1:47🔗AdamIt is Loveline. I'm Adam Corolla. It is Dr. Drew. Phone number 1-800-L-V-E-1-9-1. Facts number 310-8-5-4-44-55. Dr. Drew is a board-certified physician and addiction medicine specialist. Tonight, we're happy to have Andy Dick as our guest.
2:03🔗AdamA friend of the show. Yes, indeed, he did. He has brought one of the Bitches of the Century with him to play tonight. So you have some music planned for us.
3:22🔗AdamShe's a joy. They should make a perfume after her. They really should. What a joy she is to be around. You don't want to miss her speaking. David Michael, who's Todd's attorney, and I don't know if Alan is going to speak at this or not, but he's going to come in here and talk tonight. So Todd McCormick, for people who don't know, Todd McCormick has done this show once in the past, I believe.
4:05🔗AdamAnd to me, here's how the Todd McCormick story goes. The truth is somewhere in between. Would he be behind bars? No. Is he a terminally ill cancer patient who needs marijuana to survive? No. But the truth is somewhere in between. I know. And he has to have a pot farm at his house. Todd McCormick is the guy who was all over the news. It was about two and a half, maybe three years ago. He rented out- How long ago? It's been a while. He rented out a big Bel Air mansion and just grew pot in every room of the house. And then got busted. And then Woody Harrelson and a few other folks who were for legalization of marijuana got in his corner. And then he got out of jail. And then he spoke about it. And I guess he's back in the clink. Andy?
4:52🔗GuestWell, the thing about him is you were coming down on him because he had a lot of pot. He was growing. But I think they charged him with being a dealer or something like that. But he was just giving it away to other cancer patients and people who have illnesses that were helped by ingesting or maybe smoking.
5:17🔗AdamRight. But the way the law is, is if you have more than a certain amount, it's considered for distribution. If you have a joint, that's for you and if you have a-
5:26🔗GuestHe was helping other people out. He wasn't selling it. He only had 800 bucks in his account when they threw him in jail for five years. And also, he really does have cancer.
6:35🔗DrewHe's a good guy, but we're trying to sort out the truth.
6:38🔗AdamWe're trying to get at the truth. Okay, here's what the truth is and here's the problem. Marijuana is not a killer. It's not evil and it does not destroy lives. On the other hand, it is a drug.
6:58🔗AdamDoes that mean? Does that mean it should be illegal? No, and here's the problem. The people on the right, the government, the Republicans, the people in power, they make a big deal over it and they say you're going to go crazy and it's going to kill you and it doesn't. And then the problem with the Todd McCormick's of the world and the Woody Harrelson's of the world is they go too far the other way. It's good for you. It cures everything. It should not only be legalized, but should be put in vending machines at preschool. And now the truth is in between. The truth is it ain't going to kill you. It's not going to make you a genius. It's not going to cure your cancer. It should be legal. And we should have the choice to use it responsibly, like any other substance that's legal, including alcohol and cigarettes and things like that. So I don't want to go too far with Todd McCormick, who's dying of cancer and needs a bong to live. And I don't want to go too far with this stuff should all be made illegal and everyone should be locked up. And I don't believe anybody should be locked up. On the other hand, I have friends, one in particular, my best friend was locked up for drugs and has saved his life because he was killing himself.
8:08🔗GuestI did not know I was your best friend. That is so sweet.
8:12🔗AdamYou are in the top 4500, Andy. I can tell you right now. I call him the elite 4500.
8:19🔗DrewAs an addict, though, does having drugs that you have been addicted to illegal help you?
8:25🔗GuestDoes having, what do you mean? Does having drugs, what do you mean having them? Say that again?
8:30🔗DrewI am ambivalent about the legalization of certain drugs that are already illegal. And one of the main, my main source of concern about legalization is that the fact that certain ones are illegal helps me structure the environment for people to become addicted to them like Pot in your case. Does the fact that it is illegal help or did it increase the probability that that was the drug you chose in the first place? Or is it not an issue?
8:54🔗GuestIt's not an issue, because I'll tell you that the government comes into play with me in that I crashed my car and I was, I had some drugs on me that were illegal. So I guess it did come into play in that way. But when I first smoked pot, when I was, I started late by the way, I smoked pot when I was-
9:22🔗DrewAnderson, do you have a tape of Andy's first experience of marijuana?
9:26🔗GuestNo. Jesus Christ in heaven, where is this bin? Send me an ounce of this stuff. That's how I felt when I first smoked it. I really, I really, you know, it had nothing to do, no.
9:40🔗DrewBut no, I'm wondering if the fact that it's illegal will help again structure the environment to keep you from being as likely to sort of go over to it.
9:49🔗GuestNo, maybe if it was, I'm thinking maybe if it was legal, I would have gotten through those days quicker and earlier at an earlier age.
9:58🔗GuestYeah, because it was a big nasty secret. I remember being very afraid of some of my friends finding out.
10:05🔗DrewI'm kind of ready to get over it. Let's just legalize this thing and be done with it.
10:08🔗AdamYeah, we've been arguing over whether pot should be legal like idiots for the last 30 years or so in this country.
10:14🔗DrewI also think the next person that really comes out strongly in favor of this could be like the president or senator. I mean, the people are going to get behind that.
11:28🔗CallerNo, he didn't see me. I cracked the door open, I saw him, I was like shocked, so I closed it and walked out, and I was just like, oh, my God.
13:17🔗AdamThis is the thing. There's about 95% of life where it's like, well, you should do this or you should do that. You should tell this person. You should alert that person. You shouldn't go over there. And there's about the 5% life of do nothing. This is a definite do nothing for me. Just move on.
14:27🔗GuestSometimes it does happen magically, pow.
14:30🔗DrewOnly when you don't want it to happen. Yeah. It's something that takes a while typically. If you go for a year and have trouble still, you might want to see a fertility doctor about it at that point.
15:12🔗AdamJeff? Yeah. You pull out a couple of your front teeth. Upper teeth is better. All right? Quit your job and take a condom. Cut the end off and wrap it around the base of your penis and your testicles when you're having sex. Okay? Okay. All right. That'll do it. And have a cousin and your sister move in with you. She'll be pregnant the next day. All right?
15:35🔗DrewBut Jeff, there's all kinds of reasons that can impact on fertility. I don't know if you want me to list them, but just don't worry about it. It's only been three months.
15:43🔗CallerYeah. I joined the Army about eight months ago. And I had a pretty serious girlfriend for about seven months when I left. And we broke up because I was leaving.
15:54🔗CallerAnd when I went back over Christmas, my friend and her are dating, my best friend. And it's really awkward being around them for a couple of reasons. One, because I'll be with them and all of a sudden they'll go downstairs and I won't see them for a while. And two, well, I still have feelings for her. And it's hard to be around both of them at the same time.
16:54🔗AdamOkay, good. Listen, this is ex-girlfriend. I know you're hurting over it. We've all been there. She's gone. She's with an ex-boyfriend of yours. You're no longer friends with him.
17:33🔗DrewHonestly. Yeah, but not. Actually, it did so much nothing for me that I lived on a floor of guys that smoke pot just constantly. Their position was I just didn't smoke enough pot.
17:46🔗GuestThat's what I always would say to people who didn't get high. You need to smoke more.
17:52🔗DrewIt only affects a certain biological set.
18:04🔗DrewNo, addicts love it. I love it. It just sends me into heaven. That experience of I love it is absolutely universal amongst people that are addicted to it. They're addicted digitally. It's pow, now.
18:15🔗GuestSomebody told me yesterday literally that it has something to do with enzymes, that addicts' enzymes are different.
18:23🔗DrewWell, the entire structure of the brain is different in addicts, and it's really about what are called intracytoplastic messengers in the mesolimbic reward system.
18:45🔗AdamYeah. And you seem just as high to me. And I mean that as a compliment. It hasn't added or detracted anything from you whatsoever. You're the same old dick we love. Susan?
19:16🔗CallerMy question is, I've been on antidepressants for the past two months. And I've been seeing a therapist every week too. But my psychiatrist, after the first time I saw him, he told me that based on my history, in his opinion, I'd have to take antidepressants for the rest of my life.
19:39🔗CallerWell, I guess major depression. Five years ago, when I was in college, I was on solos for like a year, and I was diagnosed with depression, and it's in my family, and whatnot.
19:51🔗GuestIs she not allowed to mention the drug?
19:52🔗CallerI guess it's from how I told him that I felt, that he thinks I'm always going to have to take antidepressants, and that just concerns me.
20:34🔗AdamOh, my God. I'm so glad because here's Susan. She's like, no, no, no. It's not. I don't know. You may be right. Oh, Christ. You're right. He's guilty. I killed myself. But she, no, no, no. She's like, Drew, give me the line. Give me the line about the, you got off them.
20:52🔗DrewYeah. You try to get off under presence once and we're unsuccessful.
21:18🔗DrewThe other thing that would cause psychiatry, and again, I'm just trying to understand what would make him say that to you, is if there was some serious history of abuse or chaos in your family. No, there is not. That would lead him to believe that there is what might be called a personality problem or a personality disorder.
21:32🔗AdamAlso, Susan could have misread him where she said, am I going to have to stay on these goddamn pills for the rest of my life? And he said, I don't know.
21:42🔗CallerNo, he said yes. In my opinion, you will take these for the rest of your life. And I couldn't really hear you, but did you say that there must have been abuse in my history?
21:50🔗DrewNo, I said, I'm trying to figure out, boy, we're back.
21:55🔗AdamIn fairness to him, though, he only thinks you're going to live to 28.
21:59🔗DrewI said I was trying to figure out what other things would cause a psychiatrist to tell you you would need antidepressants or psychotropic medication your whole life, and that would be personality disorders. And those are real common, and people have had some very heavy traumas in childhood.
22:17🔗GuestBecause that's the thing I know you don't mix, right? You don't mix things. That's when people go psychotic and kill themselves or other people.
22:23🔗DrewThe other way you end up antidepressant the rest of your life is to take a bunch of LSD.
22:27🔗CallerI'm scared you're cutting out. I can't resist.
22:28🔗AdamAll right. Listen. Whenever someone calls this show and tries to make a case for something, they usually do a better job of making a case for the opposition. The more I talk to Susan, the more I thought, listen, not only do you need to be on these drugs, I'm going to get on some too when I'm talking to you. All right. So here's the deal, Susan. That's what I'd like to do, Drew. Can I do that? Can I have some Prozac, just three or four tablets I keep my pocket at all times when I have to deal with the people I have to deal with all day? I just pop one. People that should be on them, maybe they're ignoring their medication, maybe they're not going to the therapist. What about me? Why don't I just medicate myself? Give me some of those.
23:09🔗DrewMaybe that's not such a bad idea. Maybe not for that reason, but maybe it's not such a bad idea.
23:13🔗AdamNo, no. Thank you, Drew. I appreciate the comment. I will keep a Prozac or some sort of serotonin reuptake inhibitor pellet in my mouth, between my teeth in the back like a Nazi war criminal with the Sinai tablet.
23:27🔗GuestThen when you run into me, you'll just swallow it.
23:30🔗AdamWhen I run into Andy, I just chomp down on it. All right. So, hey, Susan, here's what you can do, prove us, him and everyone wrong. Oh, shut up.
23:42🔗AdamHold on. Take your medication for now, do your therapy, go to law school, get your ass together, give it a few years, get your feet under you, and then we'll see. You can prove everyone wrong then, not tomorrow. Dan?
24:01🔗CallerI was just wondering, I have a couple of warts on my hand, and I was wondering if those can spread to other areas.
24:12🔗DrewAs I understand, yes, other areas, but you're worried about your genitalia, right? Yeah. As I understand, no, as I understand it can, but- Yeah, it never does, and only certain types of virus can.
24:23🔗AdamEvery guy who ever had a wart on his hand would have it on his genitals.
24:38🔗GuestMeans that you can ingest it, you can drink it, but you have to dilute it. You pour a whole bottle of it in your bath and you take those baths for three days.
25:33🔗AdamWe're going to take ourselves a quick break, and we'll be back with all that after this. Loveline. Be right back. Yep, it is Loveline. I'm Adam Corolla. This is Dr. Drew, phone number 1-800-LOVE-191. All right, Andy Dick is in the studio. He is here talking tonight about the Spitfire Tour, which is going to benefit Todd McCormick. He's the local guy who grew a ton of weed, got himself thrown in the can, he got out, and I think he's back in.
26:38🔗AdamRight. Alan Isaacman is here. Alan is going to be representing Todd McCormick also. He represents Larry Flint, and he's the guy who was portrayed by Ed Norton in The People vs. Larry Flint. So he's been around, been in front of the Supreme Court, and is now back. Not in front of the Supreme Court, but back to argue on behalf of the Little Stone Man. What's going on there, Alan?
27:07🔗Nice to be here, Adam. I'm happy to be here and happy to be representing Todd, and I think he's a very sympathetic person to represent and is trying to fight a good battle here.
27:20🔗No, I didn't. I didn't win an Oscar. I won a Supreme Court decision.
27:24🔗AdamYou know what I like about attorneys and politicians? They'll work your first name in and nobody else does that. Like they'll be up there and they'll go, Bert, I'm glad you asked me that. It's like something you learn when you win people over. There's something in the front of every book that says, call the guy by his first name.
27:41🔗GuestDid you call me Andy? I didn't catch that.
27:43🔗DrewNo, you got Adam. He's talking to Adam. He'll get to you, Adam.
27:46🔗AdamWe're going to shut Andy's mic in a second.
27:49🔗AdamAll right. So, Alan, explain the situation. Is Todd currently incarcerated?
27:56🔗Yes, he's currently incarcerated and he's serving at this point a five-year sentence that was imposed by the judge pursuant to a stipulated agreement. And Todd agreed to the five-year sentence in order to get a right to appeal the exclusion of his medical necessity defense from the trial that would have happened. In other words, he had a choice. He could have gone to trial facing three charges of ten-year minimum mandatory penalties if he lost. And if he had gone to trial then, the judge had already ruled that he could not argue medical necessity or Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act or anything like that.
28:38🔗AdamWhy, how can you do that? I mean, how can you predetermine you can't make a certain argument? I mean, I know it does go on, but this is the basis of his argument, of his innocence.
28:49🔗You're absolutely right about it. And what you have in this situation is you have federal charges in federal court. And on the other hand, you have a state initiative which is passed by an overwhelming majority, the people of California, which resulted in a law saying that people in California may possess and use marijuana on a doctor's recommendation or doctor's approval for medical needs.
29:17🔗And there's a federal law, Controlled Substances Act, and this court interpreted the Controlled Substances Act as predominating over the state law and said that we don't care whether there's a medical necessity or not. That's not a viable defense, and you can't even raise it to the jury, and you can't even tell them why you say you were growing the marijuana.
29:39🔗AdamIt really just doesn't sound like a great system when you have an argument you'd like to make for your innocence, and the judge tells you in advance you can't use that argument when it's your only argument, but be that as it may.
30:26🔗AdamHey, Alan, here's what I'm most interested in, is a taxpayer. Because this seems to be much ado about nothing. It really does. And it seems to be tying up a lot of people who get paid a lot an hour. And what does something like this cost? I mean, what does it cost the federal government? Well, do you have any idea?
30:47🔗CallerWhen you say cost, there are, you know, you can, you can...
30:52🔗CallerForever. And you talk about the cost of incarceration, and you realize that most people that are in jail are in jail for drug-related offenses. You talk about the amount of law enforcement personnel that are dedicated to fighting drugs and to putting people in custody for drug-related matters. You talk about the people at home who are, you know, have home invasion robberies and things like that in order to get drug money. I mean, where do you draw the line?
31:15🔗AdamWell, I go through the roof when I think about how much, what percentage of crime is drug-motivated. And when I say that, I mean, let's legalize it. See, people look at it as if we legalize drugs, we're going to have a bunch of crazed druggies running the street causing crime. But the reality is, is the crime comes with the legalization. You make booze illegal and you see what happens. Now we have the mafia. You make anything somebody wants illegal and they got to now break into your house and steal your stereo in order to buy it. If it was a tenth the price and available, obviously they don't need your stereo for that. But I know, and it's like counting grains of sand at the beach and they can't even begin to go down that route. But what I'm saying is, it's just the Todd McCormick case. For what it costs for the judges, for the courts, for his representations and all that kind of stuff, how much does something like that roughly cost us, the taxpayers?
32:13🔗CallerWell, I don't think there's any question that if you put a fair value on the court's time and on the prosecutor's time, the expert witnesses who were involved in this case, and on the defense counsel time, you will find that it runs into at least the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
32:31🔗AdamRight. That we're essentially throwing out the window because Todd McCormick is 5'6, he goes about 125 pounds.
32:41🔗AdamHe does not pose a threat to anybody. And I'm not interested in people who don't pose a threat to me or the rest of society.
32:47🔗GuestI love Todd. And if he can hear us, he's in prison right now. I just want to say hi if he can hear us. Hi, Todd. We love you.
32:54🔗CallerUnderstand one thing about this and that is that Todd had a choice. He could have gone to trial, as I explained, or he could have pled guilty with waiving, that is, giving up the right to appeal, in which case there would not have been a specific sentence the judge had to impose. It could have been anywhere up from no time to five years in prison.
33:14🔗CallerOr he could have pled guilty under the arrangement that was made with him, and preserved his right to appeal on the basis of this medical necessity defense. But if he did that, he had to agree to a five-year sentence.
33:27🔗AdamBut you guys are going to win this one quite easily, because...
33:35🔗DrewIn the state court, he'd win it, but there's no such thing in the federal court.
33:37🔗AdamHe's still going to win it. He has a great representation.
33:41🔗DrewBut this could be a big deal. It's the Harrison Act, really, that's the basis of all of our drug laws, isn't it? The Harrison Act in 1911 and 1912.
33:47🔗CallerIt goes way back, but there's a controlled substances.
33:52🔗DrewAre you going to ask that be looked at as a... Because I think that's the thing that's happened. That is a draconian medieval document.
34:00🔗CallerYou know that... I don't mean to interrupt you, Dr. Drew, but you know that your point is well taken, that marijuana is classified under the Controlled Substances Act the same as heroin. It's a Class I controlled substance, as opposed to cocaine, for example, which is a Class II controlled substance, which means that doctors under certain circumstances can prescribe that kind of thing.
34:22🔗AdamDrew got me a kilo just last week. It's still in the trunk of my car, but if you guys need, you know, need a quick powder or something, you know, a little boost for the rest of the show.
34:57🔗CallerI'm relatively confident on the basis for our appeal. We already have two Ninth Circuit decisions which have recently come down in different contexts, which recognize that medical necessity may be a viable defense. And I think the Ninth Circuit will probably rule the same way in our case, which will send it back down in the trial court.
35:17🔗AdamWhat was Todd doing that got him back in prison? Was he growing as much as he was growing before? Was he just using? Did he violate his parole by just having any amount on him?
35:29🔗GuestI think there was an auto act. I think he was speeding or something in his car and he happened to have some on him or something.
35:36🔗CallerWell, he got his bond revoked because he was driving down a highway and was stopped by the highway patrol. And there was a suspicion that he had marijuana and the highway patrol and he had a little encounter and then he ended up being brought back in front of the federal court because when you're on bond, you have to obey all laws. And one of the conditions of his release was that he not smoke marijuana.
36:05🔗AdamAnd did he have a confrontation with the highway patrol guys?
36:09🔗CallerWell, it's a confrontation in a sense. I mean, he didn't stick around and they had to go after him again.
36:15🔗AdamI see. I'll tell you one thing about this Todd McCormick. He got a love for a guy who's been dying of cancer for the last 20 years. He moves pretty good. He gets around. He tries to outrun the cops. He's all over the talk show circuit. This guy's been dying of cancer for 25 years. Nobody lives a more active lifestyle. And I know that's because he smokes marijuana.
36:48🔗CallerHe's energized by his belief in his cause. I think he really is a believer in the virtues of what he represents.
36:54🔗AdamWell, I wholeheartedly agree. The argument here isn't whether marijuana is good or evil. The argument is whether we have the choice as citizens of a free country to make our own goddamn minds up. Of course, we do about 99 percent of everything else. Why not this? If Todd McCormick thinks marijuana helps him or he thinks he has cancer, if anyone thinks they have cancer and think marijuana helps them, then good. Smoke your head off. It's your business. That's it. If you can't pay your bills, if you can't pay your taxes, that's another story. But as long as you're paying your taxes and registering your car, and not shooting anybody, then smoke all you want. That's the way it is. I mean, it's the same with-
37:37🔗DrewYou met in other victimless crimes. You met a guy on an airplane, remember? Wasn't that you riding a plane?
37:42🔗AdamYeah. He gave me a book on victimless crimes. If people really knew the numbers behind victimless crimes, not only drugs, but things like prostitution and other crimes, consensual crimes where there's just no victim. If they knew the amount of money this government spends locking these people up, keeping them incarcerated, the judges, the bailiffs, the parole officers, the amount of time, and the amount of violent criminals that have to be set free to make room for guys like Todd McCormick, who are going to be used like a bottle brush for some big black guy's anus when he's in prison. Ouch! Thank you. Then they would be outraged. I mean, the reality is, is you want people in who are going to do harm to you, not to themselves. And even then, they're not doing harm to themselves. I mean, if some guy wants to bang a hooker, let him bang a hooker. If he wants to smoke a joint while he's banging the hooker, that is all his business. If he wants to hold me up at the ATM, if he wants to carjack me, if he wants to invade my home, then he needs to be incarcerated. And I certainly don't want that guy out on the street to make room for Todd McCormick. That's the part that drives me insane. And I don't think people really know the true numbers behind this. And it is staggering. We touched on it just a little bit earlier in the evening. But I mean, the percentages of people behind the money that it cost, what we could do with that money, it's staggering.
39:14🔗CallerYou're absolutely right. And there's a lot of vested interests in maintaining the status quo and keeping it going just because of that money that you're talking about.
39:24🔗AdamWhy? You mean you're talking about DEA agents not wanting to be out of jobs?
39:30🔗CallerThere are a lot of people who have jobs based on that. If we didn't need as many prisons because of that, we wouldn't need as many prison guards if we didn't. Our border patrol and our DEA and our customs and all the people who spend so much time on the drug wars. People that go down to these Latin American countries and all the aid that goes back and forth because of that. It's a huge infrastructure based on the so-called drug war and keeping drugs in the hands only of those people who are willing to break the law to engage in the sale of drugs.
40:12🔗AdamThere's a sort of fundamental layout of the whole thing that just doesn't work and that's prohibition. It's just the people you don't want to make the money, make the money and the victims are the little people.
40:25🔗GuestEdward Norton played you in the People vs. Larry play. But like in Aaron Brockovich, did you like play a waiter or a waitress in the?
40:35🔗CallerNo, actually, Aaron Brockovich, his boss is somebody who's on the other side of a case or two that I have right now.
40:45🔗GuestSo we run into each other. Did you have a small part in the movie?
41:24🔗GuestThere's always a winner, I guess. There's one winner and one loser.
41:27🔗AdamWe got to take a little break. Alan Isaacman is sitting in. He's the attorney for Todd McCormick. He also played Norma Ray in the movie from the same name in the 1970s. Andy Dick is here. We're going to shut his...
41:44🔗AdamWe're going to turn his mic on during the commercials as a courtesy to Andy and his management, but we'll be shutting it off when the show begins again in about five minutes.
42:32🔗AdamIt is Loveline. I'm Adam Corolla. That is Dr. Drew, phone number 1-800-LOVE-191. Andy Dick is our guest tonight. Andy Dick is doing something this Sunday with his hip friends, among others. Perry Farrell, Spearhead's gonna be there. Larry Flint, Bill Maher, Exine Servenka. A joy, a joy to be around. I'd love to hear her speak.
42:59🔗GuestHe's in, yeah, the Dead Kennedys. He is defending himself because in Washington, I think, with something with his band suing him.
43:08🔗AdamI think Nabisco has a suit against him for stealing his name.
43:11🔗GuestNo, I think it has something to do with stealing his name. With like a corporation wanting to use a Dead Kennedys song in an ad. And he, you know, he didn't want to do that. And now the band's angry.
43:22🔗AdamWhat, Disney wants to use Holiday in Cambodia as part of their new summer campaign. And Jello's having none of it. What the hell kind of Dead Kennedys song does any corporation want to use?
43:39🔗AdamOh, everyone's getting hip. Also Alan Isaacman is here tonight. He is an attorney. He's representing Todd McCormick. He was best known for being portrayed by Ed Norton in The People versus Larry Flint. He's Larry Flint's attorney and that in itself seems like a full-time gig to me. I mean that just as an attorney when Larry Flint signs on, that's got to be a dream gig.
44:02🔗GuestI'll tell you, because Ed Norton probably gets himself into a lot of scrapes, so you probably have your hands full.
44:09🔗AdamAll right, let's shut Andy's mic again. Thank you. How much your free time is spent on Larry Flint and his various debacles?
44:17🔗CallerWell, Larry's been a very active individual, and he's a successful businessman, and I get a lot of his...
44:26🔗Caller.get a lot of his litigation matters and other legal matters, and it's been fun because they've been interesting over the years.
44:34🔗AdamYeah, and when you represent Larry Flint, it seems like at least from seeing the movie, he's not the kind of guy who sort of sits back and lets you do the driving.
44:50🔗AdamThere must be times when you've said to Larry, listen, I'm the one with the degree, I'm the one who passed the bar quite down, and let me do the talking.
45:00🔗CallerWell, you know, he's a smart individual, and he knows when you get in the courtroom that he picks a lawyer he's got confidence in, and then he lets the lawyer handle the legal work. And that's what I do. I mean, he doesn't run the case in the courtroom. He doesn't try to. If he has suggestions, he'll raise them, and he always has, you know, good ideas. But he doesn't try to tell me how to, you know, run a case just like I don't tell him how to publish a magazine.
45:28🔗AdamBut you guys did have, at least according to the People vs. Larry Flint, an adversarial relationship at certain times in your relationship. I mean, there are times when you told him, like, sit down and shut up, and he moutht off anyway. Did that really go on?
45:43🔗CallerWell, it didn't go on exactly like it was portrayed in the movie, but there were times when he did want to represent himself back in the early 80s, and the court would appoint me to represent him in those situations.
45:55🔗GuestHow long did he go out with Courtney Love?
45:57🔗CallerYou know, I'm not a liberty to say. Okay, Andy, thanks.
46:01🔗AdamAll right, so Alan has his work cut out for him with Todd McCormick, whose court date has not been set yet.
46:21🔗GuestYeah, Todd is, and now we're all speaking about him and his kids.
46:26🔗DrewWas that that tour, Adam, that we followed down at Clemson?
46:29🔗AdamYes, I think we showed up at the University of Clemson, do a little speaking engagement. We asked him who the last people that spoke at this engagement was. At the University was, and they said it was a Spitfire Tour. Basically, they just smoke pot.
46:42🔗GuestIf you can't say anything nice, do not say anything at all.
46:46🔗AdamI'm going to say three words, smoke pot, rape. Those are the three words that come to mind when I hear. Well, just to hear them tell it, that's all. It's just like a van full of stoners pulled up and tried to nail every co-ed in the place.
47:01🔗GuestThat's not true. You're thinking of the Andy Dick Circus of Freaks 1998 Tour.
47:06🔗AdamThat could be confused. Probably. All right. So let's see. Well, actually, geez, it's time to go to break again. Drew, you want to say anything? Let me ask, since we have an attorney in here, let me shift gears for a second. Alan, Drew and I get paid the same amount of money for doing this show. Just your observation of what has gone on in the last hour of the show, would you say that's fair that we split it right down the middle?
47:38🔗CallerI think it's very unfair in that you're both really highly underpaid.
47:44🔗AdamThat's good. But in the NFL, hypothetical question, who gets paid more, the quarterback or the guy who does the long snaps for the punts? You know what I'm saying?
47:56🔗CallerYeah, no, I know what you're saying. I know what you're saying. And I don't know anything about who gets paid more here. And of course, Dr. Drew hasn't been speaking up on this. So I don't know if he agrees with you or not.
48:07🔗AdamThe silence is deafening. We get paid the same. And I believe that's a grave miscarriage of justice.
48:14🔗CallerWell, do we want to put it all out on the table, exactly how much we're talking about here? And maybe we can negotiate an increase somewhere?
48:22🔗AdamI don't want to get paid more. Don't get me wrong. I want Drew to get paid less. That's my angle on this whole thing. All right, we're going to take a little break. Alan, thank you for dropping in and filling us in on the Todd McCormick case. Andy Dick's mic will be turned back on and he'll bring in a couple of the Bitches of the Century and we're going to hear some music after this.
48:44🔗GuestLoveline, 1-800-LOVE-191. Back in a minute.
48:47🔗AdamWell, it's worth hearing. Yeah, it is Loveline. I'm Adam Carolla. That is Dr. Drew. We like to call him the silent one. He doesn't talk much, but he doesn't do much either. Phone number, 1-800-LOVE-191. Thank God he has his computer to keep him company. Sorry for inconveniencing you, inconveniencing you, Drew, with the show.
49:57🔗AdamAndy Dick is our guest tonight. You can find him at the House of Blues coming up this Sunday for the Spitfire Tour, raising money for a drug addict. Now, Jeff Harris and Andrew Sherman are both here. Well now, Jeff, are you one of the bitches?
50:22🔗AdamAnd Andrew, of course, is a veteran bitch. And we're going to hear something from Andy. Now, Andy, are you and the bitches going to be playing coming up this Sunday at the House of Blues?
50:34🔗GuestYeah, we usually do like one or two numbers that relate to whatever topic we're talking about in the Spitfire Tour.
50:42🔗AdamRight. So you got a couple numbers worked up for the House of Blues this Sunday.
50:53🔗GuestNo, because we only do two songs on that tour. So if I did them now, you wouldn't come on Sunday. So we're going to do something else from our show at the Mint.
51:20🔗GuestJust because she had one bad night with you.
51:22🔗AdamI'm not saying anything bad about it. I'm saying the woman is a joy. Joy to be with.
51:27🔗GuestAnyways, this song that we're going to do was inspired by my friend here, Andrew Sherman, the only Jew in the band, said to me, do you realize that you drag your feet when you walk? And me, the sharp wit that I am without skipping a beat, I said that's because I'm sick of walking.
54:45🔗GuestWe can act like an imbecile. I asked my friends to carry me. They would not comply. The bastards don't come around much now, and I think I probably know why. My girl and me are splits, Andy Dick, everybody.
55:37🔗AdamJeff Harris and Andrew Sherman. An inspired version, Andy.
56:21🔗GuestThat we can play. Yeah, because at the show, we have, there's bits. It's not just music. There's these bits that will frighten you. Even if I describe them to you, you will still be frightened.
57:34🔗AdamYeah, they had a rough night. That's all right. I'm back. What's up, girl?
57:37🔗CallerAll right. My problem is I'm 16. I'm 5'11. I'm 140 pounds. I'm a good-looking guy. I'm attractive. But I can't get any girls no matter how hard it is. I mean, I don't even try hard. You know how you say you got to get your crap together? These guys, they got to get their stuff together. And the ladies will follow. I have my stuff together. I get straight A's. I hang out with friends. I'm not a dork.
58:03🔗DrewYeah. By crap together, he means like when you're 24.
58:06🔗AdamYes. You being part of the speech and debate, having straight A's in the Medrinas Escuderos Club, is not going to get you tail in...
58:14🔗CallerI'm not in that. I'm not in any of that.
58:16🔗AdamOkay. Good. It's not going to get you tail in high school. Later on in life, it will translate into tail because you'll take those good grades. You'll go to college. You'll become an attorney. You'll become a doctor. You'll get a Porsche. You'll get one of those members-only jackets. And that's when the chicks will start falling at your feet. Right now, you're on the long-term plan, Carl. Yeah. Here's the deal with Puntang, as far as I can tell. You either get some in high school or you get some later.
58:47🔗AdamIt's not usually both. And it can be you don't get any ever. Oh, crap. But if you're a good... Wait a minute, though, Carl. Carl, if you're a good looking guy and you're getting good grades, you're on the later plan. You've put a down... With your grades, you've put a down payment on Puntang. You understand?
59:06🔗CallerWhich is better, though, now or later?
59:11🔗CallerBecause I hang out with my friends and they get all the girls, all the good-looking ones, and then I have to put up with their immature, ugly friends.
59:22🔗AdamWell, listen, you got to start somewhere, Carl.
59:31🔗AdamYeah, I know it's tough. I mean, look at me, I got no tail in high school, but look at me now, I barely get any tail. But that's still not no tail. You know what I'm saying?
59:42🔗AdamYes, I'm literally a millionaire. Thank you, Carl. I was one of the few guys in high school, I got so little trim that I actually owed tail. Like there's a lot of guys who just don't get laid, I owed a BJ. I was in the hole. I was overdrawn for BJs. You don't find guys that go subterranean that way. Usually, they just bottom out, but I tunneled. I really did. I couldn't get anything in high school.
1:00:09🔗DrewYou're speaking literally, look at these bongo drums.
1:00:18🔗AdamIt's the one Desi Lou played. Yeah. Yeah. Jeff, you get a certain amount of tail just from my toting those drums around in your truck, right?
1:00:26🔗CallerI was kind of feeling lucky after what you said.
1:00:28🔗It wasn't too long ago that I graduated high school.
1:01:15🔗GuestDreams are fine. I honestly, I think a couple of weeks ago, I had a weird dream about not even an animal that you would see on this earth. It was like a creature.
1:01:29🔗GuestBut there's nothing I can do about that because I can't even find that creature if I look for it. But I'm just saying dreams. I'm very serious too, that dreams are okay. Dreams are okay. It doesn't mean you're a lesbian.
1:01:41🔗AdamAndy cornhole the unicorn. He told me during the break. I think he said Pegasus.
1:01:59🔗AdamHey, Lee. Here's the deal. You dreaming about this is not a problem. You worried that you dreamt about it is a problem. Do you know what I'm saying? Because we all dream about whatever and we never think about it. We don't worry about it. But if you feel like, hey, maybe there is something here, maybe you do have some lesbian feelings or tendencies, then maybe it is something to talk about. Do you feel that way?
1:03:06🔗GuestIt flies away with my tongue stuck in its butt. I'm hanging from it with my tongue.
1:03:15🔗AdamWhere are you going, baby? Oh, you got to pick Hercules up from Mount Olympus. But that's not for another half hour. Come here. Hey, don't be uptight. All right. Lee?
1:03:27🔗AdamYou got kids. Yes. You're married. Focus on that. If you're having some difficulty in your marriage, which maybe are and maybe that's what's causing you to look this other direction, then look back at the marriage and work on that. Right? All right, Lee?
1:04:47🔗CallerAnywho. I have dreams and fantasies of guys way older than me, taking advantage of me and that's about the only guys I have sex with are guys in their late 30s or early 40s.
1:04:58🔗GuestGive me your number. I need to talk to you.
1:05:03🔗CallerWhen we're on hold, I'll give you my number.
1:05:05🔗GuestI did that one time and I did that. Some girl really wanted to talk to me. Remember when I was here and I went in the other room and I said hi? Somehow it came out that she weighed over 300 pounds.
1:05:15🔗CallerOh, I don't weigh that much. I'm sorry.
1:06:13🔗AdamI mean, that's my answer. Listen, most women, younger women who go out and hook up with guys that are quite a bit older than they are, it has to do... It's a daddy thing. Yeah.
1:06:24🔗AdamAnd there's issues with daddy, but you have no issues with your dad.
1:06:27🔗DrewAccording to you, everything's perfect there.
1:06:29🔗CallerWell, like, the dreams I have and stuff, it's like when I was younger, it's like me being younger and some other guy taking advantage of me.
1:06:37🔗DrewDid that ever actually happen to you when you were a little kid?
1:06:40🔗CallerNo. I don't... You know, not that I remember.
1:06:43🔗AdamAll right. Well, then what are you going to do? Here's the point. You're doing something, but you have no motive for doing it according to you.
1:07:46🔗CallerI don't know if you guys remember because you get so many calls, but that kid that called up that one night and he said he was in the school bathroom and some kid went in there and tried to rape him and then wiped his ass before he raped. Do you remember that Adam?
1:08:24🔗AdamKeep listening and write a letter to your local filly.
1:08:27🔗GuestCan we hear a little man, Ace? Well, why do you do that to me? I have to go to the bathroom and what are they doing? Why are they doing that? Are we going to take a break?
1:08:59🔗GuestBut you don't have any singles. Do you have a song yet?
1:09:02🔗AdamI just forced Snoop to call me man, Ace if you really want to know what the truth is. Here's why mayonnaise is great. It has the word man and you can replace an S with a Z, which rappers love to do. They love to swap out those letters, especially when there's a Z to be had. Also, it's white. You know what I mean? The white rapper, mayonnaise.
1:09:26🔗DrewAnd then mayonnaise has multiple meanings when it comes to Adam and his habits.
1:09:36🔗DrewAll right. Thank you. Your brother's ranch.
1:09:42🔗AdamAll right, brother, you're going to get some ranch on you before the night is true. We're going to take a little break. Andy and I are going to go to the bathroom and do the swords thing, right, Andy?
1:09:55🔗GuestLoveline with Adam Corolla and Dr. Drew. We'll be right back.
1:10:30🔗AdamIt's Loveline. You know, one thing I never get used to doing this show is how the guest will speak mere seconds before my mic heats up when we're coming back from break. Sometimes we don't talk that much, but here's what I'm and I know Andy, don't take this as any kind of personal attack, really don't, because everybody does this. And Drew, you'll back me up on this because you do it as well and you actually encourage it in the guest. But a guest will sit here sort of silently. There won't be a much conversation, maybe a little back and forth. And then all of a sudden the music will start swelling. I'll put the earphones on. I'll pick the microphone up. I'll put it against my mouth and I'll see the guest and they'll have a question for me. And they'll say, hey, how's about, where do you guys park when you guys do the show? And I think to myself, what is it exactly they're thinking is going on? I mean, they know we're doing a radio show. They know there's a little commercial breaks. And obviously, they see this is the time that we're going back to doing the show. Do they think I'm going to give an answer? Not you, Andy. You're golden. But Drew, how often does that happen? That somebody asks a question or makes a statement or has a sort of proclamation seconds before it is time to speak?
1:11:50🔗AdamMost nights. And while the music is swelling, the headphones have been put back up and the microphone has been brought to the mouth. Does it usually make a difference?
1:12:02🔗AdamThe funniest thing is it usually interrupts a good story, but that's all right. The guests usually just keep rolling on. You'll hear us talking into the break. Andy Dick is our guest tonight. Andy Dick can be found Sunday night, this coming Sunday night at the House of Blues, raising money for Todd McCormick who's in jail for a pot again. You can get some tickets and go out there and check it out. Larry Flint will be there.
1:12:49🔗AdamThey're raising money for Todd McCormick. Also, you can find Andy Dick every Sunday night with his Bitches of the Century over at the Mint.
1:13:38🔗GuestBroadway's Vicki Lewis. No, she was on NewsRadio. She is a show stopper.
1:13:42🔗AdamWho am I thinking of? Oh, Vicki Lawrence. That's right. She sung the night the lights went out in Georgia, didn't she? No, did she? Wasn't that her big song? She was on the Carol Burnett Show.
1:13:52🔗GuestYeah, but I'm talking about Vicki Lewis, the redhead from NewsRadio.
1:14:39🔗GuestWhy would you say that and what is it supposed to mean?
1:14:41🔗DrewAlso, we need to give people's courses in this country on how to compliment people. I really admire you guys, believe it or not.
1:14:48🔗CallerI'm sorry if I got it wrong, but it's just that you tend to distrust so many guys, but I really do admire Drew so much for what you do. I had such a difficult childhood, including molestations and stuff like that, and to hear you talk about it, and I think educate people that it goes on is so very important. I just have a great amount of admiration for you and for Adam's sense of humor.
1:15:11🔗AdamWell, thank you. You see what happens when you-
1:15:27🔗CallerHi. My question is, I was at a party Saturday night. I'm not usually in the habit of doing any kinds of drugs because I think I'm prone to a little bit of depression. A lot of people, they were smoking, and I couldn't get away. I didn't have a car with me. I had to sleep there overnight. I swear to God, I've been high, but not a good high, just sick ever since then. My head's been spinning. I haven't been able to focus very well.
1:16:00🔗DrewBut I wonder if you just started getting anxious having panic attacks or something.
1:16:04🔗CallerNo, no. I mean, it was a very small room. There was a lot of smoke, a lot of cigarettes, a lot of marijuana. That doesn't, you don't think that has any-
1:16:16🔗GuestIt's all in your mind. But your mind can do tricks like that.
1:16:19🔗AdamAlthough, you do inhale a decent amount of atmospheric smoke. For instance, well, I'm sure you're aware that millions die each year from secondhand smoke.
1:16:31🔗AdamAnd it's the number one killer of people under 50. Secondhand smoke. Waitresses, average life expectancy, 24 years old. Everyone dies of secondhand smoke. Actually, wait a minute, that was two years ago. Now nobody dies of secondhand smoke because they've decided to stop lying about it so much.
1:16:48🔗CallerOr they're all dead, all the ones who were going to die.
1:16:50🔗AdamYeah, that's what it is. Yeah, all four people that died of secondhand smoke. Oh, God, I want to kill people when I think about those campaigns.
1:16:57🔗CallerDrew, is there a really sensitive... Because anytime that I have smoked, that I felt kind of the same way, just kind of sick for a couple of days and not any kind of good high. Is there anything that at least... Is there a sensitive body type to POD?
1:17:11🔗DrewYeah, there's definitely some people that are adversely affected by it. Some people get really severe panic attacks from it. And those panic attacks are percent.
1:17:17🔗AdamThe medical term is lidus waitus, is what they call that.
1:17:22🔗DrewBut if this is the way you characteristically feel when you've been exposed to that drug, how can we deny that maybe you were exposed to enough to get that again? But I wouldn't worry that something permanent has developed, although I have seen ongoing panic attacks in people that are exposed to even low levels of marijuana.
1:17:38🔗AdamLiam, this one's in your head, not in your lungs. That would be my take. Contact high is not true.
1:17:47🔗AdamWell, I'll tell you what does happen. If you've been baked enough in your day and you're hanging around guys that are getting baked, it brings you back to the baked days and you start thinking about it and you have what you call a contact guy. That's fabulous radio, Andy. Andy is doing some good prop humor. All right. Do we find that we found that the Dub C drop? I can't remember what he called me.
1:18:14🔗CallerIt's cracking y'all. This Dub C from the West Side Connect gang. Y'all know this still West Side of mine chillin on the Loveline. Y'all know what time it is.
1:19:51🔗CallerYeah. Also, I used to cut myself all over and I don't do that no more. I was kind of wondering also if the reason why I pierced my body is because it's another way of not cutting myself, I guess.
1:20:44🔗AdamListen, screwball. Listen, you need a counselor like nobody else. Believe me. Trust me on this one, brother. If you were sexually assaulted on numerous occasions when you were younger and you're acting out now and you need to work it out.
1:21:25🔗AdamHey, listen, it's got to be tough on guys. It was tough on women. It still is tough on women, but we're constantly talking about the shame and the humiliation and victims coming forward and all that kind of stuff. Think about a guy who was sexually molested and even how much more difficult that is for him to come forward.
1:22:02🔗GuestHe twiddled me. I don't know what diddled means.
1:22:05🔗AdamI see. You don't want to be making light if you're twiddling?
1:22:10🔗GuestNo. He wanted us to play stick shift, and whoever made it to the finish line first would get a bowl of popcorn.
1:22:19🔗AdamWow. Popcorn ball and a bowl of popcorn. You know what I miss? You know what I miss? I don't miss much for my JALHO, but I do miss the popcorn ball, and I don't know where that went, and if people still eat those, or if they've just gotten past that. Remember popcorn balls?
1:22:42🔗GuestThat was around Christmas. Yeah, it was a Christmas treat.
1:22:44🔗AdamI miss popcorn balls. Someone's got to whip me up a popcorn ball.
1:24:01🔗AdamAll right. He heard that there was a new drug that got him high. Okay. One more time and then we go to break. I can't get enough of this guy.
1:24:14🔗AdamYou know what's fun? It's fun, the timing, because sometimes you check in, he's right in the middle of one, and then sometimes there's a long couple of beats. Now, let's see if we can time one. Let me see if I can time one just right.
1:24:40🔗GuestIt's like an angry snore. He's angry now.
1:24:44🔗AdamAll right. We're going to take a little break. We'll be back with more Snoring Kitties after this.
1:24:50🔗CallerYo, Loveline will be right back, homie.
1:25:33🔗AdamYeah, it's the Loveline of Adam Corolla. That is Dr. Drew over there. Andy Dick has joined us tonight. You can find him Sunday night. This Sunday at the House of Blues for the Spitfire Tour trying to raise a little money for a worthy cause. Larry Flint, Bill Maher, Exeence Frank, a joy, will be there. And many other interesting people. Andy's going to play a couple of songs over there. And so will you not be at the Mint this Sunday?
1:25:59🔗GuestWe're going to still try to do the Mint. We're going to try to do both shows. It's going to be hard.
1:26:02🔗AdamI see. Well, if anyone can pull it off. Andy Dick, Andy and the Bitches of the Century will be airlifted out of the House of Blues about 810, 815 and dropped on the helipad on top of the Mint to make the 830 gig. I think they're going to play another ditty for us. Is that true, Andy?
1:26:23🔗GuestIt's our only hit. It's our only hit.
1:26:25🔗AdamIt is. All right. Well, wait a minute. Let's just check back with Joe, see if he's still snoring.
1:26:36🔗GuestMaybe we should keep him on during our song.
1:26:40🔗GuestLet's see if we can do it. And we are gonna have ourselves a fling with your tiny, tight, white, and out of sight little brown. Re- Ring, ring, ring, ring.
1:27:51🔗GuestThank you. I hope he shows up to the show.
1:27:56🔗AdamNo bigger fan of Andy Dick than Joe18 on line three.
1:28:03🔗GuestStop it. It's like bad PR. Every time you say my name, he snores.
1:28:07🔗AdamDon't just believe me as far as Andy Dick and the Bitches of the Century being great. Let's hear what a critic has to say. Critics agree. The critics agree. The greatest night of entertainment. What? Yes.
1:28:30🔗GuestIt's not, I don't know why I'm laughing.
1:28:33🔗AdamIs Loveline the fastest two hours on radio? Let's hear what the callers think.
1:28:50🔗AdamIt never gets old. I love it. Oh my God. Drew, should someone breathe that fast? Chipmunk doesn't, a squirrel doesn't breathe that fast. All right. I'm going to put Joe on hold. I can really go on. If we could get one of those guys who calls in and farts on demand and put him on the next line next to Joe who snores on demand, I would just kill over.
1:29:49🔗CallerOkay. A friend of mine has a yeast infection in his mouth. Don't ask me how he got it, but I guess he brushes his teeth like five times a day.
1:29:58🔗DrewNo, Liz, he needs to see a doctor. That is a sign that his immune system isn't working normally though.
1:30:05🔗CallerThe doctor told him that he had to gargle with yogurt.
1:30:11🔗DrewOh, that's bizarre. He did not see a doctor, because there are easy treatments for this, no problem. What are they?
1:30:19🔗DrewThere's a mouthwash called mystatin, which is antifungal, and there's also a fluconazole, which you can take one pill of and will eradicate it completely.
1:30:29🔗DrewYeah, that is... No, that's not what they told him. That's not what they told him. He did not see a medical doctor. And it's simply treated, and he needs a workup to see why he got this, because when I was in training, it was one of the hallmark signs of HIV. It was an otherwise healthy male with an oral thrush.
1:30:48🔗AdamAlright, he needs to go to a real doctor.
1:30:56🔗DrewNo, no, no, no, listen, in the old days, that was the kind, in the old days, when I was in training, that was the thing we'd look for first, because it often means immune impairment. It also could mean he took a whole bunch of antibiotics recently. That could even predispose to it.
1:31:08🔗AdamLiz, he needs to see a doctor that does not have a gong and a giant root hanging in the window. You understand?
1:31:17🔗CallerWell, what I was going to ask you in the first place, now my question has been answered, could you actually douche with that for a yeast infection in a woman? No, no, no, no.
1:31:54🔗CallerYeah, I've been with my boyfriend for probably three and a half months and he is still in the closet and we go to a very close minded school. Yet I've been out of the closet probably all three years in high school.
1:32:11🔗CallerAnyways, Adam, we've told a few of our closest friends and we just now told our parents that we were together and my mom loves him and his mom loves me. Probably two nights ago, I went over there and we were messing around and I came down and I had a hickey on my neck and his mom flipped even though she said she was okay with it.
1:33:00🔗GuestLet him give you a hickey on your butt. No one will see it.
1:33:04🔗CallerWell, one of my bigger questions was, he's having problems trying to come out to the rest of the school. His mom wants us to be discreet about it and he doesn't really want to.
1:33:17🔗GuestBut that's fine, too. You know, yeah. I think you should, you know, just keep it quiet. I wish I would have just kept my damn mouth shut about my sexuality. I really do. I don't think it's helping anybody and it definitely hurts me, you know, people. I got bi-bashed the other week. Really? Yeah. Somebody said, you're bi- he was with a couple cute young blonde girls and he was a bigger, a tall like, he was some other, he was from some other country. But he said, you're bi- he's bisexual. And the girl's like, shut up. And he's like, no, seriously, he is, he is. And I said, and we were on an elevator. And I said, right as the doors, I waited for the doors to open. And I said, and you're large. And he pushed me. And I said, he said, I'm going to kick your ass.
1:34:17🔗GuestOh yeah. I scared the crap out of him. I started screaming and running. And then he started running to his car. And then I had my friend Ed waiting in his car to pick me because I can't drive. I don't have a license anymore. And that guy right over there, Ed came around the corner. But he was already afraid because I'm like, come on, let's go, let's do it. And he ran to his car and Ed and I both chased him to his car.
1:34:39🔗AdamMaybe he thought you meant sex. No? No. The upside is he got eight songs out of it.
1:36:00🔗DrewAndy, thank you for coming. Andy Dick and Bitches of the Century. See you guys at the Mint at 6010 West Pico, 7.30 every Sunday night, right?
1:36:10🔗DrewNick Nolte will be there every single Sunday.
1:36:12🔗GuestNo, but in Spitfire Tour, of course, at House of Blues.
1:36:16🔗DrewYeah, whatever anybody thinks about that, I suspect everybody just sort of tired of it. I mean, the whole controversy about marijuana. About pot.
1:36:26🔗DrewWell, I think so. But we'll see. The Spitfire Tour is out there and that will include Andy Dick, Larry Flint, Bill Maher, Perry Farrell, and Xena Joy.