If Letterman thinks the guest isn\'t worth his time (which he lets you know within the first thirty seconds), you\'d be well advised to set the Tivo and microwave a bowl of popcorn, because shit is about to get hilariously awkward.
David Letterman may not be the greatest late night host ever (sorry, nobody's ever going to top Craig Ferguson), but thereâs one type of interaction in which Letterman absolutely shines: dealing with people he has no respect for. If Letterman thinks the guest isn't worth his time (and he'll let you know within the first thirty seconds), you'd be well advised to set the Tivo and microwave a bowl of popcorn, because shit is about to get hilariously awkward. I used to think it was his becoming old, crotchety and possibly senile that gave rise to this bizarre streak of gut-busting faux pax, but the videos gathered below prove without a doubt that Letterman's been a dismissive prick since the very beginning. Well played, sir.
9. Richard Simmons
The Guest: Simmons isnât the kind of guy who demands a lot of respect to begin with. Itâs like how in nature, animals sometimes display bright colors as a warning that theyâre dangerous. But, you know, the opposite.
The Tipping Point: At the beginning, you can almost tell yourself Daveâs genuinely faking interest. Sure thereâs some sort of dangling tray fouling up the segment, but heâs not about to let that ruffle him. Unfortunately Simmons use of the phrase âgo-go kartâ is an offense he apparently canât let slide by without comment. The Highlights:
The simpering sarcasm that es for Simmonsâ anger, like a dandelion head bursting in your face on a crisp Spring morning.
The fact that Letterman mocks Simmonsâ clothes is made all the more poignant when Simmons stands up a second later to reveal a lovingly sequined glitter shirt handmade in Daveâs honor.
The explosion. Itâs an excellent enough moment to make me wish all TV segments ended with minor appliance fires. It would sure liven up the local news.
8. Bill OâReilly
The Guest: I think I summed up my thoughts on Bill OâReilly fairly well by spending a week making a five-minute video of him being an irresponsible prick. Daveâs feelings are probably along the same lines, which meant this clip was destined for Youtube greatness.
The Tipping Point: After Dave spends a good thirty seconds thoughtfully articulating his fairly complex standpoint in response to Billâs browbeating, emotionally provocative, sound bite of a question, Bill interrupts him to repeat the same question, but louder. Itâs at this point you can see Dave realizing that they are no longer in the realm of reasoned debate, and responding accordingly. The Highlights:
Since this is the first time Iâve seen OâReilly from an angle besides in-my-face, itâs also the first time I became aware that he has a troll-like hunchback. For a comedy blogger, this is excellent information to acquire.
The fact that CBS cut the video off at the exact height of Daveâs superiority over Bill. The only way they could have encapsulated the interview better would be to change their call letters to ZNG! If you want to see the whole excruciating interview, feel free to click this phrase right here.
7. Michael Richards
The Guest: As you may recall, Michael Richards went on an ethnically-themed tirade at a comedy club in the mid-00âs. In case watching the video of that wasnât uncomfortable enough for you, here he is stammering out an awkward apology on national television.
The Tipping Point: This oneâs not Dave acting disrespectful as much as the whole damned situation being as uncomfortable as a long car ride with the grandparent whoâs âof a different era.â Still, the fact that Dave calls Richards out when he seems to blame the black guys in the audience because they âheckled himâ lets you know heâs not a big Kramer fan. The Highlights:
When Jerry Seinfeld, ostensibly one of the funniest people in the world, turns to the tittering audience and says âstop laughing, itâs not funnyâ in a way that irresistibly triggers another wave.
At one point, Richards questions whether the Letterman show was the right place to apologize, takes a dig at the audience, and then at Dave for making jokes about the situation. He then settles the issue definitively by sawing his hand through the air, going âya-ta-ta!,â and sliding through the door of Jerryâs apartment to borrow food.
I know this one lags in the last third, but watch that part anyway, because I swear to God none of the words Richards puts together amidst collar-tugging silences coalesce into anything that means anything at all in any language. This is followed by some gibberish he cribbed from Maya Angelou to make a perfect bullshit sandwich (open faced).
6. Paris Hilton
The Guest: On some level, Paris Hilton must be aware that society by and large considers her an imbecile. Itâs what sheâs built her empire on. That, and her weird half-closed left eye. So itâs in keeping with her nature that of all the nights she could have appeared on The Late Show, she chose the week after she was released from prison. Thanks to Dave, sheâs not likely to make that mistake again.
The Tipping Point: Letterman clearly had this ambush planned from the very beginning. Basically the first words out of his mouth are âsoâŠprison.â From about 0:50 on, itâs just a long tragic slide into a lecture from your Dad. The Highlights:
Lettermanâs continuous recanting of facts about the case, as if Paris might have forgotten the details of her own life while deg a new fragrance.
When Paris, basically placid throughout the entire interview, finally asks aloud if they can stop talking about her jailtime, and Dave responds by changing gears from âcoyly invasiveâ to âbrutal, cutting sarcasm.â
About six minutes in, when you defy all your natural tendencies by actually starting to feel bad for Paris Hilton.
5. John McCain
The Guest: A lot more press was made by McCainâs failure to appear
on The Late Show than when he actually did show up, but thereâs not a lot more awkward than watching him trying to explain himself to several million swing voters while being openly mocked.
The Tipping Point: When McCain is forced to utter the three words that can kill a Presidential campaignââI screwed upââand Dave laughs the laugh of a man who just warped the course of American history with his stupid TV show and unwillingness to let anything go. The Highlights:
McCain reveals his true feelings about Keith Olbermann at precisely 0:43.
And somewhere between 1:04 and 1:20, he officially becomes a sad old man.
During the course of the interview, McCain implies that Dave is a hack, overpaid, and a torturer, and says that he can use spy satellites to find out the details of his phone conversations. Itâs nice to know that even in our ultra-PC world, the powerful can still threaten to have someone killed for fucking with them.
4. Harmony Korine
The Guest: Harmony Korine is the heroin-chic avant garde writer/director who helped bring us Kids and Gummo, two mock-documentaries about how terrible stuff can be if youâre poor, HIV-positive, addicted to drugs, or just leading a miserable, fucked up life. I know what youâre thinking: laughs ahoy!
The Tipping Point: Daveâs description of Harmony as âpleasantly oddâ doesnât exactly set the bar very high, but when he sees the way Korine is dressed and asks if the âskate park was closed,â you know Daveâs officially shifted into crotchety old man mode and is fixinâ to drive us all the way to Awkwards-ville at eight miles an hour with the blinker on. The Highlights:
When the poster child for edgy, unrelenting street film calls his brutal movie about the lives of cat-murdering white trash âa really amazing blockbuster.â Somehow, I canât imagine the Armageddon crowd movie hopping to go check out Gummo.
Harmonyâs constant wiping of his eyes and strange choking noises could either be inappropriate laughter at some imagined private joke or bitter tears for all the suffering in the world. Either way, I want to buy some of his drugs from him.
The part where Elliot Smith makes a surprise appearance andâoh, nevermind, thatâs still Harmony.
3. Harvey Pekar
The Guest: Robert Crumb collaborator and central character of the film American Splendor, Harvey Pekar here manages to somehow be uglier and more obnoxious than Paul Giamatti putting all of his considerable talents towards being ugly and obnoxious.
The Tipping Point: Itâs pretty apparent from Harveyâs otherappearances on the show that Lettermanâs Producers booked him for the sole purpose of causing a TV train wreck that channel surfers would be forced to stop an ogle. So when Letterman literally bans Harvey from the show, heâs essentially saying âhosting my own show is not worth the ordeal of talking to this man for four minutes.â The Highlights:
At 3:20, when Lettermanâs staff officially decide to deploy the nuclear warhead of talk show interviews, the superimposed thought balloon. Either that, or Harveyâs brain has become so powerful that it can materially manifest donuts (although Iâm not sure Iâd be willing to eat a donut that came out of Harvey Pekarâs head).
The comments below the video, wherein people almost unanimously Pekar as a âworking class heroâ and denounce Letterman as a âsmug hypocrite.â Iâm not saying I disagree with the latter, but really? A working class hero? John Lennon would not approve.
2. Madonna
The Guest: Before cowgirl Madonna, Kaballah Madonna, and Guy Ritchie-ruining Madonna, there was filthy sex goddess Madonna. Here, she punishes Dave for making jokes about her promiscuity and unseemly nature by graphically detailing her sex life and cursing like a sailor.
The Tipping Point: Really, itâs Daveâs fault. He just had to push her. And after he spends the opening minute of the interview trying to get Madonna to kiss an audience member, she signals the beginning of his penance by calling him âa sick fuck.â From the look on Daveâs face, he knows things are only going to get worse from there. The Highlights:
Madonna gives Letterman her underwear and tries to get him to smell them, likens the boom mic to a big black dick, and turns every possible instance of sexual suggestiveness into a joke about her aching vagina. The whole interview is essentially your high school theatre class. Or possibly a Cracked article.
Madonna calls âuntrue rumorâ an oxymoron, which implies that she believes all rumors to be true. Therefore, Iâd officially like to start the rumor that Madonna is only adopting kids so she can eat them when the End Times come. Then she and Alanis Morisette will hang out in a ranch house and compose ill-informed songs about linguistic concepts.
When she accuses Charles Barkley of ânot understanding the meaning of friendship,â marking the most unlikely celebrity beef of all time.
By 13:20, they actually settle into a pretty awesome Abbot and Costello-ish routine culminating in one of Daveâs best zings of all time (at 14:55). The rest is entertaining enough that it actually made me want to see them do a national tour where they just talk to each other until theyâre so full of hate that the show falls apart.
1. Crispin Glover
The Guest: Twenty years later, debate still rages in the lamer corners of the Internet as to whether this is footage of Crispin Glover, worldâs best actor, or Crispin Glover, worldâs highest man. Fake or real, itâs worth watching if only to see Paul Shaffer with slightly more hair.
The Tipping Point: Whatever tipping point preceded this display of drug-induced self-reproach and pale nerdy flexing happened long before the interview took place. My question is how they did a rehearsal interview without realizing the guy was on a mountain of angel dust big enough to have been the remains of a wildfire in heaven. The Highlights:
Always on the cutting edge of fashion, Crispin perfectly models his six-inch platform shoes by directing a high kick directly at Daveâs face.
About halfway through, Glover proves that an incredibly high man can still read Variety. Thatâs right before he says âIâm strong,â then flexes muscles large enough to make you think âoh wow, he actually is kind of strong,â and then âDavid is in grave danger.â
Seriously, what the hell was in that case? Human eyes? Victorian flatware? I really want to know.