Це відео не доступне.
Перепрошуємо.

FAREWELL, OJ | The Best OJ Simpson jokes that got Norm Macdonald fired from NBC

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 18 кві 2024
  • ROAD TO 300,000 SUBSCRIBERS
    -FIND ME ON PATREON FOR EXCLUSIVE CONTENT AND PERKS!
    patreon.com/BrittReacts
    DONATIONS:
    - PAYPAL: www.paypal.com...
    - CASHAPP: $BrittReacts
    - STUDIO/EQUIPMENT WISHLIST: www.amazon.com...
    norm macdonald
    norm macdonald death
    norm macdonald movies and tv shows
    how did norm macdonald die
    norm macdonald cause of death
    norm macdonald moth joke
    norm macdonald son
    norm macdonald wife
    norm macdonald book
    norm macdonald last words
    norm macdonald age
    norm macdonald as burt reynolds
    norm macdonald adam sandler
    norm macdonald audiobook
    norm macdonald archive
    norm macdonald andy richter
    norm macdonald artie lange movie
    adam eget norm macdonald
    adam eget on norm macdonald death
    andy richter norm macdonald
    archive norm macdonald live
    adam sandler norm macdonald
    albert fish norm macdonald
    adam carolla norm macdonald
    adam egan norm macdonald
    actor norm macdonald
    anthony jeselnik norm macdonald
    norm macdonald burt reynolds
    norm macdonald brother
    norm macdonald better than ezra
    norm macdonald bob uecker
    norm macdonald bob dole
    norm macdonald best lines
    norm macdonald best of
    best of norm macdonald
    best norm macdonald quotes
    bob saget norm macdonald
    based on a true story norm macdonald
    billy madison norm macdonald
    billy joe shaver norm macdonald
    barbara walters norm macdonald
    burt reynolds norm macdonald
    bob uecker norm macdonald
    bob einstein norm macdonald
    norm macdonald carrot top
    norm macdonald crocodile hunter
    norm macdonald colonel sanders
    norm macdonald children
    norm macdonald characters
    norm macdonald chris kattan
    courtney thorne-smith norm macdonald
    comedian norm macdonald
    conan norm macdonald
    conan o'brien norm macdonald
    comedians in cars getting coffee norm macdonald
    chris kattan norm macdonald
    chris farley norm macdonald
    carrot top norm macdonald
    cast of norm macdonald live
    chevy chase norm macdonald
    norm macdonald death cause
    norm macdonald died
    norm macdonald david letterman
    norm macdonald death family guy
    norm macdonald dennis miller
    norm macdonald dirty johnny joke
    norm macdonald documentary
    did norm macdonald die
    dave chappelle norm macdonald
    dirty work norm macdonald
    dennis miller norm macdonald
    david letterman norm macdonald
    does norm macdonald have a wife
    don ohlmeyer norm macdonald
    dennis miller on norm macdonald death
    did norm macdonald ever have a wife
    dylan mcdonald norm macdonald
    norm macdonald espys
    norm macdonald everyone in this story
    norm macdonald ethnicity
    norm macdonald education
    norm macdonald espy joke
    norm macdonald espy oj joke
    norm macdonald ezra joke
    norm macdonald early stand up
    norm macdonald elle
    esther povitsky norm macdonald
    espys norm macdonald
    eric andre norm macdonald
    early norm macdonald
    eddie vedder norm macdonald
    esther povitsky norm macdonald fight
    eddie murphy on norm macdonald death
    eddie murphy norm macdonald
    elon musk norm macdonald
    norm macdonald family guy
    norm macdonald frog joke
    norm macdonald frank stallone
    norm macdonald filmography
    norm macdonald family
    norm macdonald funeral
    norm macdonald find a grave
    norm macdonald father
    norm macdonald funniest moments
    norm macdonald favorite books
    frank stallone norm macdonald
    family guy norm macdonald
    funny norm macdonald quotes
    funniest norm macdonald
    fred stoller norm macdonald
    fred willard norm macdonald
    frog joke norm macdonald
    fairly oddparents norm macdonald
    faith ford norm macdonald
    full norm macdonald live episodes
    norm macdonald germany
    norm macdonald gif
    norm macdonald gordon ramsay
    norm macdonald girlfriends
    norm macdonald garfield
    norm macdonald gilbert gottfried full
    norm macdonald gilbert gottfried vimeo
    norm macdonald gretchen bleiler
    grown ups norm macdonald
    germany norm macdonald
    gordon ramsay norm macdonald
    gilbert gottfried norm macdonald live
    gretchen bleiler norm macdonald
    girlboss norm macdonald
    george carlin norm macdonald
    guy who fired norm macdonald
    greg fitzsimmons norm macdonald
    geoff edgers norm macdonald
    norm macdonald height
    norm macdonald how did he die
    norm macdonald house
    norm macdonald howard stern
    norm macdonald host snl
    norm macdonald hat
    norm macdonald hoodie
    norm macdonald history quote
    how old was norm macdonald when he died
    how did norm macdonald die and how old was he
    how long did norm macdonald have cancer
    hannah gadsby norm macdonald
    how old is norm macdonald
    howard stern norm macdonald
    how tall was norm macdonald
    harland williams norm macdonald
    how to watch norm macdonald live
    norm macdonald imdb
    norm macdonald iq
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERSS

КОМЕНТАРІ • 673

  • @FMAkers-jq2kh
    @FMAkers-jq2kh 3 місяці тому +246

    Norm's first line on the Weekend Update after O.J. was acquitted: "It's official: Murder is now legal in the state of California."

    • @nonaligned293
      @nonaligned293 3 місяці тому +6

      Some of these people making compilations are useless.

    • @auntypc4791
      @auntypc4791 3 місяці тому +2

      lol, that's hilarious!

    • @Gutslinger
      @Gutslinger 3 місяці тому +3

      The compilation is a complete failure without it.

    • @larrydeshazo260
      @larrydeshazo260 3 місяці тому +1

      Yep, this Montage of OJ Jokes Should Have Started With This Joke!!!

    • @chocolatechimichanga
      @chocolatechimichanga 3 місяці тому +2

      ​@@nonaligned293the compilation she's watching is jokes before the verdict, and there is another compilation by the same channel of jokes after the verdict, which includes the above referenced joke.

  • @dcaslick
    @dcaslick 3 місяці тому +123

    What made Norm so great is he didn’t care if a joke hit. He just went for it without worrying about the reaction. He was fearless as a comedian.

    • @ryanr4156
      @ryanr4156 3 місяці тому +3

      My favorite thing was how he was amazing at explaining his own joke too

    • @jackson9282
      @jackson9282 3 місяці тому +10

      I think his joy was when they didn't get it.

    • @mwmwm3388
      @mwmwm3388 3 місяці тому +4

      because he knew the joke was good and its just the crowd that doesn't get it, at least that's what people close to him have said

    • @Lyka-U-Kair
      @Lyka-U-Kair 3 місяці тому +2

      Makes me think of when he was on the Bob Saget roast and all he told were old dad jokes. I don't know how me could make it funny, but by God he did it and more.

    • @9ine-fd6zc
      @9ine-fd6zc 2 місяці тому

      ​@@Lyka-U-KairNorm really knew how to play with the expectation of the audience. In that roast everybody expected him to be the savage, he was savage but not in the way everybody expected

  • @GeoffEmbler
    @GeoffEmbler 3 місяці тому +206

    Norm was fired for the OJ jokes because Don Ohlmeyer was a senior NBC executive who was also very close friends with OJ. After a while Ohlmeyer had enough and fired Norm. After OJ was arrested Ohlmeyer visited OJ in jail pretty much every day.

    • @billebrooks
      @billebrooks 3 місяці тому +15

      Yeah, this makes no sense to me. Why would anyone listen to some idiot that nobody ever heard of? Did he threaten to fire Lorne Michaels as well? Why didn't they just fire Don Ohlmeyer? It is no wonder SNL that is a complete failure now.

    • @nunyanunya4147
      @nunyanunya4147 3 місяці тому +4

      ... this reminds me ov that tragady. you know the one...? 9/11

    • @jackgilchrist
      @jackgilchrist 3 місяці тому +18

      ​​​​@@billebrooksBecause Ohlmeyer was a top NBC executive and thus Michaels' boss.
      Who was gonna fire the guy, other than even higher NBC executives? Which rarely happens and I believe is something the board would have to vote on.
      You think they're gonna fire one of their high mucky mucks over some comedian? Norm may be great to us but not to a bunch of old suits at NBC.
      Besides, Ohlmeyer probably had shit on half the board.

    • @billebrooks
      @billebrooks 3 місяці тому

      @@jackgilchrist It is not just about Norm though. Nobody defends OJ anymore. It is hard to believe that that is the hill this Don idiot wanted to die on. It is like Prince Andrew standing up for Jeffrey Epstein. How did that turn out? What did it really prove getting rid of a comedian because of jokes about a guy wanted for murder? Just think about the attitude of our friendly video maker Britt.

    • @flingonber
      @flingonber 3 місяці тому +15

      @@billebrooks You don't have to be famous to be powerful, dude...really powerful people usually aren't household names.

  • @kurtjohnson4816
    @kurtjohnson4816 3 місяці тому +79

    There were a lot of OJ fans who didn't want to believe OJ was guilty. But I was standing next to a black friend of mine at work when the verdict was announced. He just shook his head and muttered "He killed those people".

    • @amirsim2479
      @amirsim2479 3 місяці тому +2

      @kurtjohnson4816 Yeah …. This new generation doesn’t understand the time frame and how big oj was back then before the murders ….. a lot more people believed oj was innnocent or didn’t want to believe that a black sports hero could do that ….. my personal opinion studying the trial etc ….. I believe oj went there to scare Nicole and I believe he sorta blacked out in a fit of rage that’s just my take ……

    • @lloydwaycott8178
      @lloydwaycott8178 3 місяці тому +7

      @@amirsim2479 Blacked out after taking a knife, gloves, and pull-down hat to meet her? Right.

    • @amirsim2479
      @amirsim2479 3 місяці тому +1

      yeah that could be done to scare her to you know ….. he might have been debating if he really wanted to kill her or just scare the shit out ov her ……

    • @JakeKoenig
      @JakeKoenig 3 місяці тому

      You own anecdotal evidence aside, the vast majority of black Americans (or as you called them, "OJ fans") celebrated like they had just won the lottery because a black man got away with murdering two white people. I was only 12 at the time, but even at that age I realized that this whole melting pot experiment called America was doomed to fail someday. I can't peacefully coexist with 45 million people who hate me and want my whole race dead. Somewhere between 40-50% of black Americans right now STILL believe OJ was innocent, and a black woman on CNN recently said the OJ "represented something for black Americans" and that "incidents like OJ would keep happening" if the country doesn't "deal with the issue of race." Sounds like she's threatening that blacks will keep murdering whites until they no longer feel oppressed (as if them not feeling oppressed will EVER happen).
      Let all that sit with you for a while. Still think your one black friend in 1995 represents black America? I don't.

    • @alanclinton4239
      @alanclinton4239 3 місяці тому +1

      Nice to know you have a black friend.

  • @Christopher-Baltimore
    @Christopher-Baltimore 3 місяці тому +91

    There’s a major flaw with that compilation! It leaves out the ending! “Well, it is finally official; murder is legal in the state of California.” - Norm MacDonald. RIP. ua-cam.com/video/4CR8u-2TKb0/v-deo.htmlsi=uvgAWzPDwnNJiyki

    • @akanshsrivastav8269
      @akanshsrivastav8269 3 місяці тому +2

      So true

    • @nunyanunya4147
      @nunyanunya4147 3 місяці тому +10

      dont give the Juice a hard time! he died doing what he loved. not being held accountable for double murder!

    • @debjorgo
      @debjorgo 3 місяці тому +2

      Yeah, I was waiting for that one too.

  • @JakeKoenig
    @JakeKoenig 3 місяці тому +55

    Here's the TL: DR version if you don't want to fully research the OJ case:
    - A blue beanie and righthand glove were found at the crime scene.
    - Bloody footprints at the scene matched rare and expensive shoes owned by OJ and were the exact size. Less than 300 pairs of that shoe at that size were sold in America.
    - OJ's blood was found at the crime scene and leading away from the crime scene alongside the bloody footprints.
    - Nicole's blood and Ron Goldman's blood were found on the door of OJ''s white Ford Bronco and inside the Bronco.
    - OJ's blood was found leading from his Bronco into his home.
    - OJ's blood, Nicole's blood, and Ron's blood were found on lefthand bloody glove found at OJ's house, which was an exact match of the RH glove found at the crime scene.
    - Nicole's blood was found on OJ's socks inside his home.
    - OJ's hair fibers were found on the two dead bodies, inside the blue beanie (deeply embedded into the knit showing it had been worn often over a long period of time), inside the glove at the crime scene, and inside the matching bloody glove at OJ's house.
    - Blue clothing fibers were found on the dead bodies, matching the color of a shirt worn by OJ in a video from an earlier event that day, and corroborated by a friend of OJ who said he saw him wearing that color shirt right after the murders.
    - Carpet fibers that could only be found in OJ's year, make, and model of vehicle (the Bronco) were found on the dead bodies.
    - Blood was found on the sheets of the hotel bed that OJ stayed in the day after the murders.
    - A cut was found on OJ's thumb by investigators. He claimed he cut it "on some paper" after he learned about his wife's murder.
    There is a LOT more evidence, but that list covers the overwhelming forensic evidence that the defense claims was ALL planted by racist cops. And then a jury of 9 blacks, 2 Hispanics, and one white person (even though the crimes took place in Brentwood which was over 90% white) acquitted OJ despite the overwhelming evidence of his guilt. Years later several black jury members said they voted not guilty as payback for the Rodney King verdict, basically letting a black man go free for murdering two white people as revenge for what they considered to be a racist LA police force beating up a black man and getting away with it. Those interviews are all on UA-cam. Feel free to go watch the racists admit what they did.
    Anyway, that covers the broad strokes. And today, almost half of black Americans still believe OJ is innocent according to recent polls taken after his death.

    • @JoshieMadhatt
      @JoshieMadhatt 3 місяці тому +9

      I dunno if you've read this book but you seem very knowledgeable about the case so if you haven't it's by Vincent Bugliosi and it's called Outrage: The five reasons OJ Simpson got away with murder. I feel like it gives a different perspective than most people do. The biggest thing most people mention is the "Dream Team" 2nd biggest is prob those jurors who admitted it was revenge. 3rd is Mark Fuhrman getting caught for being extremely racist. But Vincent spends a LOT of time talking about the prosecution and how it was stupid of them to leave certain evidence out like the police interview where they pretty much caught him in a lie about that big gash on his finger. And also their dumb asf decision to allow OJ to try the gloves on himself instead of having someone do it. Cuz they gave OJ a green light to like "struggle" and go ugh I can't get em on

    • @user-yr3hu1ug7r
      @user-yr3hu1ug7r 3 місяці тому +4

      @@JoshieMadhatt , yeah i had read some things about the prosecution being very incompetent as well. Like you said though....many factors but the prosecution really failed to present a good solid case.

    • @davidm5646
      @davidm5646 3 місяці тому +2

      I mean the fact that no other suspect has come up for such a high profile case is telling enough.

    • @z.kramer6027
      @z.kramer6027 3 місяці тому

      @@user-yr3hu1ug7r this is why a chosen jury system is stupid. Judges who know the law and have sworn to leave out personal opinion should convict people. not everyday people influenced by the media. People like OJ can be pardonned purely because people like him.

    • @a3gill
      @a3gill 3 місяці тому

      TLDR

  • @br529
    @br529 3 місяці тому +90

    Norm was savage and fearless. He was true to himself

    • @skyhawk4946
      @skyhawk4946 3 місяці тому +4

      Norm was truthful and never gave in.

    • @gerrym.9354
      @gerrym.9354 3 місяці тому +4

      I wish I had the balls to be Norm.

    • @Believer1980
      @Believer1980 3 місяці тому +1

      I would like to say now Norm has a chance to roast OJ's murdering arse to his face.
      However , where OJ is going, they don't need Norm for the roasting, I heard they have spits over pits of fire for that job.

    • @gamehappenings
      @gamehappenings 3 місяці тому +2

      Norm was the kind of guy who didn't care if no one else found it funny. As long as he found it funny

  • @MintyFreshTurds
    @MintyFreshTurds 3 місяці тому +25

    A matching size 12 shoe print of the shoes he had been known to wear were found at the crime scene. The day before OJ was to wear the gloves in the court room, Johnny advised him to stop taking his arthritis medication so his hands would swell up. Leather that has been dampened with blood will shrink as it dries out, then you add on top of that the latex gloves he had on underneath during the fitting and you can see him forcibly spreading his fingers out the whole time he is pulling the gloves on.

    • @hebber1961
      @hebber1961 3 місяці тому +4

      It was a dumb move by the prosecution.

  • @marcuspi999
    @marcuspi999 3 місяці тому +20

    My two favorite jokes.
    1) Hey hey, easy with that. That's my lucky stabin' hat!
    2) Ron Goldman's last words, "Hey! You're O.J. Simpson!"

    • @JoshieMadhatt
      @JoshieMadhatt 3 місяці тому +6

      My two favorites
      1. The most popular Halloween mask is OJ Simpson and the most popular greeting is "I'll kill you and that guy who's bringing over your glasses...or treat
      2. It's official. Murder is legal in the state of California( why wasn't it in this compilation is beyond me)

    • @davidherren1984
      @davidherren1984 8 днів тому

      "At least I didn't kill her like some people I know."

  • @capncrunch1122
    @capncrunch1122 3 місяці тому +56

    At least OJ can rest in peace knowing his wife's killer is dead..

    • @MC-fv4vv
      @MC-fv4vv 3 місяці тому

      Oooo!

    • @philippesauvie639
      @philippesauvie639 2 місяці тому

      Two-tiered justice system in action 30 years ago just like it is today. You’ll find out

    • @drServitis
      @drServitis 2 місяці тому +2

      @@flyeaglesfly9940 Don't be a racist.

    • @flyeaglesfly9940
      @flyeaglesfly9940 2 місяці тому +1

      @@drServitis that’s cute.

    • @drServitis
      @drServitis 2 місяці тому +1

      @@flyeaglesfly9940 Only white people think OJ killed his white wife. He was found innocent in a court of law.

  • @davidgrace2951
    @davidgrace2951 3 місяці тому +19

    Overwhelming evidence. Guilty as F

  • @metoo7557
    @metoo7557 3 місяці тому +34

    Honesty loves questions.
    Power does not.

  • @owenfromkc3468
    @owenfromkc3468 3 місяці тому +31

    Dorf is a character that Tim Conway would play on The Carol Burnett Show. They would sometimes do fake infomercial Dorf videos, typically about golf.
    You should add Dorf / Carroll Burnett Show to your collection.

    • @MoyeBoy420
      @MoyeBoy420 3 місяці тому +3

      There was a whole Dorf series. I use to watch it when I was a kid and it was hilarious. My favorites were Dorf on Golf and Dorf and the first games of Mount Olympus. Tim Conway played that character perfectly.

    • @robertstuart480
      @robertstuart480 3 місяці тому +1

      "Dorf and the first games on Mount Olympus."

    • @chrischar9428
      @chrischar9428 3 місяці тому +2

      Pretty sure Dorf was post carol burnett

    • @EricArmstrong-vo6dp
      @EricArmstrong-vo6dp 3 місяці тому

      Not the best joke. I thought he should’ve gone with “Stabbing to the Oldies”

    • @MoyeBoy420
      @MoyeBoy420 3 місяці тому

      @@chrischar9428 Yes it was, never meant to imply that it came first

  • @wizard1687
    @wizard1687 3 місяці тому +7

    The Bronco chase happened June of 94. Verdict took place October of 95. 15 months of wall to wall OJ coverage

  • @MotoNomad350
    @MotoNomad350 3 місяці тому +5

    Norm was a savage! He got to do so many OJ jokes because that trial took 11 months. And, yes, those set ups were factual.

  • @lurx2024
    @lurx2024 3 місяці тому +23

    I don't even think that Norm was particularly obsessed with the Simpson case, he just enjoyed how uncomfortable it made people. Today it is not unusual for comedians to tap into dangerous and taboo subjects in order to exploit them for comedic effect, which made Norm's humor way ahead of his time.

    • @MarkMay-cr6bv
      @MarkMay-cr6bv 3 місяці тому +5

      I LOVED Norm, but Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryer and George Carlin among others were doing edgey, controversial comedy about taboo topics long before Mr. McDonald came on the scene. I would say he was at least partially influenced in one way or another by all those guys.

    • @lurx2024
      @lurx2024 3 місяці тому

      Yah, I agree, another ground breaking comedian who pushed the envelope of the audience's discomfort was Andy Kaufman.

    • @jkelly02
      @jkelly02 3 місяці тому +2

      Sorry, but that is not ahead of anyone or any time. It's practically the definition of a comic, or at least, a court jester.

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 3 місяці тому +4

      Comedians always did that, always

  • @Trendkiller196
    @Trendkiller196 3 місяці тому +3

    He had a great cushy gig at SNL. He didn’t care. He said what he believed and was fired. Still didn’t care. Did great afterwards. Solid guy. He was dying and didn’t tell anyone. Went out like a hero

  • @metoo7557
    @metoo7557 3 місяці тому +5

    What do I think? If the crime was committed in today's age, the news papers would never report any information on the suspect at all.
    At all.

  • @richardbrown6781
    @richardbrown6781 3 місяці тому +28

    OJ never hired anybody to find Nicole’s killers. Doesn’t make you raise an eyebrow.

    • @750count
      @750count 3 місяці тому +7

      To that point. If OJ didn't do it, shouldn't the case still be open?

    • @this.is.a.username
      @this.is.a.username 3 місяці тому

      EX wife

    • @jaegybomb
      @jaegybomb 3 місяці тому

      @@750count OJ was convicted in civil court and probably only got off in the initial trial because of sloppy dna collection.

    • @GenerationalDisappointment
      @GenerationalDisappointment 3 місяці тому

      @@this.is.a.username Ex wife who had 2 children with him.

    • @this.is.a.username
      @this.is.a.username 3 місяці тому

      @@GenerationalDisappointment lmfao and why didn't the kids ever hire anyone to find the killers then? everyone knows the son killed her and OJ covered for him.

  • @Jazzbeau1
    @Jazzbeau1 3 місяці тому +13

    One of O.J.'s lawyers was Robert Kardashian, father of Kim etc. The O.J. trial was quite long. One of the memorable aspects of the trial was the extensive use of DNA evidence. This trial was the inspiration for all the crime scene investigation t.v. shows that did not exist prior to the trial.

    • @amyaeschbach3581
      @amyaeschbach3581 3 місяці тому +4

      The beginning of the Court TV channel! The trial was on 24/7! 1st time public got to see up close and such a long trial. Evidence was overwhelming. Obsession began when OJ drove his white SUV down LA Highway chased by police and wouldn’t surrender. We all watched this live on TV hours and hours. The world was shocked by the verdict and even more by the protests and violence. I think the only reason anyone could laugh at jokes about this horrifying tragedy was because the trial and verdict seemed so far beyond comprehension that laughing felt like the only thing to do besides sitting in anger.

    • @terrygreene4166
      @terrygreene4166 3 місяці тому

      @@amyaeschbach3581 all true except OJ wasn’t the driver. Cowlings was.

  • @user-xi4nq2wb7h
    @user-xi4nq2wb7h 3 місяці тому +8

    Britt, Norm loved bombing, numerous comedians have confirmed that when Norm would bomb at a comedy club, he would stand out front and shake hands w/ every patron as they left the show. Conversely, when he killed, he would go backstage & hang out w/ comedian buddies… he was one of a kind!

    • @samil5601
      @samil5601 3 місяці тому +4

      Norm didn't kill. That was OJ.

    • @davedecker1725
      @davedecker1725 3 місяці тому

      At least he wasn't a hypocrite

  • @robertstuart480
    @robertstuart480 3 місяці тому +21

    Britt, I was in elementary school during this trial. Me, a white kid, in a rural Arkansas school full of other white kids. And they interrupted school the day of the verdict to let us know what happened. Literally(1) everyone in the country was following this case.

    • @davidoriggan
      @davidoriggan 3 місяці тому +1

      Go hogs!

    • @jeffk.9075
      @jeffk.9075 3 місяці тому +4

      I was a sophomore in high school and our history teacher had AV set up a tv in the classroom and we watched the verdict. I can say that the opinion in the classroom was not split. We were all sure he did it.

    • @scottNNJ
      @scottNNJ 3 місяці тому +6

      I was in college. Two of my fraternity brothers stayed back to watch the verdict, arriving late to class. The professor scolded us, in his proper British accent, “The REST OF US don’t skip the beginning of class to watch the OJ verdict.” Then, a bit quieter, under his breath, asked “So, what was it?”

    • @laudanum669
      @laudanum669 3 місяці тому

      I was the Chief Engineer at a Hotel during the trial. I moved a TV into my office and did as little as possible over the next 11 months so I could watch the trial.

    • @-scrim
      @-scrim 3 місяці тому

      Is that supposed to be shocking or abnormal? A school of white kids??? WOAH???

  • @memorylane7068
    @memorylane7068 3 місяці тому +4

    I grew up in Buffalo, NY and was the hugest O.J. fan. It was sad when my hero fell from grace.

  • @timgray3790
    @timgray3790 3 місяці тому +10

    I think 99% of America knew he was guilty. It was more shock than anger when he got off.

    • @amirsim2479
      @amirsim2479 3 місяці тому

      @timgray3790…. You’re wrong …. Tim …. people of colour especially blacks stoood by oj side … which is evident by the verdict reaction …… so your statement about 99% of the country thought he was guilty is flat out false …..

  • @tygerfisk7519
    @tygerfisk7519 3 місяці тому +9

    Norm did at least 2 oj jokes every episode for months. An exec at NBC who used to be a friend of OJs got sick of it and ordered him to stop, norm didn't stop. I think they tried to fire the writer who worked with Norm and not him but norm just stood by the writer.

  • @mikefetterman6782
    @mikefetterman6782 3 місяці тому +2

    For months we all heard the 911 calls of Nicole Brown calling while OJ was flipping out in the background during several upon several domestic abuse calls to their house. Nicole had several photos of her body after the beatings she incurred at his wrath.

  • @waynehackney5812
    @waynehackney5812 3 місяці тому +5

    RIP Norm Macdonald

  • @beaunossaman4722
    @beaunossaman4722 3 місяці тому +15

    Norm has to have over 100 OJ jokes.

  • @toddfarrow9541
    @toddfarrow9541 3 місяці тому +51

    OJ should have never outlived Nicole and Ron but also Norm.

    • @mynameisnotearl4383
      @mynameisnotearl4383 3 місяці тому +3

      That’s a Sad thought or comment

    • @mahametsoumounou8273
      @mahametsoumounou8273 3 місяці тому +2

      He did not do that shit, get over yourself

    • @auntypc4791
      @auntypc4791 3 місяці тому +3

      @@mahametsoumounou8273 lmaoooo!

    • @MyOpinionish
      @MyOpinionish 3 місяці тому

      ​@@mahametsoumounou8273lol yet he still manage to get jail time? Yeah what a stand up man.

    • @mattcollins4646
      @mattcollins4646 3 місяці тому

      Yeah he f'n did. Lol​@@mahametsoumounou8273

  • @paulsmith8510
    @paulsmith8510 3 місяці тому +3

    I was 7 when he got acquitted. I remember being at Pizzeria Uno with my family and it came on the TV and it got really quiet and theb everyone freaked out.

  • @GoatOfTheMountains
    @GoatOfTheMountains 3 місяці тому +12

    It wasn't anyone who works at SNL's decision to fire Norm, it was an exec from the network. Like someone at Amazon seeing something on Twitch and deciding someone needs to be fired after the fact. They wouldn't necessarily be paying attention to what's going on during pre-production.

    • @seanmackey8552
      @seanmackey8552 3 місяці тому

      Don Ohlmeyer fired Norm. Don was a good friend of the double murderer.

  • @hotroof
    @hotroof 3 місяці тому +1

    Norm on the Late Show with David Letterman talking about his firing from NBC is pretty classic. Worth a watch.

  • @brandonseyfried1251
    @brandonseyfried1251 28 днів тому

    I was a young and very busy police detective during this whole debacle. When the jury came back with a verdict after just 4 hours, we were sure he was cooked. When that verdict was "not guilty" the whole office got really quiet, and most went home for the day.

  • @pamhodges527
    @pamhodges527 3 місяці тому +3

    I worked with a woman for 17 years that was so obsessed by this trial she wore headphones all day listening to the trial. Six months later a team of police swarmed our work place. Early that morning she stabbed the woman her husband was fooling around with. Went home, showered, got rid of knife and clothes and came to work. She passed in prison.

    • @aadpiraat7126
      @aadpiraat7126 3 місяці тому

      She was just listening for some tips

    • @MC-fv4vv
      @MC-fv4vv 3 місяці тому

      Wow! That is crazy!

  • @mikefetterman6782
    @mikefetterman6782 3 місяці тому +2

    Norm also went heavy after the Clintons, when several of the people set to testify against their dirty real estate dealings suddenly committed suicide. One man, Vince Foster, died and fell Uphill after shooting himself twice, and still had the gun in his hand, something that normally would have fallen to the ground. (just like the J. Epstein case, where his 6' 6" Italian bodybuilder cellmate, with ties to the mob, could do nothing to stop Jeff from choking himself?) So many powerful people were afraid of Norm and George Carlin for spouting truth.

  • @eigerw
    @eigerw 3 місяці тому +7

    The FX show American Crime Story does a great job of covering the trial, definitely recommend it.

  • @TheDylls
    @TheDylls 3 місяці тому +6

    Truly Norm's greatest joke ever was dying of cancer without telling anyone he was sick

    • @user-xi4nq2wb7h
      @user-xi4nq2wb7h 3 місяці тому +2

      In classic Norm fashion, in his last phone conversation w/ Podcast partner & best friend Adam Eget, Norm said, “ we are gonna start the podcast back up & you’re getting a huge raise.” lol.. classic Norm troll!

    • @TheDylls
      @TheDylls 3 місяці тому +1

      @@user-xi4nq2wb7h Oh, MAN... I feel like I've heard that before, but THANK YOU for reminding me! Guy was truly a savage 😂
      "The MAAANNN grate..."

  • @cspaikido
    @cspaikido 3 місяці тому +6

    When a juror is axed they are removed from considering the case.

    • @MintyFreshTurds
      @MintyFreshTurds 3 місяці тому

      😂 OJ wanted to try an axe this time!

  • @Pierrosangue
    @Pierrosangue 3 місяці тому +3

    Norm just did not accept the OJ situation... much love, sir

  • @phlgriffin
    @phlgriffin 3 місяці тому +2

    Most every joke starts with something true about the case, before Norm puts his spin on it. And, yes, the jokes kept coming because the trial went almost a year. Local TV news people made a career out it, becoming national TV commentors.
    But, Norm was a pure genius! King of dry humour!

  • @77gnelson
    @77gnelson 3 місяці тому +11

    Just heard an interview with Rosanne Barr. Called him her favorite comedian.

    • @Bear78420
      @Bear78420 3 місяці тому +5

      Well let’s not hold that against him 😉

    • @MjandDilly23
      @MjandDilly23 3 місяці тому +2

      Norm and Roseanne were good friends. Norm wrote for the Roseanne show.

    • @joshritz7067
      @joshritz7067 3 місяці тому

      You beat me to saying it lol​@@Bear78420

  • @jimcoddington7745
    @jimcoddington7745 3 місяці тому +2

    This is only part 1 of the OJ and Norm on Saturday Night Live he also covered the Civil Trial

  • @gsparkman
    @gsparkman 3 місяці тому +2

    I was a teen when OJ was at USC. He was a star. In the NFL he was a star breaking so many records. He was a hero. OJ in Los Angeles was one of the most loved native sons. He was welcome guest in the homes of the most important and influential people across the nation. He was admired and people wanted to be in his orbit. It was hard to believe a man of his stature could possibly be a murderer. But then the evidence started mounting up. The trial was more than a trial. It was high drama. From the high powered attorneys, the Kardashian connection, the glove and shoes, arguments of timelines, the slow motion Bronco chase and the comic relief of Kato, it was compelling television. At the end I was convinced of his guilt and believe the verdict was a travesty-later somewhat corrected by the civil trial. I’m surprised that there haven’t been reruns of the trial on television; would probably get good ratings.

    • @amirsim2479
      @amirsim2479 3 місяці тому

      @gsparkman… but the verdict and the reaction was polorizing ….. the majority blacks thought he was innnocent vs majority whites thought he was guilty …..

    • @auntypc4791
      @auntypc4791 3 місяці тому

      @@amirsim2479 It wasn't the fact that they thought he was innocent (they knew he was guilty), it was the fact that they CHEERED when he was found Not Guilty. We were SHOCKED when we heard them cheering.

  • @eddiebaker40
    @eddiebaker40 3 місяці тому +1

    I wouldn't say Norm Macdonald was the funniest person to ever live, but nobody has been or ever will be as funny in the way that he was. One of one.

  • @Frank-pe9pk
    @Frank-pe9pk 3 місяці тому +3

    I do remember this whole trial. My wife would watch it all day. Most everyone knew he did it. Back then you could make fun about it and not have the government knocking down your door, dressed in black face. It was comedy!

  • @Logan_Baron
    @Logan_Baron 3 місяці тому +1

    Even outside of the OJ jokes, and even outside of SNL, Norm had a comedy style that was entirely his own. Not even like anyone else.

  • @Bishop228
    @Bishop228 3 місяці тому +5

    This video is only scratching the surface. There are 2 videos, “Norm constantly shitting on OJ Simpson” Part 1 & Part 2, containing most or all of Norm’s OJ jokes. Part 1 is kinda short, but Part 2 is nearly 30 mins long.

  • @RonaldSimkin
    @RonaldSimkin 3 місяці тому +3

    3:30 It was a LIVE show, so rehursal could be one thing and once live he could go off script and sort of flip it to his bosses because he actually was super popular for doing that stuff. There were people above him on both sides but he just kept hitting the hammer on it.

  • @JC-rb3hj
    @JC-rb3hj 3 місяці тому +1

    Don Ohlmeyer was the dufus NBC president that canned Norm. He was a sports nut and a good friend of OJ's. Norm was told to back off and Norm did want Norm does, he doubled down and went harder on OJ. Norm was told he wasn't funny and was fired.
    Norm dove right in when he bombed on a joke. One of Norm's friends that is a comic tells a story about Norm going out on stage and falling flat. After the show he stood at the door and greeted that audience as they were leaving. He was absolutely one of a kind. Only Norm could make you squirm and laugh at the same time. Smartest guy in town.

  • @detredwings21
    @detredwings21 3 місяці тому +3

    You hit the nail on the head, Norm was the goat

  • @holypaper
    @holypaper 3 місяці тому +8

    During this time, the OJ trial was on the news 24/7. Norm played on this by including OJ jokes in almost ever skit, often several times. There was also overwhelming evidence that he was guilty so that became the ongoing crutch of these jokes. Don Ohlmeyer was one of NBC's producers and eventually had enough of Norm's relentless jokes about OJ. So he pulled his strings and got Norm removed from Weekend Update. For many people, Norm's Weekend Update was the only reason to really watch SNL during this time as the show's quality was starting wane and the fact that Norm was the best Weekend Update host ever.

  • @mcraiderking5690
    @mcraiderking5690 3 місяці тому +4

    Norm didn’t give a 💩!

  • @Landonio
    @Landonio 3 місяці тому +1

    RIP Norm, Ron, and Nicole.

  • @Enrique-Garcia
    @Enrique-Garcia 3 місяці тому +1

    The trial lasted 11 months... so yes, plenty of weeks for Norm to lay into OJ over and over again. I remember vividly and lividly being unable to watch my after-school cartoons for eleven months.

  • @TheoSmith249
    @TheoSmith249 Місяць тому

    Norm's stare down of the audience when they clearly are not taken with a joke... was the best part.

  • @Taylorswiftfan13308
    @Taylorswiftfan13308 3 місяці тому +1

    It is funny to see these all rolled together like this, but one lost element of it presented this way is it had a much subtler, slow burn effect all spaced apart as they were.
    These items came one or two per Saturday on the SNL Weekend Update segment, interspersed among the regular bits there.
    In real time this compilation spanned many months, and in hindsight, even in the pre "cancel culture" era, it is pretty amazing Norm maintained it so long.

    • @Taylorswiftfan13308
      @Taylorswiftfan13308 3 місяці тому

      And yes, just as you suggested/suspected, the news headlines that started the jokes off were real news releases as the case progressed.

    • @abducteeofearth1703
      @abducteeofearth1703 15 днів тому

      Why are you pretending to be a child???

  • @marvinmegee7495
    @marvinmegee7495 3 місяці тому

    NBC West Coast division President Don Ohlmeyer, who happened to be an extremely close friend of Simpson begrudgingly put up with Macdonald’s O.J. jokes during the trial, but he lost his mind when Macdonald kept making references to Simpson in the months that followed. Midway through the 1997-98 season, he fired Macdonald from Weekend Update. “Lorne’s point at the time was, just do it for the rest of the season and we’ll make a change in the summer,” Ohlmeyer recalled in the SNL oral history Live From New York.

  • @kingdaniel3519
    @kingdaniel3519 3 місяці тому +1

    It's interesting to see how universally understood it is now that he was guilty, when during his trial in 1995 people were fairly split between his guilt or innocence.

  • @danielschartzer1396
    @danielschartzer1396 3 місяці тому +2

    On SNL the people that did the weekend news report
    They write their own skits and Norm wouldn't stop writing these OJ jokes you got to remember OJ was acquitted so basically Norm thought he was guilty and ever joke he wrote it was very blunt about it but anyway that's how it was back then

  • @fitzgivesfits1
    @fitzgivesfits1 3 місяці тому +1

    Not only did they have to submit the jokes, they spend all week rehearsing the show. There was plenty of time to figure out what was or what wasn't in good taste.

  • @terrygreene4166
    @terrygreene4166 3 місяці тому +1

    There never will be another Norm. Let’s get him the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. Please contact them. The more l listen to Norm the better l like him. My favourite is his discussions with Dennis Miller.😂 😂😂 hilarious

  • @rickdeckard6294
    @rickdeckard6294 3 місяці тому +1

    It’s always so interesting to see what younger people don’t know about things that were once very relevant. This is not a criticism, just an observation. It’s just weird to see people who don’t know what actually happened with the trial.

  • @lynettebrinkman9552
    @lynettebrinkman9552 3 місяці тому +2

    Norm just threw the absurdities of real life at the audience then studied their reactions. As a side note during this video , at one point I seen Norm’s head with Dolly Parton hair so that was entertaining.

  • @Jamie-lw5sy
    @Jamie-lw5sy 3 місяці тому +2

    The nation wasn't split, everyone knew he did it. Some just wished he could get away with it. 😒😢😒

  • @flingonber
    @flingonber 3 місяці тому +2

    The trial went on for almost a year, but it was a huge story for even longer than that...that's why there are so many updates.

    • @jonlate4581
      @jonlate4581 3 місяці тому

      People have talked about it for the past 30 years so there ya go.

    • @flingonber
      @flingonber 3 місяці тому

      @@jonlate4581 That's true, but back when it was actually happening it was a different level. I was in high school and my school wheeled TVs on carts into our classrooms so we could watch the verdict...it was a BIG deal.

  • @CuttinEJ
    @CuttinEJ 3 місяці тому +8

    The trial lasted for 11 months and OJ was in jail for quite a while before the trial started.

    • @inthedarkanonymous5625
      @inthedarkanonymous5625 3 місяці тому

      Quite a while like 20 to life for a double murder?

    • @Chrisrob90406
      @Chrisrob90406 3 місяці тому +1

      People forget that the trial seemed to go on forever. And it did not start until months after the murders so the event was in the news nearly a year and a half before the verdict. That gives lots of time to make jokes on the subject which keeps it current.

    • @CuttinEJ
      @CuttinEJ 3 місяці тому +1

      @@inthedarkanonymous5625, like several months pre trial confinement.

  • @sinistan1002
    @sinistan1002 3 місяці тому +2

    I used to watch SNL but don't remember this one or the firing behind it. But of course do remember seeing that OJ bronco chase on the freeway in 1994 live as it happened, was on every major news channel that was a major TV event along with the trial of course in 1995

  • @Randsurfer
    @Randsurfer 3 місяці тому +1

    That isn't even all of the jokes. One of the best after the not guilty verdict:
    "Well, it's official, murder is now legal in the state of California".
    Another:
    "Police admitted that they conspired to frame OJ, but had to call off the plan when they got to the scene and discovered he really was the murderer".

  • @Aesclepius
    @Aesclepius 3 місяці тому +1

    This was only every saturday night, try to imagine living through it daily on television. It was on 24/7

  • @stoves92
    @stoves92 3 місяці тому +3

    I remember watching the verdict live in class in high school.

  • @mackenzie98
    @mackenzie98 3 місяці тому +2

    He’s still my favourite weekend update host. RIP Norm

  • @LocoCanada
    @LocoCanada 3 місяці тому +2

    Ron Goldman's final words; Hey aren't you OJ Simpson?

  • @mvf80
    @mvf80 3 місяці тому +1

    I was in high school when the verdict came. They brought tvs into our class. The room had black kids on one side and white kids on the other. There was a lot of tension in that room.

  • @lisannebaumholz5028
    @lisannebaumholz5028 3 місяці тому +1

    O.J., as per usual, had nothing to say about Norm's S.N.L.'s bits. What can you say when you know you are guilty?
    The worst thing about this whole "saga" is that the terrible injustice done to Rodney King at the hands of the LAPD was conflated with the domestic abuse that Nicole Brown received at the hands of O.J. Simpson.
    I wonder if U.S. federal or state laws that protect people from spousal violence have changed much since the O.J. case?
    (I'm Canadian so I am familiar with Canadian federal and provincial law but not so much with U.S. federal or state laws concerning domestic violence.)

  • @kallsop2
    @kallsop2 3 місяці тому +2

    As others have noted these jokes were spread out over the length of trial which was 9 months. His jokes were the best part of the whole 24/7 coverage of OJ from the moment of Nicole and Ron's death until the verdict was read. The coverage was round the clock six days a week.
    As for how many episodes of Weekend Update from Saturday Night Live I'd say at least 50.
    It was really a clown show of a trial for the prosecution, the defense and especially Judge Ito.
    This whole thing was so long a friend of mine and his wife conceived and she gave birth to a child in between the slow speed chase and the verdict.

  • @thedoubledowner5359
    @thedoubledowner5359 3 місяці тому +2

    There were so many stories about OJ on SNL was because the OJ trial was THE #1 story in America for about a year

  • @tim2024-df5fu
    @tim2024-df5fu 3 місяці тому +1

    The one thing that came out of the OJ Simpson trial you might not be aware of is the Kardasians. They got their start because their dad was one of OJ's lawyers. Their appearing next to their dad in trial photos got them in front of the public's eye. The rest as they say is history.

  • @toddsonnier3763
    @toddsonnier3763 3 місяці тому

    I was in college at the time of the trial and I remember that people were torn, but not innocent versus guilty. There were people who were furious that he got away with it and people who were thrilled that he got away with it. Very few people thought he was innocent because the evidence was so overwhelming.

  • @rossmacintosh5652
    @rossmacintosh5652 3 місяці тому +21

    Britt, at the time the country wasn't split. Virtually everyone thought OJ did it. It was only the jury and very few contrarians who thought him innocent.

    • @dab_family9405
      @dab_family9405 3 місяці тому

      Absolutely. Today there's more OJ fans because all the qanon and trumpers have crawled out of their mama's basement. At the time, we knew he was guilty. K. N. E. W.

    • @jkelly02
      @jkelly02 3 місяці тому +4

      I don't recall it that way. There was a racial divide.

    • @ronthompson95
      @ronthompson95 3 місяці тому +2

      Exactly right 100%.

    • @ronthompson95
      @ronthompson95 3 місяці тому

      @@jkelly02 A racial divide is where a situation occurs, there are two ways to look at it and come to a conclusion, and the outcome is a decided. 100% of the population knew that OJ was guilty. It was only those who decided to look past it for whatever reason they felt so. That’s not split. That’s a percentage of really stupid people saying to have no soul and support a murderer that hated his own race. It’s a simply equation. I hate injecting reality like that.

    • @joeconcepts5552
      @joeconcepts5552 3 місяці тому +1

      I don't think that's right. I think it was probably MOST people who thought he did it. But it wasn't just the jury who thought the way they did.

  • @scoleman9848
    @scoleman9848 3 місяці тому +1

    This was a compilation of Norm's jokes before and during the trial. There is another compilation out there of Norm's OJ jokes after the trial.

  • @joeconcepts5552
    @joeconcepts5552 3 місяці тому +1

    I don't think I've ever seen another comedian who seems to take perverse pleasure in people not liking his jokes.

  • @mangasky7
    @mangasky7 3 місяці тому +2

    Norm in beast mode.

  • @kennethbrown5164
    @kennethbrown5164 3 місяці тому +3

    Norm was the man!!!

  • @asherosu
    @asherosu 3 місяці тому +1

    Norm would do 2 of 3 OJ Jokes a week. An executive at NBC who was friends with OJ kept demanding that Norm stop. Norm went harder and harder each week until the exec fired him. A year or two later the exec was fired and Norm hosted SNL.

  • @chewy98ta28
    @chewy98ta28 3 місяці тому +2

    So many of the people in these updates are dead now. F Lee Bailey, Johnny Cochran, O.J. Simpson, Norm Macdonald and especially Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman. O.J. made sure of that.

  • @karenbliss8719
    @karenbliss8719 3 місяці тому +2

    Oh Britt, you had to be really young when all of this happened! 😂. I think he got fired after this aired & the network was taking a lot of heat for it. You have to admit, the “been there, done that” joke was kinda funny! 😂. Anyway, you also have to remember that the Rodney King arrest, which was unreal, happened like 3 years prior to the murders so California wasn’t a nice and friendly place to be at that time! Lol! Black people absolutely hated the cops and white people were sticking up for the cops! It was a mess!! I watched the “chase” (which was so bizarre), the trial, and all the documentaries, in other words, anything and everything to do with OJ and Nicole. I was a “homemaker” 😂 so I could do that but I’m sure everyone in the US watched whatever they could, whenever they could. It was a really, really odd time because of race. People really didn’t care about the facts, unfortunately, it was more “black man kills two beautiful and innocent white people” or “famous athlete/star being falsely accused of murdering two people”. No one really said that, of course, but that’s the only way I can really describe the tension, because before all of this, OJ was very respected and loved! Watching every day of the trial, I just knew he was guilty, but with all the mistakes the cops made and the evidence from both sides and words I never heard of before (no Google), it was all screwed up! The jury said he didn’t do it and that’s what people had to go with. They had like a split screen of two colleges, one predominantly white students, and one predominantly black students, to see the reactions and then there was a smaller inset with OJ and his lawyers. When the verdict was read….oh my Lord, well you can imagine! I turned the tv off and cried. I don’t even know why except that I knew all 3 families would never be the same; Nicole’s, Ron’s, and OJ’s. And if OJ really didn’t do it, it did take a toll on him and his family. I know people are tried for murder all the time, but this one just had the whole nation and probably some of the world held in suspense for 9 months! And we never really saw a whole trial on TV before. Okay, I’m done and I apologize for writing such a long and probably very boring description of what my world was like in the year 1995! My husband worked overseas, and my son was 11 and my daughter was 5. Again, sorry this was so long!❤

  • @lancemorrison8561
    @lancemorrison8561 3 місяці тому +2

    Norm became the legend he is for defying SNL!

  • @standoughope
    @standoughope 3 місяці тому

    Lets not forget that Norm's WU was the most popular segment of SNL at the time. Apparently some executive asked Lorne to ask Norm to stop with the OJ jokes because he was friends with the juice. You can't say something like that to a born comedian. They'll bite 100% of the time. He's a legend, RIP =(

  • @RmnGnzlz
    @RmnGnzlz 3 місяці тому +1

    12:30 I'm also glad Norm didn't go for jokes involving the kids. Because in reality, that was the worst part and making dark jokes about it would be easy. Now they have to spend Christmas with the guy they must be 95% sure killed their mom.

  • @jamesdavisjr6937
    @jamesdavisjr6937 3 місяці тому +2

    There is a South Park episode where they make fun of the oj defense team and oj getting off the if Chewbacca
    Was a wookie defense

  • @jackhaskell694
    @jackhaskell694 3 місяці тому

    Actually Ohlmeyer wanted to fire Norm’s writing partner, Jim Downey. His intent was to silence Norm by making him afraid of losing his job. He figured firing Downey would hardly be noticed by the public. Norm messed up his plan by quitting the show when they fired Downey.

  • @frijolero6048
    @frijolero6048 2 місяці тому

    Yes, he did these jokes in real time, as in each week of the trial before and after the verdict. That's why this was so legendary.

  • @66MANICMECANIC
    @66MANICMECANIC Місяць тому

    Norm stood on the side of comedy and nothing was off limits. He also was the King of awkward comedy.

  • @martintorrez999
    @martintorrez999 3 місяці тому +1

    One of OJ's lawyers was Kim Kardashian's Father Robert Kardashian.

  • @garthbigelow
    @garthbigelow 3 місяці тому +1

    Rodney King was still very much in the mind of the nation and the thinking with acquitting OJ was that two wrongs made a right

  • @Calmontheoutside
    @Calmontheoutside 3 місяці тому +1

    Norm was a master at not giving a crap whether the audience laughed.

  • @acebongboy
    @acebongboy 3 місяці тому +1

    I was a huge OJ fan and hoped he didn't do it, but as more and more info came out, it seemed pretty clear that the Juice did it. It was a fascinating case the whole country lived day after day. It was wild watching the white Bronco slow-speed chase live and also the trial live.

  • @DocsChannel
    @DocsChannel 2 місяці тому

    When Norm's boss said you "cant talk about OJ" he went way harder

  • @mattschliemann9683
    @mattschliemann9683 3 місяці тому

    I have been waiting for the day you watched the OJ compilation, it's almost like you were inadvertently waiting for something to happen before you did, and here we are lol.

  • @KLStorer
    @KLStorer 3 місяці тому

    Norm wasn't fired by SNL's Exec Producer, Lorne Michaels, he was fired by the president of NBC who was close friends with OJ.