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Andrew Schulz
What's up, everybody? Welcome to flagrant. And today we have one of my favorites. Man, we got Adam Rowe back.
Adam Rowe
We got.
Andrew Schulz
And listen, we heard you in town. We want you to come on the pod naturally. But there are some things that we need to get to the bottom to that are happening in Great Britain right now.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Andrew Schulz
Okay. It seems like there's two problems that could solve one another. There's, like, a couple British girls that are trying to, like, the most people in a day, and then there's, like, gang. You see where he's going with it? And I just, you know, if you'd.
Adam Rowe
You know, if you'd have paused him before he brought either of those up, I knew. We got Bonnie Blue, Lily Phillips, and grooming gangs, Grumman Gangs.
Andrew Schulz
So what I'm saying is, if it's like, there's a problem and then there's a solution, but it just seems like we can't connect him. And this is where you need that American ingenuity. I'm here to let Bonnie Blue and What's the other one's name?
Akash Singh
Lily Phillips.
Andrew Schulz
Lily Phillips. Know that there's a What?
Akash Singh
Sorry, I thought you were talking about the. I was like, we don't know their name.
Adam Rowe
That's scary.
Andrew Schulz
Anyway, but the. The grooming gangs, right? I feel like we could, you know, they don't have to do it anymore. They could just get online.
Adam Rowe
I think you're forgetting. What we need to stop making it sound so cool.
Andrew Schulz
What is that? Grooming gangs is just.
Adam Rowe
It has a little ring to it.
Andrew Schulz
Like, make it sound.
Adam Rowe
Make it sound worse than that. It makes them sound like hairdressers.
Akash Singh
Exactly.
Andrew Schulz
Make it sound way worse.
Adam Rowe
What is.
Akash Singh
What is the grooming part? I don't understand.
Adam Rowe
So, like, I mean, it's going to make me sound like I'm an expert on it, but, like, grooming someone, like. Like, it's when, like, a teacher is, like, wanting to one of their students. They, like, groom them. Like, hey, it wouldn't be too bad if we. I've heard of that. And, like, that's what these gangs are accused of doing.
Andrew Schulz
So they would. They would groom girls.
Adam Rowe
Yes.
Andrew Schulz
And then wait until they're legal and then have sex.
Adam Rowe
I've got to be honest with. Yeah, I think so what you're talking about is.
Andrew Schulz
I don't know what I'm talking about.
Adam Rowe
I know.
Andrew Schulz
I just have one head sign.
Adam Rowe
So where you're getting these headlines from is, like, the Daily Mail and shit. So, like, this is the daily.
Andrew Schulz
You have gang and gang bangs. In the same place. And then for whatever reason, we can't put those together.
Adam Rowe
It's resonant push by like right wing media. It were like, we want to sort of focus on immigration. So, like, there's a really, really good interview from years ago where there's a political commentator from the UK called Acala.
Andrew Schulz
And he's another guy who raps too.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah. And he's talking on, like, there's like a panel, like, it's like a panel in front of an audience talking about like racism and all that sort of stuff. And he goes, the interesting thing is when like a Pakistani guy, someone or a grooming gang who are from Pakistan originally come on.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Their racial identity and the fact that they're an immigrant is put forward is like the primary reason for them committing the atrocity.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Whereas, like when Jimmy Savile is like a really famous people, he's a white guy from Stoke. When he does it, it's not like it's because he's from Stoke. Whereas, like the Grierman gangs, like, well, they're from Pakistan. Of course they're doing it.
Andrew Schulz
But we assume it's because he's British, that's why he does. Isn't that what the rest of the world goes? They're like, yeah, this is what they do.
Adam Rowe
You've got the top two of all time. You've got Michael Jackson and Epstein.
Andrew Schulz
You guys fell off, you had a great run.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. And then that's what America is. America does every. And. And you just take it to one more level. So you always see what we're doing. And then it's like, so you heard.
Andrew Schulz
What Adam Rose said. Step it up, ladies. 2,000 guys in a day.
Adam Rowe
And that's the thing with this. You're saying, like, why can't we just marry these? You're forgetting that in the uk, yeah, our racism is directed towards Pakistani guys and people from South Asia rather than anyone else.
Andrew Schulz
Then who then?
Adam Rowe
Mexicans and black people.
Andrew Schulz
Is that. I don't know. I don't know.
Adam Rowe
I think we eclipse.
Andrew Schulz
I think, hey, we were punching Asians for a little bit.
Adam Rowe
You stopped that for a couple of weeks.
Andrew Schulz
They're fucking. They fight back.
Adam Rowe
It was scary.
Andrew Schulz
It was scary. Okay, so this is again, a lot of the news that we get from Great Britain is like, what, Elon tweets?
Adam Rowe
Yeah, exactly. You know, that's a problem.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. So we read the headline and we're like, grooming gangs. What the fuck is going on over here? I will say I looked into the thousand People, they fucked a little bit more and they're doing it. They are actually having sex with these guys.
Adam Rowe
Oh, they're 100% doing it.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. What is the reaction in, like, proper polite British circles about this?
Adam Rowe
I mean, I think you have, like, a bastardized idea of what, like, the politeness of Britain's like. Like, if you look like Britain, I'm.
Andrew Schulz
Not talking about Liverpool, but, like, the.
Adam Rowe
Facebook post about it. Like, she's a whore. She's a fucking whore. Like, let's call a spade a spade.
Andrew Schulz
She's a whore. But when's the next one?
Adam Rowe
Because there's still a thousand guys showing up to.
Andrew Schulz
So did you see the Jamaican mom yank her son off the line? That was. Yes, that was.
Adam Rowe
I'm next, mom. There was a guy who. So he was interviewed on, like, Good Morning Britain, which is like a. It's a morning show in the uk, and one of the guys that did it, one of the guys who says he went queued up, he went, joined the line, realized he was like, I'm gonna be here for a few hours. Went and ate dinner. So he was like, I've got time for a burger. Went and his burger came back to the line, said he got near the front and then was like, I can't do it on a full stomach.
Andrew Schulz
It's hard.
Adam Rowe
And they interviewed him at, like, 9:00 in the morning, being like, so tell us what your experience. He was like, I could just smell like cor. And it just. Oh, my God. I couldn't go through.
Andrew Schulz
There's some great porn stories coming out of Britain. The. The girl that had sex with the inmate. Oh, was that.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Was that real? What was the.
Adam Rowe
I can show you the video. Have you not seen it?
Andrew Schulz
I saw. I saw the video, but I mean, like, was it quickly?
Akash Singh
He's online.
Adam Rowe
I would find, like, you said.
Andrew Schulz
No, no, I saw the video and she was phenomenal. But she was so good that I thought it was kind of set up. She was, like, a pro. But it turns out she was actually a. What are they called? Corrections officer.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah, no, she's a prison officer. She's like a script we call.
Andrew Schulz
We call that a CEO. Corrections officer.
Adam Rowe
Oh, okay. Yeah. So like.
Andrew Schulz
Like, Rick Ross. What, the rapper? Used to be. Yeah, yeah. I don't think he did the porn. The last thing you want is a girl doing this and going, okay, okay. So that story was crazy.
Adam Rowe
Crazy. Especially because she, like, is it weird.
Andrew Schulz
What we get over here from you guys?
Adam Rowe
Like, you get, like, such a tiny.
Andrew Schulz
I know. I know.
Adam Rowe
I. I talk about this in, like, stand up context. It is so much harder for me to come out here than for you to come to the uk because we get all of your news, all of your media, every movie that's even remotely good from the States. We get every TV show.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. We are hyper aware of cultural events here. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
I remember a couple of years ago, I did Gotham.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And you were on the Bill.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I come off and there was one joke that just got all. And it was not. It was a joke I relied on. You know what I mean? And you were like, they just didn't get it. And it was a bit about, like, in the uk, homeless people drink cider. So the routine was like, I gave this guy some money and like a girl who had, like a bit of a stick up her ass was like, you're supposed to buy them food. The whole bit is like, oh, I think he wants cider.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And the audience just looked at me like I was speaking parcel tongue. They were like, what the. And then you were like, that's like a middle class, like, gay summer drinking and not drinking ski. And you went, try it tomorrow. With, like, whiskey or liquor. And I tried it, like, proper puffed it. Like, all it took was that. But those, like, we think, at least, I think we're very culturally similar countries. So you think you can just do your small things.
Akash Singh
I've been there. I've been there, Adam.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, this is crazy. This is. This is.
Akash Singh
We did the show in Manchester. Okay.
Andrew Schulz
I thought it was in Vancouver.
Adam Rowe
No.
Akash Singh
Oh, well, that's a different one. I don't even know if you knew about this because I barely even registered it until later. We do the show in Manchester.
Andrew Schulz
Right.
Akash Singh
Adam joins us.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Akash Singh
The lineup is great. It's Derek, it's Adam, it's me, and then it's you. Okay. And so Derek goes up, does a great job, and then. Oh, brother. What is even happening? Okay, so then Derek goes up, he does a great job. I'm gonna interrupt him by myself, shooting on my own story. Adam goes up, and I'm kind of listening because, like, I know Derek said, you know what I mean? And so I'm listening to Adam said. And I don't hear a word that he's saying. I'm hearing the whole thing. I don't understand anything. Like, his accent is sort of thick now in Liverpool or in Manchester, it was like you couldn't understand a word.
Adam Rowe
But also, so before, because I know where the story's going. Let me Just contextualize this. So that show was the day after you did our podcast?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Right. And you come to our podcast and you're in the studio with the whole career, and then you go to me, you want to come to show tomorrow? I was like, yeah, we'll come down. Me, Jack, who's the photographer, also, like, one of my best mates. Yeah, stay. Who's like, our podcast, like, admin guy. And then Carl, who's like my best mate, lead producer. So the four of us, like, we'll come down the show. Yeah, that's all I knew. And then, like, at the time, I'm sort of like, half going through a breakup. Like, it had been done, but I hadn't spoke to me dad for a while. Like, not that I hadn't spoke to him, but, like, I hadn't seen him. So the next day, I text me that. I was like, you want to go for lunch? Should we go for lunch tomorrow? And he's like, yeah, let's go. And he's like, what are you up to tonight? I was like, oh, I'm just going to Manchester to watch Schultz. He's in town and, like, gonna see the show. And my dad was like, we haven't had a pint for ages. Can we go and have a pint? So I went and had 10 pints of Guinness with my dad. And then on the way to Manchester, you text me and say, how long are you doing? Like, how long do you want to do tonight?
Andrew Schulz
Oh, I thought you knew that I was inviting you to.
Adam Rowe
No, no, no. To do a spot. Like, you're very casual with stuff like this in your head. You're like, oh, I've got a friend who lives down the road. Of course he's going to do a set. In my head, I'm like, I'm just going to watch. You've got two openers with you already. That's probably enough for you. I'm just gonna. I'm having a night in the theater watching a friend of mine. So I. I'm in the car and Carl's driving us, and I'm like. I'm like. I was like, oh. I was like, well, I'm not. Not doing the show.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah.
Adam Rowe
So I was like, I'll do it. And I turn up to Manchester and Tanya goes, can I get you anything? And I was like, I need four bottles of water. And then I walk in the dressing room and you're all meditating.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, that's right, we're asleep. Oh, we're.
Adam Rowe
So. I'm like, oh, God. So I spent.
Andrew Schulz
Jet lag is fucking so. Dude, that's so funny. Yeah, we turned all the lights out. We put, like, the thing down, and then we all tried to take a nap. And then Adam comes in. Ten Guinness teeth, like, what's up, lady?
Adam Rowe
So I'm like, right, I really need to sort my head out here. But then, like, whenever I'm talking to you guys or if I'm on stage in the States, my accent softens quite a bit.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, this is softened out.
Adam Rowe
This is so soft.
Akash Singh
He's doing an American accent.
Andrew Schulz
He's articul.
Adam Rowe
I honestly think I sound like Jay Z right now. I'm trying to do.
Andrew Schulz
I thought I'd be co. This is how you talk to the police.
Adam Rowe
But in Liverpool and Manchester especially, like, for the crowd, I know I can just.
Andrew Schulz
Just lay in.
Adam Rowe
I can just let go. So, like, what would normally take me, you know, 20 minutes to do out here, I could probably do in 10 in Manchester. So I go on, and I'm doing my set, and I don't know whether you want to tell the rest of the story, but I have a joke in my. In my set at the time about my. A girl. I'm breaking up with her, and I'm happy to see it go. So she's trying to upset me, and she said, while we were together, I've faked, like, half of my orgasms.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I'm like, that's a compliment. Like. Like, half. That's a whole every two balls. Like, it's insane. But Mark's got a similar bit about.
Akash Singh
Like, proving that I'm good at sex. Like, why I think I'm good at sex.
Adam Rowe
And he went on straight after me because he couldn't understand the word I was saying. He does that joke in the whole room's like, that last guy just did that.
Akash Singh
He fucking set me up. The beginning of the set, I'm doing.
Adam Rowe
I'm like, all right, this is fun.
Akash Singh
This is a good show.
Andrew Schulz
In case any of you guys only speak English, I'll do this version of the joke.
Akash Singh
And I get to the middle of it, and that joke just gets nothing. And I was like, huh, that's weird. And then I'm thinking in my head, like, did I forget the song setup?
Andrew Schulz
Did I up the joke, dude?
Akash Singh
And then I'm doing the rest of the set thinking, like, did I not. I'm not. I don't know any of these jokes.
Adam Rowe
It's just 3,000 people going, why has he just done that?
Andrew Schulz
So wait, did did you tell him afterwards or something?
Adam Rowe
I did, briefly. I was like, mark, you know that bit that, like, confused you in the middle? Like, I'd done the same sort of premise, like, before you went on, and he, like, he'd just come off stage, he was a bit frazzled, and he was like, oh, yeah, yeah, no worries. And then before, when we got here, like, when we were waiting around, like, he. He's like, oh, yeah, this. And I was like, you didn't really click onto this.
Andrew Schulz
I had. Yeah, go, go.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, that's it.
Andrew Schulz
I had no clue.
Akash Singh
I didn't register because I came on stage and he goes, oh, yeah, yeah, we have a similar bit. And I go, that's awesome, man.
Andrew Schulz
I didn't get.
Akash Singh
Like, sometimes comics are similar bits, you know, whatever. And I didn't realize that's what you were saying until five minutes ago.
Andrew Schulz
And I was like, you didn't? Didn't we have two shows?
Adam Rowe
Yeah, I only did the late show, though. I was drinking Guinness while you.
Akash Singh
And the first show was amazing. And the second show, that one show just bombed. And I was like, what the fuck?
Andrew Schulz
Carl's Mancio off stage, Mark was in. Or we were all in Vancouver. Not the last time. The time before.
Adam Rowe
This is legendary, dude.
Andrew Schulz
And Mark had a great bit about Uber, right? I won't. I won't tell the bit, but. And, you know, he would start the joke by saying, like, we were taking the Uber over here, right?
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Just to, like, make it feel really present and get everybody involved and so relatable. And Mark is telling the joke, and without realizing that there is no Uber in Vancouver. You did not take a fucking Uber here.
Adam Rowe
That would kill me, you know, because it doesn't just ruin that bit. The whole audience then goes, this guy's full of shit.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. Yeah.
Akash Singh
He's not even married.
Adam Rowe
Okay. He's not even.
Akash Singh
He doesn't even have a huge dick. Okay.
Andrew Schulz
That joke wasn't real.
Adam Rowe
Oh, Like, I would. I think I'd have got to the end of that and being like, oh, they don't have Uber here. Yeah, yeah, There's. There's a handful of times, because I come out here and I, like, you did actually realize on stage this is.
Akash Singh
How dumb I am. I didn't even realize it. I had to get halfway through the bit that I'm bombing through, and someone goes, we don't have Uber. Because I was like, maybe I'll just. I'll muscle through it and kind of get them back.
Andrew Schulz
Long drive. Oh, so bad.
Chris Distefano
Also, guys, show dates first of all Brea. We already sold out all four shows. I'm gonna try to get everybody who wants to see the show tickets though. So we're adding one. February 20th, Thursday we're gonna add that show. Also February 27th, 28th and March 1st, I'm gonna be in Zany's in Nashville. March 14th and 15th, I'm be in Tulsa, Oklahom, 21st and 22nd, Omaha, 28th and 29th, Columbus, Ohio. And then the April shows are in Tampa. The ones that I could not make because I had the flu are moved to April 11th and 12th. I think tickets are already almost sold out, so hurry up and buy those. If you bought tickets in January, you're good for now. But we're gonna add as many shows as we can. Love you guys. Akash singh.com for those dates and we're gonna add more soon. Thank you. Peace.
Adam Rowe
I'll google stuff now. Before, like, even before, like a club set over there. Like if I've got like something I'm gonna try out. But like I, I'm checking this, I'm checking this. Homeless people drink cider. Nope. Okay. I do do that.
Andrew Schulz
When I'm like, when I'm in another country. It's never like the concept of the joke. I'm like, do you know what this word means?
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah. You know, you, you've texted me a couple of times in the uk. Yeah, I remember when you text me about London, you were like, what the is? What are these people? Like, I can't get me finger on. Yeah. And I was like, no one where you are is a Londoner.
Andrew Schulz
That's the thing. Yeah, it was like everywhere else is so tribal. Like where you guys are from 30 minutes down the road, they're completely different groups of people. Then I'm in London, I'm like, what do they identify as?
Adam Rowe
They've all moved there. Yeah. So like, because London's, I suppose in a very similar way to New York. London has become so expensive and gentrified.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
That everyone who used to live here now lives there. And everyone who used to live there now lives there. So everyone gets pushed out by like two miles every time. The things get more and more and there's not much rent control. So you like. Whereas in like, you know, in New York, you'll get like a 97 year old Jewish woman on the Upper west side who's surrounded by like millionaires and she's just owned the place for 100 years. That doesn't happen in London. People do just get pushed out oh really? So in the middle of London, there's just nothing but people who've moved there? Pretty much.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, interesting.
Akash Singh
But sometimes those rules. I remember we went to Abu Dhabi and they were like, hey, just be careful about some of the things you say.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Akash Singh
Like they gave us like a little list. They were like, don't, don't talk about the, don't talk about Islam. Don't, don't speak about the, the royal family. And he goes, I'm not listening to that.
Andrew Schulz
He just didn't listen. I actually don't like it when they.
Adam Rowe
Tell me me makes you want to.
Andrew Schulz
Do it also, like, I complete ignorance if I don't really know.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
But if like I get sat down with the guys in the outfits and everything and they tell me all the rules, the outfits now I'm like, like, they just told me this dressed up and like, yeah, I feel like there would be something bad there. But then I. You get arrested for that.
Adam Rowe
So there's a comedy club that runs, it's called the Laughter Factory. It's in Dubai and Abu Dhabi because it's the same country, aren't they? UAE and it, the. They had a guy get arrested at one of their club shows about. It must be like 10, 15 years ago.
Andrew Schulz
Local guy or foreign?
Adam Rowe
No, from the UK. So they pretty much fly out UK guys occasionally. They'll get like a road comic from America out there.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And they're always like, just don't mention the royal family.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And they were doing like a two night run at one hotel and on the second night after the guy had done stuff on the first night.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
They sent people to the back to like. And as soon as he went to bring it up again because in his head he's like like, oh, I got away with it last night. And he goes through it again. They were like, come with us. And he was in police custody for like three days.
Akash Singh
Wow.
Andrew Schulz
What did he say?
Akash Singh
Yeah, I want to know.
Adam Rowe
I think it. He literally was like, I was told I can't talk about these guys. Who the do they think they are? I think he took that attitude and they were like, well, this is who the we think we are. Sit over there for three days.
Akash Singh
See, that's real royalty. Would you like, would you respect that royalty? I know you don't respect the English royalty. Okay.
Adam Rowe
But I mean, I don't respect. I mean the only reason I'll respect it while I'm out there weapons it is, is that I don't want to go to jail. You know, I'LL respect it because I've. I have to. Yeah. But I don't respect anybody who is born naturally better than everyone else. It's fucking insane.
Andrew Schulz
What do you think of that Meghan Markle? Like, what do people think of her out there?
Adam Rowe
It's a real, like, political issue. You. So the left are like, she's amazing. And the right are like, she's a.
Andrew Schulz
But for what? Why. Why is she amazing? What'd she do? A little ginge off your hands.
Adam Rowe
So. Because the left, generally speaking, hate the royal family and the working class people, a lot of them are just like the Royal Family. Like, what the. Why, why do we have to. Because she's sort of gone in as a normal person, broke it up, caused a bit of a problem.
Akash Singh
Oh.
Adam Rowe
And then it's sort of gone. I'm not adhering to your rules. I'll take your grandson and we' going back to America. Yeah. That is kind of fire when you put it that way.
Andrew Schulz
I'll take your grand.
Akash Singh
Watch him.
Andrew Schulz
Come with me. That's crazy.
Adam Rowe
So people are like, yeah, good for that.
Andrew Schulz
I'll teach your gr.
Adam Rowe
Shout out me.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, man, I never saw. That's fire. We hate her here for some reason. I think it's just the idea, like, Americans, really. I think it's the same feeling as, like, we really resent people who haven't seemingly earned their. Their success.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
You know, like the idea of, like, nepotism or heirs or the Royal family.
Adam Rowe
Takes the royal family and you should like it.
Andrew Schulz
We don't respect the Royal family here. Yeah. We don't give a.
Adam Rowe
We don't now. When the Queen died, they canceled comedy clubs across the uk.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, no.
Adam Rowe
And like, friends of mine are like, out of work. I wasn't even working that weekend, but I just put like three shows on and left building was like, if you've lost gigs this weekend, we'll split the door between everyone. I was like, that. That's just not happening.
Andrew Schulz
They canceled the comedy show because they'.
Adam Rowe
Have you seen the video of, you know, the musical Wicked?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Do you know how it opens? Do you know the first song in Wicked?
Andrew Schulz
No.
Adam Rowe
So the first. The first line is, she's dead. And it's like, good news. So the night that the Queen died, the guy who owns the theater had to go on stage. There's a video of this, of him doing this. He goes on stage before the show and goes, hey, we're really respectful about the Queen and stuff, but we've still got to do the full show. So Just so you all know, if this is the first time you've seen w Wicked, this is like a do. As many of you are no doubt aware, Her Majesty the Queen sadly passed away earlier this afternoon, and we send deepest condolences to her family at the respect of Buckingham Palace. All shows are continuing to perform this evening. Therefore, tonight's show will be performed as usual and as written. Good news.
Andrew Schulz
She's dead.
Adam Rowe
That's the opening line.
Andrew Schulz
The Queen is dead.
Adam Rowe
The Wicked Witch.
Andrew Schulz
That's great.
Akash Singh
And the fact that they had to preface it is so funny.
Adam Rowe
Some guy like, never been on stage before in his life. They're like, you're gonna have to go.
Akash Singh
It almost makes it worse because I bet you half the people are like, yeah, we're just seeing Wicked. We're not thinking about it. You know what I mean? And then the fact he's like, I know this sounds like we're happy the Queen's dead.
Adam Rowe
It only takes one person to complain though, doesn't it? And then it's a news story, so that's better. They do it.
Akash Singh
Oh, that's unreal. I didn't realize you were such a theater fan.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, like, you love musicals. I've seen quite a lot. Yeah. A few years. I'd never watched it until about maybe like six years ago. And then I heard Hamilton. All I knew about Hamilton was it was a like a hip hop musical. And I said, I really want to go and see that. And an ex girlfriend got me tickets to go and see it. And I remember being at the end of the first song, like, this is incredible. I couldn't believe it. And then I like watching them. I'm.
Andrew Schulz
You want to know how incredible Hamilton is?
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Once we went to like a private dance club in Hawaii. Strip club. Strip club. But there's like a little private room where the strippers come in.
Adam Rowe
He's trying to be.
Andrew Schulz
He's trying to feed nice. And you, they give you an aux cord and you get to control the music. And I go, mark, you know what you got to do? He's like, I got it. I see Mark go up to the aux, plugging in, and the next thing I hear is, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun. How does a bastard son of a floor. I was saying, like five minutes we were just singing and dancing, and the strippers were all just sitting down, like, so confused. They tipped down. They did, they did. They were trying to, like, give us drugs. They were just like, I think if we settle them down, they'll let us get naked.
Adam Rowe
I've been banging on about it for years. That I really liked it. And the. The lads we do our podcast with have been like, I can't think of anything worse. And I was like, you've just got to see it. Like, it's. It's great.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And then there was a touring version of it that came to Manchester, and I was like, look, we're going podcast night out, few beers, and we're going to see Hamilton. And the cast was so bad. And so I was sat next to Finn, who's one of our producers, and he loves it as well. And, like, the. Carl and Dan was sat behind us and they'd been, like, dragged to see this thing, you know what I mean? And we were about halfway through and I. I just looked at. And Finn was already looking at me. And Finn was like, this is a lot gayer than I remember. I was like, yeah, it really is. And we got to the interval and went up and I tried to be like, so, what do you think? And Carl and Dan were like, are you fucking insane? It was so bad. If that was the first time I'd ever seen it, I wouldn't like it.
Andrew Schulz
Is it weird to have that showing in England? England? No, like, the historical count of the Revolutionary War.
Adam Rowe
So, like, this is.
Andrew Schulz
There's no way you learn how we learn it.
Adam Rowe
No, we don't learn it at all.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Really?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, we learn about World War II and that we won and you guys kind of helped. And that's pretty much from, like, years ago.
Andrew Schulz
They lie to you in school.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Or they lie to you.
Andrew Schulz
No way. Well, somebody had to drop those nukes on the right. Somebody had to do it.
Akash Singh
You guys had to.
Andrew Schulz
Had to stop that war that was already over.
Adam Rowe
We. We don't learn anything about it. So, like.
Andrew Schulz
So we didn't help out at all.
Adam Rowe
In the way you learned in World War II?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah.
Adam Rowe
It's like the Americans sort of helped at the end, but this whole, like, we would be speaking German if it wasn't for America. It's just like. That's not really true.
Andrew Schulz
Really?
Adam Rowe
Yeah, it's just like we were going to sort of, you know, like, it would have been. We might have won anyway. Yeah, we. We won it. Yeah. That's. Britain is like. No, we. We beat the Nazis. Winston Churchill defeated the Nazis.
Akash Singh
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. He also made it a million.
Andrew Schulz
Did he take out a mill?
Adam Rowe
Like, it might have been. I don't know the exact number, but it was a lot.
Andrew Schulz
It was a lot.
Adam Rowe
They don't Love Churchill.
Andrew Schulz
They don't love them at all.
Akash Singh
So you just learn history through musicals.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Akash Singh
He thinks Alexander Hamilton is black. I think to this day he's like.
Adam Rowe
What'S really funny about that is I know he isn't, but in my head they all are. Like, I have to like, when you.
Andrew Schulz
Look at the $10 bill, you're like, who the fuck is.
Adam Rowe
Like I have to do you genuinely have to correct that? In my own head I'm like, yeah, Aaron Baird is not a 4 foot 9 black guy.
Andrew Schulz
You know what's crazy? Hamilton in America was like not a very. In our generation was not a very popular figure.
Adam Rowe
Totally.
Andrew Schulz
Like they were going to replace him. I think on.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, I think that was the plan.
Andrew Schulz
And Aaron Burr, the extent of Burr was a Got milk commercial. Do you remember that commercial? He's eating a cookie and he doesn't have any milk. And he like calls in some hotline to like win something thing. And he goes. And they go, who is the person that had a duel with Hamilton and then shot him and then killed Alexander Hamilton? And the guy goes, he can't get it out because he doesn't have milk. Do you guys not remember this commercial?
Adam Rowe
Vaguely remember.
Andrew Schulz
Now you're saying, I remember this my entire childhood going, I don't know who the that guy is. And then I remember seeing Hamilton, I was like, oh.
Adam Rowe
What a legacy. Do you know what's really interesting about like the American Civil War thing is real quick.
Andrew Schulz
Sorry. So. So when, when you're watching a play of like the American Revolution in England, is there like a complete disconnect to an event that happened in history? Like, I don't think Americans are there yet to like have a play. Like if there was a Vietnamese play about how they won the war, I don't think it'd be like celebrated in America.
Adam Rowe
I. I just think if. Yeah, genuinely, even though we know it's not, it sort of like feels like fiction. Not that we're saying it's like lies. It just feels like I love it. Do you?
Andrew Schulz
It feels like wicked things are so silly.
Adam Rowe
It's just not like a.
Andrew Schulz
And it doesn't look like you're watching a loss.
Adam Rowe
No. And it's not like it doesn't feel like that. Like we're so small compared to you guys. Like it doesn't make any sense that we would run this place. Like, to me, like if I actually, like, I've never really thought about it, but I'm thinking about it right now.
Andrew Schulz
And yet the idea we were a colony of you? Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, the idea that, like. Like, I don't even want the King to run Liverpool. Like, why would he have control of Baltimore?
Andrew Schulz
The King is the best character in it.
Adam Rowe
Oh, it's so funny.
Andrew Schulz
I mean, it's amazing.
Adam Rowe
It's so funny. But like, you guys, I guess, because you're taught of it as like, this victory. And it's part of, like, the American thing is like, oh, we got our independence and we.
Andrew Schulz
Rebellion is like part of the identity. So any story that has rebellion, we get all excited about.
Adam Rowe
Totally. And it's. It's. It's the only time it's ever been, like, sort of contextualized for me. Like, that is. And it was actually. It was to do with this show. So I went to Nashville in the summer at the end of my tour. Me. Alfie opens for me and he's also a brilliant comic. And Jackie was me tour manager. We went to Nashville for a week to just let rip, drink, music, whatever. And it was Jordan CMA Fest, like the Country Music Association Festival. So they have, like, stadium shows. And I was like, well, on the Friday we'll go to. To that. We'll go and see that. And we're in the stadium, and I go to go the bar and get some drinks, and as I get to the top of the stairs, some, like, real Southern guy, like, dressed like. He, like. He's. I'm wearing the bleachers, you know, so. And he's got like, you know, flannel shirts on, trucker cap. And he's like, hey, man, can I get a quick photo with you? And I was like, yeah, I've seen you a while ago on flagrant. I've seen some of your stuff. I like it, man. I like it. Can we get a photo? And we take a photo and I then go, carry on to go. And he goes, hey, Adam, Adam, don't forget the Civil War. Don't forget the revolution, the Revolutionary War. And I was like, what? And he goes, we won, man. And I was like, I get to the bar to Alfie and Jack. I was like, some guy just asked me for a photo and then started yelling about some war.
Andrew Schulz
I loved it.
Adam Rowe
I loved it.
Andrew Schulz
I love you, but I'm so interested. That's the most American.
Adam Rowe
So he'd see me on you. Yeah, yeah, that's great.
Andrew Schulz
And shout out to him. I want like, yeah. This is like, I guess a peculiar question, but it's the observation I had when I was in. When I was in Britain is there's all these tiny Little towns that have kind of evolved independently from this idea of England. Right.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And then the empire kind of swallows them all up.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
But they have their own identities.
Adam Rowe
Some of them do.
Andrew Schulz
Some of them do. Whereas like the states in America are added after the 13 as. America. America.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Like if you're too. You. You don't have an identity outside of us.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Maybe Texas, because they almost did their own thing, but it's rare. So I wonder if that changes things where, like, you don't really personalize like what the Greater England did because there are people there a thousand years ago just doing their thing anyway.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. And to be fair, you know, like.
Andrew Schulz
Are there loyalists in Liverpool for the Crown?
Adam Rowe
Yeah. But it's a, it's a very small minority.
Andrew Schulz
Right.
Adam Rowe
And like, like, what do you think of them of like the, of the loyalist of the Crown? Don't speak to them. Yeah, they're not in my life. I just hear they exist. You know, I like when. And this, this obviously when I'm doing like podcast and stuff in America, like this, like people do want to talk about the British thing. I'm probably a really bad person to talk to about it because of the way Liverpool sees the rest. And I'm not as like, hardline as some Scouses are with this.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
You know, like, like there's a lot of like people from Liverpool who when the England football team plays, they actively want them to win. Like if England are playing Spain.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
There's Scousers who will buy a Spain jersey and go the pub in the Spain jersey and be like, come on, Spain. Because they, they hated that much with me. I kind of want England to win. And the second they lose, I'm like, Whereas like Liverpool can lose a game and it'll take me a month to get over it.
Andrew Schulz
Got it.
Adam Rowe
Like there's such a. This is quite like, I do like, like I, I don't really like the, the uber English attitude.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I think a lot of the pride that like people on the center right. To the right of like British politics have is rooted in racism and colonialism. Really. It just is. It's like we conquered the world. It's like that shouldn't be your only reason to be proud of the country because that's not actually a good thing.
Andrew Schulz
Right.
Adam Rowe
So there's a lot of stuff to not like.
Andrew Schulz
It's debatable. You go to some that England never got to and you're like, you could have used a little. Used a little bit.
Adam Rowe
I just got back from India And I'm telling you, we have left that place in a mess.
Andrew Schulz
You didn't go before. It was crazy before, honestly.
Akash Singh
They got a train now.
Andrew Schulz
They love that thing.
Adam Rowe
The trainees go, by the way. Nobody I was in Rio got train, by the way.
Akash Singh
What's so British? See the colonial comes out, it's the best train.
Andrew Schulz
But when you see them on top of the train riding it, aren't you like that was worth the jewel. Like they're enjoying that thing. So imagine they got a roller coaster. Oh, if you dropped a roller coaster In Mumbai, dude. 1, 6, 4.
Adam Rowe
We're not even hungry anymore. We're having too much fun. Tea. That's insane.
Akash Singh
Don't have to worry about it throwing up either.
Adam Rowe
It's perfect. I just don't like it's funny. So a couple like when.
Andrew Schulz
But that's good perspective to have. Like, I think a lot of Americans don't know that about England. I think that we assume that every country is kind of like us, incredibly proud of themselves. And that's it, that's the identity. Yeah. We're divided it in America but for the most part Americans are like, it's America. And then the rest of y'all.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Whereas you know, you go to Spain and there are parts of Spain that are like, we're not Spanish.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, like, like Barcelona, the bass country.
Akash Singh
You just had riots right? In Liverpool like a couple months ago.
Adam Rowe
A few months ago. That was, that was the first time that like Liverpool sort of had a grooming party, entertain. Like we can talk about this story if you want, but it's bleak.
Andrew Schulz
Like what do you mean?
Akash Singh
Oh, really?
Adam Rowe
So there's a guy called.
Andrew Schulz
We won't joke around about it at all.
Adam Rowe
Huh?
Andrew Schulz
We're not going to joke around about it.
Akash Singh
All this is going to go point.
Adam Rowe
It's, it's so bleak, really. So fresh. Oh, like a guy went into a, a 7 year old's like dance class and stabbed three 7 year old girls to death.
Akash Singh
Oh, I didn't know that's what it's about.
Andrew Schulz
Great job, Mark.
Adam Rowe
The riots and the guys called Axel Ruderback Ghana and he's the son of immigrants and although his family are Christian, there's a widespread belief that his, his motivations are rooted in Islam. Even though that's not like being actually released as information. Everyone's just gone, look. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And you know, he's like, he stabbed one of these girls 122 times.
Andrew Schulz
Holy.
Adam Rowe
Like, like it is one of the ways.
Andrew Schulz
So what happens to somebody like That. I mean, you kill him, right?
Adam Rowe
There's no death penalty penalty.
Andrew Schulz
Well, what do you do with people?
Adam Rowe
He's been put in prison for a minimum of 52 years, which means technically in 52 years he could be released.
Andrew Schulz
But somebody in prison will kill him.
Adam Rowe
Right, There's a. I got sent a voice Note today on WhatsApp. So, like, when stuff happens in the UK, like, they'll like, you'll get like forwarded many times as like a thing on WhatsApp, and it's a voice note saying he's already been absolutely battered in prison, but people won't kill him, they'll just make it is time in there impossible.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, really?
Adam Rowe
And, like, the correction officers will be.
Andrew Schulz
Like, they look the other way.
Adam Rowe
They'll, they'll go. They won't just look the other way. They will go and get the two most dangerous guys in the prison and be like, you know, in cell seven. Do you know what he's in for? Yeah, well, the doors open.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Whoa.
Andrew Schulz
But, yeah, yeah.
Akash Singh
So the riots were about that. And then people were.
Adam Rowe
The riots were anti immigration riots, being like, look, what happens when we have borders open is this guy's parents get in, they have him here and then he goes and kills. But again, again, it's because, look what, what this guy's done is horrific. And it's very hard to have this conversation, especially because this happened in Southport, which is eight miles from where I live. Like, it's, it's up the road, May maybe 20 at maximum. It's up, like, Southport is where on a sunny day in the summer, that's where me and my family would go. There's like a theme park there with roller coasters, no Indians on them. Absolutely. And we go there for the day.
Akash Singh
Yet not after this.
Adam Rowe
And it's, it's, it's absolutely heroin. Awful. It's one of the worst stories of my lifetime that I can remember. And because people got real angry and they had that. They, they were given a reason, Right. He did it because of this. So then the protests were. And riots were huge. But then there's turning up to these protests and riots with like six packs of Stella and they're being like, hey, we're at the riots and it's like, you don't give a. You want a reason to go and smash a town up and get drunk with your mates. You're a thug. Some people genuinely care about the safety of children and, you know, they're there for the right reasons. But a good chunk of these riots where People are just seeing an opportunity to go and get Hammond on a Tuesday night and smash up a place with no retribution.
Andrew Schulz
That's the. Yeah, that's the tricky thing is that, like, a certain amount of people are going to be crazy.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Right. Like. And that is going to be consistent across whatever culture.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And when you have people that are entering your country. Country, you know, a certain percentage of them are going to be crazy. And the idea, I imagine, with an open border is that there's no way to discern who is or isn't now. There's no way to tell if somebody's kid is going to be crazy.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
You know what I mean?
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
But I get. I get the. The anger that somebody has in a situation where, like, we need. We can at least control this if we just stop people from coming in.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And. But you're not going to control crazy. They're going to be fucking Jimmy Savills totally. Right. He's going to be monsters. No matter what.
Adam Rowe
That. Like, I think the job. Obviously this is a more serious conversation, but I think the job of a comedian often is to stand right in the middle of the spectrum of conversation and talk and laugh at how both sides of any conversation are discussing it. Because on the right, there's always going to be hypocrisy. On the left, there's always going to be hypocrisy. And I'm talking about any spectrum there. And until both sides, and we're so far from this at a minute, because everything is genuinely, really divided, like, conversationally, until both sides find a way to be able to go. Do you know what? You've got a good point there. But. But that, that.
Andrew Schulz
That's not gonna happen.
Adam Rowe
We're so far from.
Andrew Schulz
All right, guys, stay break for a second. I'm very excited to have this sponsor on the pod. I briefly mentioned them in the Vivek episode. Vivek was talking about the importance of compound interest without being too, like, nerdy and boring. I. I think it's really cool with this company Acorns has done. What they're trying to do is get you to actually invest, not gamble. What a lot of us do with the stock market right now. Not me, because I don't know what the hell I'm doing is gamble. Pick a stock. You try to see where it goes. You're not Nancy Pelosi, you're not any of these other politicians. You don't know what's going to happen to market and you're trying to time it and you know who else is trying to time it? Billion and trillion dollar hedge funds and money managers. Like you're not going to beat them. But what you can do is you can invest with acorns. And by invest, I mean put money in and let compound interest work for you. You put in and it's the long term. It's over 10 years, it's over 20 years. Okay? Vivek was talking about it very eloquently, but the idea is, is you're going to invest, going to let the American economy work for you over a long period of time. How are you going to set your kids up for college? How are you going to set yourself up for retirement? The strategy here is long term, okay? If you're looking for quick money, that's not acorns. Don't use acorns. But if you're looking to set yourself up and you're looking to provide for yourself in the future and let the American economy work with you. And by the American economy, I mean they're investing this money over tons and tons and tons and tons of stocks, okay? And over the long term, it looks so far so good. Hopefully Donnie T. Takes it to the moon. Hopefully it doesn't take it down in any way. But over the long term you see that growth. And if you want to be invested in that growth, which you should because that's what these rich people are doing, they're getting all this money because they're leaving their money and getting that compound interest year over year.
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Adam Rowe
Dick hard.
Andrew Schulz
Dick hard. Blue Chew. Same active ingredients since I'd see Alice or Viagra. But this is the chew. This one that we rock with. Okay, we need to lay down a pie. When you lay down a pie, okay, we need to hit him with the pie. You go to blue2.com okay, you make sure that you use that promo code flagger you get your first month free. All you gotta do is pay the five dollar shipping. Okay? This is the, this an absolute no brainer. You got a big date this weekend. She already knows she's putting out. She sends you the videos, she's sending you the ass shaking. She tells you what she's going to do with it. Rock up, rock up my boys and have a great time. Now let's get back to the show. Funny to see even in America, like we put out this piece, the intro to an episode basically right after the inauguration. And you know, for the last four years people cried. You know, a lot of times they were crying about the Democrats and they're crying about, you know, people making fun of, you know, who you can joke about or whatever and we're clowning Elon because he had that fucking autistic moment where he's, you know, throwing a fucking Nazi slew. Did he mean to tell everybody he's a Nazi in that moment? Of course not. Right.
Adam Rowe
He didn't mean to. I. I do think he meant to do what he did, though. I think it's also like trolling.
Andrew Schulz
That's. That's.
Adam Rowe
I'm like, let's see what I can.
Andrew Schulz
That's debatable. Maybe that's the case, maybe not. And then we can even have that discussion. I don't think that he. That that was what he did. But there is a version where you could just be like, I did some dumbass shit right there. Right? Like, you can just acknowledge it. You don't have to be like, you guys are stupid. I can't believe you do that, or find all these excuses. Well, he was technically doing a Roman Solito.
Adam Rowe
Like, that is what the Nazis were doing, though. Yeah. So when people are like, it's a Roman sleuth. The Nazis back then were like, we're doing a Roman salute.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, it's the same. They're not different.
Andrew Schulz
Right, right. I guess, I guess, I guess Hitler.
Adam Rowe
Was like, we all do the Roman salutes. Like, you by you going, I'm not doing the Hitler one. I'm doing the Roman one. That's like saying, you know, my point.
Andrew Schulz
Is, like, there was all these right wing guys like, oh, you can't make fun of anybody. And what happened to comedy? We should be in front of whatever. And the second the jokes are about Elon, it's like, oh, dude, you used to be funny. This is fucked up. You just became the guy you were criticizing for the last four years.
Adam Rowe
Ben Shapiro, talking about Bill Bear.
Andrew Schulz
What did he say?
Adam Rowe
He said, I've been a Bill Bear fan for years. I thought, he's absolutely brilliant. I went to see him in Florida. He's gone, woke. Like, Bill Bear's gone.
Andrew Schulz
Well, this is another thing. Like, there are narratives that happen when a comedian gets to, like, a sweet. A certain size. Right. A certain level of success. Like, I haven't seen it happen with me. I've seen it happen with other people. Like, and these narratives just sprout up. And you have to be a certain level of success for the narratives to even pop up. And what's interesting about Burr is, like, Burr is one of the most prolific comedians that's ever existed. And I've seen this thing happen. Like, oh, he's going, whoa, girl. This is. It's Honestly, I think I. This is my take on it. It's like when feminism, like the pendulum swung way too far in one direction and you could never feel like you could make fun of women. And women were saying ins these, like with the protection of feminism. If you call them out on it, then you're a sexist and you're a bigot. So everybody was really scared. Comedians who had jokes about the absurdity of this extreme feminism gained a lot of popularity because you could get the sentiment that we all had out. I mean, I definitely benefited from that. I had plenty of jokes about that. And Bill was amazing at that. Prolific at that. Now the pendulum has swung back. We don't need to make fun of feminine this all the time.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
We realize that they're. So now he's going just making fun of whatever he wants to make fun of right now. But because he doesn't offer that, like, social utility for you, now he's gone woke and now he's not funny.
Adam Rowe
It's. I also think you never liked him.
Andrew Schulz
You like that he made you feel good with your feelings.
Adam Rowe
Yes. He valued your opinions.
Andrew Schulz
You never. You never respected the craft or the art of comedy.
Adam Rowe
Totally. And as a comic for me, like when I'm watching comedy, like, and when I sort of. It's not even necessarily the most I ever laugh. Yeah, it. But the most respect I ever have for a comedian is when I do not know what. I don't think you should ever know what a comedian's real opinion on any subject is. Like when a comic brings a subject up and it could be, oh, I'm going to talk about trans people now or this or whatever, when I know what your next 4 minutes of opinions are going to be. Bored. I'm done with it. And I do think some comics get to a certain level and we don't have to name names. I hate Saginoff comics and stuff, like publicly and whatever. But the certain comics who are big, like arena level comics and they bring shit up now.
Andrew Schulz
And I'm like, we know the angle.
Adam Rowe
I know. I know exactly what you think on this, even as a comic. And it would be so much funnier if you. If Bill Bear in his new hour is doing an hour about why women are great, that'll be the best thing.
Andrew Schulz
He'S done in January. So funny as long as it's funny. I don't care if you're woke as long as it's funny.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. I'm assuming a baseline that the comic is getting lost in its footage.
Andrew Schulz
Exactly. And that's what I hate about the criticism. Right. It's like you can be funny and have a progression, aggressive line of thinking. Yeah. There was a guy named Jon Stewart that did it really effectively for the last two, two decades probably. So, yeah, it's, it's like, it's really, it's a shame when you see these people that they seem to, like, be fighting for comedy, and everybody can get these jokes. And the second the jokes are kind of against their point of view, all of a sudden now that person has completely changed.
Adam Rowe
Everything's funny until it's about your thing. And, like, there's certain stuff people could bring up that I would be offended by, but you just gotta, you know, you got to just. I, I, I've said this before on another podcast years ago. This is how I view comedy. This is like my sort of the way I like to think about it. It's like, we're lawyers, right? We're like defense lawyers. And the bit is our client. And our job isn't to worry about whether they're guilty or not. Our job is to get them off.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, sure.
Adam Rowe
Our job is to convince the jury that this is an innocent thing. And it doesn't matter whether, like, I take any client on. You could say, this is, this is what my opinion is on this. Got to win the jury over. And that's why bad comics who are like, oh, that the crowd are too woke for me. It's like, no, no, you're a bad lawyer. You couldn't get your client on. You couldn't convince a jury of your peers that your premise was innocent.
Akash Singh
If you had an attorney say that, be like, dude, you're going to jail because that jury's so woke.
Andrew Schulz
Jury sucks.
Akash Singh
That's not good.
Adam Rowe
You said you'd save my life. Yeah, look at the Woke.
Andrew Schulz
No, you're 100% right. It's, it's, it's. Yeah. Comedy should be like your emotional reaction to something.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
It doesn't have to be what you know to be right or wrong. It's how you feel in the moment. Like all the old Borscht Belt comics, take my wife, please. You don't really want someone to take your fucking wife. But there's moments where you're like, get this bitch away from me. Right. And that's the sentiment of the joke. So as long as you're honoring that emotional reaction to the joke, it doesn't matter what's fucking true or not true. And he's Ben Shapiro types who, I don't know why we would give a flying fuck what they think about comedy anyway. Like, he literally says, facts don't care about your feelings. Comedy should not deal with facts at all. Like, the facts. Guys, stay out of comedy. We are liars. You know what I mean? I want the liar comments. I want the comments. I'm gonna lie, and it's gonna be funny for the next hour. I'm like, I like you. You are interesting to me. You know like when Patrice O'Neill talks about harassment day?
Adam Rowe
Oh, it's. Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
He's not literally saying we should sexually harass women one day out of the year. But be funny if you, like, that's all comedy has to be. It'd be funny if.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Andrew Schulz
I don't want to do this. We got the grooming gangs, and we got the girls that fucking everybody. It'd be funny if we connected them. Tell the grooming gangs, show up at Bonnie Blues, next thing. It'd be funny if. Why is that so hard for these nerds like Shapiro to understand?
Adam Rowe
Because they have super autistic, like, ones and zeros, guy.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. And the comedy is in ones.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. It's twos and threes and fours and fives and, like.
Andrew Schulz
Well, now you're exciting them, you're saying. But, yes, 100%, it's between the line. It's that. It's that. It's that emotions, that feeling, it's everything in between. Yeah.
Akash Singh
Most people have a thing where they go, there's nothing funny about blank. You know what I mean? And comics go, no, there's something funny about you.
Adam Rowe
About, like, this.
Andrew Schulz
And that's why we do it. Yeah. You're not a comedian.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Ben Shapiro, you're the guy who says if comedians are too woke or not.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Akash Singh
That you have a new girlfriend, right?
Adam Rowe
Yes.
Akash Singh
Has she seen your old set where you talk about your old girlfriend?
Andrew Schulz
Well, I can't wait for this breakup.
Adam Rowe
All my cards are with me. Like, speaking of understanding, just on my.
Akash Singh
Phone, I wonder if she's seen the old set and is like, I better act right, bro.
Andrew Schulz
Like, if she wants to be famous, act very wrong. Yeah, you. You gotta be careful for the Toxics.
Adam Rowe
The. The. The. The girl I'm with now is. We've been friends for a few years, so she. We were friends actually, when I was working that stuff out. So she's seen, like, an early warm up for that show. We've been together since July. And, yeah, she's. She's. She's great.
Andrew Schulz
Asian. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
No. Is that an eye joke? Go back to your roots.
Andrew Schulz
That is hilarious. Asian girls love you. They're just like, how does he.
Adam Rowe
They just have to sleep on this side of the bed.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, bro.
Adam Rowe
Now you're like the Taylor Swift of comics, man. Get in a relationship, break up.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, I got a new special.
Adam Rowe
You do one hour and that sticks forever, bro.
Andrew Schulz
That's funny, though. I mean, you got to talk about your. It was a crazy story, though.
Adam Rowe
I like. Yeah. And gentlemen, genuinely, like, for legal reasons, I have to stress. It was fictional.
Andrew Schulz
Yes.
Akash Singh
Yeah, it is.
Adam Rowe
Like, it's a totally fictional. Completely, completely fictional.
Andrew Schulz
There's no truth in it at all.
Adam Rowe
No, no, no.
Andrew Schulz
And that's why any resemblance to real.
Adam Rowe
Life is purely coincidental.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, exactly.
Akash Singh
Don't you need those coincidences?
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Akash Singh
You have an hour of coincidences.
Andrew Schulz
You're, like, wild.
Adam Rowe
Like, my mum's an alcoholic in real life. And in the show.
Andrew Schulz
What the fucking sentences.
Adam Rowe
I could have written anything, but it was just. It came.
Andrew Schulz
That's a funny thing to put in the beginning of a special. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Y.
Andrew Schulz
For legal reasons, all of this is fiction. Yeah. That's even more enticing. Yeah, Right.
Adam Rowe
It's. Yeah, it was. It was interesting putting a special like that out because you know that for me, that hour. So the hour you're talking about there is called Juicy, and that is more of like an. An Edinburgh Festival type hour of stand up, where it's, you know, it's one long story. I'm sat down for a lot of it. It, like, we shot it in a small room very deliberately, and that is not the way I've came up. Although I, you know, I've gone to the Edinburgh Festival and done hours and stuff. I've never really, before that show, done like, a long narrative hour and, like, figured it. The. The reaction from, like, people who followed me for years and, like, fans of, like, our podcast and stuff was like this, like, I love all you stand up. I love all your jokes. I love all the routines. This is just different. And the fact that there's, like, there's genuine, like, pieces of you and there's moments where you're not even trying to be funny and you're just talking to us, it's a totally different thing and we want more of that. And then with the. So I put a special out in November, the most recent one, and that's a lot more clubby again, because I wanted to just go back out and do what I've done for years. I do think the next show I do will probably be another, like, narrative One, I want to like, try another story and try and do another thing. It's. Yeah. The way it was received. Like when. When you can really sort of put a piece of you, like, and be, you know, talk about your actual life and what you actually felt at moments and proper give, like, give people a real story. The reaction to it. Like if, like the special I've just put out, I'm really proud of it. I think it's great. A lot of people have messaged me and being like, this is so funny. Love it. They're sharing it. This is the best, like, the funniest artist stuff I've seen. When I was getting messages about Juicy, they were like paragraphs in the dms, like, yeah, this. It made me.
Andrew Schulz
Stories affect people differently in general. Like, if somebody walks in the room right now and goes, guys, I got a crazy story, we're gonna give them about like two minutes of our attention, no matter what. It's like our earliest form of digesting information. Or we could like write down. It was just people saying, yo, this is kind of wild. Yeah, I mean, the Odyssey who the remembered that entire story. But we're hardwired to remember these things that have this long form narrative. You know, it's like if we wanted little chunks of things, movies wouldn't exist.
Adam Rowe
No.
Andrew Schulz
But when you sit down for two hours, it's this one beautiful long story that kind of reflects, you know, whether our. Our lives are led, you know, so. But mixing things up, I think is important too. You got to always keep your fans on their toes. I think, like, once they start expecting something.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
There can be a little boredom that comes with it. But they show up and they see this hour and it's all these punchy jokes and they're like, oh, well, that's right. Oh, he also does this. And then you hit them next time with something completely different.
Adam Rowe
That's. That's what I want to do. Like the. The hour. I've just browse. I like, I love doing it. I worked with Alfie again, who like helped me with Juicy, like, directed it. He was at like a lot of. He was also opening for me, so he was at a lot of the tour shows being like, hey, you've done this. A little different to last night. Last night was better and stuff like that. He's really good for that. And we shot this most recent one in my, like, Bucket List venue. I know, like, your Bucket List venue was msg and that's why I flew out for that with Carl. That was. It was so good that used to be there for that.
Andrew Schulz
Thank you, man.
Adam Rowe
But my bucket list, the first venue I ever seen comedy in was the Liverpool Empire Theater. It's a British comic called Ross Noble. Oh, yeah. And I. I was 16. I just, like, sort of found out, like, live comedy was a real thing. It wasn't just, like, something that was on the TV every now and then, and I loved it. And that was sort of the start of like, oh, I can do this. And I remember, like, when I started, I was like, by the time I'm 30, I want to headline that room.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
By the time I did that, I was 32. But the two years for Covid, I'm taking that off. And we did two, like, I, you know, incredible, like, hometown sports back home. So we did two shows in one night in the Empire theaters. That was nearly 5, 000 tickets. And then later in the tour, we did the arena. And I've got the footage from that where, you know, the jokes are a little different. And, like, we can release some clips from that eventually. But the special shots to just, like, the guy, like, Will, who's, like, our camera guy at our podcast and, like, our production company. Company, like, he's filmed with me for years now, and he knows what I want from a. A special. Like, a big thing for me is there's always movement in the shots. I never want a camera on a tripod that's, like, got no one doing this with it. Like, if it's static, I want a slow zoom. If like, like. And he not only, like, just got what I wanted. The level to which he's filmed it, the. The shots, the backdrop, the haze is the perfect, like.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
It's so good. The audiences were fucking incredible. And I'm so happy with how it's came out. Yeah. And it. I'm really happy with it as an hour to stand up, but just as a. A video. It's.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
You could watch it with the sound off. And I think you'd like it because he shot it so well. And I'm so proud. Like, we did that with my team.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And that genuinely comes, like, genuinely from, like, what you guys do. Do you know what I mean? Like, watching people, like, who just go, oh, I'm just gonna make it myself.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And, like, I. I shopped it round and we got a couple of bites, and not the bites that I wanted. And I was like, it's going on YouTube. I want people to see here.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. And the reason I came out to the States for these Two weeks. I wanted to start again.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Where no one really knows me.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And be going on in comedy clubs where they're like, who the it? And I've got to win them over again because like, most comedy clubs in the uk, like, most comedy clubs in the uk, like, I. I could probably get that a little bit, but they'll always be like 10 or whatever. And if I do it in Liverpool at my home club, half the room are like, oh, yeah, there's Adam.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So I just wanted to like being in New York and Austin and being like, I'm starting again with clubby stuff for now because we're about to go on like a podcast tour where I've got to do 20 minutes.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
But in the back of my head, I'm making. I'm sitting in cafes all day over here being like, what's this next, like, long.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Story to give.
Andrew Schulz
And it's got to be something real. Like, you can't make a story out of nothing.
Adam Rowe
No. But like, I. Watching you do your show that. I don't know how much you spoke about when you specials coming out and whatever, but come out.
Andrew Schulz
I don't know if we've mentioned it, but basically next month. Next month it comes out on that Netflix.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, but like, I watched you do that twice. Once in Manchester, once at msg.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. You saw the new version in msg. Yeah, Because I didn't announce.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Adam Rowe
There's a. The back half of that special is a story.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like the front loaded. Like you're being short and what everyone knows. But yeah, there's a. Like, for people who haven't seen that tour live and are going to watch the special.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
There's a shift in that hour, isn't there? From infamous. Yeah, it's not the same.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
It's not just another album.
Andrew Schulz
Yes, that was the idea. I mean. Yeah. The idea is I wanted to tell a story and it was not something I'd never done before. I also want to be personal. Like, I never thought my life was interesting enough to be personal, you know, and then, you know, this. I was really hard for us to, you know, have a kid. And then I started talking about on stage and then I started getting those reactions from people and they were like, well, you know, kind of going through the same thing. And I was like, oh, it's not just me. And I started reading all these books about storytelling and like learning, like, what the structure was and the different arcs that you have to do in the three Acts. And, and I was like, okay, maybe I can turn this into a story, but I don't want the audience to think that it's a one man show.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Because I always felt like that was a little bit of a. It's like you're asking them to lower their expectations a little. You know what I mean? So I, I wanted to start a stand up and then turn into this thing and see if I can kind of hold your attention. And then the weirdest thing would happen is like you get into the story and like you can just feel the energy.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Like they're like, where's this going? What's going to happen? Wait, no. And yeah, I can see why you're compelled to do it again because once you capture their attention in that way, it feels different than just punchlines, if.
Adam Rowe
I'm fully honest with you. So the most recent special that went out was called what's Wrong with Me?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And when I first sat down to start writing that, I had the exact same sort of plan.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
I was like, I'm going to front load it with bang, bang, bang, bang. And the last 20 minutes is going to be more whatever. And I'm curious how much of the last 20 is true. Like the kid throwing the shoe. That's the mri. So we, I haven't clipped that yet, so. But we can talk about that. That is, that is almost all trim, really. Okay. So.
Andrew Schulz
But also none of it is.
Adam Rowe
None of it is.
Andrew Schulz
None of it's so good.
Adam Rowe
This isn't juicy. This isn't.
Andrew Schulz
I'm just saying, to protect you.
Adam Rowe
So I was at the, the airport. So the, the story at the end of this show, which I thought would be more of a narrative story, sit down, let's have a conversation bit. And just as I was doing it on tour and working with Alfie on it, Alfie was like, this can just be punchy. Like it's, it's funny enough that we can keep it punchy and it's still interesting and you don't have to slow down quite as much as you did with Juicy. So let's just let it be what it's going to be like. Let the source of show choose itself sort of thing. But I like the. I'm a bit fucking mental with like health anxiety, like bad hypochondria. So like I thought I'm having like heart attacks and strokes before. It's like really all consuming at times. And for a year, for a year. I didn't get checked for a year, but I had Googled symptoms and I was pretty sure I had multiple sclerosis, Ms. right, which is not like a death sentence, but daily life effect. And it can limit your life, but it's not like you're going to die, whatever. And I was sat at the airport waiting to do a show to Belfast and I'd been putting it off because in my head, genuinely, I was like, I don't want to know I've got it because then I've got it.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah, you're dead.
Adam Rowe
I'd rather think I've got it.
Andrew Schulz
I feel that 100%.
Adam Rowe
I, yeah, I'd rather think I've got it than have it.
Andrew Schulz
I avoid that.
Adam Rowe
So, yeah, I'm putting it off. But like, literally. Literally. So this is the true version of the story. I would wake up every morning and the first thing my brain would give me was, you got ms, just so you know.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, what?
Adam Rowe
And then I'm going to sleep at night and it didn't matter unless I was like hammered and I've been out with the boys and you just pass out.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like if I'm like sober and going to bed and like the room's quiet, me brain be like, yeah, just go to sleep. But you know you have got Ms. So just so you know, like, it's just constant all the time. And like, if I was really hung up over, all the symptoms got real worse and it was bad. And then I'm sat in the airport waiting for this flight to Belfast, which is a 25 minute flight, it was delayed by two hours. And I'm sat there and there was two people who were obviously also waiting for the same plane. And it was a woman and the guy she cares for, it was like severely disabled, like, like shattered, gouty, non control of limbs to say, yeah, yeah. And he took, he kept taking his shoe off and throwing it that like down the airport, like lounge. And I was just really enjoying it. It was really funny. It was so fun. Like I just. The first time I've seen it, I'm like, she's having a bad day. Like, I think I'm having a bad day waiting for this plane. But like I'm this. She's having a bad day and she keeps like putting it back on. She's putting on, she's going, stop it now. People are watching us and it's not funny. Stop it now. And then he would sit there and he would just wait a few minutes and he'd take it off again. So he like, he done it for the entire delay. And every time it got funnier and in the end I'm like laughing out loud, like clapping and stuff. And then that day genuinely was the day I booked my movie. I scan to get tested for Ms. Yeah. Because the biggest fear I had, and this is true, was that I wouldn't if it was going to affect my speech and my ability to hold a microphone and stuff.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
If it affected my ability to do stand up, which is all I really cared about is being able to be a comic. That's all I want to be, a great comic. And that's like my life thing.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
As I. If it takes that away from me, I won't find it funny.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
I won't find having a disability funny.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And watching him throw his shoe again and again and again. And the fact that every time she told him off, he waited.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So he knew what he was doing.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Because otherwise if he just didn't know, he'd have took it straight off again and do it again. But he was waiting till it was funny again. And it didn't matter that he was like, like that. Like there was a part of his brain that was like, this is hilarious. And I was like, if he's seeing the funny side of what he's got.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like I'm not going to be that. So I've got to be able to find human in mind.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I went and got checked and.
Andrew Schulz
Then it turned out you were gay or.
Adam Rowe
I was hungover. I was drinking too much.
Akash Singh
Different disease.
Andrew Schulz
Different disease.
Adam Rowe
Runs in the family.
Akash Singh
I wonder if you've got what that guy has. You know what I mean? If you guys both think shoe off is the funniest thing you ever. I got that.
Adam Rowe
And you know, you know, since I got checked.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Cuz I hadn't really spoken to any of like my friends. Friends. This is so funny. Like about the symptoms and stuff.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So like I just googled it and Google goes. You've got Ms. Yeah, of course. And I've spoken to like mates of mine since and I'm like, oh, it was, you know, it's there. And they were like, yeah, I get that too. But like, like I know there's like, there's been this like wave of like, men need to talk more.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
If we did just have a little.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, I don't know, you know when you go like heavy on a night and you wake up the next day.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Do you ever like struggle to, to sort of articulate your words? Oh, yeah.
Akash Singh
You can't think of Words on stage, you're like.
Adam Rowe
Or do you ever like go to speak and you need to swallow your saliva, but you've got to swallow.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
These are all symptoms of multiple cirrhosis.
Andrew Schulz
Oh.
Adam Rowe
So like this is what I was getting to like a severe level. If I was having like a big night and I'm going on stage the next night and I'm having to like constantly sip water so that I can get through the set. And then I googled it and I was like, oh, what is it? And it's like, you've got, you've definitely got multiple cirrhosis. And for a year I was like putting it off and I paid a lot of money for the doctor to get.
Andrew Schulz
All these people are out here running 10k for a bunch of alcoholics.
Adam Rowe
I think.
Andrew Schulz
So waking up at six in the morning and jogging the freezing cold for a guy with too many.
Akash Singh
And you're so stressed about, you're like, you know what'll help this? Alcohol is the only thing that helps.
Andrew Schulz
Cuz when you're drunk you're like.
Adam Rowe
I laugh M. Yeah, I can speak fine. I can get my words out really kind clearly right now.
Akash Singh
Have you been a hypochondria forever?
Adam Rowe
It started about a month after my dad had a heart attack. So like I had a real, like there was a, a good few months in my, my mom died in September, my dad had a heart attack and nearly died in December. And a month later I started getting like severe chest pain and I, I went to hospital via an ambulance like well into double figures in one calendar month. Now in the UK that costs nothing. So like over here I probably couldn't have afforded the hypochondria. But like in the uk I would turn up and I'd be like, I think I'm having a heart attack again. And it'd be like the same nurse and she'd be like, okay, cool. So they'd hook me up to the ECG machine and they like check and then. But every time this is what they'd say, they'd go, look, you're 24, you don't smoke, you don't do cocaine. Okay?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
You're not going to have a heart attack. Like you're not, but you could.
Akash Singh
Okay, don't say that.
Adam Rowe
So if you get like worse symptoms than you had today, if it feels really different, then come back because then we need to see.
Akash Singh
And your brain goes, got it?
Adam Rowe
Yeah. And then the next day I'm like, this feels different to get today 999 and then back to the hospital.
Akash Singh
You're just a regular to the hospital. You walk up, be like, I'll take the same thing.
Adam Rowe
Room two? Yeah, room two.
Andrew Schulz
All right, guys, a break for a second. I want to talk to you about freedom, okay? Freedom from exhaustion, freedom from fatigue, freedom from drowsiness, freedom from sleepiness. Okay? There's one way that you can do that. Coke. Now, now that we got our border shut down, that coke is going to be hard to get. So how are you going to compensate? You're going to do with another C word. Coffee. Black rifle coffee, to be exact. Okay? Many people have told me that's the cocaine of coffee. A lot of you guys are sniffing unnecessary fentanyl in your nose when you could be slurping on a black rifle coffee, right? Being a proud American, feeling free, not having a caved in nose. That's what happens when you're sniffing up all that cocaine and fentanyl coming across the border, which is now shut down, okay? If you want to be free of cocaine and fentanyl, but still be awake to stand on that border and see if migrants are crossing, Black Rifle coffee is the way to do it, okay? If you need to be up all night patrolling the border for America, I was waiting for it. To make sure. I need at least one caca in every black rifle you make sure if you want to be up. I know some of y'all are up all night on cocaine patrolling that border. You don't need that anymore. You got the black rifle coffee. Didn't even know that was possible. I just added the cacao and coffee together. How did I do that? I had the black rifle espresso with cream, and my brain started coming up with unbelievable ideas how to stop abortions, how to. Just kidding. Just kidding, Al. I'm just kidding, Al. Don't be concerned. The point that I'm trying to make is this black rifle coffee right here is going to keep at least 300 migrants outside of your country. 100% guarantee. This black rifle coffee right here is going to make sure that all of our trade partners bend a knee and kiss the feet, okay? If you're slurping down a black rifle coffee, you are projecting America into its next golden age of freedom and excellence. And mostly workers from America. Mostly. Mostly workers. There are no H1B visas at the Black Rifle Coffee Company. I don't know that for a fact, but that's what I assume when I drink this espresso with cream. My point is, if you go to black rifle coffee.com and use the code flagrant. You're going to keep 30% more migrants out of this country and you're going to get 30% off today and see what all the hype is about. Let's get back to the show. All right, guys, let's take a break for a second. Listen, everybody knows somebody who is, you know, deeply affected by the wildfires in la. Okay? We just had somebody over the studio a couple weeks ago. Ago lost absolutely everything. I've had tons of friends that lost absolutely everything. It is incredibly tragic. It's one of the worst natural disasters that we've ever experienced here in America. I think they said it was something like $250 billion worth of damage. There are priceless memories that are absolutely, you know, evaporated by that fire. Obviously, there's a lot of questions. There are claims that insurance companies canceled thousands of homeowners fire policies in the months leading up to the fires. Were those canceled translations legal? Could this catastrophe have been avoided? Was the city prepared? Morgan and Morgan, America's largest injury law firm, has helped millions of families in their times of need. Just like now, they were there for the PG&E wildfire and for the Maui wildfires. And now they are here again to help the families that have been affected by the Los Angeles wildfire. So if you or someone you know lost property because of these California wildfires, you can check out Morgan and Morgan today. Okay? They might be able to help you out. They might be able to get you the bag, the bag that you deserve. So for more information, go to Cali wildfire lawsuit.comflagrant that is Cali C A L I wildfire lawsuit.comflagrant to learn more, this is a paid advertisement for Morgan and Morgan. Now let's get back to the show.
Akash Singh
What's the wildest thing you believed you had?
Adam Rowe
I think. I think Ms. Is hard to top. I've. The. The. The heart attack stuff was the worst. That was a good like 18 months of being completely uncontrollable. Yeah. And it was definitely tied to, you know, you lose a mom and then like, of course, like this. This is. This is also how much my family drink. This is true. So my dad had that heart attack on my little brother's 18th birthday.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. Can we get another beer or two in here for Adam? Yeah, of course. Yeah. I want to see some Simpsons.
Adam Rowe
Have to wait till tomorrow morning.
Andrew Schulz
Grab me one too.
Adam Rowe
Go on. My dad had that heart attack on my little brother's 18th birthday.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, Jesus.
Adam Rowe
Right.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So I had a set at the comedy club in Liverpool. So my little brother was going for a meal in the little village near we where we lived, West Derby Village, and then was going into the city center, like to go out into the early hours of the morning. So I was like, I'll come to the meal, I'll quickly run into town, do my set and then I'll come and meet you back at the bar. He's like, great. So I have the meal, I go to town and I'm literally behind the curtain waiting to go on. And my phone rings and it's thanks man, it's me little brother. And initially I thought I'll just turn this off. I was like, there's 15 of him and his friends. And what he's probably going to be like is, can you get me into your show? Me friends want to watch your set. So I thought I'll just button him and you know, I'll see him after the thing. But something made me answer the phone and he goes, you need to leave the comedy club right now. And I was like, I'm not doing that. I'm about to go on stage. What? What you mean? He goes, me dad's having a heart attack. And I was like what? And I like obviously I don't really remember the next like five minutes but apparently I just go like white.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And so there's another guy that was supposed to go on after me. He was like, I'll just, he's like the hosts already on, they think I'm on and like this passing the no culture in America where it's like someone else is going on. That's not a thing. So the, the host just goes Adam Rowe. And this other guy, Pete goes on stage and just explains what's going on. And so I call my dad's phone cuz Jack's like, he's gone to the hospital and the, the doctor answers and he's like yeah, he's currently in the Royal Liverpool Hospital but he's being transferred to Broad Green Heart and Chest Hospital because he is having a heart attack and they need to, you know, they need to operate on him right now. So we go to Broad Green Hospital. I get this there and then my like family have sort of heard of it. Like they've heard what's going on through me brother and other people. So like my auntie or aunt for you guys, her, her partner, me uncle and a few cousins and there's a load of us in this little room. And the first thing you know when you like this is how comedy can really, like, fix a awful moment. We're all just so sad. Me dad is, like, under the knife having the surgery, like, right now to try and fix what's going on. And we're all just, like, devastated and don't know what to do. And my uncle, who's not with us anymore, he died a few years ago. He was just the most gentle giant in the world, but he was also fucking stupid, like, so thick. And he goes into the. He goes into the bathroom and he comes back in and he goes, this is a real, like, fancy hospital list. And I was like, what? It's a NHS hospital on the outskirts of Liverpool. What the fuck are you talking about? And he. He goes, no, no, no. They make you sign the wall to say you've been and used the toilet. And I was like, no, they. That's the cleaning thing. And he. He'd got a pen, like, he just.
Andrew Schulz
Got rid of his cancer.
Adam Rowe
Like, no. So, you know in the. In the. On the wall of a bathroom, when the cleaner goes in and cleans the bathroom, they have decided to go, 1:00pm, Sheila, clean the thing. Yeah, there's just like, Marie, Marie, Marie, Sheila, Sheila, Sheila. And then just Colin. And we're all dying laughing at that. And another hour ago, my dad's done the surgery and then this guy comes in and he goes, look, your dad's going to make it. He's in a pretty, you know, it was a pretty big clot that he had, and we. We've got it out and it's going to be a long road to recovery, but we're going to bring him past this waiting room you're in now to put him into there, but you're not going to be able to see him for a couple of hours, just so you know. And we're like, okay. And then about 30 seconds later, we hear, like, double doors go to the end of the corridor. So we're all poking our heads out the door and my dad is being wheeled on a bed, but he is sat up off his head on drugs with thumbs up. And I go, are you all right? And he says, I think I'll make last orders.
Andrew Schulz
What does that mean?
Adam Rowe
Like, the last call at the bar.
Andrew Schulz
That's nice of him to let you.
Akash Singh
Guys know, like, hey, don't worry.
Adam Rowe
20 minutes later, he's like, you can go and see him. And my dad was like, so, are we leaving? And we were like, you're gonna be here for like a week. He's like, I'm fine. He's like, you've had a heart attack. He's like, yeah, but it's. I'm not anymore.
Andrew Schulz
It's perfect now.
Akash Singh
He's like a football player with a thumbs up. He's getting stretchered off. You know, it's kind of nice.
Adam Rowe
Let everyone know you're okay.
Akash Singh
Oh, that's wild.
Andrew Schulz
But he's passed.
Adam Rowe
You said my uncle has the guy who signed his name.
Andrew Schulz
But your dad.
Adam Rowe
My dad's still with us.
Andrew Schulz
He's okay. Good shit. How old are you now?
Adam Rowe
33.
Andrew Schulz
Okay, cool.
Akash Singh
Are you boozing less now ever since your ms?
Adam Rowe
No, if any.
Andrew Schulz
And, like, now that you know you don't have ms?
Akash Singh
Cheers.
Adam Rowe
I go through phases with drinking where I'm like, I'll go like. Like, I've signed up for a half marathon in May. So, like, for like, eight weeks before that, I'll. I'll really cut it out and I'll run, like, a lot more than it. My weight always fluctuates. Me drinking, like, I. I go real hard for, like, a while and then go, just have a little chill. Which period are you in right now? So normally I would, like, have a relatively quiet January, but My birthday is the 11th of January 7th.
Akash Singh
And you're in New York.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. No. So, like, with. With this year, I was like, Christmas was a heavy session, and then January, I was like, the 2nd of January is my housemates. Like, my roommate's birthday. The 11th is my birthday. I'm in New York and Austin for two weeks. I was like, we'll see what February looks like, you know, but then the podcast's on tour in Dublin in February, so maybe we have to see what March looks like.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, you gotta get after that. Yeah, that's good. Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And then April's Easter, you know, that's a big week.
Andrew Schulz
It's insane.
Akash Singh
Have you ever turned down a drink from your family? I did this, like, a week ago. Like, my dad was like, oh, yeah? What are you gonna have? I was like, I'm not going to drink. He goes, all right, come on. Like, no, I'm not. He goes, all right, we'll just have two more lo. And Just got him. Just order me a drink.
Adam Rowe
All right.
Andrew Schulz
I wish Alex would learn how to turn down a drink. He was like, yo, you can't take this anywhere, dude.
Adam Rowe
What do you. No, no. Are you happy on the booze?
Andrew Schulz
No, he's not heavy on the booze, but if he has, like, three drinks, he has no ability to control the questions that he asks any people.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Akash Singh
No matter what the environment.
Andrew Schulz
He is. I go, you about your eye.
Adam Rowe
Ask me about the eye.
Andrew Schulz
Let him have two more drinks.
Adam Rowe
Everyone's dead.
Andrew Schulz
Okay, so. Yeah, can you see better out of that? Okay, so. So we go down to do this. I love that you're playing paddle, by the way. You were telling me out there you're playing.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, love that.
Andrew Schulz
So I go down to do this. I get to be a co captain in this paddle, this reserve cup thing, right? So this guy Wayne and reserve, they're really like the people that are pushing PA Battle in America, and they have this big cup and they get, like, the 16 best players in the world, and they go do this tournament. It's awesome. You get to play and watch these guys, and it's incredible. And I'm obsessed with the sport. It's not even popular yet. So you're right there, you're watching them. It's unbelievable. It's like. It'd be like if you were watching, like, the Dream Team in basketball scrimmage against each other, but there's only, you know, a couple hundred people in the gym. Yeah, it's unbelievable. And I go, al, you want to come down to, like, Miami? It'll be fun. We'll hang out. He goes, yeah, actually, I would like to do that. And I was like, oh, awesome. Like, my friend, I don't get to hang out with him that much anymore. He's going to come down. This is. This is great. Comes down. We're all hanging out now. The other captain is a guy named Derek Jeter who is the shortstop for the Yankees. You know, Derek Jeter. And, you know, and growing up in New York, he's the king of New York, right? And, you know, you know, to the king, go to spoils, you know, and there was, you know, lots of great stories about Derek Jeter, and maybe the most famous story that's ever come out about Derek Jeter is that as a story. This is a fictional story, you know, is that, you know, after he would bed the most beautiful women in New York City, he would give them a gift basket of his signed memorabilia as a sign of his appreciation. Legend. Okay.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
So Derek's a co captain. Like, I get to meet Derek, or he's the other captain I get to meet to meet Derek, and I'm chopping it up with him, and I'm like, at a certain point in time, I'm asking about this gift basket, and I'm, like, warming up to it. And he's the, like, sweetest, nicest guy. Like, he's also, like, he's this nice, polite, handsome, dignified dude, but he's also been, like, playing baseball, which is just hanging around with guys in a dugout for 20 years, maybe 30. He's playing with his kids, so he knows how to be like a bro and hang as well. He's starting to get a little loose. We're busting balls a little bit. And Alex comes over, and Alex is so excited. And Alex is like, four tequilas deep, right? And I see Alex come in hot.
Akash Singh
He appears sometimes, right?
Andrew Schulz
He pops up out of nowhere. And usually you could, like, hover in the periphery. And I'm going to introduce you. He introduces himself, right? He goes, hey, I just want to let you know my name is Alex Media. He gives him his, like, famous name, not even, like, his real name.
Adam Rowe
And he goes, his game attack.
Andrew Schulz
Exactly. Yeah. And he goes, oh, you want to.
Adam Rowe
Add me on Xbox?
Andrew Schulz
Hey, my name is Alex Mead. I just want to know you're a legend. And I'm like, all right, where's this going?
Akash Singh
That's fine.
Andrew Schulz
And he goes, you're a legend. And then he looks at. And then Derek's like, oh, thanks so much, man. He goes, no, no, no, you're a legend. And I'm like, no, I'll. Don't do it. Don't do it. And he just goes, I got it. No. What's up with the gift bag now?
Adam Rowe
I'm so embarrassed.
Andrew Schulz
Derek is so. Derek is so media trained, right? He goes, man, I mean, you got to be stupid to even believe a story like that. You got to be stupid now. He don't say it didn't happen.
Adam Rowe
He just says, you got to be.
Andrew Schulz
Stupid to even believe a story.
Adam Rowe
So I'm such a good denier.
Andrew Schulz
Beautiful, right? You got to be stupid even believe a story like that. Now. I've always wanted to ask Derek this one question because I've always thought about the gift baskets, because I'm like, hold on. There are guys that probably got gifted, like, a signed baseball for their. From their favorite baseball player by their girlfriend, like a Derek Jeter signed baseball. And after that story came out, I always wondered what those dudes thought. Like, they'd pick up that baseball and be like, how the did you get this base? Like, can I see the authentication? Like, where the is this baseball. Baseball from? Right? And so I could try to, like, you know, just calm the situation down. And I go, yeah, wouldn't that funny if a guy said that? And he's just kind of laughing. We're all kind of laughing, and it Goes silent for a second. He goes, nah, but you did that. Now Al is so drunk, he doesn't start to realize Derek getting annoyed. And Derek starts going, I mean, you gotta be a idiot to believe that. He says, idiot to believe that. And Al goes, nah, you the man. Al has one line, right, that he had in the deck for about 10 years. He goes. He goes, ha, short stop. More like long stop.
Adam Rowe
No, no, no.
Andrew Schulz
Goes. V. Goes. Val goes, oh, yeah, they were ready to go.
Adam Rowe
Al goes, I've been waiting to say that for 10 years. And Jeter's just there the whole time. And this guy's like, hair as well. And this is his story of you, bro.
Andrew Schulz
I'm so embarrassed. Derek might have said three different times you would have to be a idiot to believe he was right.
Adam Rowe
I think one of the times I was like this idiot police.
Akash Singh
And Al always prides himself on being, like, the coolest guy when he meets people. Like, anytime someone comes in, I take a picture with them. Al's always like, you really?
Adam Rowe
Like, at some point, someone's going to.
Andrew Schulz
He did a whole Instagram carousel post where it was like, him and Derek Jeter a picture of a gift basket, right? Go to his Instagram. Right now he's snitching on himself. He's a father of four, okay? He's a businessman. Now.
Adam Rowe
At some point, Derek, Jesus, is going to be sat with one of his friends, and one of his friends gonna be like, oh, there's this podcast I watch Go Flav. Like, look at it. And Derek, she's gonna go, I met those guys and see that guy. You know what he did? He's a idiot.
Andrew Schulz
Happy out. I thought I was the angel to go back.
Adam Rowe
Go back.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, look at you. Corps ball. Go back. You know, I thought I was at the age that I wouldn't geek out if I met one of my childhood heroes, but I just met Derek Cheater, and that is not the case. Next slide. Respect. Respect. Next slide.
Adam Rowe
Gift basket. Next slide.
Andrew Schulz
Is there one more?
Akash Singh
There was a couple he didn't post. I already know.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Trying to get ahead of it. Oh, man. Bro.
Akash Singh
You might have Ms. For real.
Andrew Schulz
Shout out. Derek, though. Derek's a man, dude.
Adam Rowe
You think we can get him on the podcast?
Andrew Schulz
I was immediately trying to get him on the podcast. You gotta come on a podcast. You gotta. I gotta make up for this, Bro. Bro. I said to him, I go. I go, derek, what you need to do is never come on this podcast, okay? I tell every one of your business deals is signed, sealed, delivered, and you were ready to retire and anger your wife and your entire family. Then you come on Flager and you tell them stories with the boys.
Adam Rowe
I think I said to him, was like, yo, you're married. I know. Would your wife care if you gave out gift baskets? And he's like, nah, probably not. It's like, then you need to go with this lie and sell it right now.
Andrew Schulz
I mean, it can't be true. Like, when he said, you gotta be a fucking idiot to believe it. There was a part of me who was like, yeah, that's the most ridiculous thing ever. But you have to understand what we saw Derek Jeter as. Like, who is the biggest football player in England when you were growing up?
Adam Rowe
For me, it was Steven Gerrard.
Andrew Schulz
Okay, so it's Gerrard or some people. It's Becky him or something. Midfielder.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. I knew that from thief.
Adam Rowe
Went to my school.
Andrew Schulz
No way.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, same school. Same school as Carl, my mate, and.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Patty the baddy.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, no way.
Adam Rowe
All the same school.
Andrew Schulz
That was crazy, that Patty thing that happened.
Adam Rowe
Patty and Stephen are painted on the walls. I'm not on the walls.
Andrew Schulz
You gotta get on that wall. You gotta get on that wall. Start hanging out some kick baskets. No, but shout out, Derek, man, I thought he handled your drunk ass very well.
Adam Rowe
Okay, cool.
Andrew Schulz
Well, I don't know. I kind of left the combo. And I told V. I was like, yo, get Alex the out of there immediately.
Adam Rowe
I've never been more embarrassed. Would you want him on the podcast now? Would you be. Are you kidding me? I got. I got to make.
Andrew Schulz
But at the same time, it's like, I. I would only want him if he wanted. If he was comfortable talking that about what happened.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
You know, because I'm trying to, like, equate it to something like, this guy had the city in his hand. Like, didn't you know, the Knicks weren't really balling like that. We weren't winning championships. He was winning champions. I mean, the Yankees win. There's an entire parade. The whole city shuts down. We don't have school. Like, it's unbelievable.
Adam Rowe
You know what's crazy to me? So, like, I. I love sports, and I'm a. I'm a real, like, when in Rome guy. Yeah. Like, if I'm somewhere, I want to go and do the thing. So, like, while I've been in New York, but, like, in the past, I've been to a Knicks game, into a Rangers game, been to a Nets game, been to a Jets game now.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
But I went to. When Me and Carl came out to see you at msg. Yeah, we went to a Yankee game. Yeah, I really like it. Like, not even just the sport. The sport's fine.
Andrew Schulz
It's boring.
Adam Rowe
But like the idea of just being sat, not really needing to pay attention with your friend, just drinking beer.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
But it was empty.
Andrew Schulz
Really. Was this just like a regular season game against a bum team?
Adam Rowe
So it was against the. Against Detroit, but I think I would say 15% of seats taken.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. That's surprising. I mean, usually the Yankees sell tickets. There are teams where it's completely empty. Like, it looks like it's preseason in a show.
Adam Rowe
What's the point?
Akash Singh
They play so many games too.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, they play 162 games and they. The TV deals is where they make all the money. But I think something's got to change with baseball. Like, I don't think there.
Adam Rowe
It's got to.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, like.
Adam Rowe
Like for. Obviously the only sport I really care about back home is like our football.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
You can't. Like, I can only get a ticket to a liffield game because I know enough people who've got like. Like there's 20 of us. We go to every game.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Sometimes two people can't make it. Like, I know enough groups of that that I can normally get one. One or two tickets. Yeah, you can't. Like, every single game sells out. Like at the start of the season, it's all gone, whether we're good or bad.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, I just can't. Like, when we were there, we were just like. We were watching it being like, oh, maybe everyone gets here for the second half.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like for the end. And then we got for the second half. And I was like, that's weird.
Andrew Schulz
I mean, that sounds weird for Judah's not playing. No. But even this year they were good. Like, that's peculiar.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Who's like the. Who's the. Forgive me for being so, like, unknowledgeable. Who's like the guy right now who's like, expecting. Expected to get a home run?
Andrew Schulz
Aaron Judge.
Adam Rowe
Aaron Judge. So I. I won some money on him because, like, her friend of mine was like, get Aaron Judge on for a home run. And I think he got one.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, you. You gambled. You. You. Oh, I like that. You like to put some money down.
Adam Rowe
Oh, yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Really? Is that like, oh, tell me, tell me, what is your spot?
Adam Rowe
I'm gonna put a grand on the Eagles.
Andrew Schulz
Really? Well, you know what? If you're gonna. If you're gonna gamble on sports, you gotta do it with steak. We've changed outfits, but it's important because this week is maybe the greatest week in sports.
Chris Distefano
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And by that I mean it is another reminder that the Dallas Cowboys are not in the Super Bowl.
Chris Distefano
Yeah, yeah. I'm broken. So I take back everything I said. I'm pretty certain the Eagles are going to win because this is just the year that God has decided to make everything I hate happen. So the Eagles are going to win the Super Bowl. I'm going to throw myself off of whatever fucking bridge.
Andrew Schulz
I just want to remind you that Akash is having a. A career year right now, okay? This Guy's selling out 100 shows every single city he goes to. It's unbelievable what he's doing and he's still upset about his football team.
Chris Distefano
Why, God? Why? That's all I can think to say.
Andrew Schulz
The point is, if you're going to bet on the super bowl, you should not trust Akash because he's been wrong every single week. We still trust him, but we're down to lose our money. If I was you, I would put that money on them Kansas City Chiefs, okay? The last, last team in the league that still represents a native American, okay? There's something very important about that.
Chris Distefano
That is fire.
Andrew Schulz
That is fire. 100, okay? And that's why they haven't lost. They got the luck of the natives. Simple as that. If it was the Washington Redskins, they might be in it.
Chris Distefano
Oh, that's probably why they lost.
Andrew Schulz
Just saying. But the best luck.
Adam Rowe
Who?
Andrew Schulz
The natives. Yeah, I know. I think it's more irony.
Chris Distefano
They got good luck with them casinos.
Andrew Schulz
That it? Tell steak. Hey, Steak is the leader of the globe betting in U. S. Social casinos. Better on top sports and political events. Use the promo code flagrant for your welcome bonus. All right. I just want to let you know Steak is definitely owned by 100 Native American. No, no, it's owned by 100 natives. That's what is natives. Natives to where? We do not know. But those people are native to somewhere and that is a fact. Okay? Now let's get back to the show. You should go check out the Super Bowl. That'd be cool.
Adam Rowe
I really want to go to the super bowl. Like one year. I'd love to go.
Andrew Schulz
That's a good American event.
Adam Rowe
Dan. Who? Dan and the co host of our podcast. Have a word. He's like a big. He doesn't care about football, like our football at all really, but he's a big NFL guy. His team is the Saints. But he doesn't. He's not really that bothered. He wants them to win but like he's like he just loves the game.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And he, you know, he's desperate for the Chiefs not to win this. He wants to be more interested in that. And yeah, I'm really getting into it. But yeah like I just love the Sundays. Watching the NFL in the UK are great because normally Liverpool, if Liverpool play on a Saturday, great. If they play early Sunday I can watch Liverpool play at like lunchtime.
Andrew Schulz
Oh yeah, all your NFL games are super late.
Adam Rowe
Well there's one that will start at like 6:00pm yeah. So I can go to the Liverpool game, get back, watch the first game. Next game's 9:30. I'll watch that one and then if I'm not tired and I still want to stay up there's a 1 o'clock game and I can be up till 4am and I. It's just great and every game but it's so easy. I know like you've got like a, a sponsor there but like it's so much more difficult in the States to gamble than it is in the uk.
Andrew Schulz
Oh really? Oh really?
Adam Rowe
Wait why like the uk? Every like strip of shops has a bookies on it.
Andrew Schulz
Wait, you can't do it digitally though.
Adam Rowe
You can. I do it on my phone so I, I mean they don't operate in the US so I hope it doesn't affect your sponsor. I use a company called bet365 yeah.
Andrew Schulz
You use a stick.
Adam Rowe
It's, it's yeah it's so easy but like I'll be watching like a. Something like I'll, I'll have a bet on the game like the money line of the game or the COVID or whatever and like with the, with shocker with our football like I'll have you call it a parlay. We call it an accumulator or an aa. Yeah like I'll have like every prem game I'll try and whatever if Liverpool are playing some and if Man United are playing I'll bet against them like Boxing Day this year, the day after Christmas. So every year on Boxing Day me and the lads I went to school with, we still get together. Yeah, that's our day. I like Christmas is fine. Boxing Day day is my day so I'm. This year we played golf at 9am yeah by 12 we'd done like half the course and we were like ah this, let's go to the pub. So we got a pub after like half the course and we were in the pub until 6pm and then Livepool played at 8pm, but there's games all day. So 9am golf after the breakfast with the boys, straight to the pub for lunch with the boys and beers and then lift will play in the night. And I won about four and a half grand on Boxing Day.
Andrew Schulz
Wow.
Adam Rowe
Man United played Wolves. I put like 200 quid on wolves to beat them. At one point, Manchester City got a penalty and I bet in that moment on them to miss that penalty. And they missed the penalty. That I bet. Like, I really like convoluted thing on the live field game.
Akash Singh
I don't know how you guys do this.
Adam Rowe
I can't.
Akash Singh
I get so stressed. Like anytime I put money down, I was just like, I can't even watch. It's like makes it so agonized.
Adam Rowe
You can only bet money that if you don't win, you're just like, ah, yeah, it has to be fun. Like there, like people get genuine gambling problems where they're like, ah, my rent relies. Like, I like, I'd never ever put money down where I'm not worried about it. And also I set myself a limit at the start of the season. I'm like, that's what I've put in my account. That's what I'm betting with. And anything else, I'm betting with the bookies money.
Andrew Schulz
What does that mean, betting with the bookies money?
Adam Rowe
So like if I. Let's say I've put 500 quid in my account.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I've won. Won three grand.
Andrew Schulz
Ah, okay.
Adam Rowe
Yes. It's their money. Like if I, if I put a thousand pound on the Eagles, it's. I'm putting steak's money.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
On the thing.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And if I win, then great. I get more of stakes money. And if I lose. Okay. Stay get a bit of their money back.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah. That's actually a good way to look at it.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. It's not my money until the end of the season. And at the end of the season, I'll buy a new watch.
Andrew Schulz
Alex, outside of, outside of having that beautiful moment with Derek, how did you enjoy the.
Adam Rowe
The paddle tournament live and watching professionals fire. All right. Watching them play.
Andrew Schulz
You think you're them.
Adam Rowe
Like when.
Andrew Schulz
I don't know how, like when I play, I'm like, oh, I'm doing the exact same thing they're doing. And then I see videos of it and it just looks like someone's putting it in slow motion.
Akash Singh
It's like sex. It really is. Like, you watch videos, you're like, I'm that guy. You Know what I mean? And you see yourself, you're like, what the is that?
Adam Rowe
You're in a hotel room, you're like, mir, you catch yourself, you're.
Akash Singh
Oh, God, what is he doing to that girl?
Adam Rowe
But it's finer than I know.
Andrew Schulz
You got to get into it, man.
Adam Rowe
It is fine. Like watching the professionals play, it's so fast and they're so technical. Like, that is a sport.
Andrew Schulz
And they, they stretch out the points for so long. Like there's like weird things. I like climate effects of it when it's cold. Like the ball balls are, are less. The air is, I guess, more dense. So the ball doesn't fly as much.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
So they can't knock it out as easily. So the points would just last forever. And you get to see them. I mean, just, it's just masterful the way they're doing it. I, I, it's such a weird thing to describe to people because a lot of people don't even know what the sport is. Half of the people think I'm talking about pickleball. I'm not talking about pickleball.
Adam Rowe
What's the difference?
Andrew Schulz
So pickleball is basically like ping pong, but you're standing on the table.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Andrew Schulz
So it's like a smaller tennis court. The ball is like this corked thing and it's, it's for basically like old people.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Andrew Schulz
Like, that's the idea of it.
Adam Rowe
So when I was in school.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And I mean like high school. And it's not there anymore, but the school, like playground, the yard, we had what was called. And I've never seen this anywhere else in the world, but I assume it's like an iteration of either pickleball or paddle. Paddle.
Andrew Schulz
Paddle tennis.
Adam Rowe
It was short tennis. It was called.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So it's exactly the same as paddling that you served towards the back of the court.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And you serve. But you would save underarm.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. It, some people call like lawn tennis or something like that. Maybe.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
But that was like every, like we, we used to get two breaks and they would get a break at like 11 or another at once. The 11 o'clock break was like 20 minutes and one was an hour.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And you could buy a bat for five pounds. So maybe like six, seven dollars.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
From the design department. Bottoms of the school.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And you would go home and you would paint your bat. Whatever. Like you put like a, you know, an LFC logo on it or whatever.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And, but every day.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
We would play this.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And then I got to like Sort of, you know, the age 15 and they changed the school yard and they weren't there anymore. And it like that sport just left my head.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And then about a year ago, I.
Andrew Schulz
Have the skills still. Yeah, I'll keep going.
Adam Rowe
This is a year ago I see you posting on, like, Instagram, and I'm like, that looks a bit like. Like an enclosure exposed.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, sure.
Adam Rowe
Tennis.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And then two separate groups of friends of mine. So there's a. There's a venue in Liverpool called Pin Social Club, and it's a. It's a bar right in the city center. It's got like bowling, table tennis, pool and all that. And I run some events there for them as well. But the guys who own and run that, they just text one day and was like, you play paddle? And I was like, no, but why? And they're like, we need an extra player tomorrow. I was like, I'll be there. And I went and played with them. And then my cousin who, like, I like, we're not as close anymore because we've grow up and stuff, but we were like inseparable as kids because he's only six months older than me. So, like, real close age. And whatever he texted me, he was like, did I see on your Instagram. So you were playing paddle? I was like, yeah, I've had a game. And he was like, come play with us. We play as well. So there's two separate groups. And then because of those, like, the other lads that I mates with, like, the podcast boys are like, I'd be up for a little game of that. So I think, there we go.
Andrew Schulz
This is how it starts, bro.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And it becomes an obsession, I'm telling you. It's like everywhere it's sprouted up, it becomes the dominant sport. And yeah, I just want everybody to get into it.
Akash Singh
Do people know you out there, like, as a paddle ambassador?
Andrew Schulz
Probably more just from up. No, that's not true. Anybody that's in the paddle space knows that's far because there just aren't that many people with a following that are playing paddle. You know, like every once in a while the F1 guys play or like a soccer guy plays and there's this big deal in the paddle world, but you don't feel like they're playing obsessively, you know, like, I take lessons in this and the fact that people think it's pickleball is so embarrassing. Imagine going, I have to go to my pickleball lesson. I say it on a podcast, but.
Adam Rowe
I've got my Dementia screening, my denture fit, and then my pickle ball, bro.
Akash Singh
He was taking it so seriously the day before.
Andrew Schulz
We're.
Akash Singh
We're in here, we're working on stuff, and we brought a bunch of cookies. We're all eating cookies. And he's like, I can't. I got this paddle tournament. I didn't even realize he wasn't playing. Yeah, he didn't eat cookies to watch paddle. Like, that's how serious he takes.
Adam Rowe
It can't be fat watching paddle. I'm going to feel bad enough.
Andrew Schulz
He's so good.
Adam Rowe
He's trying to coach from the sideline.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, this is a.
Adam Rowe
Paying attention to him at all.
Andrew Schulz
I'm speaking, like, broken Spanish. I'm just yelling now. I'm like, heckling them a little bit. I'm asking the guys on the sidelines, like, what city they're from in Spain and shit. And I'm just, like, making up things about their city. Like, what's the strip club in Malaga? What's the strip club in Malaga? You know, do it for the putty club, you know, Bro, there's a video Vala has. I should get the video. Where, like, I'm just trying to help out. And again, I'm not the coach. I'm the captain, which is just like, me and Derek are some guys that. Or, you know, have some notoriety or whatever. And they're like, we'll just make you guys, like, the captains to put some clout on the event. We're not supposed to do anything.
Adam Rowe
There's no, like, famous paddle players. So they've got, like, the comedian who does it and then fuck it, let's get a big.
Andrew Schulz
Who's friends with a guy who owns the thing and is the ambassador and. But I take my captain roll very seriously. I'm on the sidelines with them. I'm handing waters out. They're from, like, Argentina and Spain. Now, Spain is not a third world country. It's a first world country kind of.
Adam Rowe
Exactly.
Andrew Schulz
But like. But so, like, they're on the silence and they're still doing, like, Third World, like, techniques to, like, deal with cramps and, like, they're eating bananas like they're chimpanzees on the sidelines.
Adam Rowe
New York.
Andrew Schulz
Get him, like, a Gatorade pouch or something. Like, I've never seen a marathon guy run and grab a bushel of bananas and then scarf them during the match. A full banana during a match is insane. No, tennis players do that all the time during the match. Oh, dude, I had no clue. I thought they didn't know about the Gatorade pouch then. They have those little energy pouches that you like gogurt but Gatorade or something. So I'm like, get. Get him some first world. The guys on the side, I'm like, you want me to go to the grocery store, get some banana right now? But yeah, I'm like, trying to hand him water. They're just ignoring me. I'm like.
Adam Rowe
I never saw him someplace.
Andrew Schulz
Where it's like, he's one of the.
Adam Rowe
Most famous people there, and no one gave a.
Andrew Schulz
About him. The player didn't give a. Give a fly. It wasn't until I started making fun of them that they started like, yeah, because I also think there's, like, a language barrier. They're not really sure who I am. One guy was calling me Derek, and I was like, that's the other captain. These guys have no clue, you know, what's going on. And then when I. I would start teasing him a little bit, I think they were like, oh, okay. He's not. He doesn't really think he's the coach, you know, in paddle.
Adam Rowe
Remind me, because I have not played that many games yet. So, like, how. How's the scoring work?
Andrew Schulz
So it's just like tennis, like, 15, 30.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Andrew Schulz
Was it 40 and then game.
Adam Rowe
How many games do you think you'd have to play against, like, the guy who won. Yeah. To. To win one game?
Andrew Schulz
No, there wouldn't. It doesn't matter.
Akash Singh
No, he would wear out. He would wear out. He would, like, give up.
Adam Rowe
So would he.
Akash Singh
No, no, no, no. Honestly, he would want to win so bad.
Andrew Schulz
This is how. I honestly believe this to my core. I. Two of us could play against one of them, and then he would still win.
Adam Rowe
Oh, really? Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Two of us against one, and we could hit at any point of the part of the court we want, and they would still win, and we wouldn't get a game out as long as when we served. We would have to serve into the same spot every single time. Like, they're just unbelievable. Like, it just.
Adam Rowe
I didn't realize the difference. It was that far, but it's far.
Andrew Schulz
No, it's far. It's just. Everything looks so easy. It's imp. But I. I really hope people go check it out and play. It's amazing. It'll drive your wife crazy.
Adam Rowe
I.
Andrew Schulz
My wife hates it. She hates how much I love it.
Adam Rowe
Because you having fun.
Andrew Schulz
And it's interesting because when she has fun doing things that don't involve me, I'm, like, really happy for her.
Adam Rowe
Cuz you got a break.
Andrew Schulz
Cuz I get all roads lead to battle. But when I go to play battle, she's furious about that for some reason. And she's like, I'll play with you. And I'm like, no, you won't. Crazy how they're built like that, right? Yeah, you're retardant.
Adam Rowe
So you have a, you have a career that keeps you out every weekend and at night. And now you picked a sport that you're playing all the time during the day that you have to be away for like two or three hours at a time. So now you just. When's he supposed to play paddle if he's going to be working overnight?
Akash Singh
Yeah, that's a good point.
Adam Rowe
But that's, that's why she hates it.
Andrew Schulz
But here's what I that's why she hates when I'm playing paddle in the morning. I'm now not out partying at night. So it's actually the best thing for her. Also, if I play golf, that's like four, five, six hours. I picked a sport that's only like two or three. You're welcome.
Adam Rowe
I play golf as well. Oh, that's great.
Andrew Schulz
Domestic disputes a lot.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, He's a fit relationship in five years right now. Yeah. But this is a good one. He's going to last.
Andrew Schulz
You described your Sunday and I was like, how is she okay with this? Nine o'clock pints with the boys, three hours of golf, then we go watch the football game. I'm like, what the fuck is going on? Like, does she not go, hey, wait, you can't do it.
Adam Rowe
We did Christmas Day together. So the next day it's like, go away.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, wow. She has like in enough.
Adam Rowe
It's just fine. Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, wow.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. Also, she probably working. She works in hospitality.
Andrew Schulz
I need to get my wife. That's what I'm saying. No, but he said probably working.
Adam Rowe
He had no idea what it was.
Andrew Schulz
She does or some.
Adam Rowe
Derek. Jer.
Andrew Schulz
I love this guy.
Adam Rowe
It's great. Honey.
Akash Singh
This how much he loves going to the pub. He didn't even finish the golf match. If you remember the story. He's like, we played half. We said it like, golfing is about drinking. You're like, let's just stop the golf part.
Adam Rowe
We were drinking on the course while we took. We took.
Andrew Schulz
You're allowed to do that, right? Yeah, yeah.
Akash Singh
That's a part of.
Andrew Schulz
Is golfing. Like, I know you're super rich now that you're a successful big time comedian, but golf in America is Like a rich person sport.
Adam Rowe
It is.
Andrew Schulz
Is it, is it middle class as well?
Adam Rowe
Sort of seen as that in the uk but like, like I played golf when I was a teenager and when like we had fucking. No, like nothing.
Andrew Schulz
So you can be middle class, you can be normal and play golf. That's it.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, totally.
Andrew Schulz
In America that's not the case.
Adam Rowe
But like a set of, a set of golf clubs for like a beginner set that aren't very good will set you back like, I don't know, 300 pounds.
Andrew Schulz
Wow.
Adam Rowe
Well, like secondhand you probably get it for 100. So like you could start like with very little money and then to get onto like a, a publicly owned course, you're paying like £20 to play a game. Oh, that's not bad. Like a really good, a really good course will cost you hundreds and really good golf clubs will cost you thousands.
Andrew Schulz
That's the thing in America it's like a quarter million dollars to join a golf club.
Adam Rowe
It's a country club, it's no end of that.
Andrew Schulz
Or a million sometimes.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, it's nowhere near that.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. But maybe in Florida, around the city.
Akash Singh
It'S like a lot.
Andrew Schulz
This is a different. Like in Florida, I grew up playing golf. Like very middle class golf. Got it. Where there's more land, you have more courses and then it's a little bit more expensive.
Akash Singh
I have like, like middle class friends that live on golf courses, like very regular lives. And they're on like the 18th and.
Andrew Schulz
Like I want to play that course.
Akash Singh
Oh yeah, that, that's what my brother does every week.
Andrew Schulz
He play, he plays in.
Adam Rowe
Have you played before?
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, I have. I'm horrible. But I love the idea that there's like projects surrounding the golf course.
Akash Singh
That, that's what it was. There was one course where it's just a links course. So it was just like, like nine holes or whatever.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Akash Singh
And it was just in the hood and then you would just get random.
Andrew Schulz
People going to play that's.
Akash Singh
And they wouldn't really take care of the greens. It was just all overgrown. And so a lot of the, a.
Adam Rowe
Lot of the publicly owned courses in like Liverpool are a bit. And then there's like the middle ones. The middle ones are normally the ones that I'll play and they're good. But I've played like good courses a handful of times and like what these like professionals are playing on. Like I seen a video the other week and it was, he was like, do you think you could win the US Open if you started on the.
Andrew Schulz
Green That's a great. That's a great. What's it called? Okay.
Adam Rowe
And the answer is no. No, not even.
Andrew Schulz
Not even close. Do you know what he's asking right there?
Adam Rowe
Yeah, but, like, the green is close to the hole, right?
Andrew Schulz
The green is the. The patch with the shortest.
Adam Rowe
So you couldn't win. The green could be between the size of this room and four times the size of this room, depending on the hole. Okay.
Andrew Schulz
And you stargo every grid there. That would be a great matchup. You get the best golfer in the world, and then you get me. You. Well, you actually play golf. But me and Al, guys who don't play golf, and we start on the green and they start at the te.
Adam Rowe
And we play 18, they beat you by between 30 and 50 shots.
Andrew Schulz
It's like putting.
Adam Rowe
And I might be being really nice as well, but.
Andrew Schulz
No, but we played mini golf.
Adam Rowe
Exactly.
Andrew Schulz
We might have an advantage. Good at that.
Adam Rowe
Until you can read a green. So, like, the best course I've ever played on was about six months ago with a friend of mine called Thomas, called the Shire. It's about an hour outside of London, and there's a practice green at the start of the course for you to just, like, practice putting before you tee off. And I dropped the golf ball from at just a height, and it just went its own way and then. Then rolled off to green. And if you tap it, it will go. But these pro golfers can look at a green and see if they drop the ball here, exactly where it's going to end up. And that's what you're playing against. And you just be looking at a green going, right, I'm here, the hole's there. I'll hit it that way. But what you actually need to do is hit it over there so that it does that. And they know how to do that. So you'd go that way, and then you'd be. Then you'd be off the green.
Andrew Schulz
No, I'd figure that out.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, I figure that out.
Adam Rowe
This doesn't sound Tour.
Andrew Schulz
Greens would be even harder if you're playing against actual Tour players. They're playing on greens that are faster than what you played.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah, it would.
Andrew Schulz
It's like. It's like, yo. Which is good grass. I was talking to one of these guys because a lot of guys that play tennis are now, like, kind of playing paddle. And there's this one guy, Willie Kanye was his name. He beat Federer, like, three times. He was like, I think, number eight of the world at one point in time. And he was saying, like, how the game of tennis changed. I had no clue that they were changing the greens, like, they were making it slower, making it faster. And they're changing the game to make it more friendly for tv, essentially changing the density of the ball.
Adam Rowe
They made it green.
Andrew Schulz
They made. They change the color, but they're also changing, like, the size of it.
Adam Rowe
Oh, really?
Andrew Schulz
So I think what happened was there was a time, like, have you ever seen that thing, that picture of the. Of what the. What the grass tennis courts call it? I guess just grass.
Adam Rowe
Lawn. Yeah, lawn.
Andrew Schulz
So what, the lawn tennis court and how they've changed over the years, like, which patches are the most used up? So back in the day, when the game was at the net, you would see it all chopped up. And now the game is almost never at the net. They're both behind the line, and they're both ripping it. And it's because they've changed the game to make it more exciting to extend the volleys. When we were growing up, the guys, it would just be a hard serve because the greens were so fast. And then maybe one or two shots, point went at. So they changed the game to make it more enjoyable for tv. I don't think that this is a coincidence at all. Outside of the William Sisters being like superstars, the woman's game game picks up at the same time that the men's game is just serve and then done.
Adam Rowe
Oh, interesting.
Andrew Schulz
Because the women don't have the power, so the rallies are much longer, and the game is more interesting.
Adam Rowe
Watching women is better than watching them. It's so much better. And, like, the women technically get paid more.
Andrew Schulz
Wait, what do you. Oh, because they play less.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. So the prize money for men's and women's Wimbledon is the same, but men is best of seven sets, and women is best of five.
Andrew Schulz
So look at the greens. That's right.
Adam Rowe
Or it might be three.
Andrew Schulz
Look how much of the area where you would volley has eroded. And this is in 2024. There's almost nothing. Same exact course, and everybody's just behind the line.
Adam Rowe
That's interesting.
Andrew Schulz
They do this with a lot of sports.
Adam Rowe
Like baseball.
Andrew Schulz
They eliminated the shift.
Adam Rowe
You used to have, like, the dead.
Andrew Schulz
Ball era of basketball in the early 2000s when they. That was when they allowed. They basically, like, allowed defenses to be different with, like, hand checking and things to stop Shaq. Oh, yeah. They had, like, the hack a shack rule that change like this happens to.
Adam Rowe
Make the sport better and stuff like.
Akash Singh
That was the whole thing.
Adam Rowe
Well, that was.
Andrew Schulz
You never that was like, you're not supposed. Supposed to do it, but like, baseball's changed a lot to make it. Well, you should. Yeah. Because then the guys end up making more money. And, you know, that's the thing about these sports. Like, tennis is like, we know about the top, you know, 20 guys that are making awesome money. The other like 400 or 500 are not making most money. They're like pros at the local country clubs or whatever. So you want the, the prize money to go up, but is it. You should manipulate the game. Yeah.
Akash Singh
I'd be kind of pissed though, right. Like, if you get graded a game, then they change and you're like, what the.
Andrew Schulz
Like, I asked him about that and he goes. Because I think there was a moment where his skill set worked for what was happening. And I think he could really. I think it was what's called like a pusher, where basically you could defend. You just get to every single ball, you just exhaust them. You just get to every single ball, you exhaust it. And then the game changed. It might have moved outside of his skill set, but he's like, yeah, you gotta be able to adapt. Like, that's the nature of this.
Adam Rowe
Yeah. I mean, if you're gonna be great at any sport, you can't be great at that point of the sport. And then it's like, oh, well, you've sort of made it harder for me to use that. It's like, well, then you weren't a tennis player, you were that guy.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
Like, you've gotta be good at the whole. You got to be able to get around the whole thing. Yeah. Like with football, like, the game changes every sort of like five to 15 years. Like a new coach comes in and it's like they cry a little less.
Andrew Schulz
Play like that.
Adam Rowe
We'll play like this. Like, at the minute the game's very like possession based for the top teams. Like, we're going to keep the ball until you make a little mistake and the wrong player runs on us. And then we'll find that garbage. But like, that's about. I think that's about to change again. Like, pace is. Pace is not quite as important now for the best teams because when, when there's a game of football and you've got like the full pitch and, you know, a team who's bad against a really good team will just line up right in front of their own goal. So there's very little space in between the lines for them to find. So, like, this team's fast players don't get to utilize their pace very much.
Andrew Schulz
Because it's like they neutralize the pace.
Adam Rowe
Where are we going to run from?
Andrew Schulz
Crowd in the box. Right.
Adam Rowe
So then the best teams want best technically gifted players because they can find the spaces in between this rather than trying to run through it. Yeah, they gotta stop that crying. But when they get hurt. Yeah. When they get fake hurt. Yeah. Ridiculous. Yeah, yeah.
Akash Singh
I don't know how you curb that. Like, like, do they do like, they need to do more yellows for guys that don't actually.
Andrew Schulz
Like, that's what they do in the NBA. You get, you get a flagrant for flopping.
Adam Rowe
Yeah, yeah, that's what they need to do. You get booked for diving in football.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So rarely though. Yeah. But because for it to be a dive, it has to be. You weren't touched and you're faking. But if they touch them at all, it's like, oh, maybe it did hurt him that much. Maybe he's just this guy.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, yeah, maybe you're a.
Adam Rowe
I, I.
Andrew Schulz
Have a couple questions if you don't mind. I really like British comedians. I'm like a big fan of British comedians. Is there anyone new and like sort of upcoming that you're like, oh, you should check him out.
Adam Rowe
We spoke about Jamie last time we were here. The guy whose autistic brother beats him up. Yeah, yeah. Dr. Gaff. So Jamie's like well on the rise and he like, he's not got any standup available online. All of his clips are podcasts and his idea with that is you've got to see me live or you don't get to ever see what I do. And it is. He's very like different on stage and he's very aggressive with the audience. It's almost clowning in that like, it's like it, there's substance to it. It's not just clowning, it's stand up as well. But like it'll get right in audiences faces and it's, it's, you know, there's levels to it and he's like, I don't think that translates to video, so I'm not doing it. And he's just sold a lot of tickets on a tour that's dangerous. He's doing real well. There's a. I'm not in the clubs as much at the minute because I've been touring for a good few years and I've took a little break since I put the special. I'm starting again now. So I can only really tell you about. Do you know what Actually, there's a lad who's a friend of mine called Elliot Steele. Okay. And Elliot's got mates with a couple of us comics because he's really good mates with Daniel Sloss, who's got, like, a career out here as well and stuff. Elliot I met when he was 17 and I thought he was fine. I was like, oh, you're fine. He's a good friend of mine. But I was like, he's fine. He's not a great comic, but he's fine. And then about 18 months ago, maybe a year ago, I was in London for some, like, work stuff, and I was like, I'm gonna just go to the comedy club and do some spots. And I had to follow him and I watched them and I was like, oh, you've been working really hard. And he's just an absolute. And he's not just. He's not just kill him at, like, easy stuff. He's really. He's in, like, a really young, liberal London comedy club and he's really provoking them, but in a really brilliant way.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
So that was really good for me to see that because it was a friend of mine who, to be honest, like, I. I was like, I just think he's okay. When I met, when he was a kid, you know, he was 17.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah.
Adam Rowe
And he's now mid-20s. And he's. He's going to be very, very, very good. Yeah. I think those two, for me, they're the first two that have come to me head.
Akash Singh
I'm actually. I'm curious the amount of times you come to us, like you're here multiple times a year. Is there anything about America or American that still surprises you?
Adam Rowe
No, not surprises. I mean, I feel like I've got a pretty good handle on it. Like, I also feel like I see things coming and stuff and. Yeah, not. Not particularly surprising.
Akash Singh
No, that's kind of nice. Like now you're like, oh, you're fit in, but even going to Texas, you're not like, whoa, this is not what we.
Adam Rowe
No, but I have.
Andrew Schulz
I feel like, okay, here's something that might. Maybe you can explain that is along the same thing.
Adam Rowe
Okay.
Andrew Schulz
Robbie Williams.
Adam Rowe
Chrissy D. Was asking me about this. He's super famous.
Andrew Schulz
That's a great point.
Adam Rowe
Who's Robbie Williams? Okay, so here's Robbie. You haven't even heard any of this yet.
Andrew Schulz
So Robbie Williams did an iconic episode of MTV Cribs. He had a song where he was, like, taking off his skin and, like, his muscles. Do you remember the music video for that. And he's just like pop sensation from the uk that has on paper everything that you need to succeed in America. And for whatever, whatever reason, he just didn't cross over.
Adam Rowe
Because he's very, very, very British.
Andrew Schulz
So there's a British, like, British things. We like Idris Elba. We like James Bond.
Adam Rowe
We like it. We like Ricky Gervais.
Andrew Schulz
We like Ricky Gervais.
Adam Rowe
I, I can't tell you why. I don't know whether it's just. I can't get my finger on it, but like, I wouldn't expect Robbie Williams to be bigger and I, I know that he isn't now because of this movie that's come out. So he was.
Andrew Schulz
What is, what is the movie? Okay, go break down Robbie Williams, then we'll get to the movie.
Adam Rowe
He's a pop star. He was in a. A boy band called Take that. He was seen as like the entertainer, like the one a lot of women fancy because he was like the naughty boy of the group. He wasn't the talented one of the group. The talented one was the lead singer who wrote all the songs called Gary Barlow. And then when Take that sort of, you know, had that boy band thing where one of them's going to go and do their own thing and they're going to break off and whatever. Robbie Williams became like the guy. He was the solo star. Sony gave him like 80 million for like three albums. And that was like back in the 90s or the early 90s, so it was a big deal. So, like he was like the guy. Big, big tours and very famous and like you could stop anybody on the streets in the UK and be like, do you know Robbie Williams is. And they say, yeah, like he's that level of famous. He hasn't like been massively in the public eye for a few years because he got 80 million for three albums. So he's gone and had a sit down. But there's a movie that's come out, they show year and it's called Better man or something like that one. Yeah. And it's, it's his sort of life and career story, but for no apparent reason. He is a monkey in it. Nobody else's. Your ass is mine, to be honest.
Andrew Schulz
So let's take it T feel so.
Adam Rowe
So you know the song?
Andrew Schulz
Of course I know Robbie Williams.
Adam Rowe
I've never heard that. But this.
Andrew Schulz
No way. Why, bro?
Akash Singh
The entire film is told from the perspective that he's a chimp.
Adam Rowe
And then is anybody acknowledging the fact that he's a. No, it's never brought up once. No one else is a chimp. This is either genius or we're talking about it. We're talking about it.
Andrew Schulz
So the movie. Movie bombed here.
Adam Rowe
Oh, it came out already. So Universal bought the rights to it in America. And these numbers will not be accurate, but it's essentially like they paid 100 million for the rights and they got, like, 5 million back.
Andrew Schulz
Oh, I thought it made like, 200. Like, I thought it was like. And I'm not even being facetious, I thought it was, like, less than a thousand dollars opening week, but. But it seems like that's part of the marketing.
Adam Rowe
But did it do well there? It's done fine. I mean, cinema is not doing very well anyway. Like, the big movies that, like, are being pushed not do. Like, I know a few people who've seen it, and being like, it's what you think it is. Is.
Andrew Schulz
Is the movie good? Like, is the story good?
Adam Rowe
I haven't seen it. It's Robbie Williams Life story, and he's a.
Andrew Schulz
The opening weekend was $18,000.
Adam Rowe
Holy.
Akash Singh
Yeah. 09% of its total gross.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Akash Singh
It's like it now pulled in 1.2 million.
Andrew Schulz
I think they took a risk.
Adam Rowe
No, such a.
Andrew Schulz
Like, sometimes you take a risk, man.
Adam Rowe
But you know what it is? You know, like, when. And I imagine you've had meetings like this where, like, you meet with TV people. And now, because everything's like, no one's watching movies and stuff. Robbie Williams has gone in and gone, hey, I'm ready to tell my life story. And they're like, yeah, Robbie, it's just not new. It's not interesting. He's like, what if I'm a monkey? And they're like, we need something interesting. Make me a fucking monkey then.
Akash Singh
And the idea is like, oh, I'm less evolved than other people. Like, I'm more primitive or something.
Adam Rowe
I think the idea of it is he's just like, you know the whole old adage of, like, oh, you're just like a dancing monkey. Like, you're not like. You're just like, you're not a person. You're just a fucking. Go and do the thing for us. Yeah, Yeah. I think that's what it is.
Andrew Schulz
And does he become a real boy at the end?
Adam Rowe
I don't think so. I think he's just a monkey.
Akash Singh
He gets kissed by Jimmy Seville, and.
Adam Rowe
Then he becomes a real boy.
Akash Singh
Beautiful, actually, at the end. Wild movie, dude.
Andrew Schulz
Hell. Okay, so when are you back in town, Adam? I know you leave tomorrow.
Adam Rowe
I think I'll probably come back into town in, like, April or May and do some more spots and some spots or shows.
Andrew Schulz
Have you toured here?
Adam Rowe
Actually, I haven't toured here yet.
Andrew Schulz
So do you have any interest in doing, like, traditional club weekends and, like, doing the American comic thing?
Adam Rowe
Probably not.
Andrew Schulz
Okay.
Adam Rowe
What I would like to do out here is I really like the relationship I have with the US Right now in that I've done the sort of guest spots and the trials of the clubs, and when I'm coming out, they, you know, they'll throw me up. And that's nice. And then because of people like you and other guys who've had me on the podcast and stuff, I'm slowly sort of like, I did like, Tommy Pope and Chris's podcasting, and there's comments on it going, I've seen this kind of thing. Yeah, it was funny. They're really good guys.
Andrew Schulz
Shout out both of them then, man, this is awesome.
Adam Rowe
I. I like that. And eventually I'd like to tour out here in that I can come out and do a few shows in a few cities. But also, I just really love, like, I love being in the States generally. I love Nashville, Big country music guys, you know, But I love New York. I just love being here the best. And, like, being here for, like a week, jumping up and doing some spots, writing in the day, going like, I've got my places now where I go for pizza and for a sandwich and for bit of coffee. Like, I know what I like and where it is. I feel like I've got a good. And there's so much more of this city I obviously haven't seen. But, like, I can come to New York and not even get maps out on my phone and know where I'm going and know when I'm going to be places and stuff.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah. And it's a grid system.
Adam Rowe
I really like it.
Akash Singh
The British conversion is tough, though.
Andrew Schulz
I get it. What's one street in pounds? No, I think you should spend some more time here, man. I think. I think it'd be cool. I also think it'd just be a fun experience to do like a. A random improv or Funny Bone.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
You know, like, just do a weekend of five shows maybe while you're building an hour and just experience that here.
Adam Rowe
I would definitely like to do that at some point. Yeah, I. I like.
Andrew Schulz
I think it's like in the same way that, like, American comedians think about doing the Edinburgh Festival.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
This is like a very traditional British thing. I like, take my show there. But to me, when I think of like American comedy. I don't think of it in the big arenas or even theaters. I think about it like a mall comedy club. And you're doing five shows and you're at a shitty hotel.
Adam Rowe
Yeah.
Andrew Schulz
And you're spending your days like looking for a diner to go eat and it's.
Adam Rowe
You're really selling this.
Andrew Schulz
Yeah, it's like, it's, it's, I don't know, it creates some awesome shit. It's I, you get to see real America too. It's.
Adam Rowe
I truly believe that. And I do want to see a lot more of the States. I really, really do. So. Yeah, maybe that might be sort of something I do in the next sort of few years. Definitely.
Andrew Schulz
That'll be fun. Well, listen, we'll always be here. We'll be supporting. Thank you so much for coming on, man. And all the other specials.
Podcast Summary: Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh
Episode: OnlyFans Girl Takes on 1000 Dudes & How to Fix British Grooming Gangs w/ Adam Rowe
Release Date: February 5, 2025
In this episode of Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh, host Andrew Schulz welcomes comedian Adam Rowe back to the podcast. The conversation dives deep into pressing social issues in Great Britain, particularly focusing on grooming gangs and their media portrayal, juxtaposed with personal anecdotes from Adam's life and career in comedy.
[00:00 - 04:00]
Andrew Schulz initiates the discussion by bringing up the alarming issue of British girls being targeted by grooming gangs, referencing figures like Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips. Adam Rowe critiques the media's sensationalism, highlighting how right-wing outlets disproportionately associate these crimes with Pakistani immigrants.
Notable Quote:
Adam Rowe at [02:07]:
"It's resonant push by like right-wing media. It's like, we want to sort of focus on immigration."
He contrasts this with cases involving white perpetrators, such as Jimmy Savile, where racial identity is rarely cited as a motive, emphasizing a double standard in media narratives.
[07:00 - 09:00]
The conversation shifts to personal interactions and public perceptions. Adam shares a story from "Good Morning Britain," where a man abandoned his food due to the overwhelming odor of a grooming gang event, illustrating the societal disgust and fear surrounding these incidents.
Notable Quote:
Adam Rowe at [05:48]:
"I could show you the video. Have you not seen it?"
Andrew Schulz responds humorously, reflecting skepticism about staged scenarios.
[12:00 - 20:00]
Adam Rowe discusses his journey in stand-up comedy, revealing his shift from traditional punchline humor to more narrative-driven performances. He highlights the challenges comedians face in politically correct environments, where crossing certain lines can lead to backlash or loss of audience.
Notable Quote:
Adam Rowe at [38:10]:
"I think the job of a comedian often is to stand right in the middle of the spectrum of conversation and talk and laugh at how both sides of any conversation are discussing it."
He criticizes comedians like Bill Burr and Ben Shapiro for their perceived lack of authenticity and overemphasis on aligning with specific ideological stances, arguing that true comedy should transcend political divides by focusing on universal human experiences and emotions.
[19:00 - 25:00]
The hosts delve into the topic of Meghan Markle and the UK's royal family, examining how public figures become focal points for broader societal tensions. Adam notes the polarized views, where Meghan is hailed by the left for challenging royal norms and criticized by the right for perceived deviations from tradition.
[60:00 - 70:00]
Adam Rowe shares insights into his stand-up specials, particularly focusing on "Juicy," a narrative hour that blends personal storytelling with humor. He explains the meticulous process of crafting a long-form narrative that maintains audience engagement without relying solely on traditional jokes.
Notable Quote:
Adam Rowe at [60:13]:
"So this is the true version of the story. I would wake up every morning and the first thing my brain would give me was, you got ms, just so you know."
He recounts the positive reception of his specials, emphasizing how personal and relatable stories resonate more deeply with audiences compared to generic joke routines.
[30:00 - 40:00]
The discussion highlights the stark contrasts between American and British societal norms, particularly in how humor and social issues are navigated. Adam points out the grid-like structure of American cities, making navigation easier compared to the more fragmented identities within the UK.
Notable Quote:
Andrew Schulz at [30:13]:
"Yeah. And to be fair, you know, like."
They explore how British towns maintain unique identities, leading to diverse cultural expressions, whereas American cities often lack this fragmentation, resulting in a more homogenized cultural landscape.
[70:00 - 90:00]
Adam introduces the topic of paddle sports, sharing his enthusiasm and recent involvement in paddle tournaments. He compares paddle to other sports like golf and tennis, highlighting its growing popularity and technical demands.
Notable Quote:
Andrew Schulz at [99:00]:
"This is how it starts, bro."
Adam recounts his experiences playing in tournaments, interacting with professional players, and the misconceptions surrounding the sport. The hosts humorously debate the complexities of paddle, its similarities to tennis, and its accessibility compared to sports like golf, which in America is often perceived as elitist.
[95:00 - 100:00]
The conversation further explores the evolution of sports, using tennis as an example of how rule changes can shift the game's dynamics to make it more entertaining for audiences and television, albeit sometimes at the cost of traditional play styles.
[62:00 - 80:00]
Adam opens up about his personal life, detailing the emotional turmoil he faced after his mother passed away and his father suffered a heart attack. He shares a poignant story of receiving a call during his comedy set, informing him of his father's medical emergency, underscoring the delicate balance between personal struggles and professional responsibilities.
Notable Quote:
Adam Rowe at [72:02]:
"I just liked, like, the first time I've seen it, I'm like, she's having a bad day. Like, I'm having a bad day waiting for this plane."
He discusses how comedy served as both an escape and a coping mechanism during these challenging times, ultimately leading him to embrace more personal and heartfelt material in his performances.
[77:00 - 85:00]
The hosts reflect on the intersection of personal hardship and humor, with Adam emphasizing the importance of authenticity in comedy. He narrates how witnessing strangers' resilience and humor in the face of adversity inspired him to incorporate real-life experiences into his acts, making his performances more relatable and impactful.
Throughout this episode, Andrew Schulz's Flagrant offers listeners a raw and unfiltered conversation between comedians tackling some of the UK's most sensitive social issues. Adam Rowe's candid discussions about media biases, personal trauma, and the evolving landscape of comedy provide a compelling narrative that challenges listeners to reflect on the complexities of humor, culture, and societal norms. The episode underscores the power of comedy as a tool for both coping with personal hardships and critiquing broader societal flaws.
End of Summary