Laugh Everyday (Itâs Medicine for Your Day)
January 11, 2019
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[Altucher Confidential]
âLaugh Everyday (Itâs Medicine for Your Day) â
[Gilbert Gottfried]
[James Altucher Podcast with Gilbert Gottfreied](
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Gilbert Gottfried is 40+ years into his career. Heâs entertained hundreds of millions of people. And yet, some part of him still wants to be liked.
He was 15 when he started doing stand-up comedy. He dropped out of high school. And within 10 years he was on Saturday Night Live.
He was big on impressions.
But then he got tired of that. And had to figure out his own act.
Meaning⦠heâd have to show some version of himself⦠on stage⦠in front of an audience.
âI had to develop my own act,â he said.
âWhat does that mean?â
âI would just go on stage with nothing prepared. And just start talking and joking around. Sometimes, I would lose the audience totally. Theyâd be walking out. And, back then, I remember I didnât mind it all that much.â
âDo you think that was an advancement of your skills?â I asked. âBecause Iâm sure at 15 you were scared to death?â
âYeah, I mean I think everybody in show business has this split personality where one half of you is like, âIâm going into show business and people are going to pay money to come see me because Iâm that great.â And then the other half of you is saying, âOh oh, please love me. Please love me. I want some reassurance that Iâm worthy.â
âYou probably canât let the audience see youâre nervous about what they think, though, right?â
âYeah.â
âBecause theyâll tear you apart.â
âYeah.â
So he focused on the act. And the material.
But now the stage is everywhere.
Itâs online. Itâs on social media. Itâs in the hashtags, the clickbait headlines. You canât leave it at the club or the office or wherever stress used to live.
Now it comes home with you. Itâs in your pocket.
I asked Gilbert about this. Because he knows what itâs like to be the center of hate.
Heâs made 9/11 jokes, Tsunami jokes, jokes about the shooting that happened at the gay nightclub. I asked him about this. He told me about the nightclub jokes.
And why he made themâ¦
He said, âOne guy tweeted me and said, âI never thought that Iâd wake up crying and go to sleep laughing.â And one other guy sent me a tweet, saying, âYou make me laugh at times when I donât want to⦠and thatâs when I need it the most.â
Some people say, âYou went too far.â But Gilbert has a job to do.
Heâs a comedian. And if heâs going to keep making people laugh, he has to teach himself how to deal with the half of him that says, âPlease like me.â
So I took notes.
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Here are the top 3 lessons I learned from Gilbert Gottfried about quieting your insecurities:Â
1. REMEMBER THE TEAM EFFECT
Groupthink is infecting the internet. Every day or week or month, thereâs a new âvillain.â People get their tweets and stone the villain.
You can spend 40 years building up career. And it can all be taken to trial now by someone in their basement.
I asked Gilbert, âDeep down, what was the worst moment emotionally for you? Where you were at your lowest?â
âOh god, I donât remember. I just remember thinking, âThis is it. Itâs all going to stop here.ââ
âWhat would stop? Your comedy career? Would your financial life stop?â
âAll of that, yeah. But what I didnât realize at the time is that the villain of the month is like the flavor of the month at Baskin-Robbins. We need someone to go, âHey, come on gang, letâs get a posse together and go after this one.ââ
And itâs true. People get excited to join the group and throw punches. They forget that theyâre actually hurting someone.
And that the pain can last longer than the tweet. It can bleed into someoneâs financial stability, their peace of mind, it can affect their mental health.
Gilbert knows he canât persuade the team of haters to stop hating. Thatâs what team theyâre on. Itâs like trying to convince a Red Sox fan to root for the Yankees.
A Red Sox fans are Red Sox Fans.
Yankee fans are Yankee fans.
Hate fans are hate fans.
Donât try to convince someone to switch teams. Just look for the people rooting you on.
When Gilbert got fired from Aflac (he was the voice of the duck) he saw a lot of hate tweets.
But this one stood out, âGilbert Gottfried Gets Fired After Aflac Discovered Heâs a Comedian.â
2. GO TO THE BOTTOM
Gilbert had a performance a few days after 9/11. It was in New York for the Hugh Hefner roast.
âThere were still black clouds floating around,â he said. âThe World Trade Center was still burning.â
He got on stage and said, âTonight, Iâll be using my Muslim name, Hazin binLade.â
Then he said, âI have to leave early tonightâ¦â
And this is where he lost the crowd.
He said, âI have to go to LA. Unfortunately, I couldnât get a direct flight, we have to make a stop at the Empire State Building.â
âPeople were booing and hissing. Chairs were screeching back. And one guy yelled out âToo soon.â
I appreciate any kind of humor. But this was so extraordinarily crude, I almost didnât want to laugh. But Iâve learned thatâs when I need to laugh. Because, if I donât laugh, Iâm choosing misery over freedom.
Iâm trapping the toxin in my blood. And not giving myself a chance to grieve or move on.
When Gilbert heard, âToo soon,â he got confused.
âI thought that meant I didnât take a long enough pause between the setup and punchline.â
âYou assumed the audience was all professional comedians?â
âYeah,â he said laughing. âIf you said I was up there for 200 years after that joke, Iâd believe it. Thatâs what it felt like.â
Gilbert was gripping the podium. He stood back. And if you watch the video, it looks like heâs lost.
âWhat was going through your mind?â
âI figured I already lost the crowd, why not go to the bottom level of hell?â
He went deeper and deeper into his act.
âAnd then they started laughing and applauding and cheering. And it just showed that they needed that release.â
Tension is everywhere. Itâs in our families, our relationships, our work. Itâs in our fears. Gilbert sort of has this gift to look past the miserable.
I wish I had that gift. But I donât. Sometimes I get stuck. And thatâs when I need laughter the most.
Gilbert couldâve walked off stage. And left feeling like heâd lost.
Maybe thatâs what the crowd wouldâve wanted. Maybe they wouldâve wanted to see him leave and say, âYay, we did it. We destroyed him. Heâs gone.â
But he didnât give them that opportunity. He went to the bottom. And rose up from there.
3. DO THE DONâTS
Whenever someone tells Gilbert not to joke about something, he jokes about it.
He gave me an example.
He said, âHow do you make a dead baby float?â
â⦠a glass of ice cream, two scoops of dead baby.â
I didnât get it. But his delivery was funny.
Some people are against âdead baby jokes.â Itâs against their moral compass. But Gilbert isnât saying âI approve of a baby dying.â
âWhen youâre doing those jokes, you know itâs horrible,â he said. âThatâs why youâre saying the jokes. Because itâs so awful.â
Part of it is temptation.
If youâre in school and the teacher tells you to be quiet, donât you want to make noise?
People tell you, âDonât do X.â They say it because someone else told them âDonât do X.â
So if they see you do X, itâs just proof that theyâre in chains. And that they followed a rule that doesnât actually exist.
They realize they made a choice. And they didnât want to make that choice.
Which causes regret.
And regret is painful.
So people keep saying, âDonât do Xâ to prolong the pain.
Gilbert is always going to have some piece of him that wants to be liked. But itâs getting smaller and smaller.
At first, he was half âplease like meâ and half âIâm the greatest.â
Now heâs some part âplease like meâ and some part âI want to make you laugh. I want to help release the tension.â And heâs some part âI want to have fun at what Iâm doing.â And another part âI want to improve at my skill.â
People are always going to be outraged. News moves fast today. And itâs easy to get out casted.
Itâs another thing to fall down.
Gilbert didnât let Aflac become a death sentence. Instead, he laughs at the absurdity.
âWhen people get offended and outraged, theyâre patting themselves on the back,â he said. âTheyâre like, âSee, I was outraged!ââ
Thereâs no award for getting angry. And thereâs no award for surviving the Twitter mob.
Thereâs only reward in deciding youâre more than just half and half.
[James Altucher Podcast with Gilbert Gottfreied](
Sincerely,
[James Altucher]
James Altucher
P.S. I love to write... mostly because I love to share what Iâve learned.
Thatâs why I enjoy telling stories like Gilbertâs.
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