focused. Sheâs very in the moment, you know. And thatâs a good thing in a significant other. Sheâs very present. Jews donât daydream, (In a playful tone) âcause folks are after âem and they gotta stay sharp, you know what I mean? They have to be there. They havenât let their minds wander since Egypt. They just stay sharp. They go (frantically speaking and pointing): âWhoâs that? Who are you? Whatâs that? Whatâs that over there? Donât do that!â (Audience Laughs)
âIâm Irish⌠I keep things very bottled up, and I donât drink. Which is not what youâre supposed to do when youâre Irish. I donât drink. I used to drink and then I drank too much and I had to stop. That surprises a lot of audiences because I donât look like someone who used to do anything. (Audience laughs, Mulaney imitates sitting in a chair eating) I look like I was just sitting in a room in a chair eating Saltines for like 28 years and then I walked right out here. But I did, I used to drink a lot and then I stopped. I donât know if anyone here is thinking about quitting drinking but you need to know 2 things if youâre thinking of quitting drinking.
The first is that when you stop drinking and you still go to parties where people are drinking, they will have no idea what to offer you. Like once people start drinking for the night, they forget everything that isnât alcohol. Like ill show up at a party and theyâll be like: â(acting as if to point) Hey everybody! Alright we got Coronas in the fridge and Oh! Hey! Mulaney! Would you like, like an old turnip we found in the cabinet? Would that be good for you? Would you like that? (His eyes are now wide open). I know you donât drink (winking, audience laughs). Or my girlfriend left a Nuva Ring in the fridge, would you want that? (winking) I know you donât drink!â (Pauses)
Also if you quit drinking youâre about to lose the greatest excuse in your life, which is (As if talking to a girl):âIâm really sorry about last night. I was just too drunkâŚâ That is a get out of jail free card that you donât even realize youâve had until you lose it. I canât say that anymore. I can never be like: âSorry about last night, I was just so drunk.â Now I have to be like(As if to a girl again): âIâm really sorry about last night, itâs just that Iâm mean and loud, (pauses) it probably will happen again.â (Audience laughs)
Now I, myselfâââI quit drinking âcause I used to drink too much and then I would black out and I would âruin partiesâ⌠or so Iâm told. (Audience laughs) When you do that enough, you black out drinking and you do crazy things, you kind of become like Michael Jackson. Like any story anyone says about you might be true and (Acting mysterious) even you donât know by the end. I saw an interview with Michael Jackson before he died and they were like(Like a reporter): âIs it true you bought the elephant manâs bones? And he was like(Pretending to be Michael Jackson): âI donât know!â Ya know, cause how could he keep track of that? (Audience lightly laughs)
So I would hear stories about myself. Hereâs a story I once heard about me. I guess I was 20 and I was at a party at someoneâs house and I had blacked out drinking, and someone came out of one of the rooms at this party holding like an old antique bottle with some liquid in it, and they said, âHey, is this whiskey or perfume?â And apparently I grabbed it, drank all of it (pretending to drink a bottle), â and said (pretending to throw the bottle behind his head): âItâs perfume.â And it was.
Another story I heard about myselfâââthis one happened in high school. Uh, We had this teacher in high school whose kid went to our high school. His name was Mr. McNamara and his son Jake McNamara went to our high school. He was a sophomore when I was a senior. So he was two years behind me. And Mr. McNamara was an ashole. And one weekend, he and his wife decided to leave town, which you should never do IF YOUâRE AN ashole! (Audience laughs) And Jake McNamara decided to throw a party at the teacherâs house. (Sarcastic) Hooray! And everyone around town heard about it and we all got up individually and thought(Speaking maniacally), âOkay, letâs go over there and destroy the place.â
I walked into this party. Everyone I had even met was at this party, and everyone was drinking like it was the end of the world. (Audience laughs) People were drinking like it was the civil war and a doctor was coming to saw our legs off. (Audience laughs)It was totally unsupervised; we were like dogs without horses⌠we were running wild. I walked down (pauses) I walked down to the basement, they had a pool table in the basement. One dude took a running start and threw his body onto the pool table and broke it in half. Another kid found out which room was Mr. McNamaraâs and went upstairs and took a shirt ON HIS COMPUTER! (Audience laughs) So the party was going great (sarcastically).
Iâm standing in the basement, and Iâm holding a red cup youâve seen in movies. And Iâm standing there and Iâm holding a red cup and Iâm starting to black out and I guess someone said like âsomething something police.â and in a brilliant moment of word association, I YELLED âfork DA POLICE! fork DA POLICE!â (In a drunken accent, Audience laughs). And everyone else joined in, 100⌠drunk⌠white⌠children yelling âfork da policeâ with the confidence of guys who have already been to jail and arenât afraid of it anymore. (Audience Laughs)You know, like the: âI served my nickel! You come and take me!â confidence, but white children. (Audience laughs)
The reason someone had said âsomething something policeâ was because the police were there. So a Chicago police officer walked down the stairs and got to the bottom in the basement and looked out over a sea of drunk toddlers YELLING: âfork THE POLICEâ In his face. He was almost impressed. He was like [whispering] âWOW.â And then he leaned into his walkie-talkie and my friend john, who is now a fatherâââthis man now has a babyâââ(Imitating the action)he grabbed a 40, smashed it on the ground and yelled: âSCATTER!!â
And everyone ran in a different direction. We all ran in different directions. It was like that scene in âRatatouilleâ when the humans come in the kitchen and all the rats go in different ways. (Audience laughs as Mulaney acts frantic)We all ran in different directions, I ran into the laundry room and I jumped up on the washing machine and I crawled out through a window into the backyard and now Iâm running through the backyard and there was this big chain link fence and I thought Iâve never climbed a fence that high before. And then I woke up at home (pauses, audience laughs).
On Monday, I went to school, cause thatâs what we did back then. (Audience laughs) And Iâm walking into the school building and who do I see but Jake McNamara. And he says to me âhey, were you at my party on Saturday?â and I was like: âNoâ you know, like a liar (Maniacally, then pauses). And he said things really got out of hand: âSomeone broke the pool table, someone took a shirt on my dadâs computer, But the worst thingâ he saysââââthe worst thing is that someone stole these old antique photos of my grandmother and my parents are freaking out about it.â and I had that thought that only blackout drunks and Steve Urkel can have (pauses, audience laughs and claps while he says): âDid I do that?â
I figured no, I would never do that. I was never sure until two years later (audience in shock) ⌠relax. Iâm playing video games with this kid named Alex that we also went to high school with. Two years later, weâve graduated by now. Weâre playing video games for a couple hours, and then Alex says to me(in a hushed tone), âHey, come here. I want to show you something.â And he takes me into his bedroom and then he takes me into a side room off of his bedroom. Never a good thing to have. (Laughing) (Mulaney is in a hushed voice even worse than before) And he shows me a tiny room that is covered wall to wall in stolen antique photos from different peopleâs parties over the years. (Audience laughs) And I said: âWhy? Why do you do this?â and Alex said âCause itâs the one thing you canât replace.â (Long pause, Audience is laughing hard now) Thatâs the end of that story but how forked up is that? Thatâs crazy! (audience laughs more and claps)
So I donât drink anymore⌠and its weird you know? I miss it sometimes because drinking can kind of calm your nerves and I live in New York now and sometimes you can see things that will make you anxious youâll see troubling things out on the street. I was coming into my apartment building one night and I saw in front of my building a wheel chair, knocked in its side with no one in it. (audience laughs but almost in confusion) Thatâs a bad thing to see. Something happened there⌠you hope it was a miracle⌠but probably not⌠probably something worse. (audience laughs)
And I donât like argument, some people like to argue, you know? They think itâs like an art. And I donât like it, I think its because really ordinary arguments can get really dramatic really quickly. Like I was talking to a friend recently, and I told him I didnât think I believed in the death penalty, and my friend said to me: âoh, so youâre telling me, that if you saw Hitler⌠walking down the street⌠you wouldnât kill him?â (Audience chuckles) That wasnât what I was telling you, but alright, lets talk about this entirely new topic. What would I do if I saw (giggling) Adolph Hitler (acting out a walking motion) just walking down the street? Well first off I wanted to know what did my friend mean? Did he mean I see a guy in like the military outfit with the little moustache, cause then I would assume thatâs someone dressed up as Hitler. (Audience laughs) Iâm not gonna kill that guy. Iâm not gonna kill an actor and ruin Indiana Jones 5 just cause I donât understand costumes. Or does he mean Iâm walking down the street and I see like an old old man who I think might be Hitler based on my memory of what Hitler looks like. Iâm not gonna kill that guy either, because I am often wrong. Id murder him and people would be like: âWoah! You just killed an old old man! (Acting it out)â and Id be like: âhe looked like Hitler!â and theyâre like: âYeah, a littleâŚâ (Audience laughs and claps)
I have a lot of strange interactions on the street. Years ago, I was walking down the street and a homeless guy came up to me. And he walked up to me he pushed me like that (as he acts out a pushing motion), he pushed me in the chest. And then he said these things in this order. He pushed me and he said (in a strange accent): âExcuse me, I am homeless, I am gay, I have aids, Iâm new in town.â (Mulaney looks confused as the audience cracks up) Youâre gonna close with âNew in town?â that is not the most dramatic thing you just said. As they said in the movie Jerry McGuire: âYou had me at AIDS.â Hereâs how I wouldâve ordered those things, I wouldâve said: âExcuse me, Iâm new in town, and it gets worse.â Didnât that guy practice his like pitch at all in the mirror that morning and just figure out what he was gonna say? Ya know in the morning ya know just be like (He then imitates what this gay man would be doing in the mirror): âAlright now what am I gonna do today, what am I gonna do tonight? Imma walk up and say hello, no thatâs too subtle imam push him. Imma push him. And Iâm gonna say Iâm new in town, no no hold back hold back. Save it. Build to that. Iâm about to walk up to him, imma push him and go I HAVE AIDSSSS, no thatâs too strong⌠alright. (Cracking himself up as he does this) imam walk up to him, push him and start with the fact that I am homeless, as that is a given. Then for back story I will pepper in the fact that I am gay.â (Audience laughs)
Which I know its tough for gay youth on the street, but thatâs not like a reason for money. You cant be like, hey would you help me out Iâm very gay? (audience laughs) Like a few dollars⌠I always love how he phrased it by the way. He never mentioned living on the street, he said Iâm new in town, like it was intriguing. Like he wanted me to set him up with somebody. Like I have a friend whose like: âThereâs no single guys (âguysâ in New York accent) left in Manhattan.â And Iâm like: âI know someone whose new in town.â (Pretends to be his friend now)âWhat are 3 other things about him?â (Audience claps and cheers)
Just too anxious for a lot of things, I get nervous all the time, not even about like major life things, just about like everyday situations. Like this is my regular speaking voice, but if Iâm in a pubic bathroom and someone knocks too suddenly on the door or stall door, I go into a whole different speaking voice. Which is âEh, someoneâs in hereee. Someoneâs in hereee. (In a strange almost British accent)â so theyâre gonna be like: âI think there is a carnival barker in there. I think someoneâs trying to drum up business for a carnival.â
I decided to do something about this anxiety recently. I decided I was gonna try and get a Xanax prescription. I donât know if anyone here has ever tried Xanax, but its fantastic (a few claps) very muted claps for Xanax. You donât really get woos, its more like yeahhhhhhhhhhhhh. I didnât know how to get a Xanax prescription though, drugs like that a tricky sometimes, but I talked to a friend of mine and he said oh yeah, I did this. He said that he had a regular doctorâs appointment and at the end of it he said to his doctor: âHey doctor, sometimes I get nervous on airplanes.â And the doctor just wrote him a Xanax prescription. And Iâm like yeah, thatâs the type of lowbrow shirt Iâm looking for. Ill take your advice, friend Iâve never listened to before. (Audience laughs)
So I go to a clinic, and I go in and Iâm just going to go in for you know a regular type of check up and at the end, Iâll ask about Xanax. So I get to the front desk, and they have a âwhy are you here sheet.â And I wanna pick something that will get me out really quickly. And I look down and I see frequent urination. And I was like, perfect thatâll be a super quick visit you know? Ill just be like hey, sometimes I pee a lot and the doctor would be like (Mulaney pretending to be the doctor): âMe too, crazy right?!?â And Iâll be like: âI get nervous on airplanes.â (Audience laughs) So I checked off frequent urination and I sat down in the waiting area and I waited for 3 hours. I finally go back to the observation room and oh! In the observation room there was a male nurse standing there and he has a Batman sticker on his stethoscope, a Batman necklace and a Batman watch. He was kind of moving around the whole time, he was just like: (acting this out) âalright! I am too blessed to be stressed! Lets do it! What are you allergic to, besides work?â and then heâd take something and throw it over his shoulder and be like: âBeats working.â And all of his jokes were anti work, which is not always what you want from a health care professional. (Audience laughs)
The doctor comes in the room and the doctor looks at my chart and he says: âOh, youâre here for frequent urination, how many times a day are you urinating?â And I tried to think of a number that would warrant a doctor visit. So I said 11.(Audience is shocked)That was too many times to say. The doctor looked at me and said: âYouâre peeing 11 time a day? Then you may have something wrong with your prostate. So, what we need to doâŚâ Some of you are ahead of me (addressing audiences laughter). So I donât know exactly how he phrased it, but the gist of it was: âHey, if this visit was to continue, Iâm going to stick part of my hand up your ass. And I didnât know what to say. Cause I couldnât be like: âNo thatâs okay, I was lying. It was a lie⌠to get drugs. You know? Like a crime!â (Audience laughs) So what I did was, I pulled down my pants, walked over to the observation table and I put my hand on the observation table like this (puts hand on stool) and by the way, part of me was like: âWhatever⌠you know? You ever have those days where youâre like: âThis might as well happen. (Pauses) Adult life is already so God damn weird.â (Audience laughs)
So Iâm bent over like this on the table, and the doctor comes up behind me and says â no no no, not on your hands, your elbowsâ and he knocks me down like that (putting elbows on the stool now). And this is so much worse than this (gets back to his hands). I donât know why, I think its cause this has a little remaining dignity to it, you know what I mean? (Audience laughs) This is sort of like, go stick it in, I am an American. This is like youâre leaning over the edge of a cruise ship and youâre like: âahhh weâre approaching Martinique!â he knocked me down to my elbows and then, he stuck his hand in. and you know how sometimes youâre like, I bet I know what most things feel like ya know? You just think youâll know? I did not know, what this was gonna feel like. And this was the actual sound I made, I went: âooooooohhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmm.â (Audience laughs and claps) But I didnât say it, like it came from my vocal chords but it was totally involuntary. It was as if a ghost had been trapped in my belly and finally flew out towards the light. And then, when he pulled his hand out, we had gotten to know each other pretty well, so ill phrase this a delicately as a can. I didnât not realize than when the doctor pulls his hand out it feels like your shirtting cause the only thing to come out of your butt before has been shirt. (Audience laughs)
So, he pulls his hand out and I thought I was shirtting into his hand. So I yelled: âIâM SORRYY! This is a very routine procedure by the way for most doctors. And so far heâs had to deal with âOHHHHHMMMMâ and âIâM SORRYY!â (Audience laughs) And he didnât even let me off the hook you know? He wasnât like: âOh donât worry, you didnât shirt into my hand.â He just threw his glove away and went(As if enraged)âAhhhwahhhahwa.â And I was about to ask about Xanax but he was like: âAlright your prostateâs fine but we still need to do a blood test.â So I pulled up my pants and shuffled away, (Acting this out) feeling different. And he yells out into the hall, he goes: âHey! Weâre doing a blood test in here. Get in here!â Batman dances back in and heâs like: â(pretending to dance) Alright, we gonna do a blood test. You look different, letâs do it.â The doctor left the room, so Iâm alone with Batman. I just need this blood test to be over. But first I had to tell Batman something, I was like âBatman look, Iâm one of those people who, when you take blood from me, sometimes I can faint. And I was in the waiting area for 3 hours and I havenât eaten anything all day and Iâm really worried Iâm gonna faint.â And Batman said to me, and ill never forget it: âpshh, youâre not gonna faint!â
So, I stick my arm out, Batman puts the needle in my arm, and Iâm immediately on the ground. (Audience âdiesâ laughing) I wake up and I am covered in sweat lying on the observation table. I wake up, I open my eyes and I see Batmanâs face. Heâs looking at me and he goes: âyou gotta go!â and I go: âCan I please talk to the doctor though for a sec because sometimes, I get nervous on airplanes.â And Batman said: âthe doctorâs gone!â so I got my stuff⌠and I left. The moral of the story is⌠that if youâve been nervous your entire life, you should ask your doctor about Xanax because if you lie to him, he will stick his finger in your ass. And if you do suffer from frequent urination, keep it to yourself. I went to that clinic 2 years later for a different checkup and as I was leaving, who do I run into but Batman. And he smiled at me and he was wearing reading glasses to show that time had passed.
Thanks very much for listening to me, my name is John Mulaney. You were really fun, thank you.
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Couch
When I was first told I would need to be non-weight bearing for three months, I thought âOkay, I can rock this. I really like horror movies and I have been known to enjoy a couch day here or there.â The first few days were kind of an odd vacation. Mike did everything for me and all I did was lay on the couch, eat narcotics, and watch TV. It wasnât half bad. There was the one twenty minute period of time where Mike left to go get pizza (one of my favorite comfort foods) and the laptop, which was streaming football (another Erin comfort), said the battery was running low. I promptly crutched to Mikeâs office, nabbed the charger, crutched back to the laptop, plugged it into the laptop, and then attempted to plug it into the power strip which lived behind the TV. In hindsight, this was a bad choice. I was new to crutch life and my gimpy skills were a solid four, at best. As I reached for the cord, I realized I wasnât going to make it. My choices were a) step on my newly operated on leg and prevent myself from falling or b) fall. In the matter of a few seconds, I opted to fall. I then promptly called Mike in hysterics because I realized my gimpy vacation was far from an actual vacation and I was scared because my head was only a few inches from the coffee table.
The funny thing about being gimpy is the world doesnât stop. As much as I wouldâve liked to just be hurt, the rest of lifeâs responsibilities wouldnât allow me the space to properly cope with my newly found life status. Mike, as great as he is, also has a job. At some point he needed to go back to work and so did I. The day before Mike had to go back to work we did a test run. He was home but I needed to do everything on my own. This seemed like an insurmountable task and at the same time it was a reality check because my insurmountable tasks were simple day-to-day activities. Â
A friend of mine recently broke her foot and shared âgetting ready for the day is exhausting and by the time I make it downstairs Iâm basically done for the day.â I couldnât have related more to this. Remember- being broken is insanely hard. Not only is every task you complete two hundred times harder, but your body is trying to heal and healing is exhausting. During my trial-run I got a A+. I showered alone, got dressed all by myself, started and fed the fire, let the dogs out when needed, and fed myself. By the end of the day I was exhausted and promptly went to bed by 6 pm.
The next day I was alone and I would be alone during the week for the next 2 months and 3 weeks. I am fortunate enough to work from home, so working was actually an option. The first day I came back we had a team meeting. I was determined in some ways to hide what had happened to me, so I asked Mike to help setup my work station at our kitchen table because I would surly be able to sit in a chair and I could prop my leg up. When the meeting started it was the normal âHi, how are you!â via our bobbling heads on Google hangouts. Soon after this, however, the content changed to âErin, what happened?!â I had to tell my employer what happened because I knew I was going to need a certain level of flexibility, while I healed. At the same time, I wasnât ready for these questions. I wasnât ready to talk about what happened on the mountain and I certainly wasnât ready to talk about how much I was struggling. This is something I have learned will always be true. Even today at PT I told them I didnât want to see another PT while they were on vacation because âthey will ask me what happened.â Â
When it comes to diseases, no one asks âhow did you end up with a brain tumor?â This would be insensitive and people understand the severity of the situation. When it comes to injuries, EVERYONE will ask you what happened. Almost freezing to death on a mountain wasnât something I wanted to talk about, except people wanted to talk about it. It was dramatic and people like drama. I on the other hand, dodged and still dodge these questions as best as I can. My trauma is not for others. Itâs mine and is something Iâll be working on for quite some time. Â
Back to the team meeting - after I answered the questions I realized something very quickly, I couldnât sit in a chair. Remember the whole âkeep your leg above your heartâ thing the surgeon drilled into me? Well, a chair wonât do this for you. I messaged my supervisor, saying I would be right back and promptly crunched to the couch, where I would remain for the next three months.Â
At this point I knew my reality: I was extremely limited in what I could do and work was pretty much the only ânormalâ thing in my life. I like to think about life as a happiness pie. We all have different things we value and those pieces come together to create happiness in our lives. In general, my happiness life pie consists of Mike, my friends, my dogs, things I enjoy doing (hiking), and work. My relationship with Mike had changed significantly because we werenât partners anymore, he cared for me and I was reliant on him. My relationship with my friends changed because we couldnât interact in the same ways we used to. There were no more drinks on Friday night. Hiking was completely out of the picture. My dogs were scared of me (crutches) and I couldnât really do anything with them. Work didnât really change though. It was the one place I could interact with people and they had no idea I was hurt. It was in some way the single thing, emotionally, which got me through those months.Â
As the months passed, there were challenges. Most of it had to do with learning how to move around my home and how to manage life responsibilities. Here are a few things I learned:
1. Put a chair at the top of any flight of stairs. It makes getting to the floor much easier so you can scoot down the stairs. If you learn how to crutch downstairs, you let me know because I never figured it out.
2. A lunch bag makes carrying things much easier. You can hold it in your hand and crutch pretty easily. In the same vein, take multiple meals at once. Breakfast and lunch will fit in there.
3. Group your activities. If you have to get up, make a bathroom trip, let the dogs out, and put wood on the fire. Itâs easier overall.Â
4. Put everything at eye level or lower. Reaching something on the top shelf isnât going to happen.
5. Plan your day out. If you have meetings, you canât run to the bathroom. Give yourself a solid ten minutes to do pretty much anything.
6. A gimpy kid diet is a real thing. Remember- you arenât moving. If you donât want to pack on pounds, think about what you eat. At the same time, remember you are healing and you do actually have to eat. I found success with nuts, hard boiled eggs, dried fruit, granola bars, yogurt, and the occasional mushroom poutine (comfort food is a real thing).Â
7. Be kind to yourself. There are going to be days when you need to take a nap at 2 pm and thatâs okay.Â
Over and above how to manage my own moving, I realized managing my relationships was more difficult. Mike has been fantastic and I am thankful everyday I have such a wonderful partner. At the same time, I would be lying if I didnât say this made things difficult for us. We went from being a team to being a super needy person and a rock star. Just like every great rock star, there is a day where their fame fades. If I were to go back to these months, I wouldâve been nicer to Mike. I wouldâve been less compulsive about how clean the house was, I wouldâve waited a few minutes after he got home to ask him to do something for me, I wouldâve asked âhow was your day,â and I wouldâve said âthank youâ much more often.  I donât have an excuse for why I behaved the way I did. I didnât have the space in my mind to deal with my own emotions and to treat my partner they way they deserved to be treated.Â
When it came to my friends, I wish it was different. With the exception of two or three people who really were there for me, I felt alone. My weekly scary movie night gals made the trip to my house for those months and often times this was the sole source of human interaction I had other than Mike. Others came every so often and like I said, I felt alone. I understand people have other commitments and I am not blaming anyone. In reality, Iâm not sure what I shouldâve expected from my friends. All I know is I felt alone.
My coworkers became and have been a solid and valued source of support to me. I always worry about how much I share with coworkers because thereâs the whole work vs. personal life dynamic. I am fortunate to have a few folks who I work with, who I would call friends before I would call them coworkers. They have been an invaluable source of support to me and I cannot thank them enough.
The rest was the same. Couch, bed, repeat. I got into a certain sort of routine and counted the days down until I would be crutch-less. Little did I know, those days would be equally as challenging.Â
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NFL Dad, Week 12: An unfortunate chain of events
One dadâs diary of balancing two young children with seven hours of RedZone channel. How much could possibly go wrong? (A lot, if youâre Alex Smith.)
A successful day of parenting has two qualities: (1) good logistics and (2) getting the hell out of the house. They work in tandem, and the farther you go, the more logistical planning you need.
For example, I know that my kids need to be down for their nap by 1:30 p.m., so any morning excursion needs to end with us back at our apartment by 1:15. Except my 18-month-old son sometimes tires out by 12:30 or 1:00, so earlier is better. And they need to eat lunch by noon, or sometimes 11:30, so we need to pack lunches or plan a stop for food. Plus snacks. Plus the diaper bag. Which stroller are we going to take â the unwieldy double? Or the collapsible one? Are we taking the subway? Does the subway stop weâre going to have an elevator, or should I plan on throwing my back out carrying a stroller up the stairs again? I swear the invasion of Normandy had fewer coordinating instructions.
This is the kind of planning my wife and I put into a Saturday excursion to a French bakery to get macarons (my three-year-old daughter has a fascination with Paris). We put my son in the foldable stroller for the short stroller ride, and counted on our daughter to walk most of the 10 blocks from subway to fancy cookies.
It went swimmingly! The kids were overjoyed to be in a new neighborhood, our scheduling was stellar, the macarons were light but rich in flavor â and then the wheels fell off. Or, more accurately, a nut fell off a screw holding the stroller together, and half the frame collapsed.
Now, instead carrying my daughter on my shoulders while my wife pushed our son in the stroller (read: walking at an adult pace), my wife carried my daughter while I slung the collapsed stroller over one shoulder and carried my son in my other arm. He is the approximate size and shape of a 27-pound kettlebell, minus the convenient handle. It was slow going.
When we finally got on a subway home, I looked at the stroller, the conveyance that made the trip easy until one tiny lost part turned it into dead weight and gave us extra things to carry. This is where, if I were concerned about making this a football metaphor, I would talk about injuries and the difficulties of replacing a star player mid-season in the salary cap era.
But Iâm not. I just wanted to complain.
EARLY GAMES, FIRST HALF
â Here is my ranking of early slate games based on anticipated entertainment value to me. NOTE: I have weird tastes and strong grudges.
Bears-Eagles. The Eagles are fun to watch, the Bears are an entertaining disaster, and I love blowouts.
Bucs-Falcons. Mike Evans and Julio Jones.
Bills-Chiefs. Both teams are in freefall, I picked the Bills to cover today, and Iâm an ardent supporter of Tyrod Taylor, Competent Starting Quarterback.
Panthers-Jets. The Jets are trash but I kind of love them? For not sucking as hard as they should? Love is weird, man.
Titans-Colts. A pleasing array of blue uniforms.
Dolphins-Patriots. I have Rob Gronkowski on a fantasy team.
Browns-Bengals. No to this much orange. No to this much Ohio.
â Speaking of Browns-Bengals, my daughter pooped on the toilet just before the games started. Three more poops on the toilet, and she gets to watch her first movie: Moana.
Iâm familiar with the schools of thought that say you shouldnât incentivize potty training, and thatâs how we started off, too. Then my daughter started holding in poops for several days before struggling to crank out the hardened rock in her butt, and we implemented a multi-tiered system of bribes that would put FIFA to shame.
â The kids come and kiss me before naptime as Tom Brady hits Gronk on a 3rd and 7. The Pats are already up 7-0 after running a fake punt on 4th and 9 deep in their own territory, and they soon double their lead with a TD to Gronk. Iâm fine calling this one over.
â Tyrod Taylor finds Zay Jones on a drag route across the end zone (NOTE: as always, when I cite the route that was run, any inaccuracies are due to not paying attention and lack of replays). The Bills are up 7-0 at the end of the first quarter, and Alex Smith has looked VERY shaky to start the game. So I guess thatâs why they donât hand out actual Quarter-Season MVP trophies.
â In a bang-bang flurry of cuts, RedZone shows three straight touchdowns: Mohammed Sanu hits Julio Jones for a 51-yard touchdown bomb from the Wildcat formation; the Dolphins scoop up an errant snap to score a defensive TD; and Cam Newton runs it in on a bootleg on 3rd and goal at the goal line.
I will now embed the best of those three plays.
Look at that cool head despite the bobbled snap! I am prepared to declare Mohammed Sanu better than at least five starting quarterbacks in the NFL.
Also, I called that a Wildcat formation, but the Wildcat really seems more a principle at this point: âWe have replaced our quarterback with someone more athletic for one play. He canât really read a defense, but weâre not necessarily counting on him to. Are you ready? âCuz this is gonna be an adventure for us, too.â
â Nelson Agholor flips into the end zone, and the Eagles are up 14-0 over the Bears. This game is as good as over, but I love that thereâs so much more to come. THRASH THE SCRUBS.
â Alex Smith has started 1/6 for 3 yards. Chiefs Twitter is embroiled in a bitter civil war between fans who want Pat Mahomes to start and fans who blame the play-calling, or the line, or ... buddy, I donât see how this is on anyone but Smith. He seems like a very nice person whoâs gone through a lot of professional hardship, but at this point I a benching would be an act of mercy.
Also, I crave Pat Mahomes bombs. LET PAT COOK!
â On Saturday, when weâd gotten back on the subway after the stroller broke, I said to my wife, âIt reminds me of that saying, âFor want of a nail, the shoe was lost...â
She gave me a puzzled look.
âYou know, âFor want of a nail the shoe was lost. For want of a shoe the horse was lost,â then the rider was lost, then the message, and so on until the war was lost.â
Her face was still blank. Had she really never heard this common proverb about logistics in war? I shrugged and offered meekly, âMy parents used to say it.â
âYou and I had really different childhoods,â she replied.
â Julio Jones had one touchdown in the first 11 weeks of the season (proof that football is flawed). He now has two in the first half against the Bucs.
http://pic.twitter.com/FWGgJ8bdXi
â ALSO, KEITHFUJIMOTO (@vineydelnegro) November 26, 2017
RIP, those ankles.
QUESTION: Hey, what about the ball coming loose after Jones hit the pylon? There have been repeated rulings that players havenât been established as a runner despite taking several steps while making a catch, so if Jones lost the ball going to ground, shouldnât that be a touchback? Or at least reviewed with closer scrutiny than it got?
ANSWER: SHUT UP NERD. Did you see that cornerback fall down or what?
â Alex Smith update: He is 2 of 8 for seven yards. The Billsâ Steven Hauschka misses a 52-yarder, so the Chiefs will have good field position to try to get their first first down of the day as the clock approaches the 2-minute warning.
OK, we have a first down! But itâs still not great for the Chiefs. It feels like every replay features the color commentator circling the open receiver that Smith didnât see. Still, KC gets its first points of the day with a Harrison Butker field goal, and the Bills hustle to answer before the gun: Hauschka is good from 56 yards, and the Bills lead 13-3 at halftime.
â Robby Anderson makes a RIDICULOUS catch in double coverage for a touchdown. This marks his fifth straight game with a touchdown.
.@youngamazing9 beats double coverage with EASE. #Jets http://pic.twitter.com/uAtifOZIVW
â NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2017
One of my co-workers offered Anderson to me as part of a trade package last week â âAndersonâs been really good lately,â he said â and I reacted like heâd offered me a plate of dog crap. Look, I enjoy the scrappiness of the Jets, but I donât want them on my fantasy teams.
â With less than 10 seconds left in the half, Matt Moore gets picked off in the end zone. Instead of trailing by just one score, the Dolphins will go in to the locker room trailing 21-10.
Not that it matters, of course. Miamiâs lone touchdown is a chance defensive score on a bad snap. Theyâve already gotten their breaks for the game (they also snatched an INT from Brady, just his third of the season), and theyâre losing anyway. Iâm not sure why I framed a potential one-score game as potentially affecting the outcome; I blame the announcers.
â Alshon Jeffery, working out of the slot in the red zone, puts Eagles up 24-0 with five seconds left in the half. The score, his seventh of the season, triggers a $250,000 performance clause in Jefferyâs contract, as well as an extremely good celebration.
BOWLING FOR EAGLES http://pic.twitter.com/RXEYdmuiU9
â Clay Wendler (@ClayWendler) November 26, 2017
EARLY GAMES, SECOND HALF
â Albert Wilson slips through several defenders to score the Chiefsâ first touchdown. KC has some life, and now trails 13-10.
â Holy hell, what a play by McCown to Anderson for 50-plus yards and the TD. The Jets now lead 17-12.
"GO DEEP!" - @JoshMcCown12 And that's exactly what @YoungAmazing9 did. Another @NYJets TD! #Jets http://pic.twitter.com/Gdi31ZUDG0
â NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2017
I would like to issue an apology to Josh McCown. Before the season, I said the only job he should have at age 38 is as a backup for a good team, and that he had no business starting. That was wrong: He has completed more than 67% of his passes for 17 touchdowns (both career bests) while throwing eight interceptions in 11 games. Thatâs totally serviceable! Iâd take McCown over Joe Flacco any day.
â Ummmmm...
How does Chris Myers think burping a baby works? http://pic.twitter.com/lwYCec5jxg
â Mike Tunison (@xmasape) November 26, 2017
Look, announcers have to say a LOT of words every game, and the right phrase isnât always on the tip of your tongue. Chris Myers saw Delanie Walker performing CPR on the football, and the words that came out to describe it were âburping the baby.â I donât think he doesnât know know how to burp a baby. Itâs not like heâs fending off lawsuits for crushing infantsâ chests while babysitting, you know?
â My daughter wakes up from her nap. âCan I watch football too, Daddy?â she says. My heart gushes. I doubt that this is anything approaching an original thought, but I think the reason Iâm so madly in love with my daughter is that sheâs a little copy of the woman I love the most, but with flashes of my own DNA. So sheâs a combination of my most selfless love with the egotistical love I have for myself, and those feelings happening at the same time is more powerful than any other emotion Iâve felt.
My son? Oh yeah! Heâs great too. Love that little dude.
â Jonathan Stewart scores for the Panthers, but the two-point conversion comes up short. Carolina takes an 18-17 lead.
â My wife goes to get our son up from his nap, but he rejects her presence. âDaddy! Daddy! Daddy!â I go in and play peekaboo with him, and he cackles maniacally. Itâs my laugh, in toddler form. Let the record show that I love him as much as my daughter.
â With the Chiefs trailing and less than three minutes left, Alex Smith throws off-target on 4th and four. The pass was closer to being intercepted than it was to being completed. The film session for this game isnât gonna be fun for him.
Wouldnât it suck to have to sit through critical replays of your job? âHereâs where your Powerpoint went off the rails, Johnson. What was this chart supposed to accomplish? Look at the clientsâ eyes here: Theyâre completely glazed over! You lost your audience!â
â After a Jets field goal, the Panthers take the lead on a fumble recovery that goes for six the other way. The two-point conversion gives them a six-point lead, and my precious 4.5-point spread looks in trouble.
â Trailing 16-10, the Chiefs have one last chance to mount a game-winning drive, and Alex Smith ... throws an interception. Tradavious White returns the ball all the way to the Chiefsâ 10-yard line, and boos rain down on Smith. Poor guy. Poor Chiefs fans, too, but Iâm still allowed to feel bad for a nice guy who sucks at his job.
â The Panthers return a punt for a touchdown, and the Jets have now COMPLETELY Jetsâd this up. They allowed consecutive defensive and special teams touchdowns to go from winning this game to having no chance to cover. I canât WAIT to go back to not caring about the Jets.
â The Eagles defense, thinking theyâd intercepted a Trubisky pass late in the game, perform the Electric Slide. But the call is overturned, so they intercept Trubisky again, and perform the Electric Slide again.
Eagles making an Electric Slide music video this time out http://pic.twitter.com/q4RTtlXYZC
â CJ Fogler (@cjzero) November 26, 2017
The celebration only counts if the play stands.
LATE GAMES, FIRST HALF
â Totally biased late slate entertainment rankings:
Seahawks-49ers. Here is my weekly apology for being a Seahawks fan. If I could stop, I would.
Saints-Rams. This should have been flexed into Sunday Night Football. I reject Brett Hundley from primetime.
Jaguars-Cardinals. The Calais Campbell/Blaine Gabbert revenge game! Also, Blaine Gabbert versus Blake Bortles reminds me of one of my favorite tweets.
Broncos-Raiders. I appreciate the bad blood, but âPaxton Lynch versus Marshawn Lynchâ doesnât quite move the needle when both teams have losing records.
â Itâs rainy and windy in Santa Clara, and on the first play from scrimmage, Russell Wilson ignores a short throw to a wide-open J.D. McKissic in order to throw to a blanketed Jimmy Graham. Eric Reid picks him off.
â For a couple of blissful minutes, my kids play together peacefully without any involvement from their parents. Is this ... Could this be a glimpse of what we hoped for when we had kids 19 months apart? Like, OF COURSE, theyâll fight over toys, but the mere NOTION of entire minutes where I donât have to actively parent one or both of them makes my heart sing.
â After a Seahawks drive stalls, Blair Walsh is wide left from 48.
âHe only missed PATs for one season.â
â Saints-Rams is finally underway. The Rams put together an impressive drive and go up 7-0 on a short slant to Sammy Watkins.
â RedZoneâs first look at Broncos-Raiders is a knock-down drag-out fight between Michael Crabtree and Aqib Talib on the sidelines, and on the field, and across the field. Both players â as well as Gabe Jackson â are tossed from the game.
It started the play before, when Crabtree punched Chris Harris in the stomach. On the next play, Crabtree blocked Talib, and the cornerback took the opportunity to snatch the Raiderâs chain for the second year running.
I know that fighting is bad, especially given that players are already trying to murder each other within the rules on every play of the game, but ... this was all WILDLY ENTERTAINING. Like, Marshawn Lynch escorting Talib out of the game is only the fourth- or fifth-most intriguing part of this.
Marshawn Lynch escorted Aqib Talib out of the game. http://pic.twitter.com/D2Cci6Ks3c
â Will Brinson (@WillBrinson) November 26, 2017
Iâm so bummed that this is the second Broncos-Raiders game of the year. I want another one!
â Bobby Wagner straight up ROBS a man of a catch, and the Seahawks get the ball at 14. Two plays later, Russell Wilsonâs read-option fools the camera man (and everyone else) as he scoots in for the touchdown.
After review... It's a @Bwagz54 INT! #Seahawks http://pic.twitter.com/HQTT7JFBqO
â NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2017
.@DangeRussWilson will do it himself! #Seahawks http://pic.twitter.com/GbC1G1o1g8
â NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2017
â Alvin Kamara breaks a 74-yard run for a TD. Holy crap. The Saints cut the Ramsâ lead to 10-7.
He. Is. GONE. 74-yard @A_kamara6 TOUCHDOWN! #GoSaints http://pic.twitter.com/EhnZE2cAFX
â NFL (@NFL) November 26, 2017
I will never forgive myself for not getting Kamara in any of my fantasy leagues. All of the excitement at the beginning of the season for Kareem Hunt and Tarik Cohen has faded, and itâs Kamara whoâs the real truth. I love that dude. (NOTE: I have no idea what he looks like without a helmet.)
â We get my parents on a Facetime call so they can see the kids. I say âseeâ and not âtalk with,â because conversing with the kids through the screen is almost impossible. My son only wants to get close enough to touch the screen (he constantly hangs up on family members), while my daughter becomes hyperactive, running from room to room, posing in downward dog, and crawling through a collapsible tunnel weâve laid out. After each trick she runs to the iPad to make sure sheâs still being watched, shriek-laughs, and runs off to do something else.
â Even though Talib got the better of Crabtree, the actual football game has been all Raiders, thanks mostly to Paxton Lynch. Jared Cook makes a nice catch in the back of the end zone, and the Raiders lead 14-0.
wow that stat http://pic.twitter.com/C6lZQIwgN5
â Harry Lyles Jr. (@harrylylesjr) November 26, 2017
â ENDORSEMENT: The frozen mini chicken tacos from Trader Joeâs. Theyâre one of the rare foods that both of my kids will eat every time without complaint.
â The Jags get on the board with a field goal before the half; they trail 13-3. Nothing about the Cardinalsâ lead feels safe, yet Blake Bortles isnât exactly the man Iâd choose to lead a comeback. The Jags will need a defensive or special teams TD to get back in the game.
LATE GAMES, SECOND HALF
â The 49ers open the second half with a big dose of Carlos Hyde, who batters the Seahawks D and carries the Niners into Seahawks territory. A field goal cuts the Seahawksâ lead to 7-6.
â One of my daughterâs pretend games is a spin on the Sleeping Beauty/Snow White plot: She puts me or my wife to sleep with magic, we fall asleep, then she wakes us up with a kiss. When she comes to work her magic on me, I fall asleep very slowly, yawning as I watch Russell Wilson convert a 3rd and nine by hitting a leaping, twisting Doug Baldwin downfield. She kisses me awake before the next play, another shot downfield to Tanner McEvoy. The quick drive ends with a Nick Vannett TD and no other magical comas.
â RedZone shows clips of Calais Campbell reuniting with his former teammates before the game. And yet no mention of the respect Jaguars players surely have for Blaine Gabbert. What a shame.
â I have the TV muted while we listen to a Beatles playlist. Iâve never cared much for the Beatles, but their work holds up as childrenâs music. The Beatles are like if Raffi had an edge and more instruments.
Now, some people might be angered by that take, but Iâm not trying to be incendiary. Revolver and Sgt. Pepper are two of the best childrenâs albums ever made, and Iâll take âYellow Submarineâ over âBanana Phoneâ any day. Well, almost any day. Banana phones are pretty funny.
â Both defenses in the Saints-Rams game have stiffened â no points in 3rd quarter, and not much in the way of drives, either.
â Bork Birdles scores on a bootleg. The Jags trail 16-10.
â Jimmy Graham scores a touchdown on a short slant. With the ball on the left hash, the Seahawks lined up five wide receivers -- three on the left, two on the right. Then they motioned Tyler Lockett to the left, leaving Graham isolated on the wide side of the field. A fade was the obvious call, which is probably what made getting open on the slant so easy.
I wrote all of that out because it took the Seahawks TWO YEARS to figure this shit out, even though the Saints printed money with plays like that for five years.
â Letâs check in on Paxton Lynch:
Paxton Lynch is 7-of-12 for 35 yards, 0 TD and 1 INT. Vs. the NFL's worst defense. It's more than halfway through the third quarter.
â Frank Schwab (@YahooSchwab) November 26, 2017
â With the kids in the bath, my wife has switched to a Christmas music playlist. My daughter splashes my wife after being told not to do so, so I come in to levy the punishment. I pull my daughter out of the bath, and she starts screaming. It takes some of the enjoyment out of Mariah Carey singing âAll I Want for Christmas Is You.â Only some of it, though. That song is a fortress of good cheer.
â After my daughter calms down, I put her in her pajamas. âWhat was your favorite part of the day?â I ask. âWas it splashing in the bath?â
âYeah,â she says, though not with conviction.
âWas it playing with Evan and eating my breakfast sandwich?â
âYeah.â
âWas it going to church with Mommy?â
She pauses. âNo.â
â With the Saints down by 13 at the beginning of the fourth quarter, Alvin Kamara adds âhurdling guysâ to his repertoire.
This just in: Alvin Kamara is extremely talented #Saints http://pic.twitter.com/uobNEKP6R0
â Clay Wendler (@ClayWendler) November 26, 2017
On the same drive, the Saints go for it on 4th and five at the edge of field goal range, and Brees again goes to Kamara, which sets up first and goal. But the drive stalls, and the Saints kick a field goal like a bunch of cowards. Theyâre gonna lose the game now.
â While I sing âThe Teddy Bearsâ Picnicâ to my kids, Calais Campbell scoops up a fumble and runs it in to give Jags a 17-16 lead. I love how predictable the Jaguars are. NOW GIMME SOME BORTLES IN CRUNCH TIME.
â With about a minute and a half remaining, the Niners lose C.J. Beathard to an injury after a hard hit from Michael Bennett. ITâS GAROPPOLO TIME.
Down 24-6, Jimmy G calmly steers the Niners a whole 19 yards, culminating in a touchdown on the final play of the game. Just a really thrilling ending for the Niners faithful who stuck around, and a devastating turn of events for the heroes like me who had the Seahawks defense in fantasy.
â Strangely, the Broncos scoring points has coincided with Trevor Siemian replacing Paxton Lynch, who left the game with an injury.
This @TrevorSiemian TD pass... #DENvsOAK http://pic.twitter.com/0HDLVieQKl
â NFL (@NFL) November 27, 2017
That score makes it 21-14, and the Raiders will need a first down or two to kill the clock.
â Late in the fourth quarter, with the game tied at 24, Jacksonville intercepts Gabbert, and Scott Hanson actually says, âBlake Bortles getting a chance to be a hero...â
Come on, now. We know better than this. When Bortles is in charge of a two-minute drill, donât frame it in the positive. At the very least, be noncommittal. âLetâs see what the Jaguars do here.â âWeâre heading for an interesting finish.â âSurely both sides are nervous here.â Hedge your bets, man.
On 3rd and six, at the outer edge of FG range, Tyrann Mathieu intercepts Bortles.
â On 3rd and eight, deep in his own territory, Derek Carr hits Cordarelle Patterson deep to kill off the Broncosâ hopes for a comeback.
Oh my, @ceeflashpee84! 55-yard gain on the pass from @derekcarrqb! #RaiderNation http://pic.twitter.com/ahy06MkyFl
â NFL (@NFL) November 27, 2017
â Alvin Kamara gets in for another score, and itâs back to a one-possession game with 1:45 remaining. It is unfathomable to me that Kamara only got 11 touches in this game (for 188 yards and two touchdowns). I understand that heâs not built like a workhorse, but Sean Payton may want to revisit that decision after this game.
The onside kick is no good, and the Rams win.
â The Jaguars have gotten the ball back with the game still tied. Once again, Blake Bortles has a chance to be the hero, which is to say: He throws another interception. Phil Dawson kicks a 57-yard field goal and the Cardinals win.
â As the games wrap up, I knead the mixture that will become tonightâs meatloaf. I wonât go into my motherâs full recipe â although putting a recipe at the end of 4000 words of derivative bullshit would make this a typical internet recipe â but the combination of ground beef, ground pork, raw egg, bread crumbs, and various sauces and spices is less than pleasant.
It gets better as I go, though, and after I shape the loaf and wash my hands, I put the pan in the oven and watch RedZoneâs touchdown montage. It goes on a little too long, but then, so do most things about the NFL.
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mmhm, also this!
[funky 90âs beat and cityscape pan]
[singing] ⏠New in town,
[John Mulaney jumps out of apartment with rolled up papers]
⏠John Mulaneyâs New In TownâŚ
[John tries to put mustard on his hot dog and dramatically squirts his shirt]
⏠Heâs spilling mustard on his shirt,
[John is in an office setting and comically drops an armful of rolled papers]
⏠Heâs got some papers to deliver, but oh no!
[Switches to shot of a newspaper that reads âJohn Mulaney is a Great Architectâ and John does an âall right!â motion with his fistâ]
⏠Heâs successful, and heâs got so many crazy friends!
[A black man carrying a small Asian man walk into the shot. Yellow serifed lettering reads âWITH âPOUNDCAKEâ WALKER & MICHAEL ITZOFFâ]
[John exasperatedly rolls his eyes, puffs his cheeks, and lowers his arms in front of him]
⏠Ooh, new in town, John Mulaneyâs New In Town!
[Pans in to a New York apartment building]
(low narrator voice) New In Town was filmed in front of a live studio audience.
[Fades into the actual stage and the crowd is cheering while upbeat music plays]
[John walks on stage with a cartoonish grin and picks up his microphone with a flourish]
Hi! Hi! Hello!
[crowd continues to cheer]
Hi! Hahaha, how are you? Thank you, thatâs very nice of you, thank you.
[cheering fades away]
Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thatâs so nice of you, I hope youâre having a good week, thank you for being here! I, uh, am doing well myself. In a couple days Iâm gonna turn 29 years old and Iâm very excited about that. I was hoping, uh, by now that I would look older but that didnât happen.
[light audience laughter]
I donât look older, I just look worse, I think. Honestly, when Iâm walking down the street, no oneâs ever like, âHey, look at that man!â I think theyâre just like âWhoa! That tall child looks terrible!â [slowly turns head with shocked expression to pantomime someone looking at him walk by] [audience laughter] âGet some rest, tall child! You canât keep burning the candle at both ends!â
You ever seen on âAmericaâs Most Wantedâ when they age a photo of someone? Just take my kindergarten photo and yellow the teeth and put bags under the eyes and be like âThis is what he would look like nowâ [puts hand in front of him as though he were showing someone a picture]
[audience laughs]
I was a very nervous kid, I was very anxious all the time when I was younger. But whatâs nice is that⌠some of the things I was anxious about donât bother me at all anymore. Like, uhhh, I always thought that, uh, quicksand was gonna be a much bigger problem than it turned out to be.
[audience laughter]
Because if you watch cartoons, quicksand is like the third biggest thing you have to worry about in adult life, behind real sticks of dynamite [holds up one finger] and giant anvils falling on you from the sky [holds arms slightly away from body and looks up]
I used to sit around and think about what to do about quicksand! I never thought about how to handle real problems in adult life. I was never like, âOh, whatâs it gonna be like when relatives ask to borrow money?â [audience laughs]
[John turns head sharply to the side] Now Iâve gotten older, and not only have I never stepped in quicksand, Iâve never even heard about it! No oneâs ever been like, [slight Brooklyn accent] âEy, if youâre cominâ to visit, take I-90 âcause I-95 has a little quicksand in the middle. [moves hand in circular motion] Looks like regular sand, but then youâre gonna start to sink into it.â [lowers hand to gesture sinking]
[audience laughs]
I was nervous all the time, but I had a good family, I have wonderful parents. A lot of guys my age Iâll hear them say this, theyâll go, [slightly lower and slurred voice] âEvery day I think Iâm becoming more like my dadâ. I think Iâm becoming more like my mom? Because I- I was watching that show âAccess Hollywoodâ and one of the reporters said, [switches mike to other hand and imitates facial expression and voice of a reporter and bobbles head while speaking] âUp next, weâve got an exclusive interview with Sandra Bullockâs former husband Jessie James,â and out loud, I went, [slightly higher and harsher voice] âEuch! This oughta be good!â
[audience laughs and John nods curtly]
Thatâs pure mom.
[a little more audience laughter]
My parents are both lawyers, they are BOTH lawyers, and sometimes they would be like lawyers with us when we were kids. I remember one time I was in bed, and my dad came in and he said âGood night, John! Did you brush your teeth?â and I said, âYesâ, But hereâs the thing. [light audience laughter] [John smiles mischievously] I hadnât.
[quickly turns head with serious expression] But who cares? I didnât have, like, a job interview or anything. So my dad comes back and in a couple minutes holding my toothbrush [raises his arm up by his head as though holding a toothbrush] He says, âJohn, is this your toothbrush?â and I said âYesâ, and he said, [moves hand with emphasis with every word] âSo we agree that this is your toothbrush?â
[audience laughs]
But he said, âJohn this toothbrush is [looks down and looks up quickly] bone-dry.â Yea, like he looked down and he said [looks down and looks up quickly] âbone-dryâ. [audience laughs]
He said, âYou lied to me!â and I said âDad, [holds up a finger] I did not lie, I said that I brushed my teeth, I never specified that I brushed my teeth tonight! [points to the side slightly behind him] And if the court reporter reads back my remarks, you will see that I did not perjure myself.â
My momâs also a lawyer, she was a different kind of lawyer with us when we were kids. My mom was more like Nancy Grace. She would just make wild accusations all day long and wait for something to stick. [audience laughs]
My mom would blame me for things that happened on the news. [dramatically turns head to the side while smiling] That is true.
I woke up one morning when I was a kid and my mom was standing over my bed and said, [vibrates head dramatically on italicized words and speaks in a slightly higher and more frantic voice] âI just heard that Princess Diana and her lover Dodi Al-Fayed have been killed in Parisâ
[turns on his heel and takes a couple steps to the side]
Like I had something to do with it! I was like, [defensive tone] âMom, I have been here all night. You can feel the TV, itâs warm.â Luckily, I had a good alibi since I was in Wisconsin and 12.
[audience laughter]
My brothers and sisters and I had this babysitter named Veronica when we were kids, and I was [hushed tone] in love with her. I was in love with Veronica. She would babysit us on Saturday nights.
[return to normal volume] And in my head, when I was a little kid, I thought that Veronica was like 25, 30 years old. I was just talking to my mom the other week, I found out that when I was 10 Veronica was 13.
[audience laughs as John wears a confused expression]
So why was she in charge? All she could do was dial the telephone a little better than I could.
13 when Iâm 10? Thatâs just like hiring a slightly bigger child. That would be like if youâre going out of town for the week and you paid a horse to watch your dog.
[audience laughter]
Like, [turns head as though looking up and a horse and holds out hand as though holding a piece of paper] âAll right, here is the number where weâll be, [maintains eye contact with imaginary horse and moves hand to gesture lower to the side] and hereâs where we keep the dog food, [moves hand up to pet imaginary horse] and youâre a horse.â [audience laughs] [John continues to move arm in dramatic sweeping motion to show petting the body of a horse] [hushes horse] âShh shh shh shh shh, shh shh shh, shh shhâ
[turns towards audience and lowers arm] Why do people do that? People always shush animals. Theyâll go, [mimes petting a large animal] [speaks in soft voice] âHey, shh shh shhâŚâ [turns sharply to face audience with a cheeky expression and bobbles head, speaking in a matter-of-fact high pitched voice] Theyâve never spoken.
[as the audience laughs, John walks slowly to the side]
I always wanted to live in New York when I was a kid, Iâm so excited that I get to live in New York. I saw New York City in a movie when I was a kid, it was called Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. It is a sequel, [audience starts clapping] Yeah, how about that movie? [audience laughs lightly]
It was a sequel to the movie Home Alone.
[starts speaking in a hushed tone] I remember in that movieâââoh, the kid in Home Alone 2. He gets into a stretch limousine on 5th avenue with a large cheese pizza and I thought, [turns head upwards and outstretches arm and yells] âTHIS IS THE HEIGHT OF LUXURY!!â
[light audience laughter]
Now I live in New York and Iâm psyched, [turns head to the side with dubious expression] but that is a stupid movie title. [turns head sharply] Lost in New York? The streets are numbered. Howâd you get lost in New York?
[turns head with condescending expression and tone of voice] I know itâs kind of stupid to complain about a movie that came out 17 years ago, but I wasnât a comedian back then. So I have to do it now. I wish Iâd been. I wish Iâd been a Def Jam comic when that movie came out. [aggressively] I would have torn it to pieces! Be like, [imitates a âghettoâ manner of speaking and voice with increased volume and paces back and forth quickly] âYou seen this shit? You seen this Home Alone 2: Lost in New York shit? Itâs a grid system, motherfucker! [audience laughs] [John raises his eyebrows and whips his head to the side and begins speaking more rapidly] Where you at? 24th and 5th? Where you wanna go? 35th and 6th? 11 up and 1 over, you simple bitch!!â
[audience laughs and applauds]
[John returns to his normal voice and demeanor and raises an arm in a sweeping motion]
Thatâd be my big joke. Thatâd be the closer. If I was a Def Jam comic when that movie came out. [weakly holds up a finger] But alas, I was not.
[turns head after every comma] I think the bullying that young people have to go through now is really rough, I really sympathize, âcause I was bullied when I was a kid. When I was in grade school, I was bullied for being Asian-American. Aaaand, the biggest problem with that⌠is that I am not Asian-American. [presses lips together tightly]
[light audience laughter]
But when I was younger, [turns head quickly and says while laughing] and this is absolutely true, people thought that I might be Asian-American. [turns head with serious expression and holds his hand at eye level] I have pretty thin eyes, I had very thin eyes when I was a little kid [sweeps hand down from top of head to eyebrow then moves it straight horizontally] and I had straight black hair that I wore in a bowl cut. And from the ages of 3 to 8, people thought that I might be a young Chinese person.
On the first day that he met me, the guy that is now my best friendâââhe met me the first day of kindergartenâââhe went home that night and said, âPapa, today I met a boy with no eyes.â [audience laughs] [John smirks and sways his head with swagger] And that was me.
Kids would make fun of me in middle school. Kids would call me a âchina manâ, which of the racial slurs has got to be the laziest. [audience laughs] That is just pushing two words together, [dramatically shakes head with eyes closed] no work was done there.
[speaks in an incredulous tone] It was very confusing to me because Iâm not Chinese, no one in my family is remotely Asian. I mean, we take our shoes off when we come inside, but that was more of a carpeting thing that anything else. [light audience laughter]
Hereâs how bad it got, though⌠I remember when I was in junior high, we had this music appreciation class that we never appreciated. And they took us to hear some classical music once at a symphony orchestra. So we go to a symphony orchestra. In one of these classical pieces, there is a moment where they [pantomimes hitting something with his arm] bang a gong, and every time they banged the gong, all the kids sitting in front of me would stand up, turn to me, [places hands together and bows deeply] and bow like that. [audience laughs] Which is some racist-ass bullshit, but also [turns head with impressed expression] incredibly well coordinated for a group of 13-year-olds.
13-year-olds are the meanest people in the world. They terrify me to this day. If Iâm on the street on like a Friday at 3 PM [moves hand with emphasis on each word] and I see a group of 8th graders on one side of the street [points to the side and then dramatically moves point towards the audience] I will cross to the other side of the street. [moves pointing finger with emphasis on each word] Because 8th graders will make fun of you, [changes point into an âokayâ with his hand and continues to move it for emphasis] but in an accurate way.
[speaks with a spiteful tone and expression] They will get to the thing that you donât like about you. They donât even need to look at you for long, theyâll just be like, [uses high obnoxious voice and shuts eyes while doing a goofy dance] âHa ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha ha ha! [sharply turns to side and points with alert and mocking expression] Hey, look at that high-waisted man! He got feminine hips!â
And Iâm like, [John moves to side where he was pointing and screams in a high but gravelly voice while shutting eyes tightly and moving fist and upper body down in unison for emphasis] âNo!! Thatâs the thing Iâm sensitive about!!!!â [audience laughs] [John straightens up and turns to the side and pouts]
[John returns to regular demeanor and expression and paces the stage in silence for a moment, smiling at the audience occasionally]
When I was a boy, I was also confused with a woman sometimes over the phone, because before I went through puberty, I had a voice like a [stands up on tip toes and makes voice slightly higher] little flute! [audience laughs]
I was once on the telephone with Blockbuster Video, which is a very old-fashioned sentence. Andâââ[audience laughs] It is! I was on the telephone with Blockbuster Video⌠thatâs like when your gram would be like [narrows eyes and covers upper teeth with his lip while bending over slightly, yelling in a high obnoxious voice] âWeâd all go play jacks down at the soda fountain!â [turns to the other side] and youâre like, [holds hand out in exasperation and narrows eyes while bending over slightly while yelling in a rude manner and shaking head slightly while speaking] âNo one knows what youâre talking about, you IDIOT.â
[John straightens up and audience laughs]
[looks an audience member in the eye] You know how you talk to your grandma? [turns and holds up hand at about shoulder height] So⌠[John freezes his pose for a moment while waiting for audience to finish laughing] [lowers hand to side and turns slowly] I was on the phone with Blockbuster, and Iâd called them a couple of times in one day to ask about a movie, and I called for a third time. I said, [holds up hand to ear to pantomime holding a telephone and speaks in a very high nervous voice] âHey, yeah, I-I was just calling to see if you had Addams Family Values yet,â [returns to normal demeanor] and the guy at Blockbuster went, [holds up other hand to pantomime a telephone and speaks in a very low aggressive gravelly voice while shaking head and hand for emphasis] âHey lady! Iâll tell you when we get Addams Family Values!!â
[returns to normal demeanor] But look, I wasnât offended as a boy being confused with a lady, I was offended as a lady who was getting pushed around by this chauvinist asshole that works at [mockingly] Blockbuster video, talking to me like Iâm some floozy⌠[with confidence] I am a proud Asian-American woman [audience laughs] and you will treat me with respect! [audience applause] I am a tiger mom!
[turns towards audience with dramatically serious expression and tone of voice] Now when people make fun of me, I deserve it. Uhh, I do. [nods] When people get mad at me now, itâs my fault, when people get mad at me on the highway thatâs all my bad, Iâm a terrible driver, I know nothing about cars. [regretful] I meant to learn about cars, and then I forgot. [audience laughs lightly]
Nothing that I know can help you with your car ever. Unless youâre like, uh, [turns head side to side as though looking for someone while pointing behind him with his thumb] âHey Iâve got a flat tire, does anyone here know a lot about The Cosby Show?â and then I could be like [hunches over slightly and walks with swagger with a comically âmature expressionâ and low voice] âOh, perhaps I could be of some assistance.â
Iâm one of the worst drivers Iâve ever seen, and I just want you all to know that if youâre ever on the highway behind me, uh, [colloquial yet condescending tone] I hear you honking and I also donât want me to be doing what Iâm doing. [audience laughs] I donât like that Iâm in that lane either, and I sure would like to get out of it! [audience laughs]
I was on the highway in Texas recently which was like a highway filled with 13-year-olds. [uses hand to represent his car and slides it to his left] And I was in the far left lane and then it turned into a U-turn only lane and I started to make a U-turn [turns hand inwards] [begins speaking rapidly and with urgency while shaking head] but then I panicked because I didnât wanna make a U-turn! So I put the car in reverse [pulls hand back to where it previously was] and then merged right back onto the highway [turns hand to his right and pushes it forward] [returns hand to microphone]
The best thing about that was that after that, cars were pulling up and [turns head to side while pantomiming steering a car] looking over to see who just did that piece of shit move, [audience laughs] expecting to see like [straightens up and speaks with emphasis] a 100-year-old blind dog whoâs texting while driving and drinking a smoothie, instead they see a 28-year-old healthy man trying his best. [audience laughs and claps lightly]
Itâs wrong to make fun of people, you know, but itâs so fun sometimes. [voice becomes increasingly low and hushed as sentence goes on] Iâve written for some TV shows, and, you know, on a major TV show you have to be careful about what you say about people âcause a lot of people get offended, or so it has been explained to me.
I was onceâââIâll tell you this, I was writing for an awards show once, and I got into some trouble. I wrote a joke for this awards show that had the word âmidgetâ in it. And someone from the network came down to our offices and he said to me, âHey, you canât put the word midget on TV,â and I said [turns head and gestures to himself with his hand] âI sure would like to!â And he said, [turns to the other side and points finger and speaks more aggressively] âNo! âMidgetâ is as bad as the ânâ-word.â
[turns head towards audience] First off, no. [audience laughs and John chuckles] No, itâs not! âDo you know how I know itâs not,â I said to him, âis because [gestures back and forth to himself and the imaginary other person] weâre saying the word âmidgetâ, and weâre not even saying what the ânâ-word is! If youâre comparing the badness of two words, and you wonât even say one of them⌠[nods head with energy] thatâs the worse word.â [audience laughs]
[accusatory and incredulous tone] Also, I donât mean to gloss over what, like, little people have been through in this country, but you cannot compare the plight of midgets to African-Americans. That is outrageous! Midgets were never enslaved, [widens eyes and uses a dramatic tone] unless you count the Wonka factory! [audience laughs]
So we get into this argument, weâre going back and forth, he goes [points and speaks sternly] âYou canât put that word on TV,â [turns to face other side and points while whining] and I said, âI want to,â and he said [outstretches pointing arm and moves it for emphasis] âIf you put that word on TV, there could be a protest of midgets on this building!â [turns dramatically and leans over] and I said, âPromise?â [audience laughs] How tempting would that be?
I donât mean to complain about censorship at all though, because as you probably have seen by now, you can basically say whatever you want on television. Itâs ridiculous. You can say anything you want! And if you donât believe me, you should watch a little program called Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. [audience applause] Yeah. A show that I LOVE, because on that show you can say the grossest things youâve ever heard in your life. No, you canât say like the âfâ-word, you canât say that on Special Victims Unit, but people walk around on SVU going like, [walks to one end of the stage and quickly turns on his heel and walks with purpose while looking at the audience and imitating Ice-T] âLooks like the victim had anal contusions. [audience laughs] [points over his shoulder with this thumb] Yo, looks like we found semen and fecal matter in the victimâs ear canal.â [audience laughs]
Those are two real things that I heard on Law & Order: SVU at 3 in the afternoon, [audience laughter] both spoken by Ice-T. [audience laughs and John laughs as well, causing his voice to crack] Ice-T is a detective with the special victims unit, he handles New Yorkâs most sensitive cases.
I love Ice-T on SVU. He is fantastic, heâs awesome. Whatâs so great about him is that heâs been with the SVU for like, mmm, 11 years now, but he still treats every case like itâs his first in terms of total confusion. [light audience laughter and John chuckles] Sometimes theyâll be in the middle of an investigation and Ice-T will be like, [impersonates Ice-T and wears a skeptical expression while darting eyes side to side] âYo, you telling me this dude gets off on little girls with pigtails?â Itâs like, [condescendingly] âYeah, Ice. [tightens lips and nods] Heâs a pedophile. You work in the sex crimes division. Youâre gonna have to get used to that.â
[looks at front row audience] You know how they try and tie in, like, current events to every episode of SVU? [looks up] So there was this episode I saw a while ago that was about sex addiction, âcause a lot of celebrities have come out as sex addicts. So the episodeâs about sex addiction. There is a scene in the episode where the other detectives are trying to teach Ice-T what sex addiction is, [with emphasis] and it takes a couple of minutes. [audience laughs]
And finally, Ice-T gets it, [sharply jars upper body backwards while framing his face with a hand] and they cut to him in this close-up and he goes, [darts eyes side to side while impersonating Ice-T] âOh, I get it. [looks straight on with wide eyes] You mean like when someone drinks too much, or snorts cocaine, or bets the house on the ponies?â
[nods while smiling and speaks in a amiable tone] I was like, âYeah you got it, man.â [audience laughter] And I was psyched that Ice-T understood so that they could continue with the investigation, but I couldâve watched another four hours of Ice-T just naming examples. [sharply jars hand up to frame his face] Just that close-up and Ice-T like, [impersonates Ice-T with a wide-eyed expression, looking side to side after each sentence] âOr like when some smokes too many cigarettes? Or like when someone shops too much with credit cards? Or like when someone plays too many scratchy lotteries? Or like when someone eats too much chocolate cake? Or like when someone eats too much chocolate cake and then barfs it up?â
[makes talking motion with hand] And he would just keep talking and it would slowly fade out and say [flicks hand forward] âExecutive Producer: Dick Wolf.â [audience applause] Thatâd be my ideal episode. Thatâd be a good one.
I saw this SVU a little while ago, I saw this episode of SVU, and Dean Cain was a rapist⌠[suddenly looks surprised and holds up hand with a defensive explanatory tone] ON THE SHOW. [audience laughs] And there was a scene where they do a line-up with Dean Cain and four other guys and they bring in this woman whoâs gonna look at the line-up, and itâs her behind the glass and they open the curtain [pantomimes opening a curtain] and sheâs standing with the two other detectives. [hushed tone] And I knew she wasnât gonna say this, but part of me was hoping she would just be like⌠[squints and looks back and forth from towards the audience and to the side with a puzzled expression] âIs that⌠Dean Cain? [audience laughs] [John points towards the audience and nods before turning towards the side again while nodding] Fucking Dean Cain? [shrugs and nods] Thatâs pretty cool.â
I also watch this show called Cold Case Files. On Cold Case Files, they solve old murders, and itâs really interesting â cause what I learned from it is that it was really easy to get away with murder before they knew about DNA. It was ridiculously easy. Like, what was even going on back then? What was a murder investigation like in 1935?? One cop would just walk in and be like, [speaks sharply with an old-timey accent] âDetective! [points over his shoulder with his thumb] We found a pool of the killerâs blood in that hallway!â and he would just be like [low voice] âHmmm⌠gross! [audience laughter] Mop it up. Now then, back to my hunch⌠[holds chin with hand and looks around the floor] HmmmmmmâŚ. Look for clues. [stands up straight and looks into the audience with a confident expression and speaks with purpose] Iâll tell you what weâll do! [chuckles] Weâll draw chalk around the body is. That way, [narrows eyes and looks side to side and speaks with a suspicious tone] weâll know where it wasâŚâ [audience laughs]
A couple years ago, I saw this movie called Public Enemies with Johnny Depp, it was about old bank robbers and stuff. Hereâs how easy it was to get away with bank robbery back in the 30âs. As long as you werenât still there when the police arrived, you had a 99% chance of getting away with it. To the point that, like, those old bank robbers, they take credit for the bank robberies! Like, they come running out of there and theyâre like [jumps up and squats while pretending to hold a gun, speaking in an old-timey accent] âHa ha ha! And if anyone asks, you tell em it was Golden Joe and the Suggins Gang!â [pantomimes shooting to the side with his imaginary gun] And then they like shoot âSugginsâ into the side of the wall. Itâs like, what, were bullets free back then? And they donât even disguise themselves! [stands on tiptoes for emphasis] They dress up for the bank robbery. Theyâre rolling in there in, like, [walks a few steps with swagger] big suits and hats like theyâre going to church in Atlanta. They make a day of it! [audience laughter and applause]
[John walks around for a while, steps over his microphone cord and looks into a camera] [mumbles to the crowd while gesturing to the camera] I donât know about that. [camera moves side to side] [John laughs nervously] Oh ho ho! Oh good, it has a mind of its own. [camera moves up and down] [audience laughs] Thatâs very reassuring. No, no no no⌠[John walks away from the camera] I donât like robots⌠[waggles finger by his head] thinking of things. [audience laughs, and John paces for a moment]
[looks himself over] Hope you donât mind that I dressed up. It was my first communion today so I decided to come right from it. [audience laughs] I was a very good first communicant.
Thank you for coming to this show by the way, I really do appreciate you coming to a thing because you didnât have to, and itâs really easy not to go to things. [light audience laughter] It is so much easier not to do things than to do them, that you would do anything is totally remarkable. [audience laughs] Percentage-wise, it is 100% easier not to do things than to do them. [slowly turns head with excited expression] And so much fun not to do them! Especially when you are supposed to do them. In terms of, like, instant relief, cancelling plans is like heroin. [audience laughs] It is an amazing feeling. Such instant joy.
Kids donât like that. Kids always wanna do stuff. Kids get angry, they go, [mockingly high and whiney voice] âAw, we didnât do anything ALL DAY.â You ever ask an adult what they did over the weekend and they say they didnât do anything, their faces light up. Be like, âWhatâd you do this weekend?â [puts hand on hip and looks down and speaks softly] âI, um, I did nothing. [looks up with bright expression] I did nothing at all. [looks down] Did we do anything? [looks back up with epiphanic joy] No, I didnât do anything.â [light audience laughter]
People especially donât wanna do their jobs. Iâve found that out recently too. I have a friend named Megan, sheâs an elementary school teacher and I was out with her one night and she was drinking like a monster. And I said to her, [holds out arm and looks to the side with a confused expression and an accusatory tone] âDonât you have to do a shift at school tomorrow?â And she went, [closes his eyes and slurs his words] âAhh, Iâll just show a video.â And I was like, [shocked but excited expression] âThatâs why teachers show videos?â [audience laughs] She said this, she goes, [closes eyes and slurs] âYeah, I donât wanna work!â And I was like, âYou know the kids donât wanna work eitherâ and she was like [closes eyes and slurs] âGood!â [pantomimes taking a shot]
I, uh, really doâââI was psyched to do it in New York. Uhh, Iâm really happy to live here and was glad that we could do it in New York City. And, uh, Iâm not sure how you all got here tonight, um, but I did wanna say this, Iâve never been, uh, killed by hit men so I donât know what itâs like in the moments just before youâre killed by hit men, but I bet itâs not unlike when youâre on the subway and you realize that a mariachi band is about to start playing. [audience laughs] Just that brief moment where youâre reading and youâre like [looks up from imaginary book with a pleasant expression and tone] âOh, a guitar player. [looks down and then back up] Oh, another guitar player. [looks down and then back up] Oh, an accordion playerâââ[expression changes to a cartoon-like dread and surprise and he speaks in dramaticised slow motion] OOOHH NNNOOOOOâ [audience applauds] [John begins imitating mariachi music] [sings with a slightly slurred and lower voice] ⏠This is the loudest thing in the world! [audience laughs]
[low and almost mumbling] Uh, I was really excited a lot of people, uh, showed up. They told me that it was a big theater and I thought that no one would come. So thank you for coming. I wanted to, like, take ads out in the paper. Like, beâââyou know, do something to a tot so I get in the New York Post or something. [light audience laughter]
Uhh, the New York Post is my favorite newspaper. I think itâs great, I read it every day. I like reading the New York Post because reading the New York Post is like talking to someone who heard the news, and now theyâre trying to give you the gist. [audience laughter and applause] Itâs like, youâd get the same amount of information if you grabbed someone on the street and you were like, [pantomimes grabbing someone by the shoulders and shaking them violently, yells shrilly] âWHAT HAPPENED TODAY?â and theyâre like, [throws arms out with a shocked expression and speaks in a low voice with a New York accent] âThereâs a perv in Queens!â Youâd be like, [pantomimes tipping a hat] âAll right, thank you.â [audience laughs]
Or rather, itâs like someone read a better newspaper and now theyâre trying to text you everything they can remember. [moves thumb to pantomime texting] [audience laughs and John chuckles] Doesnât have to be right, just has to be short. I really do love the Post, I read it a lot and thereâs a hierarchy in the New York Post. Uh, different people that they like [gestures hand up at head level] and different people that they donât like. [gestures hand down at waist level] Uh, and if you pay attention, [moves hand down from head to waist level in segments] you can start to identify some of the rankings that they have.
Um, the number one thing that you can be [holds hand up and head level] in the eyes of the New York Post is an angel. An angel is a child who has died. That is the best thing that you can be in the eyes of the New York Post. The less amount of time you live, the better⌠in the eyes of the Post.
After that, [moves hand slightly lower] under an angel is a hero. [lowers arm to his side] A hero is any man who does his job. [audience laughs] Youâll a lot of times see headlines that are like, [announcer voice] âHero Tutor Teaches After School,â and youâre like [shrugs and uses a low voice] âYeah.â [shrugs] [audience laughs]
[holds up hand at chest level] Down towards the bottom of the spectrum, there are pervs. Pervs touch tots, [moves hand slightly higher] tots are angels who havenât died yet. [audience laughs] [points behind him] There are no children in the eyes of the New York Post. [chuckles] Youâre either a tot [points next to him at shoulder level] or youâre dead and youâre an angel. [points next to him at head level]
[turns on his heels toward audience and holds up a finger] I did leave one out, sorry. [turns back towards his imaginary chart and gestures from chest level to slightly higher] Above perv is a bozo. [audience laughs] A bozo is any man who cheats on his wife. [bobbles head and speaks out the corner of his mouth with an old-timey accent] That guyâs a bozo! [audience laughs]
I remember seeing a headline when Tiger Woods cheated on his wife and it says [mocking announcer voice] âTiger says heâs sorry, but Elin says [turns sharply and speaks with emphasis] âBeat it, bozo!ââ [audience laughs] No, she did not. [audience laughter] She is from another country. And even if she was from this country, no one has said âbozoâ in 1,000 years. Who was your source on that, New York Post? Some tiny old lady that chain smokes all day long? They met her in a parking garage and they were like [squats down and speaks with excitement] âMadge, give us the scoop! What did Elin say to Tiger?â [turns and squats lower, pantomiming smoking a cigarette while squinting and speaking in a low gravelly voice] âEh, she told him to âbeat it, bozo.ââ [audience laughs and John straightens himself up]
Iâm feeling good tonight though, I got a massage recently. Went to a spa to get a massage, [chuckles] I went into the room to get the massage and the woman there told me to undress to my comfort level. Those were her words, she said, [bends over slightly and speaks in a gentle feminine voice while doing a âcalm downâ motion with his hand] âIâm gonna leave the room, you undress to your comfort level.â [quickly straightens up and turns] So I put on a sweater and a pair of corduroy pants, and I felt safe. [light audience laughter]
Iâm trying to, in general, take better care of myself. Iâm trying to stop smoking, Iâve smoked since I was 13 years old. I started when I was 13 years old âcause I stole 2 cigarettes [holds up two fingers] from my older sister and I hid them in a shoebox under my bed with a copy of Cosmopolitan Magazine. [light audience laughter] And one day, my mom cleaned under my bed, and she [hushed voice] found the shoebox. I came home from school and my mom was standing there holding it and she said, [pantomimes holding a box and stares forward with an accusatory look and speaks with a loud sharp voice] âHey mister! I found your treasure!â [audience laughs]
[waggles his finger] And I never liked the way she phrased that, you know, âcause that made me sound like the worldâs lamest pirate. Like, a guy whose treasure chest is two cigarettes and a womanâs magazine. [audience laughs] And my dad came home from work, and my mom told my dad that she had cleaned under my bed and found a shoebox with two cigarettes and a Cosmopolitan to which prompted my dad to ask, [low deadpan voice] âHow does John know how to make a cosmopolitan?â [audience laughs]
Iâm trying to eat better. I was out to lunch with a friend and I got a chicken sandwich and the waitress said to me, [light casual voice] âOh, youâre getting a chicken sandwich! Well that comes with a choice of either salad or fries.â Those were the choicesâââsalad or fries, the two most different foods in the universe. [light audience laughter] Thatâs like saying, âWhat kinda day do you wanna have? [raises arm to side] Do you wanna be active and go to the bathroom and stuff, or [gestures to the ground] do you wanna lay on the floor moaning?â [audience laughs] [mockingly casually] âOh, youâre getting a chicken sandwich? Well with that, you can either [gestures fingers as though counting] go for a jog or smoke crack cocaine.â [audience laughs lightly] [mockingly light and slightly feminine] âOh, huh, well⌠[moves hand in circular motion to gesture to imaginary table] if I get a plate of crack for the table, [outstretches hand to imaginary person] would you have some? Youâd have crack if I got a plate of crack? Yeah, okay, yeah weâll take an order of crack.â [light audience laughter]
[suddenly turns and speaks with purpose] Sometimes when people order fries, [playfully] they act like itâs a little adventure. Theyâll be like, [turns to side and speaks in a feminine voice] âShould we get a plate of fries for the table? [looks side to side] Should we do it? Should we-should we share some fries? [nods] [returns to normal demeanor and turns toward audience] They gotta make sure that everyoneâs onboard with it, itâs like [outstretches arm to gesture to imaginary table and returns to feminine voice] âIf I get fries, youâll have a couple, right? If I get fries for the table, youâll haveâââ[bats hand at imaginary person and speaks playfully] I know youâll have fries if I get friesâââshould we do it? Yeah, letâs be bad! Câmon, letâs do it, all right, [looks up and behind as though speaking to a waiter, speaks with confidence] weâre gonna take a plate of fries!â [return to usual demanor] Itâs like a group of couples agreeing to do ecstasy together. [audience laughter]
I have a girlfriend now, uh, myself, which is weird because Iâm probably gay based on the way I act and behave and⌠[audience laughs] have walked and talked for 28 years. [light audience laughter] [shrugs] I think I was supposed to be gay. I think, like, in Heaven they built, like, three quarters of a gay person and then they forgot to flip the final switch, and they just [gestures pushing something] sent me out and it was like, [turns to one side] âYou marked that one gay, right?â and it was like, [turns to other side with shocked low voice] âOh no! Was I supposed to?â [audience laughs] and they were like, [slightly lower and frazzled voice, looking side to side] âOh man, well thisâll be a very interesting person. [audience laughs] [lighthearted playful voice] Thisâll be a very silly person.â [audience laughter]
I was definitely gay when I was a little boy. [light audience laughter] A lot of little boys are gay. You know, theyâre very [sways arms and legs] flowy and they have [chops air with hand] very hard opinions on things. [audience laughs] I donât mean that I was a sexually active gay man when I was a little boy, thatâs not what I mean. When I was a little boy, I was more like a 67-year-old gay man [slowly and gently tosses hand in front of him] thatâs kind of over it sexually, you know. I was just like an old queen, I would just come out of the recess yard and be like, [closes eyes and dramatically sweeps arm to the side, speaking in a high slightly drawled voice] âEveryone get outta my way, [audience laughs] I just wanna sit here and feed my birds.â [audience laughter] The gym teacher would tell me to play kickball and Iâd be like, [narrows eyes and speaks with a slight drawl] âYou want me to do whaaaat?â [turns head and chuckles] [audience laughs]
Real quick, this happened pretty recently, I was in a restaurant near here in the West Village and I was at the urinal [gestures in front of him as though there were a urinal] and an old gay man came in the bathroom with a walker like this [squats slightly and pretends to have a walker] and he said this to me, he went, [closes eyes and leans back slightly, speaking in a high voice with a New York accent] âIâm either having a drink or I have to pee, youâre livinâ the golden years, kid, not me,â [stands up straight with amazed expression] like, he spoke in rhymes, it was crazy. [audience laughs] It was such a weird interaction that I wasnât sure if it actually happened. I came out of the bathroom and I asked my girlfriend, I was like, [points behind him with a confused expression] âDid you see, like, an old man follow me in the bathroom?â and she was like [looks down slightly and speaks with a slightly higher voice] âJohn, [looks up and turns head suddenly] that bathroomâs been closed for forty years! [audience laughs] [John shakes head up and down to make his voice fluctuate] Whooooooaaaa!!! Whoooooooaaaaaa!!!! [audience laughter]
Where was I? Iâm not gay, but I might be, and I have a girlfriend, aaand sheâs a female person. [chuckles] [audience laughs] Itâs going very well, I love her very much, and so a few months ago she was like, [moves hand in a circular motion and speaks deadpan] âOkay, itâs going well, so now I should meet your parents.â Because that what people do when a relationship is going well. They meet each otherâs parents, and Iâve never understood that. Iâve never been with my girlfriend and thought like, [slow suggestive voice] âOh, honey, tonight is going great, but do you know what would make it perfect? [audience laughs] Charles and Ellen Mulaney. [audience laughter] Come on! [chuckles] Letâs get them in the mix. Weâve been going pretty hot and heavy lately, I think itâs time we bring in two older Catholic people.â [audience laughs]
My girlfriendâs a female and I had all these friends that were female. So when I started dating her I was like âoh great, theyâll all get along⌠no.â Not even a little at the beginning. I donât want to make any generalizations about women because I donât know shit about women, but if there is one thing Iâve learned in my personal experience is that I think women can be friends with each other, (In a hesitant tone) but I think it can be tricky sometimes when you force women to hang out with each other. I think that sometimes doesnât work.
Like, I donât think that you could ever put together a heist with women. Does that make sense? Oceans eleven with women would never work! Causeâ two would keep breaking off and start talking shit about the other nine. Or not even talk shit, just say weird passive aggressive things while they break into the casino.(Pretending to break into a safe with a stethoscope) Just be like: âaww, I love how you just wear anything.â
(Audience Chuckles)
My girlfriend is wonderful though. I listen to everything my girlfriend says. I donât mean she bosses me around, I just listen to everything she says because before I had a girlfriend, I never had someone whose always standing next to me (Steps to the side and acts as if someone is currently standing next to him) who can just point out obvious things that are happening.
Like weâll be in a restaurant and my girlfriend will be like: âyou ordered your food an hour ago. It should be here by nowâ and Iâm like âyeahhh it should!â Itâs like having a lawyer for everyday life. Sheâll be like: âthe bus driver shouldnât talk to you in that wayâ and Iâm like: âno he shouldnât!â (As he waves his arms around as if in confidence). Before I had a girlfriend, I had no standard of how I should be treated as a human being. You could do anything to me and I was just like a young Motown singer. I was like shiny and dumb and easy to trick. Iâm like (in a Motown/black accent): âaww man, youâre gonna give me a whole hundred dollas for all of my songs? Where do I sign Mr. Berry Gordy?âAnd now when Iâm not with my girlfriend you can still do anything to me. I can tolerate any treatment.
Like I try to travel alone sometimes you know and Iâll put up with anything. Like ill book a ticket on some garbage airline. You know I donât want to name any actual airline so lets just make one up and so lets just call it delta airlines. So Iâve got my ticket at âDelta Airlinesâ(Does air quotes) and I show up at the airport. âCan I get on the plane now please (figuratively hands ticket to fake person)?â And their like (In a maniacal irritated tone): âNO! ITS BEEN DELAYED 9 HOURS! (Spits)â and I go (Like a child) âOkayyyâ and I go to the bathroom. Then I come out of the bathroom and I go(Like a child): âany updates?â and they go (In a maniacal irritated tone): âyeah, we took off while you were in the bathroom. BECAUSE WE HATE YOU. Now take this meal voucher that doesnât work, GO! FETCH! (As if he pretends to throw a stick for a dog playing fetch).â And I go (Like a child): âOkayyyyyâ and I go over to the Wolfgang puck express and am like(Like a child): âCan I have a sandwich please?â and they go (In a maniacal irritated tone): âNOOOOOOOOO!â and I go(Like a child): âOkayyyyyyâ and they go(Like a bully at school): âYouâre a little fat girl arenât you?â and I go(Like a child): ânoooo! Noooo!â and they go (Like a bully): âSay it!â and I go (Like a child): âIâm a little fat girl.â And then I go over to the Delta help desk, which is an oxymoron and I go(Like a child): âCan I please go home on an airplane?â and they go(In a maniacal irritated tone): âNooooo! In fact, weâre gonna frame you for murder! And youâre gonna go to jail for 30 years!â and I go(Like a child): âWhy are you doing this to me?â and they go(In a maniacal irritated tone): âBecause weâre Delta Airlines: life is a fucking nightmare!â But with my girlfriend she would be like: âLetâs see if Southwest has any flights?â So itâs better⌠(Audience laughs and claps lightly)
My girlfriend is a Jewish woman, which is I did on purpose. (Audience laughs) Uhhhh, that sounded creepy. I donât mean like: âahhh I got one!â(Pretending to grab someone) I mean I⌠I⌠Iâm not Jewish, but Iâve always liked Jewish people. I just like them a lot. And I really like dating Jewish women. Theyâre great! Because I think what a lot of people have in relationships is communication cause guys donât know what women are thinking. And with Jewish women you donât have to guess what they are thinking. They will tell you. Yeah, this is going to get playfully anti-Semitic so just allow it to go there. Iâll get in trouble, you wonât. I really do mean this though I⌠I really admire that Jewish people, in my own personal experience, have, are very up front with their feelings. Theyâre very⌠theyâre very vocal about their thoughts and feelings and I just think thatâs really admirable.
You know, Iâm Irish, and Irish people wont tell you a thing. Irish people keep it so bottled up you know? Like the thing with Irish people is: âIâll just keep all my emotions right here(Points to heart) and then one day, Iâll die.â Like in Ireland itâs like(In Irish tone): âoh your boy, he died.â And itâs like(In Irish tone): âAlright bury the boy, do it bury the boy. Burry the boyyyyy.â (Audience laughs) Irish people donât want comfort. Look at a sweater made in Ireland. Its like a turtleneck made out of âBrilloâ pads. I used to date gentile women and⌠(Pauses)⌠(Audience laughs)⌠I dated this girl she used to stare out the window all day long and Iâm like, whatâs wrong (In a sarcastic playful tone)? And sheâd be like: âyou wouldnât even understand if I told you.â (In a pissed off tone) What the fuck am I supposed to do with that?!? (Audience laughs)
My Jewish girlfriend and I donât have to guess whatâs wrong! She comes in the room andâŚ(stutters) and then we can move on from there. Thatâs what I mean. Sheâs very focused. Sheâs very in the moment, you know. And thatâs a good thing in a significant other. Sheâs very present. Jews donât daydream, (In a playful tone) âcause folks are after âem and they gotta stay sharp, you know what I mean? They have to be there. They havenât let their minds wander since Egypt. They just stay sharp. They go (frantically speaking and pointing): âWhoâs that? Who are you? Whatâs that? Whatâs that over there? Donât do that!â (Audience Laughs)
âIâm Irish⌠I keep things very bottled up, and I donât drink. Which is not what youâre supposed to do when youâre Irish. I donât drink. I used to drink and then I drank too much and I had to stop. That surprises a lot of audiences because I donât look like someone who used to do anything. (Audience laughs, Mulaney imitates sitting in a chair eating) I look like I was just sitting in a room in a chair eating Saltines for like 28 years and then I walked right out here. But I did, I used to drink a lot and then I stopped. I donât know if anyone here is thinking about quitting drinking but you need to know 2 things if youâre thinking of quitting drinking.
The first is that when you stop drinking and you still go to parties where people are drinking, they will have no idea what to offer you. Like once people start drinking for the night, they forget everything that isnât alcohol. Like ill show up at a party and theyâll be like: â(acting as if to point) Hey everybody! Alright we got Coronas in the fridge and Oh! Hey! Mulaney! Would you like, like an old turnip we found in the cabinet? Would that be good for you? Would you like that? (His eyes are now wide open). I know you donât drink (winking, audience laughs). Or my girlfriend left a Nuva Ring in the fridge, would you want that? (winking) I know you donât drink!â (Pauses)
Also if you quit drinking youâre about to lose the greatest excuse in your life, which is (As if talking to a girl):âIâm really sorry about last night. I was just too drunkâŚâ That is a get out of jail free card that you donât even realize youâve had until you lose it. I canât say that anymore. I can never be like: âSorry about last night, I was just so drunk.â Now I have to be like(As if to a girl again): âIâm really sorry about last night, itâs just that Iâm mean and loud, (pauses) it probably will happen again.â (Audience laughs)
Now I, myselfâââI quit drinking âcause I used to drink too much and then I would black out and I would âruin partiesâ⌠or so Iâm told. (Audience laughs) When you do that enough, you black out drinking and you do crazy things, you kind of become like Michael Jackson. Like any story anyone says about you might be true and (Acting mysterious) even you donât know by the end. I saw an interview with Michael Jackson before he died and they were like(Like a reporter): âIs it true you bought the elephant manâs bones? And he was like(Pretending to be Michael Jackson): âI donât know!â Ya know, cause how could he keep track of that? (Audience lightly laughs)
So I would hear stories about myself. Hereâs a story I once heard about me. I guess I was 20 and I was at a party at someoneâs house and I had blacked out drinking, and someone came out of one of the rooms at this party holding like an old antique bottle with some liquid in it, and they said, âHey, is this whiskey or perfume?â And apparently I grabbed it, drank all of it (pretending to drink a bottle), â and said (pretending to throw the bottle behind his head): âItâs perfume.â And it was.
Another story I heard about myselfâââthis one happened in high school. Uh, We had this teacher in high school whose kid went to our high school. His name was Mr. McNamara and his son Jake McNamara went to our high school. He was a sophomore when I was a senior. So he was two years behind me. And Mr. McNamara was an asshole. And one weekend, he and his wife decided to leave town, which you should never do IF YOUâRE AN ASSHOLE! (Audience laughs) And Jake McNamara decided to throw a party at the teacherâs house. (Sarcastic) Hooray! And everyone around town heard about it and we all got up individually and thought(Speaking maniacally), âOkay, letâs go over there and destroy the place.â
I walked into this party. Everyone I had even met was at this party, and everyone was drinking like it was the end of the world. (Audience laughs) People were drinking like it was the civil war and a doctor was coming to saw our legs off. (Audience laughs)It was totally unsupervised; we were like dogs without horses⌠we were running wild. I walked down (pauses) I walked down to the basement, they had a pool table in the basement. One dude took a running start and threw his body onto the pool table and broke it in half. Another kid found out which room was Mr. McNamaraâs and went upstairs and took a shit ON HIS COMPUTER! (Audience laughs) So the party was going great (sarcastically).
Iâm standing in the basement, and Iâm holding a red cup youâve seen in movies. And Iâm standing there and Iâm holding a red cup and Iâm starting to black out and I guess someone said like âsomething something police.â and in a brilliant moment of word association, I YELLED âFUCK DA POLICE! FUCK DA POLICE!â (In a drunken accent, Audience laughs). And everyone else joined in, 100⌠drunk⌠white⌠children yelling âFuck da policeâ with the confidence of guys who have already been to jail and arenât afraid of it anymore. (Audience Laughs)You know, like the: âI served my nickel! You come and take me!â confidence, but white children. (Audience laughs)
The reason someone had said âsomething something policeâ was because the police were there. So a Chicago police officer walked down the stairs and got to the bottom in the basement and looked out over a sea of drunk toddlers YELLING: âFUCK THE POLICEâ In his face. He was almost impressed. He was like [whispering] âWOW.â And then he leaned into his walkie-talkie and my friend john, who is now a fatherâââthis man now has a babyâââ(Imitating the action)he grabbed a 40, smashed it on the ground and yelled: âSCATTER!!â
And everyone ran in a different direction. We all ran in different directions. It was like that scene in âRatatouilleâ when the humans come in the kitchen and all the rats go in different ways. (Audience laughs as Mulaney acts frantic)We all ran in different directions, I ran into the laundry room and I jumped up on the washing machine and I crawled out through a window into the backyard and now Iâm running through the backyard and there was this big chain link fence and I thought Iâve never climbed a fence that high before. And then I woke up at home (pauses, audience laughs).
On Monday, I went to school, cause thatâs what we did back then. (Audience laughs) And Iâm walking into the school building and who do I see but Jake McNamara. And he says to me âhey, were you at my party on Saturday?â and I was like: âNoâ you know, like a liar (Maniacally, then pauses). And he said things really got out of hand: âSomeone broke the pool table, someone took a shit on my dadâs computer, But the worst thingâ he saysââââthe worst thing is that someone stole these old antique photos of my grandmother and my parents are freaking out about it.â and I had that thought that only blackout drunks and Steve Urkel can have (pauses, audience laughs and claps while he says): âDid I do that?â
I figured no, I would never do that. I was never sure until two years later (audience in shock) ⌠relax. Iâm playing video games with this kid named Alex that we also went to high school with. Two years later, weâve graduated by now. Weâre playing video games for a couple hours, and then Alex says to me(in a hushed tone), âHey, come here. I want to show you something.â And he takes me into his bedroom and then he takes me into a side room off of his bedroom. Never a good thing to have. (Laughing) (Mulaney is in a hushed voice even worse than before) And he shows me a tiny room that is covered wall to wall in stolen antique photos from different peopleâs parties over the years. (Audience laughs) And I said: âWhy? Why do you do this?â and Alex said âCause itâs the one thing you canât replace.â (Long pause, Audience is laughing hard now) Thatâs the end of that story but how fucked up is that? Thatâs crazy! (audience laughs more and claps)
So I donât drink anymore⌠and its weird you know? I miss it sometimes because drinking can kind of calm your nerves and I live in New York now and sometimes you can see things that will make you anxious youâll see troubling things out on the street. I was coming into my apartment building one night and I saw in front of my building a wheel chair, knocked in its side with no one in it. (audience laughs but almost in confusion) Thatâs a bad thing to see. Something happened there⌠you hope it was a miracle⌠but probably not⌠probably something worse. (audience laughs)
And I donât like argument, some people like to argue, you know? They think itâs like an art. And I donât like it, I think its because really ordinary arguments can get really dramatic really quickly. Like I was talking to a friend recently, and I told him I didnât think I believed in the death penalty, and my friend said to me: âoh, so youâre telling me, that if you saw Hitler⌠walking down the street⌠you wouldnât kill him?â (Audience chuckles) That wasnât what I was telling you, but alright, lets talk about this entirely new topic. What would I do if I saw (giggling) Adolph Hitler (acting out a walking motion) just walking down the street? Well first off I wanted to know what did my friend mean? Did he mean I see a guy in like the military outfit with the little moustache, cause then I would assume thatâs someone dressed up as Hitler. (Audience laughs) Iâm not gonna kill that guy. Iâm not gonna kill an actor and ruin Indiana Jones 5 just cause I donât understand costumes. Or does he mean Iâm walking down the street and I see like an old old man who I think might be Hitler based on my memory of what Hitler looks like. Iâm not gonna kill that guy either, because I am often wrong. Id murder him and people would be like: âWoah! You just killed an old old man! (Acting it out)â and Id be like: âhe looked like Hitler!â and theyâre like: âYeah, a littleâŚâ (Audience laughs and claps)
I have a lot of strange interactions on the street. Years ago, I was walking down the street and a homeless guy came up to me. And he walked up to me he pushed me like that (as he acts out a pushing motion), he pushed me in the chest. And then he said these things in this order. He pushed me and he said (in a strange accent): âExcuse me, I am homeless, I am gay, I have aids, Iâm new in town.â (Mulaney looks confused as the audience cracks up) Youâre gonna close with âNew in town?â that is not the most dramatic thing you just said. As they said in the movie Jerry McGuire: âYou had me at AIDS.â Hereâs how I wouldâve ordered those things, I wouldâve said: âExcuse me, Iâm new in town, and it gets worse.â Didnât that guy practice his like pitch at all in the mirror that morning and just figure out what he was gonna say? Ya know in the morning ya know just be like (He then imitates what this gay man would be doing in the mirror): âAlright now what am I gonna do today, what am I gonna do tonight? Imma walk up and say hello, no thatâs too subtle imam push him. Imma push him. And Iâm gonna say Iâm new in town, no no hold back hold back. Save it. Build to that. Iâm about to walk up to him, imma push him and go I HAVE AIDSSSS, no thatâs too strong⌠alright. (Cracking himself up as he does this) imam walk up to him, push him and start with the fact that I am homeless, as that is a given. Then for back story I will pepper in the fact that I am gay.â (Audience laughs)
Which I know its tough for gay youth on the street, but thatâs not like a reason for money. You cant be like, hey would you help me out Iâm very gay? (audience laughs) Like a few dollars⌠I always love how he phrased it by the way. He never mentioned living on the street, he said Iâm new in town, like it was intriguing. Like he wanted me to set him up with somebody. Like I have a friend whose like: âThereâs no single guys (âguysâ in New York accent) left in Manhattan.â And Iâm like: âI know someone whose new in town.â (Pretends to be his friend now)âWhat are 3 other things about him?â (Audience claps and cheers)
Just too anxious for a lot of things, I get nervous all the time, not even about like major life things, just about like everyday situations. Like this is my regular speaking voice, but if Iâm in a pubic bathroom and someone knocks too suddenly on the door or stall door, I go into a whole different speaking voice. Which is âEh, someoneâs in hereee. Someoneâs in hereee. (In a strange almost British accent)â so theyâre gonna be like: âI think there is a carnival barker in there. I think someoneâs trying to drum up business for a carnival.â
I decided to do something about this anxiety recently. I decided I was gonna try and get a Xanax prescription. I donât know if anyone here has ever tried Xanax, but its fantastic (a few claps) very muted claps for Xanax. You donât really get woos, its more like yeahhhhhhhhhhhhh. I didnât know how to get a Xanax prescription though, drugs like that a tricky sometimes, but I talked to a friend of mine and he said oh yeah, I did this. He said that he had a regular doctorâs appointment and at the end of it he said to his doctor: âHey doctor, sometimes I get nervous on airplanes.â And the doctor just wrote him a Xanax prescription. And Iâm like yeah, thatâs the type of lowbrow shit Iâm looking for. Ill take your advice, friend Iâve never listened to before. (Audience laughs)
So I go to a clinic, and I go in and Iâm just going to go in for you know a regular type of check up and at the end, Iâll ask about Xanax. So I get to the front desk, and they have a âwhy are you here sheet.â And I wanna pick something that will get me out really quickly. And I look down and I see frequent urination. And I was like, perfect thatâll be a super quick visit you know? Ill just be like hey, sometimes I pee a lot and the doctor would be like (Mulaney pretending to be the doctor): âMe too, crazy right?!?â And Iâll be like: âI get nervous on airplanes.â (Audience laughs) So I checked off frequent urination and I sat down in the waiting area and I waited for 3 hours. I finally go back to the observation room and oh! In the observation room there was a male nurse standing there and he has a Batman sticker on his stethoscope, a Batman necklace and a Batman watch. He was kind of moving around the whole time, he was just like: (acting this out) âalright! I am too blessed to be stressed! Lets do it! What are you allergic to, besides work?â and then heâd take something and throw it over his shoulder and be like: âBeats working.â And all of his jokes were anti work, which is not always what you want from a health care professional. (Audience laughs)
The doctor comes in the room and the doctor looks at my chart and he says: âOh, youâre here for frequent urination, how many times a day are you urinating?â And I tried to think of a number that would warrant a doctor visit. So I said 11.(Audience is shocked)That was too many times to say. The doctor looked at me and said: âYouâre peeing 11 time a day? Then you may have something wrong with your prostate. So, what we need to doâŚâ Some of you are ahead of me (addressing audiences laughter). So I donât know exactly how he phrased it, but the gist of it was: âHey, if this visit was to continue, Iâm going to stick part of my hand up your ass. And I didnât know what to say. Cause I couldnât be like: âNo thatâs okay, I was lying. It was a lie⌠to get drugs. You know? Like a crime!â (Audience laughs) So what I did was, I pulled down my pants, walked over to the observation table and I put my hand on the observation table like this (puts hand on stool) and by the way, part of me was like: âWhatever⌠you know? You ever have those days where youâre like: âThis might as well happen. (Pauses) Adult life is already so God damn weird.â (Audience laughs)
So Iâm bent over like this on the table, and the doctor comes up behind me and says â no no no, not on your hands, your elbowsâ and he knocks me down like that (putting elbows on the stool now). And this is so much worse than this (gets back to his hands). I donât know why, I think its cause this has a little remaining dignity to it, you know what I mean? (Audience laughs) This is sort of like, go stick it in, I am an American. This is like youâre leaning over the edge of a cruise ship and youâre like: âahhh weâre approaching Martinique!â he knocked me down to my elbows and then, he stuck his hand in. and you know how sometimes youâre like, I bet I know what most things feel like ya know? You just think youâll know? I did not know, what this was gonna feel like. And this was the actual sound I made, I went: âooooooohhhhhhhhhmmmmmmmm.â (Audience laughs and claps) But I didnât say it, like it came from my vocal chords but it was totally involuntary. It was as if a ghost had been trapped in my belly and finally flew out towards the light. And then, when he pulled his hand out, we had gotten to know each other pretty well, so ill phrase this a delicately as a can. I didnât not realize than when the doctor pulls his hand out it feels like your shitting cause the only thing to come out of your butt before has been shit. (Audience laughs)
So, he pulls his hand out and I thought I was shitting into his hand. So I yelled: âIâM SORRYY! This is a very routine procedure by the way for most doctors. And so far heâs had to deal with âOHHHHHMMMMâ and âIâM SORRYY!â (Audience laughs) And he didnât even let me off the hook you know? He wasnât like: âOh donât worry, you didnât shit into my hand.â He just threw his glove away and went(As if enraged)âAhhhwahhhahwa.â And I was about to ask about Xanax but he was like: âAlright your prostateâs fine but we still need to do a blood test.â So I pulled up my pants and shuffled away, (Acting this out) feeling different. And he yells out into the hall, he goes: âHey! Weâre doing a blood test in here. Get in here!â Batman dances back in and heâs like: â(pretending to dance) Alright, we gonna do a blood test. You look different, letâs do it.â The doctor left the room, so Iâm alone with Batman. I just need this blood test to be over. But first I had to tell Batman something, I was like âBatman look, Iâm one of those people who, when you take blood from me, sometimes I can faint. And I was in the waiting area for 3 hours and I havenât eaten anything all day and Iâm really worried Iâm gonna faint.â And Batman said to me, and ill never forget it: âpshh, youâre not gonna faint!â
So, I stick my arm out, Batman puts the needle in my arm, and Iâm immediately on the ground. (Audience âdiesâ laughing) I wake up and I am covered in sweat lying on the observation table. I wake up, I open my eyes and I see Batmanâs face. Heâs looking at me and he goes: âyou gotta go!â and I go: âCan I please talk to the doctor though for a sec because sometimes, I get nervous on airplanes.â And Batman said: âthe doctorâs gone!â so I got my stuff⌠and I left. The moral of the story is⌠that if youâve been nervous your entire life, you should ask your doctor about Xanax because if you lie to him, he will stick his finger in your ass. And if you do suffer from frequent urination, keep it to yourself. I went to that clinic 2 years later for a different checkup and as I was leaving, who do I run into but Batman. And he smiled at me and he was wearing reading glasses to show that time had passed.
Thanks very much for listening to me, my name is John Mulaney. You were really fun, thank you.
(Walks around the auditorium as a joke, sits in a chair and applauds himself. Says thank you again, then leaves.)
(The intro music for the 90âs like sitcom plays again as the special ends and rolls its final credits)
(End)
maybe @donutspeeches needs to see this
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