Ramy Youssef | You Already Love Him | Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out Podcast
Вставка
- Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
- Ramy Youssef was one of the first and most popular guests on Working It Out back in 2020, and now he’s back with updates to some of the same very material he worked out the first time around. Mike and Ramy discuss which Death Cab For Cutie songs make Ramy cry, unfriendly encounters in Jacksonville, the perils of public restroom keys, and Ramy’s not-so-secret “secret marriage.” All that and why Ramy wants Mike’s next special to be called “The Arab Dad.”
Please consider donating to www.karamfoundation.org/
Listen and subscribe to the Working It Out here:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
Find Mike:
Website: birbigs.com/
Instagram: / birbigs
Facebook: / birbigfans
TikTok: / mikebirbiglia
Find Ramy Youssef:
Website: linktr.ee/ramyyoussef
Instagram: / ramy
Hosted and Produced by Mike Birbiglia
Producers: Peter Salomone and Joseph Birbiglia
Associate Producer: Mabel Lewis
Consulting Producer: Seth Barrish
Assistant Producer: Gary Simons
Video Consultant: Graham Willoughby
Special Thanks: Marissa Hurwitz, Josh Upfal, David Raphael, Nina Cwik, J. Hope Stein, Oona
Music: Jack Antonoff and Bleachers - Комедії
“Has he been 13 the whole time?” 🤣🤣🤣 love this podcast!
I am floored that neither of you pointed out the fantastic double entendre with “There are some holes in the relationship that need filling.”
When y’all are talking about music that makes you cry and he says Death Cab for Cutie, my brain immediately supplied me with the memory of the end credits for “My girlfriend’s boyfriend” rolling, because it plays “i will follow you into the dark”. That was my first experience with DCFC and Mike, and I probably watched that special 20 times - loved this episode! Thanks for sharing yourselves. :’)
Omg when they kept holding hands 😂😂😂😂😂 but also 🥹🥹🥹
Love Ramy in conversations. Both were great here.
LOVE Ramy Yousef!
Great episode
Want a good cry song for a parent? Look up "How You've Grown" by 10,000 Maniacs.
I think on one hand, comedy is comedy, the comic's "feelings about politics" can be vehemently disagreed with and still be valid or funny. But I do think you should be open for criticism about your "feelings about politics" if you are negatively affecting a vulnerable group 😅. Sometimes the joke was actually not funny, not original, not coming from a person who knows what they're talking about. In those cases, unfortunately, there is not always space given for listening to the criticism, maybe for changing your mind, or not changing it at all, doing something with it after careful consideration. It goes to polarisation and nothing gets resolved.
iPhones and writing a movie don’t match
yep. unless the movie is called Distraction 😂