Showing posts with label Shut Up I Love It. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shut Up I Love It. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Shut Up, He Hates Larry David podcast is locking down locked-down listeners


As we asked earlier this week: He hates who??  BURT KEARNS’ appearance on a “very special episode" of the popular podcast SHUT UP I LOVE IT is becoming an instant favorite among locked-down listeners.

Burt, known for his book Tabloid Baby until the recent publication of The Show Won’t Go On, his and Jeff Abraham's recent bestseller, tells hosts Sasha Feiler and Jay Hunter the very personal reasons behind the axe he continues to grind against... Curb Your Enthusiasm's Larry David.

There's a great lesson to be learned here. Somewhere.

LISTEN HERE or HERE or wherever great podcasts can be heard.

SHUT UP I LOVE IT! on FACEBOOK


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Podcast: Burt Kearns' 30-year grudge behind “Shut Up I Hate Larry David!"









Hold on a second. He hates who?? Our colleague BURT KEARNS is no stranger to controversy (see Tabloid Baby) but now he's really stepped in it, as he returns to the popular podcast SHUT UP I LOVE IT, in a "very special episode" that’s sure to get a reaction from the giants of comedy!

Burt and Jeff Abraham, his co-author on the best-selling book, The Show Won’t Go On, were guests on the Shut Up I Love It podcast in September, defending the greatness of Jerry Lewis’s unseen film, The Day The Clown Cried (listen here), and were featured in a bonus episode (listen here) that captured an interview with the authors conducted by hosts Sasha Feiler and Stephen Cohen, before an enthusiastic crowd at Stories Books and Cafe, the famed literary salon in LA’s hipster Eagle Rock neighborhood.

The latest target? The photos above tell the story: a 30+ year personal grudge against one of America’s most beloved curmudgeons!  Find out why Burt tells Sasha Feiler and Jay Hunter

“I hate Larry David!”

LISTEN HERE or HERE or wherever great podcasts can be heard.




Sunday, December 22, 2019

Ugly Things magazine has a pretty, pretty, pretty good review of The Show Won’t Go On

Ugly Things? Pretty Cool! That’s the word from our pals Jeff Abraham and Burt Kearns, as the revered music magazine offers the latest praise for their book, The Show Won’t Go On: The Most Shocking, Bizarre, and Historic Deaths of Performers Onstage.

Noted writer, critic and editor Alan Bisbort reviewed the book from Chicago Review Press  in #52, the Winter 2019 issue of the  jam-packed rock ’n’ roll magazine that celebrates “wild sounds from past dimensions.” Bisbort wrote that the book is “touching... dramatic"... and that the authors "have combed the morgues of entertainment history to offer more than mere titillation.

“Though their book charts moments of human tragedy, the treatment does not feel cheap or exploitative. Rather, they use the death as a means by which to reexamine the careers of the fallen and set the stage, so to speak, for their swan songs... All of these performers may have fallen, but their beats will go on, thanks to Abraham and Kearns."

The issue also features an extended interview with coauthor Kearns.

From the Ugly Things interview with
The Show Won’t Go On coauthor Burt Kearns
Ugly Things was founded in 1983, is based in La Mesa, California, and edited by Mike Stax. It focuses on beat, garage rock, and psychedelic music from the 1960s. The magazine’s name? It’s a tribute to the rock and blues band, The Pretty Things.

Buy this issue 152-page issue and other Ugly Things merch by clicking this sentence!

Click here to follow Ugly Things on Facebook.

Visit The Show Won't Go On website for lots of extras.

And Abraham and Kearns’ appearance with Shut Up I Love It podcasters Steven Cohen and Sasha Feiler at Stories Books and Cafe in Los Angeles’s Echo Park is now a bonus episode of Shut Up I Love it.


Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Shut Up! Echo Park loves ‘The Show Won’t Go On’ event featuring comedy podcasters


Rock 'n' roll electrocutions, Siberian nightmares and the most dangerous occupation in show business were the hot topics at Stories Books and Cafe on Sunset Boulevard last night as the hosts of Eagle Rock's popular podcast Shut Up I Love It gave another grilling to the authors of The Show Won't Go On.


Sasha Feiler and Steve Cohen had hosted authors Jeff Abraham and Burt Kearns on Shut Up I Love It last month. On the show in which guests defend unpopular or controversial pop culture figures and works.  Jeff and Burt spoke movingly about their idol Jerry Lewis and his (unfairly, they insisted) maligned film, The Day The Clown Cried.  This time, onstage at the iconic independent bookstore in Echo Park, the topic was the acclaimed new book about "the most shocking, bizaatte and historic deaths of performers onstage.



It was an informative, often funny show that featured actual fireworks when a colorful, awesome display went off in the sky just a block away from the patio on which rows of theatre-style chairs have been arranged for the book event.

Feiler and Cohen were as witty and charming as they are on their podcast.  Sasha Feiler took the topic to an intimate level when she spoke of growing up in Siberia, and how the death onstage of a Russian movie star had haunted her since childhood and led to a special interest in death and celebrity.

Haunting Sasha
(Following that revelation, Jeff and Burt went to their volumnious archives. "Sasha was most likely talking about  Andrei Mironov," Burt tells us. "He was a movie star who was the leading man in popular Soviet films including The Diamond Arm, Beware of the Car and Twelve Chairs.  He was also a singer, and performed onstage. On August 14, 1987, he was at the Riga Opera Theatre in Latvia, performing the lead role in The Marriage of Figaro, when he collapsed onstage.  He died in a hospital two days later.  He was 46. Cause of death? A cerebral aneurysm. The LA Times reported that 'scores of thousands' of Muscovites turned out for his funeral."

Thanks, Burt -- "Closer to home, the classical pianist Mikhail Klein actually died onstage in Siberia two years ago.  He was performing with the Irkutsk Philharmonic Orchestra in Irkutsk.  I don't want to add to Sasha's trauma, but Klein was playing a jazz number he wrote called 'This Is All Russia' when he slipped from the bench and wound up in a heap at the foot of the grand piano.  Heart failure at 72.”


Musician Andrew Haworth wrote and performs the Shut Up I Love It theme and has a new album, Simple Man
Comedy Store legend Steven Alan Green wrote and starred in I Eat People Like You for Breakfast, a one-man show about his traumatic experience with Jerry Lewis 
Another poignant highlight of the evening was Burt's tribute to Stories Books and Cafe as "one of the last literary temples" in Los Angeles, and to influential author Nick Tosches, who died over the weekend.  Tosches was a friend to the folks who run the literary website, PleaseKillMe.com. Burt and Jeff are frequent contributors to the site, and one of their stories, The Death of Cathy Wayne, an outtake from The Show Won't Go On, was a topic at last night's event.

Burt puts at least one listener to sleep
The group discussion was recorded and may wind up as a bonus episode of Shut Up I Love It. We'll keep you posted on that and the next stop on the roadshow for The Show Won't Go On: the Most Shocking, Bizarre and Historic Deaths of Performers Onstage.

Courtesy: Raquel Queen of Bail

Monday, October 14, 2019

Authors Abraham & Kearns’ 'Show Won’t Go On' roadshow rolls into Hollywood & Echo Park October 19 & 22


The show is most definitely going on in Los Angeles later this week for the pair Vanity Fair has called  “show business and pop culture savants.”  Jeff Abraham and Burt Kearns, authors of The Show Won’t Go On, will be out and about in Los Angeles for more unpredictable, informative and often hilarious discussions and signings of the book about “The Most Shocking, Bizarre and Historic Deaths of Performers Onstage.”


The pair takes their show to the Dearly Departed Artifact Museum in Hollywood on Saturday afternoon, October 19 at five p.m.  Museum founder Scott Michaels, an author and celebrity in his own right, will host the event amid a unique collection of celebrity death memorabilia, from “The Jayne Mansfield Death Car” to the cremated remains of Michu, the little star of Big Top Pee Wee and Alf.  Michaels is best known as for his Dearly Departed Tours, which offer essential tragical history tours of Hollywod from star's homes to death sites.  


On Tuesday, October 22 at 8 p.m., Abraham and Kearns will meet the crowd at Stories Books and Cafe in Echo Park. The event at the book lovers’ oasis and literary hotspot will be hosted and moderated by the podcast stars of Eagle Rock.  Improv performer and comedy writer Sasha Feiler and comedian Steven Cohen host the popular Shut Up I Love It podcast.  Abraham and Kearns were guests on the show in September, defending their hero, Jerry Lewis, and his unseen yet often-maligned film, The Day The Clown Cried.

Cohen & Feiler of Shut Up I Love It
The Show Won't Go On, published by Chicago Review Press, has received great acclaim from the likes of Vanity Fair, the UK Telegraph and Daily MailNational Public Radio — and Gilbert Gottfried.  The book, audiobook and ebook are all available at bookstores, Amazon and other online bookstores -- and through the website, TheShowWontGoOn.com.

Watch this space for the latest on events by The Show Won’t Go On team.


JEFF ABRAHAM AND BURT KEARNS, authors of The Show Won't Go On: The Most Shocking, Bizarre, and Historic Deaths of Performers Onstage:

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 at 5 pm:  DEARLY DEPARTED ARTIFACT MUSEUM, 5901 Santa Monica Blvd, HOLLYWOOD
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22 at 8 pm: STORIES BOOKS & CAFE, 1716 Sunset Blvd,  ECHO PARK 

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

The Day The Critics Cried: 'The Show Won’t Go On’ authors defend Jerry Lewis’ lost Holocaust film on the Shut Up I Love It podcast


The authors of The Show Won't Go On: The Most Shocking, Bizarre, and Historic Deaths of Performers Onstage go back to their roots, lay it on the line and challenge the conventional snark propagated by some of the biggest names in comedy, in an appearance on the popular comedy podcast, Shut Up I Love It.

Jeff Abraham and Burt Kearns defended their obsession during the ninety-minute podcast hosted by comedy performers and writers Sasha Feiler and Steve Cohen. Shut Up I Love It "celebrates those aspects of pop culture that make you go OOH and others go YUCK.”  In this case, in the podcast episode launched this morning, the topic is Jerry Lewis, and his infamous lost Holocaust drama from 1972, The Day The Clown Cried.

Two guys one mic
Abraham and Kearns are recognized Jerry Lewis aficionados.  Abraham is a top Hollywood publicist, show business historian and comedy archivist.  Kearns is a documentary writer, producer and director.  The pair met when Abraham represented Kearns' 1999 book, Tabloid Baby.  They bonded over a love of Jerry Lewis.  Abraham had worked and spent time with Lewis often.  Kearns had a production job on one of the Jerry Lewis Telethons and was allowed unprecendented access behind the scenes of the telethon when filming a documentary report in 1989.

Steven Cohen and Sasha Feiler in the podcast studio
On the podcast, Feiler notes that Kearns has not one but two Jerry Lewis tattoos on his arm.

These aren’t fake Jerry Lewis fans, just trying to hop onboard the hype train,” Cohen points out.

“Absolutely,” Abraham says. "I sit here wearing my Jerry Lewis watch and shirt."

"Why are you asking us to shut up and love him? Feiler asks the authors.

"He's also been a very divisive figure in entertainment," Kearns says.  "Some people love Jerry Lewis. Some people hate Jerry Lewis."


Due to rights issues, lawsuits and other factors, The Day The Clown Cried was never released, and for forty years the only word on the subject -- the single review -- came from satirist Harry Shearer.  In a 1979 article for Spy magazine, Shearer claimed to have seen a bootleg version of the film and compared it to “a painting of Auschwitz on black velvet.”  Decades later, hipster comedian Patton Oswalt produced mocking readings of the script on stages in Hollywood and New York, laughing and denigrating at Lewis along the way. In part because of these comics who actually owed so much to Lewis, The Day The Clown Cried became a joke.


In recent years, however, clips from the film have surfaced. A German assembly of the footage, combined with dramatic readings of missing scenes by the film’s actors, created a 31-minute rough cut that led to a reappraisal of the work.

"It’s unfortunate that Shearer, who seems to revel in the snarky spotlight, turns out to be the movie’s sole critic," Richard Brody wrote in The New Yorker. "If these clips suggest anything of the rest of the film, any tastelessness, sentimentality, or clumsiness of Lewis’s effort would be beside the point. He was working in the dark, in a self-inflicted state of moral shock, and attempting the impossible."

On the Shut Up I Love It podcast, Abraham and Kearns go farther. 

After the team summarizes the script and quality of the production, Kearns actually states: "I think it's an Oscar-worthy film. I think Lewis' performance is an Oscar-winning performance."


Comedy talents Feiler and Cohen are left to weigh the evidence and give their verdict as to where Jerry Lewis and The Day The Clown Cried land on the Shut Up I Love It spectrum. 


 And as they do in The Show Wont Go On, Abraham and Kearns are rewriting history with their frank and honest appraisal of The Day The Clown Cried!

The podcast was videotaped for posterity.
Burt Kearns & Jeff Abraham surround the SHUT UP I LOVE IT team, Sasha Feiler, consultant and technical adviser Jay Hunter and Steven Cohen