We Might Be Drunk
Gary Vaynerchuk (Gary Vee) - Sam Morril & Mark Normand - We Might Be Drunk Podcast
09 Mar 2026
Chapter 1: What experiences do comedians share about road gigs and travel?
Ooh.
All right. Try to get it on the camera.
Trying to wake up here.
Yeah.
How you doing, man?
Good, good. I made a mistake. I had a 5 a.m. flight out of Tulsa.
Did you do Kane's Ballroom?
No, I did the new comedy club.
Oh, shit.
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Chapter 2: How does social media impact the comedy industry?
Tulsa's cool.
They call it the Austin of Oklahoma. Yeah. A lot of bars. Not a lot of competition in Oklahoma. No, no, that's true. Although, Oklahoma City's pretty cool.
Oh, yeah.
I've had good times there.
My opening line was, I've never been here. I've been to OKC. I bombed there. Not as much as Alaska.
And they would go, boo. I think my opener in OKC was, you guys weren't a part of the Confederacy, but you would have been.
Ha, ha, ha. They weren't? No, they weren't around, I don't think. Oh, yeah, good point. A very Native American-y state, Oklahoma. Yeah, oh, yeah. And Black Wall Street. Yeah. Yeah. All right. So, didn't mean to break it down. Tulsa? Tulsa, yeah. So, Tulsa, you know, you just want to, there's like not a lot of direct flights. So, I got the first one out, out of Nam.
And so, then you do three shows Saturday. You don't get to bed until two.
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Chapter 3: What are the challenges of testing comedy material online?
You got to wake up at four.
You got to stop that three show Saturday shit. You're getting old for that. I'm getting old. I should take my own advice, but you should stop.
Well, that's why I'm all stuffed up, because then you land in New York, and you're like, it's 11 a.m. What am I doing? I'm here too early. I showed up. My wife was like, huh? What are you doing here? She just hands me the baby.
Come home. You give your baby COVID.
I got the third show, though, baby. Yeah, third show. I show her the check. She doesn't care. And then, yeah, then you're just on with the baby all day. Then it was, I missed Valentine's Day, so I did a big Valentine's dinner with drinks.
Where did you go?
We went to Cafe Zafri. Which is a nice little spot if you want to take a date out. Yeah. Yeah, she dressed to the nines. Look at this place. It's gorgeous. Right by Union Square. Ooh, look at that. That is fancy. It's right in the heart of Manhattan.
Ooh, can I run a joke by you? Sure. Speaking of a date I went on. Went on a date with a 25-year-old. We go back to my apartment. She's going through, you know, I got a lot of DVDs. She's going through them all. She goes, I've never seen The Godfather. And I was like, you got to see The Godfather. And I was like, wait, is this grooming?
That could be something, right? That's great. Caught me off guard completely.
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Chapter 4: How do comedians discuss their personal experiences and struggles?
Yeah. Podcast.
Dude, that movie. So crazy thing about so network. William Holden. Awesome. That movie, by the way, dies. You know, he has like one of the all time drunk deaths of all time. He's an alcoholic. William Holden, if you don't know, like Sunset Boulevard. Awesome actor. He is such a fall down drunk that he just slips in his apartment, hits his head on the side of a table and bleeds out.
Wow.
Like 61 or something or 62. Not that old.
Wow.
And then Peter Finch, who's in this movie as well, dies. He was the first actor to win an award posthumously. So the pre Heath Ledger.
wow look at that yeah i'm mad as hell and i'm gonna take i'm not gonna take it i'm not gonna take it anymore man fucking i just watched burr text me to watch this movie called the outfit from the 70s and duvall and burr's like i love it you would never have a bald guy as a lead man anymore like this ain't that definitely not horseshoe bald no you could be like you could be like the rock ball or statham yeah
Well, I'm watching an old L.A. Ghoul movie. I'm like, not a lot of heartthrobs with back hair anymore.
Oh, good point. You don't see that shit anymore. That's true. How about Michael Caine and Alfie? Oh, my God. He looks like a melted candle when he takes his shirt off. It's horrific. But he was a hunk back then.
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Chapter 5: How can comedians effectively use algorithms to enhance their reach?
Use the algorithms to your advantage. Let me explain something to everybody that might be valuable for anyone who's listening. Small business owner, somebody's trying to pop off. The algorithms expose you. They don't change you. Everybody's algorithm is a complete direct correlation to what they're engaging with and searching and looking at.
Yeah, but you don't want to curate to the algorithm because that's going to change your voice.
Correct. It's actually the opposite. You're exactly right.
Chapter 6: What role does social media play in shaping comedy material?
You want to only do your shit, post at scale. Wow. Follow me. This is going to ruin my life, dude. I'll tell you why. When you're even writing, again, I don't know your process, but as you're putting together your next special, like literally right after Tampa, It's gonna be another year, six months, I don't know your cadence, right? Respect, 18 months.
Even when you're writing, even when you guys are jamming, you're fucking filming it, you guys laughed, it goes out. It fucking goes out.
Chapter 7: How does the concept of overexposure apply in the modern media landscape?
I would literally film every second from day one of like, fuck, I'm on the hook. Yeah, that's why he's filming. Literally every... Like I basically.
He's taking a shit later. He's like, let me get this.
Because shit, taking a shit gets views.
With all seriousness.
No, I think if you film the whole process, put out lots of pieces, you can use it as a feedback loop. And here's the best part.
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Chapter 8: What are the implications of AI on the future of stand-up comedy?
Isn't it good to have some mystery though?
Yes, it is.
Cause it feels like if you film everything, we're going to become a society of everyone just walking down the street. Like, and then I said that. And you're just like, what the fuck is the world?
But you know what the best part is? And I've, you know, we've all seen that like video and all that stuff. Yeah, but the fucking truth wins, meaning we're not going to be a society of everyone filming.
Don't let the Pam Bondi.
Well, yeah. Governments are going to be filming everything. That's done. Robots filming everything is done. Surveillance state is real for our grandkids.
The Ring camera. It's got everything.
It's going to be way more than that. Like, once China puts the thumb on the scale, we're gonna have to counter.
But don't you think, like, I feel like it's changed the way, I don't like that the way to meet people is through our phones now. Like, I miss eye contact. I can't get a fucking woman on the street to make eye contact now because they're all on their phones. So prior, you were just like, you really liked a good street encounter? I think it was more organic, to use your word, organic. I agree.
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