| Listened to this last night and give him props for looking hard at that part of his life and making it funny. He's very direct. The bit with the kid at the beginning was also so direct and funny. I love that all the comedians at his intervention had to agree beforehand not to do any bits during! How crazy is that?! |
I will never understand why there is such a cultish fandom for John Mulaney. |
He's a decently funny celebrity. I think similar cultiness exists for many celebrities, his is just unusually large -- perhaps due to popularity among young people on sites like Reddit and Tumblr? |
I thought the GQ part was funny, but weak as an ending. I also thought the Pacino thing was not at all funny and went on forever. |
+1. Went back to watch several parts over again. So good. |
He's funny. He seems like a likable human. I don't agree he's a god. |
Hated Pacino thing. Just not funny. |
No he isnt |
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So I've watched this special twice (once for myself, and once to evaluate the question I'm going to ask all of you in a minute, hang on). I thought it was hilarious and really good. But should I let my almost-15 year old watch it?
She loves John Mulaney and has enjoyed his other shows (except the old people broadway thing). But 90 minutes about his recovery from cocaine and other drugs makes me think that might just be bad parenting. The other thing is that the show makes pretty clear that many of the other shows of his that she's really enjoyed were performed by him when he was high on cocaine. So that would also teach her a kind of lesson that maybe I don't want her to learn. And clearly being on cocaine is terrible, but in some ways does he make it sound like a fun adventure, running across town to pawn watches etc. I'm not sure my kid wouldn't get the wrong message, so I'm leaning toward no, although she really wants to watch it alot. Thanks for any input/reassurance I'm making the right decision! |
| I thought the Pacino things was pretty funny tbh. |
I actually think it's a good message for my teen to hear that if you start drinking and drugs at a young age, you could be fighting addiction for the rest of your life. I let her watch it. |
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He's amusing without actually being laugh out loud funny. The little boy looks are aging weirdly. I wanted him to talk obliquely about Olivia Munnn, the way he did about Anna Tendler but maybe in the next show
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I think stand-up is tough and sometimes you can’t reclaim the magic you had when you were young and hungry. Case in point ( for me): Sebastian Maniscalco |
I would be very careful. There is already a culture of performance enhancing drugs for academics (ADHD drugs, Ritalin, other stimulants), and basically this is an ad for comedy as a necessity for a career in comedy. |
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We watched it with my 3 kids, all of whom are younger than 15. The youngest is 9.
I don't think any of them are now keen to abuse coke and pills. He makes it funny because he's a comedian. But he makes clear how bad things were and that he needed help. |