Bill Maher has hung onto his job hosting HBO talk show “Real
Time” for 10 years now, despite his penchant for politically incorrect comments
that would require most public figures to turn their publicists into human
shields.
But he knows that at some point, his bosses at HBO could tap him
on the shoulder and put him out to pasture.
“They did it to Johnny Carson when he was 67, and he was still
the biggest star in television almost … certainly in late-night,” says Maher,
57. “The grim reaper waits for no man, television-wise.”
So he continues to hit the road with his smug, snarky brand of
political comedy: This winter, his weekly schedule typically has included the
hourlong show aired live on Fridays from a studio in Los
Angeles , followed by Saturday and Sunday shows in various U.S. cities.
This Sunday night, he performs at Charlotte ’s Belk Theater. (Details: www.ncbpac.org.)
“Stand-up,” Maher says, “you can do till you’re 100. George Burns
was booked at the Palladium when he was 100, and he damn almost made it.”
Maher spoke to the Observer recently about Donald Trump, who is
suing Maher for $5 million over a joke he made about Trump being descended from
an orangutan; President Obama, who Maher calls “Django Unchained”; and the
real “Django Unchained” – a movie he found almost as disturbing as Trump.
Q. Is it hard to switch gears
like that between doing the TV show and then doing your stand-up act?
No, because they actually feed each other. I love going out into
the country because I feel like I take it back to L.A.
and have a sense of America
that I wouldn’t have otherwise, so I’m not just talking about it from an ivory
tower. And I’m very fortunate in the type of material I do, being political,
I’m always being given a fresh batch of fun material to work with. I feel sorry
for these observational comedians who sit there at a diner looking at the
ketchup bottle, thinking, “F---, I’ve gotta come up with a joke about this.
What is funny about a ketchup bottle?” And then you finally come up with
something and they tell you, “Oh no, George Carlin observed that in 1974.” But …
especially with these Republicans, I’ve got funny stuff every week.
Q. And with Trump, right?
Trump! Everywhere I go now, that’s the first thing the crowd
yells out. “Trump!”
Q. So have you been really
busy fretting about his lawsuit against you?
Oh my God, when this thing goes to the Supreme Court, let me tell
you. Ahh, no I don’t know what to tell you about this man. Like I told Conan
last week, it’s as if they made Lenny from “Of Mice and Men” a billionaire. …
It’s insane. I don’t think he’s even a person. It’s like some sort of ’80s pop
reference that I’m having a feud with. It’s like J.R. Ewing and I are fighting.
Q. He was actually in Charlotte earlier this month and was
talking up the golf club he bought in Mooresville, which isn’t far from here.
Maybe you can check out the course when you’re in town.
I’m not a golfer, but I know that one of his hobbies in life is
ruining coastlines, like that thing he had in Scotland, remember that? But
yeah, if that keeps him off the streets, fine.
Q. I take you have no
interest in ever being on “The Celebrity Apprentice”?
Or any other reality show.
Q. Your thoughts on Obama at
the beginning of his second term?
It seems like the ball really is in Obama’s court now. After the
State of the Union … and this being his second term, people are wondering
what’s he gonna do – I keep calling him “Django Unchained” for the second term
– and the Republicans are really … coming across … to the American public as
just sulking, just pissed off, reacting out of personal grudge as opposed to
what’s best for the country. And we’ll see. I think Obama had a very important
lesson to learn in the first term, which is that yeah, it was right to reach
out to people … and he certainly did reach out, you cannot blame the guy for
not trying. But all he got was the back of their hand and “Go back to Kenya , you
f------ Socialist.” So it just seems like he’s taking a different tack now,
which is basically to take it to the people and embarrass the Republicans into
doing something.
Q. Earlier this month, you
made headlines after airing an editorial on “Real Time” that skewered the
Pope’s resignation and Catholics in general. There was one story I found that
was basically just a transcript of the monologue, and there were 361 comments
on it.
Oh really? All positive, I’m guessing?
Q. Absolutely. Why do you
think people get so fired up about religion?
Well, because for so many people, it’s what they cling to.
Remember what Obama said, “they cling to their guns and their religion”? And
with some people, I understand that, I said that in my movie “Religulous,” that
if you’re in prison, and you say, “All I got in here is Jesus,” I get that. But
for a lot of people, I don’t think it’s really that necessary. It’s yes,
frightening when the light goes out at night to think that you may not wake up
and if you don’t you’re just worm food, but come on. It’s attached to too much
bull----. There’s too big a price to pay for that, and obviously, the point we
were trying to make in that editorial, was that … Catholics don’t really follow
anything the Pope says anyway. Ninety-eight percent of Catholics use birth
control – that’s quite a blowing-off of church doctrine. … They masturbate and
they divorce and they have pre-marital sex. OK, so if you’re not really
following what the Pope and the Church says anyway, and the Church has been
shown to be a safe haven for child molesters, what are you sticking around for.
If he quits, you can quit.
Q. Let’s talk about the
South. Your views of it?
I play the South so much. I love the South. In the old days, I
loved it because it was always more fun to go out after the show. Now that I’m
old, I don’t really go out after the show, so that’s out of the question, but
yes, it was always more fun to go out in Charlotte or Houston than it was in
Boston or even San Francisco is not much of a party town. The South knows how to
have fun. But beyond that, I love playing the South. … (Audiences) are pretty
much the same all over, people who come to see you and pay money to see you
generally are your fans. They generally want you to do well, and then you
really want to do well for them. But there is just a little extra bit of love
and enthusiasm when I play red states, because first of all I think they expect
me not to come there, they expect me to have written off that state as a bunch
of rednecks. … What I’ve found is that everywhere, (even in) the reddest of the
red states … there are always two or three thousand liberal, progressive, very
often Atheistic-thinking people even in places like Alabama. They just are
marbled into the woodwork. But they come out when I come out when I come to
their town, and so it’s sort of I think a release to be in a room with all
people who think like you when you thought maybe you were the only one in town.
So there is a really special feeling in places like that. Now, Charlotte is a big, sophisticated city so I’m
sure these people are aware that there are people like them. But maybe not so
much in Tulsa , Oklahoma . Maybe not so much in Huntsville , Alabama .
But … I just think that in general, the feeling in the South is just different.
It’s just more laid-back. It’s more friendly. I’m not saying it’s exactly
Mayberry if you walk down the street, but there’s more humanity, as opposed to
that “don’t look at each other, don’t make eye contact” that you find in
Northern, colder cities.
Q. Lastly, since it’s Oscar
week, let’s talk about movies. Did you see “Argo” (which won Best Picture
Sunday)?
“Argo” – loved it. Great entertainment.
Q. How about “Lincoln ”?
Loved “Lincoln .”
Loved it, and I saw that and then I saw “Django Unchained” about a week later
and I noticed that because they’re up against each other in the same year and
they both happen to be talking about similar subject matter, right, it’s about
slavery and that whole era … they’re compared to each other. … I had real
problems with (“Django”) as far as going from low comedy – like that scene
where they can’t see out of their klansmen outfits, it’s right out of “Blazing
Saddles” – to go from a scene where Kerry Washington is whipped to that scene,
I just couldn’t make that adjustment. I guess some people can, but I couldn’t
go back to laughing after I saw her whipped, or the two slaves’ fight to the
death in the living room. This I found was very disturbing. And for Steven
Spielberg to be able to do a movie about not the dramatic stuff that we think
about with Lincoln – (no) battle scenes … just the procedural movement of
legislation – and still make over $100 million, I think is an amazing
achievement. I just think he is widely perceived as the greatest director, and
he’s still underrated.
Q. “Zero Dark Thirty”?
I wasn’t all that entertained. It was OK, but it was a little too
documentary-like, and yeah, I didn’t know what all the fuss was about, quite
frankly. I liked her other one, “The Hurt Locker,” a lot more. … As far as that
whole controversy about the torture, I thought it was bull---- for the movie to
present the capture of bin Laden as dependent on that torture because the
experts seem to disagree.
Q. And last one – I’m
particularly curious, since it has religious themes – did you see “Life of Pi”?
No, I have not seen “Life of Pi.” I have stayed away on purpose.
I like Ang Lee a lot and I think he’s a great director, and I’ve really enjoyed
a lot of his movies – “The Ice Storm” and “Brokeback Mountain” – but I know
people who’ve seen it and they’ve told me, “Bill, you’re probably not gonna
want to go see this one.”
1 comments:
Bill Maher, blazing the way for unfunny comedians since 1956.
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