APP Adrian
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And he took his work very seriously. Carlin was a wordsmith, and he loved language. For every one of his HBO specials, he usually spent more than a year touring comedy clubs to hone and polish his material. He'd change a word here or there between performances just to see what kind of reaction he'd get, and he'd use the words that got the best reactions.What I always liked about him is that he clearly thought about things. His own unique thoughts. Often about some of the simplest things Like "Why do we drive on the Parkway and park in the Driveway?"
Now, the primary reason to wear a hat is to protect your head from the elements--sun, rain, snow, whatever. So if it's pouring down rain and you remove your hat just because a flag or a hearse is driving by, your head is going to get wet and you've just defeated the purpose of wearing a hat in the first place. You could just as easily hold your hand over your heart or bow your head and observe a moment of silence, either of which could be recognized as a gesture of respect with value equal to that of removing your hat, and your head would remain dry. It's a foolish and unreasonable rule.
He often made his performances appear to be stream of consciousness, but the reality is that he was very prepared.
That may be the only perspective that explains this particular rule of hat etiquette; it still seems foolish to me. [huh]Is it not one of these things that one has to demonstrate one's respect or depth of feeling through being inconvenienced? At least thats what it seems.
That is exactly the point of etiquette, of course.Is it not one of these things that one has to demonstrate one's respect or depth of feeling through being inconvenienced?
I'm not so sure about that; it was probably equal parts of both. In his early career Carlin always presented himself as being rather conventional--short hair, clean-shaven, and wearing suits and ties. But in the late 1960s/early 1970s he deliberately grew out his hair and beard, and began wearing faded denim jeans because he realized he identified with the "younger crowd" more than with the "corporate types" he'd previously been aiming his routines at. In the process his material became more "free form" and observational, which was also a deliberate and calculated change. He lost some TV bookings because producers thought his new "counterculture" appearance and on-stage demeanor might be off-putting, but when he performed "The Hair Piece" on The Ed Sullivan Show the general public understood he'd simply reinvented himself and those concerns dissipated. From there, his transition to the "curmudgeon" persona he adopted later in life may or may not have been a natural evolution, but he did profess to experiencing schadenfreude (deriving pleasure from the misfortunes of others) so his own self-awareness of this may have been a contributing factor.Carlin was a huge favorite of mine from my teens into my forties. However, at a certain point his style changed from the amused stoner to the angry old man. I'm sure the change was due more to growth and maturity, was organic and not calculated...