Interview: Jerry Lewis
An 11-hour conversation about “well, just about everything that’s ever been funny.”
An 11-hour conversation about “well, just about everything that’s ever been funny.”
Amy Wallace GQ Aug 2011 25min Permalink
“Poor white Americans’ current crisis shouldn’t have caught the rest of the country as off guard as it has.”
Alec MacGillis The Atlantic Aug 2016 20min Permalink
The tragi-comic career of a nobody comedian from the 1940s who ditched his wife, child, and eventually his own name.
Kliph Nesteroff WFMU Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Midtown Manhattan. The highest concentration of showbiz havens and hangouts in the whole entire world. The Chorus Girls. The Drunk Newsmen. The Jazz Hepsters. The Mob. They converge with the force of a fly against a windshield. This is where American popular culture is born. Its influence permeates the nation. Walk the streets and weave through the hustlers, the gangsters, the bookies, the rummies... and somewhere among that crowd - you'll walk past a nondescript artistic genius or twelve, indiscernible from the dregs, biding time until they transform the American landscape. And high-above the loud, syncopated beat of Midtown you can hear... The Comedians.
Kliph Nesteroff WFMU Oct 2011 35min Permalink
The name Shecky can vacillate from noun to verb to adjective. The opinion of every comedian during that gilded age of show business, whether they were Republican Bob Hope or hipster Lenny Bruce, is that Shecky Greene was the wildest of them all. The craziest of them all. Most importantly - the funniest of them all.
Kliph Nesteroff WFMU Jun 2011 35min Permalink