Watch George Carlin... It`S Bad For Ya! Download

Watch George Carlin... It`S Bad For Ya! Download

George Carlin Interview Archive of American Television. In one of his final interviews, George Carlin (1. Everybody thinks they have rights. And I tell them why they don't have any rights — because your rights can disappear. So they're not rights, they're privileges…. It's fucking make believe, folks. It's like the boogeyman. We made that up. And people, they cling to these things. Not my audience. My audience is glad to hear me get in there with the Rotor Rooter and the deep enema. Cleans the system out. I mean, I love doing this stuff.  It's such a joy, god." George Carlin's career as a stand- up comedian was marked by his irreverent material epitomized by his famed comedy routine about the "Seven Dirty Words You Can Never Say on Television." In his three- hour Archive interview, Carlin describes his early comedic talents and how, as a teenager, he would record bits on a tape recorder and play them back for friends.

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Watch George Carlin... It`S Bad For Ya! Download

Buy George Carlin: It's Bad For Ya!: Read 185 Movies & TV Reviews - Amazon.com.

  1. It's Bad for Ya is the 19th and final album, and 14th and final HBO stand-up comedy special by stand-up comedian George Carlin. It was televised live on March 1, 2008.
  2. 0. 63997304584.170998. 0. 2008 8528605184 14 3/26/2011. 2008 4686249984 14 3/26/2011. 2009 4698939922 13. 1979 9392799744 12 7/2/2011. 2009 8531963904 13. 2013.
  3. Archives and past articles from the Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia Daily News, and Philly.com.
  4. The vast majority of industrialized societies are so totally disconnected from the natural world that very few even notice the rapidly dying ecosystems around them.
Watch George Carlin... It`S Bad For Ya! Download

He talks about the influences from the movies (particularly Danny Kaye's films) and early television (such as the variety series Broadway Open House) on his comic sensibilities. He then chronicles his early life through the Air Force, as a disc jockey, and as half of a comedy team with Jack Burns, leading to his first professional appearance on television on Jack Paar's Tonight Show. He notes various "breaks" along the way and talks about going solo, working as a stand- up comedian for several years, before he got back into making television appearances on such programs as The Ed Sullivan Show. He speaks in detail about his infamous "Seven Dirty Words" monologue and the FCC case that resulted from it (filed against WBAI radio, for obscenity), bringing it up- to- date: "Now piss has changed. Piss, interesting development, piss is now okay on television if you're pissed off, but not if you're pissed on. In other words, if you change the preposition you get in trouble. It's all right for me to say to you 'why are you pissed off at me?' But you can't say 'because you pissed on me.'" He recalls his appearance as the very first host of Saturday Night Live, and discusses how his HBO specials resurrected his career. He touches on his later work as an actor in Kevin Smith's movies and on such shows as the PBS series Shining Time Station, which earned him two Daytime Emmy nominations as Outstanding Performer in a Children's Series. Watch Fox Hunting Online.

Henry Colman and Jenni Matz conducted the interview on December 1.