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George Carlin was a unique source of financial advice

Posted Jun 23 2008, 07:17 PM by Karen Datko
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Irreverent, hilarious, provocative and profane -- all were qualities of the great George Carlin, who died Sunday from heart failure. But who knew that Carlin was also a good source of financial advice?

What else would you expect from the comedian who so well understood our fascination with materialism, as demonstrated by his "A Place for My Stuff"? ("Bouncing Back" at Bouncing Back from Bankruptcy, one of many Carlin fans who mourned his passing online, provides a link to the "stuff" routine. Considering it's Carlin, the language is only slightly off-color.)

It was also Carlin who said, "Why is the man (or woman) who invests all your money called a broker?" (DigitalDreamDoor.com provides a list of Carlin quotes -- as well as a list of many incorrectly attributed to him.)

In a Bankrate.com interview in 2001, Carlin described how he came to his financial senses -- in the process he also refined his wit -- and overcame a staggering $3 million IRS debt he had accumulated while abusing drugs. At one point during his financial rehabilitation, he served as a spokesman for MCI. Was that a cop-out for an anti-establishment guy? In a simpler world, he said, "I would go from campfire to campfire, dragging my stone tablet of jokes around for people to see in exchange for pieces of meat. It would be a nicer system. But that's not the way it is."

The way it was is that he worked hard for 20 years to get the IRS monkey off his back. As Key Bell notes at Don't Mess With Taxes, he told Esquire: "It made me a way better comedian. Because I had to stay out on the road and I couldn't pursue that movie career, which would have gone nowhere, and I became a really good comic and a really good writer." Amen.

At the time of the Bankrate interview, Carlin said, he was earning $2.5 million a year. He described his method for maximizing income from shows -- control the venue and the ticket revenue -- and his passive income from books, HBO specials and videos.

Since living in the woods isn't an option, he said, "we all make adjustments to our value system according to our needs and what we can tolerate."

Carlin spent his final years harping on his favorite topics -- religion and corporate America. ("It's a big club, and you ain't in it," he said.) His words about the state of the American worker may seem all the more relevant now: "It's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it."

He also was true to his mission. "I think it's the duty of the comedian to find out where the line is drawn and cross it deliberately," he once said.

Comments

 

I think he did a lot of religious comedy because he was so hurt about the death of his wife.  I can relate! (my infant  died and I was angry at God)   There are some funny things in religion and if we can't laugh at ourselves, then we are no better than those who kill people for drawing pictures of their "prophet" or strap bombs to themselves.  I would only hope that God can look on his heart and see what was really going on inside.  We only saw the bitter, hurt part... which at times, he made kinda funny.  

anyone remember the "hippy dippy weather man"???

Like any other comedian, some material was funnier than others, but he always delivered.

Wow, there are so many comments, I can't even get through them all. Most, loved George, but some hated him. The reason is very clear. As George once said, as a child, they teach you a man is looking down at you from the clouds, and he's not very happy with some of the things you do. Once you teach a child to believe that, you can make him believe anything. I'll give my own small example. Thousands of Years ago, before the time of the wheel, God decided to kill every man, woman and child on earth for being evil, except for one family. He spared the Noah family, who built a boat per Gods instructions, and collected two of every creature to accompany his family and be saved. The authors of this story did not know the world was 25,000 miles around, with 5 continents and seven oceans and that there are 250,000 different species. All we know is, the story must be believed, otherwise, which are stories, and which are truths. Tell a jury one lie, and all can be taken as lies. You can always say, "God works in Mysterious ways"

The truth is George was very gentle in his humor about religion. As we all know the bible is based on facts. How about this, when God decided to kill every man woman and child on earth, he found one family[Noah] worth saving. Though the wheel had not been invented yet, and the world was 24,000 miles around, he followed Gods orders and collected two of every creature to store on his boat. Somehow he crossed 7 oceans and 5 continents, thousands of Islands and lands to acquire 250,000 different species[actually more then, because some are extinct now]. Religious people are still looking for Noah's Ark, of course they're mad at George. They have devoted their lives to silliness, and of course they are angry that George mentions it.

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