Mike Birbiglia: Thank God for Jokes (2017) Movie Script
1
Hi, I'm Jimmy Kimmel.
Can I get everyone to be quiet, please?
Can everyone be quiet? Please?
Everyone?
John. Where is John Krasinski?
John, please tell everyone to be quiet
and pay attention.
Could you do it
a little bit louder, please?
Thank you, John.
Good evening and welcome
to the 22nd Annual Gotham Awards.
You are there tonight to celebrate
the best independent films of 2012
and Matt Damon, whom we know
from such influential independent films
as Ocean's Eleven,
Ocean's Twelve, Ocean's Thirteen,
The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy,
The Bourne Hypocrisy,
and The Legend of Bagger Vance.
No one embodies the spirit of indie
like Matt Damon.
Anyway, I know you're eating
and telling your friends
about how much other people's money
you lost this year.
But we're about to get started,
and I would like you to pay attention
because I think
you will be happy you did.
The man you're about
to enjoy is very funny.
He, too, is an independent filmmaker.
He made an excellent movie this year
called Sleepwalk with Me,
and he is here tonight to entertain you
more than Matt Damon could ever
dream of doing, quite frankly.
Ladies and gentlemen, please put
your drinks down for five seconds
and give a very warm welcome
to Mike Birbiglia.
So...
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you, guys.
Well...
That was four years ago.
And the reason I show you that
is 'cause that video played
before what ended up being one
of the strangest nights of my life.
Because when Jimmy Kimmel
said John Krasinski's name,
John Krasinski was there, and he stood up,
and he told everyone to be quiet.
And by "everyone," I mean, Matt Damon.
And Amy Adams and Claire Danes
and Harvey Weinstein,
all these fancy people.
And somehow, I was hosting this event.
I'm not being falsely modest.
I get that we're all here right now.
But I also know,
at some point this week,
you told someone
where you were going tonight
and that person said, "Who?"
And you said some things I'd done.
They said, "What's that?"
You said, "Go back to bed, Grandma,"
'cause she's sleeping, but...
I'm a niche, I understand that. But...
this is a really big deal for me,
and I was so anxious for the week
leading up to the event.
And I couldn't sleep,
I was short of breath.
The night before,
I said to my wife, "Clo..."
Her name is Jen.
I said-- I said, "Clo...
I think this might be a disaster."
She said, "Mo...
why do you think that?"
I said,
"I've been a comedian for 15 years,
and what I've learned
is that you should never tell jokes
to the people who the jokes are about."
My wife had the perfect answer for this,
and I'll tell you what it was later.
But jokes are something
I think about all the time.
They're a volatile type of speech.
Just look at the news.
The Charlie Hebdo incident two years ago
where these ten satirists were killed
for drawing a disrespectful cartoon
of Muhammad,
who the killers believed
to be the prophet of Allah,
their lord and savior,
which, by the way, he might be.
I have no horse in that race.
Muhammad seems like a nice guy.
Jesus was popular with 12 dudes.
Buddha's confusing. I'm pretty sure
he's an elephant or a sumo wrestler.
The point is...
that these were comedy writers like me,
and they were murdered.
I was so shocked by this. At the time,
I remember talking to everybody about it.
And my mother said to me,
"Can't these writers just write jokes
that aren't offensive?"
And I thought about it.
I said, "I'm not sure that's possible,
because all jokes are offensive...
to someone."
I'll give you an example.
My wife does this thing
that drives me crazy.
She's late for everything,
and I'm an on-time person.
Round of applause
if you're a late person, typically.
Few people. So, what late people
don't understand about us on-time people
is that we hate you. And...
the reason why we hate you
is that it's so easy to be on time.
You just have to be early,
and early lasts for hours.
And on-time just lasts a second,
and then you're late forever.
Welcome to the show.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks for coming.
We were just talking about you.
So, late people always try
to re-brand "late."
They'll say, "I'm fashionably late,"
which is like saying,
"I'm stylishly racist."
Which is another thing about late people.
A lot of them are racist.
And the reason these late racists
drive me crazy...
is they're often so good-looking.
I mean, you ever get ready for something
with a late person?
They look into their closet
like it's Narnia.
Like it's an infinite well
of possibilities.
On-time people are just like,
"This is what I look like."
Sorry about that.
The reason I'm an expert in this
is that I was raised by late people.
My parents are laties, and--
When I was a kid,
my mom used to pick me up
from my swim class at the YMCA,
90 minutes after the class would end.
I know. She was like the cable company.
"I will pick you up between the hours
of 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m."
I was a ten-year-old child just standing
on the street corner
in a dripping wet bathing suit
and flip-flops.
My mom wasn't on the way.
She was at the book club
talking about The Color Purple.
I was like, "Mom, I am the color purple!"
One year, we went on a family vacation,
and we left for the airport
45 minutes before our flight took off.
We lived 45 minutes away from the airport.
My dad shouted at the security guard
like it was his fault.
This is the '80s,
when airport security consisted
of a high-five and a pat on the ass.
It was a different time for late people.
It was the golden age.
And then I married a late person,
like I said, and it's an issue.
This week, we were heading to yoga,
which is why I look excellent
and feel excellent.
I yearn for the day
that doesn't get a laugh.
I'm not even sure why we're laughing,
but I'll go with it.
So...
we're heading to yoga. My wife says,
"Wait for me, I'm not ready."
Which is silly 'cause you don't have
to be ready for yoga,
'cause all it is is trying not
to fart while stretching.
And that's my life already
without the stretching.
And clearly...
clearly, I don't belong in yoga.
It wasn't designed for male humans.
And you can tell when the instructor says,
"I want you to reach your hand back
towards your bra strap,
and then lift up your leg
unless you're on your period."
I'm like, "I'm pretty sure none
of that applies to me.
I've only had my period once.
I'm not even sure that's what that was."
Some of the poses are outrageous.
The other day, the instructor goes,
"I want you to push your chest
into the mat
and your butt in the air,
and then pull up the front
of your mat like a slut."
I was like, "All right."
I was trying to be a team player.
I was like, "I'm a bad girl.
I'm a yoga slut down on my luck...
trying to forge a mind-body connection."
And then she goes, "That's right, pull up
the front of your mat like a sled."
Minor adjustment.
Let me just close my butt.
So, my wife says,
"Wait for me, I'm not ready."
And I held my ground.
I go, "I'm not gonna wait for you
'cause you're a late person.
I'm an on-time person.
I don't want that entering
into our marriage
'cause I feel like
it's going really well so far."
Try to put a positive spin on it.
And she goes, "Fine."
Passive-aggressive--
classic for late people.
And then she says,
"Save a mat next to your mat,
for me, in class."
I said, "Clo, I'm not gonna do that
'cause I have more allegiance
to my fellow on-time people
than I do to you, my own wife."
And that didn't go well.
And so--
So, I felt bad.
And then I get to class,
and I put down my mat.
Then I put down a mat next to my mat
for my wife.
And this woman comes up, she goes,
"Do you mind if I put my mat right here?"
I was like, "Actually, my wife is..."
Sometimes I'm so polite,
I don't even finish sentences.
This other woman comes up, she goes...
I was like...
We were like deferent whales.
Which is another pose I'm working on.
Class fills up, 100% full,
wall-to-wall sluts.
Except for the empty mat next to my mat,
because my wife decided, arbitrarily,
she just wasn't gonna come
to class that day.
I know!
The ultimate late person move!
Absence!
Class-- class ends.
Empty mat.
All that people are gonna assume
is that my wife is dead.
Or I've invented the fictional concept
of having a wife
so I can have this weird
double-wide super mat.
The most selfish possible move
in the most socialist of exercises.
And this woman comes up.
She says, "I hope your wife is okay."
Which is the yoga way of saying,
"We hate you."
But that's just my side of the story.
In fairness to my wife,
if she were here tonight, she'd be like,
"Yeah, but you're not telling them..."
And I'd be like, "Excuse me, ma'am.
There's a show going on."
She'd be escorted out of the building.
I've done it before, I'll do it again.
That's what I love about jokes.
They're just your side of the story.
They're your opinion, which isn't
to say they're always just opinions.
Sometimes they're an externalization
of your inner thoughts,
and often your inner thoughts
are inappropriate.
I was at my urologist recently.
Just chillin'. No, I had a--
I had a symptom. Don't repeat this.
I had a symptom where--
This is hard to say.
I had a thing where, when my wife
and I would have sex,
I would have a pins-and-needles sensation
in my urethra
the moment I would ejaculate.
Which at first was exciting.
At first, I thought, "Ohh.
Maybe this is a new type of orgasm.
Maybe I've broken through."
But then the pain didn't go away.
I was like, "Oh, no!"
It's like when you're eating spicy food
and you're like,
"That's hot. That's hot! That's too hot!"
But it was with my penis.
Which is much higher stakes
than your tongue,
which is your mouth penis, in a way.
Nobody calls it that, but--
So, I explained this to my doctor--
not in these words--
and he's unfazed by it.
He goes, "It's not a big deal.
It's probably a muscular thing.
You're just trying too hard
when you have sex."
And I said, "You're telling me."
But I didn't--
I didn't say it. I just thought that.
I was like...
He was like, "Is there something wrong
with your head?" And, uh...
'Cause I don't say a lot
of jokes offstage.
I just think them.
He was like, "Is there something wrong
with your head?"
I go, "No, I'm a comedian."
He goes, "You're a comedian?"
I go, "You're a doctor?"
But I didn't say it. I just thought it.
I was, like...
You know?
He really didn't believe me,
he goes, "If you're a comedian,
how come you're not funny now?"
What I wanted to say was I'm gonna
take this conversation we're having
and then repeat that to strangers.
And then that's the joke.
You're the joke... later.
But I didn't say it.
I just thought it, and, uh...
I could say these jokes.
But when you have your pants
at your ankles
and a rectal thermometer in your butt,
you're thinking,
"This might not be the right time."
I feel like we're led to believe
this false clich from romantic comedies
that we're all just whipping off jokes
all the time.
Like, we meet a girl in a coffee shop
and we're like,
"What's in your latte? Cum?"
And she'll be like, "You're hilarious!
We should be married in 90 minutes."
But in real life, that guy gets arrested.
Or runs for president.
Like, if you think about--
If you think about jokes--
If you think about jokes,
you can't tell jokes in life, almost ever.
Like, at work or school.
Or the airport is a great example.
I read a story where a guy sneezed
on a plane,
looks around and he goes,
"I have Ebola."
Here's why that's not a good joke.
They landed the plane.
They landed the plane.
And they're met by the guys
in hazmat suits.
And his defense was, "I'm joking."
Which is always this catch-all defense
when people say dumb things.
You can't tell jokes at work, basically,
because at some point in history,
some idiot showed up at work,
and was like, "Nice tits, Betsy!"
And Betsy's like, "What?"
And that guy's like, "I'm joking!"
And the boss is like...
"Uh...
no more jokes!"
Jokes have been ruined
by people who aren't good
at telling jokes.
A joke should never end with "I'm joking."
Or "Git-R-Done."
So, it's the week before I host
the Gotham Awards,
and I start writing the jokes.
And it felt like
sort of a no-win situation:
How do I make jokes that are relevant
to the people in the audience
but don't make them hate me?
And so, I started with jokes about myself.
I wrote, "It's an honor to be here,
because 13 years ago,
I was a coat check person at this event.
And here I am hosting,
and I made more money checking coats."
Which is true.
Yeah, I remember that period
of my life so well.
I was so broke, and I was actually living
on an air mattress in Queens,
and I couldn't afford a dresser
for my clothes.
When you're broke,
everything is just low to the ground.
You know? You--
You roll off your air mattress
in the morning,
grab pants from the floor,
you cook noodles on a hot plate.
One falls out of your mouth,
you're like, "It's not too far."
The only way you could get lower
is if you died.
And I moved to New York
'cause there's all these
comedy clubs here,
but they didn't want me
'cause I wasn't good at it.
So, what I did was I drove
my mom's station wagon around the country
to areas of lesser comedy concentration,
places like Ohio,
West Virginia, New Jersey, and...
Not a joke, but thanks.
And, actually, I bought my mom's car.
I always like to point that out
because I found out recently
that sometimes when parents have faith
in their child's dreams...
they'll give them their car.
My mom got the full Blue Book value.
She was like,
"This guy just doesn't have it."
And...
I remember this rock-bottom moment
where I'm driving back
from a comedy club in New Jersey
to my air mattress in Queens,
and this cop just points at me
and waves me over.
When you're broke, cops will pull you over
if you have a crappy car
just to see what else you got going wrong,
you know?
Yeah.
And he says, "License and registration."
As I'm pulling out my license,
I'm realizing it's expired by three weeks.
And I had that moment where I think,
"Should I preface this conversation
with this key piece of information?"
Like, "You're not gonna like this."
You know what I mean?
"Same team. We both think I'm an idiot."
And...
It was actually worse than just that.
He came back and goes, "Did you know
that your license is suspended?"
Yeah, I didn't even know
what that meant.
I was very naive, and so I--
I had an unpaid speeding ticket
from high school.
So I said to him, and I quote--
I said, "Yes.
No.
Wait. What does 'suspended' mean?"
And he said, "Please step out of the car."
And I get out of the car.
He says, "You're under arrest."
I said, "No, I don't think so."
He says, "I'm sure of it."
And then he cuffs me
to prove the whole thing. And--
Round of applause if you've been arrested.
Has anyone been arrested before?
Few people. What did you--
Can I ask, what did you get arrested for?
I got arrested by a woman cop
and put in a headlock.
I don't like how you said "woman cop."
That was very obnoxious.
It really was. I don't--
I'm fine with it. It's a comedy show.
Anything can happen.
We're all friends here.
But it just did rub me the wrong way.
You know, women can be cops.
It's sort of part of the whole thing.
You said you're--
You're saying it like it's an anomaly.
And it's, like, a whole thing.
I only said it like that because I've been
getting my balls busted
for the last ten years over it.
Oh, okay.
Well, that doesn't make sense also.
But, uh-- but sure, yeah. So--
So, this crazy, out-of-nowhere,
woman cop shows up.
Well, get this: she's a lady.
Badge and everything.
And I said, "Cook me dinner!"
You know what she said?
She said,
"No, you're under arrest for a crime."
So...
Unbelievable.
You're really buried in this point.
I mean, there's nothing--
There's nothing you could say
that would vindicate you.
She put me in a headlock.
You already said that.
I feel like your talking points
are all wrong.
She put you in a headlock? Why?
First of all, what was your crime?
I got to a keg, and I got my cup of beer,
and I was waiting in line for the beer.
-And...
-You're leaving out so many details.
Where?!
Basic details!
We don't all have to be Ira Glass,
but come on!
Where-- where was this?
It was in the woods.
So--
So--
So--
No further questions, Your Honor.
It was in the woods.
It was in the woods.
I didn't even know ladies went
in the woods.
It was like seeing Bigfoot.
I will say this about being arrested.
It's a shocking experience
if you've never had it happen,
because they cuff you, and the cuffs hurt.
And the cops don't have to take you
to jail right away.
Like, I was cuffed in New Jersey
and sitting in the back of the cruiser.
I'm looking through the windshield,
the cop was just hanging out
with his cop buddies.
And they're laughing, making jokes,
like, "I arrested this guy for nothing."
You know, just like,
"What does 'suspended' mean?"
And...
I'm having the most traumatic moment
of my life.
It's like,
"I never knew I would be arrested.
I wear New Balance shoes."
You know, and--
And I'm nervous 'cause I'm afraid of cops.
I always thought I was most afraid
of bears,
but at least if a bear kills you,
everyone gets mad at the bear.
If a cop kills you,
30% of Americans are like,
"It's a hard job."
You know what I mean?
If a bear kills you,
they don't have a bear press conference
where all the bears stand behind
the murderous bear in solidarity,
and the bear commissioner steps forward,
and he's like,
"He's usually a pretty good bear.
He usually just eats honey
and is unaware of bees."
But cops will kill you.
That's, like, on the news and everything.
And so--
So, I'm nervous and I'm sweating.
I'm itchy. I had an itch on my face.
But I didn't have
any extremities available.
So, I'm looking around like the character
from No Country for Old Men.
And I see a door handle.
I'm like, "That's pointy."
And I reach over. I'm scratching my face
on the door handle
which creates more itchiness
on my cheek and my shoulder.
And then I'm just sort of
writhing around in circles,
like a dog trying
to shake off a medical cone.
And the cop looks back.
He's like, "We got a live one!
What the hell are you doing?"
I'm like, "Will you scratch my face?"
Apparently, they never do that.
Not once, ever.
As it turns out, no one's even asked,
which is crazy to me.
'Cause that's the itchiest backseat
I've ever been in.
It's like a tickle fight back there...
with lice. I would have done anything
for a scratch.
I'd be like, "I'll let you use your gun,"
you know, which is pointy,
but obviously dangerous.
And so...
the officer books me
at the Weehawken, New Jersey, jail.
He even took the shoelaces out of my shoes
'cause apparently,
it's a very common thing
when people's licenses are suspended...
is they'll hang themselves.
I don't like to joke about it.
It's called suspension post-suspension.
It is...
all-too-common, under-reported.
And then--
And then he took a mug shot of me.
He knew I'd performed
at a comedy club that night.
So, he took an extra one,
and he put it in his pocket.
He goes, "This is in case
you ever get famous."
Which I thought was nice, you know?
I was like,
"At least he's rooting for me."
Sure, he's arresting me now.
But long-term, this guy sees it.
Which is more than I can say for my mom.
And so--
So, I had this one joke
about being a coat check person.
But increasingly, I'm getting so anxious
about hosting this event.
And so I called Jimmy Kimmel,
'cause I thought
that if I had a video like that,
it might give me some credibility
with the audience,
where it felt like every relevant topic
would be a minefield.
Which is always, by the way,
somewhat the case in comedy
when you perform
for a specific group of people.
Like, I remember
the most extreme example I've had.
I was performing
at a Christian college, and, uh...
It was a weird show.
It was in a giant gymnasium,
and there was a 30-foot crucifix
on the wall.
And I thought that was funny,
because I was thinking,
like, if Jesus were there,
what would he say?
Like, "Use the elliptical!"
You know, because--
Because I think about Jesus a lot.
I went to Catholic school
for nine years,
and they teach it to you
when you're so young, you're seven.
They're like, "There's this guy Jesus,
and he loves you.
And you love him, too, right?"
You're like, "Wait. Do I know this guy?"
And they're like,
"Oh, yeah, there's this guy Jesus,
who everybody loves
'cause he loves everybody.
And a long time ago, he died,
and it's not totally your fault.
So...
don't be scared or sad
'cause he's in heaven now with his dad,
who is also God.
There's this other thing
called The Holy Spirit
that no one really understands.
All three of these things are a cluster...
that are staring at you all the time."
If you have any questions,
just pop into that strange broom closet
in the corner
with Father Steven, who no one's done
a background check on.
Don't forget to mention
if you've been masturbating,
'cause he's fascinated by that.
And angry, but mostly fascinated, and--
Starts innocently enough,
as innocently as man-boy love can start.
You sort of accept there's this guy Jesus,
and he loves you,
but he's dead and he's bleeding,
but he's in great shape, and--
And I actually really enjoyed church
when I was a kid.
My favorite part was the hymns.
We'd sing this one that goes:
Christ has died
Christ is risen
Christ will come again
Thank you, guys.
You know that one? It's a hit.
It's been number one on the charts
for 47,000 weeks in a row.
Pretty sure it's gone myrrh,
at this point.
Yeah, that's right.
That's a rare myrrh joke.
That joke is comedy myrrh. And--
No, I love that song.
Lyrically, very concise.
You got Christ. He's the protagonist,
and then he died, which is sad.
Then he's risen, which is unexpected.
And then he'll come again, which--
I don't know, I'm--
I'm not sure I'm rooting for that part.
I feel like, you know, thanks for coming.
Appreciate the books, but--
Do we really want him to come again?
If he comes again, he's gonna be so mad.
He's gonna be like, "I don't understand.
How come these people are so rich
and these people are so poor?"
'Cause he's Jewish, right?
He'd have a Jewish affect.
"How come these people have thousands
of loaves,
and these people have half a loaf?"
'Cause he's a socialist.
He's a Jewish socialist.
He's the least popular modern demographic,
especially with Christians.
He's the original Bernie Sanders.
You know that, right?
I mean, Jesus--
Jesus would never win in the general.
But--
So, my brother Joe,
who's here with me tonight, he would--
He really taught me what jokes were
when I was a kid.
He used to sing parodies of these hymns
while we sang the actual hymns.
He was like the "Weird Al" Yankovic
of church.
He'd go...
Christ has lied
Christ was imprisoned
Christ will come at ten
By far, my favorite line--
this idea that Christ will be arriving
at a very specific time.
Because Christ is an on-time person.
That's one thing you should know.
He's a punctual savior.
So, I'm talking about all this on stage
in this Christian college gymnasium,
and...
it's not connecting, you know?
And it was really sort of awkward
backstage after the show
between me and this guy who booked me.
He was just like, "Why?
Why would you talk about Jesus
for ten minutes on stage?"
And I didn't have the best answer,
but I feel like it's good enough
to share with you guys.
I said, "Jesus died...
so I could tell those jokes."
In fairness
to the Christian college organizer,
I'm a pretty safe bet
as far as comedians go,
I don't curse gratuitously on stage,
which has a lot to do with my mom.
No, really. When I moved to New York,
she was upset, and I'd go, "Why?"
She said, "I don't want you to become one
of those dirty comedians."
And I said, "Okay."
And she said, "You don't have to use
those words to be funny.
For example, Oprah's very funny."
And I said, "Maybe to Gayle.
Or even Stedman,
when they let him in on it.
But I don't know--
I don't know
if you understand my goals, Mom.
I'm not trying to be the queen
of daytime."
Because my mom and I are so close,
I really tried not to curse a lot
over the years on stage.
At this point,
I've released four comedy albums,
and none of them have
the explicit lyrics label on them.
But sometimes,
I feel conflicted about that
'cause a lot of comedians I admire most
did curse on stage.
Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor.
And some of them who famously don't curse
are secretly criminals.
This is fun for me, just watching
50 people mouth, "Bill Cosby."
And then there's this odd thing
about not cursing,
which is, sometimes you're booked
in places just for that reason.
Like, a few years ago, I got booked
to perform with the Muppets,
which is a great honor.
I grew up on the Muppets.
It was a Canadian television special
hosted by them,
and I had to follow Fozzie Bear.
I'll tell you something about Fozzie Bear.
He's actually a pretty good comedian.
I feel like I have to make that point
because the joke of Fozzie, I guess,
is that he's a bad comedian
who also is a bear.
But Fozzie--
Following Fozzie is nearly impossible.
Like, he's killing on stage, killing.
Even when he's not killing, he's killing
'cause he's got
that joke parachute catchphrase:
"Wocka Wocka Wocka!"
Which is his "Git-R-Done," by the way.
I don't know if you've thought
of that before, but...
I'm watching Fozzie from the wings,
and it's dawning on me, like,
this show isn't gonna go well for me,
for a very specific reason.
When people go to see the Muppets,
they don't want to see people.
They just want to see more Muppets.
When you're watching Sesame Street
and Gordon and Maria wander in the frame,
and you're like, "Out of there."
We want to see more of the creature
who lives in the garbage.
So, Fozzie's killing,
and then he's heckled off the stage
by Statler and Waldorf.
That's the gay couple that lives
in the balcony.
If that's not the case, I'm very confused.
They go to theater seven nights a week,
and they bitch about everything.
I mean, what--
What are the clues here? And so...
Statler and Waldorf heckled Fozzie,
and then they introduced me,
which is an insane precedent
for hecklers--
this idea that if a heckler
defeats the comedian,
they're now in charge of the show?
It's like if a streaker ran
onto Yankee Stadium,
they just threw him a mitt.
They're like, "Third base!"
"I don't have a uniform!" You know?
So, they introduced me, and they're mean.
That's Statler and Waldorf's thing.
One of them goes,
"This next guy walks in his sleep."
"Oh, yeah?
I like sleeping during his act. Ha!"
"Please welcome Mike Birbiglia."
And I jog onto stage.
And I'm so flustered by being pre-heckled
by these surreal puppets,
that I forgot to bring my stool.
I get to the center, and I look around.
I go, "Ah, fuck!"
I'll tell you who doesn't like
the word "fuck."
People who have purchased tickets
to see the Muppets...
and the Muppets.
The people in the audience were like...
The Muppets were like...
I go, "Sorry about that!"
And I jog off stage.
And I jog back on stage,
this time with the stool.
There's nothing I can do
to get the audience on my side.
Because not only am I the guy who cursed
on The Muppets,
as far as these people know,
I'm the guy who curses exclusively
on The Muppets,
not even in the context of a joke.
I'm just this guy...
who jogs on stage,
says "fuck," and then jogs off stage.
I'm like the villain of the Muppets.
I'm, like, Fuck Monster.
Which is what I've been trying
to get my wife to call me for years.
So, I'm bombing on The Muppets.
It's literally the opposite
of my childhood dream come true.
I remember as a kid thinking like,
"Maybe someday, I'll be on The Muppets."
But I never thought, "Maybe someday,
I'll be on The Muppets,
and it's not gonna go so well."
After ten minutes, I walk off stage--
I'm not making this up.
I was consoled by Kermit.
He was like, "I thought you were good."
I was like, "Not now!"
Threw him up against the wall.
No, it was--
I felt terrible.
I just felt like I failed so profoundly.
But then the more I mulled it over,
the more I thought
maybe I'm being overly prude
on behalf of the Muppets.
If you think about it, the Muppets,
they've seen a lot.
The Muppets are, like, 70 years old.
Like, you think when the cameras
aren't rolling, Animal doesn't curse?
You think Animal's never like...
"This fucking snare drum
sounds like shit!"
I'm pretty sure Janice has tried heroin.
You know what I mean?
You think Janice is never like,
"Kermit, I am, like, so fucked up.
Can I use your leg to tie off my arm?"
That's right.
That's a Muppets heroin joke.
And I'm pretty sure if there was a line,
I stepped over it right there.
That's what you always have to think about
when you're writing jokes,
is sort of, where is the line?
And you don't want to cross it,
but you want to go near it.
You know, it's subjective,
sort of where the line is.
That's where it becomes complicated.
And that's what I was mulling over
as I was flying back to New York
the day before hosting the Gotham Awards.
I was on the plane. I was writing jokes,
and I was eating a chicken salad sandwich
on walnut raisin bread.
And I remember that because, actually,
the flight attendant came over,
and he was like, "Excuse me,
are there nuts in your sandwich?"
I knew it wasn't gonna end well.
Because that sentence never ends with:
"'Cause I love nuts!
Nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts!
They're great in everything!
Sprinkle them on your sundae!
They're the building blocks of pesto!"
Which they are
and nobody's talking about it.
And so, as--
So, as I responded,
I just kept eating the sandwich.
I was like...
"I think that there might be...
walnuts in the bread."
"Actually, you can't eat that on the plane
'cause the woman seated by the window...
has a nut allergy."
"I won't feed them to her.
Or rub them on her face."
"Actually, she'll have a reaction
even if there are nuts
in the air."
"Nuts in the air?"
Which just so happens
to be my favorite hip-hop song.
I tried to be respectful.
I said to the woman,
"Are you serious?
You'll have a reaction if there are nuts
in the air?"
She said, "Yeah,
I'll have a reaction if there are nuts
in the air."
"You shouldn't leave the house.
There are nuts everywhere."
And I was so hungry,
I said to the flight attendant,
I said, "Is there anywhere
where I can finish my sandwich?"
"You can finish it...
in the bathroom."
"Okay." And I head out.
And I walked into a JetBlue bathroom,
and I ate a chicken salad sandwich.
I'm experiencing that great symphony
of smells--
just bathroom and antiseptic,
mayonnaise, and I'm gagging.
And I'm eating more of the sandwich,
and I'm gagging.
And I'm eating more of the sandwich.
And I realized at that moment,
that I have what is called
a fecal airspace allergy.
And--
Well, you know,
it isn't just if I eat feces.
It is if--
It's if the feces...
are in the air.
If the feces are in the air...
I'll have a reaction.
All right. So, you know
who doesn't like this story,
are people with nut allergies.
And you know who does like this story?
Everyone else.
And...
I feel genuinely conflicted about that,
'cause there's almost a thousand people
in this room together right now.
And about 997 of us are like,
"Ha ha! Nuts in the air."
And then three of us secretly are like,
"That's my life."
You know? And I don't--
I don't want to be that to you,
but jokes have to be about something.
I told that story last year
in San Francisco,
and this kid came to me after the show,
and he asked me
if I would sign his EpiPen.
'Cause he has a nut allergy.
And if he has a reaction,
his mom has to spike him in his leg
so he doesn't die.
And I was really moved by this,
'cause that's precisely my sense of humor.
I have jokes on my albums about having
a bladder tumor when I was 19,
and how I was once hit by a drunk driver,
how I have
a life-threatening sleep disorder.
And those are my best jokes.
That's sort of what I'm interested in.
So, I said to his mom, "How many times
have you had to spike him?"
And she said, "Three times."
I thought, "Wow.
This kid almost died three times...
so I could tell that joke."
So I wanted to dedicate this show tonight
to him.
He's dead.
I'm joking.
Wocka Wocka Wocka!
Git-R-Done!
I'm flying back to New York
and writing jokes,
and I'm researching the guests of honor
at the Gotham Awards.
And I see that David O. Russell
is gonna be there.
And David O. Russell is one
of my absolute favorite directors,
dating back to when I was in high school.
I remember seeing his movie
Flirting with Disaster in the theater.
And I laughed so hard,
and then he went on to have this
illustrious Oscar Award-winning career--
Silver Linings Playbook,
American Hustle, Three Kings.
And I'm reading about him,
and this joke occurs to me on the plane,
and I just start laughing maniacally,
alone.
Not the best look. You know, just like...
"I have Ebola!"
I'm laughing for two reasons.
One, at the joke,
and two, at the absurdity
that I would tell this joke the next night
when he would be sitting right there.
And so the moment I land, I call my wife.
I said, "Clo, listen to this joke."
And she laughed really hard,
and I'll tell it to you guys in a moment.
But first, I just want
to say one last thing about jokes,
which is that I think jokes,
at their best, have the ability
to make us all feel closer to one another.
I think one of the--
My favorite things about marriage
is that you can share jokes
with your wife or husband
that are funny to you
and that person and no one else,
other than maybe your cat.
Because when you have a cat,
your barometer for humor--
out the window.
Last summer, my wife and I went
on a trip to Massachusetts.
And I called it "Catsachusetts,"
which is not funny.
But in our house,
it was the joke of the year!
I was like,
"We're going to Catsachusetts."
My wife's like, "Aah!"
I was like, "Aah!"
Our cat was like, "Aah!"
Because everyone loves a good pun
when you have a cat.
So, we drive to Catsachusetts.
When we arrive, my wife has a headache,
and she asks me if I'll acclimate Ivan--
that's our cat-- to the bedroom.
'Cause he's an indoor cat,
and you can't just put an indoor cat
into a house because he'll explode.
I bring him in the bedroom,
and while I'm there,
my wife discovers that there were mice
in the house.
And it was worse than just mice.
They were parasitic mice.
They have toxoplasmosis,
which means they have a parasite in them,
and they want it in you.
They're unafraid of cats.
They're unafraid of people.
We discovered this because my wife
was watching TV on the couch,
and she looked next to her,
and there was a mouse,
and he was watching TV also.
And she screamed,
and he just looked up at her
like Stuart Little.
Like, "Hey! What's going on?
I don't like this show, either.
I don't know why all those women
would want to marry that one guy."
She pushes him off the couch,
and he doesn't even run away.
He doesn't even scurry,
which is a verb invented for mice.
He just walks into the kitchen
like a roommate.
He was like,
"Fine, I'll go in the other room.
I just think you're overreacting."
Then he did a confessional
into the mouse cam in the kitchen.
He was like,
"I'm not here to make friends.
I'm here to win.
I was here before they came.
I'll be here when they're gone.
I'm a mouse."
That's from Real Mousewives
of Catsachusetts.
That night, I'm sound asleep, and my wife
wakes me up by grabbing my face.
She says, "Mo, Ivan found the mouse.
You need to get the mouse."
And I said, "Clo...
we have a cat.
We do everything for the cat.
We give him food.
We give him an apartment
that he thinks is the world.
We set aside an area in the apartment
for him to poop in
that we clean more often
than the area where we poop.
We have a gentleman's agreement
that in the unlikely event that a mouse
should walk through that door...
and that day may never come...
that he will murder that mouse,
and we will never speak
of that mouse again,
and that cat will receive protection."
That's from Catfather.
Clo says, "Mo, get the mouse."
And she hands me a cup.
I take the cup,
walk towards the mouse.
Mouse walks towards me.
I walk away from the mouse.
I put the cup over the mouse.
I put a magazine under the cup,
and I take him in the backyard.
I stick him in the forest,
where I can only assume
that he walked into the mouth of a wolf.
The next day we drove home,
and from that day forward,
we have called that state...
Mouseachusetts.
So, I want to point out something special,
that happened there at the end
which is, a few minutes ago,
I prefaced the story
with a Massachusetts-based pun.
Catsachusetts.
Which we all agreed as a group:
Not funny.
Moments ago...
I concluded the story with another
Massachusetts-based pun.
It was nearly identical.
It was Mouseachusetts.
But that time, we applauded.
Which means...
in a way...
it's like we're married.
I do.
So, now that we're married...
I'm gonna share with you this joke I told
at the Gotham Awards.
David O. Russell, like I said,
is one of my favorite directors,
but infamously, shouted at Lily Tomlin
on the set of I Heart Huckabees
many years ago.
You might've seen it on YouTube
because it was caught on tape,
it was put on YouTube.
It was seen by millions of people.
If you haven't seen it,
there is nothing I could do
to properly convey
just how extreme this rant was
other than typing out a transcript
of what he said,
printing it out
and just reading it to you.
So, they were on the set of this movie.
They're in this classroom area,
and it's Dustin Hoffman, Lily Tomlin
and Jason Schwartzman.
And in between takes,
David O. Russell comes out
and he says to Lily Tomlin,
and I quote,
he says,
"I'm just trying to fucking help you!
You understand me?!
I'm just trying to be
a fucking collaborator!
I'm just trying to help you figure out
the fucking picture! Okay, bitch?!
I'm not here to be fucking yelled at!
I didn't work on this thing
for three fucking years
to have some fucking cunt yell at me
in front of the crew
when I'm trying to help you, bitch!"
So, I thought I should talk about that
on stage because--
because if comedy is tragedy plus time,
this is the funniest thing I've ever seen.
So, I said, "David O. Russell's here."
He's about where you are, about third row.
I said, "One of my favorite directors,
known for going to extremes
to get exactly what he wants.
The great director Elia Kazan once said,
'You do whatever it takes
to get the shot.'
David O. Russell once said,
'I'm just trying to fucking help you,
you understand me?
I'm just being a fucking collaborator.
I'm just trying to help you figure out
the fucking picture. Okay, bitch?
I'm not here to be fucking yelled at.
I didn't work on this thing
for three fucking years
to have some fucking cunt yell at me
in front of the crew
when I'm trying to help you, bitch.'
Two great directors
basically saying the same thing."
The audience enjoyed it.
David O. Russell left.
Which was unfortunate timing
because he was just about
to receive the lifetime achievement award.
The woman who booked me came over
to my table and she said, "Mike,
David is very upset about your joke,
and I think he might leave.
Will you talk to him?"
And I said, "Absolutely."
Because, worst-case scenario,
it goes terribly.
Best-case scenario,
he makes me the lead in his next film.
And so, I'm walking with this woman.
She says, "It's my fault.
I never should've let you tell that joke.
I should have screened your jokes."
And I felt so bad
because I wanted to be like,
"I never would've let you screen my jokes.
I would've sent you decoy jokes."
I'd never hand someone a piece of paper
with the word "cunt" written on it.
I wasn't raised that way.
Christ has died, Christ is risen
But instead, I was like,
"Yeah, maybe it's your fault. Who knows?"
And then...
we get to the men's room.
David O. Russell storms out to the exit.
She follows him, and I follow her.
He looks back at her and goes,
"Give your fucking award to someone else!"
And I was like, "Awesome.
This is like we're in the video."
I go back to my table and my wife says,
"Mo, what's going on?"
And I say, "Clo, it's a long story,
and it hasn't ended yet.
But we're not in Mouseachusetts anymore."
Sitting at our table was Jared Leto,
but I didn't know it was him
because he was preparing for his role
in Dallas Buyers Club.
And so he'd shaved his eyebrows,
and he hadn't eaten in weeks.
And he leans over and goes,
"I haven't eaten in 21 days.
And that joke made me laugh my ass off."
I said, "Thank you, strange skeleton man.
That means a lot to me 'cause I'm in a lot
of trouble right now."
Amy Adams gets on stage to present
the award to David O. Russell, or not.
She says,
"David is a wonderful collaborator."
Which is the exact language
from the video,
though she left out the "C" word,
which was smart.
And then David O. Russell got on stage,
and he gave a really wonderful speech.
He's got a lot of wisdom.
He sits down. The reporter said,
"David, what did you think
of Mike Birbiglia's joke?"
"Comedians are gonna make jokes about
what they're gonna make jokes about."
They came over to me. "Mike,
what did you think of David's reaction?"
I said, "Whatever he said is fine."
And an article came out
in Variety magazine that week
about the event,
and the opening line of the article read,
and I quote...
"Before any winners were announced
at Monday's 22nd edition
of the Gotham Awards,
one thing became clear:
Mike Birbiglia will not be
in David O. Russell's next picture."
I'm the joke, later.
And I think that's fair.
Because if David O. Russell
were here tonight,
he would say, "I was invited to that event
to be honored by my peers.
And then you, who I'd never heard of,
got on stage and recited verbatim
the most regrettable three minutes
of my life,
and everybody laughed."
And I would say, "Excuse me, sir.
There's a show going on."
He'd be escorted out of the building.
That's his side of the story.
But I want you guys
to know my side of the story,
which is that I gave it a lot of thought
before telling that joke.
I ran it by comedian friends.
I ran it by my brother Joe,
who wrote "Christ Will Come at Ten."
I ran it by my wife the night before.
I said, "Clo, can I tell this joke
when I know he'll be right there,
and it will not go well for him at all?"
And Clo said,
"It depends on what you want
from the night.
If you want to be successful
in show business,
you probably shouldn't tell the joke.
If you want to be true to yourself
as a comedian,
then tell the joke."
And I told it...
because I love jokes.
I really do. I love jokes.
Jokes are meaningful to me.
Tonight's show here with you guys
is meaningful to me.
And the Charlie Hebdo incident in France
two years ago was meaningful to me
and to a lot of people.
After that incident,
I read about this peaceful rally in France
with almost four million people.
It was leaders of Israel and Palestine,
people of all religions,
and they were gathered behind the idea
that despite our differing jokes
and opinions,
civility is ultimately what matters.
And increasingly it matters more,
because now you can transmit images
and jokes and cartoons and videos
across the Earth in seconds.
So, people in Russia are our neighbors.
People in China are our neighbors.
People in Texas are our neighbors.
Which, to me, is most worrisome.
But it really does beg this question:
"What does it mean
to be a decent neighbor?"
I think part of it is just listening
to people
in the context
in which they intend their words.
You guys could leave here right now
and say, "Mike Birbiglia got on stage
and said Jesus was a Jewish socialist
who talks like Woody Allen.
Then he said, 'Nice tits, Betsy,'
which is sexist.
Then he said,
'Statler and Waldorf are gay,'
which is homophobic.
Then he called his tongue his mouth penis,
which is offensive to mouths and penises.
Then he made fun of that guy for saying
he was arrested by a woman cop.
Then he said,
'Christ has died, Christ is risen '
which sounded phenomenal
but was also offensive.
Then he told cat puns for an hour.
Which I don't enjoy 'cause I'm humorless.
Then he didn't tell one joke about Muslims
'cause he loves ISIS!
Then he said, 'I'm just trying
to fucking help you, you cunt!'
And then he left."
And all of that's true.
Which is why I'm cautious
when I tell jokes on stage,
because anything
can be taken out of context.
People's careers are taken down instantly,
and some people...
are killed.
So, I'm putting this in your hands.
You can choose to leave here
and quote me out of context,
or you can choose not to.
But I trust that you won't.
Because we're neighbors.
And whether you like it or not...
we're married.
Thank you. Thank you so much
for being a part of this.
Christ has lied
Christ was imprisoned
Christ will come at ten
Thank you very much.
See you next time, everybody.
See you in the neighborhood.
-[man] Wet Money exclusive!
-[man 2 laughing]
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah!
Pesto.
Wet Money.
Check it out!
We had to make a flight, yeah
Didn't have time to eat
Threw my stuff in the bag
As I jumped onto my feet
The bag was filled with nuts
Some bread around cold cuts
I didn't know it was a thing
Until a lady started to sing
Nuts in the air, nuts in the air
Everybody wave your nuts in the air
Nuts in the air, nuts in the air
Everybody wave your nuts in the air
Boy, get off the flight
I didn't want to fight
Snuck into the end
So she wouldn't use her EpiPen
I tried to calm her down
Examples from around
Nuts in muffins
Nuts in her bread now
Nuts from on the ground
Nuts in the pesto
Nuts I ingest-oh
I said, "Hey
Don't she got that thing?"
Where the hell did my sandwich go?
Hey, hey
I swear I just pulled it out
Pulled it out
Yeah, and now
It's in that lady's mouth
This is a Mike Birbiglia comedy special!
Greatest comedian in the world!
He didn't tell me to say that.
It's just a thing I think.
He would never say something like that
about himself.
He's very humble.
Thank God for jokes, motherfuckers.
Hi, I'm Jimmy Kimmel.
Can I get everyone to be quiet, please?
Can everyone be quiet? Please?
Everyone?
John. Where is John Krasinski?
John, please tell everyone to be quiet
and pay attention.
Could you do it
a little bit louder, please?
Thank you, John.
Good evening and welcome
to the 22nd Annual Gotham Awards.
You are there tonight to celebrate
the best independent films of 2012
and Matt Damon, whom we know
from such influential independent films
as Ocean's Eleven,
Ocean's Twelve, Ocean's Thirteen,
The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy,
The Bourne Hypocrisy,
and The Legend of Bagger Vance.
No one embodies the spirit of indie
like Matt Damon.
Anyway, I know you're eating
and telling your friends
about how much other people's money
you lost this year.
But we're about to get started,
and I would like you to pay attention
because I think
you will be happy you did.
The man you're about
to enjoy is very funny.
He, too, is an independent filmmaker.
He made an excellent movie this year
called Sleepwalk with Me,
and he is here tonight to entertain you
more than Matt Damon could ever
dream of doing, quite frankly.
Ladies and gentlemen, please put
your drinks down for five seconds
and give a very warm welcome
to Mike Birbiglia.
So...
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you, guys.
Well...
That was four years ago.
And the reason I show you that
is 'cause that video played
before what ended up being one
of the strangest nights of my life.
Because when Jimmy Kimmel
said John Krasinski's name,
John Krasinski was there, and he stood up,
and he told everyone to be quiet.
And by "everyone," I mean, Matt Damon.
And Amy Adams and Claire Danes
and Harvey Weinstein,
all these fancy people.
And somehow, I was hosting this event.
I'm not being falsely modest.
I get that we're all here right now.
But I also know,
at some point this week,
you told someone
where you were going tonight
and that person said, "Who?"
And you said some things I'd done.
They said, "What's that?"
You said, "Go back to bed, Grandma,"
'cause she's sleeping, but...
I'm a niche, I understand that. But...
this is a really big deal for me,
and I was so anxious for the week
leading up to the event.
And I couldn't sleep,
I was short of breath.
The night before,
I said to my wife, "Clo..."
Her name is Jen.
I said-- I said, "Clo...
I think this might be a disaster."
She said, "Mo...
why do you think that?"
I said,
"I've been a comedian for 15 years,
and what I've learned
is that you should never tell jokes
to the people who the jokes are about."
My wife had the perfect answer for this,
and I'll tell you what it was later.
But jokes are something
I think about all the time.
They're a volatile type of speech.
Just look at the news.
The Charlie Hebdo incident two years ago
where these ten satirists were killed
for drawing a disrespectful cartoon
of Muhammad,
who the killers believed
to be the prophet of Allah,
their lord and savior,
which, by the way, he might be.
I have no horse in that race.
Muhammad seems like a nice guy.
Jesus was popular with 12 dudes.
Buddha's confusing. I'm pretty sure
he's an elephant or a sumo wrestler.
The point is...
that these were comedy writers like me,
and they were murdered.
I was so shocked by this. At the time,
I remember talking to everybody about it.
And my mother said to me,
"Can't these writers just write jokes
that aren't offensive?"
And I thought about it.
I said, "I'm not sure that's possible,
because all jokes are offensive...
to someone."
I'll give you an example.
My wife does this thing
that drives me crazy.
She's late for everything,
and I'm an on-time person.
Round of applause
if you're a late person, typically.
Few people. So, what late people
don't understand about us on-time people
is that we hate you. And...
the reason why we hate you
is that it's so easy to be on time.
You just have to be early,
and early lasts for hours.
And on-time just lasts a second,
and then you're late forever.
Welcome to the show.
Thanks for being here.
Thanks for coming.
We were just talking about you.
So, late people always try
to re-brand "late."
They'll say, "I'm fashionably late,"
which is like saying,
"I'm stylishly racist."
Which is another thing about late people.
A lot of them are racist.
And the reason these late racists
drive me crazy...
is they're often so good-looking.
I mean, you ever get ready for something
with a late person?
They look into their closet
like it's Narnia.
Like it's an infinite well
of possibilities.
On-time people are just like,
"This is what I look like."
Sorry about that.
The reason I'm an expert in this
is that I was raised by late people.
My parents are laties, and--
When I was a kid,
my mom used to pick me up
from my swim class at the YMCA,
90 minutes after the class would end.
I know. She was like the cable company.
"I will pick you up between the hours
of 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m."
I was a ten-year-old child just standing
on the street corner
in a dripping wet bathing suit
and flip-flops.
My mom wasn't on the way.
She was at the book club
talking about The Color Purple.
I was like, "Mom, I am the color purple!"
One year, we went on a family vacation,
and we left for the airport
45 minutes before our flight took off.
We lived 45 minutes away from the airport.
My dad shouted at the security guard
like it was his fault.
This is the '80s,
when airport security consisted
of a high-five and a pat on the ass.
It was a different time for late people.
It was the golden age.
And then I married a late person,
like I said, and it's an issue.
This week, we were heading to yoga,
which is why I look excellent
and feel excellent.
I yearn for the day
that doesn't get a laugh.
I'm not even sure why we're laughing,
but I'll go with it.
So...
we're heading to yoga. My wife says,
"Wait for me, I'm not ready."
Which is silly 'cause you don't have
to be ready for yoga,
'cause all it is is trying not
to fart while stretching.
And that's my life already
without the stretching.
And clearly...
clearly, I don't belong in yoga.
It wasn't designed for male humans.
And you can tell when the instructor says,
"I want you to reach your hand back
towards your bra strap,
and then lift up your leg
unless you're on your period."
I'm like, "I'm pretty sure none
of that applies to me.
I've only had my period once.
I'm not even sure that's what that was."
Some of the poses are outrageous.
The other day, the instructor goes,
"I want you to push your chest
into the mat
and your butt in the air,
and then pull up the front
of your mat like a slut."
I was like, "All right."
I was trying to be a team player.
I was like, "I'm a bad girl.
I'm a yoga slut down on my luck...
trying to forge a mind-body connection."
And then she goes, "That's right, pull up
the front of your mat like a sled."
Minor adjustment.
Let me just close my butt.
So, my wife says,
"Wait for me, I'm not ready."
And I held my ground.
I go, "I'm not gonna wait for you
'cause you're a late person.
I'm an on-time person.
I don't want that entering
into our marriage
'cause I feel like
it's going really well so far."
Try to put a positive spin on it.
And she goes, "Fine."
Passive-aggressive--
classic for late people.
And then she says,
"Save a mat next to your mat,
for me, in class."
I said, "Clo, I'm not gonna do that
'cause I have more allegiance
to my fellow on-time people
than I do to you, my own wife."
And that didn't go well.
And so--
So, I felt bad.
And then I get to class,
and I put down my mat.
Then I put down a mat next to my mat
for my wife.
And this woman comes up, she goes,
"Do you mind if I put my mat right here?"
I was like, "Actually, my wife is..."
Sometimes I'm so polite,
I don't even finish sentences.
This other woman comes up, she goes...
I was like...
We were like deferent whales.
Which is another pose I'm working on.
Class fills up, 100% full,
wall-to-wall sluts.
Except for the empty mat next to my mat,
because my wife decided, arbitrarily,
she just wasn't gonna come
to class that day.
I know!
The ultimate late person move!
Absence!
Class-- class ends.
Empty mat.
All that people are gonna assume
is that my wife is dead.
Or I've invented the fictional concept
of having a wife
so I can have this weird
double-wide super mat.
The most selfish possible move
in the most socialist of exercises.
And this woman comes up.
She says, "I hope your wife is okay."
Which is the yoga way of saying,
"We hate you."
But that's just my side of the story.
In fairness to my wife,
if she were here tonight, she'd be like,
"Yeah, but you're not telling them..."
And I'd be like, "Excuse me, ma'am.
There's a show going on."
She'd be escorted out of the building.
I've done it before, I'll do it again.
That's what I love about jokes.
They're just your side of the story.
They're your opinion, which isn't
to say they're always just opinions.
Sometimes they're an externalization
of your inner thoughts,
and often your inner thoughts
are inappropriate.
I was at my urologist recently.
Just chillin'. No, I had a--
I had a symptom. Don't repeat this.
I had a symptom where--
This is hard to say.
I had a thing where, when my wife
and I would have sex,
I would have a pins-and-needles sensation
in my urethra
the moment I would ejaculate.
Which at first was exciting.
At first, I thought, "Ohh.
Maybe this is a new type of orgasm.
Maybe I've broken through."
But then the pain didn't go away.
I was like, "Oh, no!"
It's like when you're eating spicy food
and you're like,
"That's hot. That's hot! That's too hot!"
But it was with my penis.
Which is much higher stakes
than your tongue,
which is your mouth penis, in a way.
Nobody calls it that, but--
So, I explained this to my doctor--
not in these words--
and he's unfazed by it.
He goes, "It's not a big deal.
It's probably a muscular thing.
You're just trying too hard
when you have sex."
And I said, "You're telling me."
But I didn't--
I didn't say it. I just thought that.
I was like...
He was like, "Is there something wrong
with your head?" And, uh...
'Cause I don't say a lot
of jokes offstage.
I just think them.
He was like, "Is there something wrong
with your head?"
I go, "No, I'm a comedian."
He goes, "You're a comedian?"
I go, "You're a doctor?"
But I didn't say it. I just thought it.
I was, like...
You know?
He really didn't believe me,
he goes, "If you're a comedian,
how come you're not funny now?"
What I wanted to say was I'm gonna
take this conversation we're having
and then repeat that to strangers.
And then that's the joke.
You're the joke... later.
But I didn't say it.
I just thought it, and, uh...
I could say these jokes.
But when you have your pants
at your ankles
and a rectal thermometer in your butt,
you're thinking,
"This might not be the right time."
I feel like we're led to believe
this false clich from romantic comedies
that we're all just whipping off jokes
all the time.
Like, we meet a girl in a coffee shop
and we're like,
"What's in your latte? Cum?"
And she'll be like, "You're hilarious!
We should be married in 90 minutes."
But in real life, that guy gets arrested.
Or runs for president.
Like, if you think about--
If you think about jokes--
If you think about jokes,
you can't tell jokes in life, almost ever.
Like, at work or school.
Or the airport is a great example.
I read a story where a guy sneezed
on a plane,
looks around and he goes,
"I have Ebola."
Here's why that's not a good joke.
They landed the plane.
They landed the plane.
And they're met by the guys
in hazmat suits.
And his defense was, "I'm joking."
Which is always this catch-all defense
when people say dumb things.
You can't tell jokes at work, basically,
because at some point in history,
some idiot showed up at work,
and was like, "Nice tits, Betsy!"
And Betsy's like, "What?"
And that guy's like, "I'm joking!"
And the boss is like...
"Uh...
no more jokes!"
Jokes have been ruined
by people who aren't good
at telling jokes.
A joke should never end with "I'm joking."
Or "Git-R-Done."
So, it's the week before I host
the Gotham Awards,
and I start writing the jokes.
And it felt like
sort of a no-win situation:
How do I make jokes that are relevant
to the people in the audience
but don't make them hate me?
And so, I started with jokes about myself.
I wrote, "It's an honor to be here,
because 13 years ago,
I was a coat check person at this event.
And here I am hosting,
and I made more money checking coats."
Which is true.
Yeah, I remember that period
of my life so well.
I was so broke, and I was actually living
on an air mattress in Queens,
and I couldn't afford a dresser
for my clothes.
When you're broke,
everything is just low to the ground.
You know? You--
You roll off your air mattress
in the morning,
grab pants from the floor,
you cook noodles on a hot plate.
One falls out of your mouth,
you're like, "It's not too far."
The only way you could get lower
is if you died.
And I moved to New York
'cause there's all these
comedy clubs here,
but they didn't want me
'cause I wasn't good at it.
So, what I did was I drove
my mom's station wagon around the country
to areas of lesser comedy concentration,
places like Ohio,
West Virginia, New Jersey, and...
Not a joke, but thanks.
And, actually, I bought my mom's car.
I always like to point that out
because I found out recently
that sometimes when parents have faith
in their child's dreams...
they'll give them their car.
My mom got the full Blue Book value.
She was like,
"This guy just doesn't have it."
And...
I remember this rock-bottom moment
where I'm driving back
from a comedy club in New Jersey
to my air mattress in Queens,
and this cop just points at me
and waves me over.
When you're broke, cops will pull you over
if you have a crappy car
just to see what else you got going wrong,
you know?
Yeah.
And he says, "License and registration."
As I'm pulling out my license,
I'm realizing it's expired by three weeks.
And I had that moment where I think,
"Should I preface this conversation
with this key piece of information?"
Like, "You're not gonna like this."
You know what I mean?
"Same team. We both think I'm an idiot."
And...
It was actually worse than just that.
He came back and goes, "Did you know
that your license is suspended?"
Yeah, I didn't even know
what that meant.
I was very naive, and so I--
I had an unpaid speeding ticket
from high school.
So I said to him, and I quote--
I said, "Yes.
No.
Wait. What does 'suspended' mean?"
And he said, "Please step out of the car."
And I get out of the car.
He says, "You're under arrest."
I said, "No, I don't think so."
He says, "I'm sure of it."
And then he cuffs me
to prove the whole thing. And--
Round of applause if you've been arrested.
Has anyone been arrested before?
Few people. What did you--
Can I ask, what did you get arrested for?
I got arrested by a woman cop
and put in a headlock.
I don't like how you said "woman cop."
That was very obnoxious.
It really was. I don't--
I'm fine with it. It's a comedy show.
Anything can happen.
We're all friends here.
But it just did rub me the wrong way.
You know, women can be cops.
It's sort of part of the whole thing.
You said you're--
You're saying it like it's an anomaly.
And it's, like, a whole thing.
I only said it like that because I've been
getting my balls busted
for the last ten years over it.
Oh, okay.
Well, that doesn't make sense also.
But, uh-- but sure, yeah. So--
So, this crazy, out-of-nowhere,
woman cop shows up.
Well, get this: she's a lady.
Badge and everything.
And I said, "Cook me dinner!"
You know what she said?
She said,
"No, you're under arrest for a crime."
So...
Unbelievable.
You're really buried in this point.
I mean, there's nothing--
There's nothing you could say
that would vindicate you.
She put me in a headlock.
You already said that.
I feel like your talking points
are all wrong.
She put you in a headlock? Why?
First of all, what was your crime?
I got to a keg, and I got my cup of beer,
and I was waiting in line for the beer.
-And...
-You're leaving out so many details.
Where?!
Basic details!
We don't all have to be Ira Glass,
but come on!
Where-- where was this?
It was in the woods.
So--
So--
So--
No further questions, Your Honor.
It was in the woods.
It was in the woods.
I didn't even know ladies went
in the woods.
It was like seeing Bigfoot.
I will say this about being arrested.
It's a shocking experience
if you've never had it happen,
because they cuff you, and the cuffs hurt.
And the cops don't have to take you
to jail right away.
Like, I was cuffed in New Jersey
and sitting in the back of the cruiser.
I'm looking through the windshield,
the cop was just hanging out
with his cop buddies.
And they're laughing, making jokes,
like, "I arrested this guy for nothing."
You know, just like,
"What does 'suspended' mean?"
And...
I'm having the most traumatic moment
of my life.
It's like,
"I never knew I would be arrested.
I wear New Balance shoes."
You know, and--
And I'm nervous 'cause I'm afraid of cops.
I always thought I was most afraid
of bears,
but at least if a bear kills you,
everyone gets mad at the bear.
If a cop kills you,
30% of Americans are like,
"It's a hard job."
You know what I mean?
If a bear kills you,
they don't have a bear press conference
where all the bears stand behind
the murderous bear in solidarity,
and the bear commissioner steps forward,
and he's like,
"He's usually a pretty good bear.
He usually just eats honey
and is unaware of bees."
But cops will kill you.
That's, like, on the news and everything.
And so--
So, I'm nervous and I'm sweating.
I'm itchy. I had an itch on my face.
But I didn't have
any extremities available.
So, I'm looking around like the character
from No Country for Old Men.
And I see a door handle.
I'm like, "That's pointy."
And I reach over. I'm scratching my face
on the door handle
which creates more itchiness
on my cheek and my shoulder.
And then I'm just sort of
writhing around in circles,
like a dog trying
to shake off a medical cone.
And the cop looks back.
He's like, "We got a live one!
What the hell are you doing?"
I'm like, "Will you scratch my face?"
Apparently, they never do that.
Not once, ever.
As it turns out, no one's even asked,
which is crazy to me.
'Cause that's the itchiest backseat
I've ever been in.
It's like a tickle fight back there...
with lice. I would have done anything
for a scratch.
I'd be like, "I'll let you use your gun,"
you know, which is pointy,
but obviously dangerous.
And so...
the officer books me
at the Weehawken, New Jersey, jail.
He even took the shoelaces out of my shoes
'cause apparently,
it's a very common thing
when people's licenses are suspended...
is they'll hang themselves.
I don't like to joke about it.
It's called suspension post-suspension.
It is...
all-too-common, under-reported.
And then--
And then he took a mug shot of me.
He knew I'd performed
at a comedy club that night.
So, he took an extra one,
and he put it in his pocket.
He goes, "This is in case
you ever get famous."
Which I thought was nice, you know?
I was like,
"At least he's rooting for me."
Sure, he's arresting me now.
But long-term, this guy sees it.
Which is more than I can say for my mom.
And so--
So, I had this one joke
about being a coat check person.
But increasingly, I'm getting so anxious
about hosting this event.
And so I called Jimmy Kimmel,
'cause I thought
that if I had a video like that,
it might give me some credibility
with the audience,
where it felt like every relevant topic
would be a minefield.
Which is always, by the way,
somewhat the case in comedy
when you perform
for a specific group of people.
Like, I remember
the most extreme example I've had.
I was performing
at a Christian college, and, uh...
It was a weird show.
It was in a giant gymnasium,
and there was a 30-foot crucifix
on the wall.
And I thought that was funny,
because I was thinking,
like, if Jesus were there,
what would he say?
Like, "Use the elliptical!"
You know, because--
Because I think about Jesus a lot.
I went to Catholic school
for nine years,
and they teach it to you
when you're so young, you're seven.
They're like, "There's this guy Jesus,
and he loves you.
And you love him, too, right?"
You're like, "Wait. Do I know this guy?"
And they're like,
"Oh, yeah, there's this guy Jesus,
who everybody loves
'cause he loves everybody.
And a long time ago, he died,
and it's not totally your fault.
So...
don't be scared or sad
'cause he's in heaven now with his dad,
who is also God.
There's this other thing
called The Holy Spirit
that no one really understands.
All three of these things are a cluster...
that are staring at you all the time."
If you have any questions,
just pop into that strange broom closet
in the corner
with Father Steven, who no one's done
a background check on.
Don't forget to mention
if you've been masturbating,
'cause he's fascinated by that.
And angry, but mostly fascinated, and--
Starts innocently enough,
as innocently as man-boy love can start.
You sort of accept there's this guy Jesus,
and he loves you,
but he's dead and he's bleeding,
but he's in great shape, and--
And I actually really enjoyed church
when I was a kid.
My favorite part was the hymns.
We'd sing this one that goes:
Christ has died
Christ is risen
Christ will come again
Thank you, guys.
You know that one? It's a hit.
It's been number one on the charts
for 47,000 weeks in a row.
Pretty sure it's gone myrrh,
at this point.
Yeah, that's right.
That's a rare myrrh joke.
That joke is comedy myrrh. And--
No, I love that song.
Lyrically, very concise.
You got Christ. He's the protagonist,
and then he died, which is sad.
Then he's risen, which is unexpected.
And then he'll come again, which--
I don't know, I'm--
I'm not sure I'm rooting for that part.
I feel like, you know, thanks for coming.
Appreciate the books, but--
Do we really want him to come again?
If he comes again, he's gonna be so mad.
He's gonna be like, "I don't understand.
How come these people are so rich
and these people are so poor?"
'Cause he's Jewish, right?
He'd have a Jewish affect.
"How come these people have thousands
of loaves,
and these people have half a loaf?"
'Cause he's a socialist.
He's a Jewish socialist.
He's the least popular modern demographic,
especially with Christians.
He's the original Bernie Sanders.
You know that, right?
I mean, Jesus--
Jesus would never win in the general.
But--
So, my brother Joe,
who's here with me tonight, he would--
He really taught me what jokes were
when I was a kid.
He used to sing parodies of these hymns
while we sang the actual hymns.
He was like the "Weird Al" Yankovic
of church.
He'd go...
Christ has lied
Christ was imprisoned
Christ will come at ten
By far, my favorite line--
this idea that Christ will be arriving
at a very specific time.
Because Christ is an on-time person.
That's one thing you should know.
He's a punctual savior.
So, I'm talking about all this on stage
in this Christian college gymnasium,
and...
it's not connecting, you know?
And it was really sort of awkward
backstage after the show
between me and this guy who booked me.
He was just like, "Why?
Why would you talk about Jesus
for ten minutes on stage?"
And I didn't have the best answer,
but I feel like it's good enough
to share with you guys.
I said, "Jesus died...
so I could tell those jokes."
In fairness
to the Christian college organizer,
I'm a pretty safe bet
as far as comedians go,
I don't curse gratuitously on stage,
which has a lot to do with my mom.
No, really. When I moved to New York,
she was upset, and I'd go, "Why?"
She said, "I don't want you to become one
of those dirty comedians."
And I said, "Okay."
And she said, "You don't have to use
those words to be funny.
For example, Oprah's very funny."
And I said, "Maybe to Gayle.
Or even Stedman,
when they let him in on it.
But I don't know--
I don't know
if you understand my goals, Mom.
I'm not trying to be the queen
of daytime."
Because my mom and I are so close,
I really tried not to curse a lot
over the years on stage.
At this point,
I've released four comedy albums,
and none of them have
the explicit lyrics label on them.
But sometimes,
I feel conflicted about that
'cause a lot of comedians I admire most
did curse on stage.
Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor.
And some of them who famously don't curse
are secretly criminals.
This is fun for me, just watching
50 people mouth, "Bill Cosby."
And then there's this odd thing
about not cursing,
which is, sometimes you're booked
in places just for that reason.
Like, a few years ago, I got booked
to perform with the Muppets,
which is a great honor.
I grew up on the Muppets.
It was a Canadian television special
hosted by them,
and I had to follow Fozzie Bear.
I'll tell you something about Fozzie Bear.
He's actually a pretty good comedian.
I feel like I have to make that point
because the joke of Fozzie, I guess,
is that he's a bad comedian
who also is a bear.
But Fozzie--
Following Fozzie is nearly impossible.
Like, he's killing on stage, killing.
Even when he's not killing, he's killing
'cause he's got
that joke parachute catchphrase:
"Wocka Wocka Wocka!"
Which is his "Git-R-Done," by the way.
I don't know if you've thought
of that before, but...
I'm watching Fozzie from the wings,
and it's dawning on me, like,
this show isn't gonna go well for me,
for a very specific reason.
When people go to see the Muppets,
they don't want to see people.
They just want to see more Muppets.
When you're watching Sesame Street
and Gordon and Maria wander in the frame,
and you're like, "Out of there."
We want to see more of the creature
who lives in the garbage.
So, Fozzie's killing,
and then he's heckled off the stage
by Statler and Waldorf.
That's the gay couple that lives
in the balcony.
If that's not the case, I'm very confused.
They go to theater seven nights a week,
and they bitch about everything.
I mean, what--
What are the clues here? And so...
Statler and Waldorf heckled Fozzie,
and then they introduced me,
which is an insane precedent
for hecklers--
this idea that if a heckler
defeats the comedian,
they're now in charge of the show?
It's like if a streaker ran
onto Yankee Stadium,
they just threw him a mitt.
They're like, "Third base!"
"I don't have a uniform!" You know?
So, they introduced me, and they're mean.
That's Statler and Waldorf's thing.
One of them goes,
"This next guy walks in his sleep."
"Oh, yeah?
I like sleeping during his act. Ha!"
"Please welcome Mike Birbiglia."
And I jog onto stage.
And I'm so flustered by being pre-heckled
by these surreal puppets,
that I forgot to bring my stool.
I get to the center, and I look around.
I go, "Ah, fuck!"
I'll tell you who doesn't like
the word "fuck."
People who have purchased tickets
to see the Muppets...
and the Muppets.
The people in the audience were like...
The Muppets were like...
I go, "Sorry about that!"
And I jog off stage.
And I jog back on stage,
this time with the stool.
There's nothing I can do
to get the audience on my side.
Because not only am I the guy who cursed
on The Muppets,
as far as these people know,
I'm the guy who curses exclusively
on The Muppets,
not even in the context of a joke.
I'm just this guy...
who jogs on stage,
says "fuck," and then jogs off stage.
I'm like the villain of the Muppets.
I'm, like, Fuck Monster.
Which is what I've been trying
to get my wife to call me for years.
So, I'm bombing on The Muppets.
It's literally the opposite
of my childhood dream come true.
I remember as a kid thinking like,
"Maybe someday, I'll be on The Muppets."
But I never thought, "Maybe someday,
I'll be on The Muppets,
and it's not gonna go so well."
After ten minutes, I walk off stage--
I'm not making this up.
I was consoled by Kermit.
He was like, "I thought you were good."
I was like, "Not now!"
Threw him up against the wall.
No, it was--
I felt terrible.
I just felt like I failed so profoundly.
But then the more I mulled it over,
the more I thought
maybe I'm being overly prude
on behalf of the Muppets.
If you think about it, the Muppets,
they've seen a lot.
The Muppets are, like, 70 years old.
Like, you think when the cameras
aren't rolling, Animal doesn't curse?
You think Animal's never like...
"This fucking snare drum
sounds like shit!"
I'm pretty sure Janice has tried heroin.
You know what I mean?
You think Janice is never like,
"Kermit, I am, like, so fucked up.
Can I use your leg to tie off my arm?"
That's right.
That's a Muppets heroin joke.
And I'm pretty sure if there was a line,
I stepped over it right there.
That's what you always have to think about
when you're writing jokes,
is sort of, where is the line?
And you don't want to cross it,
but you want to go near it.
You know, it's subjective,
sort of where the line is.
That's where it becomes complicated.
And that's what I was mulling over
as I was flying back to New York
the day before hosting the Gotham Awards.
I was on the plane. I was writing jokes,
and I was eating a chicken salad sandwich
on walnut raisin bread.
And I remember that because, actually,
the flight attendant came over,
and he was like, "Excuse me,
are there nuts in your sandwich?"
I knew it wasn't gonna end well.
Because that sentence never ends with:
"'Cause I love nuts!
Nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts, nuts!
They're great in everything!
Sprinkle them on your sundae!
They're the building blocks of pesto!"
Which they are
and nobody's talking about it.
And so, as--
So, as I responded,
I just kept eating the sandwich.
I was like...
"I think that there might be...
walnuts in the bread."
"Actually, you can't eat that on the plane
'cause the woman seated by the window...
has a nut allergy."
"I won't feed them to her.
Or rub them on her face."
"Actually, she'll have a reaction
even if there are nuts
in the air."
"Nuts in the air?"
Which just so happens
to be my favorite hip-hop song.
I tried to be respectful.
I said to the woman,
"Are you serious?
You'll have a reaction if there are nuts
in the air?"
She said, "Yeah,
I'll have a reaction if there are nuts
in the air."
"You shouldn't leave the house.
There are nuts everywhere."
And I was so hungry,
I said to the flight attendant,
I said, "Is there anywhere
where I can finish my sandwich?"
"You can finish it...
in the bathroom."
"Okay." And I head out.
And I walked into a JetBlue bathroom,
and I ate a chicken salad sandwich.
I'm experiencing that great symphony
of smells--
just bathroom and antiseptic,
mayonnaise, and I'm gagging.
And I'm eating more of the sandwich,
and I'm gagging.
And I'm eating more of the sandwich.
And I realized at that moment,
that I have what is called
a fecal airspace allergy.
And--
Well, you know,
it isn't just if I eat feces.
It is if--
It's if the feces...
are in the air.
If the feces are in the air...
I'll have a reaction.
All right. So, you know
who doesn't like this story,
are people with nut allergies.
And you know who does like this story?
Everyone else.
And...
I feel genuinely conflicted about that,
'cause there's almost a thousand people
in this room together right now.
And about 997 of us are like,
"Ha ha! Nuts in the air."
And then three of us secretly are like,
"That's my life."
You know? And I don't--
I don't want to be that to you,
but jokes have to be about something.
I told that story last year
in San Francisco,
and this kid came to me after the show,
and he asked me
if I would sign his EpiPen.
'Cause he has a nut allergy.
And if he has a reaction,
his mom has to spike him in his leg
so he doesn't die.
And I was really moved by this,
'cause that's precisely my sense of humor.
I have jokes on my albums about having
a bladder tumor when I was 19,
and how I was once hit by a drunk driver,
how I have
a life-threatening sleep disorder.
And those are my best jokes.
That's sort of what I'm interested in.
So, I said to his mom, "How many times
have you had to spike him?"
And she said, "Three times."
I thought, "Wow.
This kid almost died three times...
so I could tell that joke."
So I wanted to dedicate this show tonight
to him.
He's dead.
I'm joking.
Wocka Wocka Wocka!
Git-R-Done!
I'm flying back to New York
and writing jokes,
and I'm researching the guests of honor
at the Gotham Awards.
And I see that David O. Russell
is gonna be there.
And David O. Russell is one
of my absolute favorite directors,
dating back to when I was in high school.
I remember seeing his movie
Flirting with Disaster in the theater.
And I laughed so hard,
and then he went on to have this
illustrious Oscar Award-winning career--
Silver Linings Playbook,
American Hustle, Three Kings.
And I'm reading about him,
and this joke occurs to me on the plane,
and I just start laughing maniacally,
alone.
Not the best look. You know, just like...
"I have Ebola!"
I'm laughing for two reasons.
One, at the joke,
and two, at the absurdity
that I would tell this joke the next night
when he would be sitting right there.
And so the moment I land, I call my wife.
I said, "Clo, listen to this joke."
And she laughed really hard,
and I'll tell it to you guys in a moment.
But first, I just want
to say one last thing about jokes,
which is that I think jokes,
at their best, have the ability
to make us all feel closer to one another.
I think one of the--
My favorite things about marriage
is that you can share jokes
with your wife or husband
that are funny to you
and that person and no one else,
other than maybe your cat.
Because when you have a cat,
your barometer for humor--
out the window.
Last summer, my wife and I went
on a trip to Massachusetts.
And I called it "Catsachusetts,"
which is not funny.
But in our house,
it was the joke of the year!
I was like,
"We're going to Catsachusetts."
My wife's like, "Aah!"
I was like, "Aah!"
Our cat was like, "Aah!"
Because everyone loves a good pun
when you have a cat.
So, we drive to Catsachusetts.
When we arrive, my wife has a headache,
and she asks me if I'll acclimate Ivan--
that's our cat-- to the bedroom.
'Cause he's an indoor cat,
and you can't just put an indoor cat
into a house because he'll explode.
I bring him in the bedroom,
and while I'm there,
my wife discovers that there were mice
in the house.
And it was worse than just mice.
They were parasitic mice.
They have toxoplasmosis,
which means they have a parasite in them,
and they want it in you.
They're unafraid of cats.
They're unafraid of people.
We discovered this because my wife
was watching TV on the couch,
and she looked next to her,
and there was a mouse,
and he was watching TV also.
And she screamed,
and he just looked up at her
like Stuart Little.
Like, "Hey! What's going on?
I don't like this show, either.
I don't know why all those women
would want to marry that one guy."
She pushes him off the couch,
and he doesn't even run away.
He doesn't even scurry,
which is a verb invented for mice.
He just walks into the kitchen
like a roommate.
He was like,
"Fine, I'll go in the other room.
I just think you're overreacting."
Then he did a confessional
into the mouse cam in the kitchen.
He was like,
"I'm not here to make friends.
I'm here to win.
I was here before they came.
I'll be here when they're gone.
I'm a mouse."
That's from Real Mousewives
of Catsachusetts.
That night, I'm sound asleep, and my wife
wakes me up by grabbing my face.
She says, "Mo, Ivan found the mouse.
You need to get the mouse."
And I said, "Clo...
we have a cat.
We do everything for the cat.
We give him food.
We give him an apartment
that he thinks is the world.
We set aside an area in the apartment
for him to poop in
that we clean more often
than the area where we poop.
We have a gentleman's agreement
that in the unlikely event that a mouse
should walk through that door...
and that day may never come...
that he will murder that mouse,
and we will never speak
of that mouse again,
and that cat will receive protection."
That's from Catfather.
Clo says, "Mo, get the mouse."
And she hands me a cup.
I take the cup,
walk towards the mouse.
Mouse walks towards me.
I walk away from the mouse.
I put the cup over the mouse.
I put a magazine under the cup,
and I take him in the backyard.
I stick him in the forest,
where I can only assume
that he walked into the mouth of a wolf.
The next day we drove home,
and from that day forward,
we have called that state...
Mouseachusetts.
So, I want to point out something special,
that happened there at the end
which is, a few minutes ago,
I prefaced the story
with a Massachusetts-based pun.
Catsachusetts.
Which we all agreed as a group:
Not funny.
Moments ago...
I concluded the story with another
Massachusetts-based pun.
It was nearly identical.
It was Mouseachusetts.
But that time, we applauded.
Which means...
in a way...
it's like we're married.
I do.
So, now that we're married...
I'm gonna share with you this joke I told
at the Gotham Awards.
David O. Russell, like I said,
is one of my favorite directors,
but infamously, shouted at Lily Tomlin
on the set of I Heart Huckabees
many years ago.
You might've seen it on YouTube
because it was caught on tape,
it was put on YouTube.
It was seen by millions of people.
If you haven't seen it,
there is nothing I could do
to properly convey
just how extreme this rant was
other than typing out a transcript
of what he said,
printing it out
and just reading it to you.
So, they were on the set of this movie.
They're in this classroom area,
and it's Dustin Hoffman, Lily Tomlin
and Jason Schwartzman.
And in between takes,
David O. Russell comes out
and he says to Lily Tomlin,
and I quote,
he says,
"I'm just trying to fucking help you!
You understand me?!
I'm just trying to be
a fucking collaborator!
I'm just trying to help you figure out
the fucking picture! Okay, bitch?!
I'm not here to be fucking yelled at!
I didn't work on this thing
for three fucking years
to have some fucking cunt yell at me
in front of the crew
when I'm trying to help you, bitch!"
So, I thought I should talk about that
on stage because--
because if comedy is tragedy plus time,
this is the funniest thing I've ever seen.
So, I said, "David O. Russell's here."
He's about where you are, about third row.
I said, "One of my favorite directors,
known for going to extremes
to get exactly what he wants.
The great director Elia Kazan once said,
'You do whatever it takes
to get the shot.'
David O. Russell once said,
'I'm just trying to fucking help you,
you understand me?
I'm just being a fucking collaborator.
I'm just trying to help you figure out
the fucking picture. Okay, bitch?
I'm not here to be fucking yelled at.
I didn't work on this thing
for three fucking years
to have some fucking cunt yell at me
in front of the crew
when I'm trying to help you, bitch.'
Two great directors
basically saying the same thing."
The audience enjoyed it.
David O. Russell left.
Which was unfortunate timing
because he was just about
to receive the lifetime achievement award.
The woman who booked me came over
to my table and she said, "Mike,
David is very upset about your joke,
and I think he might leave.
Will you talk to him?"
And I said, "Absolutely."
Because, worst-case scenario,
it goes terribly.
Best-case scenario,
he makes me the lead in his next film.
And so, I'm walking with this woman.
She says, "It's my fault.
I never should've let you tell that joke.
I should have screened your jokes."
And I felt so bad
because I wanted to be like,
"I never would've let you screen my jokes.
I would've sent you decoy jokes."
I'd never hand someone a piece of paper
with the word "cunt" written on it.
I wasn't raised that way.
Christ has died, Christ is risen
But instead, I was like,
"Yeah, maybe it's your fault. Who knows?"
And then...
we get to the men's room.
David O. Russell storms out to the exit.
She follows him, and I follow her.
He looks back at her and goes,
"Give your fucking award to someone else!"
And I was like, "Awesome.
This is like we're in the video."
I go back to my table and my wife says,
"Mo, what's going on?"
And I say, "Clo, it's a long story,
and it hasn't ended yet.
But we're not in Mouseachusetts anymore."
Sitting at our table was Jared Leto,
but I didn't know it was him
because he was preparing for his role
in Dallas Buyers Club.
And so he'd shaved his eyebrows,
and he hadn't eaten in weeks.
And he leans over and goes,
"I haven't eaten in 21 days.
And that joke made me laugh my ass off."
I said, "Thank you, strange skeleton man.
That means a lot to me 'cause I'm in a lot
of trouble right now."
Amy Adams gets on stage to present
the award to David O. Russell, or not.
She says,
"David is a wonderful collaborator."
Which is the exact language
from the video,
though she left out the "C" word,
which was smart.
And then David O. Russell got on stage,
and he gave a really wonderful speech.
He's got a lot of wisdom.
He sits down. The reporter said,
"David, what did you think
of Mike Birbiglia's joke?"
"Comedians are gonna make jokes about
what they're gonna make jokes about."
They came over to me. "Mike,
what did you think of David's reaction?"
I said, "Whatever he said is fine."
And an article came out
in Variety magazine that week
about the event,
and the opening line of the article read,
and I quote...
"Before any winners were announced
at Monday's 22nd edition
of the Gotham Awards,
one thing became clear:
Mike Birbiglia will not be
in David O. Russell's next picture."
I'm the joke, later.
And I think that's fair.
Because if David O. Russell
were here tonight,
he would say, "I was invited to that event
to be honored by my peers.
And then you, who I'd never heard of,
got on stage and recited verbatim
the most regrettable three minutes
of my life,
and everybody laughed."
And I would say, "Excuse me, sir.
There's a show going on."
He'd be escorted out of the building.
That's his side of the story.
But I want you guys
to know my side of the story,
which is that I gave it a lot of thought
before telling that joke.
I ran it by comedian friends.
I ran it by my brother Joe,
who wrote "Christ Will Come at Ten."
I ran it by my wife the night before.
I said, "Clo, can I tell this joke
when I know he'll be right there,
and it will not go well for him at all?"
And Clo said,
"It depends on what you want
from the night.
If you want to be successful
in show business,
you probably shouldn't tell the joke.
If you want to be true to yourself
as a comedian,
then tell the joke."
And I told it...
because I love jokes.
I really do. I love jokes.
Jokes are meaningful to me.
Tonight's show here with you guys
is meaningful to me.
And the Charlie Hebdo incident in France
two years ago was meaningful to me
and to a lot of people.
After that incident,
I read about this peaceful rally in France
with almost four million people.
It was leaders of Israel and Palestine,
people of all religions,
and they were gathered behind the idea
that despite our differing jokes
and opinions,
civility is ultimately what matters.
And increasingly it matters more,
because now you can transmit images
and jokes and cartoons and videos
across the Earth in seconds.
So, people in Russia are our neighbors.
People in China are our neighbors.
People in Texas are our neighbors.
Which, to me, is most worrisome.
But it really does beg this question:
"What does it mean
to be a decent neighbor?"
I think part of it is just listening
to people
in the context
in which they intend their words.
You guys could leave here right now
and say, "Mike Birbiglia got on stage
and said Jesus was a Jewish socialist
who talks like Woody Allen.
Then he said, 'Nice tits, Betsy,'
which is sexist.
Then he said,
'Statler and Waldorf are gay,'
which is homophobic.
Then he called his tongue his mouth penis,
which is offensive to mouths and penises.
Then he made fun of that guy for saying
he was arrested by a woman cop.
Then he said,
'Christ has died, Christ is risen '
which sounded phenomenal
but was also offensive.
Then he told cat puns for an hour.
Which I don't enjoy 'cause I'm humorless.
Then he didn't tell one joke about Muslims
'cause he loves ISIS!
Then he said, 'I'm just trying
to fucking help you, you cunt!'
And then he left."
And all of that's true.
Which is why I'm cautious
when I tell jokes on stage,
because anything
can be taken out of context.
People's careers are taken down instantly,
and some people...
are killed.
So, I'm putting this in your hands.
You can choose to leave here
and quote me out of context,
or you can choose not to.
But I trust that you won't.
Because we're neighbors.
And whether you like it or not...
we're married.
Thank you. Thank you so much
for being a part of this.
Christ has lied
Christ was imprisoned
Christ will come at ten
Thank you very much.
See you next time, everybody.
See you in the neighborhood.
-[man] Wet Money exclusive!
-[man 2 laughing]
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah!
Pesto.
Wet Money.
Check it out!
We had to make a flight, yeah
Didn't have time to eat
Threw my stuff in the bag
As I jumped onto my feet
The bag was filled with nuts
Some bread around cold cuts
I didn't know it was a thing
Until a lady started to sing
Nuts in the air, nuts in the air
Everybody wave your nuts in the air
Nuts in the air, nuts in the air
Everybody wave your nuts in the air
Boy, get off the flight
I didn't want to fight
Snuck into the end
So she wouldn't use her EpiPen
I tried to calm her down
Examples from around
Nuts in muffins
Nuts in her bread now
Nuts from on the ground
Nuts in the pesto
Nuts I ingest-oh
I said, "Hey
Don't she got that thing?"
Where the hell did my sandwich go?
Hey, hey
I swear I just pulled it out
Pulled it out
Yeah, and now
It's in that lady's mouth
This is a Mike Birbiglia comedy special!
Greatest comedian in the world!
He didn't tell me to say that.
It's just a thing I think.
He would never say something like that
about himself.
He's very humble.
Thank God for jokes, motherfuckers.