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On the record ... with Lewis Black

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So I just kept doing stand-up, and I got better and better at it. Then people said, "We'll pay you for this," and I said, "Wow, that would be interesting," because I was broke. I was outright broke until I was 40.

MW: What do you find funny?
LB: Stupidity. When something's really dumb, it's funny to me. Like the guy who goes to rob the bank and writes the note on his own deposit slip. Stuff like that is spectacular.

MW: Do you prefer live performances or TV?
LB: Live. TV is OK. I like it. But the nice thing about live... There's a relationship that comes through that's missing when you can get up and get popcorn in the middle of it.

MW: Was your comedy always in that angry, ranting style, or did that evolve?
LB: It was every type of thing. I was trying to find what I was, where I was funny. And the stupid thing is, it was right in front of me the whole time; it always is. Being funny is being who you are and blowing it up a little. I'm funny when I'm mad.

MW: Do things really make you that angry, or is some of it an act?
LB: You can't be that mad all the time or you'd be dead. But it's like I get up in the morning and Nancy Pelosi is being quoted. I can't remember what the quote was. They were talking about if Congress was going to make these budget cuts, shouldn't they look at cutting their own compensation, and the quote was something really profoundly stupid about lowering the dignity of the office. I just spun out on that for about 15 minutes. This is where I get it. ...It's beyond belief. There is no rule of justification for what they're doing. None. Maybe if they put their own finances on the line they would have gotten something done sooner.

MW: Do comedy or comedians have a social role to play in getting people thinking and talking about political issues?
LB: I don't really know. I think we act as insulation. That's really the heart of what we do. We give people a way to step back and get out of the midst of it. It allows people to step away from their lives and step away from nonsense, and that's what politics has turned into. The thing I keep trying to put into my act is that there are no adults left in the room. None. Even more disturbing is that my generation won't step forward and be the adults. A lot of these people are my age, and that is offensive to me. They wouldn't have tolerated this nonsense when they were 30, but now they're putting up with it after they're supposed to have accumulated years of wisdom?


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