He's honest? He's saying he did the wrong thing, that he was offensive to the audience and they should have responded. More like a sissy to me. I've been a fan for 30 plus years. So disappointed by this interview and I won't listen to him again
Back in the 90’s, I was in my early 30’s. One of the last times the entire gang of friends and wives got together for a July 4 beach weekend. Long story short, after the wives and kids were asleep, we were already blotto drunk when a couple joints get lit. Then somebody put a Dice tape on, and about a dozen of us laughed for 2-3 hours like we haven’t laughed in forever. It is a magical memory. Thank you Dice. 😊
Still my favorite Dice LP. I like how it was recorded. Instead of doing it in a big arena with an audience that loved him, it was recorded at Dangerfield's with an audience of people who HATED him! It was brilliant!
I consider that performance as one of the greatest moments in comedy. He improvised his routine, worked and bonded with the crowd, then destroyed them, and sent them home. It is pure genius.
I first listened to this album in the beginning of Covid Lockdown. I hadn’t laughed that hard in years and it was like therapy for me, especially in an overly sensitive world.
@@jasonlee186o he is right. Sensitive like you. Bottom feeders like yourself who think they hold a profound wisdom which society lacks the sensibility to hear. When in reality people like you just pass around various conspiracy theories and hate speech to cover up for your inadequacies
Andy and Paulie Shore were both fads. Neither of these guts understand that. Fame slapped them around and left them wondering what happened back in 1989.
My favorite scene with Dice is the one in Amazon Women On the Moon. It's so dark but you can't stop laughing. He's maybe the only person who could've pulled off that scene.
@@gatchrocks I think that's a really good point but I wonder if that's his choice or if it's because studios are scared to take a chance on giving him the role? If you were given the task and responsibilities to cast actors for certain roles and it's a multi million dollar movie, would you risk your movie casting Dice in a role nobody could see him playing? I have a theory that many comedians are just amazing actors with a sense of humor that don't realize they're amazing actors. Especially ones that have the ability to do impressions. Early in his career If I'm not mistaken, Dice did some funny impressions. To become someone else like that, it takes the skill of acting. Jamie Foxx, Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams are a few example. All won oscars too. I feel the same way about comedians that are flamboyant and I don't mean in the (for the lack of a better word) "gay" way. The ones who have a larger than life personality. They have a confidence and a comfort being the star in the spotlight. So again, you're correct. We've seen very limited range but I wonder why? What sucks is, I don't think we will ever find out the answer to that. He's older now and still carries some of the burdens from being canceled decades ago on his shoulders.
You know how many plays you can get from a professionally made cassette without any noticeable quality drop? 😂 It’s not that you listened to it so much, it’s that you were a child and didn’t take care of it (kid-me was guilty of this too) I do still have a few cassettes that I got later on as a teen though, when I was _little_ more responsible, that I always stored in the case. They’ll still play as if I bought them last week practically
Andrew Dice Clay is the fuckin' man! I grew up listening to his comedic talents during the late 1980s thru the early 1990s, and he was not only hilarious, but he was also powerful! I, as a Brooklynite, always related very well to his attitude, delivery, and brutal humor. I met him at his book signing and he was humble and appreciative. I ran into him a couple of years later at a local grocery store in Sherman Oaks, a suburb of LA, and he was a complete gentleman. It's a shame that in today's society of weak and hypocritical people, a comedian like Dice would be canceled! That's un-American. I highly recommend his autobiography called THE FILTHY TRUTH! It's an excellent read. And by the way, Rick Rubin only made contributions to hip-hop. He didn't create anything. It was created by young Black men in the South Bronx. He was inspired by the talent and culture that was already established. LONG LIVE THE COMEDIC GENIUS OF ANDREW DICE CLAY!
I'm in my early 20s.. found a bootleg burnt CD of Diceman Cometh with No Apologies as well, listened to them at 12 years old- some of it went over my head but most of it had me rolling, I'm a fan to this day. the only good thing my worst ex ever did for me was give me Day the Laughter Died Part II for my birthday
@Alex Burns I still have the double cassette THE DAY THE LAUGHTER DIED from 1990. That performance turned me into the DICE fan that I am today. Rick Rubin being involved was also impressive to me as a hip-hop fan from NYC!
My stepdad stupidly introduced me to this piece of absolute gold when I was 13. The Adventures of Ford Fairlane to this day is one of my favorite movies of all time.
I loved “The Day the Laughter Died.” I remember the first time me and a friend first heard it in the summer of 1990 we were bewildered by it at first, but then the “Richard Nixon” bit and the part where he talked about going to the supermarket we were doubled over dying with laughter. Good times. 😂😂😂
this was the album that made me enjoy comedy i was one foot out from graduating in the early 90s in the summer of 94 my friend gives me the day the laughter died plus his stereo im 17 going on 18 still living with my mom ill never forget hearing this double album and laughing my balls off. thanks dice you are truly the king
I’ve always been a huge fan of Andrew’s comedy. He can literally be considered a cultural touchstone, in regard to the impact he had on comedy, and the general public, at large. In ways, he is similar to Billy Joel, as far as having the desire to be a “greaser,” with heavy Italian undertones, despite their Jewish upbringing.
I was just about to ask is this goomba really a Jew lololol He wishes he was Italian so bad. I get it growing up in Brooklyn but if he was Italian he wouldn’t have made it.
@@ryand4533 yup ryan... brooklyn would have ate him alive BUT his whole act was based on his life around that Goomba lifestyle. As a jew they treated him badly growing up. I've heard him say that in an interview. His version of that lifestyle is hilarious though... and it's like he became one of them. Dice was and always be a comic genius (despite being the most raunchy comic ever)
Andrew Dice Clay is, was & will always be a comedic genius! I knew from the first time I heard him do stand up he was gonna be great even though his style was new & different, he was my kinda guy!
I met Dice a couple of times in 1990-1991 while working at the Sheraton Tara Hotel in Parsippany NJ. He is the nicest celebrity that I've ever met. The guy in ited me to hang out and have coffee within and his crew and we all had a good time just hanging out and talking. I watched the Vice show Dark Side of Comedy and they made him out to be such a P.O.S and that couldn't be further from what I experienced.
Stand up gets old quick, it's the characters and attitude that we ultimately remember. Guys like Dice and Ron White are examples of that. We remember the middle fingers they threw up in the air along the way.
Fantastic album. Remember being like 13 or 14 and hanging with my best friend. We had never smoked before and tried a little and listened to this. Rarely laughed so hard in my life.
I tried watching this on Spotify. This dude gets under my skin and you know, you know , you know, you know one too many times and you know you cant comment on spotidy, so you know I came here for some release, you know.
The amount of times I laughed over the years listening to this... or even thinking about it and laughing... PERT! Hour back... get it... seriously, when i am feeling down... i play the Dice! And Mitch Hedberg.
I gained a whole new appreciation for Dice after I saw his performance in Vinyl. His acting was unexpectedly brilliant and I think he said he wrote his own dialog for the scene. He's definitely not a one-dimensional guy. I hope he'll have the opportunity to do more dramatic work in the future.
wes he still packs the house in vegas and around America. Saw him last year and it was like time stood still. The crowd was just out of their fkn minds the moment he strolled on stage. When he did his Nursery Rhymes it was like nothing I'd ever experienced. Total frenzy...he was on fire too..just whipping off old rhymes and new ones. He's older now but you can see in this interview he's just as sharp as ever.
I remember that vividly as well. A co-worker of mine, at the time, and myself would sneak in the back of the store and listen to the CD, specifically that part and die laughing.
I remember watching and listening to the diceman and really sort of realizing that the good times were really coming to an end. When I saw him on some show crying, I knew that cancel culture was real. I didn't know what it was called, but I knew they were going to start coming for everything fun....and they did, and they still are.
I saw Dice at a comedy club in Miami in the late 80s, hilarious. He is the first comic I ever heard say he enjoyed not getting laughs and just wanted to push people.
Ford Fairlane is one of my favorite movies lol. Dice was my favorite comic as a kid. Dice and Rodney. I love being around other east coasters..we don't bullshit and just shoot straight. Why I enjoy Dice and Uncle Joey.
I was 16 when this came out. To a 16 year old, tiis guy was God at the time, and my friends and I would laugh until we cried, listening to that double cassette.
Sometimes its hard to make a joke in certain positive aspect. My best jokes are when im slightly angry, like Bill Burr. If i hate something i can mock it with pure genius
Proof of the frontal lobe formation: That was the most awkward album I've heard at the age of 20 years of age. My bunkmate was enjoying every bit of it and I kept playing it just to see what I was cringing over. I felt something but knew I was missing it. Fast forward through more battles and warfare and at the age of 24 and putting that CD back in to listen in 1999...man, I laughed harder than I ever have! That is summed up by "we're not here for laughter, we're here for comedy". If I could talk to that 20yo kid, I guess I'd have to say, "Theater of pain buddy. Comedy's not all sunshine and roses. Like laughing at a dog with zero legs..."
I used to work at a music store in ridgewood Nj and he and his son actually came in… one of the coworkers tipped me off but by the time I got to the other part of the store, he was walking to his Ford Bronx and was wearing some type of disguise to go unnoticed….. he only lived 15 minutes away from where I worked…… Used to love his material back in the day
One of the things that makes Dice so Awesome is he's so honest in interviews, no sugar coating.. Love this guy..
True it’s just a shame we didn’t get prime Dice on podcasts. That would have been interesting
He's honest? He's saying he did the wrong thing, that he was offensive to the audience and they should have responded. More like a sissy to me. I've been a fan for 30 plus years. So disappointed by this interview and I won't listen to him again
Back in the 90’s, I was in my early 30’s. One of the last times the entire gang of friends and wives got together for a July 4 beach weekend. Long story short, after the wives and kids were asleep, we were already blotto drunk when a couple joints get lit. Then somebody put a Dice tape on, and about a dozen of us laughed for 2-3 hours like we haven’t laughed in forever. It is a magical memory. Thank you Dice. 😊
Me and my buddies laughed hard watching Dice than anyone else .. he was so anti PC that we just found it hysterical in itself
@@brianmeen2158yes, the old I don't understand modern culture and I can revert to my fragile sensibilities where minorities knew their place.
Great story :)
He's funny AF. I ❤ NY
I read "one if the last time my friends gang banged each others wives"
Still my favorite Dice LP. I like how it was recorded. Instead of doing it in a big arena with an audience that loved him, it was recorded at Dangerfield's with an audience of people who HATED him! It was brilliant!
It was! Until this interview- did you listen to it? He seems to be apologizing for it, the sissy
I consider that performance as one of the greatest moments in comedy. He improvised his routine, worked and bonded with the crowd, then destroyed them, and sent them home. It is pure genius.
My favorite 💯
I first listened to this album in the beginning of Covid Lockdown. I hadn’t laughed that hard in years and it was like therapy for me, especially in an overly sensitive world.
sensitive like you
@@italianwaterice9594 did you even comprehend my comment?
@@jasonlee186o he is right. Sensitive like you. Bottom feeders like yourself who think they hold a profound wisdom which society lacks the sensibility to hear. When in reality people like you just pass around various conspiracy theories and hate speech to cover up for your inadequacies
Had the cassette when I was a kid. Underrated dark comedy classic.
Same here. The two cassettes with both sides full. I listened to it so many times it started sounding like an old radio.
Yeah... Hickory Dickory Doc jokes take a ton of talent. SMH
Underrated? Are you kidding? pretty well rated.
This is typical boomer parenting. I'm pretty sure I wasn't old enough to be a fan of Dice too. Growing up feral ftw.
Andy and Paulie Shore were both fads. Neither of these guts understand that. Fame slapped them around and left them wondering what happened back in 1989.
Had that on cassette and must have listened to it a good 20 times. By far his best album. Pure genius.
I think it was a double cassette?
@@jamie.777 double cassette, yes.
We need Dice more than ever now!
Why
@C-Major because of the cancel culture libbies!
Really?🤣
“When a midget goes missing do they put them on a bottle of half and half??” Ooooohhhhhhhhhh 🎲
Good one 😂
This guy! Comedy gold, genius on stage. And a damn fine actor as well.
Love Dice. He's shockingly a really good actor.
He was great in the tv show ‘Wiseguy’ in the 80’s.Although his character was the lead,he was convincing as a low level mobster.
his sitcom was great, esp the first season, i didn't even know who he was when i saw it, i think it's from 2016 ish
My favorite scene with Dice is the one in Amazon Women On the Moon. It's so dark but you can't stop laughing. He's maybe the only person who could've pulled off that scene.
@@gatchrocks I think that's a really good point but I wonder if that's his choice or if it's because studios are scared to take a chance on giving him the role?
If you were given the task and responsibilities to cast actors for certain roles and it's a multi million dollar movie, would you risk your movie casting Dice in a role nobody could see him playing?
I have a theory that many comedians are just amazing actors with a sense of humor that don't realize they're amazing actors. Especially ones that have the ability to do impressions. Early in his career If I'm not mistaken, Dice did some funny impressions.
To become someone else like that, it takes the skill of acting. Jamie Foxx, Eddie Murphy, Robin Williams are a few example. All won oscars too.
I feel the same way about comedians that are flamboyant and I don't mean in the (for the lack of a better word) "gay" way.
The ones who have a larger than life personality. They have a confidence and a comfort being the star in the spotlight.
So again, you're correct. We've seen very limited range but I wonder why?
What sucks is, I don't think we will ever find out the answer to that. He's older now and still carries some of the burdens from being canceled decades ago on his shoulders.
He’s great in Blue Jasmine.
I had that album on cassette and wore it out. That was one of the best comedy albums of all time.
Me too! I literally wore out my tape cassette 😂 until it wouldn’t play anymore!
For real. Hour back, get it? 🤣🤣🤣
@@spddiesel I'll be callin you back in an hour... back! Get it?
I got to see Andrew Dice Clay back in the 80s down in Miami Rodney Dangerfield came out and introduced him it was amazing
You know how many plays you can get from a professionally made cassette without any noticeable quality drop? 😂 It’s not that you listened to it so much, it’s that you were a child and didn’t take care of it (kid-me was guilty of this too)
I do still have a few cassettes that I got later on as a teen though, when I was _little_ more responsible, that I always stored in the case. They’ll still play as if I bought them last week practically
Andrew Dice Clay is the fuckin' man! I grew up listening to his comedic talents during the late 1980s thru the early 1990s, and he was not only hilarious, but he was also powerful! I, as a Brooklynite, always related very well to his attitude, delivery, and brutal humor.
I met him at his book signing and he was humble and appreciative. I ran into him a couple of years later at a local grocery store in Sherman Oaks, a suburb of LA, and he was a complete gentleman.
It's a shame that in today's society of weak and hypocritical people, a comedian like Dice would be canceled!
That's un-American. I highly recommend his autobiography called THE FILTHY TRUTH! It's an excellent read.
And by the way, Rick Rubin only made contributions to hip-hop. He didn't create anything. It was created by young Black men in the South Bronx. He was inspired by the talent and culture that was already established.
LONG LIVE THE COMEDIC GENIUS OF ANDREW DICE CLAY!
I'm in my early 20s.. found a bootleg burnt CD of Diceman Cometh with No Apologies as well, listened to them at 12 years old- some of it went over my head but most of it had me rolling, I'm a fan to this day. the only good thing my worst ex ever did for me was give me Day the Laughter Died Part II for my birthday
@Alex Burns
I still have the double cassette THE DAY THE LAUGHTER DIED from 1990. That performance turned me into the DICE fan that I am today.
Rick Rubin being involved was also impressive to me as a hip-hop fan from NYC!
Gotta love the Brooklyn accent: "This guy Mahk."
Ford Fairlane was an underrated movie! Classic Diceman. Pretty great cast, even Motley Crew was in it.
The food filled kiss. 🤣
Neil and Bob
Un believe able
Btw, I believe it was only Vince Neil because he was in his solo career mode by that point.
*Crue
Good prep for the band since they are play acting playing live now.
Dude hearing dice talk about rick rubin is legendary.
My stepdad stupidly introduced me to this piece of absolute gold when I was 13.
The Adventures of Ford Fairlane to this day is one of my favorite movies of all time.
MY HAIR! in that scene where he's falling....hilarious
Ed O'Neil singing Booty Time...classic
"Well if it isn't Suzuki Samurai!"
@@stevencamfield5461 ‘Here’s to you…suckin my Dick!’ Lol
Ford Fairlaine is an underrated classic movie! Have watched it many times
@@drdanr MY AXE!!! Zuzu, I found my guitar! (Sobbing) I found my guita-a-arrr!
Nobody talks about Dice in A Star is Born . He was so great in that.
Damn good guest. Absolutely amazing show. This man is a legend.
There's no bigger legend in Andrew Dice Clay's mind than Andrew Dice Clay.
Delusional if he thinks rubin created rap.
You liked this interview? He's essentially apologizing for everything he said over the last 40 years, lol. He must be a rogan fan more than a dice fan
This album and its sequel are two of the greatest stand up albums ever, pure genius.
“Hour Back” is one of the greatest bits in comedy history.
Get it!? Lmmfao.
So many people dont GET IT
Call you in an hour, back!! I’ll get back to ya, doesn’t matter if it’s now or in an hour, Back!!!!!
Adventures of Ford Farlaine was a classic
Easily my favorite special of all time, love you Dice!
Time flies so fast man
By far my favorite comedy album ever. I first heard it when I was 13 and have been listening to it ever since. Beyond classic !
Hourback!!!!
@@adolpholiverbush2get it?
I wouldn't cross the street to see a celebrity but I would love to meet Dice and thank him for all the laughs.
I loved “The Day the Laughter Died.” I remember the first time me and a friend first heard it in the summer of 1990 we were bewildered by it at first, but then the “Richard Nixon” bit and the part where he talked about going to the supermarket we were doubled over dying with laughter. Good times. 😂😂😂
Hour back.
I’m like Richard Nixon up there!
Take a fuckin' TWO HOURS!!!@@mayomonkey3810
Thanks for including the Spotify link. That's much appreciated 👍👍
Back in 1995 I was going through a really bad breakup and was depressed as hell. This album saved my ass.
Glad to hear it.
The Dice Man 🎲 Now we're talkin! 🔥
this was the album that made me enjoy comedy
i was one foot out from graduating in the early 90s
in the summer of 94 my friend gives me the day the laughter died
plus his stereo im 17 going on 18 still living with my mom ill never forget
hearing this double album and laughing my balls off.
thanks dice you are truly the king
Andrew Dice Clay -- he interviewed himself! The best ever
The World missed its chance to have Andrew as Rodney Dangerfields long lost Son in a comedy...that would have been solid Gold...
Back 2 School
Now to have dangerfeild around this day and age is what the doctor ordered 😂😂
I remember being a kid, and hearing his tapes back in the 80s. It was so fithy. It was GREAT!!!
Loved Dice when I was younger! I remember sitting in like 5th row seeing him at Warner theater and that birthed my love for live comedy
Thank you for getting Dice on here!
I wish all comics were as humble as this man
And talented …
Hahahaha. Humble and Dice Clay together is fucking hilarious.
The world could use a good dose of the Dice Man these days!
Dice was at Westover around my house a few years ago I missed it and I was so mad The dude is a legend
I’ve always been a huge fan of Andrew’s comedy. He can literally be considered a cultural touchstone, in regard to the impact he had on comedy, and the general public, at large. In ways, he is similar to Billy Joel, as far as having the desire to be a “greaser,” with heavy Italian undertones, despite their Jewish upbringing.
Club soda, is that you?
I was just about to ask is this goomba really a Jew lololol He wishes he was Italian so bad. I get it growing up in Brooklyn but if he was Italian he wouldn’t have made it.
@@ryand4533 yup ryan... brooklyn would have ate him alive BUT his whole act was based on his life around that Goomba lifestyle. As a jew they treated him badly growing up. I've heard him say that in an interview. His version of that lifestyle is hilarious though... and it's like he became one of them. Dice was and always be a comic genius (despite being the most raunchy comic ever)
Andrew Dice Clay is, was & will always be a comedic genius! I knew from the first time I heard him do stand up he was gonna be great even though his style was new & different, he was my kinda guy!
I remember the Dice man all the way back to his adult tuned Nursery Rhymes. Dice is a living legend.
The greatest comedy album of all time. Salute to Dice.
My favorite comedy album of all time.
Cool. Joe finally has Andrew Dice Clay's biggest fan on the podcast.
Are you saying Diceman's fave comedian is JOE???
@@Huxtee7 No he's saying Dice's biggest fan is Joe.
@@samnectar try again?
He's saying Andrew Clay's biggest fan is ANDREW DICE CLAY...
One of my top 3 favorite stand up albums!
Dice see u in Beverly ma. I saw you at laugh Boston and you were on the hole show, from the first minute till you walked off you were great
I met Dice a couple of times in 1990-1991 while working at the Sheraton Tara Hotel in Parsippany NJ. He is the nicest celebrity that I've ever met. The guy in ited me to hang out and have coffee within and his crew and we all had a good time just hanging out and talking. I watched the Vice show Dark Side of Comedy and they made him out to be such a P.O.S and that couldn't be further from what I experienced.
I truly think both Joe and Dice are beautiful human beings. I wish I could be there, in person ❤.
Yeah wouldn’t that be so awesome?!
I listen to it every Christmas since it was his Christmas holiday special show.
I bought that cassette in 1990, we listened to it over and over. The Christmas song at the end is the best !
Doing all those Fast & Furious movies must be a grind.
Vin Diesel looks terrible.
I agree!
ahahhaa
@@ahardcorejedi2968I’m wondering how many people are going to catch the joke 😂😂😂
Funnier than anything he's done in the past 25 years!
Bro ha ha ha ha u win 🏆
I can’t stop watching this guy. It’s no wonder he was a big as he was.
I found out about him watching the "I love the 80's" show from VH1, huge fan ever since
Saw you live in Phoenix in 1990. Great show! Thanks Dice.
Stand up gets old quick, it's the characters and attitude that we ultimately remember. Guys like Dice and Ron White are examples of that. We remember the middle fingers they threw up in the air along the way.
Very true.
Nobody loves Dice Clay as much as Dice Clay
Has to... who could dress that way for 50 years and not?
He's da B E S T !!😁👍🏻
Nobody loves anybody like they live themself
@@Will-fk2dk live? 😂😂😂
@@Will-fk2dk wrong
Watching full podcast now!
Fantastic album. Remember being like 13 or 14 and hanging with my best friend. We had never smoked before and tried a little and listened to this. Rarely laughed so hard in my life.
Yes! DICE is the man!
dice was huge when i was a teenager, and his material was PERFECT for someone of that age... i wonder if i would have enjoyed it then if i were older.
You probably would have. His material is edgy 1980s.
I tried watching this on Spotify. This dude gets under my skin and you know, you know , you know, you know one too many times and you know you cant comment on spotidy, so you know I came here for some release, you know.
The amount of times I laughed over the years listening to this... or even thinking about it and laughing... PERT! Hour back... get it... seriously, when i am feeling down... i play the Dice! And Mitch Hedberg.
The Diceman Cometh was the most shocking thing my young ears heard when it came out. It is still one of the best comedy specials I have ever heard.
The Day the Laughter Died is The Best Comedy Album of ALL Time. I have it on Cassette and CD.
I gained a whole new appreciation for Dice after I saw his performance in Vinyl. His acting was unexpectedly brilliant and I think he said he wrote his own dialog for the scene. He's definitely not a one-dimensional guy. I hope he'll have the opportunity to do more dramatic work in the future.
It’s interesting, that’s how I knew of him first. From Crime Story. Like his acting better than his comedy. Same with Bobby Lee & Bill Burr.
wes he still packs the house in vegas and around America. Saw him last year and it was like time stood still. The crowd was just out of their fkn minds the moment he strolled on stage. When he did his Nursery Rhymes it was like nothing I'd ever experienced. Total frenzy...he was on fire too..just whipping off old rhymes and new ones. He's older now but you can see in this interview he's just as sharp as ever.
That record changed my life! I still have the double cassette. Comedy MASTERPIECE
My favorite comedy album...I owned it on cassette in the early 90s and then bought it on CD in the mid-90s...today it's free on You Tube.
i was just watching "Anger" in National Lampoon's Favorite Deadly Sins. one of my favorite skits ever
My favorite and most listened to comedy album. I still put it on at night when I'm going to sleep.
"Rick basically created rap" 😂😂
Right ridiculous statement
I just shrugged my shoulders. Too nonsensical to make me angry.
Before Rick it was like house music meets disco and r&b i mean watch a documentary
That album changed my life, in 1993
When I was young in the early 90ies Dice came into a store I was working in Albany…very nice and gracious.
I remember that vividly as well. A co-worker of mine, at the time, and myself would sneak in the back of the store and listen to the CD, specifically that part and die laughing.
I remember watching and listening to the diceman and really sort of realizing that the good times were really coming to an end. When I saw him on some show crying, I knew that cancel culture was real. I didn't know what it was called, but I knew they were going to start coming for everything fun....and they did, and they still are.
Cancel culture has discovered steroids
@@jfragghianti😂😂😂
He was crying on Arsenio about his 1st movie The Adventures of Ford Fairlane getting pulled from theaters after 1 week
Geezus krist man that was in 1990 lol.
You f'ing right wingers are just as bad as the woke (pink) army, you DO realize that right?
Literally crying?
Dice man. Hell yeah. I probably heard part 1 and 2 a dozen times or more. If y’all haven’t seen it go listen to it frfr.
JR just listened like we all did . Great job JR...
ADC, first comedian to ever sell out Madison Square Gardens 2 nights in a row.
I saw Dice at a comedy club in Miami in the late 80s, hilarious. He is the first comic I ever heard say he enjoyed not getting laughs and just wanted to push people.
Ford Fairlane is one of my favorite movies lol. Dice was my favorite comic as a kid. Dice and Rodney. I love being around other east coasters..we don't bullshit and just shoot straight. Why I enjoy Dice and Uncle Joey.
Still the king of comedy!! And still the best comedy album ever!
Whenever i hear Dice I just remember Anthony Cumia's impressions of him.
Anthony Cumstain
I was 16 when this came out. To a 16 year old, tiis guy was God at the time, and my friends and I would laugh until we cried, listening to that double cassette.
I just got done rewatching entourage and he's in it 😅
Among the best ever. omfg I can't tell you the busted the gut laughing at Clay's comedy. Ageless stuff. Thank you.
No hyperbole. Dice was huuuuge back in the day and I just some kid in rural Australia in the 80s
Dice is great on every show. Even O&A were funny when they had Dice. I’m ova hear now!!
The greatest comic to ever walk Earth. Thats what Dice will tell ya.
Best comedy album ever released. I love Dice. I also love Dice Gottfried and Cumia Dice.
You never know where the Dice’ll take you.
Andrew Dice Clay not caring if people are laughing yet when I tell a joke and nobody laughs I have an existential crisis
Thats because youre an effing amateur.
Sometimes its hard to make a joke in certain positive aspect. My best jokes are when im slightly angry, like Bill Burr. If i hate something i can mock it with pure genius
Ford Fairlane... classic and timeless 80's.
definitely my favorite dice album or set or whatever you want to call it.
You can tell he's cool cuz he wears fingerless gloves.
They make it easier to suck the Stromboli sauce off those porkies
Big Jay Oakerson has entered the chat.
Dude's so tough that his Sleeves were too scared to be that close to his Biceps.
You probably thinkJeff Dunham is funny
😂😂😂
I'm ovha here now
I used to love those nursery rhymes as a kid lol Peter Peter pumpkin eater🫲👓
Dice's Little Boy Blue poem is the best
"The Day the Laughter Died' would be better suited to a Brendan Schaub stand-up special.
Proof of the frontal lobe formation: That was the most awkward album I've heard at the age of 20 years of age. My bunkmate was enjoying every bit of it and I kept playing it just to see what I was cringing over. I felt something but knew I was missing it. Fast forward through more battles and warfare and at the age of 24 and putting that CD back in to listen in 1999...man, I laughed harder than I ever have! That is summed up by "we're not here for laughter, we're here for comedy".
If I could talk to that 20yo kid, I guess I'd have to say, "Theater of pain buddy. Comedy's not all sunshine and roses. Like laughing at a dog with zero legs..."
Dude shut up
Enjoyed your comments, sir.
I saw Dice in either 98 or 99 at the Riviera in Vegas. Still seems like yesterday.
I used to work at a music store in ridgewood Nj and he and his son actually came in… one of the coworkers tipped me off but by the time I got to the other part of the store, he was walking to his Ford Bronx and was wearing some type of disguise to go unnoticed….. he only lived 15 minutes away from where I worked…… Used to love his material back in the day