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Predator Badlands now streaming on Hulu and Hulu on Disney. Here you're not the predator, you're the prey.
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None have survived.
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Predator Badlands now streaming on Hulu and Hulu on Disney. Rated PG13.
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Welcome to Fitz Dog Radio. I'll be your host for the Next, I don't know, 45 minutes, 50 minutes, 51. We don't really plan it. Once in a while I like to talk to you guys solo, especially when a lot has been going on in my life and I can't. You know, my guests are great. I love having them on, but sometimes I like to just shoot the shit for an hour. So let's get to it. Dates coming up Bakersfield at the well, April 18th Escondido Grand Comedy Club April 24th, 25 Brea Improv May 8th Boston at Laugh Boston May 29th and 30th. Then I'm coming up to New Hampshire. Rochester at The Opera House June 5 a gunquit at Jonathan's Theater on June 6. So go to fitzdog.com, get tickets. The dates may not be linked there, but you can find your way to these gigs, can't you? Also, this time of the year, I'm trying to stay consistent. I'm trying to eat better. Summer's coming. You want to look good. You want to work out, which means you have less time, tough to cook. That's where Tempo has stepped in and let me accomplish all my goals. And it's not one of these services that sends you a carrot and scallions. You got to chop up an oil. No, I don't need that. If I could cook, I'd cook. I want to eat. Tempo delivers fresh, chef crafted, dietitian approved meals right to your door. It's not a big frozen block of ice. We're talking about a two minute. I mean, this is gourmet. It is literally the equivalent of what I would expect when I go down to Abbot Kinney in Venice and I go to a nice restaurant. It is amazing. It's fast. There's so many new recipes, there's 20 new ones every week. Nutrient rich ingredients. You never get sick of the same meals because they're switching them up all the time. Protein packed meals with 30 grams of protein. Calorie conscious meals, even GLP1 balanced meals. If you're trying to really take the weight down. So if you're just trying to eat cleaner or maintain it fits your goals and like I said, so convenient. It feels like real eating For a limited time. Tempo is offering my listeners 60% off your first box. Go to Tempo Meals.com fitzdog that's Tempo Meals.com FitzDogg for 60% off your first box. Tempo Meals.com FitzDog rules and restrictions apply. And get in there, enjoy yourself. Okay, let's talk about. My voice is gone. I'm sorry if I'm a little bit flemmy. I was supposed to record this yesterday, but I completely lost my voice after doing another podcast during the day. And so we're cranking it out. I'm actually gonna do this and then I'm heading right off to do the Adam Carolla show for the hundred and seventh time. I think I am the most frequent guest in the history of the show. And I love Adam. He's a brother. I've known him for a lot of years and you know, he gets shit from the left because his politics have become very conservative. He's very outspoken. Our politics do not align. We don't talk politics very often. And I'm in that situation where you go like, well, are you supposed to even sit with somebody who you disagree with? I hope so. And when politics come up, I don't pull my punches. I talk. I mean, I saw Bruce Springsteen last night. I'll talk about that. And it's a very political concert that Bruce is doing. And I Think he's. That's well known. And maybe. Maybe we talk about politics. Maybe that's some kind of an entree into that. I don't care. I'm not scared because I know that we respect each other. And maybe it's a discourse. Maybe some ideas are shared. I hope so. The concert was unbelievable last night. It was down at the kia Center. About 12 of us went down together and just smile on my face. I've been a Bruce fanatic since I was a kid. Since I was probably about 13 years old. I've been just captured by his lyrics. Screen door slams Mary's dress waves like a vision she dances across the floor as the radio plays Roy Orbison is singing for the lonely hey, that's me and I want you only. I mean, come on. And just amusing. He's a showman. He's one of these guys that fucking, like, maybe the greatest frontman of all time. He is out there. He's seven. I think he's 75. He's got to be 76, something like that. But goddamn, the voice is good. Tom Morello came out and shredded on guitar. And, you know, the whole E Street Band was there. And they're. They all have interesting takes on music. They all play in an interesting way, but just a party. My wife had never been to a Bruce concert. She's not a huge fan of the music. She had the best time of her life. She. It's just so much fun. So go do it. If you're. If you're still. If he's coming to your town, I suggest. And, you know, yeah, it's political, but so what? You can't handle somebody fucking putting out somebody. It wasn't. It was really. It was really just about the music. And then the political stuff was there as a. As another layer to it. My first Bruce concert was in 1984. After high school, I worked for six months. I saved up $3,000 by parking cars at a country club and working as a cook at TGI Fridays. And then I got a backpack and a trench coat and I went to Europe for six months on my own. Well, I was with my buddy for half the time. And when I was in Greece, about halfway through the trip, I met a guy who said, I have one ticket for Bruce Springsteen on the 4th of July. This is the Born in the USA tour in London, England, on the 4th of July. I mean, can you fucking script a better show? Meanwhile, I am scheduled to fly home on July 5, the next morning. So I hobble into London with no Money left. I just remember being hungry at the concert because I had just enough money to get to the airport on the train the next day. And I went to a four hour daytime show at Wembley and it was unbelievable. It was just. I was hooked at a whole other level. And then, and then the last concert I went to of his was about a year ago, Maybe it was two years ago. And the tickets in LA were $1,000 each. And I was like, fuck this. So then Mike Gibbons, who's always got an angle. Mike is a guy who, even last night when we pulled into the parking lot, it was $85 to park your car at the arena. 85 bucks. And meanwhile, Ticketmaster, there's a $50 ticket fee. So right out of the gate, before you've bought your ticket, you're spending $130 to go to the fucking concert. And so Mike Gibbons kind of talks to the guy and we end up giving him 50 bucks cash under the table. He's always working at angle. So anyway, he calls us up and he's like, hey, Tulsa, Oklahoma, tickets are $110 right now. Flights are 140 round trip. And we can get an Airbnb for 10 of us where it'll cost us each about 60 bucks a night. Meanwhile, the Bob Dylan Museum has just opened in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which we've been dying to go to. The Woody Guthrie Museum is in Tulsa, Oklahoma. So we said fuck it and we got tickets and we flew to Tulsa, Oklahoma. And we started out, the seats were not good, but because it's Oklahoma, we just walked down. I mean la, you're not going anywhere. They got security every five feet to make sure you're not trying to move down Oklahoma. We walked, right? We walked to the front of the stage. Bruce came by, he didn't high five us, but he high fived the guy in front of us. That's how close we were. And it was great. Anyway, the worst is I got this guy behind me last night and he is a big Bruce Springsteen fan. It was not a young crowd. These people were up there. They were up there, but they were passionate and they knew every word. And the guy behind me especially knew every word. I know this because I paid. The ticket was 2 5th, 240, plus all this parking bullshit. And I had a gentleman behind me singing loudly every word. I paid to hear Bruce Springsteen sing Dancing in the Dark, not fucking Johnny dip shit from Jersey. We get it, you're from New Jersey. Yeah. Okay. So anyway, he stopped after this, went on for like four or five songs. I was like, all right, we're have to change seats. And then I think his voice must have worn out. But he stopped and it was fine. I could not sing along, which was driving me crazy because I wanted to sing. I knew every word to every song in the entire three hour concert. But I was mouthing the words because I had to save my voice because I'm doing this podcast this morning. I got Corolla at noon and then I'm doing Ryan Sickler's podcast at 4:00'. Clock. So I had to conserve. And anyway, it was great. Highly recommend it. I turned 60 two days ago, 60 years old, which is incredible. I do not feel 60. I am in good shape. I can bench press my weights. I can run five miles at a pretty good pace. Penis is all it's thumbs up. The penis is working well. I sleep well. I don't have to pee often at all. My energy's down. I don't have the energy that I used to have. My memory is shits. But, but. And I. And you know, and I have fun. I have fun. We had a party for my 60th, and if you're listening to this and you were not invited, it was an oversight. Cause I really did want to invite all my good friends and I really didn't spend enough time working on the invite list. But anyway, we had about 100 people and at one point I was like, I got to cut the list because that's too many people. And I looked at the list. There wasn't a single person on that list that I didn't consider a good friend who is going to be a great guest at a party, who's fun, who can tell a story, who can laugh, who parties. They were all there. And I mean I it people were partying like I had, I had seven bars of mushrooms chocolate bars and I handed out pieces to most of the people that came in were on my. A lot of people brought their own mushrooms. And then two people were sneaking off to the bathroom. And I'm proud to say this, at my 60th birthday party, two people were sneaking off to the bathroom and snorting a little drug called cocaine in 2026. So that happened. And then a couple who will remain nameless snuck into the bathroom and made love to one another. And then I was standing there with three other people when they came out and I said, did you guys just have sex in the bathroom? And they just started laughing and they said yes. And this is a couple that's been together for 25 years, we still were keeping the dream alive. People. Why not? Why not? We had dancing. I put up mirrored balls. It was a 60 themed party. So all the tablecloths were tie dyed. We had drink, you know, feather dream catchers. We had Everybody dressed in 60s outfits, from from tie dye and bell bottoms to some people dressed mod like Mad Men. 60s, there was. It was everybody. I'm not everybody. A couple people showed up without the costumes on and they kind of stood out like a sore thumb. So I had a bunch of peace sign necklaces and we had headbands and we had stuff for people to put stuff together. It gave the party a sense of fun and freedom and gave people something to break the ice and talk to strangers about the music. I put together a playlist over the last couple weeks of great 60s dance songs, from Motown to the Jackson 5 to Beach Boys, some early Beatles. And people danced, people talked, people laughed, people gave speeches. And it was a warm. We got a summer night. It was unbelievable. My buddy Matt Malloy is an actor. But, you know, as an actor, he had many incarnations of life to put himself through being a struggling actor, one of which, well, first of all, he was a licensed taxi driver in New York, which, if you don't know, takes so much study. You have to know every side street of every of the five boroughs. This is before gps. He was a licensed massage therapist and he was a licensed blackjack dealer in Atlantic City. So he bought a 350. I was so touched by the effort that my friends made helping this party be everything it could be. He, he bought a $350 blackjack table, he got a tuxedo, he tie dyed the white tuxedo shirt. And he dealt from 6:30 until 1:00 clock in the morning nonstop. And we had people buy in. It was real, real money. People bought in. I was the bank. People bought in on Venmo, they played and then if they won, they requested the money on Venmo and I paid them back. The house came out about $280 ahead at the end of the night, which I'm gonna use that money to take. Malloy and the Dunskies, this other couple, they made the cake, did a bunch of other nice stuff. We take them out to dinner with the earnings. But there was some people that were a little bit rude at the table. People get caught up in blackjack and they forget that my dealer is not a paid dealer. He is a friend and he is not to be fucked with. And so I'M a little, I'm a little upset with one of my friends who made a scene. My daughter's friend lost a lot of money and she left. Really bummed out. So then the next day I refunded her money and she was over the moon because she works in a pet store. Just make a lot of money. We had a massage chair set up in one of the bedrooms with candles and soft music and, and Everybody got a 15 minute massage that wanted one. And we had, we had, we had a food truck, not a food truck. We had a Mexican food set up in the yard. The food was unbelievable. And neighbors came lot, lots of comedians were there. Chris McGuire, Frank Sebastiano, Bill Burr. And everybody mixed with people they didn't know. And then. Yeah, and then my, my kids friends showed up and my, my son flew in from New York for the party. My sister flew in from New York with her husband and son and the son's girlfriend. My friend Dimples Liz flew in from New York. My friend Mary Fitzgerald flew in from Boston. It was huge. It was so meaningful. And I only have a party once every 10 years. I had one for 40, had one for 50, had one now for 60. And I realized that's it. Not having a 70th birthday, that's, that's pathetic. No one's gonna be fucking and snorting in the bathroom on my 70th. It's gonna end at 9 o'. Clock. This thing ended at 2:45am Are you fucking kidding me? At, at 2:15, people sent out for Taco Bell delivery. Um, my mom was not there and that was very sad. We felt a heaviness that she was missing. She should have been there, but she didn't want to fly because the flights weren't direct. Blah, blah, blah. I get it. She's 83 now. It's hard. It's just. We wish she was there. Erica Rhodes. Comedian Erica Rhodes. We have the same birthday. She used to open for me. We're good friends. And people started showing up to my party that I didn't recognize. And we realized that her party was around the corner. And people heard my party, which was much bigger and louder, and they started coming into my party. And so eventually Erica just came over to my party and she took mushrooms and had sex in the bathroom. No, she did not. We had speeches, which was really nice. There was a toast. First off, my friend Mary Fitzgerald, who I have known for 38 years. When I was in college, she was a graduate from a different college. We met and we stayed close friends through both of us living in New York, both of us moving out to LA at the same time. We. She's a TV writer, very successful TV writer and we ended up writing on Lucky Louie together. Total coincidence. Like we, you know, she was. She studied creative writing in college, she got a master's at nyu and then she ended up writing for tv. Her first TV writing job was actually for my ex girlfriend, or at the time she was my girlfriend. And she got a sitcom on CBS and she hired Mary to write for it. And then that kind of brought Mary out to la and then we have just. She's like a soulmate, you know, she gave this speech talking about how we have just had the most effortless drama, free fun. We have a thing called the Hotline, which means when we call each other over the last 38 years, the other person must pick up on the first ring. It's called the hotline. You don't send it to, no matter what you're doing, you answer the phone and it's usually a one hour conversation. So. And you know, I've just been through, we've been through deaths, we've been through marriages. And she's just an incredible person. She grew up in Boston. Tough, tough broad. And so she was there, she made a toast that was very moving. And then my, my buddy Tom o', Neill, author of Chaos, got up, talked about how he put a roof over my head. This would have been 35 years ago. He put a roof over my head in Little Italy in New York. And we've been buddies ever since. And I had to remind him while he was up there that I got him on the Joe Rogan show, which sold his book, put it on the best sellers list, and he gave us very funny gifts. Anyway, I hope this isn't boring. I was very touched by this party. My daughter got up and spoke and then Mike Gibbons, who's been my best friend for 35 years, it's just, it was a history of friendship and community. My family, my friends, everybody was there. And then Mike gave this speech that really brought me to tears. And then I had to go up and speak and I got out maybe three minutes of speaking and then I got choked up and I bit it back. You know, I bit back on the tears. I straightened out for about 10 seconds and then I started crying kinda hard and I felt like I felt so embarrassed because this is what I do, this is what I do for a living. I stay cool and deliver speeches. And Dave Rath, who is there, one of the greats he said to me afterwards, he goes, you know what's amazing about you? He goes, you can go up in front of a hostile crowd in a red city and deal with hecklers and not lose your shit. And then you get up here in front of your friends and you sob. And he goes, that's why we love you. And that made me realize, yeah, maybe people got it. I didn't have to say the words, but I wanted to. I wanted to tell my sister. My sister got up and spoke and she talked about how she followed me to college in life, and she was my best friend my whole childhood. And it was too much. It was too much love. And I am not a guy that shows emotions very well. I try to tell people that I love them, but I don't know that it always feels like it's coming from a vulnerable place. And so I just started crying. I just cried. And so the next day, I sent my friends a text telling them what they mean to me. And four of them wrote back. So, yeah, that's it. I mean. Cause there, the way people show me love is action, you know, making me a cake, getting a blackjack table, flying in. And it's not about the words. And I think that was what they were telling me. What else? So whatever. Turning 60 for me was, um, not a big deal. I. My wife is 60. That's a bigger deal. Because I always wanted to have sex with an older woman. I didn't want to be an older guy having sex with an older woman. I wanted to be the young guy having sex with the older woman. It's not as much fun when the older woman is younger than you. You know what I'm saying? And this is for me. And actually, my wife is four months older than me, but this is. Hold on, let me get some water. This marks 30 years that I have been. Literally, I would. Next month will be 30 years that I met my wife, which means we have now been together for 50% of our lives. Isn't that amazing? And I've seen her grow from. She used to be Julia Roberts assistant, and she worked in development for Julia. I saw her have a hotshot career. I saw her give it all up to raise two kids because that was her priority, become an amazing mom. And then once the kids grew up, started a new career as a doula. And just to see her studying and getting these degrees and watching the breastfeeding videos and me sitting there by her side supporting her and watching these women breastfeed on the videos, watching the full round Heaving bosom of a pregnant woman or a newly. A new. A new mom. Putting that. That breast with the elongated nipple into the baby's mouth and sucking on it as the milk dribbles down the underside of the breast. Just being there for her in a way that she knew that I cared about her. That's the important thing. And being 60, I don't feel old because I feel my kids keep me young. And they're good kids. Neither one of them became a comedian, so I know it didn't completely fuck up. My son and daughter were so social. It was one of those things where every person that left the party was like, your kids blew me away tonight. They are so mature, they are so funny, they are so caring. So it was really nice. And it reminded me of my 50th birthday. One of the most moving moments of my life was I'm a huge Led Zeppelin fan, and my kids came into my room. We always do breakfast in bed. If you're in this family and you have a birthday, you. You get breakfast in bed, and then you get given your gifts. So my 50th birthday, they gave me breakfast in bed. And then my son and daughter came in. They were probably 18 and 15. Would that be right 10 years ago? No, they would have been 15 and 12. And they came in, and my son played guitar and my daughter plays flute, and they played Stairway to Heaven for me while I sat in bed eating eggs and maybe crying. So that was nice. And it just feels like at 60, it's borrowed time for me. My father died at 53. His parents died in their 40s. All heart stuff. So every time I get a sharp pain in my chest, I just feel like, finally, finally, I don't have to do three podcasts this week. I don't have to worry about the mortgage. I can just go. But it doesn't happen. I just keep going. So at this point, I don't want to die as much as I used to. I used to. I didn't want to die. I just didn't want to live sometimes. And I'm over that hump. I'm in a good place, so I'm enjoying my bonus time. And now I'm looking at, what am I gonna retire? What, 65, 63? Start drinking again? Who knows? We went out. My sister came out a week early, and we went out to Joshua Tree, which is out in the desert, and we rented this big Airbnb. It was like five bedrooms. It had a big pool and a hot tub and a cornhole. Court and a pool table and a ping pong table and a poker table. And we just hung. The weather was perfect. For the first time, everyone in my family took mushrooms together. All of us. And there was what they call a full pink moon, which is the first full moon of the spring. And it was pink. It came up really fast, and it was big. And when you're in the desert, you can see every star. And my sister showed me this app, which. You gotta try this. It's an app where you hold it up to the sky and it shows you the constellations, you know, Taurus and Aries and the Big Dipper. And it was incredible. Cause here we are, we're tripping. We're looking at a pink moon. We're looking at the sun sky. It's warm out. And there's this cricket. There was this one cricket that was like, with us the whole time, and it was this beautiful. I love crickets. And he was the happiest cricket. And I just had this feeling of peace. And the. And we're. We got the Strokes playlist. That's, you know, how you on Spotify, you can put down, like, a band and their radio, which means you hear their music mixed in with bands that are similar. The Strokes playlist is fucking gold. And we've got these sketchbooks out, and we got colored pencils, and everybody's smiling from the shrooms and connecting. And the weirdest part was that I had gotten very sick before we left, and I lost my voice entirely. I had laryngitis, and I'm freaking out. Part of it was just the stress of throwing the party, the stress of my family all flying out. And I just got off 10 weekends in a row on the road, and I think my stress kind of collects in my throat. So I got this raw throat. When I coughed, it felt like ground glass in my lungs. And my body ached. And I was like, we're going to the desert tomorrow. So we go out and I go to the doctor, and he said. He puts me on a steroid to bring down the swelling and some antibiotics. And he goes, do not talk for the next 48 hours. And I'm like, perfect. So the entire trip to Joshua Tree, don't talk. And it was really hard not to talk. But something happened that was transformative for me, which is I sat with everybody, and I normally feel this pressure to be on and to be funny. That's always been my role since I was a kid at the dinner table, make everybody laugh, make everything okay, make sure everybody's having a good time, be funny. And instead, I had to sit on the couch with the sketch pad in my hand and just watch everybody. I'm drinking hot tea with ginger and honey, and I'm just watching everybody. And guess what? They all had a good time. It wasn't necessary for me to do heavy lifting. Not that it's heavy lifting. It's fun, but there's a layer of pressure to being that guy all the time. And it took me out of the center and it put me on the edges watching. And I suddenly just started smiling and sitting and realizing that I can just be, you know, and my family was entertaining on their own, and I was appreciating the shit out of them. And it was just a lesson. It was like. It was like, you know, part of it is like adhd, and if I'm not engaged and on, I tend to shut down and disassociate. And so I'm always afraid of doing that. So I stay on. I stay. You know, so it was just. It was a lesson to me that I can be like that more. I can just chill. And it's the same thing with my stand. I was thinking about my stand up is sometimes I feel like it's a little sweaty. I live laugh to laugh. I'm constantly grinding for the next laugh and not taking enough time to just be up there. And that's something I'm going to start working on when I'm on stage. So it made me think about my life, my narrative that life is an evolution and that this is. This next step in my life is about just accepting. And Mike Gibbons gave this speech about not looking up. He talked about how I can be a little bit resentful, that I didn't make it as big as some other people, and that each of the speeches were pointing out that I had balance in my life. And then my career, actually for 35 years, has been solid. You know, yeah, I'm not playing arenas, but. And I just. I think this next iteration of my life is about acceptance and, you know, still having my passion and still being creative, but not feeling like it's going to all go away. So, anyway, what else I want to talk about, I had gone to Crolla. All right, let's do this. We have asked our guests questions at every podcast. At the end of the podcast, I do fastballs with fits, but I never say my fastballs with fits. So I thought I'd do three or four of the fastballs with fits questions to myself. And see, and you can see what, what, what, what my answers are. So the one thing I always ask people is, have you ever been arrested? So I have been arrested three or four times. I was a juvenile delinquent. I vandalized a pool. My friends and I, one summer, snuck into a house where nobody was home. And we took potted plants and we big pots and we threw them in the pool. And a neighbor saw us and fucking ratted us out. A girl in my class fucking ratted us out. And so the cops came to my house and we were arrested. And I had to pay. I can't remember the amount, but I had to pay a fair amount of money, I think about half my summer, because they had to repair a crack in the. In the bottom of the pool. And so there were like four of us. And we all had to chip in and have it fixed. So that got me a JD Card, which is a juvenile delinquent card. When you get three JD Cards, they send you off to a special school with other juvenile delinquents. So that was my first. My second JD card. It was me and my buddy Sneaky Pete. And then this kid Rick Fideck, who I was friends with from high school. And Rick was a kind of a nerd that I was hanging out with, because I don't know why. It was one of those things where I would hang out with everybody. I was that guy. I wasn't clicky. And so we were hanging out and we had a slingshot. They called it a wrist rocket because it attached to your wrist, and then you would shoot it. So we were hiding in the woods next to. There was a Catholic girls college called Marymount in Tarrytown, where I grew up. And so cars would drive by, and we would shoot the side of the car with the slingshot, you know, with pebbles and so. And then we would run. So this car drives by, and I guess the pebble might have been a little bit too big. And I blew out the side window of this car, like, shattered it. And the car screeches to a halt. And there was three people in the car. There was a woman in the passenger seat. And then there was two dudes and. And they get out, and it was these two Puerto Rican guys. And they start chasing the three of us through. And they're adults, and they start chasing us through the woods. And Sneaky Pete was fast, and he took off like a fucking jackrabbit. He was serpentining between trees and through ditches, and it just takes off. And then I'm running and I'M pretty fast in the woods. But Rick Vaneck, this fucker, got so scared that he had an asthma attack. And so I'm trying to drag him through the woods. And these guys are getting closer and closer. Two big Puerto Rican guys. And they get up and they fucking grab us and they throw us on the ground. I'm like, all right, we're dead. We're dead. I've seen west side Story. These guys have switchblades. I know how this ends. And there's. We're in the woods, we're gonna get buried. And instead they go, get the fuck up. We're taking you to the police. Which is weird that they had Cuban accents because they were Puerto Rican. And they took us to the car and they put us in the car and they drove us to the fucking police station. And the police grilled us. And they knew there were three people. And so the cops were asking us who the third person was, and I wouldn't talk. I said it was. I said he was some kid. We just ran into him. I said, I think he was from the next town over. I think his name was Tommy. And so they literally brought out yearbooks from Irvington and Osning, which were the towns next to us. And we had to keep going back to the police station. And we'd have to go through these books and look at head at mug shots and yearbook photos, trying to identify who this other guy was that took off. Meanwhile, Rick Vanek, Johnny fucking Asma, rats Pete out to his parents. And so Pete got hauled in, and then we had. We had to pay for the window. And I had my second juvenile delinquent card. So all I need is one more and. And I'm going away. So cut to about four months later. And we were breaking into cars. We, you know, we'd steal sunglasses and change, whatever. And I remember I stole some cassettes from a car, and one of them was Motta Hoople, and one of them was AC DC Back in Black. And we stole. Stolen from the car. And then a guy came running out and he fucking chased us. And. And we ran up to the high school, and then a cop car came up to the high school and then put on the fucking siren and we had to run. And so that would have been it. I. But. But we got away. Did not get caught, didn't go to jail. Second time I was arrested was in Tarrytown. I was in a bar fight. Oh, wait, no, this was my. Was this my second JD Card? Did I get? No, this was for some reason this didn't count as a JD card, but me and my buddy Brian Van Horn, I had a moped, and we used to go to the next town and take taekwondo lessons. And so we're in the tarry in which would let anybody in because the bartender was this guy Gay Joe. And so we were about 16 years old, and he would let us in and he would give us beers. And then at the end of the night, every night, he would say, hey, you boys are too drunk to be walking home. You'll come upstairs to my apartment, you'll spend the night with me. And we would always go, nah, Joe, we're good. We'd beg off and say, now we're good. So this night, a kid named Eddie Flocko is hanging out in the bar with us, and he starts a fight with us. I forget how the fight started, but Gay Joe threw Eddie Flocko out, and then he bought us another round of beers. He goes, ah, let him go away. You'll see. You'll stay with me tonight. And so we drink another beer. And then about a half hour later, we leave. And we walk outside, and Eddie Flocko comes running around the corner, and he comes at us and he pulls out a switchblade, but it wasn't a switchblade, and it was a switch comb. Remember those combs that were like switchblade? He pulls that on us. Me and Brian, we go into a fucking taekwondo stance. And then I forgot to mention, Eddie flocko is like 30 years old. And so we grab Eddie and we throw him on the roof of a car. And we're all fighting. And what we forgot was that the North Tarrytown police station is about 20 yards from the tarry end. So these cops come out, they don't even get in a car. They literally walk out of the station and come over and arrest the three of us and put us in jail. And so we're in jail. I'm wise enough to the cop. The cop reaches in, grabs my hair, and went back when I had hair. It was beautiful. And started bashing my head against the wall. And I was bleeding down my face. And then we got one phone call. I don't want to call my parents, so I called my buddy Johnny Trouble's mother. She was a waitress. And so she came in, she's a single mom waitress, no fucking money. And she bails me out. I think it was like $200 bail. And she paid it with, like, singles from her waitressing job. So we get out, and I think we got out at like, 9 o' clock in the morning. And then I walked home and I had snuck out the night before. My parents didn't even know I was out. And so I snuck in and I went up to my room and then I came down and my mother's like, she's like, oh, no, no, no. I walked in and she saw me walking in. She goes, where were you? And I said, oh, I just met. I just met up with Brian. I walked his dog and. And she's like, oh, okay, that's weird. And then the newspaper comes out the next day and they have a thing called the police blotter where they list local crimes. And it said Greg Fitzsimmons and Brian Van horn arrested at 1:34am Outside the tarry Inn for disorderly conduct. And so I was busted. And then I was arrested for fighting again in Providence, Rhode Island. Whatever. I don't want to get too into the story, but I was arrested in Providence, Rhode Island. Me and my buddy Sean Burgoyne from Northern Ireland and my brother were walking down the street and these local. Were we in Newport or Providence? I can't remember. But we got kind of jumped and ended up in jail, which I got out of because my friend's dad was a DA in Providence. And so we got. I got out of jail without any, without any charges and then proceeded to drive back to Boston. I'd been up the whole night the night before, and I was exhausted in court, hungover. And then I drove from Providence back to Boston and my ex girlfriend's car fell asleep on 95 north and crashed into a truck and then a guardrail at 70 miles an hour and somehow hobbled the car off the road. Car was totaled. Towed it back to Boston and had to pay for that. So that's the, that's my arrested story. Who. Where did you lose your virginity? Okay, I lost my virginity to a girl named Linda. We were hanging out on the benches and the bench is where you sat when you were a teenager. And you would hope that one of your friends who either owned a car or had their parents car would drive by and pick you up and you go down to the Spanish bodega downtown and you'd buy beer. You buy some Boone's Farm, strawberry wine, maybe some Mad Dog 2020. And you'd go to one of about eight different spots that we would hang out at at night. There was. There was the loading dock, there was the hotspot, there was the Zach, there was the gazebo, there was Frog Rock. And so you would just Bong Bridge. And so you would go. You would just go on a route and you'd run into other people and smoke weed. And maybe. Maybe if it was a big night, you go out of the Bronx and buy some coke. And so. So I'm sitting on the. On the bench that night, and Linda. Linda pulls up with this other girl, Mary, and she's got a Camaro. And I'm with Johnny Trouble, and we drive off and we buy some wine and we drive to. There it was. It was drizzling out. There was a drizzle. And we pulled off the. There was the power lines, which, you know, anytime you see power lines, there's always a trail underneath them for utility vehicles to go in and do any repairs. So we open up the gate and we drive down the power line, and we start fooling around. And I'm on the front hood with my pants around my ankles in the rain, feet sliding in the mud, performing what can only be considered a dash. It was not a marathon. It was not a 440. It was. It was a dash. And Johnny Trouble was on the back hood with Mary, having sex with her. While I'm on the front. And the. And the car was rocking. We were rocking the car together. And. And. And that was it. Pants never came off. That was my first time. All right, last one. Have you ever won any awards? Yes, I have won. When I was a kid, I was on the swim team, and I was awful, but my mother made me do it. I hated cold water. I was afraid of breathing. Like, I didn't know how to do the freestyle and breathe. And so I just did, like, doggy paddle, and I always came in last. And there was an award ceremony, and they were giving out trophies. It was one of the. I got one of those participation trophies. You know, Mr. D, who was a swim coach. All our parents were there, and I was probably about 9 years old, maybe 10 years old, and I win third place in breaststroke because that was the thing that was closest to doggy paddle. I won so last place in breaststroke. And so everybody would just go up. You'd get your trophy, you'd shake his hand, you'd sit down. I go up, I take the trophy, and then I take the microphone out of Mr. D's hands, and I start thanking everybody in the room. I thanked President Jimmy Carter. I put a peanut in my nose and. And I killed. I fucking destroyed. So I didn't make it as a swimmer, but I may have launched my career that night. All right, that'll do. It. Thank you guys for hanging out. I hope this wasn't boring. I didn't really prepare it as much as I should have. I didn't do a lot of jokes. But the important thing is Tempo Meals. If you go to tempomeals.com fitzdog you can get 60% off your first box. It's amazing. Highly recommended. Also, Bakersfield and Escondido coming up. Brea, boston. Go to fitzdog.com get some tickets. We'll see you there. Thank you very much to Gotham Podcast Studios. They do an amazing job producing the show, and I guess we'll just catch you guys next time. God bless America.
Release Date: April 9, 2026
Host: Greg Fitzsimmons
In this solo episode, comedian Greg Fitzsimmons gets candid and reflective, using the absence of a guest to deliver an open, personal monologue. He covers recent life events—most notably turning 60, celebrating with a wild party, seeing Bruce Springsteen live, and his evolving relationships with family and friends. Greg mixes humor and vulnerability throughout as he shares stories from his youth, lessons learned in therapy and on the road, and anecdotes about fame, friendship, aging, and acceptance. The episode closes out with Greg answering his own signature “Fastballs with Fitz” rapid-fire questions.
Timestamps: 01:39–09:00
"Are you supposed to even sit with somebody who you disagree with? I hope so." — Greg (03:00)
Timestamps: 04:00–14:00
Timestamps: 14:00–34:00
Memorable Quote:
“You can go up in front of a hostile crowd in a red city and deal with hecklers and not lose your shit. And then you get up here in front of your friends and you sob. And that’s why we love you.” — Dave Rath (30:05, relaying to Greg after his choked-up party speech)
Timestamps: 34:00–43:00
Timestamps: 43:00–51:00
Timestamps: 51:00–54:00
Timestamps: 54:00–1:07:30
| Time | Segment | |-----------|-----------------------------------------------------| | 01:39 | Intro, upcoming tour dates, Adam Carolla discussion | | 04:00 | Springsteen concert, fandom origins | | 14:00 | Turning 60 and party setup | | 30:00 | Party speeches and emotions | | 44:00 | Joshua Tree trip, family bonding | | 51:00 | Career reflections and acceptance | | 54:00 | “Fastballs with Fitz”—Greg answers himself | | 1:04:00 | Virginity story | | 1:06:30 | Childhood award anecdote |
Greg’s solo episode blends heartfelt storytelling, life lessons, and classic Fitzdog wit. From reckless teenage antics to hearing “Dancing in the Dark” next to a screaming fan, to sharing space in silence during a desert mushroom trip, it’s a funny, poetic, and honest look at how to age well: by embracing vulnerability, prioritizing community, and learning, finally, to just be.