George Carlin Doin It Again Relaly Fuckin Stupid

American stand-upward comedian (1937–2008)

George Carlin
George Carlin 1975 (Little David Records) Publicity.jpg

Carlin in 1975

Birth name George Denis Patrick Carlin
Born (1937-05-12)May 12, 1937
Manhattan, New York, U.Due south.
Died June 22, 2008(2008-06-22) (aged 71)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
Medium
  • Stand-upwards
  • film
  • television set
  • radio
  • literature
Years agile 1956–2008
Genres
  • Observational comedy
  • character comedy
  • surreal comedy
  • blue comedy
  • dark comedy
  • wordplay
  • sarcasm
  • irony
  • satire
Subject(due south)
  • American civilization
  • society
  • politics
  • psychology
  • philosophy
  • profanity
  • everyday life
  • nihilism
  • misanthropy
  • drug use
  • language
  • mass media
  • popular culture
  • electric current events
  • death
  • masculinity
  • family
  • parenting
  • race relations
  • sometime historic period
Spouse

Brenda Hosbrook

(m. 1961; died 1997)


Sally Wade

(one thousand. 1998)

Children Kelly Carlin
Signature George Carlin Signature.svg
Website georgecarlin.com

George Denis Patrick Carlin (May 12, 1937 – June 22, 2008) was an American stand-upwardly comedian, actor, social critic and author. Regarded every bit ane of the most of import and influential stand-upwardly comics of all time, he was dubbed "the dean of counterculture comedians".[1] He was known for his dark comedy and reflections on politics, the English language language, psychology, faith and taboo subjects. His "seven muddy words" routine was cardinal to the 1978 Us Supreme Court instance F.C.C. five. Pacifica Foundation, in which a 5–4 decision affirmed the government'south power to censor indecent cloth on the public airwaves.

The first of Carlin'due south 14 stand-up one-act specials for HBO was filmed in 1977. From the late 1980s, his routines focused on sociocultural criticism of American society. He often commented on American political issues and satirized American culture. He was a frequent performer and guest host on The Tonight Bear witness during the three-decade Johnny Carson era and hosted the first episode of Saturday Night Alive in 1975. His final comedy special, It'southward Bad for Ya, was filmed less than four months before his death from cardiac failure.[2] In 2008, he was posthumously awarded the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. In 2004, he placed second on Comedy Central'south listing of meridian 10 American comedians.[three] In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine ranked him 2d (behind Richard Pryor) on its listing of the 50 best stand-up comedians of all time.[iv]

His film roles included a taxi driver in Automobile Wash, Frank Madras in Outrageous Fortune, Rufus in Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and Bill & Ted'southward Artificial Journey, Eddie Detreville in The Prince of Tides, Fundamental Ignatius Glick in Dogma, Architect in Scary Movie 3, and Bart Trinké in Bailiwick of jersey Girl. He did voice-over roles as Zugor in Tarzan II, Fillmore in Cars and narrated the starting time four seasons in the American dub of the British children's television show Thomas & Friends.

Early life [edit]

George Denis Patrick Carlin[five] was born in Manhattan on May 12, 1937,[half dozen] [7] to secretary Mary (née Bearey; 1896-1984) and The Lord's day advertising managing director Patrick John Carlin (1888-1945), who in 1935 won the Mahogany Gavel Accolade from over 800 other public speakers at the Dale Carnegie Public Speaking Found, and who died in December 1945, when George Carlin was only eight years sometime. His female parent was born in New York Metropolis to Irish gaelic immigrants, while his father was an Irish immigrant from Cloghan, a village in the Glenfin commune of Canton Donegal in Ulster,[8] leading Carlin to describe himself as "fully Irish".[nine] Mary Bearey and Patrick John Carlin had married in Manhattan in Nov 1930, Mary being Patrick John's second wife.[8] In his posthumous autobiography Last Words, Carlin wrote that, when his first wife Brenda was live, "I used to accept a fantasy of Ireland, the southeastern parts so that information technology would exist a piffling warmer, and the two of us there, shut enough to Dublin that you lot could become buy things you needed."[x]

His maternal grandfather, Dennis Bearey, was a police officer in the New York Urban center Constabulary Department (NYPD), who during the class of his life wrote out the works of William Shakespeare by hand for the enjoyment.[eleven] [12] Carlin recalled that his grandmother's maiden name was O'Grady, but it was changed to Grady before she reached the U.S. He later joked that they "dropped the 'O' in the ocean on the way here". He named his grapheme on The George Carlin Show "O'Grady" as a tribute to her.[thirteen] He had an older brother named Patrick Jr. His parents separated when he was two months old because of his male parent's alcoholism, so his female parent raised him and his brother on her own.[14]

Carlin said that he picked upward an appreciation for the effective use of the English linguistic communication from his female parent,[15] though they had a difficult relationship and he oft ran away from abode.[16] He grew up on West 121st Street in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, which he and his friends called "White Harlem" considering it "sounded a lot tougher than its existent proper name".[17] He attended Corpus Christi Schoolhouse, a Roman Catholic parish school of the Corpus Christi Church in Morningside Heights.[18] [19] 1 of Carlin's all-time babyhood friends was fellow student Randy Jurgensen who went on to become one of the most decorated homicide detectives in the NYPD's history.[20] His mother owned a television, which was a rare and new technology at the time, and Carlin became an avid fan of the pioneering belatedly-night talk show Broadway Open up House during its short run.[21] He went to the Bronx for loftier school but, later three semesters, was expelled from Central Hayes High School at age 15. He briefly attended Bishop Dubois High School in Harlem and the Salesian Loftier Schoolhouse in Goshen.[22] He spent many summers at Camp Notre Dame in Spofford, New Hampshire, where he regularly won the camp'due south drama award. Later, at his request, some of his ashes were spread at Spofford Lake upon his decease.[23]

Carlin joined the U.S. Air Force and trained as a radar technician. He was stationed at Barksdale Air Force Base in Bossier Metropolis, Louisiana, and began working as a disc jockey at the radio station KJOE in nearby Shreveport. Labeled an "unproductive airman" past his superiors, he received a general discharge on July 29, 1957. During his time in the Air Strength, he had been courtroom-martialed 3 times and received many nonjudicial punishments and reprimands.[24]

Career [edit]

1960s [edit]

In 1959, Carlin met Jack Burns, a fellow DJ at radio station KXOL in Fort Worth, Texas.[25] They formed a comedy team and later successful performances at Fort Worth's beat coffeehouse called The Cellar, Burns and Carlin headed for California in February 1960.[v]

Inside weeks of arriving in California, Burns and Carlin put together an audition tape and created The Wright Brothers, a morning time show on KDAY in Hollywood. During their tenure at KDAY, they honed their material in beatnik coffeehouses at nighttime.[26] Years afterwards when he was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Carlin requested that it be placed in front end of the KDAY studios near the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Vine Street.[27] Burns and Carlin recorded their only album, Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Club This night, in May 1960 at Cosmo Alley in Hollywood.[26] After 2 years together as a team, they parted to pursue individual careers, but "remain[ed] the best of friends".[28]

In the 1960s, Carlin began actualization on television set diverseness shows, where he played various characters:[29]

  • The Indian Sergeant – "There will be a rain dance tonight ... weather permitting ..."
  • Stupid disc jockeys ("Wonderful WINO radio ...") – "The Beatles' latest tape, when played backwards at slow speed, says, 'Dummy! You're playing it backwards at slow speed!'"
  • Al Sleet, the Hippie-Dippie Weatherman – "Tonight's forecast: Dark. Connected mostly dark tonight, changing to widely scattered light towards morning time."

Carlin performing on This Is Tom Jones in 1969

Variations on these routines appear on Carlin's 1967 debut anthology, Take-Offs and Put-Ons, which was recorded live in 1966 at The Roostertail in Detroit, Michigan and issued past RCA Victor in 1967.[29] During this period, Carlin became a frequent performer and guest host on The Tonight Testify, initially with Jack Paar as host, so with Johnny Carson. Carlin became one of Carson's almost frequent substitutes during the host'southward iii-decade reign. Carlin was also cast in Away Nosotros Go, a 1967 one-act show that aired on CBS.[xxx] His material during his early on career and his appearance, which consisted of suits and brusque-cropped hair, had been seen as "conventional", particularly when contrasted with his later on anti-establishment material.[31]

Carlin was present at Lenny Bruce's arrest for obscenity. Equally the police began attempting to detain members of the audience for questioning, they asked Carlin for his identification. Telling the police he did not believe in authorities-issued IDs, he was arrested and taken to jail with Bruce in the aforementioned vehicle.[32] In the late 1960s, Carlin was making near $250,000 annually.[33] As a tax shelter, he bought a twin-engine Aero Commander 1121 Jet Commander private jet and hired pilots to fly him to various bout dates.[34]

1970s [edit]

Over time, Carlin changed his routines and his advent; he grew his hair long, sported a beard and earrings, and typically dressed in T-shirts and blue jeans. He lost some Telly bookings by dressing strangely for a comedian at a time when clean-cutting, well-dressed comedians were the norm. He hired talent managers Jeff Wald and Ron De Blasio to help him modify his epitome, making him look more "hip" for a younger audience. Wald put Carlin into much smaller clubs such as The Troubadour in West Hollywood and The Bitter Finish in New York Metropolis, and later on said that Carlin's income was thus reduced by 90% just his later career arc was greatly improved.[33] In 1970, record producer Monte Kay formed the Trivial David Records subsidiary of Atlantic Records, with comedian Flip Wilson as co-owner.[35] Kay and Wilson signed Carlin away from RCA Records and recorded a Carlin performance at Washington, D.C.'s Cellar Door in May 1971, which was released as FM & AM in January 1972. De Blasio was busy managing the fast-paced career of Freddie Prinze and was nearly to sign Richard Pryor, so he released Carlin to Little David general manager Jack Lewis, who, similar Carlin, was somewhat wild and rebellious.[36] Using his own persona as a springboard for his new comedy, he was presented past Ed Sullivan in a functioning of "The Pilus Piece" and quickly regained his popularity equally the public caught on to his sense of fashion.[37]

Starting in 1972, singer-songwriter Kenny Rankin was Carlin's characterization mate on Little David Records, and Rankin served many times as Carlin's musical guest or opening human action during the early 1970s. The two flew together in Carlin's individual jet; Carlin says that Rankin relapsed into using cocaine while on tour since Carlin had so much of the drug available.[34] The anthology FM & AM proved very popular. It marked Carlin'due south change from mainstream to counterculture comedy. The "AM" side was an extension of Carlin's previous style, with zany but relatively clean routines parodying aspects of American life. The "FM" side introduced Carlin'due south new style, with references to marijuana and nascence control pills, and a playful examination of the word "shit". In this way, Carlin renewed a style of radical social commentary one-act that Lenny Bruce had pioneered in the belatedly 1950s.[33]

Carlin performing in the 1970s

In this flow, Carlin perfected his well-known "vii dirty words" routine, which almost notably appears on Grade Clown every bit follows: "'Shit', 'piss', 'fuck', 'cunt', 'cocksucker', 'motherfucker', and 'tits'. Those are the heavy vii. Those are the ones that'll infect your soul, curve your spine and keep the land from winning the state of war." On July 21, 1972, Carlin was arrested afterwards performing this routine at Milwaukee's Summerfest and charged with violating obscenity laws.[38] The case, which prompted Carlin to refer to the words for a time as the "Milwaukee Seven", was dismissed in December when the gauge declared that the language was indecent merely that Carlin had the freedom to say it equally long equally he acquired no disturbance.[39] In 1973, a human complained to the FCC later on listening with his son to a similar routine, "Filthy Words" from Carlin's Occupation: Foole, which was broadcast one afternoon over radio station WBAI. Pacifica received a citation from the FCC for violating regulations that prohibit broadcasting "obscene" textile. The Supreme Court upheld the FCC action by a vote of v to four, ruling that the routine was "indecent just non obscene" and that the FCC had authority to prohibit such broadcasts during hours when children were likely to be among the audience.[forty] [41]

The controversy increased Carlin's fame. He somewhen expanded the "dirty words" theme with a seemingly interminable end to a operation, finishing with his vocalization fading out in one HBO version and accompanying the credits in the Carlin at Carnegie special for the 1982–83 season, and a set of 49 web pages organized past field of study and embracing his "Incomplete List of Impolite Words".[42] On stage, during a rendition of this routine, Carlin learned that his previous comedy anthology FM & AM had won a Grammy. Midway through the performance on the album Occupation: Foole, he can be heard thanking someone for handing him a piece of paper. He and then exclaimed "shit!" and proudly announced his win to the audience.[43]

George Carlin was arrested vii times for reciting the "Seven Dirty Words" routine.[44]

Carlin hosted the premiere broadcast of NBC'southward Sabbatum Night Alive on October 11, 1975. Per his request, he did not appear in its sketches.[45] The following flavor, 1976–1977, he appeared regularly on CBS Tv's Tony Orlando & Dawn variety series.[46]

Carlin unexpectedly stopped performing regularly in 1976, when his career appeared to be at its top. For the next v years, he rarely performed stand-up, although information technology was at this fourth dimension that he began doing specials for HBO equally part of its On Location series; he did 14 specials, including 2008'due south Information technology'southward Bad For Ya! [47] He later revealed that he had suffered the first of three eye attacks during this layoff period.[48] His get-go two HBO specials aired in 1977 and 1978.[49] [50]

1980s [edit]

In 1981, Carlin returned to the stage, releasing A Place for My Stuff and returning to HBO and New York Urban center with the Carlin at Carnegie TV special, videotaped at Carnegie Hall and airing during the 1982–83 season. Carlin continued doing HBO specials every yr or two over the following decade and a half. All of Carlin's albums from this time forward are from the HBO specials.[51] [52]

He hosted SNL for the second time on November 10, 1984, this time actualization in several sketches.[53]

Carlin began to attain prominence as a motion-picture show actor with a major supporting role in the 1987 one-act striking Outrageous Fortune, starring Bette Midler and Shelley Long; it was his first notable screen role afterward a scattering of previous guest roles on television serial. Playing out-of-stater Frank Madras, he poked fun at the lingering effect of the 1960s counterculture. In 1989, he gained popularity with a new generation of teens when he was cast as Rufus, the time-traveling mentor of the title characters in Bill & Ted'south Fantabulous Run a risk, and reprised his role in the film sequel Beak & Ted's Bogus Journeying besides every bit the outset season of the drawing series.

1990s [edit]

In 1991, Carlin had a major supporting role in the movie The Prince of Tides, which starred Nick Nolte and Barbra Streisand, portraying the gay neighbor of the main grapheme'south suicidal sister.[54]

He also played the role of "Mr Conductor" on the PBS show Shining Time Station and narrated the show's sequences of the American and New Zealand version of the U.K. television series Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends from 1991 to 1995, replacing Ringo Starr. Carlin narrated the showtime four seasons of what would later become known as Thomas & Friends for use on Shining Time Station. Co-ordinate to Britt Allcroft, who adult both shows, on the first 24-hour interval of the assignment, Carlin was nervous most recording his narration without an audience, and so the producers put a stuffed teddy bear in the booth.[55]

In 1993, Carlin began a weekly Fox sitcom, The George Carlin Show, playing New York City taxicab commuter George O'Grady. The show, created and written by The Simpsons co-creator Sam Simon, ran 27 episodes through Dec 1995.[56] In his final book, the posthumously published Last Words, Carlin said almost The George Carlin Testify, "I had a neat time. I never laughed so much, then often, so hard equally I did with cast members Alex Rocco, Chris Rich, Tony Starke. There was a very strange, very good sense of sense of humour on that stage ... [but] I was incredibly happy when the testify was canceled. I was frustrated that it had taken me away from my truthful piece of work."[57] [ page needed ]

Carlin was honored at the 1997 Aspen Comedy Festival with a retrospective, George Carlin: xl Years of Comedy, hosted by Jon Stewart. His start hardcover book, Brain Droppings (1997), sold nearly 900,000 copies and spent forty weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.[58]

2000s [edit]

Carlin later explained that there were other, more businesslike reasons for abandoning his interim career in favor of standup. In an interview for Esquire magazine in 2001, he said, "Because of my abuse of drugs, I neglected my business affairs and had large arrears with the IRS, and that took me eighteen to twenty years to dig out of. I did it honorably, and I don't begrudge them. I don't detest paying taxes, and I'm not aroused at anyone, because I was complicit in it. But I'll tell y'all what it did for me: it made me a way meliorate comedian. Considering I had to stay out on the road and I couldn't pursue that movie career, which would have gone nowhere, and I became a really good comic and a really good writer."[59]

In 2001, Carlin was given a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 15th Annual American One-act Awards. In December 2003, Representative Doug Ose (R-California) introduced a pecker (H.R. 3687) to outlaw the broadcast of Carlin's "seven dirty words",[60] including "compound use (including hyphenated compounds) of such words and phrases with each other or with other words or phrases, and other grammatical forms of such words and phrases (including verb, adjective, gerund, participle, and infinitive forms)". The neb omitted "tits", but included "asshole", which was non one of Carlin's original seven words. The bill was referred to the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution in January 2004, where information technology was tabled.[60]

Carlin performed regularly every bit a headliner in Las Vegas, but in 2004 his run at the MGM Grand Las Vegas was terminated subsequently an altercation with his audience. After a poorly received set, filled with night references to suicide bombings and beheadings, Carlin complained that he could non await to get out of "this fucking hotel" and Las Vegas; he wanted to get back east, he said, "where the real people are". He continued: "People who go to Las Vegas, you've got to question their fucking intellect to starting time with. Traveling hundreds and thousands of miles to essentially give your money to a large corporation is kind of fucking moronic. That's what I'm ever getting here is these kind of fucking people with very limited intellects." When an audition member shouted, "Stop degrading us!" Carlin responded, "Give thanks you lot very much, any that was. I hope it was positive; if non, well, blow me." He was immediately fired, and presently thereafter his representative announced that he would begin handling for booze and prescription painkiller addiction on his ain initiative.[61] [62]

Following his thirteenth HBO special on November 5, 2005, Life Is Worth Losing,[63] which aired live from the Buoy Theatre in New York City – during which he mentioned, "I've got 341 days of sobriety" – Carlin toured his new fabric through the first half of 2006. Topics included suicide, natural disasters, cannibalism, genocide, human sacrifice, threats to civil liberties in the U.S., and the case for his theory that humans are junior to other animals. At the first tour end in February at the Tachi Palace Casino in Lemoore, California, Carlin mentioned that the appearance was his "first bear witness dorsum" after a half dozen-week hospitalization for eye failure and pneumonia.[ commendation needed ]

Carlin voiced a character in the 2006 Disney/Pixar animated feature Cars. The graphic symbol, Fillmore, is an anti-establishment hippie VW Microbus with a psychedelic pigment job and the license plate "51237" – Carlin's altogether. In 2007, Carlin voiced the magician in Happily N'Ever Later on, his last film. Carlin'due south concluding HBO stand-up special, Information technology'due south Bad for Ya, aired live on March 1, 2008, from the Wells Fargo Center for the Arts in Santa Rosa, California.[64] Themes included "American bullshit", rights, death, sometime age, and child rearing. He repeated the theme to his audience several times throughout the show: "It's all bullshit, and it's bad for ya."[65] When asked on Inside the Actors Studio what turned him on, he responded, "Reading virtually language." When asked what fabricated him proudest of his career, he said the number of his books that accept been sold, close to a million copies.[ citation needed ]

Personal life [edit]

In Baronial 1960, while touring with comedy partner Jack Burns in Dayton, Ohio, Carlin met Brenda Hosbrook. They were married at her parents' home in Dayton on June 3, 1961.[66] The couple's but child, Kelly Marie Carlin, was born on June 15, 1963. The two renewed their hymeneals vows in Las Vegas in 1971. Hosbrook died of liver cancer on May 11, 1997, the day before Carlin'due south 60th altogether.[67] Half-dozen months later, he met comedy writer Sally Wade, and afterwards described information technology as "honey at first sight" but admitted that he was hesitant to human action on his feelings and then soon after his married woman'southward expiry.[68] He eventually married Wade in a individual and unregistered ceremony on June 24, 1998. The marriage lasted until Carlin's decease in 2008, two days before their ten-year anniversary.[69] [lxx]

In a 2008 interview, Carlin stated that using cannabis, LSD, and mescaline had helped him cope with events in his personal life.[71] He also stated several times that he had battled addictions to alcohol, Vicodin, and cocaine,[72] and spent some time in a rehab facility in late 2004.[73] Although born into a Catholic family unit, he vocally rejected religion in all of its forms, and frequently criticized and mocked it in his comedy routines.[74] When asked if he believed in God, he responded, "No. No, there's no God, only in that location might be some sort of an organizing intelligence, and I think to sympathise information technology is way across our ability."[75]

Death [edit]

Carlin had a history of heart problems spanning three decades. These included heart attacks in 1978, 1982, and 1991; an arrhythmia requiring an ablation process in 2003; a meaning episode of heart failure in late 2005; and two angioplasties.[76] On June 22, 2008, at the age of 71, he died of middle failure at Saint John's Wellness Center in Santa Monica, California.[77] [78] His expiry occurred one calendar week afterwards his last performance at The Orleans Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. In accordance with his wishes, his body was cremated and his ashes were scattered in front of various nightclubs he had played in New York City and over Spofford Lake in New Hampshire, where he had addicted memories of attending summer campsite as an adolescent.[79]

Tributes [edit]

Upon his death, HBO circulate 11 of his 14 HBO specials from June 25 to 28, including a 12-hr marathon block on their HBO Comedy channel. NBC scheduled a rerun of the premiere episode of Saturday Nighttime Alive, which Carlin hosted.[lxxx] [81] [82] Both Sirius Satellite Radio'due south "Raw Dog One-act" and XM Satellite Radio's "XM Comedy" channels ran a memorial marathon of George Carlin recordings the day post-obit his expiry. Sirius XM Satellite Radio has since devoted an entire channel to Carlin, entitled Carlin'due south Corner, featuring all of his comedy albums, live concerts, and works from his private athenaeum.[83] Larry King devoted his entire show of June 23 to a tribute to Carlin, featuring interviews with Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Maher, Roseanne Barr and Lewis Black, equally well as Carlin's daughter Kelly and his brother, Patrick Jr. On June 24, The New York Times printed an op-ed piece on Carlin by Jerry Seinfeld.[84] Cartoonist Garry Trudeau paid tribute in his Doonesbury comic strip on July 27.[85]

Four days before Carlin's death, the John F. Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts had named him its 2008 Marker Twain Prize for American Sense of humour honoree.[86] He became its beginning posthumous recipient on November 10, 2008, in Washington, D.C.[87] Comedians honoring him at the ceremony included Jon Stewart, Bill Maher, Lily Tomlin (a by Twain Humor Prize winner), Lewis Black, Denis Leary, Joan Rivers, and Margaret Cho. Louis C.Thousand. defended his stand up-upward special Chewed Up to Carlin, and Lewis Black defended the second season of Root of All Evil to him.

For a number of years, Carlin had been compiling and writing his autobiography, to be released in conjunction with a i-man Broadway show tentatively titled New York Male child. After Carlin's death, Tony Hendra, his collaborator on both projects, edited the autobiography for release as Last Words. The book, chronicling virtually of Carlin's life and future plans, including the 1-man show, was published in 2009. The abridged audio edition is narrated by Carlin's brother, Patrick Jr.[88]

The George Carlin Messages: The Permanent Courtship of Emerge Wade,[89] by Carlin's widow, a collection of previously unpublished writings and artwork past Carlin interwoven with Wade's chronicle of their ten years together, was published in March 2011. The subtitle is a phrase on a handwritten annotation that Wade found side by side to her reckoner upon returning home from the hospital after her married man's death.[90] In 2008 Carlin's girl Kelly announced plans to publish an "oral history", a collection of stories from Carlin's friends and family.[91] She later on indicated that the projection had been shelved in favor of completion of her ain project,[92] an autobiographical one-adult female show, A Carlin Home Companion: Growing Upwardly with George.[93] [94]

On October 22, 2014, a portion of West 121st Street, in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan where Carlin spent his childhood, was renamed "George Carlin Manner".[95]

Moneyball screenwriter Stan Chervin announced in October 2018 that a biopic of Carlin was in procedure.[96] [97]

On Baronial 10, 2020, it was appear that Judd Apatow and Michael Bonfiglio would direct a documentary about Carlin.[98]

Influences [edit]

Carlin's influences included Danny Kaye,[16] [99] Jonathan Winters,[16] Lenny Bruce,[48] [100] [101] Richard Pryor,[48] Nichols and May,[102] Jerry Lewis,[16] [48] the Marx Brothers,[16] [48] Mort Sahl,[101] Spike Jones,[48] Ernie Kovacs,[48] and the Ritz Brothers.[16]

Comedians who have claimed Carlin as an influence include Dave Attell,[103] Bill Burr,[104] Chris Rock,[105] Jerry Seinfeld,[106] Louis C.M.,[107] Lewis Blackness,[108] Jon Stewart,[109] Stephen Colbert,[110] Bill Maher,[111] [112] Patrice O'Neal,[113] Colin Quinn,[114] Steven Wright,[115] Mitch Hedberg,[116] Russell Peters,[117] Bo Burnham,[118] Jay Leno,[119] Ben Stiller,[119] Kevin Smith,[120] Chris Blitz,[121] Rob McElhenney,[122] and Jim Jefferies.[123]

Works [edit]

Discography [edit]

Main
  • 1963: Burns and Carlin at the Playboy Gild This evening
  • 1967: Take-Offs and Put-Ons
  • 1972: FM & AM
  • 1972: Class Clown
  • 1973: Occupation: Foole
  • 1974: Toledo Window Box
  • 1975: An Evening with Wally Londo Featuring Beak Slaszo
  • 1977: On the Road
  • 1981: A Place for My Stuff
  • 1984: Carlin on Campus
  • 1986: Playin' with Your Head
  • 1988: What Am I Doing in New Jersey?
  • 1990: Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics
  • 1992: Jammin' in New York
  • 1996: Dorsum in Town
  • 1999: You Are All Diseased
  • 2001: Complaints and Grievances
  • 2006: Life Is Worth Losing
  • 2008: It's Bad for Ya
  • 2016: I Kinda Like It When a Lotta People Dice [124]
Compilations
  • 1978: Indecent Exposure: Some of the Best of George Carlin
  • 1984: The George Carlin Collection
  • 1992: Classic Gold
  • 1999: The Fiddling David Years

Film [edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1968 With Half-dozen You lot Get Eggroll Herbie Fleck
1976 Car Launder Taxi Driver
1979 Americathon Narrator
1987 Outrageous Fortune Frank Madras
1989 Bill & Ted'south Excellent Risk Rufus
1991 Beak & Ted'due south Artificial Journey Rufus
The Prince of Tides Eddie Detreville
1999 Dogma Fundamental Ignatius Glick
2001 Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back Hitchhiker
2003 Scary Flick 3 Architect
2004 Jersey Daughter Bart Trinké
2005 The Aristocrats Himself
Tarzan II Zugor Voice
2006 Cars Fillmore
2007 Happily N'Always After Sorcerer
2020 Bill & Ted Face the Music Rufus Posthumous release; archival footage[125]

Television receiver [edit]

Year Championship Function Notes
1962 The Tonight Show Himself one episode
1965 The Merv Griffin Prove 1 episode
1966 The Jimmy Dean Show 2 episodes
The Kraft Summer Music Hall Due north/A Writer
1966 That Girl George Lester Episode: "Break a Leg"
1967–1971 The Ed Sullivan Show Himself 11 episodes
1968 The Smothers Brothers One-act 60 minutes one episode
1969 What's My Line? 1 episode
The Game Game one episode
The Carol Burnett Prove 1 episode
1971–1973 The Flip Wilson Evidence six episode
Likewise author
1972 The Mike Douglas Show 1 episode
1977 Welcome Dorsum, Kotter Wally 'The Wow' Wexler Episode: "Radio Gratuitous Freddie"
1975, 1984 Saturday Dark Alive Host Episodes: 1 and 183
1987 Nick at Nite North/A
1988 Justin Case Justin Instance Television movie directed Blake Edwards
1990 Working Tra$h Ralph Sawatzky Television picture
1991–1996 Thomas & Friends Narrator (vocalism) 104 episodes
1991–1993 Shining Fourth dimension Station Mr. Conductor, Narrator 45 episodes
1995 Shining Time Station: Once Upon a Time Television film
Shining Fourth dimension Station: Second Chances
Shining Time Station: One of the Family
Streets of Laredo Billy Williams 3 episodes
Shining Time Station: Queen for a Day Mr. Conductor Television motion-picture show
1994–1995 The George Carlin Evidence George O'Grady 27 episodes
1996 Mr. Usher's Thomas Tales Mr. Conductor, Narrator half dozen episodes
1999 Storytime with Thomas 2 episodes
1998 The Simpsons Munchie (voice) Episode "D'oh-in in the Air current"
1999, 2004 The Daily Show Himself 3 episodes
2000 MADtv Mr. Conductor Episodes: 518 & 524
2004 Inside the Actors Studio Himself 1 episode
2008 Cars Toons: Mater's Alpine Tales Fillmore (voice) i episode; archival recordings

Video games [edit]

Year Title Role
2006 Cars Fillmore

HBO specials [edit]

Special Year Notes
On Location: George Carlin at USC 1977
George Carlin: Again! 1978
Carlin at Carnegie 1982
Carlin on Campus 1984
Playin' with Your Head 1986
What Am I Doing in New Jersey? 1988
Doin' It Over again 1990
Jammin' in New York 1992
Dorsum in Town 1996
George Carlin: xl Years of Comedy 1997
Yous Are All Diseased 1999
Complaints and Grievances 2001
Life Is Worth Losing 2005
All My Stuff 2007 A box set of Carlin's offset 12 stand-upward specials
(excluding George Carlin: 40 Years of One-act).
It's Bad for Ya 2008
Commemorative Collection 2018

Written works [edit]

Book Year Notes
Sometimes a Little Brain Damage Can Assist 1984 ISBN 0-89471-271-three[126]
Brain Droppings 1997 ISBN 0-7868-8321-ix[127]
Napalm and Silly Putty 2001 ISBN 0-7868-8758-3[128]
When Will Jesus Bring the Pork Chops? 2004 ISBN ane-4013-0134-7[129]
Three Times Carlin: An Orgy of George 2006 ISBN 978-1-4013-0243-half dozen[130] A collection of the 3 previous titles.
Last Words 2009 ISBN 1-4391-7295-ane[131] Posthumous release.

Audiobooks [edit]

  • Brain Droppings
  • Napalm and Silly Putty
  • More Napalm & Silly Putty
  • George Carlin Reads to Yous (Compilation of Brain Droppings, Napalm and Featherbrained Putty, and More Napalm & Silly Putty)
  • When Volition Jesus Bring the Pork Chops?

The "Carlin Alarm" [edit]

After Carlin'southward seven muddied words routine and subsequent FCC v. Pacifica Foundation Supreme Court ruling in 1973, broadcasters started to use the "Carlin Warning" to remind performers of the words they could non say during a live functioning.[132]

Cyberspace hoaxes [edit]

Many writings found on the cyberspace have been falsely attributed to Carlin, including various joke lists, rants, and other pieces. The web site Snopes, an online resource that debunks urban legends and myths, has addressed these hoaxes. Many of them contain cloth that runs counter to Carlin'southward viewpoints; some are especially volatile toward racial groups, gay people, women, the homeless, and other targets. Carlin was aware of these bogus eastward-mails and debunked them on his own website, saying, "Hither's a rule of pollex, folks: Null you encounter on the Internet is mine unless it comes from i of my albums, books, HBO specials, or appeared on my website," and "It bothers me that some people might believe that I would be capable of writing some of this stuff." Weird Al Yankovic referenced these hoaxes in a line of his song "Stop Forwarding That Crap to Me" past proverb "And past the way, those quotes from George Carlin aren't really George Carlin".[133]

Encounter as well [edit]

  • Counterculture of the 1960s

References [edit]

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    • Mikkelson, Barbara (November 1, 2007). "The Paradox of Our Time". Snopes.com . Retrieved June 12, 2014.
    • Mikkelson, Barbara (October 2, 2005). "The Bad American". Snopes.com . Retrieved June 12, 2014.
    • Mikkelson, Barbara (October 23, 2005). "Hurricane Rules". Snopes.com . Retrieved June 12, 2014.
    • Mikkelson, Barbara (February 5, 2007). "Gas Crisis Solution". Snopes.com . Retrieved June xi, 2014.
    • Mikkelson, Barbara (January 12, 2006). "New Rules for 2006". Snopes.com . Retrieved June x, 2014.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • George Carlin at IMDb
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • George Carlin on Charlie Rose
  • "George Carlin collected news and commentary". The New York Times.
  • George Carlin at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Carlin

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