Episode 1685 - Marc Maron

Episode 1685 • Released October 9, 2025 • Speakers not detected

Episode 1685 artwork
00:00:00All right, let's do this.
00:00:11How are you?
00:00:11What the fuckers?
00:00:12What the fuck buddies?
00:00:13What the fuck nicks?
00:00:14What's happening?
00:00:17I am Mark Maron and this is my podcast WTF.
00:00:23Welcome to it for almost the last time.
00:00:29This will be the penultimate.
00:00:32Is that how you say it?
00:00:34Penultimate episode of this show.
00:00:37We have one more show to do.
00:00:40That will be on Monday.
00:00:42That will not be recorded here in the garage.
00:00:48And this one, I just wanted it to be us.
00:00:51I wanted it to be in the garage with just me and all of you.
00:00:59Me and you, we've had a relationship for a long time.
00:01:04A long time.
00:01:0516 years.
00:01:08That's the longest relationship I've ever had with you.
00:01:11And if it hasn't been that long for some of you, you'll get the feeling.
00:01:19Get up to speed.
00:01:20Go spend 16 years with me.
00:01:22You can do it online.
00:01:24But on some levels, I understand that this is like a breakup, I guess.
00:01:33I don't feel it in that way.
00:01:35I know that some of you are sad.
00:01:38I'm sad.
00:01:40It's a big change for me.
00:01:42But sometimes you have to move on.
00:01:46And I know you don't have a say in this and I apologize, but that's sometimes how these breakups go.
00:01:54But the truth is, is that we've certainly all come a long way together.
00:01:59I got an email today or someone reached out on me.
00:02:03She'd been listening to me for 16 years and she started when she was five because her parents used to make her listen to me in the car and she hated me.
00:02:13Because I was just this annoying kind of grumpy grown-up.
00:02:18And somehow or another, now that she's in her 20s, she's come around to understanding the grumpiness.
00:02:27But that's crazy.
00:02:29That people have grown up with me, that people have started with me in their teens, in their 20s, even in their 30s, and they're now in their 40s now, and their entire lives have changed.
00:02:40And I've been there.
00:02:41I've been talking to you.
00:02:43I appreciate the gravity of that.
00:02:47People are coming up to me a lot right now and saying, I'm going to miss you.
00:02:51I don't know what I'm going to do without the show.
00:02:53You were always with me.
00:02:56I get people emailing that they've taken me all over the world with them.
00:03:02And I again, I appreciate the weight of that.
00:03:05And I'm grateful to have have been part of your lives.
00:03:10I really am.
00:03:11You know, I have to make sure that I I say that because I don't always think that way.
00:03:17I don't I'm just sitting here in this garage by myself.
00:03:22And I'm surrounded with kind of homemade sound panels that a kid made for me.
00:03:29I've got some tchotchkes and bullshit on the desk here.
00:03:31And I walk out here from my house and I do this and I don't, I'm just talking out.
00:03:39I'm talking out.
00:03:41I don't know where it all lands, but over the years and certainly in the last few months, it's been very moving for me to hear how much
00:03:49of what I do and what we did here, the conversations, the stories, my life has had an impact.
00:03:58It's profound.
00:04:00And humbling because I rarely think about that.
00:04:03I mean, it's been a long time since I thought about like how many people are listening or it's been a long time since I I've listened to a whole podcast.
00:04:12So my experience with this is I'm just sitting out here.
00:04:15I'm just sitting out here in the garage talking, but I know I'm talking to you.
00:04:21And I do that as full-heartedly as I possibly can.
00:04:26And I guess that comes through.
00:04:28I want to reflect a little bit, I think, because I've been thinking about me in relation to this show, in relation to my life, and how it kind of began.
00:04:40But also before that.
00:04:43Before that.
00:04:43And some words come up to me.
00:04:45You know, look, I've been called self-centered.
00:04:48I've been called narcissistic.
00:04:49I've been called...
00:04:51You know, a navel gazer.
00:04:53Yeah, these are the bad things.
00:04:55And in reflection about who I am and what my creativity is, I came upon a few words.
00:05:04A lot of times when I talk about starting this podcast, there's a sense that it was desperation.
00:05:12And that word has connotations that are negative, that, you know, that guy's desperate.
00:05:20And I think if you remove the judgment tone from desperation and you apply it to your life, the definition of desperation is
00:05:30Is a state of despair typically one which results in a rash or extreme behavior?
00:05:37Yeah, I'll take it.
00:05:39I'll take it.
00:05:40At the beginning of this show, I was in a very bad place.
00:05:46My career was in the toilet.
00:05:49And there was really nowhere to go from where I was.
00:05:52I'd been through a lot of shit.
00:05:53I'd been through two divorces, one that was dramatically and traumatically heartbreaking and costly.
00:06:02I didn't have a way forward really with comedy that made sense.
00:06:04I'd already been at it a long time.
00:06:06I was in my 40s.
00:06:09And rash or extreme behavior, the extreme behavior that
00:06:14See, even that definition has the connotation of something that could be negative.
00:06:20But the rash or extreme behavior that I took part in, in my desperation at the time, was to do something totally different.
00:06:32Look, I knew I could be on these mics, but the extreme behavior was like, we're going to do this thing because we have access to this technology to put it out there.
00:06:43And we don't know where it goes from there.
00:06:45There's no money involved.
00:06:48There's no guarantee of anything, listeners, anything.
00:06:53No one even knows what these podcasts are.
00:06:56But I needed to put myself out there.
00:06:58And the extreme behavior was taking that chance.
00:07:01The rash behavior was really just believing in it.
00:07:06So I think that framing desperation in that way, it becomes proactive.
00:07:12The other word I was thinking about was urgency.
00:07:15I live in an urgent state.
00:07:19I think that when you're self-employed and you do a lot of things, you're always chasing something.
00:07:24And if you're not organized, you have to do something right when it comes into your head or you might not do it.
00:07:30But the definition of urgency is importance requiring swift action and also an earnest and persistent quality insistence.
00:07:41I am at the core an urgent person.
00:07:45Everything happens urgently.
00:07:48When I talk, all of what I put out into the world requires me talking, and it's always urgent.
00:07:54It's very rarely passive.
00:07:57So when you mix this sort of desperate extreme action with urgency, that is a large component of why I connect, I think.
00:08:09And and it doesn't go away.
00:08:11The urgency is annoying because some things can wait, but I'm not great at the waiting.
00:08:17And the great thing about doing this podcast and talking to you is that in my urgency, no matter where I am in my heart and mind, I have to put it out there for myself and then for you.
00:08:28It becomes that.
00:08:31The other word that I thought of was connection.
00:08:33Connection, a relationship in which a person, thing, or ideas is linked or associated with something else.
00:08:40I live for connection.
00:08:43I live for it because I need it to know that I exist.
00:08:47Need, that's the other word.
00:08:49Need, require something because it is essential and very important.
00:08:55I have no ability to compartmentalize.
00:08:58It's always, you know, drenched in need, the need for connection with urgency coming out of, at the beginning, desperation.
00:09:09And that's, this is how I live my life.
00:09:12And this is, it's all very immediate.
00:09:15And it's all very important to me.
00:09:17Neediness, that implies that's a negative, but everyone has needs.
00:09:23So when you take like neediness, desperation, urgency,
00:09:29It all seems negative, but it is not.
00:09:32It is the only way that I can live in the world.
00:09:36And it's the way that my brain and my heart works.
00:09:40And it just happens to sort of fit, you know, what I do, which is talk in the moment, unscripted, like now.
00:09:50both in comedy and this podcast, which are my, that's what I do.
00:09:56I'm a standup comedian by trade.
00:09:58I'm a podcaster by trade, but also this is my creativity.
00:10:05And then the other word I looked up was selfish.
00:10:08Selfish.
00:10:10Of a person, action or motive lacking consideration for others concerned chiefly with one's own personal profit or pleasure.
00:10:16Well, fortunately, it was never about profit.
00:10:21And, you know, and I and I don't know what pleasure is.
00:10:26For me, relief is good enough.
00:10:29And I don't lack consideration for others.
00:10:32I think I did because I was self-involved, but I'm not a sociopath.
00:10:38I have a conscience.
00:10:39It's just sometimes I'm a little late connecting it.
00:10:43After the damage is done, I realize, like, oh, I didn't take into consideration.
00:10:47But over the course of this show...
00:10:50You have heard me learn how to be considerate of others, how to be empathetic for others, how to listen to others, how to surrender a lot of my selfishness.
00:11:00And that's become ingrained in me.
00:11:02And that was the process of this.
00:11:04And I imagine that some of you took some of that away from this.
00:11:07I knew that I wanted to be a creative person.
00:11:11I was and am a creative person.
00:11:14And when I was younger, I remember I was in 10th grade.
00:11:17I was in an English class and we were studying poetry and the teacher asked us to write a poem.
00:11:23And I wrote this very carefully.
00:11:24Weird, heartfelt, sad poem about, you know, not knowing how to talk to girls, not being a jock, not, you know, having any experience with relationship.
00:11:37It was just a very it was too much.
00:11:40And I remember reading it, and the class was just mortified.
00:11:43And the teacher was like, oh, well, okay, Mark, thank you.
00:11:48That was very interesting.
00:11:51I just put too much of my heart out there, and it alienated me more.
00:11:56But I spoke in honesty in that moment, and the feeling of doing that was horrendous.
00:12:03So I continued to do it my entire life.
00:12:07And when I got into college, look, I tried to pursue poetry.
00:12:11I did photography.
00:12:13I did acting.
00:12:14I was always trying to put myself out there in an attempt to become sort of a whole person.
00:12:22So if I thought if I could be seen and I could show myself that somehow or another I would come together.
00:12:29And that's why I chose comedy for some reason.
00:12:33It was because I could put myself out there.
00:12:36I mean, the requirement was to be funny, and I've gone through a lot of stages of doing that.
00:12:41But you could do whatever you wanted up there, and I really believed I would find myself through that.
00:12:49Comedy brought me here.
00:12:51The mics brought me here.
00:12:53Being on a mic is how I live my life and how I've always lived my adult life.
00:12:59All the searching, which was never spiritual per se, I was fortunate in that, that I was not a spiritual searcher looking for the great answers to why we live or to whether there's a God or not or to how to be spiritually sound and connected.
00:13:15You know, I was in search of myself and
00:13:19And I figured if I could get that undertaking completed, maybe I'd seek the bigger answers.
00:13:28This is all in retrospect.
00:13:30This is me reflecting.
00:13:31But after years of talking on mics as a comic, I began to do... I had an opportunity to do some radio.
00:13:39And I realized with these kind of mics...
00:13:42I can talk like I'm talking now.
00:13:44I can talk in a way that didn't require me to be funny, that I could actually explore every aspect and emotion and creative impulse that I have through talking without being expected to be funny, expected to be anything.
00:14:03But myself, and that was the big breakthrough, is to be able to sit here.
00:14:08Again, I'm alone, and I'm always alone in this room on the mic unless I have a guest with me.
00:14:15You're hearing me find myself in the world in front of you.
00:14:24And I don't think that's selfish.
00:14:27And I think that's what we're all trying to do.
00:14:30with some success or failure or doubt or pain.
00:14:36But that's what I do.
00:14:37That's what I do.
00:14:38That was the big breakthrough that once I hit bottom, not with drugs and alcohol, that was before the podcast, but once I hit bottom with life and with career, that I found this mic and I found this medium and I found the connection.
00:14:57And I found a place where I could fully express my thoughts and feelings.
00:15:03And that was a big deal.
00:15:06And it remains a big deal to this conversation I'm having with you right now.
00:15:11But it was always about these rooms.
00:15:12It was always about this studio.
00:15:14It was always about, you know, in the beginning, it was about the old garage.
00:15:18The old garage was a magical place, a truly magical place that I was ready to let go when I let it go.
00:15:24But that place, when I first got into that space, and it was actually a functioning garage just filled with crap,
00:15:33Broken furniture and this and that lamps.
00:15:35I just stuck a table in it.
00:15:38I put a floor down.
00:15:39I stuck a table in it and I had my MacBook and I had these big mics.
00:15:43And I sat there and did this with people coming in.
00:15:47And as it began to sort of take shape and become a thing, you know, I moved all of my stuff from storage, all of my books, all of my tchotchkes, all of my life in pictures, photographs, pieces of art, little knickknacks.
00:16:02And I made it an environment that was not just cozy, but it was literally a representation of my entire life through bits and pieces of things that were important to me.
00:16:15Clutter, but informed clutter.
00:16:17It was like you were walking into my being.
00:16:20because I was surrounded with all of it in that room.
00:16:24And it was a magical place.
00:16:26And at the beginning, when people would come to the house, they'd have to walk through my little, you know, eight, 900 square foot house with one bathroom, this old 1923 Spanish bungalow house with a beat up garage out back.
00:16:38And they'd have to walk through my entire being before they even got on the mic.
00:16:44And all the sort of working through things with people and trying to
00:16:49Get connected initially with my community of comics who I thought I had alienated.
00:16:54But I always felt this way.
00:16:56It turns out over time that you start to learn that, you know, only you feel that way.
00:17:01It was like that moment in high school where I spoke up and I did something that I thought was, you know, important and beautiful and honest.
00:17:09And I felt nothing but ostracized.
00:17:12I've always felt that way.
00:17:14And I guess that is sort of an inverted grandiosity.
00:17:17Like, you know, in the rooms, they call it the piece of shit at the center of the universe.
00:17:23But it just wasn't really the case.
00:17:25And over time, I realized, like, you know, I'm not that important.
00:17:27I'm not that special.
00:17:29I don't have that much of an impact.
00:17:30And all these things that I was assuming were in my head.
00:17:34But nonetheless, over the course of those first few hundred episodes, I started to
00:17:39Open up and started to learn how to have these conversations and also speak to you directly at the beginning, which was very important.
00:17:46And this was never a for profit endeavor.
00:17:49I was adverse to even having ads on it.
00:17:51I thought, you know, that would ruin it, man.
00:17:53We got something pure here.
00:17:55It wasn't even a punk rock sensibility.
00:17:57I just thought it would ruin the integrity of the thing.
00:17:59So, you know, we set up a donation site and I was in my house with I had a roommate at that time, Stosh, and she was helping me pack envelopes, you know, to send swag out to people that gave a little money.
00:18:12It was like it was all hands on deck.
00:18:14It was urgent.
00:18:15It's always urgent.
00:18:16This was urgent.
00:18:18when I got up to do this, but it was always just about me on this mic, and it still is.
00:18:23You know, I walk away from this, I walk away from a guest interview, and it's in the past, and I don't even think I always realized the impact of it or how it's going out there.
00:18:34I long ago stopped wondering about how many people are listening and all that, and I was just showing up to do this work, you know, with a certain sense of urgency.
00:18:48It just was life or death, urgency and the need for connection so I could exist in the world.
00:18:59But it was always about these mics.
00:19:00That old studio was, you know, a magical place.
00:19:04And people would come to look at it.
00:19:06They would drive by my house.
00:19:07They wanted to know what it was, the garage, the cat ranch.
00:19:12The cats all played an important part.
00:19:14My divorces played an important part.
00:19:17My friends who would make me laugh played an important part.
00:19:20But really, when it comes down to it, it was you guys who were really the most important because something I was doing was speaking to you.
00:19:30And the sort of gratitude and input I've had from the audience has been something I could never have imagined.
00:19:38That my struggle, which is...
00:19:41Again, the urgency of my life and how I react to it and then talk about it and live in it and share it with you was somehow a consciousness that many of you connected with.
00:19:59And it changed my life.
00:20:04And look, a lot of things have changed for me.
00:20:05A lot of you know that.
00:20:08when I moved to this house again, the urgency I've done this show.
00:20:14I did it in the magic room in the old house at the cat ranch, you know, out there off of that beat up patio deck.
00:20:23I've done it in hotel rooms around the world.
00:20:26I've done it in airport lounges.
00:20:28I've done it in cars.
00:20:30I've done it, uh, you know, outside because, uh,
00:20:36my work ethic, my creative ethic, and just the way I live my life is urgent.
00:20:45And I do feel like I, I could use a break from that because I was just realizing the other night when I was driving down to the store over Laurel Canyon, a drive I've made all of my adult life on and off to the comedy store that I was sitting in my body and my body was in my car and
00:21:06I don't know if that really is as profound to you as it is for me, but I was in that moment because I've been wondering, you know, what's life going to be like without this podcast?
00:21:17And we've been slowing down and saying this goodbye for a long time now, months.
00:21:24but I was really in a present that I don't know that I've experienced before where I wasn't up in my head.
00:21:33I wasn't really panicking about anything.
00:21:37Oh boy.
00:21:38I guess that's the other word.
00:21:39I left out a very important word.
00:21:47Hold on.
00:21:48I'd like to get the definition of that.
00:21:54I left out the most important word to go with the other words.
00:21:59Panic.
00:22:00Sudden, uncontrollable fear or anxiety, often causing wildly unthinking behavior or wildly overthinking behavior in my case.
00:22:11My panic is definitely not unthinking.
00:22:14It may be untrue, but it's not unthinking.
00:22:18Throw that into the mix.
00:22:20Panic, need, connection, urgency, desperation, selfish.
00:22:27These are the words that I guess I'm trying to share with you because all of them seem negative.
00:22:35But out of that combination, I became a more full person.
00:22:42compassionate, empathetic, wiser, funnier, humble person.
00:22:54But I couldn't have done it without that path through those words and what they mean and sharing them with you.
00:23:03So I'm driving in my car and I realized like, dude, you are fully in your life right now.
00:23:08You just turned 62 years old and you're fully in your life right now.
00:23:13And I don't know if I've ever felt that.
00:23:17It's taken me this long to get here.
00:23:21And I know that not everybody's like me.
00:23:25And I don't need to talk about why I'm like I am.
00:23:28I've done that exploration.
00:23:31This being in the world in the form and with the sense of self I have now is a new experience.
00:23:38Because I've done everything...
00:23:41to not avoid it, but to just keep moving.
00:23:46And I'm realizing now as we slow the show down that I have not really sat with myself and just sat with the frequency of what is in my immediate environment, in my immediate life, with a sense of accomplishment, with a sense of peace, with a sense of appreciation for what I've done and for other people.
00:24:10And it's overwhelming, but it's new to me.
00:24:17But I just remember when I got this place and I was thrilled about the studio, having a studio here, but then the sound wasn't right and I was trying to record the first day I was here and they were jackhammering around the corner and I just freaked out because it was bleeding into the room.
00:24:34My old garage was so insulated with shit from my life that it was a perfect sound.
00:24:40And I just remember, like, I still had my headphones around my neck and I ran around the corner to where they were doing the construction.
00:24:46I was in the middle of the street looking at these guys working construction going, how long are you going to be doing this?
00:24:52I have to record the urgency.
00:24:55And I don't even know with my urgency, you know, how insane I have looked in my life to other people.
00:25:00Like, what is what is the problem?
00:25:02I this is very important.
00:25:05Everything is very important.
00:25:08And they stopped.
00:25:10It was like when Arnold Schwarzenegger came over here and they were doing yard work.
00:25:13And I was like, you guys, Arnold Schwarzenegger is going to be here.
00:25:17This is important.
00:25:20Everything is fucking life or death.
00:25:22And that is some anxiety part.
00:25:24Oh, anxiety.
00:25:26Wow, that's the other word.
00:25:29I think I kind of, it all adds up to that, doesn't it?
00:25:36But look, you guys, oh, come on, I'm going to miss you.
00:25:42Yeah, yeah, yeah, oh yeah, this is... Anxiety is a normal human emotion involving feelings of apprehension, fear, or unease about potential future misfortune.
00:25:53Yeah, that's, yeah, that's, yeah, exactly.
00:25:57Welcome to me.
00:26:02Boy, now I'm just doing a hypochondriac thing.
00:26:05Excessive worry or rumination.
00:26:07Physical symptoms.
00:26:10Rapid heartbeat, sweating, shortness of breath, muscle tension.
00:26:13Avoidance, avoiding situations or activities that trigger anxiety.
00:26:17Everything.
00:26:18Difficulty sweeping.
00:26:19That went away.
00:26:20Irritability.
00:26:21Yeah, there's the other word.
00:26:23Anxiety.
00:26:24What are the words we have here?
00:26:27Desperation, urgency, connection, need, selfish, anxiety.
00:26:32Through that path, my friends, I've become a more full person right in front of your very eyes.
00:26:40But it was always about the mic.
00:26:42It was always about the talking.
00:26:44It was always about the urgency of talking.
00:26:46It was always about working it out out loud in front of you.
00:26:49And we've been through a lot of stuff together, a lot of breakups, death, cats, the world,
00:27:04Yeah, we've been through a lot of shit together.
00:27:11And I'm going to miss you.
00:27:11I'm going to miss this.
00:27:15And this was not a decision made quickly and was not taken lightly.
00:27:24And I do want to say that I am somewhat excited.
00:27:29I am somewhat relieved.
00:27:31But a lot of people are like, well, you know, you're not going to stop, whatever.
00:27:34You're going to go on to do this.
00:27:37And yeah, yeah, but the work, this work was my life.
00:27:42This work was important.
00:27:45Every one of these conversations was important to me.
00:27:48And I always have an elevated sense of self-importance, you know, just because that's the way I live my life.
00:27:54Like, wow, we really did something here.
00:27:57And I think about that with jokes and with everything.
00:28:00And like when I look outside to people, I'm like, I don't know what I want them to be.
00:28:05I guess I want them to be my mother.
00:28:07And I'm like, you know, four years old.
00:28:10And I just want people to go, that was really great.
00:28:13That really made a difference.
00:28:14That was really special.
00:28:15That was important, that joke.
00:28:19But now I can do that for myself.
00:28:23This was important.
00:28:24This was special.
00:28:26This was relevant.
00:28:27This was life-changing for me and for some of you.
00:28:33It was important.
00:28:34It is important.
00:28:37And the relief that I feel is really that I've been working nonstop trying to put myself out there and be creative in the ways I've chosen for all of my adult life.
00:28:54And somehow or another, I earned a living.
00:28:58I saved some money.
00:29:00But I think I missed a lot of life while I was in it because I look back on it and I think, God damn it, how did I do that?
00:29:07How did I get through that?
00:29:09Who was that guy who did that?
00:29:11Being who I am and what I do, I'm very present.
00:29:15But once I walk out of that present, you know, it quickly becomes the past.
00:29:21And I don't really afford myself any sort of appreciation or gratitude or feeling of accomplishment naturally.
00:29:30But I have it now most of the time.
00:29:32And I want to live in that for a little while.
00:29:35And then I want to see what...
00:29:38see what I am and who I am now in terms of like just living life.
00:29:45I just want to focus on, you know, slowing it down a little bit and then being in myself and being in my life and having that be enough.
00:29:56Is that okay?
00:29:57Is that okay, you guys?
00:30:01I hope it all made sense.
00:30:06But this thing was, you know, it didn't go by fast, but when I look at it and I see how much we've done, it's crazy.
00:30:20We've done a lot of stuff.
00:30:22And we did it to the best of our abilities, Brendan and I, and all the guests.
00:30:29I got to be grateful for them, all the people that I had these conversations with who I consider my friends, even if they don't really remember me or know just how important and how urgent it was that we talked.
00:30:43Thank you to all of them.
00:30:44Amazing people.
00:30:50And I just, I want to reflect on all of it.
00:30:57It just all was all in the moment.
00:30:59It was all so, again, urgent to the point where I didn't miss it, but I didn't appreciate it enough when I did it.
00:31:10Maybe I did in the moment, but I'm just overwhelmed with the accomplishment of it all.
00:31:19I'm just so happy you guys were with me, you people, to experience this all with me.
00:31:26I am feeling grateful.
00:31:29I am feeling sad.
00:31:30It is a sense of loss, but it's not a bad one.
00:31:37It's just life.
00:31:40I mean, fuck.
00:31:41Really.
00:31:42Really.
00:31:44A lot of your input changed my mind, changed the way I looked at things.
00:31:49I really took to heart a lot of what many of you said to me in person, sometimes through emails.
00:31:57And I really feel like you were a big part of my evolution or my evolving wisdom and perception of
00:32:06You really helped me.
00:32:11I don't know, man.
00:32:14I love you guys.
00:32:16And I think you'll be okay without me.
00:32:20I'm not entirely sure I'll be okay without you.
00:32:23But it has been quite a ride.
00:32:26Quite an adventure.
00:32:27Quite a life.
00:32:30And... Boomer lives.
00:32:37Monkey, La Fonda, cat angels everywhere.
00:33:02I really had no expectations out of this show.
00:33:04I think Brendan and I got into doing it thinking we might get, you know, maybe a few hundred people, but I had no idea that it would take off the way it did.
00:33:11And deeper than that, I had no idea that it would connect to people in the way that it does.
00:33:21You're connecting with me on some other level than I ever imagined possible.
00:33:25It's not really about comedy.
00:33:26It seems to be about sharing what is inside of my head or having the freedom to do that.
00:33:31What I've grown to realize as I do this show is that many of us spend our lives just trying to get by, just trying to get through life.
00:33:42But happiness...
00:33:42I never cry when I just, you know what, it is a beautiful story and sometimes I forget that.
00:33:52Yeah, now I'm crying.
00:33:53Something happened in here, I can't explain it.
00:33:55I don't know why it happens or why it happened.
00:33:58And all of a sudden it's popular.
00:33:59There's a pride in that that you can't imagine.
00:34:01There's a pride in it that's bigger than getting a joke over or doing a good show.
00:34:05And I'm super proud of you.
00:34:06And I can honestly tell you, Mark, that when I hear your interviews, I'm in awe.
00:34:12I think it's totally amazing.
00:34:15All right.
00:34:16And I'm in awe.
00:34:17What can I tell you?
00:34:18That's the truth.
00:34:20Well, that makes me happy to hear.
00:34:21It's really what it's all about, to make people feel less alone in the most horrible places in their minds, in their lives, in their situations, of all kinds.
00:34:31How would you describe yourself using only three words?
00:34:35I don't know.
00:34:36How about I'm almost there?
00:34:45I'm very grateful that it's working out, and I love doing it, but I do have a guy within me that says, like, oh, the other shoe's going to drop, dude.
00:34:53Oh, well, that's the question.
00:34:55But something is going to happen.
00:34:58Thanks, Norm.
00:34:58That's the bad part.
00:34:59All right, let's weave it there.
00:35:01Love you, buddy.
00:35:01Love you too, man.
00:35:02That everyone you know someday
00:35:13Instead of saying all of your goodbyes Let them know you realize that life goes fast It's hard to make the good things last You realize the sun doesn't go down It's just an illusion caused by the world Spinning light
00:35:41Ultimately, this is your show.
00:35:44I'm talking to you.
00:35:51And I couldn't do it without you.
00:35:53I really couldn't.
00:35:54So thank you.
00:35:56Thank you.
00:35:57Thank you.
00:35:59Thank you.
00:36:00Thank you for listening.
00:36:18okay wipe your eyes that was it for today from the garage but we have one more episode coming up on monday our our truly last episode and uh i i i think you'll enjoy it all right then talk to you later

Episode 1685 - Marc Maron

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