George's generation was before the baby boomers. His generation was sometimes called the "silent" generation, although in his case, he is not nowhere near "silent", heh.
Yeah, Carlin was born in 1937. Gotta remember that this video was recorded in the 1990s, "Baby Boomers" were only between 30 and 50 years old at the time. They weren't the grandparent generation quite yet.
George Carlin was probably the most well rehearsed comic ever. There's a rhythm to his rants, which was done on purpose. He intentionally repeats words or phrases to put emphasis on them, he was a bit of a poet in a way.
Yes. He went from jokes to impersonation, to 7-words which caused him to evolve into word-play, and completely transformed into philosophy in his late years.
@@harrislam I'm really not a fan of people saying he's a philosopher. Social commentary, sure. He's (thankfully) not stuffy enough to be a "philosopher."
Yep! There is ZERO fat in his bits/jokes. Every word is chosen purposefully. eg. "And it's the same 3 ugly children in every goddamn shot! All the George Lucas magic in Hollywood is NOT going to change the unfortunate genetic configuration on the faces, of these children. Keep these unfortunate youngsters out of public view!" Try saying ALL that and not using the same descriptors twice! Love it!
I've had arguments with some here on UA-cam that think he's just "riffing". I've explained to these idiots that every word and gesture was rehearsed over and over until it was perfect. But they'll insist he was talking off the top of his head. I've had to send these people links about him that indeed say, everything he did on stage was intently rehearsed.
George is lucky he didn't live to see the day where thousands of people go to live concerts and everyone watches the show through the tiny phone they are holding up, so they can upload a wildly distorted video on their social media.
I think that's more the people that like the most/more popular, mainstream music that do that more. I'm my opinion that is not the best music, for the most part (if it's even good). I think among people that like better music, there are not as many that do that.
This annoys me greatly. Went to see Iron Maiden just before the lockdown,and there was an army of mainly young fans all holding a phone aloft,missing most of the show while they regularly fiddle about with their phones. I thank God I was born in ‘54 and had none of this nonsense.
@@TheCornishCockney It's bizarre man. They live inside their phone. They paid for a ticket and can literally be a few rows from the stage and watch the whole concert through their phones without realizing the absurdity. Jack White just makes people deposit their phones at the entrance and pick the up after the show which is an idea I think he said he got from Chapelle.
1937-2008. He is part of the generation before the boomers. This special was from the early 90's. His last special (you can tell because he looks much older with white hair, you guys reacted to a clip or two from it) was from 2005 I believe.
George died around 2008/2009. Yes he was comedy royalty and one of the best ever. I highly recommend his bit on ADVERTISING. He was a master of the English language and he was a genius using it. He was always extremely well rehearsed. He always left you thinking about things most people just accept and never analyzed.
I love that bit. But there used to be two different recordings of it on youtube, I'm pretty sure and now only one remains (pretty sure). It seems the one from the original special it was in has disappeared. Or at least there's some reason nobody ever reacts to it. Everyone reacts to his 25th or whatever it was, anniversary special. That was a compilation of previous bits/material, but he changed his delivery some on them. I don't like that one as much as the original, but it's the only anyone ever reacts to
I'm a tail-end 'Boomer' (1946-1964...ish) born in 1959. Carlin was born in 1937, so of the previous generation. He did give us Boomers a jab in the ribs from time to time.
Professor Carlin was 59 when he did this. It's from his HBO special Back In Town in 96. He was born May 12th, 1937. I remember his birthday because it's mine too, only much later lol. The way George worked was at the end of a tour he would completely throw away the whole show, every bit/act, of course the whole time he's on that tour he's writing the next tour. For years near the end of every tour he'd do his HBO special. By the time it was special time he had it down pat and he had most of the next one partially written. So amazing that every year it was a new show. Professor Carlin would have an absolute ball with today's world. 😢Love and miss you George😢
*MARKY MARK IS RIGHT. YOU GUYS NEED TO COMPLETE YOUR REACTIONS TO THE REST OF COACH HINES SERIES. THEY ARE MORE HILARIOUS THAN THEIR LATEST SKITS. ESPECIALLY COACH HINES BASKETBALL GAME SKIT.*
He actually used to tour the material before the special. So, by the time the special came around, he knew what worked, what didn't and exactly how to say it. If you caught him early enough on a tour, he'd have paper laid out all around him.
I saw Carlin once in 2000 and his ability to repeat a bit verbatim was amazing. He preformed a few bits I had seen before and the way inwhich he performed them could have been laid ontop of the original recording. It was uncanny.
If you can find it, watch his video about flying commercial airlines. You will be on the floor laughing, I guarantee. It's one of the funniest routines he ever did. He was born May 12, 1937 and died June 22, 2008. RIP, George. You are dearly missed.
The way he describes boomers is exactly how boomers describe millennials. And since he was older than the boomers, he saw the same perspective boomers have of millennials. Maybe it's just one of those things where music hasn't been getting worse, it's just that the music that comes out when you're 16-22 is your favorite shit forever, and your parents won't get it. It happened to people who listened to Elvis and Johnny Case then their kids listened to Def Leppard and THEY didn't get it. Maybe it's just the inevitable cascading leapfrog thing forever.
George Carlin was a comedian that my mom used to like when my sister and I were little. We couldn't hear what he was saying on whatever the tv show was - it was after 7pm and I'm fairly certain now that his content was censored. My sister and just could hear our mom laughing through our closed bedroom door. IDK but we loved to hear our mom laugh. So, recently I saw a few of George Carlin standups and I found that he made compete sense to me. If only he were here today. Rest in Peace, Mr. Carlin.
@2Nite Shining Time Station. It's the show that introduced Thomas the Tank Engine. And if I remember correctly George Carlin replaced Rimgo Starr as Mr. Conductor.
I never saw George Carlin in concert, but I did see him outside the theater (theatre) during intermission (interval) of a Lily Tomlin concert. Great comedians support one another.
Not only was George Carlin were the most brilliant intelligent comedians that ever lived. But he had a unique ability to deliver that brilliant comedy like a machine gun.
Here are the generations in chronological order:Greatest Generation,1901-1927;Silent Generation,1928-1945;Baby Boomers,1946-1964;Gen Xers,1965-1980;Millennials,1981-1996;Gen Z,1996/7-early 2010s;Generation Alpha,early 2010s-mid-2020s
What does gen z and alpha mean. Seems like generations used to be based in world events and shift in cultural and resulting shifts got a name. I'm 1990, always called a millennial, gen z and alpha should have tech names shouldn't theybe the social media gen or cellular gen, something that links big culture shifts to the people being born
@@bryansmith1691 Gen Z,or zoomers as they’re colloquially called,are kids born between 1997-2012.They’re the first social generation with access to the Internet and portable digital technology from a young age,whether that’s good or bad.I’ll look up Alpha later on tonight and comment again
Greatest Generation is a vanity tag created by Tom Brokaw, and spectacularly fails to recognize the moral flaws of an era which condoned Jim Crow and xenophobia.
The Baby Boomers in the U.S. were born from 1946 to 1964. George Carlin was born in 1937, which made him part of the "Silent Generation" (1928-1945). Some of these generation names are strange. I didn't check whether you've already done it, but his bit on the Ten Commandments is brilliant.
Pure GOLD!!! He was SPOT on everything! Please watch more of his content! I'd recommend Free floating hostility A modern man Driving Gulf War Extreme human behavior Flying Advertising and BS Soft language Rape
George Carlin didn't just influence Doug Stanhope, he influenced damn near EVERYONE in comedy today. Between Carlin and Richard Pryor, they broke barriers for every comic since.
According to an Mtv and Comedy Central Top 100 Comedians of All Time award show: #1 Richard Pryor - Considered the first "raunchy" comedian #2 George Carlin - Considered a cunning linguist.
I don't know if those additional considerations are from the source or yourself. But whoever wrote about Pryor really needs to do some research. No way he was the first raunchy comedian. Perhaps the first raunchy Black comedian to have wide exposure to a national audience, but never the first.
Boomer: born 1946-64. Now people suddenly often use it wrongly/as a joke. So good. Agree with him on the last point, I got shit for complaining when I didn't vote and I was so confused.
It's never not fucking hilarious to me that not only do current generations shit on the boomers but the generation that preceded the boomers did as well. Well deserved.
One thing I disagree(d) with Carlin is on the voting. There's such a thing as a protest (blank) vote! Unless you live in a country without that option, I suppose.
You guys are exactly right. I hear alot of Carlin's influence on Stanhope. When I first started listening to Stanhope, I immediately started calling him the new Carlin....which was kinda rude, cuz he's not Carlin, he's Stanhope. But it was a compliment, and I meant well by it.
Art has to have the quality of invoking thought and indulge our conscience. That is how you judge great art. Carlin's comedy may not necessarily gave you the abundant amount of laughs but it makes us think.
I saw George Carlin in the summer of 1974, and the only difference is that his material wasn’t, or didn’t come across as “personal”...his cynicism flourished as he aged. But he had plenty of material then, namely the ‘seven words you can’t say on TV’. It’s one of his finest, but he’s always been a quick wit and a wordmeister.
love to hear someone name drop Stanhope, though I can tell you for a fact that while Stanhope does do some of the same bits like every other comedian, he goes off the cuff a LOT. I actually was in a position to hang out with him a couple of times after watching him riff for a few hours on stage, he's an artist too. Carlin molded my personality from early on, as with a lot of gen x'ers, the's the goat.
George Carlin was born in the thirties, so definitely not a boomer. Boomers were born to returning WWII soldiers in the prosperous mid 50’s to the early 60’s. Millennials were born between 1981-1996. It’s mind bogglingly stupid to hear the online discourse where anyone whose slightly older is called a boomer and literal children are called millennials. Most of the people whining about millennials ARE millennials. Oh the boomers do absolutely suck as a generation. Given the richest most powerful nation in history, and they gave their children a fucking train wreck
That's what gets me. They live through insane prosperity and opportunity and absolutely screwed everything up in response. It's obscene the selfishness on display.
He's very funny, but on the other hand, he's like your cantankerous uncle at the dinner table on Thanksgiving. Baby Boomers were born between 1946 to about 1964. He's a lot older. I'm almost 70 and he was a grown man when I was a kid.
He’s unique. Most American comedian aren’t as acerbic as the British. George was the exception. He was the king’s fool. He could tell the truth as long as it was a joke.
You must not have seen many American comedians, then. Seems like most British comedians are stuck in what in America would be called "Boscht Belt" humor. Or what the comedians themselves would call "jokey jokes".
I heard stories about Carlin on joe Rogan that he used to write everything down and practice memorize everything until he knows every single word he is going to say.
George's generation was before the baby boomers. His generation was sometimes called the "silent" generation, although in his case, he is not nowhere near "silent", heh.
Yeah, Carlin was born in 1937. Gotta remember that this video was recorded in the 1990s, "Baby Boomers" were only between 30 and 50 years old at the time. They weren't the grandparent generation quite yet.
Carlin was born in the 1930s. This is a special from the early 90s or 80s, I believe. So, he is older than the Boomers. Boomers are post World War 2.
1946-64 are the boomer birth years. 1965-81 is gen x.
Mid 90s
@@Kibveshi 1982-1999 are ice cream sandwiches.
This is from his 1996 HBO special "Back in Town".
@@ice-iu3vv Beat me to that explaination
Ironically, George is part of what is referred to as the "Silent Generation"
How Ironic is that! 😂
Not really ironic. How many silent Gen comedians were there? Joan Rivers, Richard Pryor. Ok, I think you're on to something...
George Carlin was probably the most well rehearsed comic ever. There's a rhythm to his rants, which was done on purpose. He intentionally repeats words or phrases to put emphasis on them, he was a bit of a poet in a way.
Yes. He went from jokes to impersonation, to 7-words which caused him to evolve into word-play, and completely transformed into philosophy in his late years.
@@harrislam I'm really not a fan of people saying he's a philosopher. Social commentary, sure. He's (thankfully) not stuffy enough to be a "philosopher."
@@blossom357 Depends on what your preconceived notion on philisophers is, it's not a negative thing in my book.
Yep! There is ZERO fat in his bits/jokes. Every word is chosen purposefully. eg. "And it's the same 3 ugly children in every goddamn shot! All the George Lucas magic in Hollywood is NOT going to change the unfortunate genetic configuration on the faces, of these children. Keep these unfortunate youngsters out of public view!"
Try saying ALL that and not using the same descriptors twice! Love it!
I've had arguments with some here on UA-cam that think he's just "riffing". I've explained to these idiots that every word and gesture was rehearsed over and over until it was perfect. But they'll insist he was talking off the top of his head. I've had to send these people links about him that indeed say, everything he did on stage was intently rehearsed.
George is lucky he didn't live to see the day where thousands of people go to live concerts and everyone watches the show through the tiny phone they are holding up, so they can upload a wildly distorted video on their social media.
I feel like society is backwards in every way imaginable
I think that's more the people that like the most/more popular, mainstream music that do that more. I'm my opinion that is not the best music, for the most part (if it's even good). I think among people that like better music, there are not as many that do that.
This annoys me greatly.
Went to see Iron Maiden just before the lockdown,and there was an army of mainly young fans all holding a phone aloft,missing most of the show while they regularly fiddle about with their phones.
I thank God I was born in ‘54 and had none of this nonsense.
@@TheCornishCockney It's bizarre man. They live inside their phone. They paid for a ticket and can literally be a few rows from the stage and watch the whole concert through their phones without realizing the absurdity. Jack White just makes people deposit their phones at the entrance and pick the up after the show which is an idea I think he said he got from Chapelle.
So true, people doesn't enjoy the moment for being filming things the will never see again.
1937-2008. He is part of the generation before the boomers. This special was from the early 90's. His last special (you can tell because he looks much older with white hair, you guys reacted to a clip or two from it) was from 2005 I believe.
His last special was in 2008 called It’s Bad for Ya-about 4 months before Carlin died.The one they reacted to was from Life is Worth Losing from 2005
George Carlin would've been a great philosophy lecturer at a university. What a talented and humorous man he was indeed!
He would've hated grading papers, though!
George walked just so jordan peterson can run
George died around 2008/2009. Yes he was comedy royalty and one of the best ever. I highly recommend his bit on ADVERTISING. He was a master of the English language and he was a genius using it. He was always extremely well rehearsed. He always left you thinking about things most people just accept and never analyzed.
I love that bit. But there used to be two different recordings of it on youtube, I'm pretty sure and now only one remains (pretty sure). It seems the one from the original special it was in has disappeared. Or at least there's some reason nobody ever reacts to it. Everyone reacts to his 25th or whatever it was, anniversary special. That was a compilation of previous bits/material, but he changed his delivery some on them. I don't like that one as much as the original, but it's the only anyone ever reacts to
For me, Richard Pryor and George Carlin are the absolute GOATs! The MT Rushmore of comedy!
Do the Brits have an idiom comparable to "Mt. Rushmore?"
I’d politely like to suggest adding Mr. Red Foxx to the list of GOATS...He played Fred Sanford in the 70’s sitcom ‘Sanford and son’.
He crafted a new, one hour HBO comedy special every year for a period of time. Just an amazing talent
He kind of had to. He owns millions in taxes.
If you want to see "rehearsed" from George, watch his segment called "Advertising". The way he rattles off his lines is freakish!
George passed away on June 22, 2008.
My dad was born in 1935 while most of my friends' parents were born circa 1950. Their parents were WAY different!
I'm a tail-end 'Boomer' (1946-1964...ish) born in 1959. Carlin was born in 1937, so of the previous generation. He did give us Boomers a jab in the ribs from time to time.
Professor Carlin was 59 when he did this. It's from his HBO special Back In Town in 96.
He was born May 12th, 1937. I remember his birthday because it's mine too, only much later lol.
The way George worked was at the end of a tour he would completely throw away the whole show, every bit/act, of course the whole time he's on that tour he's writing the next tour. For years near the end of every tour he'd do his HBO special. By the time it was special time he had it down pat and he had most of the next one partially written. So amazing that every year it was a new show.
Professor Carlin would have an absolute ball with today's world.
😢Love and miss you George😢
*MARKY MARK IS RIGHT. YOU GUYS NEED TO COMPLETE YOUR REACTIONS TO THE REST OF COACH HINES SERIES. THEY ARE MORE HILARIOUS THAN THEIR LATEST SKITS. ESPECIALLY COACH HINES BASKETBALL GAME SKIT.*
I grew up listening to George as my Dad LOVED his humor. Hell I think my dad has his records. George is a master of words.😉
He died in the summer of 2008, and he knew about cellphones, and he even had a couple jokes about them!
*MORE* George Carlin please 😎
More Bill Hicks as well
He would being a field day if he was still with us. 🤣
He doesn't mess up his words because he believes in what he says unlike most comedians
He actually used to tour the material before the special. So, by the time the special came around, he knew what worked, what didn't and exactly how to say it. If you caught him early enough on a tour, he'd have paper laid out all around him.
*YOU HAVE GOT TO FINISH THE REST OF MADTV’s COACH HINES SKITS. YOU DON’T KNOW HOW MUCH HILARITY YOUR MISSING.*
Got that right. Those were his best skits.
I saw Carlin once in 2000 and his ability to repeat a bit verbatim was amazing. He preformed a few bits I had seen before and the way inwhich he performed them could have been laid ontop of the original recording. It was uncanny.
George Carlin: THE KING OF RANTS!!!
And people think it’s Burr….ohhhh, no, my friends.
His predictions have all been correct. He would have sooooo much to say today.
Hell yea! More George Carlin!
Check out his bit on advertising, and also his bit on flying/airline announcements, and the 10 Commandments
"When's the last time you saw some guy walking around in a Viking outfit?"
Umm... Jan. 6th, 2021.
LOOOL
If you can find it, watch his video about flying commercial airlines. You will be on the floor laughing, I guarantee. It's one of the funniest routines he ever did. He was born May 12, 1937 and died June 22, 2008. RIP, George. You are dearly missed.
Dave fucked it up for me. I can't hear Mike say "uh" without laughing when I remember Dave's impersonation of Mike. 😂
"woon pond feefteh"
@@gordieparenteau6555 "Cheap as chips!"
The way he describes boomers is exactly how boomers describe millennials. And since he was older than the boomers, he saw the same perspective boomers have of millennials. Maybe it's just one of those things where music hasn't been getting worse, it's just that the music that comes out when you're 16-22 is your favorite shit forever, and your parents won't get it. It happened to people who listened to Elvis and Johnny Case then their kids listened to Def Leppard and THEY didn't get it. Maybe it's just the inevitable cascading leapfrog thing forever.
George Carlin was a comedian that my mom used to like when my sister and I were little. We couldn't hear what he was saying on whatever the tv show was - it was after 7pm and I'm fairly certain now that his content was censored. My sister and just could hear our mom laughing through our closed bedroom door. IDK but we loved to hear our mom laugh.
So, recently I saw a few of George Carlin standups and I found that he made compete sense to me. If only he were here today.
Rest in Peace, Mr. Carlin.
Carlin was born in 1937, that would make him a member of the "Silent generation."
"...one pound fifty.." cracks me up everytime 😂😂.
I'm a boomer. Born in 1954. Post war. Love the channel. Subbed!!
Fun fact, George Carlin was on a children's television program.
Really? What was the name?
@2Nite Shining Time Station. It's the show that introduced Thomas the Tank Engine. And if I remember correctly George Carlin replaced Rimgo Starr as Mr. Conductor.
@@catalist69 oh wow I watched Thomas the tank engine as a kid
He refers to himself as “Mr. Conductor” in one of his sketches, right after he’s saying “fuck the children”.
I never saw George Carlin in concert, but I did see him outside the theater (theatre) during intermission (interval) of a Lily Tomlin concert. Great comedians support one another.
Not only was George Carlin were the most brilliant intelligent comedians that ever lived. But he had a unique ability to deliver that brilliant comedy like a machine gun.
Please check out his routine, of “A List of People Who Ought To Be Killed”……it may be from this same special…..HILARIOUS 😂
Here are the generations in chronological order:Greatest Generation,1901-1927;Silent Generation,1928-1945;Baby Boomers,1946-1964;Gen Xers,1965-1980;Millennials,1981-1996;Gen Z,1996/7-early 2010s;Generation Alpha,early 2010s-mid-2020s
What does gen z and alpha mean.
Seems like generations used to be based in world events and shift in cultural and resulting shifts got a name.
I'm 1990, always called a millennial, gen z and alpha should have tech names shouldn't theybe the social media gen or cellular gen, something that links big culture shifts to the people being born
@@bryansmith1691 Gen Z,or zoomers as they’re colloquially called,are kids born between 1997-2012.They’re the first social generation with access to the Internet and portable digital technology from a young age,whether that’s good or bad.I’ll look up Alpha later on tonight and comment again
Greatest Generation is a vanity tag created by Tom Brokaw, and spectacularly fails to recognize the moral flaws of an era which condoned Jim Crow and xenophobia.
I miss this guy. I was listening to him as a kid.
He was part of the silent generation, which is the generation before baby boomers.
That head nod 12:01 "THEY DID" authentic asf
Saw him perform in Las Vegas. Very funny in person. He used the Vegas dates to perfect his big performances on cable.
This is the goat imo, my fave!
The Baby Boomers in the U.S. were born from 1946 to 1964. George Carlin was born in 1937, which made him part of the "Silent Generation" (1928-1945). Some of these generation names are strange. I didn't check whether you've already done it, but his bit on the Ten Commandments is brilliant.
I was blessed to see him live. The best the ever was
1937-2008. R.I.P. G.C.
Take a look at Carlin's "Soft Language".
Got to react to George on the sanctity of life.
10:50 baby boomers are generally considered those who were born from 1946-1964. Carlin was born in 1937, which was part of the silent generation.
He makes You think. he's one of a kind a master with words and we use them
"Even his smile is a grimace" lolll
Pure GOLD!!! He was SPOT on everything!
Please watch more of his content!
I'd recommend
Free floating hostility
A modern man
Driving
Gulf War
Extreme human behavior
Flying
Advertising and BS
Soft language
Rape
George Carlin didn't just influence Doug Stanhope, he influenced damn near EVERYONE in comedy today. Between Carlin and Richard Pryor, they broke barriers for every comic since.
Just imagine if a woman was telling these "jokes". She'd be booed off stage in less than a minute
He is scary intelligent.👍
If you can say you suck to a full house and they applaud, brother you are in the Hall of Comedic Gods.
I'm Aussie bt good to see some Brit's reacting to George ☯️
George Carlin was a God incarnate he's somebody we only see every couple hundred years
Okay maybe not God incarnate he was pretty dang good
According to an Mtv and Comedy Central Top 100 Comedians of All Time award show:
#1 Richard Pryor - Considered the first "raunchy" comedian
#2 George Carlin - Considered a cunning linguist.
I don't know if those additional considerations are from the source or yourself. But whoever wrote about Pryor really needs to do some research. No way he was the first raunchy comedian. Perhaps the first raunchy Black comedian to have wide exposure to a national audience, but never the first.
Carlin was born BEFORE WWII.
Been a while since you reacted to George Carlin. Love his views. Hope you react to more of his videos.
Boomer: born 1946-64. Now people suddenly often use it wrongly/as a joke.
So good. Agree with him on the last point, I got shit for complaining when I didn't vote and I was so confused.
He was ahead of his time. Many things are still apllicable to present society.
It's never not fucking hilarious to me that not only do current generations shit on the boomers but the generation that preceded the boomers did as well. Well deserved.
One thing I disagree(d) with Carlin is on the voting. There's such a thing as a protest (blank) vote!
Unless you live in a country without that option, I suppose.
Hello OBs, Please react to Paul Mooney's Jesus was black. So wax Cleoptra. Do all of his stand up please.
Love your reactions.
"Baby Boomers" are generally those who were born between the early 1940s to the mid-1960s.
You guys are exactly right. I hear alot of Carlin's influence on Stanhope. When I first started listening to Stanhope, I immediately started calling him the new Carlin....which was kinda rude, cuz he's not Carlin, he's Stanhope. But it was a compliment, and I meant well by it.
Mike's voice is the cinnamon on my toast.
To think he was Mr. Conductor on Thomas The Tank Engine for a while. That makes this better.
Yoooo everytime i think of dude i think of the movie The Zeitgeist... Iykyk😈🤧
Art has to have the quality of invoking thought and indulge our conscience. That is how you judge great art. Carlin's comedy may not necessarily gave you the abundant amount of laughs but it makes us think.
I saw George Carlin in the summer of 1974, and the only difference is that his material wasn’t, or didn’t come across as “personal”...his cynicism flourished as he aged. But he had plenty of material then, namely the ‘seven words you can’t say on TV’. It’s one of his finest, but he’s always been a quick wit and a wordmeister.
I'm in shock when ever some young person tells me they've never heard of Carlin.
Carlin is one of my favorite
Carlin, Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor were a rare trifecta from the 1960's.
Oh, you never heard of Mr. Carlin? Well you’e about to be well acquainted
Daz everytime he see a comedian: he is one the best if not best comedian of all time.
He was born on May 12, 1937 and died on June 22, 2008.
All of his shows are social satire at its peak .
Please do "soft language" from Carlin..you guys will flip
There are SO many GC gems, can’t wait to see them react to more!
Imagine what he would be saying if he was around today
love to hear someone name drop Stanhope, though I can tell you for a fact that while Stanhope does do some of the same bits like every other comedian, he goes off the cuff a LOT. I actually was in a position to hang out with him a couple of times after watching him riff for a few hours on stage, he's an artist too. Carlin molded my personality from early on, as with a lot of gen x'ers, the's the goat.
George was born during the depression, in 1937, before the war.
You should watch his bit on football v baseball. Hilarious.
George Carlin was born in the thirties, so definitely not a boomer. Boomers were born to returning WWII soldiers in the prosperous mid 50’s to the early 60’s. Millennials were born between 1981-1996. It’s mind bogglingly stupid to hear the online discourse where anyone whose slightly older is called a boomer and literal children are called millennials. Most of the people whining about millennials ARE millennials. Oh the boomers do absolutely suck as a generation. Given the richest most powerful nation in history, and they gave their children a fucking train wreck
That's what gets me. They live through insane prosperity and opportunity and absolutely screwed everything up in response. It's obscene the selfishness on display.
Thank you 🙏 well done reaction 👏👏👏about George Carlin ☝️please find more about it 👍👋☮️
Everything George was saying about society is more prevalent then ever today.
He's very funny, but on the other hand, he's like your cantankerous uncle at the dinner table on Thanksgiving. Baby Boomers were born between 1946 to about 1964. He's a lot older. I'm almost 70 and he was a grown man when I was a kid.
He’s unique. Most American comedian aren’t as acerbic as the British. George was the exception. He was the king’s fool. He could tell the truth as long as it was a joke.
You must not have seen many American comedians, then. Seems like most British comedians are stuck in what in America would be called "Boscht Belt" humor. Or what the comedians themselves would call "jokey jokes".
React to some Sinbad he’s got some funny stuff.
I heard stories about Carlin on joe Rogan that he used to write everything down and practice memorize everything until he knows every single word he is going to say.
Baby Boomers were born in the 50,s. Carlin was born in 1937.
Boomers are 1946 - 1964 technically.
@@briankirchhoefer Thanks Brian
Where can I find one of those brown ribbons?
Legendary!!!
The legend himself!! Great stuff. Please check out Dennis Wolberg- One Night Stand. You won't be sorry.
Babyboomers are those born between 1945 & 1960