Home > Standup Specials
The Comeback Kid (2015)
00:00:24[instrumental music playing]
00:01:53[sighs]
00:01:55-All right, Petunia. -[dog panting]
00:01:58Wish me luck out there.
00:02:00[Petunia in French] You will die on August 7th, 2037.
00:02:08That's pretty good.
00:02:09[growls softly]
00:02:12All right.
00:02:16[door closes]
00:02:28[audience applauding and cheering]
00:02:46Hello.
00:02:54Hello, Chicago.
00:02:58Nice to see you again.
00:03:02Thank you. That was very nice. Thank you.
00:03:05Look, now, you're a wonderful crowd, but I need you to keep your energy up the entire show, okay?
00:03:10Because-- No, no, no. Thank you.
00:03:12Some crowds... some crowds, they have big energy in the beginning and then they run out of places to go.
00:03:18So... I don't judge those crowds, by the way, okay?
00:03:20We've all gone too big too fast and then run out of room.
00:03:24-We've all made a "Happy Birthday" sign... -[crowd chuckles]
00:03:27Wait.
00:03:29You get that poster board up, and you're like,
00:03:31"I don't need to trace it.
00:03:34I know how big letters should be.
00:03:37To begin with, a big-ass 'H'. [laughs]
00:03:41Followed by a big-ass 'A' and--
00:03:43Oh, no! Oh, God!
00:03:46Okay, all right. Real skinny 'P' with a high hump, and then we'll put the second 'P' below the hump of that first 'P', sort of like a motorcycle sidecar situation.
00:03:59And now I have no room for the 'Y', so I'll do a kind of curled-up noodle 'Y'.
00:04:04Block letters and cursive look good together."
00:04:07And then you go to write "Birthday" and you totally forget the lesson you just learned with "Happy."
00:04:14You're like, "Yeah, but the past is the past.
00:04:16Big-ass 'B'.
00:04:19Surely more letters will fit in the same space."
00:04:24You're very friendly here in Chicago.
00:04:26I mean, we're all violent here, but you're very friendly.
00:04:29No, really. And I don't like confrontation,
00:04:31'cause I've never been in a fight before.
00:04:33Though, maybe you could tell that from the first moment I walked out on stage.
00:04:37I don't give off that vibe. [chuckles]
00:04:39Some people give off a vibe of... Right away, they're like,
00:04:42"Do not fuck with me."
00:04:44My vibe is more like,
00:04:45"Hey, you could pour soup in my lap and I'll probably apologize to you."
00:04:50[audience laughing]
00:04:51When I walk, for real, my feet go out like this.
00:04:55I'm so open and vulnerable.
00:04:58I look like a doll that you point out molestation on.
00:05:01[audience laughing]
00:05:02"Show us on this white comedian where the man touched you."
00:05:08It's been a while since I've been home to Chicago.
00:05:10-I got married since then. -[audience cheering]
00:05:12Thank you.
00:05:16I married my wife.
00:05:19I love saying "my wife." It sounds so adult.
00:05:21"That's my wife." [laughs]
00:05:24It's great, you sound like a person.
00:05:26I said it even before we were married.
00:05:28We were just dating, and we were once getting on an airplane, and Anna's ticket didn't say anything and my ticket said "priority access."
00:05:33It doesn't matter why.
00:05:34But we were getting on and I said, "Uh, can my wife board with me?"
00:05:39And they were like, "Yes, of course. Right this way."
00:05:40And I was like, "Oh, that is so much better than all those times I was like,
00:05:43'Can my girlfriend come?'"
00:05:47And, yeah, I shouldn't have said it that way, but still.
00:05:50"My wife" just has some kick-ass to it, you know?
00:05:53"Get away from my wife! No one talk to my wife!"
00:05:57Marriage is gonna be very magical.
00:06:00"I didn't kill my wife!"
00:06:01That's like, "Ooh, who's that fella?
00:06:05I bet he did kill his wife."
00:06:09Being married is so nice.
00:06:11I never knew relationships were supposed to make you feel better about yourself.
00:06:14That's not really a joke, that's just a little sweet thing I like to say.
00:06:18'Cause I'd been in relationships where I got cheated on, like, long ones.
00:06:22I don't know if you've ever been in a long relationship where you got cheated on, but it changes your whole worldview.
00:06:27'Cause when I was a kid, I used to watch America's Most Wanted.
00:06:30-You know how kids do. -[audience laughing]
00:06:32And I would always think to myself, "How could another person kill someone?
00:06:36How could a human being kill another human being?"
00:06:39And then I got cheated on, and I was like, "Oh, okay."
00:06:43[audience laughing]
00:06:45"I'm not gonna do it, but I totally get it."
00:06:49And I don't mean in that way of, like, "No one else can have you."
00:06:51I don't care about that.
00:06:52It's just creepy to have an ex out there after things have ended badly.
00:06:56They have a lot of information.
00:06:58Anyone who's seen my dick and met my parents needs to die.
00:07:01I can't have them roaming around.
00:07:07I talked to a lot of people before I got engaged, you know.
00:07:10And I heard this expression about whether or not you should get married.
00:07:12This is an old expression. People say this.
00:07:14They say, "Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?"
00:07:19You ever heard that before?
00:07:21It's a bananas insulting expression... to an entire gender.
00:07:28But also, it makes no sense.
00:07:31"Why buy the cow when you can get the milk for free?"
00:07:34You're not allowed to milk a cow that you don't own.
00:07:40That's not even a situation.
00:07:45Was that a problem at one point?
00:07:47Like, in the dairy community?
00:07:50Was that happening a hundred years ago in some village?
00:07:53Some Dutch prick was sneaking in at night being like, "Ah-ha-ha, I take your milk."
00:07:58And the farmer was like, "Well, then, this is your cow now."
00:08:01And he was like, "No, no proof of purchase."
00:08:03And he ran off into the night.
00:08:05That sounded Dutch, right?
00:08:06You know what that... you know what that expression means?
00:08:10It means, "Why would you marry a woman if she's already having sex with you?"
00:08:14Which has nothing to do with what relationships are even like anymore.
00:08:18Now, it's like, "Why buy the cow?"
00:08:21Uh, maybe because, every day, the cow asks you when you're gonna buy it. And...
00:08:26[audience laughing]
00:08:29...you live in a really small apartment with the cow, so you can't avoid that question at all.
00:08:35And also, the cow is way better at arguing than you are.
00:08:39And the cow grew up in a family that knows how to argue.
00:08:43"Why buy the cow?"
00:08:45Uh, maybe because every time another cow gets bought, you have to go to the sale and you have to sit next to your cow at the sale, and your cow looks over at you the entire time like...
00:08:57[mooing angrily]
00:09:00And does not enjoy the sale at all... even though she's the one that wanted to go to the sale.
00:09:09And she's especially mad because that farmer and cow met, like, eight months after you guys met.
00:09:16"Why buy the cow?" Well, let's be real here.
00:09:18You're very lucky to have the cow that you do have.
00:09:21"Roping in cows and getting milk out of them was never anything you were known for, John."
00:09:27By the most liberal of estimates, there have been about eight cows total, several unmilked, and... a lot of people think that you like bulls, and if you just bought--
00:09:40They assume it.
00:09:42When you search your name, the third thing to come up is like,
00:09:45"John Mulaney bull?"
00:09:47And if you just bought the cow, nobody would say that anymore.
00:09:55They'll still say it.
00:09:58'Cause there are those guys who, they buy a cow, and then on the side, total matador, but...
00:10:02[audience laughing]
00:10:04But, for real, Chicago, why buy the cow?
00:10:06Let's be real. Why buy the cow?
00:10:08Because you love her. You really do.
00:10:10-And, yeah, yeah... -[audience cheering]
00:10:13Sure, she's a bossy little Jew, but...
00:10:16[audience laughing]
00:10:19...she takes care of you.
00:10:20And you don't wanna be some old man stumbling around, like,
00:10:22"Hey, you seen any loose milk?"
00:10:25[audience laughing]
00:10:29My wife is Jewish. She's a New York Jew. I did it!
00:10:34Now, I was raised Catholic.
00:10:36I don't know if you can tell that from the everything about me.
00:10:39[audience laughing]
00:10:42My wife is Jewish, I grew up Catholic, so we got married by a friend. [laughs]
00:10:48Being married by a friend is a beautiful ceremony that alienates both families' religions, while confusing the elderly people at the wedding.
00:10:57"What's the name of the bishop?"
00:10:58"That's actually stand-up comedian Dan Levy.
00:11:02He was the host of MTV's Your Face or Mine?"
00:11:06I saw a lot of Catholic weddings, though, because I was an altar boy...
00:11:10And a hush falls over the room.
00:11:14Isn't it weird how that became a scandalous thing?
00:11:17That was just some boring shit I had to do on weekends.
00:11:20But now, it's like saying, "I was a French maid for a period of time.
00:11:24I was treated well in my day. I worked for a variety of sirs."
00:11:29[laughs]
00:11:31No, being an altar boy was just a boring gig, you know?
00:11:33You'd serve Mass and then you'd serve weddings sometimes.
00:11:36My brother was once an altar boy at a wedding, and he was standing there with another altar boy in this big, packed church in Chicago where we grew up.
00:11:44And the bride was coming down the aisle, and the organ was playing, and all the pews were filled, and the bride got all the way to the altar, and the groom lifted the veil off of the bride, and right at that moment the other altar boy said,
00:11:55"Aw, she's ugly."
00:12:00And then they looked, and they were right next to the video camera.
00:12:04[audience laughing]
00:12:05And I know that's awful, but wouldn't you give a million dollars to see that wedding video?
00:12:10It was the best moment of this stupid woman's life, and she's walking down the aisle, and the organ's like...
00:12:17[vocalizing]
00:12:20And she gets all the way to the altar to her betrothed, and he unveils her to the world and to the eyes of God.
00:12:27And right at that second, for no reason at all, some Cheeto-fingered, rat-mustached, 13-year-old prick decides to go,
00:12:35"Aw, she's ugly!"
00:12:39Hopefully the videographer knew some sound editing so he could fix it to be like, "Aw, she's beautiful.
00:12:47She's enchanting."
00:12:50I grew up Catholic. I don't go to church anymore.
00:12:52But I went on Christmas Eve with my parents,
00:12:55'cause you know how you lie to your parents. So... we go into the church and I was like, "I got this under control."
00:13:01And then I got schooled because they introduced a bunch of new shit.
00:13:07No, I was going through Mass and I was batting, like, .400.
00:13:11And then in the middle of Mass, the priest said,
00:13:13"Peace be with you."
00:13:15And everyone said, "And with your spirit."
00:13:18And I was the one pre-Y2K asshole going, "And also with you.
00:13:23What? Huh? What? Huh?
00:13:27What? When? When?"
00:13:32For those of you that aren't Catholic, I don't mean to exclude you, even though we love to exclude you, but...
00:13:38There's a part in church where the priest says,
00:13:41"Peace be with you."
00:13:42And for many, many years, we all said...
00:13:45-[audience] "And also with you." -Very good.
00:13:48But they changed it to "And with your spirit."
00:13:53Because that's what needed revamping in the Catholic Church.
00:13:57That was the squeaky wheel that needed the grease.
00:14:02In Rome, they were like,
00:14:03[imitating Italian accent] "Let's see. What problems can we solve?
00:14:07Problem one. No."
00:14:13I'm actually glad they changed that, though.
00:14:15I never liked "And also with you."
00:14:17I always found that clunky.
00:14:19"And also with you." That's not how you talk.
00:14:22-"Have a nice day." -"And also you having one."
00:14:25It's just a little bit wrong, isn't it?
00:14:28It's just a little off.
00:14:29Like, when someone's like, "How are you?" And you're like, "Nothing much."
00:14:32And it sort of makes sense.
00:14:35Never begin a sentence with "And also."
00:14:38You just immediately sound caught off-guard.
00:14:41It sounds like if at the first church ever, like, they weren't expecting it.
00:14:45Like, the priest was like,
00:14:46"Hey, this is the first time we've ever had church.
00:14:48I just wanna say, 'Peace be with you.'"
00:14:51And they were like... [mumbling]
00:14:52"What? Oh. Uh, yeah. And also you should have some."
00:14:56[audience laughing]
00:14:57"Hey, that's good. Let's keep that for 2,000 years.
00:15:00And then change it to trick John."
00:15:06My wife and I don't have any children, we have a dog.
00:15:09We have a little puppy named Petunia.
00:15:12[audience cheering]
00:15:14She's a tiny little French bulldog puppy.
00:15:17I like having a puppy that's a bulldog,
00:15:18'cause it's like having a baby that is also a grandma.
00:15:22Her body is young, her face is as old as time.
00:15:26She definitely saw the Nazis march into Paris.
00:15:29She always gives me this look of like,
00:15:30[imitating French accent] "Oh, the things I have seen, you cocksucker.
00:15:35You have no idea.
00:15:36The Gestapo threw my printing press into a river.
00:15:39But, go, tell your fucking jokes.
00:15:43Bring me my dish."
00:15:47She said that. Petunia...
00:15:51Petunia is my best friend in the world. I give her a million kisses a day.
00:15:54She does not like me, and barks at me and bites me all day long.
00:15:59We had to get a dog trainer into the apartment because Petunia is a bad dog.
00:16:03We tell her that every day. We go, "Hey, you're bad at being a dog."
00:16:06So, the trainer came into the apartment.
00:16:07Sorry, didn't even walk into the apartment, walked into the threshold and went,
00:16:11"Oh, okay."
00:16:13[laughs] Like she was an exorcist or something.
00:16:15She said, "I see what the problem is."
00:16:18She said, "Petunia has become the alpha of the house."
00:16:21And then she pointed at me, she said,
00:16:23"You are no longer the alpha of the house."
00:16:26And in the back of my head, I was like, "I was never the alpha of the house."
00:16:30I turned to my wife, I was like, "Let's pretend. It'll be fun.
00:16:33Yes... My title of alpha, which I once had, how can I reclaim it?
00:16:39Because that was a thing that existed at one time."
00:16:43She said, "You need to show dominance over your puppy."
00:16:46These are things people say to me.
00:16:50I said, "How do I do that?"
00:16:52She said, "Well, let me ask you this. Who eats dinner first, you or Petunia?"
00:16:56I was like, "Petunia eats dinner first. She eats dinner at 5:00 p.m.,
00:16:59'cause she's a foot long and two years old."
00:17:02She said, "No, you need to eat dinner first.
00:17:05Because the king eats before anyone else eats."
00:17:09Oh, yes, and what a mighty king I will be, eating dinner at 4:45 in the afternoon.
00:17:17[laughs]
00:17:19"Look upon your sovereign, Petunia, and tremble.
00:17:23My lands stretch across this entire one bedroom, and I eat dinner whenever I choose, as long as it works for the schedule of a dog."
00:17:35She said, "Now, you don't actually have to eat dinner before Petunia.
00:17:39You just have to convince Petunia that you've already eaten."
00:17:46So... for the past month, I shit you not... before my wife and I give Petunia her dish, we take down empty bowls and spoons, and in front of her, we go, "Mmm, dinner. Mmm, good dinner."
00:18:04Like we're space aliens in a play about human beings that they wrote, but they didn't work that hard on.
00:18:12"Mmm, we're eating dinner."
00:18:14Meanwhile, Petunia's just staring at us with her Paul Giamatti face, like...
00:18:23[imitating French accent] "You're not eating dinner, cocksucker.
00:18:26Dish, now."
00:18:29I have a wife and a dog, and we just bought a house.
00:18:32We have a new house.
00:18:33It was built in the '20s, but it was flipped in 2014.
00:18:37Which means it's haunted, but it has a lovely kitchen backsplash.
00:18:41Actually, we didn't buy a house. A bank bought a house, and I'm allowed to keep my shirts and pants there while I pay it off for 30 years.
00:18:48The woman from the bank came over and she showed me my mortgage broken down month by month for 30 years.
00:18:53And she said, "So, for instance, this is what you'll pay in July of 2029."
00:18:57And I burst out laughing. I was like,
00:18:59"2029? That's not a real year.
00:19:03By 2029, I'll be drinking moon juice with President Jonathan Taylor Thomas.
00:19:08I'm not gonna be writing you a paper check."
00:19:13I like having a house, but I loved looking for a house,
00:19:16'cause I love real estate agents.
00:19:18I mean, they are the true heroes.
00:19:20They really are. Have you ever watched HGTV?
00:19:23-[audience cheering] -Real estate agents have to deal with the dumbest people in the world making the biggest decisions of their lives.
00:19:32Every episode of HGTV is like,
00:19:34"Craig and Stacia are looking for a two-story A-frame that's near Craig's job in the downtown, but also satisfies Stacia's need to be near the beach which is nowhere near Craig's job.
00:19:46With three children and nine on the way, and a max budget of $7... let's see what Lori Jo can do on this week's episode of You Don't Deserve A Beach House."
00:20:01I loved our real estate agent. It was so fun to hang out with her.
00:20:04It was like hanging out with my mom.
00:20:06'Cause, you know, real estate agents always look like your mom.
00:20:10And they have various Chico's accoutrements.
00:20:13They always have kind of fun mom energy.
00:20:17And they're always, "So excited to see you two."
00:20:21We would have little conferences before we walked into a house.
00:20:24She'd go, "Let's talk. Let's talk before we go in."
00:20:27We're, like, two feet from the door.
00:20:30"So, there's no toilets.
00:20:35And I know that was on your list.
00:20:42But I think I can get him to budge. Let's go."
00:20:46So, we'd have a real estate agent, and then, like, the house would have a real estate agent who's just some guy sitting in a big chair.
00:20:52And these two always hated each other.
00:20:54They'd be like, "Hi, Tony." "Hi, Kim."
00:20:56It's like, "Jesus Christ! What, were you two in the Eagles together?
00:20:59What is the animosity about?"
00:21:03Our real estate agent wanted us to have a baby more than anyone else in our lives, more than anyone in our family.
00:21:09She hinted about it constantly.
00:21:11Every room she walked into, she'd be like,
00:21:13"So, this could be an office."
00:21:17[audience laughing]
00:21:19"Or maybe a nursery."
00:21:22"Yeah. No, like we said, we don't know if we're gonna have--"
00:21:25"No, no. I know, I know, you know.
00:21:26You don't know if you're gonna have 'em, but you know.
00:21:29You know, you never know.
00:21:30Sometimes you don't know what's gonna happen, and then... you know, something happens."
00:21:35"Well, yeah, that's how all of life works."
00:21:37"Okay, all right. Okay.
00:21:40Uh-huh. Mmm.
00:21:43This is an on-fire garbage can.
00:21:50Could be a nursery."
00:21:52[audience laughing]
00:21:56She showed me a backyard once.
00:21:58She goes, "I don't even like this backyard for you."
00:21:59I was like, "Oh, do tell."
00:22:01She said, "It's all pavement.
00:22:02I think you should have some grass out there.
00:22:04You know, in case you have a couple... little guys... running around in the grass."
00:22:11And I got offended on behalf of my imaginary kids.
00:22:14I was like, "Hey, lady.
00:22:15I went outside about as much as Powder from the movie Powder.
00:22:18My children are not gonna be playing out on grass.
00:22:21They will be up in their rooms playing violent video games and catfishing pedophiles. These are my children.
00:22:27And that's my wife!"
00:22:29[audience cheering]
00:22:33I didn't mean to make it sound like we don't want children.
00:22:35We don't, but I didn't mean to make it sound like that.
00:22:38See, I just don't think babies like me very much.
00:22:40Sometimes babies will point at me, and I don't care for that shit at all.
00:22:47Like, I'll be on an elevator, and a baby will be there in its big, like, stroller activity tray, just, like, working on one Cheerio with Bobby Fischer-like intensity.
00:23:03And it'll look up at me and go...
00:23:07I like to lean in and go,
00:23:09"Stop snitchin', motherfucker." And then walk off.
00:23:12'Cause you're never too young to learn our national no-snitching policy.
00:23:17My friends have babies and I don't do so well with them.
00:23:21I had a run-in with a two-year-old girl.
00:23:24I know there are better ways to start that story, but...
00:23:28My friend, Jeremy, has this two-year-old girl, and I really like her.
00:23:31She's a sweet kid. I really like his daughter a lot.
00:23:33But I was over at his family's house for the Fourth of July, and he had his daughter on his knee.
00:23:37And it was a very lovely day. His whole extended family was there.
00:23:40And he was bouncing his two-year-old up and down, and he pointed at me and he said to his two-year-old,
00:23:44"Do you know who that is? That's your Uncle John."
00:23:47And I was like, "Oh, my God. That's so sweet. I'm her Uncle John."
00:23:50And then the baby pointed at me and said,
00:23:52"Uncle John has a penis."
00:23:55[audience laughing]
00:23:57I thank you for laughing, because no one did that day!
00:24:04Fell deadly silent, is what they all did.
00:24:10Hey, do you know what you're supposed to say when a baby points at you and knowingly says, "He has a penis"?
00:24:16No, I'm asking, 'cause I don't know what to say in that situation.
00:24:20Here's what I went with that day. I said, "Oh, come on!" [laughs]
00:24:26I don't know. I thought that'd be good.
00:24:30But then it just made it worse,
00:24:31'cause it sounded like the baby and I had an arrangement not to talk about it, and she had violated my trust.
00:24:37Like, the baby had been like, "Do you have a penis?"
00:24:39And I was like, "Yes, I do, but you're a baby, so discretion is key."
00:24:42And then the next day she goes, "He has a penis," and I go,
00:24:44"Oh, come on! Someone can't keep a secret!"
00:24:49Luckily, Jeremy's wife saved the day. The baby's mom saved the day.
00:24:53She came in and she picked up the baby, and she was like,
00:24:55"It's okay.
00:24:56She's just going through that phase where she says penis and vagina a lot."
00:25:00Aren't we all?
00:25:02[audience laughing]
00:25:03And, by the way, it would've been a totally different situation if the baby had said vagina.
00:25:07Like, if a grown woman had walked in the room, and the baby had been like, "She has a vagina," the woman could be like, "Yes, I do, and it's magnificent."
00:25:14And we would all be like, "Hooray! You are brave!"
00:25:19No one wants to applaud the penis of a 32-year-old weirdo.
00:25:28It's fun to be married.
00:25:29I've never been supervised before.
00:25:33I'm supervised. She studies what I do.
00:25:35Like an anthropologist.
00:25:38She'll be like, "Sometimes, he will watch a movie on TV even though he already owns that movie on DVD.
00:25:47Pointing this out to him confuses and upsets him."
00:25:50[audience laughing]
00:25:54I had no supervision when I was a kid.
00:25:57We were free to do what we wanted.
00:25:58But also, with that, no one cared about kids.
00:26:01I grew up before children were special.
00:26:03I did. Very early '80s, right before children became special.
00:26:07Like, I remember when milk carton kids became a thing.
00:26:10When they were like, "Hey, we should start looking for some of these guys.
00:26:13I don't think they're just blowing off steam."
00:26:17No one cared about my opinion when I was a little kid.
00:26:20No one cared what I thought.
00:26:22Sometimes, people would say, "What do you think you're doing?"
00:26:28But that just meant "Stop."
00:26:31They didn't actually wanna know my thought process.
00:26:34They didn't want me to be like,
00:26:35"Well, I was gonna put this bottle rocket into this carton of eggs, so that when I lit off the bottle rocket, the eggs would explode everywhere."
00:26:45"Oh, well, that's very interesting. And what brought you to this experiment?"
00:26:48"Oh, well, thank you for asking. Well... you know how I'm filled with rage?
00:26:55I'm so horny and angry all the time... and I have no outlet for it.
00:27:00So... eggs."
00:27:07Your opinion doesn't matter in elementary school either.
00:27:09It matters in college. College is just your opinion.
00:27:12Just you raising your hand and being like,
00:27:13"I think Emily Dickinson's a lesbian."
00:27:15And they're like, "Partial credit." And that's a whole thing.
00:27:18[audience laughing and applauding]
00:27:20But in elementary school, it doesn't matter what you think, it just matters what you know. You have to have answers to questions.
00:27:26And if you say, "I don't know," you get an X on your test, and you get it wrong and that's not fair, 'cause your brain has never been smaller.
00:27:33Also, that's not how life works.
00:27:35I'm in my 30s now. If you came to me now and you were like,
00:27:37"Hey, John, name three things that the Stamp Act of 1775 accomplished."
00:27:42I'd go, "I don't know. Get out of my apartment," you know?
00:27:45But when you're a little kid, you can't say, "I don't know."
00:27:48You should be able to.
00:27:49That should be an acceptable answer on a test.
00:27:52You should be able to write in, "I don't know.
00:27:56I know you told me.
00:27:59But I have had a very long day.
00:28:03I am very small.
00:28:06And I have no money.
00:28:11So you can imagine the kind of stress that I am under."
00:28:17Or if it's one of those true or false questions, you should be able to add a third option which is,
00:28:22"Who's to say?"
00:28:27Kids are much more supervised now, but also, they have a lot of rights.
00:28:30Like, that's the biggest civil rights increase
00:28:33I've seen in my lifetime.
00:28:34The rights of children have gone through the roof.
00:28:36I had no rights when I was a little kid.
00:28:38I remember, one time, I walked into a supermarket by myself, and I walked in through the double doors, and the woman behind the register just looked at me and she went,
00:28:46"No!"
00:28:49And I went, "All right." And I turned around and left.
00:28:51That's how broken I was.
00:28:54And there weren't special things for kids the way there are now.
00:28:57Like, we would just go see movies. Any movie.
00:28:59Like Back to the Future.
00:29:01That was a movie everyone could see. Kids could kinda see it.
00:29:04Great movie, right?
00:29:05I rewatched it recently.
00:29:08It's a very weird movie.
00:29:11Marty McFly is a 17-year-old high school student whose best friend is a disgraced nuclear physicist.
00:29:20And, I shit you not, they never explain how they became friends.
00:29:26They never explain it.
00:29:27Not even in a lazy way, like,
00:29:28"Hey, remember when we met in the science building?"
00:29:30They don't even do that.
00:29:32And we were all fine with it.
00:29:34We were just like, "What, who's his best friend?
00:29:36A disgraced nuclear physicist? All right, proceed."
00:29:40What a strange movie to sell to be a family movie.
00:29:44Two guys had to go in and do that.
00:29:46They had to be like, "Okay... we got an idea... for the next big family-action-comedy.
00:29:53All right, it's about a guy named Marty, and he's very lazy.
00:29:58He's always sleeping late."
00:30:00"Okay. Is he cool like Ferris Bueller?"
00:30:03"No.
00:30:06But he does have this best friend who's, you know, a disgraced... nuclear physicist."
00:30:18"I'm confused here. This best friend, this is another student?"
00:30:21"No, no, no.
00:30:23No, this guy's either, like, 40 or 80.
00:30:27Even we don't know how old this guy's supposed to be.
00:30:31But one day, the boy and the scientist, they go back in time and they build a time machine.
00:30:37Whoa!"
00:30:39"Okay. I think I see where you're going here.
00:30:41They build a time machine, and they go back in time, and they stop the Kennedy assassination."
00:30:46"Ah!
00:30:49Oh, wow, that's a really good idea,
00:30:51I mean, we didn't even think of that."
00:30:54"All right, well, what do they do with the time machine?"
00:30:56"Well, now I'm embarrassed to say.
00:31:00Ah, well, all right, all right, all right.
00:31:02We thought... We thought it would be funny, you know, if the boy, if he went back in time and, you know, he tried to fuck his mom."
00:31:11[audience laughing]
00:31:13"I don't know. We thought that'd be fun for people.
00:31:17But, no, good point.
00:31:18No, he doesn't get to, he doesn't get to.
00:31:20'Cause this family friend named Biff, he comes in and he tries to rape the mom in front of the son.
00:31:26The dad's gotta beat the rapist off of her.
00:31:30And also, we're gonna imply that a white man wrote 'Johnny B. Goode.'
00:31:33So, we're gonna take that away from 'em."
00:31:35[audience laughing]
00:31:40"Well, this is the best movie idea I have ever heard in my life.
00:31:44We're gonna make three of them.
00:31:47Now, you say they go to the past. How about we call it Back to the Past?"
00:31:51"No, no, no.
00:31:53Back to the Future."
00:31:55"Right, but they go to the past."
00:31:59"Yeah."
00:32:05Kids have it very good now.
00:32:08My friend's a teacher. She told me that, uh... the parents will take the kids' side over the teacher now.
00:32:14That's insane. That never happened.
00:32:16My parents trusted every grown-up... more than they trusted me.
00:32:21I don't mean coaches and teachers.
00:32:23Any human adult's word... was better than mine.
00:32:26Any hobo or drifter could have taken me by the ear up to my front door and been like,
00:32:32"Excuse me! Your kid bit my dick."
00:32:35And my mom would be like,
00:32:37"John Edmund Mulaney, did you bite this nice man's dick?"
00:32:41And I would be the only one who's like, "Hey, doesn't anyone wanna know why... his dick was near my biters... in the first place?
00:32:51Isn't anyone curious... as to how I had access?"
00:33:01Don't get me wrong, my parents love us. They just didn't like us.
00:33:06We weren't friends.
00:33:08People are now like, "My mom's my best friend."
00:33:10I was like, "Oh, is she a super bad mom?" [laughs]
00:33:15My parents didn't trust us, and they shouldn't have trusted us.
00:33:18We were little goblins. We were terrible.
00:33:21I remember, one time, we were going to this resort for a vacation when we were little kids.
00:33:26Three weeks before we went to the resort, my dad sat us down and he said,
00:33:30"All right, we're going to a resort, and I've just been informed that the man who owns the resort only has one arm."
00:33:39And we were like, "Oh, yes!
00:33:43Yay! Yes!"
00:33:45"Now, I'm telling you three weeks in advance, so that you will not freak out when you see that he only has one arm."
00:33:54"Oh, we're gonna freak out so bad!"
00:33:57"Yes, John, you have a question?"
00:33:59"How did he lose his arm?"
00:34:00"That's exactly what you won't ask."
00:34:04And then I did ask.
00:34:06I went into the kitchen one day, and I was like,
00:34:07"So, how'd you lose your arm?"
00:34:09And he was like, "Well, I was born with only one arm."
00:34:11And I was like, [clicks tongue] "Nah."
00:34:13[audience laughing]
00:34:19No, my parents loved us.
00:34:21It's just, like, they were the cops, you know?
00:34:24And we were criminals.
00:34:25So, we didn't get along.
00:34:27We only got along in that way that, like, cops will sometimes be chummy with criminals.
00:34:32Like, when my dad and I would talk, it was like that scene in the movie Heat, when Robert De Niro and Al Pacino sit down in that diner.
00:34:38We kind of had that rapport of, like,
00:34:40"Hmm, we're not so different, you and I.
00:34:43You have your law practice, and me, I have all these fucking markers."
00:34:48[audience laughing]
00:34:50"I guess we both have responsibilities when you look at it that way."
00:34:54My dad would respect it if I could get away with breaking a rule.
00:34:57We had a rule in our house, you were not allowed to watch TV on a school night.
00:35:00So, every school night, I would 100% be watching TV.
00:35:03And I would hear my dad coming, I would immediately turn the TV off and grab any book, magazine, periodical, anything.
00:35:07And I'd open it and pretend to be doing homework.
00:35:10My dad would walk in the room and he would go,
00:35:11"What are you doing? Are you watching TV?"
00:35:13And I'd go, "No, man. I'm not watching TV."
00:35:17And the TV wouldn't even be dark yet.
00:35:19It would still have, like, a neon green halo around it.
00:35:23It'd be sizzling like a glass of Pepsi.
00:35:26And I would look my dad in the eyes and go,
00:35:28"No, I'm just reading this Yellow Pages."
00:35:33My dad loved us.
00:35:34He just didn't care about our general happiness or self-esteem.
00:35:39I remember, one time, we were really little kids.
00:35:41I have two sisters and a brother, and all four of us were in our family car ride for three hours going to Wisconsin.
00:35:47My dad was driving, going down the highway in our white van with wood around the side.
00:35:53'Cause you remember when you wanted your car to be made of wood?
00:35:57You remember that era?
00:35:59Where we were like, "How much wood can we get on this car... without it catching on fire?"
00:36:06But then the big announcement. "We here at Plymouth-Chrysler can put a saucy stripe of wood safely on the outside of your car, for all those times you've looked at your minivan and thought,
00:36:16'Huh! It needs a belt.'"
00:36:19[audience laughing]
00:36:22So, we're going on the highway. We've been on the road for three hours.
00:36:25And in the distance, we see a McDonald's.
00:36:27We see the golden arches.
00:36:29And we got so excited.
00:36:31We started chanting, "McDonald's! McDonald's! McDonald's! McDonald's!"
00:36:37And my dad pulled into the drive-thru, and we started cheering.
00:36:42And then, he ordered one black coffee for himself.
00:36:47[audience laughing]
00:36:51And kept driving.
00:36:56And, you know, as mad as that made me as a little kid, in retrospect, that is the funniest thing I have ever seen in my entire life.
00:37:05How perfect is that?
00:37:07He had a vanload of little kids, and he got black coffee.
00:37:12The one thing from McDonald's no child could enjoy.
00:37:18My dad is cold-blooded.
00:37:21He once shushed a kid during Lion King on Broadway.
00:37:25That actually happened.
00:37:27We were at Lion King on Broadway, and there was a five-year-old behind us going,
00:37:30"Look, it's Pumbaa! Look, it's Timon!"
00:37:33And my dad turned around and said, "Are you going to talk the entire time?"
00:37:37[audience laughing]
00:37:40He's my hero.
00:37:43The weirdest thing when I was a kid was how much they scared us about smoking weed.
00:37:48They scared us about it constantly.
00:37:50And I've been on tour this year...
00:37:52Marijuana is legal in 18 or 19 states in some form or another.
00:37:56-It's insane. Yeah, well... -[audience cheers]
00:37:58All right, don't "whoo" if you're white.
00:38:00It's always been legal for us. Come on, sir.
00:38:02[audience applauding]
00:38:05We don't go to jail for marijuana, you silly billy.
00:38:10When I was arrested with a one-hitter at a Rusted Root concert,
00:38:13I did not serve hard time.
00:38:16I think I got an award.
00:38:20Eighteen or 19 states.
00:38:22And, by the way, I agree, it's a very good thing.
00:38:24But it's also a really weird thing, because this is the first time I've ever seen a law change because the government is just like,
00:38:32[sighs] "Fine." You know?
00:38:35I've never seen it before.
00:38:37Like, gay marriage and healthcare, we have to battle it out in the Supreme Court, and be like, "Gay people are humans."
00:38:42And they're like, "We'll think about it."
00:38:45But with weed, it was just something we wanted really badly, and we kept asking them for 40 years, like,
00:38:51"Excuse me."
00:38:54And then suddenly the government became like cool parents, and they're just like,
00:38:58"Okay, here. Take a little.
00:39:03We'd rather you do it in the house than go somewhere else... blah, blah, blah, blah, blah."
00:39:08[audience cheering]
00:39:12Those stupid parents. [laughs]
00:39:16And that's a big deal because they scared us about weed constantly.
00:39:19It would be on our sitcoms.
00:39:21We'd be watching Saved by the Bell, we'd be having a great old time.
00:39:24And then, suddenly, a character we had not seen before would show up with some weed and the episode would stop cold in its tracks.
00:39:31And they'd always hold the joint...
00:39:33The bad guy would hold the joint in a villainous way.
00:39:37They'd always offer the joint in a way that no one ever holds a joint.
00:39:40Like it's a skull in a Shakespeare play.
00:39:45And now it's legal, and that is great news.
00:39:47Unless you're a weed dealer, and then it is terrible news.
00:39:50And I don't just mean because they're about to lose out to Amazon.com.
00:39:54I more feel bad for weed dealers 'cause they're about to find out that we only showed them a certain amount of politeness because they had an illegal product.
00:40:03And we don't show that same politeness to people who deliver legal products.
00:40:08Like, when the Chinese food delivery guy comes, we don't let him hang out after he's delivered the Chinese food.
00:40:17And we don't look the other way when he says weird shit to the girls we're hanging out with... to try to preserve the relationship.
00:40:28And we definitely don't give him some of the Chinese food.
00:40:34He's never like, "Hey, can I get in on those dumplings?"
00:40:36And we're like, "Yeah, we're all friends."
00:40:42What are you, on your phone? Hey, V-neck. Hey!
00:40:50-What's your name? -[man] Sam.
00:40:51Sam?
00:40:53-Cool! -[audience laughing]
00:40:58What do you do to afford V-necks, Sam?
00:41:01[Sam speaking indistinctly]
00:41:03Typing numbers. Ah... numbers, the letters of math.
00:41:11I'm sorry to bother you. I don't mean to single you out.
00:41:14I hate when people get pulled out of the audience.
00:41:16Like, are you familiar with the Cirque du Soleil, Sam?
00:41:19They're a group of French assholes that are slowly taking over America by humiliating audience members one by one.
00:41:26We once went to see Cirque du Soleil at Navy Pier when I was a kid, and my brother came, and he was 12 years old.
00:41:31You remember being 12, when you're like, "No one look at me or I'll kill myself."
00:41:35And these French bastards come into the crowd, being like, "Le volunteer!"
00:41:40[speaking gibberish]
00:41:42And they pulled my brother up on stage, and I was like,
00:41:45"No!"
00:41:47And they brought him up, and they reached into his sweatshirt, and they were like... [speaking gibberish]
00:41:51And they had planted a bra, and they pulled out a bra and they were like... [speaking gibberish]
00:41:55And everyone at Navy Pier was like "Ah, ha, ha, ha, ha!"
00:41:58And my brother was like, "That's great!" [imitates gunshot]
00:42:03I have had other jobs besides comedy.
00:42:06I was an office temp for a while.
00:42:08I really miss that.
00:42:10I loved being a temp, because I would just go from office to office and be terrible at a different job for a week.
00:42:16And then you just get to retire like Lou Gehrig.
00:42:18You're like, "Thank you. No one will ever see me again."
00:42:20And they're like, "Goodbye!"
00:42:22I worked at an office once on 57th Street in New York City.
00:42:26I was there for a couple weeks.
00:42:28I was in a cubicle next to this other cubicle.
00:42:30This woman named Mischa sat in the other cubicle.
00:42:33I want to get the number right.
00:42:34I think Mischa had... about 900,000 photos of her daughter up in her cubicle.
00:42:40Almost like she was trying to solve a conspiracy about her daughter,
00:42:44A Beautiful Mind-style.
00:42:47I think about Mischa two times a week... because of a phone call she had next to me one day.
00:42:55It was one of my first days, and I was sitting next to her.
00:42:58And her phone rang, and this was her call, and I'm quoting.
00:43:00Her phone rang and she said,
00:43:01"Hello? Hush!" And then she hung up.
00:43:04[audience laughing]
00:43:07Think about that two times a week.
00:43:09And I didn't know her well enough by then to be like,
00:43:11"Hey, what kind of a person are you?" You know?
00:43:15Who could she have been talking to?
00:43:16"Hello? Hush!" This was a place of business.
00:43:21My only thought was that it was the CEO of the company being like,
00:43:24"Mischa, help. I'm doing a crossword puzzle.
00:43:26I need a four-letter word for 'be quiet' right now."
00:43:28-"Hush!" -"You're promoted."
00:43:32I temped at a little web company on 25th Street in New York City.
00:43:35It was a small web company owned by this old man who was old, old, old money New York.
00:43:41His name was Henry J. Finch IV.
00:43:44Like old, old, old money.
00:43:46Like, his money was in molasses or something.
00:43:49He owned this web company.
00:43:50I have no idea why he owned this web company.
00:43:53I think he won it in a rich man's game of dice and small binoculars, or something.
00:43:58Mr. Finch wore linen suits.
00:44:00He had suspenders, he had a bow tie, he had a hat, he had a cane with an ivory handle.
00:44:06I'm giving you more description than you need,
00:44:08'cause I need you to believe me.
00:44:09This was a real person I knew in the 21st century.
00:44:11Mr. Finch was in his 70s.
00:44:13He had an assistant named Mary. She was in her 50s, she was Korean.
00:44:17I don't know why he had an assistant. He did not need one.
00:44:20Unless he needed someone to be like,
00:44:21"Remember, Mr. Finch, at five o'clock, you need to keep looking like a hard-boiled egg."
00:44:26[audience laughing]
00:44:29One day, Mr. Finch came into the office.
00:44:32It had been raining.
00:44:34Everything I'm about to say to you was said in front of me on that afternoon.
00:44:38Mr. Finch walked into the office, and he was wearing a raincoat, he was wearing a rain hat, and he had his cane.
00:44:44And he walked in and he said, and I'm quoting,
00:44:46"Ah!
00:44:49One feels like a duck splashing around in all this wet!
00:44:52And when one feels like a duck, one is happy!"
00:44:55And then Mary yelled, "Ooh, ducklings!"
00:45:00To which Mr. Finch replied,
00:45:02"Too old to be a duckling. Quack, quack." And then walked into his office.
00:45:09I think about that every goddamn day.
00:45:12I mean, imagine you're me.
00:45:14You're a 22-year-old temp, and you're so hungover, and you just wanna die every day.
00:45:20And then that happens in front of you, and I don't know, gives you hope?
00:45:25And I did that a little fast.
00:45:26Let me break that conversation down for you.
00:45:29Mr. Finch walked in, and he began a conversation the way anyone would.
00:45:33-"Ah!" -[laughter]
00:45:41"One feels like a duck splashing around in all this wet!"
00:45:44The rain.
00:45:47"And when one feels like a duck, one is happy!"
00:45:50Now, that's debatable.
00:45:53But rather than debate that point,
00:45:55Mary brought up a new, separate, but interesting point... which was, "Ducklings!"
00:46:07But Mr. Finch, ever the realist about his own age and mortality... said, "Ah, too old to be a duckling!"
00:46:15As if to say, "My duckling days are behind me.
00:46:19Mary, don't you see?
00:46:21I'm a duck now.
00:46:24And to prove it...
00:46:29Well, I'll say just about the most famous catchphrase a duck has...
00:46:33'Quack, quack.'"
00:46:42And I knew right at that moment, by the way, that it meant nothing to Mr. Finch, what he had said.
00:46:46Crazy people are like that. They have unlimited crazy currency.
00:46:50Like, if I had gone into his office a couple weeks later and been like,
00:46:52"Hey, Finch, you remember that time you were like,
00:46:54'Too old to be a duckling. Quack, quack'?"
00:46:56He would just be like, "Ah, perhaps I did quack!
00:46:57But such is life for an old knickerbocker like me."
00:46:59Like, he'd say something else crazy.
00:47:02That's the wonderful thing about crazy people, you know?
00:47:05Is that they just have unlimited currency.
00:47:07The things they say mean nothing to them, but they mean everything to me.
00:47:12I was once walking into Penn Station in New York.
00:47:15I was walking down 31st Street towards Eighth Avenue.
00:47:17I'm walking down 31st, there's this woman standing at Eighth and 31st.
00:47:21I have my little roller suitcase. You can all imagine.
00:47:23I'm walking towards her.
00:47:24She's smoking a cigarette that is not lit anymore.
00:47:26She's watching me walk, kind of scanning me up and down, as if she had Terminator vision... where she could see little bits of data, like,
00:47:34[imitates beeping] "Little honky ass," and could read information.
00:47:38As I walked past her, she said this to me.
00:47:41I walked past her and she said, and I'm quoting,
00:47:43"Eat ass, suck a dick and sell drugs."
00:47:47[audience laughing]
00:47:53Very dirty, yes?
00:47:55A very upsetting thing to hear, yes?
00:47:59I'm sorry you all had to hear that, but at least you all got to hear it as a group.
00:48:03I was alone out there that afternoon.
00:48:06And she said this totally unprompted.
00:48:08"Eat ass, suck a dick and sell drugs."
00:48:12It wasn't like I had paused in front of her and been like,
00:48:14"What should I do with my life?"
00:48:19So, I walk away from her with this to-do list.
00:48:23And I like structure, I like a to-do list.
00:48:26It did dawn on me that that list of things does get better as it goes along, when you really think about it.
00:48:33'Cause it starts in a pretty rough place.
00:48:35It starts with just about the worst task a to-do list can start with.
00:48:40But by the end, you have your own small business.
00:48:44And isn't that the American dream when all's said and done?
00:48:47[audience cheering]
00:48:49That if you eat enough ass and suck enough dick, one day you can sell drugs.
00:48:56Imagine you did all that to sell drugs and then they legalize drugs, and you were like, "But I... [sighs]"
00:49:01[audience laughing and applauding]
00:49:07This has been a real thrill to perform here, by the way.
00:49:09I just wanna say that in all sincerity. Thanks for coming to this.
00:49:12[audience cheering]
00:49:13Really, really appreciate it.
00:49:17I wanna tell you one more story before I get out of here, about the night I met a guy named Bill Clinton.
00:49:24Now, I don't-- Some of you know who that is?
00:49:27[chuckling] For those of you that don't, he was President of the United States from 1993 until 2001, and he is a smooth and fantastic hillbilly who should be declared Emperor of the United States of America.
00:49:40Now, I know you know who Bill Clinton is.
00:49:43But I was doing a show at a college, and I mentioned Bill Clinton, and, like, they kind of didn't know who he was.
00:49:49Like, sorry, they knew the name, right?
00:49:52But they only knew this 2015 Bill Clinton, who's a very different Bill Clinton.
00:49:57Have you seen his ass lately? What the hell is he trying to pull?
00:50:02He's all thin now, and he wears these little tight suits, and he's got these grandpa reading glasses, like,
00:50:07[imitating Clinton] "Hey, I can't do nothing to nobody no more."
00:50:09[audience laughing]
00:50:11"Oh, me? I'm just an old, old man. I don't have the appetites." You know?
00:50:16And he's always flying around the world with Bill Gates trying to cure AIDS.
00:50:20[laughs] That is not the Bill Clinton that we all signed up for 20 years ago.
00:50:25Our Bill Clinton was like a big, fat
00:50:27Buddy Garrity from Friday Night Lights-looking guy, who played the saxophone on Arsenio, and his work in the STD community was not in curing anything at that time.
00:50:38That was the man we all elected president.
00:50:42That was the Bill Clinton that I met.
00:50:44I got to meet Bill Clinton when he was Governor Clinton in 1992, when he was first running for president.
00:50:49And I got to meet Bill Clinton because my parents had gone to the same college as Bill Clinton.
00:50:54They're a little younger, but they went to the same college.
00:50:57So, when he was first running for president, he would have all these big, like, alumni fundraisers, and everyone who went was invited to go.
00:51:03Now, this was really cool for a couple reasons.
00:51:05One, I got to meet Bill Clinton.
00:51:08But two, I got to watch my parents watch someone they went to school with become the president.
00:51:15And that is super funny to see,
00:51:17'cause think about some of the people you went to school with.
00:51:21Now imagine they're becoming the president.
00:51:24Imagine Sam was becoming the president.
00:51:31It would stir up strong emotions.
00:51:35And my parents had very different opinions on Bill Clinton.
00:51:38My mom loved Bill Clinton,
00:51:40'cause Bill Clinton was always a really charismatic, handsome guy.
00:51:44I mean, think about how many women he got in the 1990s when he looked like Frank Caliendo doing John Madden.
00:51:49Now... imagine him as a college student.
00:51:53And my mom tells me that there was this sort of chivalrous policy on campus back then, where, late at night, if female students were leaving the library unaccompanied, male students were encouraged to wait out in front and offer to walk them home.
00:52:08That sounds good, right? [chuckles]
00:52:11So, my mom tells me that Bill Clinton would be out in front of the library every single night... just being like,
00:52:20[imitating Clinton] "Hey, can I walk ya home?
00:52:21Hey, can I walk ya home? Hey, can I walk ya home?
00:52:24Hey, can I walk ya home?"
00:52:26And one night, my mom was leaving the library, and Bill Clinton was like, "Hey, can I walk ya home?"
00:52:31And my mom was like, "Hell, yes."
00:52:34So-- This is absolutely true.
00:52:36My mom, little Ellen Stanton, walked arm-in-arm with Bill Clinton to her dorm. And she was like,
00:52:42"You know, I wanted to invite him up for a beer."
00:52:44And I was like, "Thanks, I'm nine." But... her roommate was upstairs, so she lost her chance with Bill Clinton.
00:52:54Now, my dad, on the other hand, hated Bill Clinton, because my parents were dating during this time.
00:53:02And also, my dad's a much more morally-upright, conservative kind of guy.
00:53:06He always told me that he hated it in college that Bill Clinton could, quote, "Get away with anything."
00:53:11Can you imagine how he felt later?
00:53:17So, one day, this invitation arrives for a fundraiser where you could meet Bill Clinton.
00:53:22My mom opens it first and she goes,
00:53:24"Oh, we have to go. We have to go see Bill."
00:53:28And without looking up at her, my dad just says,
00:53:31"Why?
00:53:33It's not like he's gonna remember you."
00:53:37[audience murmuring]
00:53:39One black coffee.
00:53:41[audience laughing and applauding]
00:53:43Same motherfucker.
00:53:49So, my mom says,
00:53:50"Fine! I'll go and I'll take John." And I was like, "Hell, yeah."
00:53:53And I slid in the room in my First Communion suit, ready to go.
00:53:58'Cause I loved Bill Clinton. I was ten years old.
00:54:00If you were a kid when Bill Clinton was first released, it was the most exciting thing ever.
00:54:05We'd never seen a cool politician before.
00:54:08And he would go on MTV, and he'd have cool answers to kids' questions.
00:54:12They'd be like, "Governor, what's your favorite food?"
00:54:14And he'd be like, "I don't know, fries?"
00:54:16And we'd be like, "Yay, we eat fries!"
00:54:20I learned to play his campaign song on the piano.
00:54:23It was "Don't Stop" by Fleetwood Mac... from Rumours, an album written by and for people cheating on each other.
00:54:34He let us know who he was right away.
00:54:39So, I went with my mom, as her date... to reconnect with Governor Bill Clinton.
00:54:46We walked into the ballroom. It was a big hotel ballroom.
00:54:49It was the Palmer House Hilton, big Hilton hotel ballroom.
00:54:52Walked into the ballroom, it was packed with people.
00:54:54It's actually the ballroom from the end of the movie The Fugitive, remember?
00:54:58So, that ballroom.
00:54:59So, my mom and I walk in, it's packed with people, the--
00:55:04Sorry, the end where Harrison Ford, as Dr. Richard Kimble, bursts in to confront Dr. Charles Nichols, right? Okay.
00:55:11So, that ballroom.
00:55:12So, my mom and I walk in, it's packed with people.
00:55:16Why does Kimble confront Nichols?
00:55:17Well, I know we all know this, but-- No, no. But, but, but...
00:55:19Kimble, he found out that Nichols, along with Devlin MacGregor and Lentz, who has mysteriously died, they had hired Frederick Sykes, the one-armed man, to kill Kimble.
00:55:28Kimble's wife wasn't even the target. I know we all know this.
00:55:30But they were gonna kill Kimble because he wasn't gonna approve certain liver samples to pass RUD-90.
00:55:34So, Kimble finds out about all of this, and, of course, he's furious.
00:55:38And he bursts into the ballroom and he goes,
00:55:39[imitating Kimble] "You switched the samples!"
00:55:41And Dr. Nichols is like,
00:55:42[in foreign accent] "Ladies and gentlemen, my friend, Dr. Richard Kimble."
00:55:46What accent did that guy have, by the way?
00:55:48He goes, "You switched the samples!
00:55:50And you doctored your research!
00:55:53So that you could have Provasic!"
00:55:58Anyway, so it's that ballroom. So, we walk into that ballroom.
00:56:02It was packed with people.
00:56:07It was packed with people. A real Who's Not of Chicago celebrities.
00:56:12Walter Jacobson was there.
00:56:16Walter Jacobson was the local Fox anchor.
00:56:19He'd do fun things where he'd go undercover as a homeless person.
00:56:22And he'd be like, "Oh, what time is the soup?"
00:56:24And they'd be like, "Man, you're Walter Jacobson."
00:56:26He was there.
00:56:29[laughs]
00:56:30Everybody.
00:56:32And on the far side of the ballroom, under a spotlight, we saw a little bit of silver hair.
00:56:37And it was him... Bill Clinton.
00:56:39The Comeback Kid.
00:56:42But he was surrounded by reporters, and photographers, and Secret Service.
00:56:47So, what are you gonna do?
00:56:48Well, if you're my mom, you ball up the back of my sport coat, and you push me forward like a human shield.
00:56:56And then you start jogging while yelling,
00:56:58"This ten-year-old boy has to meet the next president of the United States!"
00:57:02Kind of implying that I might be dying.
00:57:05My feet were not on the ground. She was swinging me like a snowplow.
00:57:09I was just mowing down fat Chicago Democrats.
00:57:14I pushed past all the reporters, I pushed past all the photographers.
00:57:18We pushed past all the Secret Service.
00:57:21We land at Bill Clinton's feet.
00:57:23Bill Clinton turns, looks at my mom and says,
00:57:26"Hey, Ellen,"
00:57:28'cause he never forgets a bitch, ever.
00:57:31[audience cheering]
00:57:41My mom melts. She goes, "Hi, Bill."
00:57:46Then it is revealed that she has no plan.
00:57:50So... she pushes me towards Clinton and she goes,
00:57:54"This is my son, John, and he's also going to be president."
00:57:58And I was like, "What the hell are you talking about?
00:58:01I'm not gonna be president."
00:58:03And I know now that I'm definitely never gonna be president.
00:58:06Not unless everyone gets real cool about a bunch of stuff really quickly.
00:58:15Based on my ten-year-old memory,
00:58:17Bill Clinton is about 13 feet tall.
00:58:20And he leaned down, because, well, I was wearing this button that I bought outside the fundraiser.
00:58:24It was a cartoon button of George H. W. Bush, and it had a quail flying over his head, and it was shitting on his head.
00:58:33And it said, "Bird-brained."
00:58:36And I thought it was very funny.
00:58:39And Bill Clinton leaned down so that only I could hear and he said,
00:58:42[imitating Clinton] "Hey, man, I like your button."
00:58:45[audience laughing]
00:58:47And I said, "You can do whatever you want forever."
00:58:51And he took my advice.
00:58:53And... it was the best night of my entire life.
00:58:59And I got home that night...
00:59:02I got home that night, and my dad was still awake, like, reading angry under one lamp, just like... [grunts]
00:59:08And I went up to him and I went, "Hey!
00:59:11I'm gonna be a Democrat."
00:59:13[audience laughing]
00:59:15"And I'm gonna vote for Bill Clinton."
00:59:18And without looking up at me, my dad just said,
00:59:21"You have the moral backbone of a chocolate éclair."
00:59:30You know, how you talk to a child.
00:59:33So, here's the end of that story.
00:59:36That was 1992. Let's flash forward five years to 1997.
00:59:40It is now 1997. I am a sophomore in high school,
00:59:44Bill Clinton is in his second term as president.
00:59:47And on the morning that the Monica Lewinsky scandal breaks on the cover of The New York Times.
00:59:52It had been on the Drudge Report, and then it was on the cover of The New York Times.
00:59:56That morning, I wake up to the newspaper hitting me in the face.
01:00:00I am a teenager asleep in bed, and the newspaper hits me in the face and falls open on my stomach.
01:00:08And I open my eyes to see my dad standing there dressed for work, and he says,
01:00:13"The other shoe just dropped."
01:00:16[audience laughing and applauding]
01:00:20And then my dad went in to work to find out that his law firm had been hired to defend Bill Clinton.
01:00:28[audience cheering]
01:00:33Good night, Chicago.
01:00:35[audience cheering]
01:00:41[instrumental music playing]