It can't be said enough that more often than not, comedians are some of the most angriest and damaged people. For the most part, their comedy is really just a form of self-therapy.
If you ever get a chance to, check out comic round-tables. This is where comic sit around and talk about their motivations and techniques. It's fascinating to watch. One comic said it best that ALL COMEDY comes from some dark place. You never really hear a happy story about rainbows or something unless something horrible happens while watching a rainbow like Joey Diaz molesting you.
This just shows how true and real “F is for Family” is. The writing is so damn good. Just tellin it like it is. Sometimes you have to get your pain out without disguising it with comedy. He still found a way to throw some humor in it though. Dude has a big heart. It’s good to see
This is where teachers and coaches can help before it's too late. Some kids hide alot of that emotion and events that go on at-home. You csn be the help,the out let for that child.
Apparently, Bill talked to his dad and they are on good terms now. Bill tells the Christmas gift story again in his most recent special "Paper Tiger", and it's a lot lighthearted this time. So I am happy for him that he can finally get over it, and REALLY joke about it now.
I kinda knew what was going on between my parents early on, I didn't fully understand why because as I later found out they conciously acted nice to each other in front of us for pretty much all my life now. They had times when they were on the same page but honestly they never truely got along and this part I always knew but didn't understand aswell...I knew my family was disfunctional even though they convinced all my 4 sisters to grow up in this false and forced "family" lifestyle like passing down tradition. My oldest brother moved to another country "to start over because he made bad mistakes in life" and I only found out more than 10 years later at young adulthood that he literally ran away and begged our uncle in England to support him for a fresh start because the alternative would've been to cut ties with the family entirely. I grew up knowing I'm being lied to from every direction, (somehow and gladly) knowing that I must keep record on all their faults and not learn from them while also playing along with their facade to avoid disciplinary measurements. They were never violent with us, but on a psychological level they were tyrants. To get back to the point, I had parents that should have argued...saying parents should just not argue is very superficial and ignorant towards *actual problems* that should be adressed. The real issue is parents being egoists and/or not caring half as much for the actual human beings than for the moral picture of each role in their preconceived family hierarchy. Your children's intelligence will likely surpass your intelligence at quite a young age but they can't verbalize their thought as well so you treat them like children or in other words: like they're stupid, like they don't understand what's going on or most insultingly like a pet dog. Kids aren't necessarily stupid, but they will likely get stupid if you treat them like that all the time...or like in my case, will suffer many unnecessary hardships and develop all kinds of trust issues before ditching your stagnant ass as soon as they're legally allowed to.
The fact that he took those two traumatic childhood experiences and turned them into comedy bits as part of his latest special a couple years later just shows how much Bill Burr has grown as a person.
My grandfather was so sweet to all of us grandkids and our parents (his kids). The stories my mom would tell me about how afraid they were of him when they were little because of him throwing stuff and hitting them when they weren't "good"....parents can age out of that stuff, but that doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Bill's animated show F Is For Family on Netflix where he voices the main character/father (and is the co-creator) and is partly based off of his life growing up in the 70s and there is actually a little boy in the family with red hair named Bill. Anyway, the most recent season covers the character Bill voice's father returning after them not speaking for years and his character gets super pissed off at him for being so normal and his family loves the guy but all he can think of is how bad his dad was when he was a kid. Sound familiar? You guys should react to that Netflix series.
In my case, it was my mother who was the maniac. That's worse, I think, for a boy, especially when his father is too afraid of her to cross her and protect his kids. He passed away this past February, age 98. I loved him and miss him, but when my mother passed in '06, I was glad to be rid of her, and I didn't feel guilty about it.
My brothers and I grew up in same area as Bill ,and so much of this hits close to home . I can remember the brutal arguments between my parents. I remember watching my brothers play hockey (they were older)sitting with both of my parents. My dad would be yelling at them to “hustle! or you’re going to be wearing a dress when we go home !” Always in a bad mood ! I never brought a girl home until I was in my twenties for the same reasons .Maybe it’s a New England thing , but my brothers and I always took the humor from everything! I guess it’s a coping mechanism but it’s an instinct for us . I don’t regret any of it though. I think it sharpened our wit and made us stronger. We still look back and a big laugh at those days !
It's definitely atleast an East coast thing. It's tricky because, (and bill talks about this a lot) that father son relationship of getting tough and not crying and joking about everything creates a cycle that just gets repeated with your children. It's the same in my family. I'm determined to not be the maniac to my kids that my dad was to me.
Exactly the reason why I’ve always loved Bill. He always keeps it real, and is very relatable. I’ve always used jokes and comedy as an outlet/release as well. Bill is the man.
Ive thought ive seen a lot of Bill Burr, but didnt get to see this footage. Glad I did, always had this feeling that something like this happened growing up. Its piecing together his show 'F is for family' and his other comic strips. Also, I havent felt like this since ive seen his paper tiger special (towards the end)
I can relate to both Bill and the teachers. My family endured criminal DV in rural Australia and the isolation allowed my fathers abuse to grow until he became a sociopath. By the time I was 48 he died in prison because I had to use media, courts and politicians in a 10 year campaign to force the police to charge him for 33 criminal offences committed to my mother as a way to stop him from killing my mum and siblings because she left his abuse after the children had grown up and left home. I struggle with having to do that to my father who was a Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde which made it more difficult and I can visualise the hate and blame he felt towards his children for our disloyalty as he died in his cell. It took 7 years to find a doctor willing to help me with my complex PTSD from years of assisting my mums survival and protection of my siblings as the eldest. I grew up with the constant fear that the authorities would find out and with six children in the family I knew the low chance that we would get to grow up together. The best thing about living on a farm is that people didn't hear the yelling and violence to judge us and take advantage of us and when my families dysfunction became known, people did take advantage, judged us as a family and ripped us off of the farm assets and the farm was lost to solicitors and barristers fees. Living in a city would have been hard for Bill. Please don't judge Bill for pushing away his emotions, its not weakness or toxic masculinity. It is just survival, because when you let the emotions go, it takes so much to regain control of yourself and get back to an equilibrium. My experiences have helped my students. One story I will share. About 8 years ago there was a girl in my Year 12 class (last year of high school) who looked frightened and confused. She eventually told me her boyfriend who she had left was hanging around the school trying to control her and get her back. I told her to get on the phone and call her father and let him know so he can support her and allow him to help her. Last year I was talking to a colleague and this girl had told her that I was the teacher that turned her life around. She was happy and secure in a functional relationship as a young woman. That really pulls at my heart strings. I couldn't save my mum, siblings or my own children from the effects of my father, but I helped to save her. By the way my wonderful Doctor did help me and I function much better personally although the scars are never gone. My prior studies built a self awareness to my problems and his interventions were more successful as a result. I appreciate your reactions, the coach was respectful and empathetic and the Teacher was speechless and obviously moved. Kids like Bill and myself are still attending schools today. The ineffectual laws and policing are the problem.
I have no words. I’ve learned to have a certain care towards bill just understanding as much as I could of him through his comedy and this just makes him the more relatable and just understand where he comes from.
I love Bill Burr. Now I know why I relate to him so much. I grew up with a Father like that. I could never understand why my dad was like that because my Pa Pa and granny were two of the most loving, caring, decent people I've ever known and I know he wasn't treated like that by them. I still don't know why he treated me the way he did when I was a kid. He's almost 80 now and we get along fine now. He seemed to go through a change about 5 years ago. Even though he was the way he was I never had nothing but love for him. I always tried to make him proud but I could never achieve that but I never stopped trying. Even through a big part of my adulthood I still tried and tried. Still don't think I ever did.
I’ve never seen these videos before, which I find surprising because he’s my favourite comedian and I generally tend to watch his comic bits over and over again on a level that borders with addiction. He made me lmao so many times while talking about his childhood and “crazy” dad because, I guess, this guy can find the funny angel about literally anything. But this time it was touching, really touching. Amazing how the same story can make you both laugh and cry when delivered from different angles. Thank you guys for sharing!
If you heard the podcast last week about the former hockey player buddy who passed away after being paralyzed... you were blown away at the the way Bill stayed quiet for about 2 minutes. You could just tell he was holding back tears so its crazy how this just popped up in my recommended
My father left when I was 7 years old, actually on Christmas Day. He then came back the following month, telling me he was coming back for good, then left again on my birthday, never to return while he started his 'new life', with a new wife and eventually another child. My mother was left with a mountain of debt he has acumulated, so had to work 4 jobs just to makes ends meet working 6am to 6pm. As such I would leave an empty house in the morning, and come home to an empty house in the evening. My mother, under such pressure, started drinking heavily, and thus, all that comes with living with an alcoholic which I'm sure many can relate, and I won't bore you with the details here. She tried her best, and did work very hard, but my childhood was a rollercoaster to say the least. I remember being so jealous of my friends, who all, each and every one, had a loving nuclear family. It does make such an impact on your future, my education suffered greatly. I went from a child expected to do great things having skipped two grades early on, to failing all my exams only 7 years later. I became introverted, and still suffer from anxiety, decades later. I am the youngest child in my family, my older brother and sister are much older than me, 18 years older. So when my father left they had already gone, started their own lives, they didn't have to go through any of the trauma I went through, their childhood was having a loving mother and a father. Very different from mine, and it shows. Your developing years of childhood and through your teens are vitally important. And if your unlucky enough to suffer extensive scars during them, they stay with you for the rest of your life.
Paul, I am so sorry you had to deal with your father abandoning you and your family, I had a similar situation. I can relate some, thank you so much for sharing this with us.
My father went to prison when I was 2, my mother got married to one of his school friends and had two other kids, my half brothers. Changed my name when I was 3 and told me he was my dad until I found out at 16 after my step dad got arrested that he wasn't my biological dad, turned my whole world upside down. I'm 23 now and still have problems with trusting people
Dude, your wife has the sweetest voice of any lady I've ever heard. Maybe it's because she's a teacher, I don't know. But congratulations because she seems so pleasant.
Been there too. I had a pretty crazy family too, constantly fighting, yelling, screaming, stuff flew from one side of the house to another. I often woke up to find our refrigerator on the floor and the couch upside down. Now that I grew up and finally got to understand what the hell went wrong, I have a different perspective of what happened. But at the time, I was the oldest of 3 kids and I had to stay calm, change their mind in the middle of yet another argument and when shit went further down, I had to leave our room and stand for them... litterally. That got me through a lot too. I was amongst the "stuff that flew from one side of the house to another" every so often. I missed half of my class at my last year of high school, just so I could stay home and "keep an eye on my mom"... The days I went to school, people picked on me for being "distant", with old looking clothes and a few bruises every now and then. Of course, I'd lie about why, until I broke in front of a few dozen kids, burst out crying and ran from school, never to go back. When I finally left the house, I was 16, bitter and resentful as can be... thankfully, I had the decency to start working and save money to GTFO of the house. My first landlord even gave me a "fictionnal name" since I wasn't yet old enough to have an appartment, but I showed him a pile of cash, just to show how serious I was. Seeing my distress (I almost burst out crying in front of him), he took me in anyway and I've been YEARS, struggling with myself. Didn't take care of myself, spent my money on beer and weed, just keeping to myself with a "f*ck people* mentality... but I never stopped working, never took a day off; that was the only thing that was important to me. Jobless, I'd have to go back... That was unthinkable for me. My little brothers were sent to other family members.. so I'd be alone in there. No way. But all bad things aside, I grew a lot with that, and understood many things while trying to "find my place" in the world... and now, I'm living a happy life, with a great job, people working for me and a lady that I love and care for so much. But yeh... that kind of childhood can really screw you up.. You need a way to vent it. He uses comedy, I used music. Got a band, played gigs everywhere for years and used the stage to burn the excess rage until I leave the stage, almost about to collapse of exhaustion. You really need something to cling to. A passion, a good job, something, anything.. But ultimately, you're the one making the call. People around you can say anything they want; if you're not ready to get the lesson, you won't listen... but being aware that you're not alone living through hell, and knowing that there's always a light at the end of the tunnel is kinda comforting. I know many lived through a lot too and I salute your strenght. I know the feel. But for those of you still living through it, just remember: the simple fact that you're still there, still breathing is proof that you have the strenght to overcome it. Take your time, but never underestimate yourself. Go at your own pace, but challenge yourself. When confidence starts to build up, the whole world opens up for you. Peace, people.
Whenever he tells jokes about growing up with his parents, I always wondered if they were based on reality or fiction to make people laugh. There are comedians who do that. I imagine his act is therapeutic. I’m glad I saw it because you can see his humanity behind his jokes.
Bill speaks about his dad in one of his bits and how much pressure his father was under. Bill spoke to the fact that his parents were married young and had 5 boys before his dad was 30 years old. Bill, after becoming a father in his 40's laments on how he can't comprehend the (again) pressure his father must have felt having to raise 5 boys at such a young age. In this bit, Bill doesn't condone his father's behavior but says he understands much better as to why his father was the way he was while Bill was a young boy. In fact, Bill speaks to his opinion that his dad did have some good ideas but didn't express them in the healthiest of ways.
I recommended this a while back. It is a really sad story I can relate to because my childhood was exactly like this. Real violence and self hatred. In my case, it was both my mom and dad. I would hide this from school and made sure no one came to the house. First chance I got to bail at 17 I did. No contact until the age of 29 when I got married and she really wanted to meet my parents. Kind of weird seeing my wife with he own parents. Loving, and peaceful, almost like watching one of those families on TVs I used to watch on TV growing up to escape my own home-life. Same shot happened to me. My folks years later , fixed themselves. No anger. No rage. It was like meeting strangers. I went through the same emotions as Bill like "what the hell man?!?". I'm 42 now and I know I should know better. They are not the same people I knew growing up and I should give them a chance, and I have. I try to keep contact and visit. However, when I go back to that house or see them, my instinct revert back to that scared little boy hiding under the bed covering his ears or reading comics or have my headphones one...anything to be anywhere else on Earth but there. It's funny the stuff that haunts you. For me when I see Bill do his acts, I don;t see it as an act. I see it as therapy for himself. We all got to heal in our own way.
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Nah, it is what it is man. I mean you wear a Batman T shirt. We know how Bruce Wayne's child hood created the person he is. Trauma is fuel. You can use it to push yourself well beyond what others can do, or you can let it burn you up as well. The lesson I learned was we are creatures of constant change. The man you are today is not the same from 15 years ago. and Will be someone completely different in 15 years. It's a weird place to be. One day i will have to bury my folks. What to say at their funeral? Messed up thoughts like that. Guys like Bill Burr or Dr Jordan Peterson, connect with men because you can tell they get what being a man really is, but also when they share personal things you know it's from an honest place and helps others share their story. The worst part of it all was feeling alone in that experience. Both as a child, you didn't want to get you folks in trouble so you never share home life. As an adult you don't share it because you don't want to seem like damaged goods. Robin Williams had a great way of describing it. he said "he could be in a room full of hundreds of people that know him and still feel like the most alone person in the universe. Hearing stories like this.Sharing them. Makes one feel less alone and that is truly profound for healing. Hey, thank you for this channel. Whenever I'm feeling down , this is the channel I come to, so keep it up! Now enough of this emotional crap! Where are some cheap vagina jokes or family guy clips LOL!
We have a Jo Koy clip dropping tomorrow, and we should be reacting to Gary Owen "Sweet potato pie is NOT Pumpkin pie" tonight and if its not copy written will be up soon. I'll be doing some family guy stuff on my other channel soon as well.
I think it was therapy, for him and you and anyone not fortunate enough to have loving, caring, parents. Makes me feel lucky and guilty at the same time.
@@walkingwounded3824 You sound like my wife, when you say you feel guilty about having a normal life. Take it from me. You are not lucky for having something that you should have. You shouldn't feel guilty for something you had nothing to do with. When I first met my inlaws, it was surreal. Just normal people. Seeing my wife interact with them and the happiness didn't bother me one bit. Being accepted by these people as part of their family was awesome. They call me"the perfect son" as a bit of a joke because I overdo things to please others. I sometimes feel guilty that I have a better family situation with them than my own. I know and own my damage. It's funny, seeing my wife with her family or others, I experience their joy almost like 3rd party. It's nice. I know I will always have my guard up, or go into overkill when I see a threat, but that is what it is. It;s better I know where it comes from than being blind to it. I have no regrets. Been married for 14 years. Regrets is a thief of time you have on Earth. Ironically I would say my trauma made me super aware of how little time people have on Earth. So I an obsessive when taking on projects and finishing them. That had turned me into a professional success. My wife balances me out. She has me chill out, and puts things in perspective. That's how you know you found a true life partner, You balance each other out and live for each other. So no need to feel guilty. Just look at your family with the reverence they deserve. Time is too short to feel guilty or shame and other things you can change in the past. Take care.
I've noticed when Bill gets into these sensitive stories about his father he always makes excuses for his father. Like saying He doesn't want to make his father seem like a psycho or horrible guy, then he will follow that up with hes the greatest guy I know. Bill you need to stop doing that your father was an ASSHOLE and if he is still alive he owes you and your brothers and mother an apology.
That first part, opening up about his dad humiliating him, ugh... Stuff like that is why I get angry when people give comics crap about saying something offensive or being dark... It's like their coping mechanism, to laugh in the face of darkness. How can people try to strip that away from them? Just because they weren't amused, or maybe it brought up some relatable trauma in their life that they aren't able to joke about... That doesn't mean Bill or anyone else shouldn't be able to talk about it. My mother died right before my 8th birthday... And no one necessarily wants to hear jokes about dead mothers, but that was how I coped with it. I made light of it. Just tell other kids like, yeah, this is why I'm fucked up... Cuz what else are you gonna do with that? Just be angry? I dunno. I get that some people don't want to talk about or be reminded of the darker sides of humanity... But those people should maybe look up the comic they're paying to see before going and getting all offended. The comedian has the right to say what they want. If you don't like it, then leave, and go find some comic that only talks about rainbows, and puppies, and ice cream. Comedy is most often described as "Tragedy plus Time". So how are so many people scratching their heads about dark comics? It's right there in the description, leading all the way back to Shakespear and possibly even before him. It's no secret that a lot of comedians have addiction issues, mental health issues, childhood abuse issues... How is anybody shocked when they say something fucked up?
Thank you Dave Mick for sharing your thoughts and experience with us, losing someone or going through something is hard but like you said you need to own it and make it yours. Have a wonderful day my friend.
This is what happens when parents suppress their kids emotions by shaming. So if you are lucky to have children listen and teach with a firm and compassionate hand.
Man the part where bill tells the story of how he could hear his parents argue from the bus stop really stuck a cord with me, we lived right by my school and I remember I would walk out the door in the morning, open the door to see groups of kids walking by my house and the few seconds the door was open as I was walking out you'd hear F bomb this B bomb that, and then I would intentionally walk home slowly or if I walked with friends I would say "hey let's go this way" to avoid going by my house, out of the fear that they would be screaming at each other again, like bill I never got beaten and I never went hungry and the rent was always paid, so it's almost like if you were never abused you don't have a right to complain.. but sometimes something as small as this can really mess a kid up.. we are taught that even dogs feed off of the energy they witness at home.. now imagine what impact that has on a human child, arguably far more intelligent and mentally sensitive than a canine. No wonder bill is such a saint to his two children.
Seeing the most famous stand up comedians get emotional hits hard. Alot of them make jokes about terrible things in life. How they cope. Little do we all know that the jokes tell some truth. Honestly how I cope is comedy. Life is was to serious and short not to laugh about it all
Thank you so much! I'm so mad because I didn't give you and a few others a shout out. It is hard searching who recommended what sometimes, we currently have over 7,000 comments.
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Its ok . I am not looking for any recognition . I just want to enjoy your channel and share content you might laugh or cry about ..
Every Monday and every Thursday he does his podcast and then does a video podcast with Bert once a week and he just rattles off whatever he's thinking. Give it a listen.
This is at a time when Bill Burr started into comedy. It appears to be more real in a basis of understanding origin of what his style is based around. The interesting thing is that he portrays a lot of issues with his father in this video. But as his comedy style grew he changed his presentation of his father from a very negative experience to somewhat a positive experience. Not clear if this was because he wanted to build his style in a direction that is not explicitly negative (wrt his father). You don't see many videos during this period of his career. Almost appears to be two different comedians.
I'm sure that comedy is helping Bill deal with a lot of things from his past, but he has also had a ton of therapy to help him come to terms with his past..
Teacher and Coach Reacts I hope I’m not sounding weird or anything but I just found you guys’ channel and you really give off this “cool family member” mood. I don’t feel like I’m watching entertainment, I feel like I’m chilling in my living room laughing at stuff with my family. It’s not pushy or overdone like how a lot of other people on this platform behave. It’s very honest, hence my use of the word “organic” and, above most things, is what I appreciate about you guys and your videos. (AND YOU READ COMMENTS!) 😁❤️ all love👍
@@ethan-gy2sx wow, thank you so much for those kind words. You get it! We want you guys to experience the same feeling we get watching the videos for the first time or nostalgia if you already seen the bits. Thank you so much for your time writing that message to us!
This is from The Moth - The Art and Craft of Storytelling, where people tell true short stories of events in their lives and you usually get a mix of feel good, funny and heartbreaking ones. Maybe Bill's Dad's behaviour stems from how he was treated by Bill's Granddad.
I am one of the lucky ones with great parents. But I know that isn't necessarily the rule. Wow. That's rough. I'm sure there are a lot of comedians who do it BECAUSE it's therapy. At least a form of therapy. Thanks for reacting to this, guys.
The guy who introduced Bill for his award that you said sounded sad is Steven Wright. He is a very funny comedian. That's just the way he talks with a very monotone voice
Shit sucks when you want your parents approval and love but they're just always angry. It really messes with your head though when they treat you like shit and turn around and are friendly with every other person in existence.
Love you 2. Yes Bill is not a robot. Great Man and dad+ nice family. Great reaction thank you. Stay safe love you to from finland 🇫🇮👌🙂🎅💝 some day everything is better....
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Nice to see you :) Lets get this thing go away and then we can meet yes. You are welcome here any time and thank you for best reactions . love keeps everything going. :)
damn. From reading the comments this really hit too close to home for some. Be the best father you can be. Note that it does not mean that your kids are your friends and that you should let them have their way always. guide them well. Be firm but fair. Its a delicate balance.
I think this got to coach more. Dude, you need to pick the most funny controversial Bill burr but next and just laugh the whole way through. That's therapy.
My dad was like that but my mother was 10x worse funny thing is i have 4 siblings none of them got treated the way i did never understood why wasnt a bad kid didnt get in trouble or anything they just always hated me never understood why
Love the videos guys!! Coach, I just want to let you know that the beard WORKS for you man. I see that you shave it sometimes but just know, I had to force myself to look away :) ok i'll stop..
Special thanks to our subscribers requesting this video: Saad, Nmo, Junp, S Singh, guitaracoustic1, Waynes butler, and
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If I left you out just reply to this comment and I'll update it.
Yeah! Got a shout out!
It can't be said enough that more often than not, comedians are some of the most angriest and damaged people.
For the most part, their comedy is really just a form of self-therapy.
If you ever get a chance to, check out comic round-tables. This is where comic sit around and talk about their motivations and techniques. It's fascinating to watch. One comic said it best that ALL COMEDY comes from some dark place. You never really hear a happy story about rainbows or something unless something horrible happens while watching a rainbow like Joey Diaz molesting you.
he reminds me of how George Carlin grow up
This just shows how true and real “F is for Family” is. The writing is so damn good.
Just tellin it like it is. Sometimes you have to get your pain out without disguising it with comedy. He still found a way to throw some humor in it though. Dude has a big heart. It’s good to see
"You're a hilarious man, but more importantly you're a very good man."
-Conan O'Brian to Bill Burr.
conan literally cares about him. he didn't just save the show by interrupting. he stopped him from shedding tears on tv too.
You can see the sadness in your faces listening to this. You’re good people, and I’m glad I found this channel. Teacher’s students are very lucky.
Thank you for saying that. It was an emotional roller coaster.
It takes insane strength and introspection to break the cycle. Hats off to Bill burr. I feel what he feels.
This is where teachers and coaches can help before it's too late. Some kids hide alot of that emotion and events that go on at-home. You csn be the help,the out let for that child.
Never seen bill emotional before, IDK this hit somewhere deep
Same her buddy! Bill is genuine.
Yeah. I cant even express those feelings out loud let alone on a stage.
Apparently, Bill talked to his dad and they are on good terms now. Bill tells the Christmas gift story again in his most recent special "Paper Tiger", and it's a lot lighthearted this time. So I am happy for him that he can finally get over it, and REALLY joke about it now.
Well that's good to know!
@@TeacherandCoach2020 in Bill's "Losing yer shit" video u can listen to bill say what he thinks of his dad NOW.
how do you know he talked to his dad?
Screaming, arguing parents are horrible. Children don't understand what's going on
true :-/
I kinda knew what was going on between my parents early on, I didn't fully understand why because as I later found out they conciously acted nice to each other in front of us for pretty much all my life now. They had times when they were on the same page but honestly they never truely got along and this part I always knew but didn't understand aswell...I knew my family was disfunctional even though they convinced all my 4 sisters to grow up in this false and forced "family" lifestyle like passing down tradition. My oldest brother moved to another country "to start over because he made bad mistakes in life" and I only found out more than 10 years later at young adulthood that he literally ran away and begged our uncle in England to support him for a fresh start because the alternative would've been to cut ties with the family entirely.
I grew up knowing I'm being lied to from every direction, (somehow and gladly) knowing that I must keep record on all their faults and not learn from them while also playing along with their facade to avoid disciplinary measurements. They were never violent with us, but on a psychological level they were tyrants.
To get back to the point, I had parents that should have argued...saying parents should just not argue is very superficial and ignorant towards *actual problems* that should be adressed. The real issue is parents being egoists and/or not caring half as much for the actual human beings than for the moral picture of each role in their preconceived family hierarchy. Your children's intelligence will likely surpass your intelligence at quite a young age but they can't verbalize their thought as well so you treat them like children or in other words: like they're stupid, like they don't understand what's going on or most insultingly like a pet dog. Kids aren't necessarily stupid, but they will likely get stupid if you treat them like that all the time...or like in my case, will suffer many unnecessary hardships and develop all kinds of trust issues before ditching your stagnant ass as soon as they're legally allowed to.
The fact that he took those two traumatic childhood experiences and turned them into comedy bits as part of his latest special a couple years later just shows how much Bill Burr has grown as a person.
It takes a strong person like Bill to not give up or give in to the abuse.
My grandfather was so sweet to all of us grandkids and our parents (his kids). The stories my mom would tell me about how afraid they were of him when they were little because of him throwing stuff and hitting them when they weren't "good"....parents can age out of that stuff, but that doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Bill's animated show F Is For Family on Netflix where he voices the main character/father (and is the co-creator) and is partly based off of his life growing up in the 70s and there is actually a little boy in the family with red hair named Bill. Anyway, the most recent season covers the character Bill voice's father returning after them not speaking for years and his character gets super pissed off at him for being so normal and his family loves the guy but all he can think of is how bad his dad was when he was a kid. Sound familiar?
You guys should react to that Netflix series.
In my case, it was my mother who was the maniac. That's worse, I think, for a boy, especially when his father is too afraid of her to cross her and protect his kids.
He passed away this past February, age 98. I loved him and miss him, but when my mother passed in '06, I was glad to be rid of her, and I didn't feel guilty about it.
@Cfc7ninja 12 Sorry to hear it. It does suck.
Seeing an insanely funny guy getting emotional is really hard to not get emotional as well.
My brothers and I grew up in same area as Bill ,and so much of this hits close to home . I can remember the brutal arguments between my parents. I remember watching my brothers play hockey (they were older)sitting with both of my parents. My dad would be yelling at them to “hustle! or you’re going to be wearing a dress when we go home !”
Always in a bad mood ! I never brought a girl home until I was in my twenties for the same reasons .Maybe it’s a New England thing , but my brothers and I always took the humor from everything! I guess it’s a coping mechanism but it’s an instinct for us . I don’t regret any of it though. I think it sharpened our wit and made us stronger. We still look back and a big laugh at those days !
It's definitely atleast an East coast thing. It's tricky because, (and bill talks about this a lot) that father son relationship of getting tough and not crying and joking about everything creates a cycle that just gets repeated with your children. It's the same in my family. I'm determined to not be the maniac to my kids that my dad was to me.
Bill is 100% genuine, and a good fucking dude! That video breaks my heart...
Bill is awesome 💯‼
Bill still does the Patrice O'Neil benefit
Bill is a great man!
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Patrice was one of his best friends. Patrice was just an amazing comedian. I wish he was around.
I traveled into NYC to catch it once . It was a great lineup
Amen
Exactly the reason why I’ve always loved Bill. He always keeps it real, and is very relatable. I’ve always used jokes and comedy as an outlet/release as well. Bill is the man.
💯 Bill is one of the greatest!
Thanks for not only showing the origins of Bills comedy but the softer side of this channel . Laughter and tears will cleanse the soul ..
You are welcome, Bill has help this channel so much. We wanted to see where it/he came from.
Ive thought ive seen a lot of Bill Burr, but didnt get to see this footage. Glad I did, always had this feeling that something like this happened growing up. Its piecing together his show 'F is for family' and his other comic strips.
Also, I havent felt like this since ive seen his paper tiger special (towards the end)
I can relate to both Bill and the teachers. My family endured criminal DV in rural Australia and the isolation allowed my fathers abuse to grow until he became a sociopath. By the time I was 48 he died in prison because I had to use media, courts and politicians in a 10 year campaign to force the police to charge him for 33 criminal offences committed to my mother as a way to stop him from killing my mum and siblings because she left his abuse after the children had grown up and left home. I struggle with having to do that to my father who was a Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde which made it more difficult and I can visualise the hate and blame he felt towards his children for our disloyalty as he died in his cell. It took 7 years to find a doctor willing to help me with my complex PTSD from years of assisting my mums survival and protection of my siblings as the eldest. I grew up with the constant fear that the authorities would find out and with six children in the family I knew the low chance that we would get to grow up together. The best thing about living on a farm is that people didn't hear the yelling and violence to judge us and take advantage of us and when my families dysfunction became known, people did take advantage, judged us as a family and ripped us off of the farm assets and the farm was lost to solicitors and barristers fees. Living in a city would have been hard for Bill. Please don't judge Bill for pushing away his emotions, its not weakness or toxic masculinity. It is just survival, because when you let the emotions go, it takes so much to regain control of yourself and get back to an equilibrium. My experiences have helped my students. One story I will share. About 8 years ago there was a girl in my Year 12 class (last year of high school) who looked frightened and confused. She eventually told me her boyfriend who she had left was hanging around the school trying to control her and get her back. I told her to get on the phone and call her father and let him know so he can support her and allow him to help her. Last year I was talking to a colleague and this girl had told her that I was the teacher that turned her life around. She was happy and secure in a functional relationship as a young woman. That really pulls at my heart strings. I couldn't save my mum, siblings or my own children from the effects of my father, but I helped to save her. By the way my wonderful Doctor did help me and I function much better personally although the scars are never gone. My prior studies built a self awareness to my problems and his interventions were more successful as a result. I appreciate your reactions, the coach was respectful and empathetic and the Teacher was speechless and obviously moved. Kids like Bill and myself are still attending schools today. The ineffectual laws and policing are the problem.
I have no words. I’ve learned to have a certain care towards bill just understanding as much as I could of him through his comedy and this just makes him the more relatable and just understand where he comes from.
I love Bill Burr. Now I know why I relate to him so much. I grew up with a Father like that. I could never understand why my dad was like that because my Pa Pa and granny were two of the most loving, caring, decent people I've ever known and I know he wasn't treated like that by them. I still don't know why he treated me the way he did when I was a kid. He's almost 80 now and we get along fine now. He seemed to go through a change about 5 years ago. Even though he was the way he was I never had nothing but love for him. I always tried to make him proud but I could never achieve that but I never stopped trying. Even through a big part of my adulthood I still tried and tried. Still don't think I ever did.
I’ve never seen these videos before, which I find surprising because he’s my favourite comedian and I generally tend to watch his comic bits over and over again on a level that borders with addiction. He made me lmao so many times while talking about his childhood and “crazy” dad because, I guess, this guy can find the funny angel about literally anything. But this time it was touching, really touching. Amazing how the same story can make you both laugh and cry when delivered from different angles. Thank you guys for sharing!
Thank you Daniel for your comment, and it was our pleasure and privilege to react to someone like BIll.
If you heard the podcast last week about the former hockey player buddy who passed away after being paralyzed... you were blown away at the the way Bill stayed quiet for about 2 minutes. You could just tell he was holding back tears so its crazy how this just popped up in my recommended
My father left when I was 7 years old, actually on Christmas Day. He then came back the following month, telling me he was coming back for good, then left again on my birthday, never to return while he started his 'new life', with a new wife and eventually another child.
My mother was left with a mountain of debt he has acumulated, so had to work 4 jobs just to makes ends meet working 6am to 6pm. As such I would leave an empty house in the morning, and come home to an empty house in the evening. My mother, under such pressure, started drinking heavily, and thus, all that comes with living with an alcoholic which I'm sure many can relate, and I won't bore you with the details here. She tried her best, and did work very hard, but my childhood was a rollercoaster to say the least. I remember being so jealous of my friends, who all, each and every one, had a loving nuclear family.
It does make such an impact on your future, my education suffered greatly. I went from a child expected to do great things having skipped two grades early on, to failing all my exams only 7 years later. I became introverted, and still suffer from anxiety, decades later.
I am the youngest child in my family, my older brother and sister are much older than me, 18 years older. So when my father left they had already gone, started their own lives, they didn't have to go through any of the trauma I went through, their childhood was having a loving mother and a father. Very different from mine, and it shows.
Your developing years of childhood and through your teens are vitally important. And if your unlucky enough to suffer extensive scars during them, they stay with you for the rest of your life.
Paul, I am so sorry you had to deal with your father abandoning you and your family, I had a similar situation. I can relate some, thank you so much for sharing this with us.
My father went to prison when I was 2, my mother got married to one of his school friends and had two other kids, my half brothers. Changed my name when I was 3 and told me he was my dad until I found out at 16 after my step dad got arrested that he wasn't my biological dad, turned my whole world upside down. I'm 23 now and still have problems with trusting people
Dude, your wife has the sweetest voice of any lady I've ever heard. Maybe it's because she's a teacher, I don't know. But congratulations because she seems so pleasant.
Thank you Perry Arrington!!! I am so lucky to have her!
This is why the term "Tears of a Clown" holds so true
Been there too. I had a pretty crazy family too, constantly fighting, yelling, screaming, stuff flew from one side of the house to another. I often woke up to find our refrigerator on the floor and the couch upside down. Now that I grew up and finally got to understand what the hell went wrong, I have a different perspective of what happened. But at the time, I was the oldest of 3 kids and I had to stay calm, change their mind in the middle of yet another argument and when shit went further down, I had to leave our room and stand for them... litterally. That got me through a lot too. I was amongst the "stuff that flew from one side of the house to another" every so often. I missed half of my class at my last year of high school, just so I could stay home and "keep an eye on my mom"... The days I went to school, people picked on me for being "distant", with old looking clothes and a few bruises every now and then. Of course, I'd lie about why, until I broke in front of a few dozen kids, burst out crying and ran from school, never to go back. When I finally left the house, I was 16, bitter and resentful as can be... thankfully, I had the decency to start working and save money to GTFO of the house. My first landlord even gave me a "fictionnal name" since I wasn't yet old enough to have an appartment, but I showed him a pile of cash, just to show how serious I was. Seeing my distress (I almost burst out crying in front of him), he took me in anyway and I've been YEARS, struggling with myself. Didn't take care of myself, spent my money on beer and weed, just keeping to myself with a "f*ck people* mentality... but I never stopped working, never took a day off; that was the only thing that was important to me. Jobless, I'd have to go back... That was unthinkable for me. My little brothers were sent to other family members.. so I'd be alone in there. No way.
But all bad things aside, I grew a lot with that, and understood many things while trying to "find my place" in the world... and now, I'm living a happy life, with a great job, people working for me and a lady that I love and care for so much. But yeh... that kind of childhood can really screw you up.. You need a way to vent it. He uses comedy, I used music. Got a band, played gigs everywhere for years and used the stage to burn the excess rage until I leave the stage, almost about to collapse of exhaustion. You really need something to cling to. A passion, a good job, something, anything.. But ultimately, you're the one making the call. People around you can say anything they want; if you're not ready to get the lesson, you won't listen... but being aware that you're not alone living through hell, and knowing that there's always a light at the end of the tunnel is kinda comforting. I know many lived through a lot too and I salute your strenght. I know the feel. But for those of you still living through it, just remember: the simple fact that you're still there, still breathing is proof that you have the strenght to overcome it. Take your time, but never underestimate yourself. Go at your own pace, but challenge yourself. When confidence starts to build up, the whole world opens up for you. Peace, people.
Thanks for that coach I needed that
Whenever he tells jokes about growing up with his parents, I always wondered if they were based on reality or fiction to make people laugh. There are comedians who do that. I imagine his act is therapeutic.
I’m glad I saw it because you can see his humanity behind his jokes.
Everyone has a story. It was nice to hear his. It was good. Thank you. Cheers!
OMG I love Bill so much 😢 This really moved me 💔
Bill speaks about his dad in one of his bits and how much pressure his father was under. Bill spoke to the fact that his parents were married young and had 5 boys before his dad was 30 years old. Bill, after becoming a father in his 40's laments on how he can't comprehend the (again) pressure his father must have felt having to raise 5 boys at such a young age. In this bit, Bill doesn't condone his father's behavior but says he understands much better as to why his father was the way he was while Bill was a young boy. In fact, Bill speaks to his opinion that his dad did have some good ideas but didn't express them in the healthiest of ways.
Now thats a side of Bill Burr I never knew existed.
I recommended this a while back. It is a really sad story I can relate to because my childhood was exactly like this. Real violence and self hatred. In my case, it was both my mom and dad. I would hide this from school and made sure no one came to the house. First chance I got to bail at 17 I did. No contact until the age of 29 when I got married and she really wanted to meet my parents. Kind of weird seeing my wife with he own parents. Loving, and peaceful, almost like watching one of those families on TVs I used to watch on TV growing up to escape my own home-life. Same shot happened to me. My folks years later , fixed themselves. No anger. No rage. It was like meeting strangers. I went through the same emotions as Bill like "what the hell man?!?". I'm 42 now and I know I should know better. They are not the same people I knew growing up and I should give them a chance, and I have. I try to keep contact and visit. However, when I go back to that house or see them, my instinct revert back to that scared little boy hiding under the bed covering his ears or reading comics or have my headphones one...anything to be anywhere else on Earth but there. It's funny the stuff that haunts you. For me when I see Bill do his acts, I don;t see it as an act. I see it as therapy for himself. We all got to heal in our own way.
Thank you so much for sharing that with us S Singh, must of been hard to tell your story. So glad you are dealing with it.
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Nah, it is what it is man. I mean you wear a Batman T shirt. We know how Bruce Wayne's child hood created the person he is. Trauma is fuel. You can use it to push yourself well beyond what others can do, or you can let it burn you up as well. The lesson I learned was we are creatures of constant change. The man you are today is not the same from 15 years ago. and Will be someone completely different in 15 years. It's a weird place to be. One day i will have to bury my folks. What to say at their funeral? Messed up thoughts like that. Guys like Bill Burr or Dr Jordan Peterson, connect with men because you can tell they get what being a man really is, but also when they share personal things you know it's from an honest place and helps others share their story. The worst part of it all was feeling alone in that experience. Both as a child, you didn't want to get you folks in trouble so you never share home life. As an adult you don't share it because you don't want to seem like damaged goods. Robin Williams had a great way of describing it. he said "he could be in a room full of hundreds of people that know him and still feel like the most alone person in the universe. Hearing stories like this.Sharing them. Makes one feel less alone and that is truly profound for healing. Hey, thank you for this channel. Whenever I'm feeling down , this is the channel I come to, so keep it up! Now enough of this emotional crap! Where are some cheap vagina jokes or family guy clips LOL!
We have a Jo Koy clip dropping tomorrow, and we should be reacting to Gary Owen "Sweet potato pie is NOT Pumpkin pie" tonight and if its not copy written will be up soon. I'll be doing some family guy stuff on my other channel soon as well.
I think it was therapy, for him and you and anyone not fortunate enough to have loving, caring, parents. Makes me feel lucky and guilty at the same time.
@@walkingwounded3824 You sound like my wife, when you say you feel guilty about having a normal life. Take it from me. You are not lucky for having something that you should have. You shouldn't feel guilty for something you had nothing to do with. When I first met my inlaws, it was surreal. Just normal people. Seeing my wife interact with them and the happiness didn't bother me one bit. Being accepted by these people as part of their family was awesome. They call me"the perfect son" as a bit of a joke because I overdo things to please others. I sometimes feel guilty that I have a better family situation with them than my own. I know and own my damage. It's funny, seeing my wife with her family or others, I experience their joy almost like 3rd party. It's nice. I know I will always have my guard up, or go into overkill when I see a threat, but that is what it is. It;s better I know where it comes from than being blind to it. I have no regrets. Been married for 14 years. Regrets is a thief of time you have on Earth. Ironically I would say my trauma made me super aware of how little time people have on Earth. So I an obsessive when taking on projects and finishing them. That had turned me into a professional success. My wife balances me out. She has me chill out, and puts things in perspective. That's how you know you found a true life partner, You balance each other out and live for each other. So no need to feel guilty. Just look at your family with the reverence they deserve. Time is too short to feel guilty or shame and other things you can change in the past. Take care.
Oh with tha tears!!!
I've noticed when Bill gets into these sensitive stories about his father he always makes excuses for his father. Like saying He doesn't want to make his father seem like a psycho or horrible guy, then he will follow that up with hes the greatest guy I know. Bill you need to stop doing that your father was an ASSHOLE and if he is still alive he owes you and your brothers and mother an apology.
That first part, opening up about his dad humiliating him, ugh... Stuff like that is why I get angry when people give comics crap about saying something offensive or being dark... It's like their coping mechanism, to laugh in the face of darkness. How can people try to strip that away from them? Just because they weren't amused, or maybe it brought up some relatable trauma in their life that they aren't able to joke about... That doesn't mean Bill or anyone else shouldn't be able to talk about it. My mother died right before my 8th birthday... And no one necessarily wants to hear jokes about dead mothers, but that was how I coped with it. I made light of it. Just tell other kids like, yeah, this is why I'm fucked up... Cuz what else are you gonna do with that? Just be angry?
I dunno. I get that some people don't want to talk about or be reminded of the darker sides of humanity... But those people should maybe look up the comic they're paying to see before going and getting all offended. The comedian has the right to say what they want. If you don't like it, then leave, and go find some comic that only talks about rainbows, and puppies, and ice cream.
Comedy is most often described as "Tragedy plus Time". So how are so many people scratching their heads about dark comics? It's right there in the description, leading all the way back to Shakespear and possibly even before him. It's no secret that a lot of comedians have addiction issues, mental health issues, childhood abuse issues... How is anybody shocked when they say something fucked up?
Thank you Dave Mick for sharing your thoughts and experience with us, losing someone or going through something is hard but like you said you need to own it and make it yours. Have a wonderful day my friend.
This is what happens when parents suppress their kids emotions by shaming. So if you are lucky to have children listen and teach with a firm and compassionate hand.
Man the part where bill tells the story of how he could hear his parents argue from the bus stop really stuck a cord with me, we lived right by my school and I remember I would walk out the door in the morning, open the door to see groups of kids walking by my house and the few seconds the door was open as I was walking out you'd hear F bomb this B bomb that, and then I would intentionally walk home slowly or if I walked with friends I would say "hey let's go this way" to avoid going by my house, out of the fear that they would be screaming at each other again, like bill I never got beaten and I never went hungry and the rent was always paid, so it's almost like if you were never abused you don't have a right to complain.. but sometimes something as small as this can really mess a kid up.. we are taught that even dogs feed off of the energy they witness at home.. now imagine what impact that has on a human child, arguably far more intelligent and mentally sensitive than a canine. No wonder bill is such a saint to his two children.
Sometimes great comedy comes from great pain.
Well said Ron S!
Seeing the most famous stand up comedians get emotional hits hard. Alot of them make jokes about terrible things in life. How they cope. Little do we all know that the jokes tell some truth. Honestly how I cope is comedy. Life is was to serious and short not to laugh about it all
Wow - a reaction video that made me cry.
You are welcome 😁
This is the first bill burr comedy bit that I havent seen before watching a reaction video.
Deng. I'm glad I watched this one. I never seem the last 2 clips before. Neat 😁
Wow!!!...i like him more now as a person and as a comedian.
Wow that was hard to watch! What a great guy!
I am glade you watched that link i sent you of this . I broke down when he did when talking about the doll story . Look forward to your reaction ..
Thank you so much! I'm so mad because I didn't give you and a few others a shout out. It is hard searching who recommended what sometimes, we currently have over 7,000 comments.
But when I find the ones that did I'll add it in the shout out area at the bottom of this video.
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Its ok . I am not looking for any recognition . I just want to enjoy your channel and share content you might laugh or cry about ..
@@waynesbutler7834 that's cool of you!
Love you man! Love you guys. I completely understand the feeling ❤️💪🏽
We love you too Diego!
Every Monday and every Thursday he does his podcast and then does a video podcast with Bert once a week and he just rattles off whatever he's thinking. Give it a listen.
Will do! Thank you!
Not the first time I've seen this Bill burr moment and it gets me every time.
Love bill burr
Bill is so relatable.
then the fun one of the group cries, we all cry.
This is at a time when Bill Burr started into comedy. It appears to be more real in a basis of understanding origin of what his style is based around. The interesting thing is that he portrays a lot of issues with his father in this video. But as his comedy style grew he changed his presentation of his father from a very negative experience to somewhat a positive experience. Not clear if this was because he wanted to build his style in a direction that is not explicitly negative (wrt his father). You don't see many videos during this period of his career. Almost appears to be two different comedians.
Its great to see a before and after, like a metamorphism of coal into a diamond
I'm sure that comedy is helping Bill deal with a lot of things from his past, but he has also had a ton of therapy to help him come to terms with his past..
Glad he came out the other side of it all with strength and compassion for his family.
Thank you.
You are very welcome!
Excellent guys! 😞👍🏼
I went to Emerson too! Who knew I had something in common with Bill?
Definitely explains why he has some issues with anger. Or had he's Definitely been working at getting control over it.
you guys are cool, like, organically cool. and that... that’s sick. all love man❤️👍
Such an awesome thing to say. Thank you!
Teacher and Coach Reacts I hope I’m not sounding weird or anything but I just found you guys’ channel and you really give off this “cool family member” mood. I don’t feel like I’m watching entertainment, I feel like I’m chilling in my living room laughing at stuff with my family. It’s not pushy or overdone like how a lot of other people on this platform behave. It’s very honest, hence my use of the word “organic” and, above most things, is what I appreciate about you guys and your videos. (AND YOU READ COMMENTS!) 😁❤️ all love👍
@@ethan-gy2sx wow, thank you so much for those kind words. You get it! We want you guys to experience the same feeling we get watching the videos for the first time or nostalgia if you already seen the bits. Thank you so much for your time writing that message to us!
swear the god you guys had some drinks :D its even more fun to wach you :DD
This is deep and very relatable. Thanks for sharing. Stay Safe, Wear a mask 😷 if you are able to. 🙂 🙏
Thank you! You too!
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Your welcome and will do 😷. 😎
This is a compilation of every time bill has gotten emotional as an adult 😆
John mulaney “why buy the cow” is hilarious.
Great reaction. Thanks for checking it out. ✌🏽
Thank you too!
This is a good one!
telling a story like that to a room... that's rough
This is from The Moth - The Art and Craft of Storytelling, where people tell true short stories of events in their lives and you usually get a mix of feel good, funny and heartbreaking ones.
Maybe Bill's Dad's behaviour stems from how he was treated by Bill's Granddad.
7:56 "of course"
Brings me back to old times lol
I am one of the lucky ones with great parents. But I know that isn't necessarily the rule. Wow. That's rough. I'm sure there are a lot of comedians who do it BECAUSE it's therapy. At least a form of therapy.
Thanks for reacting to this, guys.
You are welcome Kevin, and thank you for watching!
The guy who introduced Bill for his award that you said sounded sad is Steven Wright. He is a very funny comedian. That's just the way he talks with a very monotone voice
Gotcha! I thought so but wasn't sure, thanks you for letting us know.
@@TeacherandCoach2020 if either of you haven't seen him before here's a good short video to react to th-cam.com/video/9Mz3EWJGGH0/w-d-xo.html
Super cool!!!
Wow poor bill.
Shit sucks when you want your parents approval and love but they're just always angry. It really messes with your head though when they treat you like shit and turn around and are friendly with every other person in existence.
Comedy may not solve your problems, but it sure is one of the healthiest ways I can think of to deal with problems until you can resolve them..
Well said Warren!
Steven Wright you should check out his standup.
He had the same life as me
Did I get a boflex bike ad because I'm on this channel? I only ride cool 20" BMX bikes at 39 years old, IDK why TH-cam thought I'd want a boflex bike.
Coach is rubbing off on your TH-cam algorithm lol!
F Is for Family on Netflix is all about this.
Love you 2. Yes Bill is not a robot. Great Man and dad+ nice family. Great reaction thank you. Stay safe love you to from finland 🇫🇮👌🙂🎅💝 some day everything is better....
😊 thank you, and we would love to visit Finland one day!
@@TeacherandCoach2020 Nice to see you :) Lets get this thing go away and then we can meet yes. You are welcome here any time and thank you for best reactions . love keeps everything going. :)
You need to watch John Mullaney.. the diner story. I think Teach would like it.
We did but TH-cam blocked the reaction😭
good video guys ! must of be difficult my upbringing just like that
Thank you Jade, so glad we have people on this channel that recommended it. Great community of people.
damn. From reading the comments this really hit too close to home for some. Be the best father you can be. Note that it does not mean that your kids are your friends and that you should let them have their way always. guide them well. Be firm but fair. Its a delicate balance.
I think this got to coach more. Dude, you need to pick the most funny controversial Bill burr but next and just laugh the whole way through. That's therapy.
RIGHT! This sh!t was way to deep...
Well that was really sad.
Well watch our other videos to make you smile again lol
My dad was like that but my mother was 10x worse funny thing is i have 4 siblings none of them got treated the way i did never understood why wasnt a bad kid didnt get in trouble or anything they just always hated me never understood why
Now you have to react in Patrice O'neal... they were best friends... anything from elephant in the room special
Do you have a Patrice bit that is not "the nasty show"?
@@TeacherandCoach2020 th-cam.com/video/C1IsDto41Tw/w-d-xo.html
P.S. greetings from Croatia, you are watched from Europe aswell
Classy move by Conan Obrien also.....he cut in quickly when he saw Bill getting choked up, some other host might milk it for viewers
I can’t tell you how much it pleases me to hear You say “Teacha” over “Teacher” it just flows so much nicer in the intro.
So glad you are pleased lol, but seriously thank you so much for watching our videos 😁
Love the videos guys!! Coach, I just want to let you know that the beard WORKS for you man. I see that you shave it sometimes but just know, I had to force myself to look away :) ok i'll stop..
Thanks for watching and for the compliment!
guys you snould try reacting to miriam margolyes, she is hella funny
.. miriam margolyes at the graham norton show. enjoy
Ruining kids and animals is sadly the easiest thing in the world. It requires you to do literally nothing.
Truth 😥
My guess on his dad is being drafted and having to fight his way out of Korea. My dad was the same way only he had to fight his way out of Nam.
I know this is of topic, but Conan had Ed Sheeran after that? Was it ginger eve?
I think Teacher is right about Bill's dad. This is one reason this monster continues in the next generation.
Hard times breed strong men, Strong men breed good times, Good times breed Weak men, Weak men breed Hard times...
RIP headphone users.