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#1289 - Eddie Izzard

#1289 - Eddie Izzard

The Joe Rogan Experience XX

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[0] three two one boom and we're live how are you what's going on i'm good i'm pouring coffee in the first seconds perfect of our chat that's the good way to do it with a cafeteria i think it is i think that's named in a french way a french press that's what they're called is it called well it's called i think it's called cafeteria but it's probably called a pot of coffee but um that makes sense but you know there's a french word for it that we just ignore here in america they did a lot of the food you know because you have um herbs you know herbs and i used to do this bit of material, which I really enjoyed saying, you know, the difference between British and American, you say this, you say, and you say herbs, and we say herbs, because there's a fucking H in it.

[1] Right.

[2] And I used to say, because it's a fucking H. But, and I thought, why has the H dropped off for America?

[3] I think it's because a lot of French guys would have come over, immigration, and they would have done a lot of cooking, you know, and these French guys know about cooking, and they do the albs, and they cut the H off totally.

[4] So I think that was an influence from that.

[5] Probably Julia Child.

[6] Julia Child, was she French?

[7] Yeah, I think.

[8] Wasn't she?

[9] She is now.

[10] I mean, she's into French cooking.

[11] All right, okay.

[12] That was her thing, right?

[13] Maybe Lafayette is sitting next to Washington.

[14] We will use Albs with the stuff here, and then we could do the Revolution New War, and then you guys will win, and then we'll hate each other forever.

[15] Well, you guys also do a lot of weird stuff, where you put like a U in color, and you have a Y in tires.

[16] What do you put in ties?

[17] T -I?

[18] R -S.

[19] Yeah, I think we had.

[20] head first dibs on the lack of which.

[21] Yeah, I don't understand what we did do this.

[22] No, you got on the, your guys got on the Mayflower, and they said, okay, we're going to talk like this from now, I'm going to say, woo, a lot, and we're going to get rid of Y in tires.

[23] We're going to invent tires.

[24] Get rid of the Y. Yeah, I just think, the U in color and honor, there's a you in honor as well, and we've got it and you've got it out.

[25] I think yours is more logical.

[26] Honor.

[27] For honor.

[28] Yeah.

[29] But not for herbs.

[30] No, herbs is, I think that's more French influence.

[31] I agree.

[32] Yeah, I always wondered, because I grew up in Boston, and I always wondered, like, those were the first people to leave England and Europe.

[33] Like, what the fuck happened to their language?

[34] Because they developed the most disgusting brand of it.

[35] Well, you've got your A's, your Boston Aes, which I can't hear a strong Boston coming out of you.

[36] Yeah, I got rid of it.

[37] I heard myself on television once when I was, like, 19 years old.

[38] I was like, holy shit, what is that?

[39] Well, you guys had, or you used to have, their mother, father, brother, You're a fucking cat.

[40] And it's the ah.

[41] And we say mother, mother, father, sister.

[42] We don't have an R at the end of our mother, brother, brother, sister.

[43] And you, in Boston, yeah.

[44] We say mother instead of mother.

[45] And the rest of America has a much stronger R. And Ireland has that.

[46] That's a very Irish -influenced thing.

[47] And for us, the I, when I'm playing American, when I was doing roles like that, the R was the hardest thing to get.

[48] Hard, hard tar.

[49] remember friends saying hey i was cooking this thing that came out like hard hard hard tar and i thought that is the one to practice because that is just hard hard hard tar we called it hard hard hard hard tar which just doesn't sound the same you spent a lot of time over you i've only the only time i've ever spent in uh england is working uh like a little bit of downtime doing stand up and and hang out over there but most of it's just been working either working for the ufc or i'd never really get a chance to really spend time in england i'd like to i'd like to do that just to kind of I understand you folks.

[50] Well, I think...

[51] You're a different breed.

[52] I think at the base, having played 45 countries now, I think everyone is actually the same when you get down below a level.

[53] But, you know, if you're going to reach for you, there's got to be a number of things which would make it seem different.

[54] And brand names all be different than your sports does.

[55] You know, everyone's sports does, everyone's politics, and that kind of thing.

[56] But underneath it all, it's going to be, there's going to be more mainstream people, there's going to be alternative people.

[57] There's going to be, and the whole spectrum now, In the old days, it used to be, everything was mainstream, and a bit of alternative.

[58] Now, I think your country, my country, we have a whole spectrum of what's interest, people.

[59] It's much more open in that way.

[60] Yeah, no, I certainly agree.

[61] Yeah, the collection of people is very similar.

[62] It's just they're operating in a different environment and different theater, right?

[63] Yeah.

[64] Yeah.

[65] And, you know, we're tightly smashed together, what would be, 65 million, and you're 300 million, and you're such a large.

[66] country is so large compared to us.

[67] Because there was a thing of only 10 % of Americans have passports, but if you look at the area, something like that.

[68] But then if you look at where the 10 % can go in America, it's just so huge.

[69] Right.

[70] So it's slightly more understandable why a lot of Americans say, I don't need a passport, because I'm just going to go to that place, which is miles away.

[71] That's understanding of you, but I think, you know, I think it would do everybody good to go somewhere, like, like Asia.

[72] Like, every time I go to Asia, I always think, okay, people are like this, too.

[73] Like, this is an interesting thing to experience.

[74] Like, Thailand in particular, which I really loved.

[75] Right.

[76] Thailand is amazing because it's like, wow, they might, they hit like this perfect frequency where everybody's really friendly and really nice.

[77] And it's, you know, they call it the land of the smiles.

[78] It's this very unusual environment there where everybody seems like warm and greeting.

[79] I don't think I ran into one rude tie.

[80] while I was there.

[81] That sounds very interesting, and I've, yeah, when I, I toured Asia, but unfortunately it was kind of in, out, you know, touring, it gets in and out.

[82] But that's interesting about the tie.

[83] Ties more than any other country, because I'm sure they must have a black market and a thing and some gangsters, some Thai gang, maybe they're very nice gangsters.

[84] Maybe they're the nicest gangsters we know.

[85] I'm sure they're not.

[86] Ask you first before they shoot you.

[87] I'm sure when it gets to the drug smuggling and sex trafficking and all the other We're going to do sex extra, but would you mind awfully if polite drugs, smugglers?

[88] I mean, they have obviously a very open environment.

[89] When you go, you see Bangkok, it's like Muay Thai fights and chaos and a lot of expats wandering around drinking.

[90] It's just, you know, it's a different sort of world over there.

[91] But when I was there, I was in Chiang Mai.

[92] And it's just super friendly people, beautiful landscape.

[93] Very nice.

[94] Have you been in Vietnam?

[95] No, never.

[96] I heard it's amazing, though.

[97] But yeah, I mean, I find that from an American perspective would be very interesting people going there, even if they, you know, were there before and during the time of war or after just to see how people are.

[98] Because they fought for so long.

[99] There's all the French stuff before that, the end of China, but even before America got involved, and they call it a thousand -year war that they fought.

[100] Anyway, it's interesting.

[101] I hope new generations coming along don't bring the baggage of before, you know, previous generations.

[102] And we can all try and move forward into a world that's more positive, even though it doesn't necessarily look like that.

[103] Well, what has always been really interesting to me about Vietnam that I learned from Bourdain was that they don't hold any grudges towards Americans, which I find incredible.

[104] I got that sense of it.

[105] I have not played.

[106] They haven't been there, but I got that sense that they were looking forward.

[107] They just accept it.

[108] That's the past.

[109] And they don't have any grudges.

[110] It's an amazing attitude.

[111] It is an amazing attitude.

[112] I suppose it's better if you're, they did an empirical, is it empirical window?

[113] They didn't like do a massive conquer in the in America left and so they got what they were, I assume the majority of them were trying to get it.

[114] Yeah.

[115] They can run it however they want to run it.

[116] But yeah, it's tragic.

[117] The things the wars are getting into.

[118] I was going to be in the military when I was a kid.

[119] That was one of my, I wanted to be in special forces.

[120] you look at me now being a transgender guy with that but yeah that was where I was I know Trump wouldn't have let me in the forces right now if I weren't applied right this second but yeah so I follow everything I kind of run my life on on the military that sounds a bit weird I run my career on a military thing because it's quite difficult to you know any career putting it together kind of weird what's your next move what's this how so you'll you like strategize isn't that yeah oh yeah strategy at the wazoo I plan 50 years ahead.

[121] Really?

[122] Oh, yeah.

[123] Well, if you think about it, I came out as transgender 34 years ago.

[124] That's not the first good thing that an agent wants to hear.

[125] You're transgender?

[126] That's 85.

[127] This is such a hot thing.

[128] This is, even now, they would say, okay, well, it's got a little better than it was for about 10 millennia.

[129] It's a little better now, but it's still not the hottest ticket that everyone's, we want transgender guys in here.

[130] For this, that, the other.

[131] It's not the top of the list.

[132] Right.

[133] And I've also got boy mode and girl mode, and I do dramatic films in boy mode and then I'm touring in girl mode and doing stand -up and I campaign for politics in girl mode.

[134] How do you do that?

[135] I just switch, change, you know, take off heels, flat shoes.

[136] Yeah, because if you were just talking, like if you didn't have makeup on and you didn't have the heels and the nails, you just seem male.

[137] Yeah.

[138] Yeah.

[139] Well, it's, I think it's genetically imbuilt.

[140] You know, there's some, I think there's quite a lot of people maybe who were, um, uh the way they're like they live their lives they live there in personality they're not particularly male or female mm -hmm i feel but i feel i've always felt since i was four or five i wanted to express this side of myself and it's built in i think it's genetic um and if you analyze masculine and if you really get down to it you can i it's i find it impossible to come out with anything that was particularly masculine particularly feminine except for the ability to build muscle mass is easier for men in event commas.

[141] That's it.

[142] But, you know, great footballers, soccer players, men and women, athletics, runners, men and women, strong character, men's weak character, men and women, mathematicians, whatever it is.

[143] There's nothing that you can really say, ah, that is only good shot with a gun.

[144] No, anyone could do that.

[145] It's, we're all humans.

[146] And so, and we get fixated by the masculine family.

[147] Whereas if it's a tiger, if a tiger's attacking you and trying to kill you, you don't go, Is this a girl tiger or a boy tiger?

[148] We don't care about it.

[149] And they don't care either, the tigers.

[150] So you've always felt like you gravitated towards feminine things?

[151] No, gravitated towards both.

[152] I gravitated towards playing soccer.

[153] I was in the first team for two years when I was a kid, was planning to do Office of Training Corps and then go Marines or Paris and then go to Special Forces, RAS, which would be the equivalent of your Delta Force.

[154] And that was a distinct plan on you a lot about that.

[155] And I thought, which war are they going to send me to?

[156] actually which one they send me to it and it could be the idiots that i'm at school with will send me to the wrong war in world war two is very clear and then after that every other war is kind of hazy uh but there's all this feminine side girl's side i'm not sure how to do it the the articulate even after 34 years it's difficult to articulate but i wanted to express that um and if i look more like a woman than i you know it it would be much easier but um yeah so i decided to do that in 85 when it wasn't cool I've had a lot of fights in the street, a lot of people screaming abuse at me. Taking a couple of people to court or just reported in the police and then we went to court.

[157] And yeah, and you fight your fights.

[158] Instead of going to do a military fighting thing, I've done, I've said, this might be wrong for me to say this, but I say I've done special forces civilian division, you know, fighting people to speak, people, and I've now perform in four languages, I've run over 80 marathons, going into politics, next year and and yeah and the transgender thing is it's in a better place than it was back in 85 well it's certainly now I think because of probably Caitlin Jenner and the movement that you're seeing to accept people that want to do whatever and anything you want to do yeah it is just we're more accepting of each other we do see it to be more what's the word begins with the tea more open more allowing, there's a word for it which just walked out of my head, but anyway, that word.

[159] But, yeah, and at the same time, people are going around doing more killings and stuff at the same.

[160] Well, there's more people.

[161] Yeah, there's just sheer volume of humans.

[162] And the population growth is insane.

[163] It's like 200 ,000 years to get to $1 billion.

[164] Yeah.

[165] And then it's taken this, I know, 50 years to get to $7 .5 billion, which is scary.

[166] Yeah, when I was a kid, I think the United States population was less than 200 million.

[167] Now it's 300 million.

[168] And global was, whatever it was, now it's 7 plus, bordering at 8 billion people.

[169] When I came out, I think it was 6 .5.

[170] I think that's just running away.

[171] And one of the weird things is if we are having less wars, if we're getting better health to people, then more kids are around.

[172] And some people in, I suppose, lower income backgrounds around the world, they will say, well, we need to have six kids because that's...

[173] That's what, you know, from a, you don't have much money.

[174] Yeah, that's what we do.

[175] But as economics go, better, people have less kids.

[176] And that hopefully that should calm down.

[177] There should be a botting.

[178] I mean, I think they feel there will be a leveling off of the population.

[179] Yeah, I've read that theory that they believe that industrialized nations and the westernized society, when people start having two careers, you know, and then two career households, people are less likely to have a bunch of kids.

[180] Yeah.

[181] So as people do better, they have less kids.

[182] Yeah.

[183] Yeah, so I'm a glass, I'm a, I'm a glass is two -thirds full person.

[184] That's what I feel.

[185] Instead of a glass is half full, half empty person.

[186] So you're optimistic.

[187] I'm a big, I couldn't, I couldn't be here in the hills with the nails.

[188] I'm planning to do this and got a film coming out and I'm touring the country.

[189] And then I'm going to politics as well.

[190] When you first started wearing women's clothes and dresses and makeup on stage, did people think it was a gimmick?

[191] What did they think?

[192] Did.

[193] I decided not to call them women's clothes, just, I'd just say they're my clothes.

[194] I would just wear dresses.

[195] Right.

[196] You know, like women can wear trousers or pants, and we used to call men's pants.

[197] And I said, oh, that pants, fuck it.

[198] So, but yeah, I first started talking about it and not wearing anything.

[199] Again, look kind of boy -like and male -like.

[200] And you were talking about it, like.

[201] I had the first joke.

[202] This is my first ever joke.

[203] I had this about two years before I did it.

[204] I said, look, you don't stand up.

[205] um so if you're from a minority it's kind of a good thing so if you in stand -up terms so if you're from a lower ink come background you can say rich people god they're so easy for them as you're a woman you say men ah men if you're an ethnic background you say white people oh there's white people so if you're white male middle class stand up it's useless so thank god i'm a transverse state that was my first laugh and everyone thought he's making jokes about something that he's not And they wouldn't believe me. And journalists were going, I don't know why he's doing this because he's doing pretty well now, but is this, I don't know, is this a joke?

[206] So I thought, I better wear a dresses, you know, puts some makeup on.

[207] And then they said, okay, he's doing this.

[208] He is serious, but he looks a mess.

[209] This kind of baby elephant thing I was doing.

[210] Okay, got to get your weight under control.

[211] You've got a better haircut than that.

[212] And you've just got to fail a lot.

[213] And there's a humiliation period.

[214] I mean, this is the weird thing about coming out.

[215] It's kind of humiliating.

[216] People say, you look, people say horrible thing.

[217] They say, what the fuck is that?

[218] Somebody said, to my face right there as I was walking out of a restaurant.

[219] So I thought, that's not very nice.

[220] And you have to be able to deflect it and go, well, you're obviously a scumbag.

[221] So fuck you, man. Is it mostly men?

[222] Yes, and occasionally women.

[223] Occasionally women, but, yeah, I mean, you know, people have lower character, or lesser character.

[224] If you're strong character in yourself, you don't care.

[225] Live in that, live, what the hell?

[226] Right.

[227] You know, people, okay, it doesn't quite look together, but, you know, life's tough enough.

[228] But if you want to put someone down, you'll raise your own status by doing it, and they will do that.

[229] And so I have stood in the street, and people have unloaded, you know, swear words, invective to me. And I've just, I, fuck you and I find you and a fucking and a fucking and they go, what you're fucking, and fuck you and fuck you and there's literally, you know, two or three of them or one of me just screaming at each other.

[230] And I just won't back down now.

[231] This happened recently.

[232] It was nine months ago, somewhere outside my house.

[233] in London, just having a go at me. So they knew who you were as well.

[234] Yeah, they did.

[235] They knew exactly where I live.

[236] We said, we're going to do your house.

[237] Oh, Jesus Christ.

[238] And I thought, who the hell is this, asshole?

[239] Just because of the way you dress?

[240] Well, it was, he added that into it.

[241] There was an altercation over, I was just packing my car up because I was just driving home to see my dad.

[242] And somebody said, you've got to give me a ride in your car.

[243] And I said, and I, so someone heckles me like that in the street.

[244] I just come back with the, you will never have a ride in my car.

[245] I have to give you, what I have to give you?

[246] So that happened and then this guy went off and the end of this and that and the other one on it.

[247] It's just screaming at me and so on shouting back at him, giving him word for word.

[248] And then I said, who is that idiot?

[249] And they said, oh, that's this guy.

[250] Oh, he's a known, he's a nutter, you know, he's just, he does this.

[251] I went, all right, maybe I should mention it because he said he's going to do my, oh, I'll mention it to the police.

[252] Ah, I don't matter.

[253] Two weeks later, same thing.

[254] Who's shouting at me?

[255] Oh, it's the same dicket.

[256] So I thought, right.

[257] Next time I go possibly stage.

[258] So now he knows where you live.

[259] Well, he always did.

[260] He was right in front of the house.

[261] That's always fun, isn't it?

[262] Yeah, well, and he said, we're going to do your house when you're away.

[263] You know, so this was the, that was his opening gambit.

[264] We're going to do your house when you're away.

[265] I'm letting, they're letting you know they're a coward.

[266] Yeah, well, it was, it was not very positive.

[267] He didn't run a PR company, I don't think.

[268] That's kind of terrorism, right?

[269] They're trying to strike terror in you when you're away.

[270] Well, yeah, that, well, that is, yes, that is the hatred thing is.

[271] Did you think about just going out there and fucking him up?

[272] I don't think I'm quite that I would have liked to If I'd gone through the military thing If I'd gone through it, I'd learn how to do that And I've never have Crave my guard myself up to the thing I do need to craft my guard myself up But I haven't got there So, well, I saw We were talking before And you were trying to tell me that you were lazy I'm like, fuck you I saw that thing that you did, that documentary where you ran A series of marathons in a row With no training at all And I remember thinking before that I had this opinion of you and the opinion of you was you're a funny guy you're a funny comedian um you you have good stand up you obviously work hard at it but then I saw that and I was like oh okay there's something going on there like you that's a different kind of human being the kind of human being that could push themselves into doing that day after day after day and I looked at your feet where your skin was literally falling off and you're taping everything up and um that's a that's a person that's got you have an iron will like that's a very unusual will for a comedian who doesn't really exercise like when you were doing I mean you were I mean you may be exercised a little bit but you weren't in shape no and you decided to run how many marathons in a row was it the UK one was it the first one yeah that was 43 and 51 days 43 marathons in a row in 51 days with no training at a dev week I did have training You know, six weeks training.

[273] Yeah.

[274] Which is not a lot.

[275] But they said that, you know, sometimes if you run a marathon, you should train for nine months before that.

[276] Yeah.

[277] And I thought, well, if I'm going to do 43, that's going to be, I'm going to be training forever.

[278] And I can't be bothered with that.

[279] So I, but you know, and this happened in your civil war, in maybe in any war, I'm quite somewhat encyclopedic about your civil war and revolution more to a bit and World War II.

[280] But on the spot training, you know, training as you go along.

[281] That's what I did.

[282] The first 10 marathons trains you for the next 33.

[283] What was it like when you got over the first day, though?

[284] The first marathon, you must have been like, what the fuck.

[285] No, first day is okay.

[286] Really?

[287] Because, well, it's all in your head.

[288] It's more mental than it is physical.

[289] And so the first marathon, I've heard of people running marathons, run, walk, stagger, not very fast, get it done.

[290] Boom.

[291] The second marathon is weird, because you go, I've done one.

[292] I'm on the second.

[293] And you can't really rejoice.

[294] You can't punch the sky.

[295] You can't put a medal around your neck.

[296] you got up at five or six in the morning and it's midday and you're going through your second one and then you're through the third one and then you're through the fourth one and then it was raining and my feet was shredding and I thought the moisture it was yes it made it too soft and they were rubbing on the on the running shoes and I didn't know how to how do I fix it when I'm actually wearing on it all the time so we started bathing it in surgical spirit which you call something else it's an ethanol methanol Anyway, it's some sort of alcoholic spirit, and it takes the moisture out of your feet.

[297] And so they became like stones.

[298] It's kind of like, we say, anyway, if anyone looks up surgical spirit, if you Google it now, you'll see what it's called in America.

[299] But it's some sort of alcoholic thing that just removes moisture.

[300] And so it made my feet, my toes like little stones and kind of tough.

[301] And actually that got us through.

[302] And then I started, and also apparently, because I did 27 mountains in 27 days in South Africa in 2016, and that was, the temperatures were crazy on that.

[303] But it seems that the body will switch on a healing property that we've got latent in ourselves that we don't use, and you will heal quicker, you will heal faster the more you get.

[304] So you get stronger, in both the British one and the South African one, I got stronger as I went on.

[305] The first 10 days are the key thing, and after that it's kind of easier you're used to it.

[306] Your body just adapts and understands this crazy asshole is going to do this.

[307] It's crazy asshole.

[308] And the brain goes, what kind of marathon shall we run today as opposed to what the fuck are you doing?

[309] What kind of marathon?

[310] Yeah, well, I think that's what the brain is doing?

[311] Because the first day the brain is going, you're going to do what?

[312] This marathon.

[313] Okay.

[314] The second day the brain is going, now we're doing another one.

[315] You know, third day, fourth day, fifth day.

[316] This is insane.

[317] And then day 10, the brain is going, okay, you're on this kind of kick or something.

[318] I understand.

[319] And let's try a better mouth.

[320] Don't push it too hard.

[321] You know, the brain starts talking to the body and somehow it levels out.

[322] Round about main.

[323] Then it gets surreal.

[324] Marathon 18, Marathon 23.

[325] I remember Marathon 31.

[326] That was a lovely.

[327] It's just so weird.

[328] Yeah.

[329] But it was fun.

[330] And you own the road.

[331] You know, Woody Guthrie, this land is our land, it's my land.

[332] You become like it's your land.

[333] It's like it's everybody's land because you're running on the roads of this country.

[334] tree I grew up in.

[335] And you feel that the roads, the fields, the birds, I didn't listen to any music.

[336] I wanted, it's a safety thing for traffic.

[337] But also, you could hear everything that's going on, birds, chatter, rivers running.

[338] There was, I ran past somebody's house.

[339] This is on about day two.

[340] And there was a river running there and it went through the back of this guy's garden.

[341] And he said, oh, hello.

[342] And I said, I went and visited him and I washed my feet in the river.

[343] And then I put the socks back on and I carried on running.

[344] I thought, I can, you can do weird things.

[345] I took blackberries out of the bushes like I did when I was a kid.

[346] It just became feral, this holistic or feral marathons.

[347] That's what I was doing.

[348] It's not run.

[349] It's not people shouting from the sides.

[350] No one cares, really, which is fine.

[351] And I'm just wrapped up in this other place.

[352] And it's beautiful.

[353] I mean, it's really zen.

[354] Well, it seems like it would change you.

[355] Like accomplishing something like that, like on the last day, the last run, when you crossed the line.

[356] What was that feeling like?

[357] Well, there's a picture.

[358] You brought up that picture.

[359] They put up some flags and stuff.

[360] That was beautiful.

[361] I tried to do it a five -hour marathon.

[362] Now, if you know the speeds, it's two hours is what they're trying to break now.

[363] So this is really slow.

[364] But then having done 42 marathons, maybe it's fair.

[365] And I missed it by about 30 seconds.

[366] But it was beautiful to finish it.

[367] I was really quite strong all the way through.

[368] I didn't stop at any time.

[369] That was good.

[370] In South Africa, though, I did 27 in 27 days, a salute to Nelson Mandel was 27 years in prison.

[371] And day five, they put me in hospital because they thought my kidneys were given up.

[372] Were you experiencing rhabdo?

[373] Is that what it is?

[374] Rabdomy -a -lach, you know about it.

[375] Yeah.

[376] Yeah, your first brother I ever talked to who's known about rabdomylysis.

[377] Yeah, I got rabdo in 2012.

[378] How did you get that?

[379] I was on an anticholesterol drug, just a sort of health drug.

[380] Your cholesterol's a bit high, take their thing once a day.

[381] And side effect is reptomyelysis, which I couldn't spell, being dyslexic.

[382] And I was peeing brown pee.

[383] And did it, there's no real pain, a lot of lethargy.

[384] I was really tired.

[385] I thought this is a bit weird.

[386] And this is without exercise you were getting it?

[387] That was on Marathon 3 and Marathon 4.

[388] So I had trained, had I trained before that?

[389] I'd done some training before that one.

[390] I'm a bit weird with my training.

[391] But yeah, so there wasn't a huge amount of training before that one.

[392] But third marathon, and I started peeing a bit of brown pee.

[393] This was not through the whole series of marathons, or it was?

[394] No, well, I tried to do South Africa twice.

[395] So in 2012 was my first one.

[396] After day four, on an anti -cholesterol drug, trying to control my cholesterol, and I started brewing brown pee, and then they said, you've got to go to hospital now, the guys that are you going to put fluids through you.

[397] You have to go to see a specialist.

[398] The specialist said you can't continue this 27 thing, because you have to get all this stuff out of your system.

[399] Otherwise, the kidneys, because it shreds the muscles into the bloodstream, clogs up kidneys, kidney failure.

[400] Very dangerous.

[401] A lot of fighters get it.

[402] Really?

[403] Yeah.

[404] Yeah, a fighter died from it recently in Boston in the Massachusetts area.

[405] Yeah, it's apparently something that happens when fighters over -train as well.

[406] Like sometimes they're not doing it scientifically, so they're not analyzing their heart rate, their heart rate variability.

[407] and they don't know that they haven't really truly recovered and they continue to push themselves because they want to prepare harder and they have this sort of mental mindset just train harder and you'll be better off but that's not necessarily the case of your body can't physically keep up with the recovery and sometimes they'll go into a fight overtrained and then they wind up getting robbed out from the fight.

[408] It's happened several times and it's caused a few deaths.

[409] Yeah, well they said this, you said you carry on running now in 2012 you won't make it.

[410] So 2016...

[411] Did you get off that medication?

[412] Yeah.

[413] I would think that all that running, you wouldn't need that medication.

[414] I would have thought, but, you know, they'd check you out and you say, Yeah, Closwell's just a touch -hoy.

[415] Wow, you know, you'd be on this for the rest of your life.

[416] That stuff scares the shit out of me, those statins.

[417] Yeah, it goes to a scary place.

[418] But 2016, day five, bloods were looking a bit weird, day off, so day 27, I did double marathon, and that was kind of a interesting day.

[419] So you run one marathon, And last day of your run, you've only done 25 marathons, and it's the day 27.

[420] So, and when you go through that finishing the final flag where the, you know, you should be waving flags, you've got another marathon to go.

[421] And it's just, yeah, my brain, I thought, this is kind of good, but you've got to, it's 90K you're going to do today.

[422] Ignore it, carry on.

[423] And it was a rough, rough old day.

[424] That's five hours, then another five hours.

[425] Five hours plus and another five hours plus.

[426] In the end, it was six.

[427] I took 11 hours and 50 minutes to run 90K So I did double marathon in 11 hours, 10 minutes That's damn good Yeah, it was good enough And they got a Comrades marathon in South Africa Which is 90K And they got a 12 -hour cutoff So I said, I will do 90K in 12 hours The double marathon was at 84 And then I did another 6K after I'd finished That last moment must be orgasmic When you finished It must have been incredible Finishing the 84 was beautiful you finish at the steps of Nelson Mandela's statue where he was made president and that was beautiful and and rough I'd had to speed up in the last hour because of complications so I actually got faster if I don't have you ever done a thing where you're knack and knack and said now go why'd you have to speed up there was a wind it was a thing called sport relief I was doing it for so it was raising money and and I wanted to finish inside the camera window they had a window till 315 South African time police escorts were needed at certain bits.

[428] Otherwise, you'll get carjacked thing and you won't survive this big.

[429] So I said, can't we just ignore the carjacking thing?

[430] No, you can't ignore it.

[431] So I said, okay, stop the clock, put me in the thing, drive me to Pretoria, stop me off, and then I'll run there and we'll just continue it on there.

[432] So we had to do that.

[433] So we got behind because I wasn't running because I had to be driven across this dangerous period of part point of road to be dropped to Pretoria.

[434] Then I just had to run the kilometers off.

[435] So they have like a carjack area?

[436] Yeah, they have certain areas where it's kind of out there, there's no one really out there, and you just go along there, and they'll, you know, anything can happen.

[437] So my field producer, Fixer, he was just saying, we don't do this.

[438] Just you can't go there.

[439] So I said, well, just get me closer to the finishing line, and then I'll just run around.

[440] It doesn't really matter where I'm running now.

[441] We know it's Batorre.

[442] We know we need to finish.

[443] I need to just run that distance.

[444] So I ran the distance off, but the time had got behind.

[445] So I had to speed up from 7 .5 kilometers an hour to 10 kilometers an hour.

[446] So an extra third of the speed, which was kind of evil.

[447] I moaned a lot that day.

[448] I was just a moaning, whining, oh, God, I can't do this.

[449] But I was never considering not doing it.

[450] And I got there, the live feed to London finished at Quarterpast, and we got there about 13 minutes past.

[451] We had about two minutes, and they just caught it before they went off here.

[452] It was like, you know, like in a film, you know, it was perfectly designed.

[453] I just knew if I got that, probably I'd get more money, or raise more money, an extra 100 grand, because we've seen this idiot finish.

[454] He's actually doing it, you know.

[455] So that was beautiful.

[456] And then I talked to the, this is a very interesting thing, because you know if you're talking to, it was a press.

[457] I talked to the press after that.

[458] It was a Sunday.

[459] And so they kept talking, normally they say, we can't talk anymore.

[460] We've got two minutes, and then we've got to talk to important people.

[461] Go away.

[462] That's what normally happens if you're talking to live press, national press.

[463] But I was on the thing, and they just kept talking to me, Because obviously a slow news day, nothing was happening.

[464] And they said, we've got this idiot who's just run, you know, 27 marathons.

[465] And they kept asking me other questions.

[466] And what favorite color do you have?

[467] And what?

[468] How big are your legs?

[469] And what?

[470] Yeah, I don't know what they were asking me. But in the end, these two interviews I did with National Press, I just said, I'm going to go away now.

[471] I'm going to stop this.

[472] I had to stop my own interview, which I've never done in my life.

[473] And I realized they've just got no one else to talk to.

[474] They're desperate.

[475] Did you notice a big change in public perception of you once you completed those marathons?

[476] Yeah.

[477] The, yeah, the certain community, and if you're transgender guy and you come out, certain people go, but I crossed into a line of, well, if you're going to do that, and you, I know you do some comedy, you do the drama stuff, we think you're a bit, you know, bonkers and out there, but fair play.

[478] I got this sort of, I got to pass a fair play to you.

[479] If you're going to do that, and I was trying to do selection.

[480] You know, SAS, they have selection.

[481] Your Delta Forces, Navy SEALs, they all have this thing that can you just go on and on and on and it's the stamina thing.

[482] And that was my civilian selection for my own whatever civilian special forces.

[483] Just to understand yourself.

[484] Yeah, I know I can go a lot.

[485] I mean, coming out as transgender, when you're straight, I'm straight transgender.

[486] So I fancy women.

[487] So I'm a wannabe lesbian.

[488] So if you come out, you could stay in the closet.

[489] And down the millennia, if we go back to the ancient Egyptians and further, there's probably a lot of guys said, I don't going to tell anyone about this.

[490] I just fancy women.

[491] I just go through it.

[492] I just won't mention this kind of feelings in my head.

[493] And I thought I should mention it because if people sat and screamed at me in the streets, I will fight that, at least verbally fight that.

[494] Or, you know, if they start going for it, I have had one fight in the streets.

[495] And I landed one punch.

[496] Yeah?

[497] Yeah.

[498] I taught myself to jujitsu.

[499] You go to fight on the streets because of this?

[500] Yeah, yeah.

[501] The guy was just giving me, oh, Tracy, oh, oh, oh, you're all dressed up.

[502] And I was, I've been a street performer for four years at Common Garden.

[503] So I was living on the street, you know, I was working on the streets and, you know, just knew a lot of people going around.

[504] I just said, Matt, you don't have to be like this.

[505] We can all, there's space enough for everyone, live and let live, kept giving me stuff.

[506] He was a bit drunk, every rest of.

[507] So he was just going to stay on that wicket, keep saying.

[508] And I said, just chill out, chill out.

[509] And then the third time, I just said.

[510] I said, oh, just fuck over.

[511] And I went, no, I unloaded a load of swear words on him.

[512] And then he swung for me, which was the handy thing because that came up in court.

[513] And then I swung back.

[514] And I landed one punch, which I was pleased about.

[515] And I was doing the wipe -on, wipe -off stuff.

[516] I was doing this.

[517] You're blocking?

[518] Yeah, from a jujitsu book that I taught myself jujitsu from a book, if you could believe that.

[519] Which is, you know, you'll get these books with the different moves in it.

[520] And you can't teach yourself that.

[521] But I did judo when I was six, actually, as well.

[522] So I liked the idea of doing these things.

[523] But I felt judo was always at the bigger kid, you all get in pajamas and the bigger kid just throws you around of it.

[524] I could never quite get the hangar.

[525] I couldn't throw the bigger kids.

[526] I could do it now, but I've never.

[527] Anyway, yeah.

[528] This is a fantastic video online of a very old judo expert.

[529] And I think he's in his 70s or his 80s.

[530] And he's working out with these young men.

[531] And you see his mastery of judo as these young, powerful men try to manipulate him.

[532] and throw him around, and he effortlessly, watch this, this old man, and you see him, he's very, very old, and he's throwing these guys around.

[533] And me, as a martial arts expert, these men are not doing this willingly.

[534] This is legitimate.

[535] Like, even that guy tries to throw him, and this is a black belt who's trying to throw him.

[536] But he's so good, and his use of balance and leverage is so amazing.

[537] He just knows where to be.

[538] Like, see how he just throws himself into a perfect position.

[539] I mean, it's really stunning to watch, and this looks like it was from the 50s or something like that, because it's a really old, yeah, does it say?

[540] It just says 75 -year -old judo master.

[541] I mean, this is an old man, and the young man is much larger than him.

[542] I mean, significantly, like 25 % larger than him, at least.

[543] Maybe even, look at me, he looks like he's twice as big as him, and he cannot throw this old man. It's really amazing.

[544] Judo is a beautiful art. He's going more and more full on, isn't He's going, I've got to get this.

[545] He's trying.

[546] I mean, he knows that this guy's a master.

[547] But it's just, look at that.

[548] Like, it's incredible.

[549] I mean, the way that guy's body can toss these people through the air, and yet they are helpless.

[550] They can't do anything to him.

[551] There's no way that.

[552] Look at that.

[553] Boom.

[554] Three times.

[555] It hurts my hips just looking at that.

[556] You can have many different martial arts that you're going on.

[557] Which ones are you?

[558] Jiu -jitsu and.

[559] Striking martial arts.

[560] My background was in striking, which is in taekwondo, and then eventually kickboxing and moitai.

[561] And then I got really into jujitsu when I got older.

[562] And what's the difference in jiu -jitsu?

[563] J -Jitsu's grappling.

[564] It's all choking people.

[565] It's like you, it's not throws like judo.

[566] There are throws in jiu -tzu, but it really comes from judo.

[567] It comes from the ground -fighting aspect of judo, which is not as emphasized, but the Brazilians really, really emphasized it and sort of they figured out what the best way for a smaller person to defeat a larger person is through leverage and jujitsu is really the only martial art that I can think of that works like you think of a martial art in a movie like in a Bruce Lee movie like there's all these people and they were always bigger than Bruce Lee but Bruce Lee fucked them all up but in the real world that doesn't usually work like the bigger people have such a giant advantage when it comes to like striking like you're never going to see uh like a heavy weight in the ufc uh fight a bantam weight fight a person who weighs 135 pounds just wouldn't it's just too much of an advantage in jiu jitsu it's legitimately possible for a 140 pound man to strangle a 200 plus pound man and do it relatively easily if they're talented i i saw documentary on bruce lee and he had the way of no way yeah which really appealed to me i mean I mean, that is like a philosophy, quite apart from a fighting philosophy, but to be so trained up in so many things that they do not know what you're going to do.

[568] And I kind of adopted that.

[569] Well, he had to overcome significant prejudice to adopt that perspective because when he was studying martial arts, you were supposed to be loyal to your style.

[570] So if you learned kung fu, you were supposed to be a kung fu man for life.

[571] You weren't supposed to also dabble in boxing and wrestling and all these different things.

[572] that he was interested in.

[573] He was interested in taking what's useful from all different martial arts and applying them.

[574] So in a sense, he was really the founder of mixed martial arts, which you see today.

[575] And in the UK, they have Cage Warriors and the US is UFC.

[576] And, you know, there's this worldwide now, the art of mixed martial arts of putting all the different styles together and you can do whatever you want within the rules.

[577] Now, I liked the attitude of that.

[578] It's sort of a life attitude.

[579] I mean, there's obviously the fighting attitude of it.

[580] And then there's the life attitude of just be prepared for anything and everything.

[581] Yeah, and be like water.

[582] Like, that was his other thing.

[583] Just go around things, move through things.

[584] Don't headbutt things.

[585] Figure out what's the best way.

[586] What's the best path?

[587] Yeah.

[588] You know?

[589] Yeah, I just, I haven't learned.

[590] Well, I think I'm waiting for someone to give me a really hard time.

[591] And I say, now, I am checking in and I am learning a martial art. Because I've really...

[592] Do you live in England?

[593] Yeah.

[594] There's so many places for you.

[595] And I'm, I live everywhere because I'm always touring, yeah, I'm always touring and filming and so I just keep moving.

[596] But yeah, I know, but you've got to make the time, especially if you're moving around all the time, you'd have to line it up so, okay, we're going to check in with this guy and that place, this like, yes.

[597] And you'd have to take it in like, you know, it's got to be something that you're serious at as opposed to dab.

[598] I didn't want to dabble.

[599] Like, stand up when I'm filming, I still do stand up when I'm filming.

[600] filming.

[601] And if I'm doing stand -up, I will think about doing drama, you know, drama and comedy, they're kind of related but different.

[602] So I keep pushing both.

[603] You've got to keep everything, match fit for life.

[604] And that's what I, like marathes, I can drop marathons now.

[605] I just did three marathons.

[606] I just dropped three maraths.

[607] I got home from playing Australia, took the train up to Berwick -upon tweet on the Scottish border, ran up to Dunbar, which is one marathon, ran across to Edinburgh, second marathon.

[608] Are you running a marathon with other people or are you just running it for yourself?

[609] I just get a backpack, put my stuff in there, change of clothes, wash kit, off I go, no backup.

[610] And is this something that started because of the series of marathons that you did?

[611] Yeah, and I want to stay match fit for life.

[612] Because that's what I noticed that everyone's a natural, all animals are natural animals.

[613] And there are the wild animals, which we were, and then there are domesticated animals.

[614] We are self -domesticated.

[615] But we are actually designed to be wild.

[616] We're supposed to be matched fit for life.

[617] And I think, as time goes on, you know, people who get back.

[618] into training or whatever they said oh that really hurts so i backed off i think it hurts because you're not doing it enough i'm not sure if this is pure science this is just a feeling for me maybe that that i need to stay fit and running and swimming and whatever i'm doing and the less i do the more the body punishes me if i'm doing it all the time if i'm always i try and run every morning i almost do this morning but i had to get up and do stuff today but if i miss one then that's kind of good because that's sort of, you know, recovery time.

[619] But I would just do hit training, high -intensity interval training every morning.

[620] And then the ability to just drop three marathons, drop seven marathons and seven days.

[621] You love that.

[622] Yeah.

[623] I love to have that in my back pocket.

[624] And I don't think that's not allowed.

[625] That's not in the list of things you're supposed to have.

[626] But I know I can do it now.

[627] And I can do it with just a backpacker.

[628] Well, you can do it too because you have autonomy.

[629] You can kind of do whatever you want to do, right?

[630] Yeah, in the earning your living when you want to go make the time.

[631] Yeah.

[632] There's also the actual, that's not supposed to be in the list of what is, what humans do.

[633] Right, right.

[634] You don't just go off and run three and three or seven and seven.

[635] And I love that.

[636] That's kind of, that's out there.

[637] Well, there's clearly people that are doing that.

[638] Yeah.

[639] Oh, yeah, everything I've done, everyone, someone's done way more than I've done.

[640] Yeah.

[641] And I kind of know that.

[642] I feel that even if I don't know that for sure.

[643] I have one crazy friend.

[644] His name's Cameron Haynes, and he's actually a famous bow hunter, but he's also an ultramarathon runner.

[645] and when he prepares for these like big foot 200s or it's like 200 plus miles or the moab 240 yeah 238 miles in the desert he runs a marathon a day so run a marathon every day and then he works a full -time job he's legitimately crazy and you know he's he always does that he doesn't take any days off and he works so run a marathon day so he'll run in the more get up really early at dawn really early run in the morning run at lunch running at dawn is beautiful in africa if you can imagine the african i got coming up were you worried by something running up and grabbing you well and that thing I wasn't I mean they told me I supposed to have security I wasn't I was kind of cool that's for people we worry about people do you were around any I was I was in a a mountain zebra national park and you know if you've ever been on a safaris they say see well they tell you to sit in this sort of shower bang big open top vehicle which got metal bars of it and they say the animals they know that the shape of that they know it's metal and metal doesn't taste very good so you'll be fine And there's a guy with a gun, and you feel good.

[646] But when I went there, of course, they said, well, you're running outside near the vehicle.

[647] And I thought, is this right?

[648] It's probably a good television, but I don't, isn't the, okay, I'll just stay close.

[649] And if something's coming.

[650] And they did.

[651] I said, what about how are the lions doing today?

[652] They said, the lions have eaten yesterday, they're fine.

[653] And they told me, you know, and that's what lines, they never go off for snacks.

[654] Lions are kind of organized like that.

[655] We ate yesterday.

[656] We ripped apart some animal.

[657] and we don't need to go and have a bag of Christmas.

[658] So they knew?

[659] They knew where they were and that they were okay.

[660] But they said the buffalo are around, and they can stamp you to death.

[661] I didn't know Buffalo or so.

[662] Black Death, they call them.

[663] Really?

[664] Yeah, they call them Black Death.

[665] They're responsible for so many.

[666] They're not as responsible as hippos.

[667] Hippos are number one, but they fuck a lot of people up, man. They don't take any shit.

[668] If you think about bulls, like when people try to ride bulls, like domestic cow bulls, they're ruthlessly aggressive animals.

[669] I mean, they'll fucking throw you through the air.

[670] Now, think of them, but wild.

[671] And in Africa, and fighting off lions.

[672] And that's African buffaloes.

[673] I mean, they are ferocious animals.

[674] And they're just, I didn't know what I had to do.

[675] I know that with hippos, if you come in between their water source, then they'll just kill you.

[676] They'll fuck you up.

[677] I didn't know what I had to do to buffaloes, whether I had to write to, right to go anywhere near them.

[678] Right to their grandma or.

[679] Yeah, if they find you to be a threat at all, they're just.

[680] so powerful.

[681] They just launch you in the air.

[682] This is a great video that I was watching this morning of a lion that was trying to take out a small buffalo and the other one got behind the lion and launched it through the air.

[683] It was literally flying like 40 feet in the air, like flipping head over heels.

[684] Because the strength of this thing to take a giant cat and just with its head, just whoop and just flies.

[685] That wasn't the one with the crocodile as well, was.

[686] No, no. This was one that was like on the side of a dirt road.

[687] All right.

[688] Have you heard about the crocodile one?

[689] I think it's busy.

[690] Go to Busy Wild on Instagram.

[691] I think that's the, have you heard about the crocodile?

[692] Yes, I saw that one.

[693] Yeah, that's interesting, isn't it?

[694] Because that, I feel the Buffalo there are acting like the local townspeople.

[695] Yes.

[696] And that the, I think the lions are the SS and the crocodile is another Yeah, this is it.

[697] This is the video.

[698] So it looks like the lions attacking this one.

[699] Look at that.

[700] Boom!

[701] Oh, it's actually not nearly as high as I thought it was.

[702] Maybe I'm thinking him another one.

[703] Yeah, that one's pretty good though.

[704] I mean, just to see it do that.

[705] Oh, you know what I'm thinking of?

[706] I'm thinking of relentless enemies.

[707] That's what I'm thinking of.

[708] There's a, there's actually a, um, uh, a documentary about this one particular strain of lion that there was a, apparently the river split sides or the river changed its path and it turned this area into an island.

[709] And the lions had to adapt because the only thing that they could eat was buffalo.

[710] which is very difficult to kill.

[711] You know, usually they're eating antelope and other smaller things that aren't nearly as dangerous.

[712] Right.

[713] So these lions developed and became far larger.

[714] So the female lions are as large as a normal male lion.

[715] And they're hulking, like massive muscles.

[716] And they're just enormous, it's just enormous strain of lion that's exclusively eating buffalo.

[717] And there's a whole documentary.

[718] It's a national geographic documentary, I think.

[719] It's really good.

[720] But it's just incredible to see these things walking around And they look cartoonish They're like the Hulk So it's hard to tell You'd have to compare them to a regular lion But there's some images of these things walking around They just look so much larger Than a regular lion Because they just had to adapt And I would think that if you're running around Like if you're running You gotta think like you're You look like something that's trying to get away Well me running in that park Now I was right next to the green vehicle so the big metal green vehicle was there and they just said stay close so I was one door flip away from I just launched myself into the it was open top so I would have been in that vehicle before they got to me I hope did you hear about that woman from she was an editor on the Game of Thrones and she was in one of those parks and she had a window rolled down and they told her keep your windows rolled up at all times she was trying to take better photographs and the cat reached in and grabbed her and pulled her out of the vehicle and killed her this was last year and then they're they're a dangerous creature yeah and you just out there running with them yeah well i they um yeah this is oh is that a picture of it yeah oh god they have a picture of it happening it was in 2015 oh wasn't really that long yeah just looked it up yeah that seems like it was recently no it's my facts terrible i was fine bro look at that though that is just so awful that they actually caught it on camera Well, she just thought it was, you know, she was safe.

[721] She's in the car.

[722] I've reached in, grabbed her and pulled her out.

[723] Yeah.

[724] You're out there running around.

[725] I would have, there was a guy with a gun next to him.

[726] I hope he's a good shot.

[727] He said he knew how to shoot things.

[728] I know, I played my cards.

[729] Yeah.

[730] Sometimes you play your cards.

[731] Well, it must have been kind of exhilarating, too.

[732] There's something about it, right?

[733] Well, there.

[734] And there was, I was talking to the zebras.

[735] I just I went out because you know obviously they were not dangerous there's a whole lot of non -dangerous ones it was actually the first day and the it was about marathon 10 or 11 or something and I felt you know once you're over the 10 mark and I'd never got there you know if you've done the whole South African thing and failed and people were tweeting about me Eddie is a you know Africa kicked your ass you know you just go in TIA you know this is Africa you're gonna take us on we're a huge fucking constant TIA that's what I said you know this is Africa yeah it's a big Africa Because Africa is...

[736] Did you tell them, hey, man, I was on medication, my fucking rabdo?

[737] No, well, it didn't really matter.

[738] That was just not whining.

[739] So I just had to come back.

[740] And I tried three times to come back.

[741] And then I came back.

[742] Three times?

[743] Yeah, I kept trying.

[744] Can we set the day that?

[745] Can we get back and do the thing?

[746] No, we haven't got enough money to be able to do that.

[747] That won't be able to set up.

[748] And then suddenly, it's on, it's on, it's on.

[749] And I didn't, I couldn't train again.

[750] And so I thought, let's just go, get it done.

[751] And then day five, within hospital.

[752] day six was in hospital as well for how after two -thirds of the marathon on day six had to go to hospital so for what um well it kept what happened uh they my my train my doctor had gone away but my trainer thought um he thought i just didn't look good it was you know 35 38 degrees whatever you know and i'm used to what is that like 1 20 Fahrenheit yeah i'd say 1 10 115 somewhere up there and I was not used to that and so I would have made it I feel but he didn't he felt he wanted me to see an expert so I saw a nephrologist I didn't even know what the word meant but that is nephrologist is a kidney expert I thought that would be a renal expert but no it's a nephrologist and it's very cool black dude and he was there in South Africa and east London it's called it's the city so it's the big place and he's going what are you doing who are you I'm running for Mandela you're what and well I'm doing this thing and okay And he said, it's okay.

[753] We've checked out your kidneys.

[754] You're all right.

[755] Your blood's, it's your hydration.

[756] Hydration is terrible.

[757] So we're going to put three liters into you, and you'll be peeing like a horse all night.

[758] And I didn't pee once.

[759] Wow.

[760] Yeah, that's what you were saying.

[761] You need some hydration.

[762] And after that, it got better, better.

[763] And so day 11, I got into this national park.

[764] So there's no one else there, just me and animals, and this, you know, security people and whatever.

[765] with me and it was kind of beautiful it was just beautiful and that the sun was great a sunset going down there was a rainstorm as well in the middle of it there were wild animals out there I don't know I just felt again this zen weird place of beauty and I'm also knowing I'm getting stronger I'm getting stronger I've gone through the barrier and I also because I'd run four marathons then a day off and then the fifth sixth day I ran two -thirds of a marathon so I'd run four two -thirds marathons in six days, which is not good numbers for your head.

[766] You need five and five, or something in something.

[767] But four and two -thirds marathes, it just didn't work.

[768] And then I ran another marathon, and I said, hang on, I've got to run a marathon and a third and get these numbers matching up.

[769] So I caught up the third marathon, and then it was always, day seven, and I've run six, eight marathons in nine days.

[770] It was always one day behind.

[771] So I thought, last day, I'll do a double marathon.

[772] And that'll be a good climactic end of my South African thing.

[773] What is going on with your mind when you're doing this?

[774] Because you're not listening to any music and you're in this sort of meditative state where you're just left foot, right foot, left foot, right foot.

[775] Breathe in, breathe out.

[776] Yeah, I'm saying it's kind of Zen, but it's not in a kind of like I'm listening to my heartbeat or anything.

[777] It's more like I just feel just some sort of beautiful thing of maybe because that's what we used to be as humans.

[778] So maybe I'm reaching back into some past memory.

[779] We humans just used to be out on the plains and we were looking for honey, wild honey, or berries or some root stuff.

[780] And if we could trap something, we could, you know, I don't know what it is.

[781] I can't quite work out what it is, but I just find it beautiful.

[782] And I do know that you're getting vitamin D in, you're getting stronger from that.

[783] Somebody once read my hand.

[784] I never do the hand palm reading, but I was at a Halloween party and there was a palm reading.

[785] I'll try it.

[786] I'm in a good place.

[787] Let's read my hand.

[788] And I can't remember what she said, except her, you need to get out more.

[789] You need to get outside more.

[790] And I thought, okay, I always felt that I need to be out back doing stuff.

[791] Because when I was a kid, I lived for soccer, for football.

[792] I used to run like a crazy idiot.

[793] I loved that game.

[794] And then from the age of 12, I went to a school that didn't play it, and I never played sports.

[795] This is one of my gifts to myself, accident, I think.

[796] From the age of 12, you know, in your teenage years, your bones are really moving and setting.

[797] And at that time, I was hardly doing anything.

[798] So I think my knees have never gone People say running on the knees My knees have not gone I've got a whole theory about the heel of the foot Which it should never You know you should You know sprinters are always on the toes All running should be on the toes And I think if the heel hits That's what it causes the knees to scroll I could be wrong on this No no that's correct That's not how people are supposed to run That was actually changed by Nike They developed a running shoe with a fat heel And they changed the way people run They change their gait And it's responsible for a lot of injuries.

[799] I think so.

[800] And I notice on horses, if you look for the heel of a horse, it's right up by their bum because the toes, you know, the hoof is the toes.

[801] And then you go all the way up that leg and right by the bum is that's the heel.

[802] It's just an enormously long foot.

[803] And you go, well, that's never going to hit the ground.

[804] And dogs don't it, cats don't do it.

[805] We are the ones that use this heel thing.

[806] Obviously, initially for walking to make us balance when we went from the chimpanzee guerrilla stage.

[807] into the, you know, we need to advance.

[808] Yeah, but even then, I mean, most people, if you just give them, if they're barefoot, like children, for example, like one of the things that I was reading this book about barefoot running and how important it is to develop this, and that most people that have problems from that, they're really having problems because their feet don't have strong muscles in them because of the atrophy.

[809] And the way they were describing a regular running shoes is essentially like a cast, and that you're so used to being protected in this cast that everything sort of just gets mushy.

[810] Inside of it and then you're also striking down on the heel, which is a very unnatural thing and when I watch my kids run like my kids will run with me sometimes and they naturally know to run on the balls of their feet.

[811] That's how they naturally run.

[812] And when people start running heel first, that's where all the problems come.

[813] It's just not a normal way for people to run.

[814] Yeah.

[815] And I was also initially in South Africa running on certain road services where they just dropped instead of doing a tarmacadam kind of covering, they had just put rocks, obviously some Lorry had come along, this truck had just dropped rocks out of the back to sort of hold together the mud in the rainy times.

[816] And very uneven surface, very hard of the foot.

[817] And I was doing these very thin, sold running in very thin sold shoes.

[818] What kind of shoes are you running with?

[819] Well, I kept changing them now.

[820] So I, but there were the Vibromes and then there were Vivo barefoot ones.

[821] Oh, so you were running in barefoot?

[822] Are we running marathons and barefoot shoes?

[823] Well, initially I was.

[824] And then my trainer, it just got so hard that my train said, look, you're going to wear these, and then I left it to them to choose my physio, and who's Olympic level.

[825] So he said, right, these are going to be better for that.

[826] I prefer you not to be in these.

[827] So I said, okay, you tell me what shoes to wear.

[828] I'll take care of running the maritans.

[829] But I do remember seeing little South African children running on the roads next to me where they're calling, hey, we'll run with you.

[830] And they had completely nothing on their feet, and they could deal with these sharp rocks.

[831] I thought were really sharp.

[832] I was every few steps were going, whoa, ow, ow, ow.

[833] And they were just, yeah, and they were just, they had, they were laughing and running along.

[834] Because their feet had built up like in this very, this very high South Africa, yeah.

[835] This is a weird wife to us?

[836] No, it's kind of fun because I go right back there.

[837] I ran with flags.

[838] That's a beautiful thing.

[839] And I was running in the Eastern Cape and they're looking at a white guy.

[840] It's a white guy doing that.

[841] And this is very rural area.

[842] So I learned to say, Molo.

[843] Molo.

[844] That was in the African National Park.

[845] That was the rain.

[846] That was the day where the rainstorm happened.

[847] You could see the thunder and lightning.

[848] That's the truck there.

[849] On the left, you can see the thing.

[850] And this guy just turned up out of the blue to track me down.

[851] What did you give you?

[852] I just gave me a letter saying, thank you for doing stuff.

[853] But if I ran with the flag and I said molo to people, and I led to say, how are you?

[854] And in Cusa.

[855] This guy seems like he's wearing women's clothes as well.

[856] Yes, he's wearing a skirt, and I think he's a transgender guy with less hair than me. Yeah, he's bald, but he's a transgender guy.

[857] Now, do you take hormones or anything?

[858] No, not the moment, but I could.

[859] I could transition, but then I've also got these boy genetics going on in me. I really think it's genes.

[860] I think they're going to find out how it works, but I can't prove that at the moment.

[861] But if I transition over, then I'll just be on the other side of this kind of fence that we give ourselves.

[862] And I've decided, okay, I'm gender fluid.

[863] I'm just going to have, like a superhero, boy mode and girls.

[864] mode like the human torch can go flame on flame off so I'm going when do you just do you decide some days today I can I can but I tend to uh do sort of block periods now but when I campaign I'm in girl mode but I'm doing films dramatic films I'm in boy mode unless I play the transgender do you have to think about it not really no but it's easier for me to be in girl mode because then if I can if if I can deal with that you know some people stare at you and and and I I have a confidence now.

[865] I carry myself with a certain confidence.

[866] They go, oh, he seems to be quite confident, so I'll just relax about that.

[867] And I can actually, I can control other people's embarrassment because if they don't know what to do, I'd say, hi, how are you?

[868] Can I have a cup of tea?

[869] Oh, yeah, well, we sell tea.

[870] Oh, no, that's why you're here.

[871] Oh, right, okay.

[872] So I can just relax people by just chatting to them.

[873] And then boy mode's quite easy for me to do because I just go boy mode.

[874] And I scrub up quite well in boy mode.

[875] Do you, have you, but you've given thought to transitioning?

[876] Yep, yeah, yeah.

[877] But, you know, part of me wants to be Steve McQueen in The Great Escape, and part of me wants to be Elizabeth Taylor in looking like at her in a cat and a hot tin roof.

[878] Who was afraid of Virginia Woolf?

[879] No, cat in a hot tin roof, more like, which I just saw on the plane yesterday.

[880] Oh, okay.

[881] So these are the two looks that go between and are going, well, I kind of both of them.

[882] And as a kid, I thought, you know, can't I look more like Clint, Steve McQueen?

[883] because I kind of fascinated by Steve McQueen and what he went through to get to where he was and he was so driven I don't know if you know about this Steve McQueen's story but you know that he was in a film with Paul Newman and he was like 93rd on the list of credits somewhere up there likes me if you watch it you can see him there's a knife fight between Paul Neum and Steve McQueen and he's like a heavy you know a young thug kind of heavy guy but he's just a small player and then the second of film he's in with him is Taring Inferno where they are equal billing and I think Paul Newman is first and Steve McQueen is higher if you look at if you look at the names on the poster Paul Newman comes in from the left so he's name is first and Steve McQueen is on the right but higher than Paul Newman that's how they got that equal billing you know how do you put equal billing if you're gonna start from the look reading from the left right but and if you remember the film they come out as two guys you say yeah they're both decent guys yeah these are both heroes yeah that's a funny thing with actors right billing yeah they want they want to make sure that their name is read first well that's that's i mean you've got to have egos to do these things i mean so many things need an ego to do them yeah and then hopefully you can switch dial your ego down when you come off stage some people can't do that um when it comes to billing ste if you know about steve mclean and his mom was a sort of sometime prostitute and had men in and out the house and his dad was just never there and he found himself through a boys a boys retreat you know because he was breaking the law and they sent him off to this place and then they told him to talk these kids out of train wild horses and that was one of the first things he did and he was just so ambitious and then and with your brunner in in magnetism seven because you know if you know that film at the beginning.

[884] He's got Yul Bryn, do you know that film well?

[885] I don't remember it.

[886] Well, it's, it's, it's, a great film.

[887] So it's got Yul Brinner with his coloring and, but no hair, but such an amazing look.

[888] And Steve McQueen at the beginning, they go up to Boothill to bury this Indian guy up at Boothill, and people are not allowing it.

[889] There's racism in the town.

[890] And they both go up and they ride shotgun, again, two heroes.

[891] But he was, he was, Yul Brinner was the top guy.

[892] And apparently, Steve McKeel, you see what you, you, he's, you You see what Brunner's doing?

[893] You see what his caravan is, man. God, he's got all this stuff here.

[894] And he just wanted to be the top guy.

[895] Yeah.

[896] And he got that.

[897] And it's a beautiful story.

[898] It doesn't end brilliantly.

[899] But, you know, bullet is great.

[900] Great escape is great.

[901] Yeah, he was a fascinating guy, Steve McQueen.

[902] He became a race car driver.

[903] Like serious race car driver.

[904] Yeah, now he came second in the one before.

[905] There's a documentary on Le Mans, Le Mans, the Mores, the 24 -Rourne.

[906] hour race and he did a race in America which was I think was a 12 hour race and they came second with a broken foot he did it you know and he was just he's kind of a force of nature but he would also do crazy things I mean really crazy things which is just not well he died fairly young too 50 he died cancer he was smoking and drinking yeah I don't know what it was you know we still don't know why people get cancer my mom died when I when I was six and she was a nurse and never smoked and she died of bowel cancer.

[907] I mean, what is that?

[908] Nothing makes sense if you, unless you put in random into the world, that's my theory of the universe.

[909] It's a good theory.

[910] Yeah, if you put random in, it makes sense.

[911] After 13 .5 billion years, we've had about 300 years since the Enlightenment, and I just think we're lucky enough to be here.

[912] We've had five great extinctions, and we could have a six, or we could look after ourselves, and treat us of people as you'd like to be treated yourself, that great rule.

[913] do unto others as you'd have done to you and that if we did if we all did that tomorrow the world would all work yeah just how do we do that how do we get that going well it's better than it was yes it's better than it was even though it seems kind of hellish if anyone's pissed off with politics at the moment track yourself back if you're going to look at politics from any time back in history it's always been hell it's always been rubbish it's always been all over the place And I think transparency as opposed to opacity, if that's the word, you know, the more transparent things are, the more you can check, hey, that guy's lying about that.

[914] If we could work out what's a lie and what's not a lie, that would be really nice.

[915] I don't know if we could have lie detectors on all the time.

[916] I think it's going to be mind reading.

[917] Mind reading.

[918] I really think that we're going to have technology within the next 50 years that allows people to different.

[919] Definitively understand whether or not someone's being honest that would it would make it.

[920] I'm sure someone could get a bad side of that But you think up front you think there's a lot of good stuff on that yeah someone could say this is going to happen though I want this to happen a lot of people scams are going to fall apart Yeah, what do you call them Ponzi schemes?

[921] Yeah, Ponzi schemes.

[922] Yeah, a lot of that's going to fall apart.

[923] Why they call Ponzi schemes?

[924] Was a guy called Mr. Ponzi?

[925] Yeah, I think so I think so I think you can there's like a there's a bunch of those little terms like Fagasy Jeff Ponzi I think Fagasy is one that people use for fake.

[926] It was, there was a limousine company that was writing bad checks.

[927] Fagasy limousine service and it became like a thing on the East Coast where, oh, this guy's a, he's a Fagasy cop.

[928] It means you're a fake cop.

[929] Yeah.

[930] Yeah, Fagasy became a big word.

[931] Charles Ponzi.

[932] Yeah, look that.

[933] Jeff Ponzi.

[934] Look at him.

[935] He looks happy.

[936] 1920.

[937] He's about to leap over his own walking club.

[938] The roaring 20s, just ripping people off.

[939] Do we tell people, as you're listening, please look up Charles Ponzi.

[940] on Wikipedia.

[941] yeah.

[942] So that's it.

[943] And how did he die?

[944] Did he explode?

[945] Hopefully he exploded.

[946] Get hit by a meteor.

[947] It'd be nice.

[948] So you are running for something now?

[949] What are you doing?

[950] I'm going to go.

[951] I've said that for nine years, quite consistently, I would like to say that I was going to run in 2020.

[952] We had set terms in our, in our politics, like you always had.

[953] You've had a four year.

[954] We arranged it into a five year, but then we've gone back to, the old system, which is where the prime minister of the country can choose when they have an election and it can be anywhere up to a day, you know, the next day after the election or up to five years later.

[955] So we have no idea.

[956] Really?

[957] So a prime minister can decide, you know what, we'll have another election in two weeks.

[958] Yeah, and they wouldn't do that for them.

[959] But, you know, like we had a general election in 15, 2015.

[960] And then in 2017, having been in for only two years, Theresa May was persuaded that if you go for election, you're going to now you're going to win big.

[961] You're going to win tons of extra seats and then we'll be able to do whatever we want.

[962] But, in fact, they lost seats in their election.

[963] So, you know, sometimes they grab it.

[964] Sometimes you go in the fourth.

[965] There's a traditional thing of going in the fourth year because if you've got all the economics going and everything's pretty good, okay, let's go now.

[966] We've got a fourth year.

[967] We've got a year to spare, but let's go in the fourth year and we can, because we know we're in a good place.

[968] And then you have to allow, I think, six weeks for an election campaign.

[969] But, yeah, we do that.

[970] I think other countries do that, but I'm sure to America, you go, that sounds crazy.

[971] But anyway, that's what we've been doing for some time.

[972] What are you going to run for?

[973] A member of parliament for some constituency, hopefully in England, would be my thing, as opposed to United Kingdom, because there's Wales and Scotland.

[974] Is this a step?

[975] Are you going to move further along the line?

[976] Are you going to eventually?

[977] No, that would be.

[978] Once I stand for an MP, then I would, Glenda Jackson, I don't know if you know, Glenda Jackson, but she did this.

[979] Well, Arnold Schwarzenegger, you know about him, because he went away, and then.

[980] came back to the creative work that he was doing to doing films, but he went away for seven years.

[981] So I will go away for a period of time and put my career to hibernation.

[982] And just do politics.

[983] Just do politics.

[984] But you have a set period of time where you're going to do this and then afterwards you're going to retire?

[985] No, I would do it.

[986] No set period of time.

[987] I just going to go off and work as long as I can, as far as I can.

[988] And then I come back when I choose to come back.

[989] So no stand up, no nothing during that time?

[990] You could do stand up if you're raising money, charity if I'm raising money for the Labor Party or my party.

[991] I think that would be allowable.

[992] I think my constituency members wouldn't mind that if I was raising money for constituency.

[993] But if I was just doing it for myself, well, you can write books.

[994] You'd like to write books and articles.

[995] It's all a bit hazy, but I'm not sure if you have the same system.

[996] We have a similar system.

[997] My friend Doug Stanhope was running for president briefly kind of as a lark and realized that he really couldn't do stand -up because if he did stand -up he would have to allow equal time for everyone else who wanted to perform who also had some like his stand -up performances were then thought of as political campaign performances something along those lines it was like some weird bullshit that he was going to have to navigate that he decided to just get back out of it yeah but he was bullshitting the entire time really was just doing it for fun no i'm gonna do it i'm gonna go in I think a lot of moderate people don't go in.

[998] I consider myself a radical moderate.

[999] I do radical things with a moderate message.

[1000] And they're already done a number of things like that in my life.

[1001] So I'm just going to take that in.

[1002] What's your goal?

[1003] My goal is to try and encourage my country and the world to go in a positive direction.

[1004] I think I've been saying this politically that I think this is our last century on Earth or it's our first century on Earth.

[1005] I think the next 80 years is for everything.

[1006] We're going to choose everything here.

[1007] We're either going to wipe ourselves off the planet.

[1008] or we're going to make it a fair world for 7 .5 billion people where you have a right to have a fair world enough democracy and transparency, enough money to live a life to have a family, not everyone, not billions of people living on $1 a day or $2 a day.

[1009] So I think we need to get to there because then immigration rises its head, your country, my country, every country in the world, and that's all people moving around because they haven't got enough money to live on or they haven't got enough security because there's a war, civil war.

[1010] and if we could get beyond that, then a lot of those problems drop away.

[1011] So, but, and going into politics and talking about a global vision of the future and whatever is a slightly, it's a very difficult thing to do because people are going to say, oh, you've just asked for that.

[1012] How is that helping this global vision?

[1013] But I just thought, we seem to be trying 1930s politics again in political areas.

[1014] So I thought, well, I'm going to, I'm going to look for a positive vision of the future.

[1015] And I know when I came out as transgender in 85, There was no way I could imagine anything.

[1016] I didn't know where it was going to go.

[1017] I just thought I need to go out there, need to argue, or discuss at least, try and set up a positive image version, you know, because I'm not sure what age you are, but I think it was 51.

[1018] So, you know, I'm 57.

[1019] So remember in the earlier years of our lives, it was just so out there, transgender.

[1020] You need to talk about it.

[1021] Right.

[1022] There were gay and lesbian people out, but transgender was like some crazy out there place.

[1023] What the hell are you on about?

[1024] And that was when I came out in the middle of that.

[1025] And it wasn't an easy thing.

[1026] But I just thought, if I'm not going to do special forces, I'll do this civilian special forces.

[1027] That is a hilarious group of choices.

[1028] Special forces or transgender.

[1029] Well, I did the civilian special forces.

[1030] And then I had to fight on the streets and argue people and be, and it's all mental, isn't it?

[1031] Right.

[1032] If you're in a, isn't any way the same because people are shooting bullets at union, and people are dying and getting blown up.

[1033] So I know there's a massive difference there.

[1034] But everything in the end is psychological.

[1035] And if I wasn't going to do that, I was going to try and do this.

[1036] And I would take risks in these areas of, you know, I'll go out and people say things in the street, whatever they do and do that.

[1037] And then I'll run the math.

[1038] So you were going out knowing that you might have to be in an altercation?

[1039] Yeah.

[1040] I was sure that was going to happen.

[1041] Teenagers are the hardest.

[1042] They just point and scream at you.

[1043] Yeah, they're little assholes.

[1044] Teenage boys, they scare the shit on me. My friend Eric said, my friend Eric Crisp, he said it to me once.

[1045] He's like, you know, because he was dealing with some teenage boys in his hometown.

[1046] And he was like, the teenage boys are the most fucking dangerous animals on the planet.

[1047] Because they have all this testosterone.

[1048] No one's really giving them any guidance yet.

[1049] They're sort of just out there wild.

[1050] And they're trying to outdo each other, one up each other.

[1051] Yeah.

[1052] You know, and then they're cruel.

[1053] They're cruel.

[1054] And they also are insecure.

[1055] And so one of the ways to combat that insecurity is to try to make someone else feel like shit.

[1056] It's like some weird natural instinct that people have.

[1057] Well, that is, that's what gossip is, hatred.

[1058] Hossop is mild hatred.

[1059] And gossip when you say so and so, they're less, that you lower their stand, you lower their respect or their value or whatever by saying something.

[1060] Or you can do it as an action.

[1061] And in doing so, you raise your own.

[1062] Yes.

[1063] By saying, at least we're not them, because they are a shithead.

[1064] Sure.

[1065] less than us and that is a that has gone on since the the dawn of time unfortunately well that's what you see the social currency of today's like shame climate like shaming people for this or that or attacking people for whatever various things they're doing trying to get public shame against people especially people that haven't really done anything wrong what they're doing is they're trying to do that to elevate themselves and they see someone in the public eye see someone who's famous or rich and they're saying that person's a fucking loser and they're you know a sports figures and a perfect example you know like some super athlete and they drop a ball you fucking loser you know and they're they're doing this to sort of maximize this sort of this like this downfall this if they see anything that's going wrong with that person's life and if they can accentuate that and pump it up it somehow or another they think it elevates them it actually is the opposite it's terrible for them it's terrible for everybody but they have this natural instinct this competitive instinct to push down the person they think is elevated too high.

[1066] Well, I think it leads it to the trolling thing online, that if you can do it from behind a firewall of no one knows who I am.

[1067] Oh, yeah.

[1068] And I remember there was something.

[1069] We have banknotes, like you have banknotes.

[1070] They had a woman on the back of one of our banknotes, the Queen's pictures on the front.

[1071] And then they changed it up every few years, and they took the woman who was on the back of it.

[1072] I think it was a 10 -pound note or something.

[1073] They took her off and they changed it.

[1074] And then there was this campaign.

[1075] We need to get a woman on the back of another different note.

[1076] If it's not going to be that.

[1077] And two people trolled this, I think, two women saying you should die.

[1078] You should be raped.

[1079] I mean, hellish stuff.

[1080] One of them turned out to be a woman who was actually attacking another woman.

[1081] And you think, what's going on in your head?

[1082] Where's that coming from?

[1083] But behind this firewall, you can go to any place of.

[1084] Well, it's almost like they don't think that a person that they're attacking online is an actual person.

[1085] They're not getting the social cues from them.

[1086] They're not looking at them in their eye.

[1087] I just think it's a piss -poor way to communicate with people.

[1088] I don't do any communicating with people online.

[1089] I don't go backing forth with people on Twitter.

[1090] I don't do the back -and -forth.

[1091] I don't comment on things.

[1092] I don't know anything.

[1093] I talk so fucking much as it is doing this.

[1094] I'm like, I've said enough.

[1095] If you don't know how I feel about things, Jesus Christ, if you listen to this goddamn podcast, that's me. I don't need to comment on other shit.

[1096] I definitely don't need to comment in text.

[1097] form back and forth with the person and try to explain myself or it's not it's not there's no benefit in it i used to when i was doing stand -up in the clubs and people might shout out fuck oh you're awesome you know from the front and i thought well you're drunk you're an idiot whatever i don't care and i would not think that person really knows what they're talking about so i wouldn't go into a thing i would try and destroy them with you know you know you know put darts and stuff yeah but that's what's happening online if someone's coming to you and i used to not worry about them before and suddenly i was worried about them and I thought no actually I'm not worried about it's it just literally like thousands and millions of hecklers yeah it's really what it is it's a heckling thing somebody I came up the last what I did was somebody I said something and someone said Eddie is a fuck you and I wrote back no fuck you I just thought it was a very witty response that's like five year olds that's what they say yeah you're a loser he just exactly he was the loser and I was the loser and I then I disconnect.

[1098] It's so stupid.

[1099] You never really feel good about it.

[1100] Even if you get a real good zinger on somebody, you're just like, what am I doing with my life?

[1101] Yeah, there was, uh, yeah, my dad's bigger than your dad thing.

[1102] Yeah.

[1103] That's what's going on.

[1104] And my dad wasn't terribly tall, so I could never use that.

[1105] What did it matter?

[1106] Yeah, and does that really work for him?

[1107] No, he keeps bumping into storeways when he goes, he's much too tall, my dad.

[1108] Anyway.

[1109] So you're, you guys are dealing with Brexit, right?

[1110] yeah we've got a how's that change the climate of england well it's made it's made it very um kind of like what's happening over here you know it's all gone polarized um like with the build the wall stuff yeah yeah and it's it's one side of the other and there's no one in the middle in a way if if you look at secession and uh um american civil war that was bound to happen at some time if you go back to the constitution and 17 was it 1787 that was supposed to happen and I think once you've European Union no one's ever tried from countries that have hundreds of years of history to choose to try and learn to live together work together some shape or form this tricky thing we're trying to do it's the hardest thing politically that's ever been done in the history of the world and I think and that's because I'm saying the American model with Native American lands and rolling over manifest destiny is a different model it's a different way of things happen it's a different time as well Yeah, a different time, and Native Americans didn't have this idea of, oh, we mark this off and we've registered this land.

[1111] So the idea that people learning to work together is tricky.

[1112] At some point, someone was going to say, I think we'd like to change this or we'd like to move out.

[1113] So this fight was bound to happen.

[1114] And so it's very toxic.

[1115] It's, I'm not getting too right at the center of it, because you could just, you know, probably like you have on your news broadcasts, you can listen to people talking hours and hours and hours and what do you think about?

[1116] What do you think about?

[1117] And it doesn't seem to get anywhere.

[1118] So I've worked out what my worldview is, this view that everyone's got to have a fair chance in life.

[1119] I know that automation is happening right now.

[1120] So there's going to be a whole load of people who won't be able to get jobs because the unskilled labor force, their job is going to get automated.

[1121] That's going to get tricky.

[1122] so the universal wage is probably going to have to come in the idea universal basic income yeah universal basic income which everyone's going to have to get and it's not going to be a negative thing it's going to be something okay then you can go off and you can retrain or you could live your life and then there's artificial intelligence parity by 2050 next 30 years and that's what does that mean we can't even work out what that means I think it's going to get harder before it gets easier and so I'm going to just I always do the long game I always do the long game so you know I came out and back in 85 and I just thought well hopefully it'll get better over time and now this will run up in 2019 and it's definitely better than that was but it can go backwards forwards forwards back but I just I'm going to try and shoot for that and the the everyone have a fair chance in life and as to Brexit where that goes well they you know positive negative you know I'm against it so I was just going to find out I don't need to think about whether I'm against it I just know that I want the younger people are coming online to vote now, they're old enough to vote, and they, 78 % of them want to be part of Europe and the older people who are passing away, probably 78 % of them wanted to be out of Europe and go back to me. So it's a fear of immigration, fear of...

[1123] Well, there's a thing.

[1124] We have to be brave and curious rather than fearful and suspicious.

[1125] And these are the two ways I think people can go.

[1126] If we're brave enough, we can be curious and say, hi, how are you?

[1127] Where are you from?

[1128] And what do you do?

[1129] Can we learn from you?

[1130] Can you learn from us?

[1131] I think that is the way for humanity to go forward or you could be fearful and suspicious well hang on no back off outside don't i don't want to talk to you i don't want to know about you and that's the fearful and suspicious way and um i think we have to be brave and curious uh otherwise we're not going to make it so for for us in america what you're essentially dealing with a bunch of different countries that speak a bunch of different languages whereas we're dealing with a bunch of different states that speak the same language but it's kind of doesn't make any difference yeah that's interesting because i thought if everyone could get the hang because english has become a lingual franca for the world hasn't made much difference and america shows you can be completely at loggerheads whether you're saying the same words or not i think if you're not saying the same words it's easier for people to say who are these people we hate them because they can't understand a single word they're saying that's easier but yeah it's an easier way to be xenophobic slash racist on it and i've always said a xenophobia is just a racist with a xylophone um which is my joke which i got to you somewhere in a political situation um but it doesn't seem to make the big difference in the end.

[1132] We have enough ways of translating and stuff.

[1133] And most people in most countries now can reach for English if they need to.

[1134] You know, like some people, I think Putin will always speak in Russian.

[1135] Any leader of a country will probably use their own language first, talk to their own country people first, and then they might throw in something in English or in an interview.

[1136] But we can work out from vibe, you know, where most people are standing, coming in so uh well i think that we're probably pretty close to some form of viable translation technology like you know google had these uh google earbuds yeah you can do it on the google app without even the earbuds if you go to google translate and you hit the microphone on there you can just say hello good afternoon with it and you can if it's on the french button i'll come out in french so you i haven't done it in the field i would like to get out to somewhere out in the sticks and actually I should test of that I'll make better the Google earbuds I think the idea is that like if you were talking to me in French it would translate it instantaneously to English you know it's probably a beta version of it now or like a clunky version of it but ultimately we're going to have something that allows you to do that there's also Google lens you could I use that when I was traveling or you could take the the camera and you look at it and it translates yeah I've done language into that's on Google translate yeah amazing so the Google Translate verbal one at the moment does line by line.

[1137] So you have to say a line, receive a line.

[1138] Yeah.

[1139] I mean, just think about what technologies existed 20 years ago and how much more advanced they are now and then add that to translation and that exponential increase.

[1140] It's probably going to, we're probably going to lose a lot of these barriers of misunderstanding.

[1141] It is interesting.

[1142] I do think we have created some amazing positive things going forward and we tend to bank them and then we don't get a hit off.

[1143] Wow, we've got that now.

[1144] Yeah.

[1145] Like, we can make coffee quite easily.

[1146] We could do the grinding of coffee beans, but then we just go, okay, and then we'll find something else to piss us off.

[1147] Right.

[1148] So trying to keep ourselves happy, because when we're happy enough, and it's usually economics, when people are happy enough, there's less racism, less immigration problems, there's less, everything's less.

[1149] And when everyone's running out of money, they get pissed off, totally understandably, but we need to make the economy of the world work, and then it would be an easier place.

[1150] How do we do that?

[1151] How do you make the economy of the world work?

[1152] Yeah, no, yes, that's an easy line to say and it's very difficult to work it out.

[1153] But I do think as you gradually learn to live together, work together, as we gradually come together, I mean, it's like in the European Union, say in America, if certain parts of America or European Union are having a tough time, then money goes to those places having a tough time to try and get them back on their feet so that they can come back in and start making enough money to be able to help other parts.

[1154] And that's the idea.

[1155] And that's logically a model that should be able to work in the world.

[1156] as we head towards it because, you know, we know that wars are terribly expensive and a lot of people die there doesn't seem to get anywhere.

[1157] Surely we should have learned this as we go back.

[1158] So wars of conquest, I don't think they're going to happen anymore.

[1159] Quite like, you know, the idea, we're going to invade this thing, like the old empire stuff.

[1160] Yes.

[1161] Which I think the Nazis did the last version of that.

[1162] From wars of conquest are now being replaced by wars of defense.

[1163] Wars of defense or wars that are hidden behind things.

[1164] You know, under some other auspices.

[1165] Pretence.

[1166] We need to, we've come in to defend these people, but they didn't need defense.

[1167] What was Grenada about?

[1168] And still don't know what Reagan was doing in Grenada.

[1169] We've got to go ahead.

[1170] Attempts to Controlled Natural Resources.

[1171] Oh, is it?

[1172] Yeah.

[1173] Well, I think that's what a lot of these are.

[1174] Yeah.

[1175] And, you know, and then it's economic wars, as opposed to.

[1176] And then stopping terrorism in his tracks and trying to keep these radical terrorists from taking over certain countries and strongholds, but we really haven't done a good job of that.

[1177] And then it's political will you need to do that.

[1178] And then people in their countries, understandably, don't like people dying abroad.

[1179] And then, you know, wars of defense, do they, I wonder whether that's going to happen.

[1180] You know, there's a thing called right to defend, the idea that countries that are better set up should be able to go in or should be willing to go in and defend people having a really tough time and try to get the politics to work on that, you know, if someone is menacing this year when Hitler was menacing within his own country, no one did anything like.

[1181] When Stalin was menacing in its own country, no one, you know, because about 30 million died under Stalin, but no one went in.

[1182] No one said, hey, we got a whistleblowing, time to go in and help.

[1183] You just, we didn't go in.

[1184] Well, we don't even go in for North Korea.

[1185] I mean, we're in this weird position with North Korea.

[1186] We have this military dictator who's clearly oppressing his entire nation.

[1187] And this strange to see in 2019, the limited internet, I mean, they have like an intranet.

[1188] They have like their own version of the internet where they have a few websites that you could visit.

[1189] Yeah.

[1190] They've got everybody locked down and extreme poverty, extreme hunger.

[1191] Like the ones that have escaped from North Korea.

[1192] I mean, they've had these soldiers and they're malnourished.

[1193] They have parasites.

[1194] It's an awful, awful condition.

[1195] It's happening right now.

[1196] And if you see when North Korea does military maneuvers, It looks like the Nazis.

[1197] And you thought, well, that Nazi thing, well, you know, I don't like the Nazis at all.

[1198] But how do they get all these people doing that?

[1199] You say, oh, the North Korea could do it.

[1200] Well, hang on.

[1201] This is just a thing.

[1202] If you spend all your time just marching up and down, you can make that happen.

[1203] And Lenny Riefenstahl can go and film it with low angles and make it look dramatic.

[1204] Make it look fearsome.

[1205] Yeah.

[1206] But we're better off globally than we were during World War II, right?

[1207] The world is better off.

[1208] And the world is better off in the Western world.

[1209] It's more progressive and more open -minded since you came out in 1985 versus in 2019 where we're sitting here today.

[1210] Yeah.

[1211] It's a different world.

[1212] It's a different environment.

[1213] That's why I'm a glass is two -thirds forward.

[1214] I do think we are in a better place.

[1215] There is more tolerance.

[1216] It does go, you know, a few steps forward, one step back.

[1217] Always, always.

[1218] You're always going to have Charlottesville.

[1219] There's Nazi rallies.

[1220] You're always going to have like weird pockets of racism and where you're like, I can't fucking believe this is still happening.

[1221] You're going to have a little of those setbacks.

[1222] I don't know.

[1223] There was something like in Germany, something like 10 ,000 people were wanting to vote for the Nazi party, or maybe it's more, but you know, that's a country of 80 million.

[1224] So let's get the perspectives right.

[1225] If certain things happen and they're on television, you go, whoa.

[1226] And that's obviously why they do them to create an outrage, get on television.

[1227] And you go, wow, it's all over.

[1228] It's happening everywhere.

[1229] Oh, well, no, it's in this small place.

[1230] Yeah.

[1231] Yeah.

[1232] I mean, sometimes, well, the beautiful things.

[1233] that human beings can do.

[1234] It's stunning.

[1235] We, you know, we can, we, so many stories of just amazing things that humans do.

[1236] And then you put the horrible things that we can do, that goes on forever.

[1237] Yeah.

[1238] If there was a God, I don't believe in a God, but if he did come down, he says, what if you guys do?

[1239] Who are these bastards?

[1240] And you guys, well done, you guys, but who are these bad?

[1241] Well, I don't, you know.

[1242] Well, they've always said the Lord works in mysterious ways.

[1243] So, look at the world.

[1244] I know.

[1245] That's, fucking mysterious.

[1246] Yeah.

[1247] Maybe it's evidence they're correct.

[1248] I think World War II was a test for God, because 60 million people died and at some point we were thinking okay how many people need to die before you come and blow a whistle and you say whoa what's the guy with moustache doing let's get him off the board flick him off the board that was my test for for god and he didn't come so i think it's up to us kids well he didn't come when we mean what they did the nazis did was obviously horrific but what we did when we dropped nuclear bombs on hiroshima and nagasaki that's pretty fucking horrific as well no intervention whatsoever from the big guy no no he didn't come in i mean he didn't catch the bomb mid -air going, hey, there's kids down there, there's women down there, these are not soldiers, this is the city.

[1249] I need to say this, and I know I'm not taking the, from the, the Japanese, I thought the Nazis were fanatics, but the Japanese at that time took it even more fanatical.

[1250] You know when the last Japanese soldier surrendered?

[1251] You know what year that was?

[1252] It's like 1980 or something.

[1253] 75, I think it is.

[1254] I think it is.

[1255] I think that one you can Google.

[1256] He was on an island.

[1257] I mean, how fanatical do you need?

[1258] Oh, that committed.

[1259] Still 1975.

[1260] 74 or 75 says, yeah, okay, I give up.

[1261] Well, they have an amazing warrior culture.

[1262] I mean, you think we were talking about martial arts, a giant percentage, including judo and jujitsu, of martial arts, came from this one island.

[1263] I mean, they perfected so many different martial arts.

[1264] And it's more the Japanese than any other country in Indonesia.

[1265] Well, I mean, they, I think the ties did it best.

[1266] I think the ties developed the best striking style, and then the Japanese developed the best grappling style.

[1267] But the Japanese are known as more warlike than the ties.

[1268] You never hear of the tie or did they used to in it?

[1269] The ties figured out the best way to gamble on fights.

[1270] They figured out the best most brutal style of fight and that is they incorporated a lot of things that other people didn't with including like leg kicks and knees and elbows and and they fought really often.

[1271] Like they would have these like to this day they have Lumpini Stadium and all these different stadiums in Bangkok.

[1272] They have these stadium champions and they have matches on a consistent basis.

[1273] And so these people are fighting from the time they're really, really young.

[1274] Like they're taking like six and seven year old boys and they're in girls as well.

[1275] And they're sending them off to these Thai camps and teaching them how to fight and then having them fight, you know, they'll have a hundred fights by the time they're 16.

[1276] Wow.

[1277] Yeah.

[1278] With Thailand, it's very strange because they're so friendly they're so smiley and friendly yet they had they developed probably the most fearsome striking style on the planet yeah i can't and then they've got uh there's a transgender thing going on as well they've got a lot of that going on they've they've they've in the um ven diagrams of what's going on there that's crossing what is intersecting here so much great food i mean they have so much cool shit the beautiful environment it's a weird place man Thailand's a weird place i love it do they feel apocalypse now that I think they did, was that in Vietnam?

[1279] No, because it was obviously set in Thailand, but I think they did some of it in Vietnam.

[1280] No, they did nothing in Vietnam.

[1281] It was too close to dates wise, you know.

[1282] Was it Thailand?

[1283] I bet.

[1284] I mean, it took fucking forever.

[1285] It makes sense.

[1286] Oh, no, that's right.

[1287] It was Marcos, yeah.

[1288] Because they, because Marcos kept saying, you know, I want the aircraft back.

[1289] I want the helicopters back, so the helicopters are coming and then they piss off somewhere.

[1290] Isn't it funny when Marcos, when you, that whole regime went.

[1291] down all we heard about was Mel de Marcos shoes yes I remember the whole thing that the beetles had a bad time there because they were invited to a place that they didn't know about and oh right everybody got mad at them yeah and that's when they last toured that was it and they were in the back of a truck they're holding on a literally the back of a truck going okay we're not going to why are we playing all these places you know that's when they started getting a hold of they're going to do what we want to do rather than what someone else was so I mean I'm with you in that I am ridiculously optimistic.

[1292] I think that, I think people, I mean, I follow Stephen Pinker's logic of, that people will sort of look at the horrible things that we have today and say, God, this world is terrible.

[1293] Now, there are definitely terrible aspects, but this is without doubt the greatest time ever to be alive that we've ever seen, at least in recorded human history.

[1294] I would agree with that.

[1295] I think communication is a giant part of that.

[1296] It is.

[1297] This is this global world, which we thought it's going to be beautiful thing.

[1298] And then people said, oh, no, it's a hellish thing.

[1299] In fact, it's got beautiful aspects and some hellish aspects, as any invention has.

[1300] You know, like the internet, hey, you can teach someone how to save their life on the internet.

[1301] Ah, you can also teach people how to make a bomb on the internet.

[1302] You know, so I think this is always the way.

[1303] Every next step we get, we will have some positives.

[1304] Then we'll hit all the negatives.

[1305] And then we'll go back to some more positive.

[1306] So, yeah, I've got to be.

[1307] optimistic.

[1308] Yeah, well, I am an optimistic person.

[1309] Otherwise, it just wouldn't be here.

[1310] But this military aspect that I mentioned, I'm flipping back to that.

[1311] But yeah, I do try and think I need to do this.

[1312] I think that's a good thing to do.

[1313] Now I need to do that.

[1314] For 10, nine years I've been saying I'm going to politics, so I'm going next year, but it might not be a general election.

[1315] I try and plan ahead because I can't, if I randomize it, if I just float, because a lot of people do, wow, this happened.

[1316] And then that happened.

[1317] And then I was like, and that could be a wonderful life.

[1318] But I have my river analogy.

[1319] If you're canoeing down a river.

[1320] If you go at the same speed as the river, it could throw you onto rocks, it could give you a wonderful ride, it could be anything, but it's up to the river.

[1321] Whereas I pedal like crazy.

[1322] Sometimes I backpedal like crazy.

[1323] I have actively backpedal against things, and sometimes usually I'm pedaling faster than the speed of the river, to try and guide myself through the river.

[1324] You see that whenever do these canoeing, well, anyone driving a boat through a river.

[1325] When I look at human interactions objectively, part of me, how?

[1326] to consider that there's a possibility that we need all this negative in order to reinforce the positive, that there's some component of human life that desires or relies upon negative things to reinforce positive things, that this yin and yang that we exist under, that this, that we see the horrors of war and horrific poverty and all these terrible things.

[1327] and the horrible violence, we see this and it actually serves to reinforce our desire for positive things and reinforce and push our society in a more positive direction.

[1328] I mean, I almost think that this is when we see national tragedies and shootings and all these different terrible, terrible things, there's all this fear and anger and frustration, but there's also action, and the action might think there's a lack of action by politicians or a lack of action by the police or a lack of action by, you know, whoever we think should be responsible for mitigating these horrible situations that happen.

[1329] But publicly, the social fabric of the world, the way people communicate and interact, I think it reinforces our desire to not have that happen.

[1330] It reinforces our understanding of peace and our love of peace.

[1331] And I think that these bad things that we see in our world, they almost propelled.

[1332] us towards a better world because human beings are constantly striving for improvement and innovation.

[1333] This is one of the things that we do.

[1334] We want things to be better and bigger and faster and stronger and we want our society to be better at all times.

[1335] We never say, this is good, let's keep it just the way it is.

[1336] We never say that.

[1337] So my thought is that even what we're experiencing in this country, we're like, it seems at times that we're almost like on the brink of civil war between the right and the left and people are lying on both sides and conflating people's opinions.

[1338] and changing people's perspectives in order to suit their own narrative, that I think that this, ultimately, all this angst and you see it from the outside, and you look at it, you go, what the fuck are we doing?

[1339] I think it's a natural part of the way human beings figure out life.

[1340] I shall respond to that.

[1341] Sure.

[1342] Yeah.

[1343] I think almost the same as you.

[1344] I would articulate it slightly differently.

[1345] I notice that humanity only sometimes gets going and does things when it's right up against the wall.

[1346] wall.

[1347] You know, sometimes that needs these things to go on.

[1348] If you took a World War II scenario, we went right to the wire on that, and then suddenly we came back.

[1349] And maybe not even, it wasn't even the political will on that.

[1350] It was just, if the Japanese hadn't bombed Pearl Harbor, we wouldn't, you guys, we wouldn't have had you guys in us, with us for a D -A.

[1351] World War II, yeah, sure.

[1352] And all that, all the, the, the forces and the money and the armets and the tanks and the Sherman's coming in, you know, we needed that coming in.

[1353] And without the Russian people, we wouldn't have won World War II.

[1354] And that was, and they were in this agreement.

[1355] So I can't quite work out humanity.

[1356] I do think positive.

[1357] I do think the negatives you can appreciate the positives more.

[1358] I do think one thing on the Brexit -Brexit -Rex hate thing that's been going on is a lot of young people are coming on and saying, so we're going to lose all this stuff, the ability we could travel to Europe without visas.

[1359] We can work there.

[1360] We could retire there.

[1361] We can get a health care there all across Europe.

[1362] And that's concerning we cut off and our roaming charges are going to go out for all that.

[1363] people are valuing what they could lose a lot more so yeah the yin and yang the you can I think I think it's going to go on this way and also some people once we get to a good place I've noticed that a lot of people will say okay I'm not going to be politically active anymore I'm just going to carry on doing my life and other people can sort things out I've noticed that people will get activated to get to a result maybe an election result or something or a referendum or whatever it is and then they'll they will just back off They get frustrated.

[1364] They go frustrated.

[1365] Well, they just think, well, that's done.

[1366] That's bagged in a positive way, maybe.

[1367] And just say, but now I'm not even going to pay attention to what's going on.

[1368] But things are going to start rolling backwards.

[1369] So I think we're going to keep having it like that.

[1370] Maybe the percentage of positive things to negative things has never changed over all the years, over the last 10 ,000 years.

[1371] It's just as more people in the world doing more positive things than doing more negative things.

[1372] Maybe humanity hasn't changed because our brain sizes haven't changed, even back to the cavemen days.

[1373] You know, even back the last 100 ,000 years, the size of our brains has not moved.

[1374] So we, if you went back to 70 ,000 years ago, we would still be able to have conversations like this, even though we wouldn't have the radios and the things.

[1375] It would be more on our tribe.

[1376] I think our tribe is better than your tribe.

[1377] Actually, Steve, I don't know if our tribe is better than that tribe.

[1378] I just think maybe there's similar.

[1379] There's some good people in that tribe and there's some shit -hairs in that tribe.

[1380] We need to maybe trade with them more.

[1381] We can go to war with them, but then we could die a lot of it.

[1382] And Shirley could die and Kenny and Roger at number 22.

[1383] You know, because those conversations were happening in a slightly different way, I think, all the way back.

[1384] And they weren't all just going, me, food, you, nice, good, three, five.

[1385] It wasn't that.

[1386] It was maybe, you know, millions of years ago, but not 100 ,000 years ago.

[1387] And we only started speaking 100 ,000 years ago.

[1388] So what we've developed since then.

[1389] I'm fascinated by us as human beings because we were just another animal.

[1390] And now we are kind of an amazing animal.

[1391] we've invented beautiful thing we landed on the bloody moon you guys landed on the moon which I as a child thought that we landed on the moon but in fact you guys landed the moon but they Apollo 11 they kept it quite open I think Michael Collins in the command module said this is for the world and there was this kind of feeling and Neil Armstrong it's a nice yeah I grabbed hold of that as a kid I was growing up you know a bit young of me it's a pretty weird thing to think that we went from not being able to talk to space travel in a hundred thousand years yeah I mean that's what they think right?

[1392] They think that people didn't have real language 100 ,000 years ago.

[1393] Yeah, the Fox P2 genetic.

[1394] I think it's about 100 ,000 years ago.

[1395] That's when it came up.

[1396] And the first words we said was, let's go to the moon in 100 ,000 minutes.

[1397] What's your name?

[1398] Jack Kennedy?

[1399] Okay, Jack, good idea.

[1400] Well, let's put it on a backburn for a moment.

[1401] What do you think happened that turned us into this?

[1402] Do you ever stop and think about it?

[1403] Well, I don't think it's a bloke upstairs floating in the clouds because they used to live in the clouds.

[1404] And then we flew through the clouds.

[1405] And no one ever mentioned, hey, he's not in the clouds.

[1406] So I, it's a round.

[1407] randomized the thing.

[1408] You know, I think these, like dinosaurs, 165 million years of those bastards.

[1409] Right.

[1410] And all they did was eat, eat, kill, poo, and have sex.

[1411] That's all they did.

[1412] Those four things for 165 million years.

[1413] We've had 300 years since the Enlightenment of human rights and democracy and stuff like that.

[1414] If we say the Greek did a great thing, but really it's the last 300 years.

[1415] They had 165 million years of that.

[1416] But why did they come along when we had all these creatures in the sea and suddenly huge ones?

[1417] something happened, something twisted, randomizing thing.

[1418] It's, I don't, maybe we'll never know.

[1419] But it has happened.

[1420] And I just don't think a bloke did it upstairs with a big beard.

[1421] He said, now is the time that you speak.

[1422] And now you make handbags.

[1423] And now fight wars with the MG 42.

[1424] And now, you know, I just, I just think it happened.

[1425] And we need to roll with it and try and make humans work.

[1426] on this planet because then we're going to go to Mars soon and you can just say it in the future if we got it going on Mars at some point the Martians are going to say we want to vote we got our own Martian government you sure you earthlings you know they're going to treat us the same way Americans treat the British yeah and then the Martians come back and attack us the Martians are going that actually come and you could just see that in some sort of of you know 100 years down the line sure yeah yeah it can definitely happen you know so I I despair about humanity and I and I and I celebrate humanity.

[1427] I do this thing, actually, which I think is nice.

[1428] I'm going to say this.

[1429] This is not, because obviously I'm doing a tour at the moment here in the U .S., but I'm going to come out of this U .S. tour on the 75th anniversary of D -Day, and I fly to Kahn in Normandy.

[1430] Are you doing a stand -up tour?

[1431] Yeah, I'm doing a stand -up tour of the whole of America.

[1432] Are you doing any dates in L .A.?

[1433] Yeah, I'm at the Dolby Theatre from the 26th to 29th of June.

[1434] Okay.

[1435] The Dolby that was the Kodak.

[1436] I want to come out.

[1437] Yeah, yeah.

[1438] If I'm 26 or 20, I'll look at it later.

[1439] We'll work at that.

[1440] Don't I. Yeah, it's all on Eddieazzo .com.

[1441] But I go to Normandy, the 75th anniversary of D -Day, and I do, and they fought the Battle of Normandy in German, obviously on one side, and then French and English on the other side.

[1442] And so I do three shows in German, first show, 50 minutes in German, and then I do 50 minutes in English, and then 50 minutes in French.

[1443] And then we have a buffet, and everyone hangs out and I meet everyone, and we, all the German speakers, the French and the English speaker.

[1444] Yeah, I had heard that you're doing that.

[1445] That is incredible, that you're doing stand up in multiple languages.

[1446] Yeah.

[1447] How long did it take you to learn that?

[1448] Well, I did French at school for eight years.

[1449] I did German school for two years.

[1450] So it was partly a sort of low -level political thing.

[1451] I just thought, if I'm an English guy going to France are doing it in French, then maybe a French kid would go, well, I'm going to do it in English.

[1452] Right.

[1453] And now the Germans are doing English.

[1454] The Russians are doing English.

[1455] The Spanish.

[1456] Everyone's going to English because you can do a, you can have a Hollywood career potentially.

[1457] or be on television in English.

[1458] You can also tour the world in English now.

[1459] You can use it as a bridging language.

[1460] We were talking about Google Translate.

[1461] I know French kids, French kid, my friend, Yassine Ballouz, has performed in Helsinki in Finland, and Finnish kids have been watching in the second language.

[1462] They've been watching in English and listening in English, and he's been performing a French guy performing in English.

[1463] So they met and laughed in a second language, which I think is an amazing thing.

[1464] But now you can tour the world that way.

[1465] So this is a thing So I'm going to go to Normandy And it's a commemoration of That the battle happened And it's 75 years ago And it's a celebration that now We don't go to war in those three languages anymore And you have different 50 minutes For French different 50 minutes Exactly the same ideas But the words are all obviously Either German and French I'll give you an example I had I said Caesar I talked about Julia Caesar I said, Caesar, did he ever think that one day he would end up as a salad?

[1466] Okay, because he was a warlike guy, he's now a salad.

[1467] And in French, Caesar, is he never imagined?

[1468] Did he one day imagine that en jour, he would finish up as a salad?

[1469] One day he would finish up as a salad.

[1470] In German, Caesar had a yeager dach, did he ever think that's er a enal that he one time as salad end up would have?

[1471] As salad end up would have?

[1472] So you've got the verb right at the end, but they still laugh at the same place, but maybe about half second later or split a second later.

[1473] as salad end up would have.

[1474] So you have to really have a deep understanding of how to structure those sentences.

[1475] It's just practice really, you know, anything in life you could do it.

[1476] If you were taken out of here, you don't speak any lines.

[1477] So if they took you and suddenly, for some reason, you had to be in any other country, Thailand, say, somebody dropped a big block of heroin into your thing just as a test, as a social experiment.

[1478] And they filmed this all and you say, hey, he's smuggling.

[1479] So you have to go to Thai prison this is kind of extreme example anyone and then you'd be learning within one month you'd have basic sentences going anyone who goes to prison is going to have sure you know if you work in a restaurant if you work any way you work where no one's giving you any English coming in you just have to pick up the words and our survival instincts would pick them up and then you might have a strong accent but you'd be you me everyone we can pick it up so I just again I can set up this artificial scenario of I have to do this So I had to learn French.

[1480] So I started before.

[1481] This show, this Wunderbar show, which is a German title, meaning wonderful.

[1482] And I started it in French.

[1483] So I jumped, because I improvised to workshould.

[1484] I don't write anything.

[1485] I just go and go, hey, chickens.

[1486] What's going on with chickens?

[1487] Chicken with a gun, dangerous.

[1488] You don't write your act?

[1489] No, I just improvise it.

[1490] Really?

[1491] And I sort of workshop it endlessly until it gets it.

[1492] And then you memorize it.

[1493] Well, I know it because I said it last time.

[1494] Right.

[1495] So in French, I was just going, Les pullet, le Poulets.

[1496] they're in danger, no. A poulet, Donald Trump, say the same and compare things.

[1497] Do you record and listen to recordings?

[1498] Yeah, record every show and never listen to them.

[1499] Ah, ha!

[1500] You record on your phone or do you have a professional setup?

[1501] No, we have a professional setup.

[1502] So, we're sometimes not with the laughter mixed in.

[1503] I've just been listening back to the German shows in Berlin, and the laughter is very low in the mix.

[1504] So I'm saying these jokes, I'm going, is anyone laughing?

[1505] Oh, so it's just from the microphone?

[1506] Yeah, there's a feed there, but they had another one, but they had it mixed low.

[1507] But yeah, you need to have a second microphone on the audience.

[1508] and just bring that mix up.

[1509] Right.

[1510] Or maybe bring it right up.

[1511] So it's incredibly funny.

[1512] But I just found doing it in another language, it's a positive thing.

[1513] It sends out a nice message.

[1514] It's hands across the water.

[1515] Can we learn from you?

[1516] Can you learn from us?

[1517] And the comedy is, I do sort of Python -esque, Monty Python -type surreal comedy.

[1518] And so I just need to find that audience in France, that audience, in Germany, that audience in Thailand, if I was there.

[1519] You know, I've played Kathmandu.

[1520] I met a kid from Kathmandu in New York on the streets.

[1521] He said, are you a comedian?

[1522] I said, yeah, where are you from?

[1523] I'm from Kathmandu.

[1524] Wow, Catmandu, a kid from Kathmandu.

[1525] What are you doing here?

[1526] Well, I'm doing, I'm a student.

[1527] But your English is good.

[1528] Yeah, it's pretty good, yeah.

[1529] Well, can I do a gig in Catmandu, you think?

[1530] I said, yeah, I think you do a gig in Catmandu.

[1531] So I said, okay, that was in 2010.

[1532] Took me seven years.

[1533] I got there 2017.

[1534] How was it?

[1535] It was good.

[1536] Unfortunately, the local, I'd less to the locals.

[1537] They'd had these couple of earthquakes, which, you know, you tend to think, well, everyone has earthquakes, but no, they hadn't had them for ages.

[1538] and suddenly they had to a bad earthquake.

[1539] So they were getting over that.

[1540] So I was mainly aid workers, unfortunately, but I was there.

[1541] But I can go back.

[1542] But, no, it was a nice setup.

[1543] But I played, you know, I went all through in Tokyo, and I played in Hong Kong and in Shanghai.

[1544] And had all the guys from, because you have the people from the Communist Party come along to check you out.

[1545] So I'm not going specifically in on certain things.

[1546] But anyway, you know, my stuff is all living there.

[1547] the comedy what the communist party you know the communist party yeah you know because it's Shanghai I thought you were saying comedy party no sorry the communist party yeah sorry just me mangling my word oh so they come and check you out to make sure you're not violating anything yes you certain areas you're not supposed to go you know whatever I don't know I just what I wanted to do the cake so but it wasn't like I was going to change I have weird stuff about Gandalf talking to to butterflies and and talking about my ancient kings like Henry the 8th and and William conquer and stuff so they probably apparently they stayed they stayed they normally disappear after a while but anyway so it's uh it's good to get out you know you said as you said play the world see the world to see it travel broadens the mind yeah i don't play very many play i played in australia and england i've done gigs in stockholm and northern ireland dublin a few other places in europe but most of the time when i go on vacation i just go on vacation i just go to experience it just to have fun so just to be there um so have you have you never written your act down um no i couldn't i see i used to do sketch comedy like like a multi -python thing and i wrote those and then i was doing a street performer for four years and that's very unwritten i there's no that's very difficult to write so it's difficult to actually develop material for that so i did that for four years so i got into this thing of well i'll do street performing like how so what would you do um we We were a double act initially, me and my partner, Rob, and we did weird things like escaping from a woolly jumper.

[1548] He'd just wrap a woolly jumper and I would tend to escape.

[1549] A woolly jumper.

[1550] Yeah.

[1551] A woolly cardigan, we would really pullover.

[1552] You call it pullovers?

[1553] Okay.

[1554] Like a sweater?

[1555] So instead of a straight jacket, he said, we take this willy sweat.

[1556] Just take a sweater.

[1557] Just ridiculous.

[1558] Yeah, ridiculous.

[1559] Making a bowl of corn flakes disappear because...

[1560] You ate it?

[1561] Yeah, I ate it.

[1562] so at its best they go this is insane these guys are crazy and they clap and they give his fivepence and when it was at the worst they go these people are insane this is awful and they'd walk away then we did sword fighting that was good because I directed three musketeers at university and so we were doing showing you how to kill someone when drunk when you do all these different moves so that was quite fun then I went solo and I was doing escapology from chains and ropes and then from a five foot unicycle from a pair of manacles escapology meaning escapeology Is that a real thing?

[1563] Escapology, you guys really call it that?

[1564] Yeah, what do you call it?

[1565] I don't know, I don't think it's a name for it.

[1566] I've never even heard of that.

[1567] I think Google will tell us there's an escape artists.

[1568] I know there's escape artists.

[1569] Escapology.

[1570] Does it exist?

[1571] Coudini?

[1572] Oh, what is it?

[1573] There's a word.

[1574] There's a thing called escapology live escape games.

[1575] World escape rooms and there's a bunch of them.

[1576] I don't know if it's the same thing.

[1577] I don't know.

[1578] No, those are escape rooms.

[1579] Yeah, yeah.

[1580] Escapology should be a wikipic.

[1581] An art form, it sounds like.

[1582] It's not really an art. It's a craft.

[1583] Well, no, Houdini was an artist of that.

[1584] I was a, I was a jobbing, crafting person.

[1585] There it is.

[1586] The practice escaping from restraints.

[1587] There you go.

[1588] Yeah.

[1589] There you go.

[1590] Steel boxes, barrels, bags, things.

[1591] So I was escaping from ropes and chains.

[1592] Yeah.

[1593] You made a conscious decision to do this, like, on the street?

[1594] Like, this is how you're developing.

[1595] Yeah, that was developing, because I couldn't get, my sketch comedy thing wasn't going.

[1596] There's a thing called the Edinburgh Festival we have.

[1597] Yeah, you know that one.

[1598] So I did 12 of those in the end.

[1599] right before I took off so I did three doing sketch and then about four doing street but on the street you have this freedom you know the freedom when things are working a bit and and it's really kind of feral no one's checking you up no one knows what you're doing you're just on the street right so I I was useless at this and then I developed a confidence a gut confidence you know that the stomach's really important it probably isn't fighting as well there's something that comes out of the there's a confidence center in the stomach really yeah the Something about the stomach.

[1600] You look into it with fighting.

[1601] I think it's neurons, right?

[1602] It's like there's something.

[1603] Everything joins there.

[1604] There's something to do with it.

[1605] Anyway, I felt, I developed this confidence on my own to go and stand on, if you ever seen, heard of the film My Fair Lady or seen the film of Eliza Doolittle, that is set on Covent Garden.

[1606] It's a massive piazza, massive square.

[1607] Washington Square Park in New York was another street -fowing place.

[1608] So it's a big open place.

[1609] And I could stand out there on my own and talk to no one and build a. up an audience.

[1610] I would set out these teacosies, which are little animal tea coesies, ducks and hamsters, weird things, things that just look like animals, and put them on the floor and people thought, this guy's crazy.

[1611] And then I'd start talking and there'll be literally no one there sometimes.

[1612] And I'd say, good afternoon, I'm going to do a show.

[1613] Welcome to the invisible audience.

[1614] Very nice to have you here.

[1615] And I had this confidence if I just kept talking, a bit like, you know, in your podcast here, you know you can keep talking.

[1616] I can go on, yeah, we're going to, ah, there's some visible people here as well.

[1617] This is Jack and Kenyans.

[1618] And I would just go on and on until I built up about 20 people and then I could start the show and then we get into it.

[1619] And if you're doing an escapology show in the end you're going to get out.

[1620] You've worked out how to get out and so there will be a definite end.

[1621] And then you can say now don't go and please can you give me some money.

[1622] So that's how I earned my living.

[1623] But that's the ninja training of performing because I learned to perform when people didn't even want to see me. Because normally they've come into a room and Lisa go, okay, who is this guy I don't know, but we're in the room, so let's drink a beer and watch.

[1624] But if they're on the street, they don't have to watch.

[1625] They can just walk off, and they often did.

[1626] So it was a tough, I had, I lost all my confidence on the street, in fact.

[1627] In fact, there's a thing, Army does this, you know, break you down, build you back at the Marines, break you down, build you back up.

[1628] They also in drama school, they break you down, build you back.

[1629] This kind of idea, I accidentally broke myself down and built myself back up on the streets of London.

[1630] So, wow.

[1631] It's kind of beautiful.

[1632] That's where I was creatively born, this new version that had this thing.

[1633] Okay, we're going to talk about chickens.

[1634] How many chickens do it take to change light, Bob?

[1635] Well, quite a lot, really, because, you know, they can't.

[1636] And unless they had a friend with him, maybe a dog could help them, or they could rig up something.

[1637] You know, I just waffle on about stuff.

[1638] And if it didn't hit a punchline, I didn't care, I just carried on.

[1639] He just kept going.

[1640] And then the confidence thing gets you through.

[1641] He just talks for hours.

[1642] So if you release a special, and you've released comedy specials before.

[1643] Yeah.

[1644] How do you develop new material once that special has been released?

[1645] I will do work in progress shows, which I took from Lily Tomlin, who did a lot of work in progress shows, and then she did her show on Broadway, I think.

[1646] And I thought, because I used to do the old tour, and I used to tour, to a tour until at the end we'd film it.

[1647] And then I'd begin the next tour with the old tour and just keep improvising in the show because I'd only improvise it on stage, and I would build up by the end of the next tour would be a different show.

[1648] But that didn't sort of work for people, because they said, we want a completely new show.

[1649] So now I do this WIP shows, work in progress shows, and I will go on stage and muck about just talking about chickens or banjos or helicopters.

[1650] So do you have a structure when you start?

[1651] Like say if it's the day after your special is done.

[1652] And now you have to work on a whole new special.

[1653] You're doing a work in progress show.

[1654] How do you develop your material?

[1655] I would start with my life.

[1656] I did it once where I just said, okay, let's go through my life.

[1657] So you may not know this, I went to, I was living in Northern Ireland.

[1658] I was born in Yemen.

[1659] I would go through.

[1660] So I've done this where I went trawled through my life.

[1661] life.

[1662] I need some sort of structure, otherwise I'm stuck.

[1663] I also found that once I'd recorded the show, like last tour, force majeure, I toured for five years because I just found there were no rules on touring.

[1664] I could just keep going back and I did 45 countries, so I could just keep on going.

[1665] And I found there were certain things I developed after we'd recorded it that were interesting and worth keeping.

[1666] So I said, okay, well, that's not in the old show.

[1667] I'm going to pull that and start off the new show with that little bit, which is that little piece of material which is fun about um and i was training on a marathon and dogs dogs were woofing at me you know i ran past the house where a dog was woofing at me and this is in the show now and i suddenly thought for the first time ever because dogs have woofed at people all but you know it's the beginning of time i thought what is the dog actually trying to say if the dog had fox p2 injected into him so he could suddenly talk what would he say to me what is that wolf whoop what does that mean and so it goes into he's basically saying assassin You're shouting, Assassins are here.

[1668] I know, I'm a dog.

[1669] It's my job.

[1670] Get a gun.

[1671] Because all dogs are very sure.

[1672] You've never heard an unsure dog in your life.

[1673] When they're barking, they're sure.

[1674] They are absolutely sure that it's assassins.

[1675] It's not a postman.

[1676] It's not the guy with a hamster outside.

[1677] Assassins are here.

[1678] Alarm, alarm, alarm.

[1679] Danger Will Robinson.

[1680] Why have you never written anything down?

[1681] Well, I found, initially I started to run a right stand -up, But I would go, and I was trying to type it or write it.

[1682] So if you go into a supermarket, I'm very slow, I'm dyslexic, so I'm slow in the supermarket.

[1683] And there, there, I just thought, I couldn't write, I seemed to be faster if I was just ad -libbing it.

[1684] So you go in a supermarket, there, and you know, and it's always fruit.

[1685] You go in and it's fruit, fruit, fruit, fruit, fruit.

[1686] And I found that if I just did it by finding it with the words, and there's a supermarket.

[1687] There's fruit and some, and you're supposed to squeeze it, aren't you?

[1688] And so I just think, all the things I can think about fruit.

[1689] So why is it fruit there?

[1690] Why not toilet paper?

[1691] You never go in the supermarket and toilet paper there because they'd say, well, that's a poo shop, you know?

[1692] You have to go in it.

[1693] It's a fresh shop.

[1694] We've got fresh fruit here.

[1695] So we're a very fresh shot.

[1696] Okay, that's why the fruit's right up the front.

[1697] And you've got to squeeze it.

[1698] But how much do you squeeze it?

[1699] And how do you know, is that the right pressure to squeeze it?

[1700] And what if it explodes?

[1701] So I would just keep chatting.

[1702] And if it didn't work, you'd just move on.

[1703] And that's how I developed this very conversational.

[1704] star that I have, which people say it's supposed to be improvisation.

[1705] It's nice.

[1706] It's just, I am always ready to improvise at any point.

[1707] Some people, if you write a thing, you say, well, that is how that piece goes and it's locked in.

[1708] But if you improvise a thing, I've noticed, I came up with this thing of molten material.

[1709] When you first create a new idea, and it's working, it's very open and live, like Quicksilver, like Mercury, and then you could add another bit, another bit, and you can add another bit, once you've got it into a shape, then it becomes locked down, it becomes like a prayer, and you can lose the joy of it.

[1710] It becomes a recitation.

[1711] And I thought, so don't ever have it locked down.

[1712] Keep it open.

[1713] Keep it always loose.

[1714] So that every time you say it, you're saying it a bit differently.

[1715] And that's the style I've developed.

[1716] And so I can improvise at any point in the show.

[1717] I can just stop it and go, what are walls?

[1718] Why have we got walls?

[1719] We've got walls.

[1720] You know, most animals in the world don't have walls.

[1721] But we've got walls and they're that good.

[1722] How's, you know, when it's raining, they don't have walls, but they're okay.

[1723] Should we have, you know, I just waffle about walls.

[1724] And say, okay, don't talk about walls.

[1725] Evergings.

[1726] So if I don't get anything out of it, I get jokes on the way out.

[1727] I get laughs on the way out, if I don't get it in the way in.

[1728] So that's the technique I've developed.

[1729] Now, when you say dyslexic, so if you read something, what do you see?

[1730] I read it, I see it, but I get word blindness.

[1731] Word blindness.

[1732] I just see other words.

[1733] Long words.

[1734] I couldn't.

[1735] Raptomyalysis took me ages to, say let alone to spell I just find it I sub vocalize so in my head I'm going the man goes down Jack what are you doing here I would almost say that and you know when your kids they actually read it out loud and I'm not reading out loud but I'm saying it in my head and other people they can do a page you know they do this speed reading and they just shouldn't and they could just take it whole pages and it's stunning I can't I don't understand that either that's that's tricky so spelling was cat with a k ceiling with an s very logical spelling my writing is all over the place bigger letters smaller letters bigger letters and they tested me and they said I'm severely a to a typically dyslexic so I have a huge mental map memory I can hold a lot of things in a memory in my head so that's just sort of a permanent distinction like you just this is just who you are there's no way to fix that it seems so I haven't heard of anyone just coming out of dyslexia and saying now I can read much faster now I can do things.

[1736] I just think you're stuck with that.

[1737] But it means you think sideways, and I think a lot of creative people are dyslexing, I think.

[1738] Sideways.

[1739] Yeah.

[1740] So you see clouds, you see a lion in the clouds.

[1741] You see, perhaps there's a train going through the sky, you know.

[1742] It's a creative thing.

[1743] Juxtaposing things on your wall.

[1744] You have juxtaposing thing, which is they don't lead from one to the other.

[1745] They can be fighting right against it or completely bonkers or out of it.

[1746] um just looking at here in the room you know and and linking things together i think creativity we're trying always trying to throw ourselves by in comedy by something that's weird and opposite and funny um Caesar you should you know I'm going for the salad line when I said that's a dude I think it's salad and then people seems to make people off and they go oh yeah Caesar salad this guy was he murdered million you murdered a million Gaulish people you know and he ends up as a salad it's not a cognac Napoleon gets a cognac a brandy But he's a salad.

[1747] What's that about it?

[1748] So, yeah, this is my dyslexic traits.

[1749] But I think you get dealt these cards when you're born, whatever genetic cards they are.

[1750] And the art of life is to play your cards as well as you can.

[1751] And the art of comedy is to relay your life in a humorous way.

[1752] Very much.

[1753] And that's your unique fingerprint.

[1754] Yeah.

[1755] As you know, if we all have, because people say, well, I seem like another comedian.

[1756] Well, talk about your own life and your own perspective.

[1757] perspective, it's got to be different to the next person's because no two people are the same.

[1758] Is that what you enjoyed the most?

[1759] The stand -up?

[1760] Yeah.

[1761] No, dramatic films I probably enjoy the most because I wanted to do that when I was a kid.

[1762] I discovered that films existed.

[1763] I broke into Pinewood Studios, one of our big studios, when I was 15.

[1764] Broke in?

[1765] Yeah.

[1766] Like illegally?

[1767] Yeah.

[1768] Got in.

[1769] Well, I was watching a film, Battle of Britain, and at the end, it says, filmed on location in Spain and England, and at Pinewood Studios.

[1770] Iva Heath, Bucks, and in the 70s, and if you remember, we didn't have videos.

[1771] We couldn't freeze things, or you just had to scribble things down.

[1772] So I was scribbling down stuff off the end of films.

[1773] And I said, Palmer Studios, Iver Heath, Bucs, okay, what are, Iver Heath, what is that?

[1774] So Bucks, okay, Bucks is short for Buckinghamshire.

[1775] That's a play.

[1776] Iver Heath must be a town.

[1777] It's a weird name, town, city, a village, must be a village or a town.

[1778] So I got a map of the United Kingdom, which had alphabetically, every town and village and city there going, listed alphabetically.

[1779] and I went all the way down and I found Ira Heath, but okay, that's where it is.

[1780] So I took a train from the south coast of England up to London, a tube train, underground train, to a place called Uxbridge, then a bus to this roundabout.

[1781] And I got off, they said, it's Pinewood Studios, they said it's about half a mile down that road, so I marched down the road, and I got to the big gabled entrance where all the big stars would come in, and I went up, and I hadn't got this bit worked out.

[1782] So I went up, and I said, I'm going to be in films.

[1783] I'm going to, can I come in, please.

[1784] It's what?

[1785] I'm going to, I'm going to make, I want to be an actor.

[1786] Can I come in?

[1787] Just piss off, kid.

[1788] No, no, it's just what?

[1789] And he just told me to piss off.

[1790] And I thought, no, I've come miles.

[1791] This is a big.

[1792] So I thought there must be another way in.

[1793] So I went up and there was another entrance that was near it.

[1794] But it wasn't the main star entrance.

[1795] It was just the kind of more lorry entrance, the track entrance, the bringing stuff in.

[1796] And I saw people going in and out.

[1797] There was a drawbridge, a bit like where eagles dare, the film, you know, anyway, someone on the gate, and some people were showing them passes and stuff, and other people were just walking in.

[1798] So I thought, okay, you've got to have the confidence to walk in.

[1799] So I did the 15, 16 -year -old confidence, and I just marched in, and suddenly I was through it, and I was in, I was into Piper Studio.

[1800] So then, you know, Spielberg broke into Universal.

[1801] I broke into, into a thing.

[1802] He got a career going pretty immediately, I didn't get nothing going.

[1803] Well, you're 15.

[1804] I know.

[1805] What is you expect was going to happen?

[1806] What was your anticipation?

[1807] Well, anticipation was, as I've said, in a piece of standard that I, because I had to walk at a certain speed.

[1808] If you're moving at a certain speed, I thought, no one's going to stop you.

[1809] So you can't creep around looking, what's this?

[1810] Because they say, what are you doing here?

[1811] You know, I just thought, in fact, it's kind of loose inside studios and no one really knows what everyone else is doing.

[1812] So you can actually creep around a bit.

[1813] But I move around at a certain speed, and I sort of march.

[1814] So I was marching down streets and up aisles and past studios and I was hoping someone to go, hey you, kid, yeah, you're marching around.

[1815] Yeah, we're doing the film called The Marching Around Kid.

[1816] Our lead kid has just exploded.

[1817] Can you continue my, yeah, I can march around.

[1818] Can you say words?

[1819] I can string a few words together.

[1820] How did you leave?

[1821] I marched out at the same speed.

[1822] I marched in, we're done here.

[1823] I marched around for two hours and I marched out.

[1824] And I have since filmed twice or three times in Pinewood.

[1825] And I'm going to, I want to do.

[1826] And every time I go back and I'm actually filming there, I go, I broke in here.

[1827] And I just walk at very slow speeds down streets, knowing that anyone could stop me. And I go, I'm just filming around the corner.

[1828] It's, yeah, it's, so I love films.

[1829] And I just finished my first film six minutes to midnight that I've co -written and produced in.

[1830] What is it?

[1831] It's set in, just before the beginning of Wednesday.

[1832] World War II, I grew up in this little seaside town, like America has seaside towns as well as well for the old days when people used to go to seaside towns before they all went to the hot countries.

[1833] And it's called Bexill -on -Sea.

[1834] It's now Hastings, Brighton, any, South Coast of being.

[1835] And there were 26 schools there.

[1836] For some reason, 26 schools, it was linked up.

[1837] There was an Earl Delaware that had set the place up.

[1838] Anyway, one of these things new.

[1839] And one of them had young girls, German girls, who were linked to the now.

[1840] party high command and they were over to learn English and make friends and be ambassadors and because there was you know obviously fascism in germany and there were fascists in britain and they were making friends and and that was the idea there was going to be hit i had this idea of linking up with british and taking everyone on and which some people were in britain were forwards and obviously a lot of us were against and uh so it sat around this girl's school and i was shown the badge the blazer badge.

[1841] All the girls had a blazer, blue blazer.

[1842] And they had a badge and it had the name of the school, Augusta Victoria College, Bexel -on -Cee, and at the top it has a British flag and then the Nazi swastika next to it.

[1843] And I thought, holy cow, I've just never seen those two flags right next to each other on the same badge.

[1844] So I thought, there's a film in that.

[1845] So we've made a film.

[1846] Wow.

[1847] Judy Datch is in it, Jim Broadbent, both Oscar winners and myself.

[1848] And what will that be released?

[1849] Rolling it out from the end of this year, from fall, as you call it, autumn fall this year.

[1850] So your love of acting and creating films, that's your primary creative.

[1851] Even Trump's stand -up.

[1852] I do love stand -up, and I can do stand -up whenever I want.

[1853] Isn't it weird that trumped is still a word?

[1854] I know.

[1855] Isn't it weird?

[1856] Yeah.

[1857] It's a weird.

[1858] He must love that that word exists that Trump actually means to one -up and better.

[1859] I'm not even going to go there.

[1860] It's crazy, right?

[1861] Yeah, it also means making tricks.

[1862] You trump things and you can make tricks.

[1863] Oh, really?

[1864] Yeah.

[1865] I didn't know that.

[1866] We have tricks in cards and you see how many tricks have you got?

[1867] That was tricky Dickie Nixon.

[1868] So that's another person who did one or two lies and untruthers down his career.

[1869] Yeah, he was also a bad guy.

[1870] So anyway, yes, it's I love, I do love stand -up.

[1871] Well, I was never planning to be a stand -up.

[1872] I was going to be a sketch comedian comedy.

[1873] Well, I was going to be an actor.

[1874] And then I thought, I can't do.

[1875] In my teenage years, I had no sexual self -confidence.

[1876] the transgender thing didn't play a part in it.

[1877] I just, I was playing football to soccer up until 13, so I was kind of, hey, I'm a runabout guy.

[1878] I'm kind of fast, athletics, whatever.

[1879] Then I go to a school, I'm nothing.

[1880] And there's no girls here, and I can't do this.

[1881] And oh, well, bodies changing, all that.

[1882] And I just lost all my confidence.

[1883] And I just thought, I can't, and I was quite small.

[1884] So at school, it was all about tall kids.

[1885] You play the romantic lead.

[1886] Small kids, you're the slave and the servant.

[1887] So I thought, okay, forget this.

[1888] I'll do comedy.

[1889] I'll do the comedy, because I love the comedy.

[1890] and Monty Pithe and discovered them I thought okay I'll do the Darling I love you You're made out of cheese I have my knees Are on fire With this You know I just make up rubbish And I thought okay That's easier So I did that And it wouldn't take off My career Just wouldn't You know Left school Dropped out of university Couldn't get it going And by the time It got going When I was about 30 I thought I'm now going to Hold on to this comedy And start doing drama at the same time So I've run these parallel things And I'm going to be on Broadway At the beginning in the next year Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf at Laurie Metcalf Scott Rudin production Oh interesting That was a great movie Yeah great movie As I say I'm doing Who's Afraid of Elizabeth Taylor And I'm playing Richard Burton And yeah So that's an amazing production You know I'm performing with Judy Dench in films And a Stephen Freer's film Victorian Abdel So I'm getting great drama roles now I've pushed a long time to do that But normally if you do comedy They won't let you do drama If you do drama you don't really do comedy That's sort of breaking down though right Steve Carell's Steve Correll He has moved out If he does I'm not sure if he's doing the comedy So much anymore But exactly where Steve Corral's gone John Lithgow could also Say he was someone It was very much dramatic career But then he did third rock For the summer He was beautiful in And he was nominated every year And won two Emmys And nominated six times Just fantastic work Yeah I was on news radio At the same time I was also over in the same network Right Yeah Yeah his stuff was He's great Yeah It's a great actor Yeah He's stunning, you know, he played Churchill in the Crown, Winston Churchill, a darker side of Churchill that people don't know about, which I knew about.

[1891] Well, he's a guy that really has a love of theater, a love of performing.

[1892] When he talks about it, you could see, like, his goosebumps rays, and you just, you could see his, he gets excited.

[1893] Yes, I can absolutely feel that.

[1894] I mean, he's played such a range of character.

[1895] If he's playing evil, you just think, this guy is so evil.

[1896] when he's playing the character in the third rock for the sun.

[1897] It's just so beautiful.

[1898] I watched it.

[1899] You can't really, for some reason, I couldn't download it in Britain.

[1900] But I found a place I could find it.

[1901] So I've watched every single episode.

[1902] I'm now going through the second time.

[1903] So it's just beautiful stuff.

[1904] So when you got into stand -up comedy, when you first started doing that, what is the scene like in England?

[1905] Was there comedy clubs?

[1906] where you could go to an open mic night.

[1907] How do you start your career?

[1908] Yeah, we were copying you guys.

[1909] I think Lenny Bruce set up the more alternative version.

[1910] But I still think in America, it's always stayed kind of mainstream.

[1911] But Lenny Bruce was definitely doing alternative.

[1912] I noticed you got a lot of Lenny.

[1913] I love that guy.

[1914] Yeah, you know, and I played him on stage.

[1915] And that was a wonderful thing.

[1916] What did you play him in?

[1917] What was it?

[1918] Lenny.

[1919] You know, the film was from a stage play?

[1920] The Dustin Hoffman film?

[1921] Yeah, that was a stage play.

[1922] Dustin Hoffman was fantastic in that movie.

[1923] He was so.

[1924] close and the guy who plays him in the marvelous mrs mazel is very good as well i know that's very interesting is it because i'm watching that i'm thinking okay now i've i've gone through the clubs myself but i did mine in the 80s and into the 90s and that's in the 50s wow and i sort of take myself there and then there's lenny there and i know lenny and i play them i used to die oh god that's me look at that but i was i was doing the stand -up i see that that That's the photo.

[1925] I put that together.

[1926] Now, that was, and I called him the Jesus Christ of comedy, because as a Jewish guy, he died for us, to, died for us to give us the freedom of speech.

[1927] Yeah.

[1928] He died for freedom of speech, because in the end, the court's killed.

[1929] A little bit of heroin, too.

[1930] I know, but the mixture together, he shouldn't have conflated it to.

[1931] Yeah.

[1932] He meant that we could say what we wanted to.

[1933] Yeah, the Mrs. Maisel thing makes it a little, it's a little homogenized, like him.

[1934] Like in even his struggle, it's almost like it's no big deal.

[1935] Are you in the latest season?

[1936] Yeah.

[1937] Is it three or two?

[1938] Well, three hasn't released yet.

[1939] They're filming it right now.

[1940] I've gone through both of them.

[1941] It's really good.

[1942] It's not accurate.

[1943] Like, historically, it's way off the mark.

[1944] There's no woman who was talking like that back then.

[1945] It wasn't, there was no Mrs. Maisel.

[1946] No, I really liked it.

[1947] And it's interesting.

[1948] She, yeah.

[1949] Like, Norm MacDonald got mad about it.

[1950] He's like, yeah, there's no one.

[1951] woman like that back then she there's no he doesn't we give it the fucking show man the hulk's not real either there's no guy who becomes the hulk no enjoy it i really like norm at don't know i love them yeah i i didn't have there was a she was swearing like a like a soldier on stage very quickly very quickly which that was i found i don't know how she ramped into that and then she wrapped down out of it it was that was something was but and then she went to france and a one episode and and and did stand up that someone was translating and I thought that was weird I have done it in French and I don't think I could have got that I don't know why that that seemed just seemed to be a slightly sharp it's not jumping a shark going up to the shark swimming around a shark it was artistic interpretation yeah they they they it wasn't realistic but it was still it was a that's a person who makes a living doing stand -up comedy I was willing to let that suspension of disbelief taste and I like the the sexual relationship is always coming back the husband's almost coming back at the frame and his and his fight there because yeah but I did watch it I binge watch it all that's what I'm doing that I just sit down now and I just watch everything and then I move on but yeah Lenny how do we get into Lenny we were talking about something else but anyway you know it's great it's great playing Lenny but oh yes I was doing the stand -ups and I was just told by director Peter Hall I'll leave the stand -up to you so I had no direction on it so I just did it as close as I could to how Lenny would have done it did you listen to a lot of recordings i did that it's very difficult for british kids or maybe even american kids of today to know because he's doing a lot of hipster references a lot of you know the sophy tucker references and there's a there's a there's a laurence welk is it welch yeah we don't know those guys so when he was doing it's good it's a sophie tucker and they're going i got to look up sophy tach i've had to look up some of the punch lines or another number of the references because you without the references you can't get it this is a trick i do in universal humor that I take either huge references or explain my references so that you know Caesar everyone probably knows about season if they don't well I yeah anyway well as good as Lenny was it's really hard for people to listen to that comedy today it doesn't necessarily trans it doesn't transfer well he's talking about Nixon and you go oh Nixon is this is vice president Nixon this is Eisenhouse Nixon yeah different thing um so he I worked out that all my stuff is non -dateable.

[1952] I don't do any topical stuff.

[1953] I don't do party political stuff.

[1954] So it should not date.

[1955] I do historical stuff because that never dates.

[1956] You know, Caesar is not going to come back.

[1957] Now Caesar's changed his whole thing.

[1958] He's much nicer now.

[1959] He's come back from the dead and he's cleaned up his act.

[1960] So I've tried to do that.

[1961] And Python did this as well.

[1962] You do stuff, it just doesn't really date.

[1963] Most of it doesn't date.

[1964] Which is a handy thing so the stuff can stick on.

[1965] But much stand -up does.

[1966] And it's also the The culture is so significantly different between the late 50s and 60s where Lenny Bruce was sort of starting out and making his mark versus today.

[1967] It's like the things that were naughty back then, the things that he could say that were controversial.

[1968] There were nothing today.

[1969] Literally, it's a non -controversy.

[1970] Well, there's one that still was when he said how many people using the N -word and S -word, you know, he just went to all the racial epithets, how many of the way.

[1971] And I did this.

[1972] I used to do that on stage every night.

[1973] And that was still a striking.

[1974] Tense.

[1975] Yeah.

[1976] But the sentiment behind it was that these words only have power because they're forbidden.

[1977] And if you could use them again again again, again, it would do.

[1978] And for the gay community, they've taken the word queer.

[1979] They reclaim that.

[1980] So it doesn't have the force anymore.

[1981] And that is a truth.

[1982] He spoke a, that was a true analysis that he did.

[1983] Yeah.

[1984] Yeah, it was.

[1985] We had some, still, there was an unfortunate.

[1986] accidentally a friend of mine stole one of his jokes and didn't know that he actually just thought of the same premise yeah and he was the the premise was that uh homosexuality in some places is illegal and what do they do if they catch you well they lock you up in jail with a bunch of men who want to have sex with you like and that was Lenny Bruce's line like dig homosexuality is illegal right so what do they do they put you in jail with a bunch of men want to have sex with you you know like that was his whole like and like that still would work today.

[1987] Like, if there was a place where homosexuality was illegal today and you did that joke, it's a good joke.

[1988] It's like set up punchline.

[1989] It's all right there.

[1990] Yeah, Lenny was ahead of it.

[1991] And you know, his early stuff was more mainstream than you could ever believe.

[1992] Oh, yeah.

[1993] He was doing way, way, Same as Carlin.

[1994] You listen to Carlin's early stuff?

[1995] No, I've heard of, heard, yes, I think I was in the way.

[1996] It was like, like, like a typical Jack Parr Tonight Show set.

[1997] It was all like really, like, down the middle, squeaky clean and he wore suits and he was a clean cut you've ever seen carlin in the early days i i i think i've seen once i yeah i do know there was wasn't there was a tie and a suit there was a change well lenny had a complete change and that thing in the film where he says you'll never play here and what's the area in upstate new york cat skills cat skills you never play the cats i want to play the cat skills again um uh i remember when i watched it first i thought oh that's a terrible thing to happen but now that i know what that was It was a certain belt of, you know, how you were going to play.

[1998] Look at that.

[1999] That's George Carlin.

[2000] Wow.

[2001] Play a little bit of this.

[2002] It's crazy.

[2003] For the Murph Griffinshire.

[2004] Big hassle.

[2005] We never see how the Indians prepare.

[2006] Look at it.

[2007] How awful that suit is.

[2008] Just because they started in Massachusetts.

[2009] They wound up defending Malibu.

[2010] Doesn't mean they're...

[2011] But it was that sort of style.

[2012] You know, he had that.

[2013] I mean, that's what you did back then.

[2014] This is the Merv Griffin Show.

[2015] I mean, really didn't have any options.

[2016] That's how you performed.

[2017] Yeah, otherwise they wouldn't let you own.

[2018] Yeah, that's what you did.

[2019] Did he change on a dime?

[2020] Did he get arrested a bunch of times, you know?

[2021] And he became a marijuana enthusiast.

[2022] And, you know, and started, it just, the times changed.

[2023] Yeah.

[2024] And I think you can only sit back and observe for so long before you start commenting on things.

[2025] And then he shifted and he became, and I think he was also, experiencing prior like prior of course was I think Lenny Bruce was the original but prior was the one who made it insanely personal and he was insanely vulnerable on stage and also he had a point to a lot of the things he was doing I mean I think if there's a great I don't think there's a greatest stand -up of all time but if there is it might be prior you know that he just he had this perspective that was just wholly individually like holy him it's up 10 years later that's what he looks like yeah yeah that's crazy the beard really does change of the end of the hair be yeah I mean he was uh look at him he's got a like a fucking Steve Jobs outfit on now yeah he became he became a you know a hippie hair got longer yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah now um Richard Pride I think Richard Pride is for me he was because I had this I had this base of of Monty which is what I was going to do.

[2026] And then I had Richard Pryor and Billy Connolly, Scottish comedian, Billy Connolly.

[2027] Those two, Billy talks to just so relaxed when he's talking to large groups of people and what Richard was doing it was the acting out of all the characters thing.

[2028] That was the wonderful thing.

[2029] That's what I do.

[2030] Why are you going to do?

[2031] Why are we going to?

[2032] He was a, right, right.

[2033] The dog says, the dog, his dog says, go on in, hey, go on in.

[2034] To burglars, yeah, you come in, go in there.

[2035] You shall not leave.

[2036] Yeah, and overments.

[2037] yeah playing these these different voices and characters and what he could do and that was just that was stunning to me yeah he was something special look at him back in the day too that's that's literally him like on the wall back there the mugshot that's the same era could be that could that be that night yeah might have been that night there's some fantastic recordings that i don't know where they are now but they used to be able to buy them i bought them at a truck stop and they from Red Fox's Comedy Club, and they were cassette tapes.

[2038] And I was doing a road gig, and I think I found them, and I bought a bunch of them.

[2039] And these recordings were, they just had set up a tape recorder, and he was doing these random sets at Red Fox's Comedy Club.

[2040] And it was a lot of experimenting, a lot of ad -libbing, a lot of, I mean, he was clearly high on stage.

[2041] I mean, he would go on stage high a lot.

[2042] And he would just ramble about stuff.

[2043] and you would see these bits forming and coming out of that and then some of those bits eventually would be on some of his more famous albums later it was great great stuff just to see this guy who was just so if you go if you go from you know your traditional stand -up comedian from 1960 like you were seeing george carlin on stage to what prior was doing in the 70s this is so different so radically radically different and he took it to a different place.

[2044] You were talking about the scene in Britain.

[2045] We're interesting.

[2046] We don't really have much of a film industry.

[2047] We don't have it as quite a set of, you know, obviously it's huge in America compared to what we have.

[2048] We have quite a good TV industry.

[2049] So, but we tour like crazy.

[2050] So there's lots of tours in 100, 500 ,000 Cs, 1000 Cs, 1000 Cedars.

[2051] That goes on like endlessly all the time.

[2052] Way more than it used to before.

[2053] So there's lots of clubs, and a lot of them were less room above a pub type clubs.

[2054] So I believe the clubs in America, which much more set up, there was a bar thing, the system.

[2055] People come out and do the drinks, and it was quite a cash outlay had to get this club going.

[2056] And it would be, you know, most nights of the week.

[2057] We'd have it one night a week.

[2058] It'd just be a function room in a pub that existed for maybe hundreds and hundreds of years because all these pubs used to be taverns, drinking and it wasn't used.

[2059] And some guy would say, hey, I'll run a club up here.

[2060] I'll take the door money, you take the bar money, and that was the deal.

[2061] So a lot of amateurs running it.

[2062] So we had lots of clubs, we had that 60, 70, 80 clubs in London.

[2063] You could zip around.

[2064] That many.

[2065] Yeah, it was a ridiculous amount.

[2066] And so for me, what the Beatles had with playing in Germany, I had with London, and we all have with playing in London.

[2067] You could do four in the night, five, four in the night quite easily on Friday and Saturday.

[2068] You just jump in taxis and zip between different gigs.

[2069] Like they do in New York.

[2070] yeah yeah and but it was just so many clubs oh wow so it was beautiful i think it's less now but it's uh there's lots of open mic nights now and it's so many people wanted to get into it you can create there's no top to the career now we playing you know people are playing an arena i started doing arena tours i'm now doing more theater tours on this one my audience has got a bit older but anyway jumping between the two like playing hollywood bowl here i you know in in l -a that's such a beautiful thing to play and it's the greeks got it right the laughter rolls down the hill.

[2071] I played it twice now, and it's just gorgeous.

[2072] Yeah, I've never played there, but I've been there for a few times, for a few different things.

[2073] I saw Annie there, and I saw the, um, what is it?

[2074] Oh, um, the nightmare before Halloween, yeah.

[2075] You saw Annie?

[2076] The musical?

[2077] Yeah, they do the musical there.

[2078] They do a version of it.

[2079] And they do, uh, the nightmare before Halloween where they play the, they play the movie and then they have a symphony and the symphony.

[2080] And didn't think Annie would be your kind of, I have kids.

[2081] You needed to say that because I didn't enjoy it.

[2082] Oh, right.

[2083] I'm bored out of my fucking mind.

[2084] No, I was just going to leave it that.

[2085] No, sir, Annie's your kind of good.

[2086] I get there.

[2087] It always comes in.

[2088] Yeah, well, I like everything.

[2089] I like a lot of things that you would think I wouldn't like.

[2090] You know that for the people of L .A. or people of the world, I believe that Hollywood Bowl is a L .A. park.

[2091] So you can actually go up there and have your sandwiches any time you want, which is a beautiful thing.

[2092] I do that.

[2093] I can drive up there because it looks like, don't come in here.

[2094] There's barriers and stuff.

[2095] But no, you can park up and go in it.

[2096] It's a park.

[2097] It's still a park.

[2098] I love that space.

[2099] It's just good.

[2100] And I knew that Monty Python had played there, so I thought, I got to play there.

[2101] Well, it's beautiful, too, because it's all outdoors, and, you know, L .A. has such amazing weather, and you look around, you see the houses in the distance.

[2102] It's like, it's a special little spot.

[2103] It is beautiful.

[2104] Yeah.

[2105] I know Dave Chappelle's done some gigs there.

[2106] I think Chris Rock did a gig there.

[2107] Yeah, it must be a fun place to perform, too.

[2108] Yeah.

[2109] It's just, it works.

[2110] That amphitheater thing, I think it was the Greeks.

[2111] I came out, Democracy and Amphitheaties.

[2112] And, yeah.

[2113] Do you still go to clubs at all?

[2114] I don't so much.

[2115] I was reading the definitive thing on Robin Williams, and, you know, how he would jump into clubs and do stuff and go on.

[2116] And I, I doesn't, that doesn't really work for my stuff.

[2117] I tend to get a small, I can do a club, like for the work in progress shows I was doing.

[2118] I was taking, I was, they, they have the Al Murray Club in, in, in, Islington, no, Angel in London, sort of north -east London.

[2119] And they had a show going on at six, one at seven, and eight, you know, and I would take an hour of that and just do that again, again, again.

[2120] So I'll take an hour and I'll go out for an hour and workshop the show.

[2121] As opposed to coming on and doing 15 minutes off the top of my head, because I find that if I'm completely going scattergun, just trying to find funny, that doesn't really help me. I need to keep crafting the stuff because I need more time.

[2122] And I also don't need If it's a If it's a comedy club They want it faster They want it quicker You know And I'm not looking to hit the gags I'm just looking to find things And have the space to stop And go, what is it about cheese?

[2123] Right, right Why has it got too easy in it?

[2124] You know, I just want to waffle around Until I go, okay, that's a good book I'll keep that pit Right Do you ever feel like Like when you're doing that Like Jesus Christ I gotta get off this fucking subject Like there's nothing there?

[2125] Well yeah I do that But then I do this thing I write on my left hand like it's a note to self and I go if I do pig farming talking about pigs and stuff like they never talk about pig farming are you guys all pig farmers I'm not talking about never talk about cheese again cheese jokes do not work especially in north east London you can you just get it try and get laughs on the way out and the career is over cheese is taking over my life but do you do some gigs dressed in your girl mode and some in boy mode or I can I can do it whatever mode I want now.

[2126] It's a complete human torch thing.

[2127] I can flame on, flame off.

[2128] So I can wear a dress or I can wear trousers and it doesn't matter.

[2129] And they don't give a monkeys either.

[2130] That's interesting.

[2131] It's now.

[2132] Well, they're your fans.

[2133] Yeah.

[2134] Yeah.

[2135] Yeah.

[2136] They're coming to see you.

[2137] Yes.

[2138] If they're coming.

[2139] Yeah.

[2140] So.

[2141] Do they get it disappointed if you dress as a man?

[2142] Um, in boy mode.

[2143] Okay.

[2144] We came to see girl mode.

[2145] No. Um, they, uh, I don't know.

[2146] I don't care.

[2147] I shouldn't care.

[2148] Yeah.

[2149] I can't be on stage I just go, oh, I wonder if this.

[2150] Because that's nothing to do with the comedy, yeah?

[2151] Yeah?

[2152] And I do think some people thought it was, you know, he's going to talk about lipstick for two hours.

[2153] So anyway, another lipstick I know.

[2154] Do you dress it at all?

[2155] Do you dress it at all in your act?

[2156] I do, but diagonally.

[2157] I will do it diagonally.

[2158] Diagonally.

[2159] Yeah.

[2160] So it's never the front part of the thing.

[2161] I will just say, what I don't know, I just, I don't know, what's a good diagonal?

[2162] It would not be the front of the subject I might point it in passing So the front I'll talk about ancient king stuff Weird banjos, dogs with fighting cats, anything like that And then I might mention it just In passing as opposed to Let me tell you about being transgender I just don't do that I talk about the fights I talked about the fight I had Which was in the street And that this guy was saying this And I said this and so I built the fight into a huge thing of huge standoff stuff.

[2163] So I can make that into it into something.

[2164] But no, it's not, because it's supposed to be the background of what I'm doing.

[2165] The essential thing, if you like surreal comedy, off -the -wall comedy, that's what I do.

[2166] And I just happen to be transgender, which makes no odds in these days.

[2167] Do you find that more today than ever people are asking you questions about transgender issues because they're at the forefront?

[2168] No, less actually.

[2169] Less.

[2170] Yeah, less.

[2171] There was a point, You were the spokesperson?

[2172] It was on, and they would, yes.

[2173] Well, if not a spokesperson, I was someone who was going to talk about it, at least.

[2174] Tell us all about this.

[2175] And I'd do an interview, and if it was an hour interview, about 40 minutes would be on that.

[2176] And then when they came to write it, they thought, well, I'm just writing all about this.

[2177] All right, let's put that back a bit.

[2178] And then they used to balance it out when they wrote the interview out.

[2179] But would you rather that they just accept it and just not bring it up?

[2180] I'm fine with it now.

[2181] after the marathons, it all...

[2182] It changed.

[2183] Yeah, it changed.

[2184] Because they said, oh, so...

[2185] Because I used to say action transvestite and executive transvestite.

[2186] I was in New York.

[2187] I was playing New York.

[2188] And they said, article, a guy was found living in one of the caves in the park in New York.

[2189] And he found to have a lot of women's shoes in there.

[2190] So he's probably a transvestite.

[2191] And I went, okay, well, that's weirdo transvestite.

[2192] I'm not living in a cave.

[2193] I'm traveling business class on the planes.

[2194] This is executive transvestite.

[2195] So I came up with that one.

[2196] And then the action transvestite was just kind of a fun because I was more kind of boise about things that I'll give people grief in the streets if they give me grief.

[2197] And then after the marathons, it became a different thing.

[2198] And everyone just went, oh, I've had some, you know, I remember a guy, this was a very interesting altercation because it's hardly any words in it.

[2199] So I live near Victoria Coach Station in London most of the time when I'm around.

[2200] And I was walking down there.

[2201] And anyway, it's a coach station, so people are traveling all over the Europe from there.

[2202] And I walked up, and I was in girl mode, this guy looked at me, he said, hey, Eddie is that?

[2203] You run all those marathons, and you wear all that clobber, which is a clobber.

[2204] And then he went, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

[2205] And he was just like he was giving me a pass.

[2206] He was going, well, okay, okay.

[2207] Yeah, they have to.

[2208] Yeah.

[2209] Well, that's what my, I mean, I didn't have a negative opinion of you.

[2210] I had a positive opinion of you, but my positive opinion of you elevated once I saw you did those marathons.

[2211] I'm like, that's a person with an iron will.

[2212] That's a different kind of person.

[2213] Like, it was so huge what you did that everyone had to respect it.

[2214] Like, they knew they couldn't do it.

[2215] Or if they could do it, they haven't.

[2216] That actually does cover it.

[2217] Yes, I hadn't talked about.

[2218] You accomplished something pretty spectacular.

[2219] It was beautiful.

[2220] And it did about five things at once.

[2221] And it was raising money.

[2222] Yes.

[2223] So I think I've raised about four and a hundred.

[2224] half million pounds about six million seven million dollars so that feels great yeah and and that's with their help because the organization is good at raising the money and it gave me this this confidence this health thing back from when i was a kid it used to be a lot of us were running around how old were you when you did that first one was i was 47 so you're 47 and you just decided yeah i'm off um it was it was training i wanted to do something it's an adventure as well and And, you know, I think you have to live life as an adventure, otherwise life is too hard.

[2225] But if you look at this adventure, it means the highs and lows built into it.

[2226] And I got this health kick out of it.

[2227] It was just a number of things.

[2228] And then I could meet people.

[2229] I remember on the first marathon, I met three army sergeants who were, and they said, we've heard you're doing this, so on the British Army.

[2230] And I was just having something to eat halfway through my, what was it, about my 10th marathon.

[2231] He said, well, we heard you doing this and well, and they were chatting to me, and, you know, because I know forces and I of that mentality, I'm very happy to chat.

[2232] And suddenly I thought, well, this is an interesting respect thing.

[2233] And they said, we're trainers, we train, we work out the training regimes for the army.

[2234] And so we were very interested in what you're doing and what you seem to be able to do.

[2235] So they just found it fascinating.

[2236] And I found that fascinating.

[2237] I could suddenly talk to service people in a certain way, sports people in a certain way.

[2238] Everything just shifted.

[2239] Yeah.

[2240] And people from different ethnic groups, some people are down on, some ethnic groups are down on being transgender, whatever.

[2241] But if you're doing that, then it says, okay, we put these two together and you're on a different place.

[2242] So it has completely changed the way a lot of people react to me. Yeah, I can only imagine.

[2243] They don't necessarily come to the comedy, but that's fine.

[2244] But they respect you.

[2245] Yeah, it's just certain different things happen, and you can, and I like to chat to people.

[2246] I found that chatting is very important, because if you see someone and it's a bloke in wearing makeup, whatever, and you get lipstick up, and you go, people can go, ooh.

[2247] But if you say, hi, nice weather today, and they go, oh, yeah, it's quite nice.

[2248] And then they want a different footing.

[2249] They're trying to put you into a place of normalcy.

[2250] Yeah, well, I'm trying to put myself in.

[2251] They will allow me in.

[2252] They will allow me in.

[2253] Okay, it seems normal.

[2254] It is the talking is the most important thing.

[2255] Just chatting away and being boring.

[2256] I have a natural boringness.

[2257] I think maybe everyone has natural boringness.

[2258] I think they're really interesting people probably just blow up in their 20s and stuff because they just do stuff that's too far out.

[2259] But most of us are pretty boring.

[2260] And then we add layers of interestingness on tops to reach that level of, okay, I think I'm quite interesting now.

[2261] I think I've got enough interest in going on.

[2262] But my boringness in chatting, I am chatting to talk about weather or wood or walls or, you know, trees or banjo.

[2263] So that introduces the normalcy, the boring chatter.

[2264] I won't say, I won't say, we've got to do something extreme now.

[2265] I'll just chat about, yeah.

[2266] Normal things.

[2267] Yeah, where'd you get that jacket?

[2268] That's quite a good jacket on your.

[2269] We'll work on me. You know, just talk about things and be human, be a human being.

[2270] the biggest controversy in America in terms of transgender people probably the biggest or one of the biggest is competing in sports with biological women that's the biggest one yes if you're asking me for answers on that haven't really got them I know yeah I've got good one for for washrooms as you call them lavatories restrooms which is urinals as you call them we call them urinals just chuck them all out And everyone just, it's all cubicles.

[2271] And we already do that in restaurants.

[2272] We already share stuff, the toilets in, right?

[2273] We do it in airplanes.

[2274] We have no bother.

[2275] But if you just remove urinals in theaters and places, there won't be queuing.

[2276] Often the women are queuing forever and the men are not queuing.

[2277] This way, everyone shares, everyone behaves of our own responsibility.

[2278] I've heard of it working in a school as well.

[2279] There was less bullying in the Luz.

[2280] So it's the idea to just check, go.

[2281] It's regression of technology, I take it.

[2282] So get the urinal.

[2283] check it out the window.

[2284] Everyone has a cubicle.

[2285] Just go to the loo and then use the mirrors and then go away.

[2286] And so everything being for both genders.

[2287] Yeah.

[2288] You just make it all even.

[2289] Then we get outside a lot of problems.

[2290] Some people will have pushback on that and have other reasons why they don't like it.

[2291] But a lot of women don't want to be in a washroom with men, though.

[2292] Well, they already are going into, if they're sharing it in the loos in the airplane, if they're sharing it in a...

[2293] Yeah, but an airplane is one, you know, it's only one person to go in there.

[2294] I think their concern is there's you know some men are fucking creeps and some women just want to have a place where they could just be themselves and just check their makeup and go to the bathroom and wash and talk amongst other women.

[2295] I understand that.

[2296] It's just I've, you know, if you think about anything that's going to change anything, there's usually something that won't.

[2297] Right, but the only reason to do this is to accommodate people who are transgender in a way that it seems like it doesn't it doesn't put them in a position.

[2298] where they can be judged because everyone's doing it.

[2299] It makes, well, if it stops bullying for, you know, in schools, then it's, it's a number of things in there that, that it can make easier.

[2300] It just makes a whole, whole area of things a lot easier.

[2301] Do you think it would stop, how would it stop bullying, though?

[2302] I don't know, well, it has, I mean, I'm just giving you the figures that have, what have they said?

[2303] Well, they just said that they tried it in the school and the bullying went down.

[2304] See, if there's girls and there's boys together, it's like boys will bully the boys or girls will bully the girls, but if you, yeah, So if you have them all together, they don't.

[2305] It seems so.

[2306] Now, I...

[2307] And they just punish the creeps, which is really what you...

[2308] I mean, if someone's being a creep in a bathroom, the problem is the creep, it's not the bathroom.

[2309] Right.

[2310] Yeah, it's...

[2311] Anyway, so this is, you know, I haven't scientifically proved this with chemicals and a slide rule or whatever, but it's an idea that gets to us to a better place, and surely we're all somewhere on the spectrum of something.

[2312] So the idea that...

[2313] that anyone who is expressing themselves in a different way that that is a problem if you take about it just straight baby if we all went back to how we used to think that there was just men and women and everyone had straight sex even that sex no one would talk about that people you know Victorian age and your equivalent Victorian age no one would talk about that that was all horrible that sex was that procreation was the whole idea of everything so if you I'm trying to to get out to a practical place where people just go to the loo and behave like adults.

[2314] Even the kids seem to behave more like adults, which is interesting.

[2315] That makes sense.

[2316] I see what you're saying.

[2317] Yeah, that is the concern, right, was that we have a system in place and someone tries to change the system, then people get upset.

[2318] And that always happens.

[2319] Yeah.

[2320] I mean, but also women do queue forever and men don't queue at all.

[2321] Right.

[2322] Cue much less, but this makes queuing even, evens that out.

[2323] So everyone just behaves like an adult.

[2324] It's just a toilet.

[2325] The Romans used to have it with open -planned toilets.

[2326] Yeah, I've seen that.

[2327] We have made it into a problem.

[2328] We have made this a whole psychological problem.

[2329] Where's the Romans just sit down there and have a poo and have a chat?

[2330] And once they did make it a problem and categorize people by gender, then it became this thing.

[2331] And now you don't want to change that.

[2332] Well, yeah.

[2333] I don't think they might have had male and female toys in the Roman times.

[2334] But it's just the fact that they were more open about the idea that it's bodily.

[2335] functions and just normal and we've you know back in before we came in and we were just going out into the woods and in the forest and having a poo it was just having a poo and now we feel it's a big problem having a poo we don't like the fact we have a poo we don't want to admit that we have the poo does the queen ever have a poo maybe never has the attitude uh be besides the marathon thing has the attitude culturally shifted in the UK the same way it's shifted in America where people I think the more and more people are out and positive.

[2336] I mean, you've basically got to, from every group, this is ethnic groups, it's from women, this is from anyone that feels slightly out of the loop.

[2337] If you can have any positive role models that go out there that do other things, you know, just something that's nothing to do with sexuality, you're very good at cooking, you're on television for this, I mean, tends to be television helps.

[2338] You go to sports style, you're this, you're that, you want to, those things, people say, well, there's a positive role model.

[2339] and they are of a different color or of a different sexuality or they you know and that just helps everyone adjust their mindset and the younger people come through and they all that's all they know I know about this person of me like you know um in baseball do you see the the famous documentary baseball the um 10 burns yeah the Ken Burns one and that black people after the civil war black people were playing baseball and then there was some guy was very powerful he said there would be no black people in major leagues at all and it was blocked from about 1890 something like this all the way through to 1950s so it was actually happening and then it went backwards yeah so there was a positive role moment and then well whatever that happened things can go backwards and things go forwards and I just think you know we're trying to get to a world where everyone's living that live yeah that's really what we need right just live and let live living as long as you're interfering with other people's lives, as long as you're not doing something that somehow or another fucks with someone else.

[2340] Like, who cares?

[2341] Why would anyone care?

[2342] I know.

[2343] I mean, I think people care because they're unhappy with themselves.

[2344] I think that's the only time people care.

[2345] And my issue with this that I've come across is with athletes.

[2346] It's with transgender athletes competing against women, particularly in my field, in fighting.

[2347] There's been some, there have been at least there was one very vocal case one very public case of a transgender athlete who was a male for 30 plus years transitioned over for a couple years for two years and then started fighting women didn't tell them that she used to be a man right and it became a giant issue and people were outraged and anger the women who got beat up were angry because they got destroyed two of them did and then she started then she was public about it and then started fighting with women that were willing and new.

[2348] Yeah, you've got to say things up front.

[2349] Yes.

[2350] I came out that long ago because I wanted to be up front about things.

[2351] So, yeah, and I don't have the great answers.

[2352] You know, I don't have the answer of everything, but, yep, I can see that.

[2353] I think one of the interesting things about it is that there are no real answers, that it's one of those things where you just got to go, huh, what do we do here?

[2354] And this is, this is what I think one of the more unique things about being a person is that we have this opportunity to look at this unusual circumstance and communicate about it and try to figure it out.

[2355] Communication, the whole thing.

[2356] I just knew on my personal thing, if I came out, if we started talking about it, we'd get in a better place than not talking about it and just saying it's a negative thing.

[2357] When you came out did it give you a feeling of relief?

[2358] Unbelievable.

[2359] I mean, you know, because you've got the secret and the secret is, is, I did self -analysis.

[2360] I lay on a bed and said, why am I thinking this way?

[2361] What is going on?

[2362] What are the thoughts?

[2363] Like, what?

[2364] But because you still like women.

[2365] Yeah.

[2366] So I, okay, here's the clearest way I can show it.

[2367] There was a woman on television.

[2368] She said, my daughter, she was 12, and she was upstairs.

[2369] She was wearing my makeup, and she's wearing my heels.

[2370] And I told her to get that stuff off.

[2371] What are you doing?

[2372] She said to her daughter, it was 12.

[2373] And that was from an age point of view.

[2374] Right.

[2375] And I just thought, well, that's what I would be doing at 12.

[2376] That's what I was doing in my stepmother's clothes and stuff.

[2377] So I thought, well, hang on, I'm having the exactly same desire.

[2378] to express myself in that way.

[2379] So I just wanted to express myself in that way.

[2380] And I was told, my society, you're not allowed to.

[2381] And I just thought, well, you know, some people are allowed to.

[2382] And I'm not, I've decided, I gave myself permission.

[2383] I said, I'm allowed to.

[2384] And it's not hurting anyone else.

[2385] And I was stealing the makeup.

[2386] And after that, I started buying the makeup because the police got me. You got caught stealing makeup?

[2387] Yeah, and I go back into the shop in Bexon.

[2388] And I say, I used to steal out.

[2389] Now, I'll buy this lipstick.

[2390] Thank you very much.

[2391] And I always make a part.

[2392] They say, yeah, it's him again with a bloody lipstick.

[2393] So, yeah, it's...

[2394] So you just had this desire to express yourself in a way.

[2395] Yeah, just like some women do.

[2396] And some women don't.

[2397] Some people say, I'm not going to wear any makeup.

[2398] I'm not going to paint my nails.

[2399] I'm not going to do that.

[2400] Yeah.

[2401] And if I had a...

[2402] If I looked very female, then I would, I would, might wear different things or express herself in a different way, but I'm, I look kind of more boyish, more maleish.

[2403] so I have to, you know, I choose certain clothes, certain look, and I do it that way, and quite a lot of people are sort of going, okay, fair play, that seems okay, and you're looking fairly well put together.

[2404] That's what I get to.

[2405] So when you finally came out, the relief, though.

[2406] Yeah.

[2407] You could just be yourself.

[2408] Yeah, and you don't tend to look terribly.

[2409] When you first go out, you go, well, that doesn't work with that.

[2410] Why was I wearing that?

[2411] That's crazy thing.

[2412] But you've never had that teenage girl chance to be able to try things out and have your peer groups say, you're not wearing that, are you?

[2413] Because that's not rubbish.

[2414] Okay, so then I gradually learned to, okay, how does makeup work?

[2415] Okay, that's how it works.

[2416] So you gradually get better at things.

[2417] Don't buy that.

[2418] That color doesn't work.

[2419] Oh, it can work, but if you, you know.

[2420] So, but the relief is huge because you've no longer got this hellish secret.

[2421] Yeah.

[2422] And then you can begin the dialogue.

[2423] I hadn't really have a dialogue with anyone at that point.

[2424] But on stage, I could.

[2425] The hellish secret.

[2426] I have friends that are in the closet and they don't know what to do.

[2427] do and they, in even comedian friends that they don't talk about it.

[2428] They hide it.

[2429] And I'm like, God, if you just let it go.

[2430] I mean, people in this day and age, the people that will accept you, that's the people you want anyway.

[2431] The people that don't accept you, you don't want them.

[2432] Like, that's their own problem.

[2433] It's this live and let live thing.

[2434] The people that don't want you to be who you actually are to fit their own narrative in their own head.

[2435] Like, those people are the crazy ones.

[2436] It's not you.

[2437] It's really.

[2438] obvious they're gay people.

[2439] It's really obvious they're transgender people.

[2440] It's really obvious.

[2441] No one's just making this up.

[2442] And down back through history as well.

[2443] Yes, forever.

[2444] And also I think I try, I say quite often, you know, it's a genetic thing because I don't, I didn't feel I got up, you know, when I was 23 and a half and I said, I think I've all become all transgender now.

[2445] No, it was I was four or five when I first knew and it has not moved those, those thoughts.

[2446] That's interesting.

[2447] So I think it is for most gay lesbian people I've talked to, I just think it's locked and it's built in.

[2448] It's something you get given these cards as I say and we're trying to be up front and be positive and express ourselves well it only makes sense when you look at the other variables the other variables when it comes to people's personality their body shape their mentality their drive their ambition all these different variables it only makes sense that there's feminine and masculine variables and that these shift back and forth with certain people and that certain people just like they're somewhere in like where you are well you have boy mode and girl mode and not I would imagine that you talking about it so openly and that you're just so free with it that there's probably people out there that are listening to this.

[2449] They're like, God damn it, that's me. Well, you know, and the youngest young people around the world, I have met people who are talking about it in school.

[2450] Actually, when I came back from South Africa, my co -writer, Kellynne Jones, he said, can you go in and my daughter's in class and they've been talking about your runs in South Africa?

[2451] So I went in and they could talk about racism because I was running a salute to the Mandela, 27 marathans to his 27 years he had to spend in prison.

[2452] So they could talk about racism, but they could also talk about being trans, transgender, or self -identifying and LGBT stuff, because there was some kid in the class who was already identifying, what did I identify as a girl.

[2453] And so they were being positive, and these kids were eight, I think, you know.

[2454] So it's way different to our childhood.

[2455] Our childhood, it was just do not talk about, do not mention it.

[2456] And if you mention it, you're going to get your head kicked in by your peer.

[2457] group.

[2458] So, and I was always, that's why I never mentioned it at school, especially, you know, I fancy girls so I could just go in that route and, uh, did you run into girls that had an issue with it?

[2459] Um, people that I know less of, but if you talk about relationships, it gets really tricky because it reflects upon people's relationships, uh, with yourself.

[2460] So, um, but it's, it's cool and I've never, I've never been great at relationships.

[2461] That's always tricky.

[2462] So, you know, well, you know, I got this career thing, and I worked out how I could work that, and I can just keep staying four steps ahead of the game, and I'm playing all these countries, and I'm doing the four languages, so I've got all that going, but then how do you, you're never really in one place to be able to continue a relationship, and then there's the being transsexual, and that goes on, so that all gets complicated.

[2463] You can't be, can't be everything working.

[2464] No. So, but I'm, I'm okay with that, and it's all good, and, and I enjoy things.

[2465] On stage, I try and make myself laugh.

[2466] This isn't comedy.

[2467] This is my trick.

[2468] I actually just try and I'd live and go, oh, that's funny.

[2469] So I'm going off of this weird trip.

[2470] I'm going to tell you this, but this is in later show in Vonderva.

[2471] But I talk about J .R .R. Tolkien.

[2472] I talk about the imagination.

[2473] We have written all these stories.

[2474] And the animals haven't done that.

[2475] All the wild animals don't seem to have written any stories.

[2476] I haven't heard of any good ones.

[2477] But we've written that.

[2478] J .R. R. Tolkien.

[2479] And I say J .R. R .R. Tolkien was born J. R -R -R -R -R -R -R -R -R -R -R -Tolkin.

[2480] You may not know this.

[2481] And people also go, is this true?

[2482] And he was born in Bloom -Fontein, South Africa, you know, so he's growing up there.

[2483] And then they moved to Birmingham in England.

[2484] And it's a different axis of, so the African accent is more like that.

[2485] And then Birmingham is all like this, talk, talk, talk, that was, got this kind of sound like this.

[2486] And then I said, when he's five, he turns to his mother because he's realized he's called J -R -R -R -R -R -R -R -Tolkin.

[2487] And he says, it is South African Birmingham twang.

[2488] and he goes, I do this strangulated accent that is trying to fight between South African and Birmingham.

[2489] And it's such a stupid line to go on.

[2490] You know, there's no logic to where I'm going.

[2491] And his mother's going, what are you saying, J .R .R .R. I can't understand it.

[2492] Because she's still in South Africa.

[2493] And he says, so I'm spending time going into the sidebar, which is making me laugh.

[2494] And I think a lot of the audience are going, what is he on about?

[2495] What is he whittering about?

[2496] And you can't really even hear what I'm saying.

[2497] But I just do this strangulated accent.

[2498] And in the end, he has to talk in a Yorkshire accent to get his mother to understand if he could cut down the number of ours in his name.

[2499] And he becomes J .R .R. Tolkien.

[2500] So that's the typical of my stand -up where I just go off on a tangent.

[2501] To make yourself laugh.

[2502] And yeah.

[2503] And I think it's sort of funny, a little bit funny.

[2504] It's probably more funny for me. Well, if it's funny for you, though, it's funny for people that are listening because comedy is contagious.

[2505] Yeah.

[2506] And if I'm, you know, if the person on stage is having a good time, then the audience would probably have a better time and this thing of it's not being locked down that it's living and breathing in front of them they do love that and and and you put more energy into the next bit when you go yeah and then this and then that and the other thing yeah so i do love stella because it's you know you can just do it and do it and you know there's no one well i was a double act i was a four person act and whenever you if you're even just a double act if you go off on a tangent then you have to look across to your partner and your partner's going where you're going right you might want to go with it you might not want to go with it keep to the script but on your own you could just go off and Lenny Bruce you know the gigs he did in front of the band you know that thing in the film that part of the film yes and he's trying to make the band laugh and the there's the people the raincoats in the front and the strippers coming on and because when we did the play Lenny we had a live actual jazz band on the stage a real good jazz musicianist so I was trying to make them laugh in just the way that Lenny had I was trying to crack them up because I would go off script and I could do this and that was just beautiful and they said you're riffing aren't you you're just riffing like we're riffing and I thought whoa this is weird this is it was really nice to cruise down his life and do stand up as close to him as I could even the mainstream I did the more mainstream stuff and then then the really edgy stuff and the weird stuff and then where Jesus comes at the back and you've got St. Pat's Cathedral that whole sequence where he's got Call the Pope, call the pokes Jesus is here Yeah.

[2507] And yeah, that was fun.

[2508] Yeah.

[2509] I got very ill doing it.

[2510] How?

[2511] Well, you started off dead, naked, and then you put your clothes on, and you're talking, and you start going backwards.

[2512] Oh, so the place starts off dead?

[2513] Yeah.

[2514] You start off dead by...

[2515] So when he killed himself in the bathroom.

[2516] Yeah.

[2517] Yeah.

[2518] And then as you start, and you're talking to either God or, I think I'm talking to a judge who was a bit like a God at the beginning of it and explaining things, as I'm putting my clothes on.

[2519] So you start off naked.

[2520] Then you have simulated sex with my wife, about a quarter of the way through the film.

[2521] So that was interesting doing that.

[2522] And then you end up dying at the end of the film.

[2523] So it just, it took a lot out of me, three months of that.

[2524] Yeah, it took a lot of them.

[2525] So emotionally.

[2526] Yeah, emotionally.

[2527] And I've never been ill to, out of a show, but it just took me down.

[2528] I just was not well enough.

[2529] So you think it was just contemplating his existence, his life and what he went through?

[2530] I think it was yeah I think part of his journey and also it was physically very grueling it's mentally and physically quite really grueling and together that it made out I was knackered and I probably just wasn't drinking enough water I should have you know I tend to think um I don't know it's a me trait definitely that I will just carry on until I get ill I would necessarily think okay you're going into a stress period now So let's get some good water on.

[2531] Let's eat some healthy food and so that nothing comes in and takes you out.

[2532] You just bulldoze your way through things.

[2533] Yeah, I tend to bulldoze.

[2534] We just bulldoze through three hours.

[2535] Do we?

[2536] Yeah.

[2537] It's three o 'clock there.

[2538] Yeah.

[2539] I was thinking I'd have no idea how long.

[2540] Isn't that crazy?

[2541] Yeah.

[2542] It's like a time warping here.

[2543] Well, then, you're good at it.

[2544] You're used to it.

[2545] I once did a street show for about two hours without starting, which was quite a beautiful.

[2546] Because on the street, if you imagine it, There's no, nothing.

[2547] Edinburgh Festival, so you know the Edinburgh Festival.

[2548] And there's this place called the Mound.

[2549] So there's people milling around.

[2550] So I was almost starting a show.

[2551] And I was just mucking about for two hours.

[2552] I was just there.

[2553] Kind of not starting, kind of starting, kind of chatting, kind of playing around.

[2554] Good, beautiful.

[2555] It's, I've done the most fun things on the street because no one's in charge of anything.

[2556] There's just no rules.

[2557] Yeah, I seen Dave Chappelle do that.

[2558] Dave Chappelle did that in Montreal.

[2559] We were doing this club soda, and then he came downstairs after we did a, I think he was like 18 or 19.

[2560] and just took his hat off and started doing stand -up and had people put money in the hat.

[2561] He was doing stand -up on the street.

[2562] I was pretty wild.

[2563] Pretty free.

[2564] As you used to see in Washington Square Parties do that.

[2565] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

[2566] Charlie Burnett was famous for that.

[2567] Charlie Burnett was a guy who was one of the original street stand -up comics in New York, and he would do that in Washington Square Park and gather everyone around.

[2568] There's video of it that people could watch online.

[2569] I think he might have come over to England at one point.

[2570] Did he?

[2571] I think he might have it.

[2572] He was brilliant.

[2573] brilliant performer really good at grabbing people and grabbing their attention and Dave learned a lot from him Eddie thank you very much man this is a lot of fun I really enjoyed it I really appreciate you coming here wonderful we got a chance to sit down absolutely tell people about your tour where they can find where you're going to be tickets all that jazz Eddie isod .com that's where it's happening and I am next two and a half months all the way up to mid -July I'm around so 40 cities 40 cities beautiful All in America.

[2574] Yeah.

[2575] And I've already played all 50 states, which is kind of beautiful.

[2576] You played Montana?

[2577] I played everywhere.

[2578] Where'd you go in Montana?

[2579] I'm not sure.

[2580] What's the capital city?

[2581] Billings, I think.

[2582] Yeah, I think we played Billings.

[2583] If not, it was near Billings?

[2584] Is that it?

[2585] Yeah.

[2586] What about Wyoming?

[2587] You did Wyoming?

[2588] Yeah, all of them.

[2589] Yeah, I made a point.

[2590] I played Alaska twice.

[2591] Wow.

[2592] We ended up in Hawaii, but played every single one, including Mississippi and Alabama as well.

[2593] That's awesome.

[2594] So, everywhere.

[2595] But it's nice.

[2596] I just love playing, you know, I just love playing around the world.

[2597] Onward.

[2598] Yeah, onward.

[2599] Good luck to you.

[2600] Thank you.

[2601] Cheers, thank you.

[2602] Thank you.