WTF with Marc Maron - Norm Mcdonald Interview

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2017

КОМЕНТАРІ • 664

  • @smokejensen_
    @smokejensen_ 2 роки тому +365

    Not meeting Norm is one of my life’s biggest regrets....besides killing my wife and that waiter

    • @iphgfqweio
      @iphgfqweio Рік тому +5

      lmao

    • @NankerPhelge65
      @NankerPhelge65 Рік тому +4

      O.J. !!!!

    • @byHexted
      @byHexted Рік тому +3

      You’re like the epitome of the type of person Norm would talk about in his book, where he got all this praise for being so funny and how all these people wanted to meet him, then he’d go out on the road and nobody would show up 💀

    • @iphgfqweio
      @iphgfqweio Рік тому +2

      @@byHexted you bought the book, we get it

    • @showtime951
      @showtime951 11 місяців тому +2

      @smokejensen6867
      We all have regrets. Good luck with golf tomorrow!

  • @pozloadescobar
    @pozloadescobar 2 роки тому +76

    Maron and Norm both put their hearts into this interview. So grateful to Mr. Maron for this contribution to comedy history

  • @isthatwhatemptymeans8222
    @isthatwhatemptymeans8222 6 років тому +824

    11:29 to get to Norm

  • @lauriehere6408
    @lauriehere6408 2 роки тому +66

    FYI, Norm comes in around 11:32

  • @TheMillieSmalls
    @TheMillieSmalls 2 роки тому +83

    Damn. Best interview with norm I’ve heard. He’s was the shit. 100% wonderful.
    You will be missed.

    • @drchadhattan
      @drchadhattan 2 роки тому

      100% he was the best

    • @TheKitchenerLeslie
      @TheKitchenerLeslie 2 роки тому +1

      His interview with Bennington is really good too

    • @kevinrhea7332
      @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +1

      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

    • @jacobolrich4197
      @jacobolrich4197 2 роки тому +2

      I didn't even know he was sick.

    • @NankerPhelge65
      @NankerPhelge65 Рік тому

      ​@@kevinrhea7332thanks

  • @tryhardtrynot
    @tryhardtrynot 2 роки тому +51

    44:50 this is my favourite Norm story ever. Norm was literally awakened into a life of laughter and love. Peace everyone ✌️

    • @benjaminz2523
      @benjaminz2523 Рік тому +6

      Agreed! This story has really stuck with me for years...

    • @sujal439
      @sujal439 9 місяців тому +9

      I have scoured the internet for as much norm as i could and this is the most earnest and defining moment i could find so far

    • @chrisshipley8703
      @chrisshipley8703 8 місяців тому +2

      Without psychedelics

  • @billytitus1519
    @billytitus1519 7 місяців тому +37

    Norm&Marc start at 11:25!
    Edit: and what a gorgeous interview.

  • @sichard.rimmons
    @sichard.rimmons 5 років тому +69

    This is the most candid and vulnerable I’ve ever heard Norm speak

    • @jackprier7727
      @jackprier7727 4 роки тому +9

      No kidding--a lot of background, and just normal raw honesty.

    • @Robcheeto
      @Robcheeto 3 роки тому +1

      Good energy in the interview and Norm was interested in the line of questions.

  • @RudyBoy
    @RudyBoy 2 роки тому +22

    Just incredible interview, Norm was an underrated genius of our time

  • @tonysnow7769
    @tonysnow7769 3 роки тому +40

    RIP Patrice ...he still comes up in comedy conversations frequently!!! 🐐

    • @16MXD
      @16MXD 2 роки тому +6

      The only man who could stand shoulder to shoulder with Norm. May they both rest in peace and their memory never die.

    • @pozloadescobar
      @pozloadescobar 2 роки тому +4

      @@16MXD So happy to say Patrice's memory is still alive. Danimations has made some great animations of his work that are spreading his gospel to the new generation. There will always be an audience for Patrice because he's a truth teller in a fake world

  • @navasaband
    @navasaband 2 роки тому +44

    Knowing what we now know, that Norm was already suffering from cancer during this interview, which is one of the best of his life, talking so eloquently about death, reminds us of the sheer power of the mind that was Norm. A legend. A true star. He will not be forgotten. We are ALL Norm.

    • @getsome4806
      @getsome4806 Рік тому +1

      Jesus Christ. You need boots for the level of bullshit in this comment.

    • @Wallyworld30
      @Wallyworld30 Рік тому +4

      Norm telling us that he gambled because it let him worry about losing money rather than ruminating on death was pretty deep. At the time I didn't think it was very big deal but in hindsight Norm worried about dying for ten years before he passed.

    • @kyleallen4648
      @kyleallen4648 9 місяців тому

      Well said

    • @GoldHamSam
      @GoldHamSam 9 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@Wallyworld30 he worried a lot longer than that! He also had cancer (stomach cancer) in his 20s which almost killed him then. So even before the second diagnosis he was already obsessing over death and his health.

    • @aussiemenace1924
      @aussiemenace1924 3 місяці тому

      ✡️ the cancer was adumb handler 🤣👎🇮🇱

  • @zaccrookmusic
    @zaccrookmusic 3 роки тому +29

    Norm:
    “Yeah, let’s not get into this, man.”
    Marc:
    *Proceeds to get into that.

  • @daisycasey9077
    @daisycasey9077 Рік тому +24

    this was an excellent interview. Two super interesting people having an enjoyable conversation. RIP Norm

  • @scattjax3908
    @scattjax3908 6 років тому +191

    Norm is the only person I've heard that can tell the same story or joke on different shows & podcasts & still make it funny & interesting. I must've heard some of these stories 3 or 4 times already but I'm still entertained. How does he do it? Is it because he's just so genuine, funny, & interesting himself?

    • @steviem8117
      @steviem8117 5 років тому +5

      hes a legend

    • @Justcarlosdiaz
      @Justcarlosdiaz 5 років тому +6

      I've wondered this exact same thing many times

    • @nolanstolz
      @nolanstolz 4 роки тому +9

      @@TheRealCookieP wow. "So he can tell an old joke like a musician can play an old song." I just had an epiphany. You are exactly right. I get it now.

    • @AF-jx7hz
      @AF-jx7hz 4 роки тому +9

      He talks about the wisdom and lightness of all the old people he grew up around and how he wished he could have that immediately without having to live life first. I suspect that the act he puts on that we all love and that has made him famous is just him acting like an old person and the timing and everything is so finely crafted because he spent his entire youth surrounded by old people. The old person he's acting like has all the good traits and comedic timing of the old people he had observed his entire life.
      This might not be it but I only say this because I also grew up around old people and death and in my experience, what he says about their attitudes is true and I also feel like my personality was influenced by my desire to have the carefree wisdom that I saw in all these old dying people who you would think should be full of dread. Of course a part of them dreads what their future holds but maybe they've come to the conclusion that ruminating over things you can't control doesn't help anything and you might as well just do you best to spread joy and relief in this horrible joke of a world we live in.
      Like Norm said, flipping that switch of positivity that Marc hates to hear about does in fact work in acting and comedy. It also works in real life and it's pretty much the only thing you really have control over in this hellish facade of an existence so why not try to help yourself and everyone around you instead of complaining about how tragic reality is since that's abundantly clear to everyone already.

    • @charlesfisk8436
      @charlesfisk8436 4 роки тому +3

      You must be a riot at parties!

  • @superintelligentapefromthe121
    @superintelligentapefromthe121 5 років тому +142

    If something is true it's not sentimental, so I say in truth.... Norm, we love you.

    • @charlesfisk8436
      @charlesfisk8436 4 роки тому +13

      You're gonna make me cry. I do love Norm. He has given us all something so wonderful and uplifting. Thanks for that.

    • @mindleft-buddy999
      @mindleft-buddy999 2 роки тому +5

      RIP Norm.

    • @motorcyclelad
      @motorcyclelad 2 роки тому +2

      Aged well. I hope he knew how loved he truly was.

    • @kevinrhea7332
      @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +4

      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

    • @pozloadescobar
      @pozloadescobar 2 роки тому +1

      Yes we do! Norm and so many other great comedians deserve so much more love. Keeping his name alive by watching and sharing his work is an expression of that

  • @Ulfur666
    @Ulfur666 2 роки тому +14

    Wow, what a great conversation. I only discovered Norm as a comedian shortly before he died, guess he's not that famous outside the greatest country on earth and all that. But now he is without a doubt my favourite comedian ever and here he is so real as a person. This podcast is just a beautiful spontaneous honest flow, thank you.

    • @colin6603
      @colin6603 Рік тому +3

      He’s from Canada so I’d say he’s pretty popular up there

  • @BucketOfMarbles
    @BucketOfMarbles 4 роки тому +275

    The fact Norm grew up around mostly old people explains everything. That old chunk of coal.

    • @williamshaw9047
      @williamshaw9047 4 роки тому +6

      I like to watch movies...and the movies I like best are porno. And did you know they've got this thing called "gay porn?" It's terrible! It's all guys! Guys having sex with each other! No women anywhere!

    • @vaughncollins1386
      @vaughncollins1386 3 роки тому +3

      His voice sounds so old😂? He ages like a fine wine comedically.

    • @russpoore8997
      @russpoore8997 3 роки тому +1

      Norm's so old, he can remember prohibition.

    • @hdrjunkie
      @hdrjunkie 3 роки тому +7

      I think that’s why he’s so funny.... all the old people words he uses like “Fella” and such...

    • @kevinrhea7332
      @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +4

      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

  • @cindyhachey7804
    @cindyhachey7804 2 роки тому +51

    Norm always had a problem with handsome people? WTF! Sad he never realized he was a super handsome dude, classically good looking, dimples, tall and striking blue eyes. Even as a mature man, with some padding, he was attractive, always good humoured and hilarious, of course. He had a curious mixture of innocence and sophistication that made him endearing. Child and cantankerous, old man at the same time is not easy to pull off, but it was not a persona, it was just the uniqueness of Norm. Maybe his physical insecurities informed his comedy in a way confidence or arrogance would have erased, but it’s a shame he did not realize women found him very appealing. Can’t think of any other comic where I laugh and swoon at the same time. Funny to the core and master of his craft.

    • @M123Xoxo
      @M123Xoxo Рік тому +6

      He also had a lot of money!

    • @twyckoff87
      @twyckoff87 Рік тому +4

      He was super handsome, but he was always shy/awkward. He was probably jealous of easygoing handsome people.

    • @birdiedog5
      @birdiedog5 9 місяців тому +3

      Norm in middle age when slimmer reminded me of an old school movie star. He had an appearance on letterman, the one when he talked about golfing with a guy who knew john fogerty, he was so handsome with that twinkle in his blue eyes. Also a very sharp dresser when he wanted to. He was always tall dark and handsome, but that was my favorite look with norm. He waa adorable as a child too. ❤❤❤

    • @ordinarycitizenn
      @ordinarycitizenn 6 місяців тому +1

      Right on point

    • @JamoonXerxesSauber
      @JamoonXerxesSauber 3 місяці тому

      Tbh I'm not sure if it was a bit that he just kept doing.

  • @paulkossak7761
    @paulkossak7761 3 роки тому +11

    Never get tired hearing Norms Rodney stories, pretty good impression of Rodney as well.

  • @bigtime8924
    @bigtime8924 3 роки тому +47

    Great stream of consciousness here.

  • @dopeyjoe4822
    @dopeyjoe4822 5 років тому +60

    hearing Norm say he loved Patrice warmed my cold dead heart.

    • @jonnytheboy7338
      @jonnytheboy7338 2 роки тому +7

      Too bad Mark interrupted him when he was just about to tell something interesting about Patrice. An interesting interview but an interviewer should never, never, continually interrupt the conversation. I must say that Norm handles it very well

    • @Ray_D_Tutto
      @Ray_D_Tutto 2 роки тому +2

      Game recognizing game.

  • @lloyd.campbell1
    @lloyd.campbell1 Рік тому +8

    One of my all time favorite comedians. Rest up Norm.

  • @josephballerini3730
    @josephballerini3730 4 роки тому +49

    I wish Marc hadn’t cut off norm’s Patrice story.

    • @EhEhXCX
      @EhEhXCX 4 роки тому +1

      I wish I said that comment before you.

  • @chrisbarr1359
    @chrisbarr1359 4 роки тому +28

    That was a very enjoyable interview. Marc and Norm seem to see many things from the same perspective. Pleasantly surprised at how relaxed and interesting their conversation was. Kudos Marc!!

    • @rosegin6658
      @rosegin6658 4 роки тому

      Know if you’re not open l

    • @mrlardtard6552
      @mrlardtard6552 3 роки тому

      Fuck you too

    • @alvareo92
      @alvareo92 2 роки тому

      Two libras! Sorry, I’m kinda into spirituality myself

    • @kevinrhea7332
      @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +1

      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

    • @davidking7344
      @davidking7344 2 роки тому +1

      @@kevinrhea7332 Thank you. Marc really loves to hear himself talk

  • @turnbuckleluccibonnadouchi9843
    @turnbuckleluccibonnadouchi9843 4 роки тому +48

    Greatest Norm quote of all time - 1:06:30
    “I don’t give a f*ck about too much.”

  • @jvenom174
    @jvenom174 3 роки тому +30

    I can just picture how uncomfortable Norm probably looked when Marc started ranting about politicians. Wish I could have been a fly on the wall for that conversation, just being scared of spiders and shit.

    • @jameslutian1977
      @jameslutian1977 Рік тому +1

      Maron's political rambling is the most juvenile form of punditry. I've heard him go through these same rants dozens of times before and it never goes beyond just hacky, childish ranting. I sometimes wonder if he really knows anything about politics at all.

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal 6 років тому +177

    a zen buddhist walks up to a hot dog stand and says "make me one with everything"

    • @kizbo
      @kizbo 5 років тому +3

      What are you talking about. The Dalai Lama just didn't understand the joke. Then he laughs as the guy telling the joke because it didn't work.

    • @rupert5390
      @rupert5390 5 років тому +31

      The finish to that joke is - the guy takes the hotdog and says "hey where's my change" The hot dog vendor says "Change must come from within."

    • @alextrippe44
      @alextrippe44 5 років тому +3

      ...the Buddhist gives $5 for the $2.50 hotdog and asks for his change, and the hotdog vendor says "Change comes from within"

    • @tylerfresina8547
      @tylerfresina8547 5 років тому +1

      You stole that.

    • @juliusseesaw5450
      @juliusseesaw5450 5 років тому +3

      Part three is llama says "within what"?

  • @bigglilwayne7050
    @bigglilwayne7050 10 місяців тому +7

    Norm's passion for stand-up is admirable, he's unquestionably on Comedian Mt Rushmore

    • @nunyanunya4147
      @nunyanunya4147 7 місяців тому +1

      i too agree he is 100% on a made up thing.
      where do you get your ideas from?

  • @malcolmzabaneh5977
    @malcolmzabaneh5977 4 роки тому +21

    I have to admit - the entire conversation got far more interesting as it went on. Actually touched on some meaningful and quasi-intellectual subject matter towards the end...

  • @colebyrnes7889
    @colebyrnes7889 7 місяців тому +7

    Gotta love how Norm's beliefs stand the test of time and Mark's, even though I often find him insightful, are the kind that lead to the downfall of civilizations.

    • @sjbrewer100
      @sjbrewer100 7 місяців тому +1

      Interesting take. Love it.

  • @bradyisthegoatofgoats4769
    @bradyisthegoatofgoats4769 2 роки тому +29

    Marc Maron is abhorrent but I'll listen since Norm is on. You can skip to around 11:30 to get to Norm.

    • @ransakreject5221
      @ransakreject5221 2 роки тому +3

      Thanx. Now if there was only a way to mute Marons voice

    • @Larry_Hegs
      @Larry_Hegs Місяць тому

      Couldn’t agree more.. even more.

  • @crashburn3292
    @crashburn3292 3 роки тому +19

    His best setup/punchline the same joke: "The rock band Better Than Ezra won a Grammy for best song yesterday. And coming in second place: Ezra."

  • @dashpratt4097
    @dashpratt4097 2 роки тому +18

    Crazy how Artie Lange could snort cocaine, do heroin, and drink like a fish for over 35 years…and Norm is the one who met his demise

  • @SONOFABITCH
    @SONOFABITCH 4 роки тому +51

    45:19 Norm reveals his origin story as a comedy superhero,
    the moment he received his superpowers!

    • @scrimmins7
      @scrimmins7 2 роки тому

      So crazy to hear him tell it

    • @mikemolaro4198
      @mikemolaro4198 22 дні тому

      This story is insane. Fits of laughing hysteria where he has to medicate to calm down?!

  • @frank2778
    @frank2778 3 роки тому +12

    Innuendo is a form of dissociation? Another example of Norm's casual brilliance.

  • @tjhill9479
    @tjhill9479 3 роки тому +9

    The Sinbad story makes me laugh out loud every time!

    • @capealio
      @capealio 3 роки тому +6

      Things have gone from Sinbad to sinworse

  • @stacyblue1980
    @stacyblue1980 7 років тому +7

    fucking YES!!! where was I when this was aired?? NORM!! ♥ we love you . our hero. Hell yesssssssss

  • @curtismcdonald6838
    @curtismcdonald6838 2 роки тому +9

    Norm gave MONSTER props to Sinbad at the start of the audio. Norm learned how to be a better comedian thru Sinbad. That’s humbling.

    • @warshipsatin8764
      @warshipsatin8764 9 місяців тому +1

      it seems pretty backhanded. he learned that a comedians success isnt based on the quality of their writing or how funny their jokes are. sinbad taught him that those things arent even necessary lol

  • @ratonsito2836
    @ratonsito2836 3 роки тому +1

    Wonderful, insightful interview. Norm really opened up. Thanks Marc!

  • @mysharona9097
    @mysharona9097 4 роки тому +34

    am I crazy... hating handsome guys @20:00?? Young Norm was better looking than pretty much any comedian i know of lol

    • @n3rds3y3vi3w
      @n3rds3y3vi3w 4 роки тому +12

      Shannon Campbell I understand what they mean though. There’s a difference between the shy handsome mysterious wallflower type and the popular center of attention guy who gets dates easily based on his looks. I can see norm being the former and jay mohr being the latter.

    • @BillySotherden
      @BillySotherden 4 роки тому +10

      As a deeply closeted gay man, I agree.

    • @charlesfisk8436
      @charlesfisk8436 4 роки тому +1

      @@BillySotherden LOL...so funny. I say that as a deeply closeted gay man...:)

  • @VECTeezy
    @VECTeezy 2 роки тому +5

    Norm ALWAYS been putting in that Dirty Work 📝🎙
    Another comic I grew up on.

  • @bradeng7158
    @bradeng7158 4 роки тому +14

    Norm's story about the blind man is very similar to a Raymond Carver short story called "Cathedral."

  • @Ryan-jc6we
    @Ryan-jc6we 7 років тому +28

    I just randomly got turned on to Marc Maron through the show Glow and have been listing to his podcasts on UA-cam. This by far is is the funniest interview I have ever heard. I love the long format. Talk shows are always selling something and we get 2 minutes with the guest. Keep up the good work Mark.

    • @iancurtisspectre3744
      @iancurtisspectre3744 6 років тому

      +artimus And you sound like a finished donnybrook clone/clown...enjoying the rapidly accelerating donward spiral? It is so heartening to know that we have a mentally challenged Prezijoke...Mueller Ain't Going Away!!! Brace yourself for President Pencebot! (a funeral for every aborted fetus in every pot)

    • @iancurtisspectre3744
      @iancurtisspectre3744 6 років тому +1

      ah ah, charade you're NOT!

    • @scattjax3908
      @scattjax3908 6 років тому +2

      If you like this interview, check out Norm Macdonald's podcast. They recently took down the official videos from UA-cam & put them on Amazon Prime, but you can still find some copies on here if you don't have Prime.

    • @landonsulsar4367
      @landonsulsar4367 6 років тому +1

      scatt jax ah I didn't realize they went to prime. Did you read he has a Netflix show starting soon? Can't wait!!

    • @scattjax3908
      @scattjax3908 6 років тому +1

      Ya I'm looking forward to that, hopefully they'll be as good the podcast :)

  • @rdpatterson2682
    @rdpatterson2682 5 років тому +5

    GREAT INTERVIEW!!!

  • @chadgrisham1165
    @chadgrisham1165 5 років тому +18

    "It was like a David Lynchian cat" lol

  • @Skimmerlit
    @Skimmerlit 6 місяців тому +1

    I have no idea how I missed this interview. It’s incredible. Norm is spot on about every great author grappling with faith in the end. I hope Norm has found peace.

  • @MattinglyBrosGarage
    @MattinglyBrosGarage 2 роки тому +14

    Norm eludes to being sick and to dying in this one. It's glossed over with a wave, but he definitely hints at it.

  • @artpinsof5836
    @artpinsof5836 2 роки тому +7

    RIP Norm. You will be missed ❤️

  • @sammalone4239
    @sammalone4239 3 роки тому +1

    Brilliant interview !!! WOW!!

  • @glitchfreak316
    @glitchfreak316 6 років тому +35

    norm Macdonald just gets it

  • @DailyMotionBetter
    @DailyMotionBetter 3 роки тому +15

    This interview reminds me of that tragedy

    • @figuresk8z
      @figuresk8z 3 роки тому +3

      Meet me under the Queensboro Bridge, you owe me $15

    • @therealCamoron
      @therealCamoron 3 роки тому +1

      I was reminded of this interview yesterday

    • @capealio
      @capealio 3 роки тому

      Terrible name for an airline

  • @emmetLshavinski
    @emmetLshavinski 4 роки тому +12

    37:04 is the best norm impression I've heard.

  • @traviscutler9912
    @traviscutler9912 7 місяців тому +3

    I've been really struggling lately and this really helped. Thanks for both of you being raw and vulnerable.

  • @anthropologist1903
    @anthropologist1903 4 місяці тому +1

    my favorite part of any Marc Maron episode is the part where he is not talking

  • @bmoore-cd2zk
    @bmoore-cd2zk 4 роки тому +8

    I love Norm because Norm loved Rodney. Among other things,

  • @simonscott1121
    @simonscott1121 Рік тому +5

    Norm is very astute. His firing always bothered me, because if Lorne didnt want it to happen it wouldnt have happened. Not even the president of the network would have overridden Lorne's word on SNL.
    This is the first time Ive heard anyone mention that it wasnt due to Olmeyer, and it was Norm :)

  • @LuckyDawgz
    @LuckyDawgz Рік тому +1

    One of my favorite WTF episodes... Norm!

  • @stanmalone7745
    @stanmalone7745 Рік тому +6

    Poignant to hear Norm talking about death and even mentioning cancer knowing now that he knew he was sick at the time.

    • @Jeremy_the_unfallible_n-a
      @Jeremy_the_unfallible_n-a Рік тому +2

      he had cancer for 9 years too apparently. think just how much hes done while knowing that

  • @ordinarycitizenn
    @ordinarycitizenn 6 місяців тому +2

    1:15:55
    Crazy how he just slips out his sickness here. It's interesting to speculate on how his illness probably informed his life which in turn affected his stand up and general outlook on life.

  • @nunyabizness6376
    @nunyabizness6376 5 років тому +33

    I loved that norm stands up for God, all the time.

    • @Ohm521
      @Ohm521 5 років тому +3

      And its interesting to note that those that know him professionally will in all seriousness describe him either as a serious atheist or passionate god fearing man.

    • @nunyabizness6376
      @nunyabizness6376 5 років тому +11

      @@Ohm521 it comes down to faith. He says it. Its the fear in all of us. That what you believe in is false. Faith is the purest thing we can have.

    • @DavidGriffin-ww2fk
      @DavidGriffin-ww2fk 5 років тому +5

      @@Ohm521 much like Bob Dylan.He is to comedy what Bob is to music.

    • @ronaldstarkey4336
      @ronaldstarkey4336 4 роки тому

      Interesting...

    • @michaelshelbyedwards
      @michaelshelbyedwards 4 роки тому +8

      Prayed for Norm. Such a beautiful person. May he find what he’s looking for.

  • @holysmokes4259
    @holysmokes4259 2 роки тому +6

    RIP Norm. 😭

  • @totalhorse6987
    @totalhorse6987 2 роки тому +17

    When he talks about naming things for the blind guy he's describing therapy. Naming objects we see around us is an anti anxiety thing. That's a really cool insight into nine year old Norm MACdonald.

    • @theweedledrop
      @theweedledrop 2 роки тому +5

      That story really touched me for whatever reason.

  • @MsMaureena
    @MsMaureena 7 років тому +22

    norm, I love you.

  • @boltsbees
    @boltsbees 8 місяців тому +1

    I think you get to the essence of Norm in this. His real take on life. I appreciate it.

  • @michaelshelbyedwards
    @michaelshelbyedwards 4 роки тому

    Amazing conversation.

    • @capealio
      @capealio 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah its called a stream of consciousness

  • @jameslutian1977
    @jameslutian1977 Рік тому +3

    Maron just can't keep politics out of his stuff. It's held him back more than he knows. Your job is to be entertaining, thought provoking, funny, ect...It is NOT to be a demagogue. Norm understood this in a way Maron never will.

  • @LivingInTheKaliYogurt
    @LivingInTheKaliYogurt 2 роки тому +45

    11+ minutes of Marc babbling and shilling before we can get to Norm is insufferable. Shout out to the hero in the comments who put the timestamp for the start of the actual interview. RIP, Norm.

    • @enoughisenough670
      @enoughisenough670 2 роки тому +5

      mans gotta eat

    • @patrickhayes9215
      @patrickhayes9215 2 роки тому +5

      Just cant stand Marc Maron. Suffering him for the love of Norm.

    • @kevinrhea7332
      @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +6

      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
      INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

    • @bobkoroua
      @bobkoroua Рік тому

      @@patrickhayes9215 Norm loved him.

    • @droberto9603
      @droberto9603 Рік тому

      Yammering bitch, I thought I was listening to The View at first

  • @StarlightUkes
    @StarlightUkes 3 роки тому +2

    I love hearing you talk man

  • @bruceules1318
    @bruceules1318 4 роки тому +9

    I have loved old people all my life. And I continue to love them. They have perspective unlike the young.

  • @mullaneymike79
    @mullaneymike79 3 роки тому +4

    This man is amazing, he truly gives 0 f****

  • @almarestori7426
    @almarestori7426 2 роки тому +1

    Great interview! I miss Norm Mac D

  • @ceebee491
    @ceebee491 2 роки тому +2

    Great interview. Norm was the Greatest.

  • @jonathanmontgomery5178
    @jonathanmontgomery5178 2 роки тому +7

    I love Marc’s question at 17:21 - asking Norm to talk about himself instead of generalizing. Big pet peeve of mine is when I or others say “you” or “people”
    when they mean “me”

  • @BrendanGFoster
    @BrendanGFoster 2 роки тому +1

    Norm's cameo in Ridiculous 6 is one of my favourite cameos in a movie

  • @esmondkim1357
    @esmondkim1357 2 роки тому +5

    I don't know why the Old Yeller incident at 49:10 makes me laugh really hard.

  • @lowbo47omzascotave94
    @lowbo47omzascotave94 4 роки тому +12

    *Eastside Low Bottoms shit !*
    Shout out to Norm for shouting out Patrice O'Neal.
    Norm's generation is whn i started watching SNL on a regular basis. It was probably my late teens. Him doing Update was funny to me because, even in the face of no laughter he pressed forward. Gotta love Norm !

  • @tAc399
    @tAc399 2 роки тому +4

    15:10 Sounds like that JFL gala went from 'Sinbad' to 'SinWorse'

  • @NeopolitianNPLTN
    @NeopolitianNPLTN 6 років тому +13

    Marc sure gets a GD lot of mileage out of that stupid dead thing under his house story.

  • @ManAdam712
    @ManAdam712 Рік тому +3

    Norm and Farley were too good for this world. Both devoted their lives to Comedy. Out of respect for Norm, I wouldn't want to see or hear anything he didn't make public, but I love hearing about his opinions on other entertainers, especially because the two of them (In the superior opinion of MifflinStHODL) could not have had two different comedic styles. But they were masters of making anyone laugh and never allowing a room to get too serious.
    I learned in that VICE show that Farley tried stand-up a few times before Second City, because he knew Comedy was his calling. Nothing will help to reset your perspective on life and help you understand what is truly important in than laughter, and the two of them knew that.
    Well... laughter or getting gang r@ped by a bunch of well-endowed fellas that are great at dunking basketballs.

  • @smmozza
    @smmozza 5 років тому +1

    ... GREAT VIDEO ...

  • @markhuntermd
    @markhuntermd 2 роки тому +7

    Genius interview uncovers all?
    Macdonald: “…(I have no faith because)..I think I’m not deep enough!”
    Does Macdonald reveal his entire persona in that single sentence?
    As a child, Norm Macdonald was extraordinarily fearful. (Perhaps poverty and lack of peers, etc.). Then one day as a child, Norm must take a blind man to the market: An overwhelmingly frightful prospect. But suddenly, in a flash he finds solace and refuge from his fear: He disconnects or disassociates from the environment. Unexpectedly, the fright evaporates and is replaced by laughter!
    Macdonald says in the interview he is frightened of nothing - Except death: the one thing he can’t escape by a process of mental gymnastics.
    Ironically, it is Macdonald’s dismissive style that makes his comedy so appealing to audiences.
    Years ago, I wrote a medical text on psychological pathologies and treatments. To write it I did a great deal of research including an examination of dissociative disorder: a condition arising as a solution to profound fear. In the most extraordinary & extreme cases, CIA spooks would electroshock a victim. Normally, as a matter of protection, a person undergoing such torture would pass-out. Our clever CIA men would drug the victims with an elixir that prevented them from passing out. What the CIA men discovered was their victims would ‘disconnect’ from the environment; and, yet remain awake. The victim would be there physically, but mentally as a means of survival, they had mentally disconnected from the pain: entering into a condition of abrupt dissociative or psychogenic fugue.
    Under these extraordinary circumstances, the CIA men could in some cases forge an entirely new persona into the victim. They could ‘autosuggest’ to the victim that their name was, “Mr. Brown”; they could convince the victim that he would escape pain anytime when he heard a particular phrase, (such as ‘somewhere over the rainbow’ - apparently a CIA favorite); and, this artificially produced victims’ persona would be extraordinarily suggestable. In some cases, they could induce this ‘Mr. Brown’ to go and assassinate so-and-so. On the day of the ‘hit’, the CIA would induce upon the victim by some phrase the appearance of Mr. Brown; together with the ‘kill instructions’. After the hit, the victim (the killer) wouldn’t remember a thing!
    This CIA derived example is an extraordinary case. However, it shows us how the human mind, under extraordinary fear, can undergo a dissociative or psychogenic fugue as a means of coping and survival. For many years I have come to examine many patients who learned to cope in life by performing a type of mental calculus whereby they mentally dissociate or disconnect from the environment as a means of safety. In nearly all cases, the patient was chronically suffering tremendous fear in childhood. Under those conditions the patient ‘learned’ this means of survival: they have disconnected psychologically in a way for which they are insulated from fear.
    My hypothesis about Norm Macdonald is based upon my intimate knowledge of dissociative disorders and Macdonald’s interview: His sudden & immediate mental transformation as a terribly frightened child to one who merely laughs it off; a lack of substantive fear in nearly all circumstances (such as being on stage); his abrupt, sudden and overwhelming emotional collapse over symbolism (eg, the 16th century painting of the beautiful woman); apathy over loss of father; inordinate reluctance to watch himself on TV; and, greatly fearing the loss of emotional control due to laughter (perhaps fearing at times that he can’t fully control the very dissociative mechanisms that shields him from a deeply rooted & profound fear of his environment).
    Perhaps too this would explain his apathy at three times losing the entirety of his wealth. In fact, he felt that ‘losing-it-all’ gave him a sense of well-being, levity, and a freedom from concern over the fundamental matters of survival: By losing all his wealth he felt blissfully disconnected from ‘life’s concerns’.
    Comedy saves us from a great many difficult things in life. It can be used as a shield. Maybe Norm Macdonald’s apathetic comedic style might be explained by my theory.
    Macdonald: “…(I have no faith because)..I think I’m not deep enough!”
    It might be too frightening for Macdonald to open up to vulnerability. It might just be too painful to immerse himself into the emotional void or to let-go and trust in ‘faith’. As a child, he learned and continues to disconnect from all things as a way to overcome social anxiety and fear.
    If this is true, then only a Super Human journey - Such as that illustrated in Joseph Campbell’s, “The Hero of a Thousand Faces” - can bring him out into the open and ultimately a cure. Many mythologies across time speak of how to treat this dilemma. There is a wonderful episode of the early 1970s TV series Kung Foo called, “One Step into Darkness”. In this episode Master Po tells Bruce Carradine’s character (Shalon Monk Kwai Chang Caine), "To run from your demon is to have him pursue you. Better to advance to meet your demon in his world than have him pursue you into yours."
    To be sure, we must all come out from behind our mother’s skirt, and face our demons. If you have enough faith to trust in the Universe, you will rise to the challenge; evolve; and, become one of the Hero’s of a Thousand Faces.
    If we refuse that journey, great anxieties will develop. Big pharma will profit wildly by selling us benzodiazepines. Benzodiazepines act as a torniquet around nerve bundles in the brain. In the short term this can lessen the pain of anxiety and so on. However, over the long term it causes large swaths of the brain to die. Soon the victim of long-term benzodiazepines becomes more and more weak-minded. As more and more of their brain dies, it becomes weaker and weaker. In time the typical patient will start abusing alcohol, opioids, etc., in an attempt to prop up their weakened emotional stability. Hundreds of celebrities over time have suffered and/or died as a direct and proximate result of Benzo’s: Michael Jackson, Anna Nicole Smith, Simon & Brittany Monjack, Paris Hilton, Courtney Love, Howard Hughes, Stevie Nicks, Whitney Houston, Bobbi Kristina Brown, Judy Garland, Lucile Ball, Tennessee Williams, DJ AM (Adam Goldstein), Brittney Murphy, Mike Starr (Alice in Chains), Ozzy Osbourne, Steven Tyler, Tara Connor (Miss USA), Kurt Cobain, Keith Moon, River Phoenix, Chris Benoit, Edward Fatu (aka Umaga), Karen Carpenter, Andy Irons, Janis Joplin, Natalie Woods, Billy Mays, Corey Haim, Maryland Chambers, Amanda Peterson, Misty Upham, American author David Foster Wallace, Carrie Fisher, Elizabeth Taylor, Dana Plato, Stephan Paul “Elliot” Smith, Prince, Don Cornelius, Sinead O'Connor, Heath Ledger, Robin Williams, Mary Anissa Jones, Elvis Presley, “Dimebag” Darrell Abbott, James Sullivan, Elisa Lam, Jimi Hendrix, Junior Seau, Elisa Bridges, Paula Yates, Amy Winehouse, Liz Taylor, tennis champion Boris Becker, singers Marc Almond, Liza Minnelli, comedian Freddie Starr, all-pro football star Junior Seau, comedian Sam Kinison, comedian Chris Farley, comedian John Belushi, comedian Phil Hartman’s wife Brynn, Marlon Brando’s daughter Cheyenne, Paul Newman’s son Scott, author Iris Chang, Larry Kings wife, Elisa Bridges (former Playboy Playmate of the Month for December 1994 who died of Xanax), creative director of fashion giant Dior, John Galliano, Ex-WWE Superstar Ashley Massaro & Chyna (born Joan Marie Laurer - Benzo’s and Z-drugs), and many more. The fact is that benzodiazepine drugs have been known to cause continual brain damage for over the last 30 years. Therefore, since the early 1980s, their long-term use has been banned in many Western countries. Meanwhile, in the USA, their use is never-ending as the manufacturer enjoys a several hundred percent markup over the international generic equivalent.
    However, it is just as likely that I am entirely wrong in my uninformed analysis of Norm Macdonald. No one in my position could possibly know for certain. My prejudgment’s here were merely meant to illustrate dissociative disorders, the profound dangers of social anxiety and long-term use of benzo’s, and to spark discussion. It is more likely that Norm Macdonald is not only an extraordinary comedian, he is extremely well-balanced. And people feel great comfort in the quiet reassured confidence, poise, and light-hearted nature of his comedic persona.
    I am far from perfect and continue to evolve as I embrace and work-through my own (many) imperfections. It is a wonderful thing - a reviving & saving grace - to benefit from the marvelous comedy of Norm Macdonald and Marc Maron! Humor saves us!

    • @dariaeliuk4377
      @dariaeliuk4377 2 роки тому +2

      This comment is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too good for UA-cam

    • @LivingInTheKaliYogurt
      @LivingInTheKaliYogurt 2 роки тому +1

      Appreciated this comment and did not know those terrifying things about jenzos having never taken them. But it does make me wonder if you have obliquely admitted a past crippling addiction to benzos or a previous period in life as an MK Ultra victim? Forgive my presumptiousness. You are likely a very well-adjusted historian of psychology! RIP Norm, brilliant and hilarious, he set the bar for future generations. Maron, not so much, but he's a decent interviewer.

    • @markhuntermd
      @markhuntermd 2 роки тому

      @@LivingInTheKaliYogurt - There were some troubles in mental health care here where I live. So, I wrote a medical text on psychiatric care in an effort to improve things.
      To write the book I did a lot of research. I examined over 100 celebrities that died of benzos. I also investigated the CIA mind control programs in an effort to understand disassociation disorder. [Physicians frequently misdiagnose disassociation disorder as Asperger syndrome (AS).]
      A few notes about Benzos: How long can I safely use Benzos?
      A few weeks.
      Why can’t I use Benzo’s longer than that?
      With continued use they cause key areas of the brain to wither away; cause memory loss; sleep disturbances; and the inability to ‘lift’ the emotional challenges of day-to-day living. Symbolically: you could say that over time, with continued use of Benzo’s, your brain will need a wheel chair to get around! As a direct result, long term Benzo users find themselves being prescribed yet more and more benzos’; and when that fails, patients will often add alcohol and/or narcotics in an attempt to support their sagging mental structure.1
      What is the purpose of Benzos?
      To anesthetize your brain from pain - Just like an aspirin or opium does for a headache, or musculoskeletal pain.
      If it’s so dangerous, why do physicians prescribe it for longer periods of time?
      Because they are really great for business! Drugs in the USA are over-priced - sometimes as much as several thousands of percent higher than the international generic drug equivalent - and that means big profits for the pharmaceutical companies!
      As you will note, government regulators are the same men that work for the pharmaceutical companies for which they are charged to protect us!
      Just think of all the additional medications and medical procedures that could be required after taking long-term benzo’s! It’s all great for business, but not for the patient.
      With continual use, you find your physician prescribing yet more and more benzo’s,2 and later Z-drugs to help you sleep, (Z-drugs like Ambien also erode brain matter), and so on. The longer you are on Benzo’s, the more disabled you become, all of which guarantees that you become a life-time patient! In fact, following an analysis of around 100 dead celebrities, from Elvis Presley to Michael Jackson, it was discovered that long-term Benzo use led to their death!3
      But I thought the doctor was trying to promote good mental health?
      Well, an uninformed physician might actually think he is trying to help. Many physicians just want to use your body like Energy Chattel.
      If it’s so dangerous, why haven’t I heard of this problem before?
      The rest of the world has been warned and has been instructed to avoid longer term use. Many countries like the UK, Germany, Holland, and others have long-standing policies against the long-term use of Benzos.
      US drug industry regulators also work for the very same corporations they are supposed to protect us from - As a direct result, USA medicine is ranked 72nd overall,4 and has the world’s most expensive pharmaceutical costs. For instance, in the USA the Benzo Xanax is priced 600,000% higher than the International Generic Drug Equivalent (alprazolam). So as you can see from the corporate share-holders point of view, it’s really great for business to keep you laid-out on Benzos!
      So, what is the actual cause of the mental health disorders they are treating?
      Science has deployed a whole collection of brand-new brain imaging methods to answer that question. These devices have allowed science to actually see inside of the brain and monitor its level of activity. Using these new imaging techniques scientists have discovered that key parts of the brain among patients with depression and anxiety are weak & underactive: Specific modules of the brain have simply withered away! It is little wonder the patient has a really tough time lifting the emotional requirements of daily life. It was appreciation of this fact that created a new paradigm shift in the understanding & treatment of these disorders: to strengthen the organic structures of the brain as if it were a muscle.
      Footnotes:
      1 Jones CM, et al., Alcohol involvement in opioid pain reliever and benzodiazepine drug abuse-related emergency department visits and drug-related deaths - United States, 2010. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2014 Oct 10;63(40):881-5.
      2 Morgan WW, Abuse liability of barbiturates and other sedative-hypnotics. Adv Alcohol
      Subst Abuse. 1990;9(1-2):67-82.
      3 Ask for a free copy of my medical text, Treatment for Disorders of Affect, Anxiety,
      Attention, Addiction & Compulsion. See chapter 3, starting page 6 onward for analysis
      of coroner reports.
      4 Medicine in the USA is ranked 72nd overall - Miles behind Cuba:
      To top off crappy health care, the US Medical industry is essentially an Insurance
      Company gulag financed by the Wall Street banking terrorist.
      www.commonwealthfund.org/Publications/Fund-Reports/2008/Jul/Why-Not-
      the-Best--Results-from-the-National-Scorecard-on-U-S--Health-System-Performance--
      2008.aspx
      Yes, Stephen Paddock Was Prescribed Valium. And it very well could have
      led to his shooting spree!
      themindunleashed.com/2017/10/yes-stephen-paddock-prescribed-valium-no-
      might-not-explain-massacring-59-people.html

    • @motleysue8171
      @motleysue8171 2 роки тому +2

      Not sure if you are aware, but Norm wrote a book that was part memoir part fictional comedy. One chapter is devoted to his being molested by a man who had been taken in by his family. The next chapter which supposedly covers the 5 years during which that took place is summed up in one sentence: I forget. Obviously, there is nothing comical about those chapters, so it seems it must be true.

    • @markhuntermd
      @markhuntermd 2 роки тому +1

      @@motleysue8171 - Wow!
      I did not know that. I only knew of Norm from this interview and took a guess. I figured I was correct or really off base. That is why I wrote, "However, it is just as likely that I am entirely wrong in my uninformed analysis of Norm Macdonald. No one in my position could possibly know for certain."
      Dissociative Disorder secondary to trauma is quite common in the USA. I believe this is because the USA has been at continual war for all but 17 years since its inception in 1776. VETS come back with broken minds - which in turn infect and radicalize the culture.
      One scary aspect in dealing with people with dissociative disorder is that you have no idea what is hidden behind the mask - the artificial persona they create for themselves.

  • @frankcooke1692
    @frankcooke1692 4 роки тому +15

    Marc Maron isn't very good at swearing. Like, it just doesn't sound natural

  • @bruceules1318
    @bruceules1318 4 роки тому +14

    Art provokes me too tears often and in many forms too. While real time life eh. I totally get what norm is talking about.

    • @maddymud
      @maddymud 2 роки тому

      Injustice in art makes me melt down. Like I can’t watch movies like Hotel Rwanda, or Schindler’s List - I start screaming at screen

  • @brownhooque
    @brownhooque 2 місяці тому

    37:02 Norm doing the callback about people imitation his voice cracks me up every time 🤣

  • @clumsysandbocks5650
    @clumsysandbocks5650 2 роки тому +3

    11:27 Interview starts

  • @55vermeer
    @55vermeer 7 років тому +51

    At 45:00 Norm has a Jungian psychological/religious peak experience.

    • @stephaniebarron52
      @stephaniebarron52 6 років тому +13

      JeffRe Tzu There's a lot more to Norm than meets the eye

    • @bradeng7158
      @bradeng7158 4 роки тому +2

      It's very similar to a Raymond Carver short story

    • @waswaswad
      @waswaswad 3 роки тому +2

      @@bradeng7158 I'm pretty sure Norm made the story up. He also tells other stories and ideas that come from Tolstoi, Faulkner and Dostojewski.

  • @Sam-xc1mm
    @Sam-xc1mm Рік тому +2

    Norm always came off to me, as a guy who was a deeply closeted homosexual.

  • @MrAM4D3U5
    @MrAM4D3U5 4 місяці тому

    Norm is the only person ever that could get me to sit through an entire episode of Marc Maron

  • @kevinrhea7332
    @kevinrhea7332 2 роки тому +2

    INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
    INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
    INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28
    INTERVIEW STARTS AT 11:28

  • @johnwalker4606
    @johnwalker4606 2 роки тому +2

    It starts at 11:30

  • @domc2909
    @domc2909 4 роки тому +2

    Great interview!

  • @LordBeezleDwarf
    @LordBeezleDwarf Рік тому

    Lmao that cat story was hilarious

  • @kojimbek2817
    @kojimbek2817 2 роки тому +2

    Lovely interview. It's never funny, but earnestly profound.

  • @droopmountain6510
    @droopmountain6510 8 місяців тому +2

    11:26 starts

  • @bodichair
    @bodichair 7 місяців тому

    Another damn good talk

  • @timkinney8719
    @timkinney8719 4 роки тому +3

    It takes a while to find the "real" Norm but he's a really great guy.

    • @waswaswad
      @waswaswad 3 роки тому +1

      I don't think Norm ever found the real Norm.

  • @GrimDarkDude
    @GrimDarkDude 4 місяці тому +1

    this talk was so god damn good, thanks so much for uploading

  • @Giller9
    @Giller9 Місяць тому

    Norm actually says in this interview that he obsesses with worry about his upcoming illness and death. Of course, Marc Maron took that to mean the eventual mortality we all face, but Norm was hinting at what was really happening to him.

  • @richzito
    @richzito 3 роки тому +2

    An advertisement for postage stamps starts at 9:25

  • @edogohan
    @edogohan 4 роки тому +3

    The avatar of misdirection and the cranky king right here