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The George Carlin Show is an American sitcom that aired Sunday at 9:30 pm on the Fox network from January 1994 to July 1995. It was created by Sam Simon, who executive produced the show jointly with the show's namesake, comedian George Carlin. [1] [2] On the show, Carlin played a New York City taxicab driver.
George Carlin hosted the show on its premiere episode. [1] Three episodes later, Candice Bergen became the first female host [ 2 ] and she was the first to host a second time later in 1975. [ 3 ] Guests who host five times become members of the Five-Timers Club, introduced on the December 8, 1990 episode, when Tom Hanks became the seventh ...
In 1981, Carlin returned to the stage, releasing A Place for My Stuff and returning to HBO and New York City with the Carlin at Carnegie TV special, which was filmed at Carnegie Hall and aired during the 1982–83 season. Carlin continued doing HBO specials every year or two over the following decade and a half.
Live from New York, it’s the cast of “Saturday Night.” Director Jason Reitman’s “thriller-comedy,” as he described it to Vanity Fair, takes place on Oct. 11, 1975, the day of the first ...
Unlike Carlin's other stand-up specials, this contains only 27 minutes of stand-up performance. The rest is a retrospective celebrating Carlin's 40th anniversary in entertainment, with clips of his television appearances and an interview with the host Jon Stewart. Some of Carlin's material was repeated in his next special, You Are All Diseased.
Jammin' in New York is George Carlin's 14th album and eighth HBO special, recorded on April 24 and 25, 1992, at the Paramount Theater, on the grounds of Madison Square Garden in New York City. Topics include the war in the Persian Gulf, similarities and differences among average Americans and language used at airports.
The special comes from Dudesy, a self-described “comedy AI” that purportedly directs an eponymous podcast and YouTube show with podcaster Chad Kultgen and Canadian actor and Mad TV alum Will ...
Life Is Worth Losing is the 18th album and 13th HBO special by American comedian George Carlin. It was recorded simultaneously with the live broadcast of the special and was his final special recorded at the Beacon Theatre. The special was the first project Carlin had undertaken since completing drug rehabilitation in 2005. [2]