Tim Dillon (Comedian): The Boomers Are A Selfish Generation And Gen Z Has Exposed Society's Scam!
Tim Dillon is a comedian, actor, and host of the Tim Dillon Show podcast. In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine named him as one of the top 10 comics you need to know, and in 2022, he released his first Netflix standup special, 'Tim Dillon: A Real Hero’.
00:00 Intro
02:01 I Was a Closeted Gay Addict
03:23 Which One of Your Parents Were Depressed?
07:03 The Impact of Your Parent's Mental Illnesses on You
09:05 Your Parents Divorce
12:32 Childhood Trauma & Taking Drugs
15:51 Hitting Rock Bottom
19:40 AA Meetings
23:15 Trying to Get Sober
24:27 Being a Juror on a Murder Crime
27:41 His First Open Mic Comedy Show
29:25 The Taboos in Comedy
33:20 Why You Don't Get Cancelled
36:09 The Podcasting World
39:42 What’s Up With The Different Generations?
48:09 What Are His Goals in Comedy
49:18 Have You Processed Your Trauma?
55:38 His Experience with Therapy
58:24 Coming Out as Gay & Dating
01:01:50 What Do You Love About Yourself?
01:05:00 Mental Health Coping Mechanisms
01:07:27 Elon Musk Buying Twitter
01:08:35 Social Media Criticism
01:09:46 Touring The World
01:15:03 What Happens in Hollywood?
01:17:40 Rising to the Top: The American Dream
01:20:51 New Generations Don't Work Hard
01:21:49 Remote Working
01:25:05 The Future of AI
01:30:26 Men's Mental Health
01:33:53 Andrew Tate's Influence
01:34:49 Who Should You Have Apologized to and You Didn't?
You can purchase tickets to Tim’s new show, ‘American Royalty’, here: bit.ly/4aHE6JN
You can watch ‘The Tim Dillon Show,’ here: bit.ly/3U1DOYp
Follow Tim:
Twitter - bit.ly/49oMOLV
Instagram - bit.ly/3PPbRRb
KZread - bit.ly/3U1DOYp
Conversations Cards:
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Sponsors:
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This episode of The Diary Of A CEO was filmed at Gold Tree Studios, located in the heart of the Sunset Strip, West Hollywood, California
Пікірлер: 5 000
Tim is basically my favourite comedian right now! I know yall are surprised to see him here 😂 the ceo of fake business 😂 Can I ask you all a favour? If you enjoy this episode with Tim, will you hit the like button on the video 👍🏾 it helps to share Tim’s episode with more people 🙏🏽
@anomalyraven
Ай бұрын
I'm a simple man. I see Tim Dillon on KZread, I press 👍
@susancooper7869
Ай бұрын
It’s the Boomers! Word 😅
@GG_11_11
Ай бұрын
@@timmy8414I was laughing during most of this podcast...plus I got to hear Tim go deeper into personal topics, I loved it!
@sreedevi3652
Ай бұрын
❤👏👏
@peterbelanger4094
Ай бұрын
Tim Dillon is a moron, I can't believe you had this guy on, I have lost respect for this channel.
That's the second time I've actually seen Dillon be candid for an extended length of time, and it's borderline surreal. He is a way more sane than his comedic persona would lead you to believe.
@peds8345
Ай бұрын
History Hyena's was a good one too!
@Wot50202
Ай бұрын
It’s true! If you catch Tim in the middle of one of his comedy rants you’d think he’s borderline lmfao. But it’s a character he plays up for comedic sake. I love it when he drops the facade and just allows someone to pick his brain. I could listen to Tim speak without his comedy character for days on end.
@colebucket6009
Ай бұрын
Yeah his comedy is derived from a pretty solid understanding of the human condition imo. He’s a smart guy socially
@juneack5848
Ай бұрын
He was great on PBD podcast
@jabronaldrangus9524
Ай бұрын
if u listen to his arguments he always sounds sane/intelligent; the energy of his rants and the aggressive cynical sarcasm does make him seem unhinged tho if ur not capturing the big picture of his claims.
"When we say, 'You can be anything you want to be', the translation is: 'Work yourself to death, I'm going to be on my boat.'" Pure Gold
@debiseeu1620
11 күн бұрын
LA is not the whole of California.LA is a city located in Southern California. There is a whole A$$ 1,100 miles of gorgeous land. The truth about New York is stank and nasty, with rude, mean people. Grow up. White can always complain about everything that’s slipping away from him.
my favorite thing about Tim Dillon is that I didn't even know he was gay, because his comedy isnt some self absorbed rant session.
@MisterNMason
11 күн бұрын
Precisely
@midmomom2490
9 күн бұрын
I had zero clue too
@LarsLarsen77
9 күн бұрын
You don't hear his fake gay voice?
@joestalin2375
7 күн бұрын
Tim turned gay by accident coked out
@damianzeate977
6 күн бұрын
hes actualy ex gay
"Why are you late to work?" "I'm gay" I gotta start using that.
@RobbbbM-qk3ei
24 күн бұрын
I’m gunna use it too.
@malmal3003
20 күн бұрын
I literally had to catch my breath from laughing at that 😂
@cody3504
14 күн бұрын
If they fire you you can sue them for discrimination 😂
@chadwells7562
10 күн бұрын
@@ianhesfordJust show up in a dress if you’re a dude, and don’t shave. They’ll get the message 😂
@fatmonkey4716
6 күн бұрын
Or the boss just says I'm trans (thereby gaining more victim points) and your fired.
I think this is the most serious/open/vulnerable I've seen Tim. I really appreciate how he let his guard down and opened up.
@paulfroelich1024
Ай бұрын
Agreed.
@monichicaz28
Ай бұрын
@@paulfroelich1024 His Honeydew episode is also excellent, really gets into his origin story and his mom
@paulfroelich1024
Ай бұрын
@@monichicaz28 word
@MultiBluedog123
Ай бұрын
@@monichicaz28Ryan is so good for allowing people to feel comfortable and really be vulnerable, just seems like a great dude
@dgwear69
Ай бұрын
He brilliantly knows how to reach new audiences! I mean this with no disrespect because I’d love a country that thought exactly like time.
That is the coolest quote ever "influencers these generic barcodes with feet" 😂
@miamihurricane865
Ай бұрын
Tim is truly a modern day poet/philosopher for our times.
@eriklondon2946
Ай бұрын
I'm a little slow, what does it mean? (Im still only part way through it.) Meaning people sell themselves out?
@SirArturia
Ай бұрын
@eriklondon2946 No worries, lol. So essentially, what Tim is saying is that influencers lack any sort of personal, redeeming qualities as human beings that they are akin to a barcode. A series of lines only to be bought and/or sold amongst the consumers of their "content."
@eriklondon2946
Ай бұрын
@@SirArturia Gotcha. Much like actors, as he talked about earlier, how big companies hire them and pay them to say words. And when at the Grammys, all they can say is "climate change". haha Got it. Thank you.
@grahammason5673
Ай бұрын
@@miamihurricane865this man has a very good perception of what the fuck is really going on on so many levels
Back in 1988, my boomer geography teacher told us 14-year-olds that another war would eventually be required for things to work out once they don't any more. He said this entirely neutrally as if it were just normal thing. Now I know better; it's been becoming increasingly obvious in that past 20 years.
@joleaneshmoleane8358
14 күн бұрын
I had a teacher in highschool say almost the same thing. That’s nuts. I remember at the time thinking that using war to fix the economy or whatever the problem is, is the most insane thing I’ve ever heard and yet nobody questions it. They can’t explain why (the normies can’t) but they’ve just accepted that “when all else fails we gotta go to war w someone.”. When asked to elaborate they have nothing other than “war is good for the economy”. And that’s it. Moving on to next topic. If this is true then wouldn’t they want to understand why? Nope! They don’t care to understand why. They just believe it’s true and normal and they’ve accepted it as truth.
@yoeyyoey8937
14 күн бұрын
It’s normal because that’s the standard we set, that’s the world that was created after ww2. We can still change things
@CraftyArts
13 күн бұрын
as if the only wars that exist are the ones america are directly involved in lol
@unionunicorn6776
12 күн бұрын
@@joleaneshmoleane8358brainwashing at its best
@donventura2116
12 күн бұрын
@@yoeyyoey8937there's no changing the corrupt gov't when people only vote for presidential elections.
The opening line already roped me in. "why are you late? 'I'm gay'" 😂
@user-vw4ln2gq8f
Күн бұрын
Congratulations on your transition 💯
My mom has Alzheimer's. I'm a man and her sole caregiver. I really appreciate when he said,"it's like saying goodbye to someone, little by little," when they have a mental health ailment and how is similar to a terminal illness.
@mattlittleton5137
28 күн бұрын
My mom too and my grandma had it as well and that is exactly what it is like. If you're a good care giver then they'll be totally gone long before they actually die...which is probably the easiest way to deal with the death of a loved one to be honest. Because technically they already had died long before they actually did so it's not a sudden jolt on your emotions when it finally happens. All in all it is truly terrible watching them slip away though, especially when the day comes when they all of a sudden don't know who you are anymore. If you're lucky after that day passes, just maybe, one day they will all of a sudden remember you and you can give them a hug and cry for a minute as you embrace them for hopefully more than just a minute. It's so fucked up to be the caregiver but I wouldn't want it any other way cause I got to have a few more moments in the end than anyone else did and I cherished them so much.
@justaride1366
26 күн бұрын
My mom has dementia. She started off repeating conversations 3x verbatim, because she couldn't remember that she had called the day before, or what she had said 15 minuted before. Then she couldn't remember my boyfriend's name, then she couldn't remember her children's names, now she doesn't know who I am. No one visits her but me (GenX), and my older sister (Boomer). My little sister (Millennial) doesn't, with the excuse that she has kids(?). My younger brother (Millennial) has no excuse, except he can't steal money from her anymore, because she has become a ward of the State (I live in a different State). Kudos to you for taking care of your mom. And yes, it IS a terminal illness.
@EMan-cu5zo
25 күн бұрын
It definitely rings true. It’s heartbreaking to watch loved ones or friends go slowly into that illness.
@benjaminwlang
23 күн бұрын
My grandmother and my mom had it. My mother was diagnosed when I was 15. She didn't die until I was 26. The first time I noticed something was wrong was when she was driving on the wrong side of the road and I told her I think she is driving on the wrong side. She went into the right lane and laughed it off saying "sometimes I forget that." I spent the "best" years of my life being a caretaker. It broke my father and my sister. We lost everything. She was completely gone by the end. Society doesn't really talk about the toll it takes on caregivers. The focus is usually on the person with the illness.
@thehubrisoftheunivris2432
23 күн бұрын
@@benjaminwlang I've decided, in these later stages, just to go broke but have stability. Try to keep her days as happy and positive as possible. I'm not particularly attached to much else in this world. I believe in God and I'm answering my calling. I'm sorry it was so tight for you and others. It's tough for me too. I just got into the perspective of not caring about much else, aside from my 10 year old daughter. She is really good and like medicine for my mom. And when my mom passes away, I think my daughter will grieve and turn it into a positive. I'm glad she gets to know my mom, even in this state.
I love Tim. Prime example of a man who grew up lost just like all of us. Finding his way and understanding what he needs to be aware about in life. good man.
@ninajoy3378
Ай бұрын
Lost is a stretch. Grew up on long island raised by boomers.... much better ...
@Jackmonkey66666hghinnv
Ай бұрын
Yeah never heard of him until now tbh but I’m always happy to see people still in the world that say things they want/believe and not just reading from a boring socially acceptable script, the whole world has gone crazy with someone having a different opinion or saying something you don’t agree with in a public space, we need a lot more people that are themselves and arnt complete puscs to speak their mind
@user-qz7zx2sd4v
Ай бұрын
Yes!
@MrSeagoblin123
Ай бұрын
Tim isn’t funny he’s relatable (he’s actually pretty hilarious)
@taylorroberts1657
Ай бұрын
And We Wish Him Well.
bro is my spirit animal lmao i was dead when he described ppl in beverly hills sitting in their house like dolls, doing nothing, thinking nothing ... truth is humor.
@DieterDuplak314
8 күн бұрын
them being nothing but shells desperately trying to prop up the false glimmer on their surface until the core is finally rotten away leaving nothing behind but glittering dust ... and slabs of silicone
@joestalin2375
7 күн бұрын
@@DieterDuplak314 It used to be they donated time to a charity to ease their conscience,now they got Prozac and gin.peace.
@cameronmtv
7 күн бұрын
@@DieterDuplak314 so much silicone!
@Oklahomacitybonger
2 күн бұрын
@@DieterDuplak314 Return the slabs!!
Tim starts with "i was a closeted gay cocaine addict." My man😂
Meghan McCain's transition is really a testament to modern science.
@lucysingh506
Ай бұрын
She is a handsome woman
@dirtymfnsanchez
Ай бұрын
#YesOrYes
@Floridagirl_life
Ай бұрын
Oh, you mf 😅🤣💀 I thought it was a topic that was going to come up for a sec! 👏🏼
@dertythegrower
Ай бұрын
Close... very close. Tim is actually Amy Schumer's Non-Identical Twin Brother.
@RoachSurfs
Ай бұрын
Lololol 🤣🤣🤣🤣
"some of our best qualities dont always come out for the best reasons.." An endearing statement
Idk how I missed Tim Dillon, but I just found him. I watched him riff and giggle with Theo V for a xouple hours, and now this. This man is calling it almost all of it, and he is still so funny, I thank God for people like him
@kr50401
21 күн бұрын
Omg you’ve missed something… go back to his early porch videos with Ben. Those were the best. The episodes called Life in the big city, Bomb Disneyland, how to be popular… The episode with Ray Kump called “Bill and Hillary’s last kill” 😂 Vintage Tim is the best Tim ❤
Ironically while listening to this I thought "I am so much harder working and more responsible those all those gen Z kids. " All while I listened to this entire podcast at work when I was claiming to do data base consolidation... a thing made up to get out of writing reports.
@yoeyyoey8937
14 күн бұрын
How do you get that job?
@TaxEvasion777
12 күн бұрын
@@yoeyyoey8937 you know somebody who knows somebody 5-10 years ago probably
@azurephoenix9546
12 күн бұрын
Ayyy....I'm doing "P.O. Compliance"😂
Nothing is more quintessential Gen X than being forgotten during every generational discussions. We love it!! 🤣
@ehhhhhhhhhh561
Ай бұрын
this is the comment i came here for lol. i was thinking the same thing
@cantonold7014
Ай бұрын
We are the ones who have to be the real adults in the room once the boomers are finally in their old folks homes.
@mrjoe27
Ай бұрын
As someone who is basically right in between Gen X and Millenials (some call us Xennials), my experience has been that true Gen Xers are the by far best recent generation.
@wesleystreet
Ай бұрын
Yeeeeeepppppp. Here to watch the world burn, I guess. 🤷
@wesleystreet
Ай бұрын
@@mrjoe27 Ehhh, I wouldn't go THAT far. As an Xennial, I prefer the Millennials... at least the older ones. I think Gen X basically gave up when they realized that their parents were never going to retire. They have the best music but they're also the most conservative (Gen X music is all counter-culture).
Love Tim's take on the Boomers. "Proving the lie of the 60's ....." and the drugs changed from acid to money ! Fantastic.
@thomgizziz
28 күн бұрын
He is not bright... he is angry at boomers when gen z is no different they clearly want to be greedy and it is just harder for them to do so. Boomers aren't any different and every generation is trying to do the same thing.
First time watching a video on this channel and it's awesome to finally see someone ask thoughful questions, maintain a perfect and consistent pace all throughout and most importantly, respect their guest enough and be selfless enough to give the guest the necessary amount of space to fully express themselves without ever cutting them off. This conversation was conducted almost flawlessly from start to finish, so major props to the interviewer.
“Millennials just wanna be patted on the head” we are the golden retrievers of society, I’m fine with that! 🐶❤
@sparrowprince3432
26 күн бұрын
I'm a millennial too, and I ain't nobody's golden retriever! Speak for yourself, flunky!
This is the most RANDOM collaboration ever 🤣 But I am definitely here for it!
@dertythegrower
Ай бұрын
Tim actually runs as a CEO, of Fake Business LLC. Based in Delaware ® © 1984
@michaelshannon9169
Ай бұрын
Hardly random, hes a notable comedian...makes sense to me...
@HeidariReacts
Ай бұрын
@@michaelshannon9169 I have seen the guests on this podcast and he does not tend to have comedians on it. So from my experience this came as a shock 🤷🏻♂️ I am happy though, love Tim Dillon as a person and comedian. He keeps it real!
@kimberkhoza6558
Ай бұрын
Same
@user-wv5ut7hq1q
Ай бұрын
Didn't know Tim was a boomer when I heard his remote work rhetoric. He should STFU about things he has no clue about.
Am I the only one laughing my azz off when Tim started imitating his teacher who died from lung cancer? "I'm here, I'm in hell now, because of you!" 😂
@caspertucker
Ай бұрын
No I fucking ROFL’d
@LiveWire1908
Ай бұрын
No you were not alone lol 😂
@jzen1455
Ай бұрын
Made me think of Thelma and Velma from the Simpsons.
@dj858
Ай бұрын
@@jzen1455 you mean patty and selma?
@NotDr.Evil137
Ай бұрын
You know they are still complaining in the afterlife lol
"we're all going to die if we keep trying to convince each other to think the same way other people think." "The way forward is to respect people's differences, and create a world where different people can thrive."... This is 100% on point!! If you're upset and lonely you'll be on social media... When you're on social media they get paid... If you follow the logic trail social media companies have an incentive to make you lonely, frustrated and unhappy...
Remided me of Bill Hicks for a second there..."drugs can be fun, I know that's not what I am supposed to say" ❤❤😂
I appreciate Tim's self-awareness. Enables him to recognize and point out the absolute absurdity of it all.
@MsElke11
Ай бұрын
He's really intelligent. Too bad he doesn't feel the need to pass on his genes onto the next generation.
@ron1836
Ай бұрын
I'm smart, tall, strong, handsomer than Tim Dillion, am in good shape, in my 30's, have money in the bank, a union job, 3 vehicles, have manly skills such as being a certified automotive mechanic but as well am the most knowledgeable person I know in realms such as history, science... STRAIGHT white man.... Yet I can't even find a decent female to go out on a date with. Let alone have children... To be completely bold and honest I kinda believe my genes are too bright and full of greatness for me to even want to allow to continue in this world and species...I THINK.. all I know is my 17th great grand parents were both passengers on the may flower and among the first 100 or so Europeans who settled the northeast of north America and we're at the first "Thanksgiving".... If my ancestors could see how things ended up I believe they would advise me to end our involvement. And what do ya know....
@SargentWebbz
Ай бұрын
@@ron1836you can’t be serious
@ron1836
Ай бұрын
@@SargentWebbz who knows. In some ways yes I am. Or maybe that's just how I have had to make myself feel as a coping mechanism because for reasons I cannot see or control I have be at odds with 99% of society all my life and just cannot make connections with humans beings. Especially in the last 5-10 years and with people younger than me say in their 20's. Just saying that I have technically every thing that women supposedly want. Yet here I am. Not even on the radar. So there is obviously more to it. Such as being basic and a normie mid wit
@trentonjohnson3833
Ай бұрын
Awareness just makes it all worse, at least for me right now it’s not fun.
Hello, I'm just a regular old guy (68) from Dallas, Tx. I usually visit this channel to watch interviews related A.I., presidential candidate RFK Jr., etc. Today I ended up here because that's where KZread's algorithm took me. I saw Tim's comedy act on TV recently and liked it. So I watched this video and discovered I really do like him and I'm now a Tim Dillon Fan.
@Kinuhbud
Ай бұрын
👍 cool story, bro
@heidi22209
Ай бұрын
Can I say that was a beautiful thing that happened to me today. Your simple honest comment... there's a strip club that has a radio add in my area. It's called Slik exotic. The pitch is.... "come for the food, stay for the show" (it's frozen pizza. If they feel like making ) Glad you came for the food.. and stayed for the show. ❤
@seanmalone62
Ай бұрын
I just moved to Dallas from Ireland!
@edrichard6153
Ай бұрын
@@seanmalone62Ireland to Dallas. It's the luck of the Irish, no doubt! Hope you have good experiences here
@LimorG
Ай бұрын
Welcome to the pig pen, watch out, it's a real knife fight out here 🐖
I'm learning so much from this channel. True to your word it keeps getting better. I'm sure it's taxing at times but i really appreciate the work you're putting into it. So many things i've been able to takeaway that has improved my perspective on things and challenged me to do better. love ya work!
Besides his humor and his comedy, the thing I love the most about Tim is his incredibly raw honesty. I love it.
Despite having heard all of these stories from Tim over the years, this interview was captivating. Tim is usually very "on" and this stands out as one of the most sincere interviews I've ever seen him give. Great interview to you both, a pleasure to watch.
@norasaysthings
Ай бұрын
I totally agree. This was unique. I love the quietness too.
Probably would’ve never clicked this on this pod but when I see Tim Dillon I WATCH. This was an absolutely amazing conversation. I’ve never seen Tim so candid and vulnerable - yet he still weaves his brand of dark sarcasm so fluidly. He is so well spoken and he continues to surprise me how thoughtful he is. Probably one of my favorite people right now.
His comments about drug use really hit home. I did a lot of what Tim did and I don't regret it and it was some of the best times of my life but also some of the absolute worst. I would never do it again but I don't regret having had the experience.
If you grew up on the East Coast in the 90s & 2000s this is so relevant and hilarious
@sb-kc3xc
Ай бұрын
for real lol
@ninajoy3378
Ай бұрын
Right!!!! I grew up on long island!!! It's wild
@kjabareen
Ай бұрын
Mystic, CT, here 1997-2000.
@rehmsmeyer
Ай бұрын
Or just 90's and 2000's in general.
@talesfromthemoribund702
Ай бұрын
I did and it is lol
Holy Shit. You have just doubled your audience. Tim Dillon Is my dad.
@haidenmorgan
Ай бұрын
Mine too! 😮
@Wilhelm4131
Ай бұрын
Do you follow in his gay cocaine addled foot steps
@thomasnohejl8196
Ай бұрын
Me three, it's a family reunion online!
@GG_11_11
Ай бұрын
He's my stepdad
@jennycoyle8204
Ай бұрын
He’s my son hi family
You've earned my subscription for this episode and I'm not even sure what you're all about yet. Real discussions matter and you at least proved you want to have them for the every day human to experience too - that's good enough for me. Thanks man 💯
Wow, Tim never ceases to amaze me. He is so funny, but there is so much more depth to him. That was so beautiful and poetic the way he described his mother's true spirit. It really hit me hard (and unexpectedly) since I feel the exact same way about my mother who was once tender, caring, and beautiful but was completely destroyed by dementia. She has been at peace for over four years now and I miss her true spirit so much.
Amazing guest! Looking forward to this one. No medical advice, no constant crying, just straight up good conversation!
@jemik9317
Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@Floridagirl_life
Ай бұрын
Yes sir 👍🏼
@one4runner435
Ай бұрын
Haha could not agree more
@peteregan9726
Ай бұрын
LOL so true
@bvo3766
Ай бұрын
The crying man its been trending lately
Tim Dillon is an international treasure, protect this man at all cost.
@brushstroke3733
Ай бұрын
Why not volunteer to be part of his retinue of body guards?
@pam164
Ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733🙄
@brushstroke3733
Ай бұрын
@@pam164 That's the look I give when some says "protect [someone] at all costs." It's just a virtue signal. All costs? Really? So if necessary to protect Tim all other humans had to be killed, that would be an acceptable trade-off? I'm not a fan of over used rhetorical devices like this one. Roll your eyes if that makes you feel superior. I guess that's what I'm doing. 🙂
@Luton-Mick
Ай бұрын
Protect him from who? The Russians? Aliens? The deep state? or perhaps gut churning cliches..
@F1986R
Ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733 Maybe he wants to say that he's disappointed to hear that from a fellow human/fan of Tim -possibly. You do have a point, but exaggerations are common in general and aren't too bad when you're expressing your genuine appreciation of something or someone
Thanks for this interview. It was very interesting insight into someone I didn't know before. Thanks, and I subbed as well.
That "what are you late?" joke in the beginning is golden!!!
Tim i recently lost my mother too and that thing you said about her soul being free really helped. God bless bud ❤
A loved one; parent, spouse, child... struggling with a mental illness, it can lead to ones own burnout, stress, overwhelm.
@annmarieknapp
Ай бұрын
Truth.
@CJ-jq4lv
Ай бұрын
💯
@Mike_Cosentino
Ай бұрын
Facts
So his daughter dies in a drunk driving accident, and he names a bar after her.... effectively making more drunk drivers that cause accidents. Thats a ruthless middle finger to God right there if i ever saw one.
@ma_junia
15 күн бұрын
70% of accidents are caused by sober drivers 🥴 (I am joking)
@Hyrogliifyx
15 күн бұрын
@@ma_junia damn, that honesty honestly kinda knocked some cobwebs outta my head. Most good jokes are based on truth. You hit the nail on the head. Good joke.
@Redd_Nebula
11 күн бұрын
its not the drunk drivers causing issues, its the drunk crashers
@Hyrogliifyx
11 күн бұрын
@@Redd_Nebula oh shit. Do we have a truth bomb thread going Cuz that was friggin good 🤣🤣🤣
This is amazing! Thank you Steve and thank you Tim! I am now a huge fan of both of you. Please do this again soon.
This guy’s amazing. I could listen to him all day long. LA being full of people “waiting for instructions” - spot on and possibly not just in LA.
@dertythegrower
Ай бұрын
nyc also.. and portland
@chubbykitten13
Ай бұрын
Chicago just entered the chat.
@Huma_S
Ай бұрын
Add Australia, and most of the "Commonwealth" countries
@skeezix8156
27 күн бұрын
Seattle. If the power goes out they’ll just stop on the freeway and start live-streaming the trauma
@TaxEvasion777
12 күн бұрын
Every Church lol
Emotional terrorists. Damn, that was excellent. I recall the 80's as a kid watching how materialistic things became. The 70's were kind of ugly aesthetically, but people seemed to care about the planet and marginalized groups. This changed in 80's where it was all about flashy colors, pop music with electronic sounds, big business, big hair, and the renewed cold war with Russia that was all contrived by American media to terrorify us. The 90's ushered in a new generation that was cynical and annoyed by how fake things were so we received grunge from Seattle, best music on planet, and a group of young people warning everyone how toxic and dangerous things were becoming. Internet opened up doors, but no social media yet, so you still had dome privacy and freedom. The millenia changed things again, and well, now even youtube is about money. It used to be largely a fun place to go. That Content Creators and Influencers are "jobs" is really kind of bizarre. Sigh. This guy knows Long Island, I lived there in grad school and he has that place well pegged. Really like this guest. Sorry to hear about his mother. I understand. Lost my Mom 9 years ago. Thank you Stephen for having this fellow.
@lisao6928
Ай бұрын
You must watch his comedy. He's the best!
@pippythefish5506
Ай бұрын
Just like a typical Boomer it's all about how morally superior you are to everybody else. You are insufferable. Go away.
@zimmerd36
21 күн бұрын
Loved your brief history lesson from 70s to 2000s. Spot on!! Agreed 90s grunge perfectly encapsulated the general feeling or conscious tone of that time. From TOOL to Alice in Chains, Rage, Henry Rollins, STP, Nirvana. I still listen to all of it almost every day. That feeling of apathetic numbness coupled with teenage angst. Little did we know those were literally the best of times. One foot in analog and one foot in digital and still about 20 yrs from all the pussies and marginalized fucktards. Despite all my rage, I am still just a rat in a cage.
What a great podcast!!! Thanks for the show!!! You really got Tim to present us a lot more of him!!!
16:50 Wife : WE HAVE NOTHING! WE’RE GOING TO DIE! 😱💀 Husband : What size are the fish 🧐🐟
@nickynepos3131
9 күн бұрын
laughed so hard at this
“I would of stayed in that castle…no matter what was said” 🤣🤣😭
Steven seems nice. We wish him well!
@belindaeaglestone9127
Ай бұрын
🤔
@FelixCousins
Ай бұрын
@@belindaeaglestone9127we wish you well too
@alejandroman187
Ай бұрын
🏌️♂️
@soundtorial4567
Ай бұрын
*Swings golf Club"
@user-ow8hl1zv6p
28 күн бұрын
@@soundtorial4567*swings golf club*
Im 2 months older than Tim and his explanation of his life and older people he was around is way to close to mine but it was such a better time to be a kid when we were kids. They still had asylums to lock up people that shouldn’t be around children.
Geeze. There is an immense concentrated quality of wisdom in this podcast. Very relatable to myself and my generation. Keep going.
Devoted Tim fan here; I cried a few times during this episode; so vulnerable but still solidly on his game. Wish you well Timmy
@user-ef9ld8ex3d
Ай бұрын
Man, nothing personal, but this host is not good. Wish him progress.
@obamasgrandpapi7925
Ай бұрын
We wish them well🤣
@Sage-308
Ай бұрын
Tim is a good man.
@Outplayedqt
Ай бұрын
@@user-ef9ld8ex3dNot progress - we simply wish the DOAC (a fellow fake businessman) well.
@familychiken
Ай бұрын
@@user-ef9ld8ex3dhe’s a Lex Fridman style interviewer from what I can determine. They seem to do very well when you look at the views and subscribers, it’s interesting. I prefer several other interview styles to this but I suppose the main advantage is that the guest has the floor most of the time, the interviewer is just a facilitator for the guest to paint a verbal picture
My favorite thing about Tim Dillon is his social awareness and knowledge of history.
Best ever guest. Wow. Grounded, humble, owns his mistakes, funny, intelligent, critical thinker.
Just subscribed to your channel! Love your content!! Reaching out from Alberta Canada! 😊
I've been and still am Dillons fan for years. But this interview is something else. I'm so glad that Tim is willing and able to give open and honest interview like this. And the interviewer is so good at what he's doing, I was not aware of this channel before. Glad I found it. I'm flying accross Europe to see Tim in Copenhagen and I'm so happy about that and I know it'll be worth it. Great interview, loved it.
@rjones6801
Ай бұрын
Same, Tim is the only reason I'm here. I've never even heard of this channel, lol. It was an excellent interview.
@MrsParksIsInTheHouse
Ай бұрын
Maybe my favorite TD interview ever. ❤ I’ve been a huge fan of his for years and I just saw him in Boston and I laughed so hard for an hour, my face hurt! 😂 I hope you enjoy him in Copenhagen- I have no doubt you will! Great interview! Very cool to see a side of Tim we never get to see. 🫶🏻
@mbdevic
Ай бұрын
@@MrsParksIsInTheHouse So true! And thank you so much ❤! So awesome you got to see him in Boston and enjoyed it! I bet he is even better with the American audience as he can just launch 😂 but I'm sure he won't hold back with us either lol. And he would die laughing seeing two ladies exchanging hearts in comment section on his interview 🤣. We wish him well!
@MrsParksIsInTheHouse
Ай бұрын
@@mbdevic - Yes! You will have a blast!! We wish him well… YES OR YES? 🤣
@mbdevic
Ай бұрын
@@MrsParksIsInTheHouse 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Probably the most authentic person Ive seen interviewed here. Really like this guy snd respect the channel. Nice job Steve!!!
@AK-74K
Ай бұрын
Half the stuff he rants about he doesn't really mean or massively exaggerated. Great comedian, very talented, but genuine isn't the word I would use. A few genuine moments here, but lots and lots of Tim's unique style ranting, so let's not make this interview into more than what it is.
Thank you for having Tim on the show, Steven. I didn’t know Tim until today, however my upbringing’s were very similar and this episode brought tears to my eyes.
What a great, honest interview with Tim....thank you, both of you.
everyone needs to listen to Tim Dillon's rant on therapy it's absolute fire. KZread it.
@fat69
Ай бұрын
Especially when he's shitting on Better Help even though they're sponsoring 😂
@FelixCousins
Ай бұрын
Truth
@Floridagirl_life
Ай бұрын
Ok thanks
@dertythegrower
Ай бұрын
@@fat69Affiliate marketing is not the same as native advertising sponsors, heh. You can get most the affiliate codes and all and they give you a cut after 60 days usually (in case of customer returns.. then they track the custom links and give you usually below 5 percent depending on the item)
@johncee
Ай бұрын
@@dertythegrowerand you seem to know nothing about how podcast adverts are priced or negotiated. Lmao
Gen X is truly the "forgotten" generation. Seldom are we ever mentioned (let alone talked about) when discussing Boomers and forward. All things considered, I see this as a positive. In the dark days to come, it is Gen X that will step out from the shadows and lead us through the tough times. We are the last generation that knows how to operate and exist in an analog world and deal with people face to face / head on.
@red_edj
Ай бұрын
I agree....we are an interesting generation in between the good old days and the future we have now. And I believe we can lead the future responsibly.
@catherineboyle8841
Ай бұрын
Came to comments just for this. Good thing we have a sense of humor!
@Mrswillia03
Ай бұрын
You betcha! Gen X will save the world
@JJHurst
Ай бұрын
As Long as they don't mistake us for boomers or millennials I'm good.
@knightrider693
Ай бұрын
Why would anyone pin their entire identity to the "generation" they were born in? Seems pretty broad based and I try not to label entire groups for trivial reasons and treat ppl as individuals for the most part..
Love Tim Dillion!!! The greatest ranter ever 😂 I’m 29 and my god he is spot on with everything he says about our parents in there 50’s, 60’s and 70’s.
Wow this was way more insightful and interesting than I expected it was going to be!! Tim is a super interesting person
Tim needs to be protected at all costs. Anyone struggling with life and family life should listen to this man.
@Tormentality
Ай бұрын
*nods head slowly in thoughtful agreement*
@brushstroke3733
Ай бұрын
Protected from what?
@Tormentality
Ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733 cultural warfare, obviously
@chrisom4699
Ай бұрын
Protect him from the lizards!! @@brushstroke3733
@Luton-Mick
Ай бұрын
@@brushstroke3733 Puke inducing "protect at all costs" cliches.
this was outrageously good. tim is far more introspective and “aware” than i ever thought.
@CdawgAMVsFilmEditing
Ай бұрын
All good comedians are. That and great observers of humans and their behaviours.😊
@unc1221
Ай бұрын
It’s ok, you’re swallowing too much.
@simply.living.better
Ай бұрын
Tim Dillion is more aware than any of us.
@unc1221
Ай бұрын
@@simply.living.better he’s more aware then you. Not me, don’t speak for me.
@grapenut6094
Ай бұрын
@@simply.living.better Im not sure he is.
This is the interview that I didn’t know I needed to hear. Always liked Tim Dillon. But after this I LOVE him! Nothing but respect 👊🏼
The rant at 40:00 had me ROFLCOPTERING
You did Tim dirty with the close ups in that lighting. 😂 He looks like he has to run up 6 flights of stairs and fight increasingly difficult homeless people on each floor.
@p.c.n2285
Ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂🤣
@taylorroberts1657
Ай бұрын
Im dead 😂
@Cheezeball
Ай бұрын
I thought he looked like Peter Griffin after going 10 rounds with the chicken.
@gitgen1887
Ай бұрын
Hehe @@Cheezeball
@CdawgAMVsFilmEditing
Ай бұрын
Well he had a lot of interesting things to say. 😊
Literally cried listening to him talk about his mom. I know this kind of life, but as a daughter rather than a son (and no dad). His description is quite accurate from where I sit.
@bbearsmama
Ай бұрын
Made me tear up. I’d always wanted to hear more about his mother. 💗
@theboomletgroup8436
Ай бұрын
❤️
@fr7nkyph7llyj7ne5
Ай бұрын
♥️🩸
@bingrusginckle
Ай бұрын
He described where I’m going now. I was shocked how every next step he told of was adjacent to the plot of my own life
@Kickitwithquan
Ай бұрын
My mother is also schizo, and everything he said is spot on
What a nice open conversation. Cuddos for his honesty. Not seeing any politician or other media personage share the life without holding out. I just realized he started his life surrounded by lies and deception, cut himself a mental suit of lying to survive, and now he is the most open person. Nice progress
I appreciate the scathing sarcasm done with a straight face when talking about the generations.
I was a big fan before but an hour and half later, I am an even bigger fan. It isn't often we get a glimpse into the raw human side of Tim that isn't accompanied with quick remarks and jokes. This was a really great insight to a man who's brain and wit are seemingly on hyper speed but clearly his heart is just as vulnerable as the rest of us.
One of my favourite guests on your platform so far. Very genuine and authentic. I love how Tim is just so raw in his truth's and doesn't have any shame entangled in his past. It is so very refreshing to see a true human being be so vulnerable and real. Thank you both for this!
@alexalexiye9791
Ай бұрын
Mine as well
"barcode with feet" 😂😂...laughing my F'en azs off... Tim is a riot!! 😅😅
I appreciate your sincere ask, and you've gained a subscriber. Let's go! 🙏🏾
This level of truth needs to be broadcast from every street corner. Society needs to reflect.
This crossover was not expected.....
1st I’ve ever heard of Tim Dillon, interesting guy, really enjoyed this conversation. Thank you.
Great interview of Tim Dillon, I enjoyed seeing a more serious side of Tim. Made me an even bigger fan of Tim and this channel as well.
I think it's hysterical then he was talking about the generations 40 minutes in he went from Boomers skipped over Gen X and right to millenials. I was a latch key kid (born 78) cooking myself dinner in 4th grade. The generation where they had an announcement every night to remind parents they even had a kid. "It's 10 pm do you know where your children are?" lol
@amyhayutin1738
Ай бұрын
Yes and I noticed he said the millennials had boomer parents when most had Gen X parents.
@DaisiesInVenus
24 күн бұрын
@@amyhayutin1738 Thank you! Not all Millennials have Boomer parents. As a Millennial myself, I have Gen X parents and I know so many that have Gen X parents as well.
Thanks Tim...my older brother was a schizophrenic..it was a tough road for him and the family....it is always helpful to hear someone else's experience. thanks!!
@JoTracy
Ай бұрын
My older sister too It's a heartbreaking road 💔
I could listen to Tim Dillion talk for 7 hours
Such a great interview 🤍
I remember the goth chick he grew up with who rollerbladed and smoked weed. I'm 5 years younger than Tim and grew up in the same town on Long Island. Her name was Tina Deluca, and she scared the crap outta me 😅 at our local park Shell Creek, she smoked on the playground. Man, I'll never forget that girl and how insane it was to be a drug addict in 7th grade.
@zimzob
Ай бұрын
I wonder where she is now. Hopefully watching this interview.
@nilnil7325
Ай бұрын
It might be good to redact her last name. She is a private person at the end of the day and might not appreciate having her name out there like that. I'm not trying to be rude, just a suggestion.
@WhatsTrullyTrending
Ай бұрын
When ur in a 4th dimension it's hard to read lol
@user-us3xi7se5b
Ай бұрын
The guy 2 above me is a bigger man than I. You don't dox people onilne and expect decency. I know the older generation grew up with phone books and this comment is most likely fake, but really? Full name and town?
@Maliceless100
Ай бұрын
Tina be outed.
first time seeing this channel but thank you for letting tim rant uninterruptedly, I subscribed
@eriklondon2946
Ай бұрын
Agreed. This is the most real I have ever heard Tim be (yes he talks about his past, but not in this detail). I love Tim most when he's got someone to talk with.
@guyninneman7982
Ай бұрын
you agree? most of this is satirical.
@eriklondon2946
Ай бұрын
@@guyninneman7982 Nope. Most of this was real. +90% of this was pretty straight up. Of course he'd mix in a joke or two to make light of his horrible past, but that is very common with comedians.
@guyninneman7982
Ай бұрын
@@eriklondon2946 so he loves boomers, thinks millennials are are the participation ribbon generation, supports the tik tok ban, and wants a draft to happen among a myriad of other things
I recently heard death described as, "the time at which the soul graduates from and outlives the body (vessel)." I found that helpful, positive, and liberating in my personal situation.
this is one of the craziest interviews ive seen in a while to be fair we need a part 2 @ 3 hours long please
TIM DILLON..... a master of sarcastic humour and super intelligent. Combining common sense with humour. ALWAYS uplifting listening to Tim Thank you for another wonderful guest.
Anything Tim Dillon is a must watch! Never watched this channel before. Great interview.
I’m so happy I listened - first time hearing Tim Dillon… very relatable (as “Xiennial” )
@patrickglaser1560
20 күн бұрын
Raeganaut*
Great episode thank you brother
stoked he was on the pod; learned the most about his personal life on this episode. glad you made him answer the last question seriously. episode set lighthearted tone i needed for my day today.
A serious conversation with Tim and not the sarcasm that he's the king of was fantastic. The honesty blew my mind,but he is an open book. Thank you so much 😊
When I came out my friends were blown away. To them all gay men are feminine. They still say I’m the straightest guy in our group. When you grow up in rural Texas, you learn real quick how to fit in.
@donventura2116
12 күн бұрын
It's because most media and art feature flamboyantly gay people and aspects of gay culture. Not sure how or why it happened, but it has gotten to the point that a portion of people think that's all gay people.
Thank you for having Tim . I never tire of hearing his experiences, insights and observations.
Best lighting on a podcast set by far! DOAC just keeps getting better
Tim Dillon is the man. His monologue rants in his podcast are legendary.
@AngelWest58
Ай бұрын
Ben was the funny one not this clown
@rudysconstruction
Ай бұрын
@@AngelWest58nobody agrees with you, clown.
Greatest thing about Tim is that he tends not to justify himself, while being entirely honest, and in that I feel him to be a very honorable person. He goes on to challenge the rest of us (Gen X here) to see our own selves. Possibly the most honest, and therefore human, comedians - in a field where honesty has normally led to legendary status - see Patrice O'neal.
Incredible interview! Thank you for being able to show a Tim we’ve never met before. Hearing him talk about grief and spirituality was comforting to discover. Great questions in such a calming manner