First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"I'd like to name my kid a whole phrase. You know, something like "Ladies and Gentlemen". That'll be a cool name for a kid. "This is my son, Ladies and Gentlemen!" Then, when he gets out of hand, I get to go, "Ladies and Gentlemen, please!""
"They charged me 15 dollars. That's how much it costs to only have 20 dollars."
"What comedy really is is connecting with a group of people, and just speaking at a heightened level without any barriers and saying things that are raw id, and having people really respond to it. You know, thatâs really what it is, and thatâs why there are people that I look at as comedy role models that arenât comedians, like Muhammad Ali. The way he spoke to audiences and crowds and stuff, if you watch some of his preaching to Nation of Islam crowds? Hilarious, and amazing, like he knew who the people were. He said, âYou know what the fuck Iâm talking about!â and he explained it to them."
"It seems like the better it gets, the more miserable people become. Thereâs never a technological advancement where people think, âWow, we can finally do this!â ⌠And I think a lot of it has to do with advertising. Americans have it constantly drilled into our heads, every fucking day, that we deserve everything to be perfect all the time."
"I just donât trust any of it. Every time I read something about how thereâs been another ridiculous climb of the Dow Jones, thereâs a part of me that goes, âThis canât be good.â None of this is real money. You know what I mean? Itâs not like thereâs actually more of anything. Itâs just ideas. When people are getting richer and richer but theyâre not actually producing anything, it canât end well."
"I think of boxing a lot with standup. I even train with boxing trainers"
"Everything thatâs difficult you should be able to laugh about."
"Credibility lasts about two cycles of bad material, and then youâll probably never get it back. If you let people down, thatâs really hard to come back fromâ harder than climbing from nothing to something, even."
"Out of the people that ever were, almost all of them are dead. There are way more dead people, and youâre all gonna die and then youâre gonna be dead for way longer than youâre alive. Like thatâs mostly what youâre ever gonna be. Youâre just dead people that didnât die yet."
"Divorce is always good news. I know that sounds weird, but itâs true because no good marriage has ever ended in divorce ⌠That would be sad. If two people were married and they were really and they just had a great thing and then they got divorced, that would be really sad. But that has happened zero times."
"I'll do all the announcements that you would have heard. Please turn off your cell phones. You can take pictures but turn off the flash. That's stupid, because it's not-- You know when you're watching the World Series and there's all that-- Like your flash is lighting Yankee Stadium. Just leave your flash off. Don't yell out during the show. If you have something you want to say to me... This is what we do. We write it down and then you go outside in the lobby and then you go home and you f-yourself because, that's selfish. This is a rhetorical performance. It's got nothing to do with you. Don't text or twitter during the show. Just live your life. Don't keep telling people what you're doing."
"Drugs are so fucking good that theyâll ruin your life."
"I did a show in New Jersey in the auditorium of a technical high school ⌠Technical high school, thatâs where dreams are narrowed down. We tell our children, âYou can do anything you want.â Their whole lives. âYou can do anything!â But this place, we take kids â theyâre 15, theyâre young â and we tell them, âYou can do eight things. We got it down to eight for you.â"
"My uncles were all funny. My dad wasnât funny, but my uncles were all funny. Now I go back and I like him better than them, they were manipulative funny."
"I had to be the head of the household really for the first time and say okay, I have to actually make a rule that weâre going to live by here. And I decided what it was is that the family comes over the work always. I mean, with the kids itâs a priority. Because I wanted them to have a feeling like they could count on me like I was really there, I wasnât just visiting. I didnât want one of these moments like, âJeez, honey, Iâm sorry Iâm not going to see you this week or this month or whatever because Iâm going to LA.â I got some offers early that go out to LA and do parts on sitcoms and I said no, because it meant going and being away for a month."
"âFuck it.â Thatâs really the attitude thatâs keeps a family together. Itâs not âWe love each other!â Itâs âFuck it.â"
"Thatâs what being a parent is like. Itâs like Platoon."
"I remember the day I saw my hair was thinning. I donât remember caring much. I donât care. Itâs just hair. It never bothered me much. I was pretty young, too. And it happened and is happening veeery slowly. I have a feeling dead people get really mad when we complain about losing hair."
"Iâve started to kind of hate people, and itâs not because I have anything against them. Itâs just, I enjoy it. Itâs recreation."
"Itâs been a very old thing for people to gather together and laugh at stuff. The first comedian in America really was Abraham Lincoln ⌠He used to go to a pub near where he lived and stand in front of the fire and he packed the place every night and he would just talk and bust everybody in their guts. He was just a hilarious speaker and thatâs what he did."
"The Greatest Generation gets too much credit. Those World War II guys, if they had all the shit we have today, theyâd be assholes too. Itâs just circumstantial. Itâs what youâre called on to do that makes you great. We havenât been called on to do anything but buy shit and get fat."
"Friends should always tell you the truth. But please donât."
"Iâm a vulgar, fucked-up degenerate comedian who did drugs. And Iâm connecting with Christian mothers and fathers. I love that. That means so much to me."
"The earliest stand-up comedy I was aware of was Bill Cosby ⌠I watched Saturday Night Live as soon as I was aware of it, and Monty Python used to be on PBS at weird hours, so I used to try to watch that. And I loved George Carlin on SNL, that was the first stand-up I ever really remember seeing on TV. And then Steve Martin. I guess I was in fifth or sixth grade when Steve Martin showed up, and he was instantly my idol. And Richard Pryor around the same time too, I sort of became aware of him, though I donât remember the first time I saw him."
"The last jobs I had were fixing cars and covering football games for a local access TV station. As in driving the mobile van to the field, setting up 3 cameras, teaching depressed grownups and interns how to use them and directing the game from the van and then wanting to kill myself."
"Iâd love to have a shitty job. I couldnât hold any down. Standup was the only thing I could stick with. Iâm an idiot that way."
"Well, I think âlikabilityâ is an overused word. I donât watch people âcause I like them; I watch them because theyâre compelling. Sympathetic is a little different ⌠Likable just thins you out. Working to make a character likable is what kills most TV shows."
"One time, I threw a candy wrapper on the street ⌠I was with a friend who said to me, âYou just littered on the street! Donât you care about the environment?â And I thought about it, and I said, âYou know what? This inât the environment. This is New York City ⌠New York City is not the environment. New York City is a giant piece of litter. Next to Mexico City, [itâs] the shittiest piece of litter in the world. Just a pussy, runny, smokinâ, stinkinâ piece of litter."
"Bill Gates has 90 billion dollars ⌠If I had 90 billion dollars, I wouldnât have it for long because I would just dream of all the crazy stuff I could do with it. This guy, 90 billion dollars. He could buy every baseball team and make them all wear dresses and still have 88 billion dollars."
"To me, comedies are usually the least funny movies. Movies that are actually a comedy are usually not all that funny. To me Goodfellas and Raging Bull are two of the funniest movies I ever saw. [Vulture, 2010]"
"Whenever single people complain about anything, I really want them to shut the fuck up. First of all, if youâre single, your life has no consequence on the earth. Even if youâre helping people aggressively, which youâre fucking not, nobody gives a shit what happens to you. You can die, and it actually doesnât matter. It doesnât. Your mother will cry or whatever, but otherwise, nobody gives a shit."
"If you do something and people think youâre stupid, just go for crazy. You get more respect that way because nobody likes stupid people."
"Now we live in an amazing, amazing world and itâs wasted on the crappiest generation of spoiled idiots."
"Twitter and Facebook and MySpace; all that stuff makes you warped. Weâve all basically given ourselves data entry jobs. Iâve actually heard people say things like, âAw shit, I have to update my Twitter.â Really? You have to? Thatâs a big priority for you?"
"People say âmy phone sucks.â No it doesnât! The shittiest cellphone in the world is a miracle. Your life sucks. Around the phone."
"Thereâs a huge amount of work that goes into placating a network in regular television. Itâs literally 70% or 80% of your workload, is showing them the material, getting their notes and presenting it to them and making sure they weigh in. Itâs a huge amount of work."
"I remember reading an article about Frasier when it was going off the air â a very sad obituary from a TV writer who said that Frasier was such a smart show, and it was for the Mensa set. And he gave an example, where he quoted some line about a woman that Frasier thinks is very mean and he says, âHer idea of tough love is the Spanish Inquisition.â And they thought that was very smartâjust because he mentioned something from history."
"Thereâs a need to perfect things in a writersâ room, and that can take a lot of fun out of a show sometimes. Itâs a struggle. It depends on your personality. Some people love working with a writing staff. I had a great writing staff on Lucky Louie, but it sometimes felt like Congress or something."
"Sometimes I just want to tell a story regardless of whether it fits what the show is saying. Iâve been in a lot of writing rooms where somebody says an idea and everyoneâs dying, like laughing so theyâre delirious. Itâs like a black hole in a good way, everything starts to fall into it, you know what I mean."
"I wish I could [keep a journal]. I have a lot of journals with one page half written in. I sometimes will write myself a quick email on my Blackberry when I think of something."
"I canât sit down and write jokes. I just flows in from some maddeningly elusive place. Believe me, if I had an Alaska in my brain, I would drill baby drill, and Iâd cum right on Sarahâs back while I was there."
"All these words we use, anybody can be a genius now. It used to be you had to have a thought no one ever had before or you had to invent a number. Now, itâs like, âHey, Iâve got a cup in case we need another cup.â âDude, youâre a genius!"
"Please stop it with voting for Trump. It was funny for a little while. But the guy is Hitler. And by that I mean that we are being Germany in the 30s. Do you think they saw the shit coming? Hitler was just some hilarious and refreshing dude with a weird comb over."
"Trump is not your best. He's the worst of all of us. He's a symptom to a problem that is very real. But don't vote for your own cancer. You're better than that."
"Because we don't want the first bit of sad, we put it away with phone,*beep*, for the food, you get a little fell kind of. You're never feel completely sad or completely happy, just feel kind of satisfied with your product. And then you die."
"I want to address the stories told to The New York Times by five women named Abby, Rebecca, Dana, Julia who felt able to name themselves and one who did not."
"These stories are true. At the time, I said to myself that what I did was O.K. because I never showed a woman my dick without asking first, which is also true. But what I learned later in life, too late, is that when you have power over another person, asking them to look at your dick isnât a question. Itâs a predicament for them. The power I had over these women is that they admired me. And I wielded that power irresponsibly."
"The hardest regret to live with is what youâve done to hurt someone else. And I can hardly wrap my head around the scope of hurt I brought on them."
"I have spent my long and lucky career talking and saying anything I want. I will now step back and take a long time to listen. Thank you for reading."
"Saying that something is too terrible to joke about is like saying that a disease is too terrible to try to cure it."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.