George Carlin

I must confess that two days ago I had no idea who George Carlin was.

I got to know him only yesterday, thanks to one of @ampajaro’s tweets announcing his death first thing in the morning. That was followed by a chain of entries coming from a few of the blogs I (helplessly try to) keep up with.

I have read such striking superlatives about this comedian that I youtubed him. After watching a few of his routines I now feel that I have to share and honour his talent. So here you have two pieces of different shows by George Carlin. Caution — strong opinions (and language) ahead.

The first video is basically about religion being a pile of bullshit (kudos, we need more of that nowadays):

On religion

The second video is a somewhat furious yet brilliant sermon against those who are against abortion. (I personally don’t agree with all of what Carlin says in this video. I am not against abortion. But unlike most of other left-wing people I know, I am not that sure that I am undoubtfully in favour of abortion, either. Also, I don’t buy the theory that equates abortion to women’s rights, and to “the choice of one woman”. In any case, I’m an atheist and my position has nothing to do with religion, tradition or customs, so I very much support — and enjoy — Carlin’s mockery of religion’s mean and simplistic approach to abortion):

“Pro life”? Anti woman!

What I admire the most about George Carlin is the technique — the round, perfectly-delivered script. He can speak for ten minutes without stumbling over a single syllable, without humming or hesitating. Weaving long enumerations of words or examples, putting the stress in the right place and stopping precisely where required.

And I love his strong and brave position on issues as sticky as religion, politics, taboos, gender, death, PC language and abortion. Even if at times he looks more like a fanatical preacher than a comedian and some of his arguments seem debatable to me. But hey, conservatism needs to be balanced. Don’t miss his “Seven dirty words” routine (“shit, piss, fuck, cunt, cocksucker, motherfucker, tits”), which apparently caused a radio station to be sued and sparkled a major debate about censorship in the American airwaves. Here, the video audio in YouTube.

24 Jun 2008 Politics, TV, Videos

6 comments so far

  1. Carmen — 25 Jun 2008 5:41

    Tiene buena pinta lo que hacía/decía el Carlin éste. Qué pena que se me escape casi todo, ay… mi inglés es muy rudimentario, tengo que ponerme las pilas con esa asignatura pendiente. He enganchao aquí lo que te conté: http://xlasbuenascostumbres.blogspot.com/
    Besos

  2. zeta25 Jun 2008 8:51

    I subscribe your post line by line, I had no idea of the existence of this guy until I started reading the obituaries days ago. He’s brilliant, and a very fast speaker! Have you see the one regarding voting?? Hilarious. And really serious. It’s a pity he had to die to enjoy his fresh sketches, better late than never I guess.

  3. June 25, 2008 — XXI Century « The German Component25 Jun 2008 15:56

    [...] post is dedicated to those who think there is some room for improvement in Science, damn it, this guy did more for Science than Scientific Journals. Possibly related posts: (automatically [...]

  4. Carmen — 25 Jun 2008 16:17

    Por qué no salen mis comentarios? :(

  5. Carlos25 Jun 2008 18:12

    Por estos lares estamos todos disfrutando de los videos… yo había oído hablar de él hace poco, buscando cosas acerca de la FCC (el organismo de censura de EEUU), gracias a un capítulo de “Family Guy”. Así encontré una canción de Eric Idle (el cantarín de los Monty Python), llamada FCC Song”, muy graciosa. Buscando más cosas sobre la canción en la Wikipedia, llegué a la lista de las 7 palabras prohibidas en televisión, y toda la histora de la demanda… parece ser que el monólogo evolucionaba”, e iba añadiendo y quitando palabras… jeje. Un gran tipo.

  6. Fabian — 2 Jul 2008 12:48

    buenísimo el tío este, no lo conocía