@@steelehere1 why didn't you say dick? This is Dice World, baby! You get to say anything that pops into your id. I hope it wasn't edited from your remarks.
Absolutely agree with everything you just typed. I remember being about 13 when Dice hit like an explosion. He's hilarious but yeah I could see how in current year Andrew would be seen by some as *problematic.* While it sucks getting older *growing up in the 80's was freaking awesome music, movies, comedies, and best of all wokeism wouldn't be a thing for decades.*
@@James-ko3gw I don't doubt you.... Although in retrospect...Do you still think he's the greatest??...Or was this a topical case of sheeple group think ...
I worked in a factory. This kind of joke was told every day at work and no one was offended. It's meant to be ridiculous and that's how we all took it.
A factory is exactly where this low brow, turn your mind off first, type of humor went over. Thank the god's of comedy it was so short lived that it blew over with barely a blip
@@corybritton1966 It went over everywhere because people didn't get butt hurt over jokes. It's called a sense of humor professor. I'll bet you're a blast a parties. lol
He came out in a time when the topical/observational comics were saturating basic cable tv comedy shows with kind of funny but tame stuff like: What's the deal with airports? What's the deal with basketball shoes? Don't you hate *insert topic*?, etc., etc.. He went against the grain in every way. His comedy was a breath of fresh air for millions of people.
exactly. in a time of jerry seinfeld lame humour, then along came kinison and clay. i loved kinison, didn't really care for clay. eddie's delirious was the best.
Comedy is funny/humorous - that wasn't comedy. I didn't laugh once. That was just trash. Of course, Brad and Lex apparently didn't know many/any of the nursery rhymes which made it suck even more for them.
Dice is actually a character he's playing! Watch Some more of his stand up and you'll see behind all the raunchy and edgy context he's really funny with great timing!!
I've seen his shows though, sometimes women stood up and left offended, they probably didn't know what his jokes were about before they went there, who knows
Please correct me if I'm wrong. From your reaction, you both may not have been exposed to nursery rhymes growing up. Many of these rhymes were attributed to Mother Goose. Dice is taking these rhymes meant for children, rhymes many of us grew up with, and making them dirty. As an example, Blue is substituted with blew in one of the rhymes. I've read that nursery rhymes were dying out or have already died out. Mother Hubbard is from 1590! I learned these rhymes in the 1970s. Thanks for the reaction!
Dice was the first comic that did not care at all. He caught a lot of hell in the late 80's. He was so different that people did everything to see him live or get his show on cassette. It seemed like every day someone was up set with Dice. He made my high school years fun.
The Diceman. It was more the shock than actually funny. Evidently, he was the first comedian to sell out two nights in a row at Madison Square Garden. He was in two movies that I enjoyed. He had a supporting part in "Casual Sex?" in 1988 then as the star in "The Adventures of Ford Fairlane" in 1990.
Dice was not that funny watching it alone, but watching other people react was the best part. I literally had tears in my eyes watching other people get shocked by his act...lol
I went to see him and my friend wore a sweatshirt that said Just Do Me. Instead of the Nike tag of Just Do It and he made a joke about her. We were laughing so hard and it was just to get noticed ny him. 🤣This was definitely in the 80s we weren't offended so easily back then😍🤘🤣
@@lastchild6153 we were laughing so hard i didn't hear it, which pissed me off. He had asked her if she was wearing panties and she said no then he slammed her but it was too loud to hear what he said🤣🤭
I used to sneak out into the living room after 11:00 p.m. to watch this, and other R-rated stand-up comedians on HBO and Cinemax. I was like seven or eight. My uncle was a tv repair man, and back then access to the movie channels required tubes you screw on the back of the tv, people would leave their tvs behind with them still attatched and never came back for them so he would hand them out to family. Only way we had anything besides analog antenna, lol.
Andrew Dice Clay was huge back in the late '80s - mid '90s. He had that east coast bold in your face, rude, nasty swagger and accent. lol. NYer. The media and women weren't too fond of him obviously . MTV even banned him for a bit. He was also in funny movies. BTW, it's missing the part when he said "and Rover gave her a bone of his own"! lol
This is why people from that generation (my generation, I'm 42) do not get this new generation. People now a days are wimpy. "You can't say such things, you may hurt someone's feelings"... My generation says "F" your feelings, we did and said whatever we wanted. We grew up with Andrew Dice Clay, Dukes of Hazzard, Ren & Stimpy, Beavis & Butthead, Married With Children, etc. If we did not like something, we just didn't watch it. We did not go on Twitter and cry.
Wimpy is an understatement.They're like limp dicks.Offended by a fuc*ING fart.If you had've said you "were offended" in the good old days you would've been lead away in a straight jacket to the funny farm.Terrible society now
Respectfully, I feel your comment is inaccurate for everyone. I’m 36 and can identify with my generation and the generation today, my children’s generation. Times change and when we don’t adapt, we suffer in silence. Life is beautiful with or without offensive jokes. I do agree with the last thing you said - if someone doesn’t like something, change it…or open the mind to a different perspective. I respect how Lex and Brad stuck with it. Even I didn’t get the jokes and was raised with those nursery rhymes 😂❤❤❤
Oh boy, The Diceman,,,Hickory Dockery Dock...we all thought Murphy was filthy. Dice said "Hold my Beer" 80's we didn't have hang ups like it is today. Almost everyone except for the most conservative loved the Diceman...
You guys have to understand that Dice was a bona fide rock star. His arrival was like going to sleep with your parents' Bing Crosby records in your head and waking up to hearing Led Zeppelin for the first time. This was a kick in the comedy teeth for people and a relief that someone finally let you laugh at the absurdity in your head. It was... fun.
"The Diceman" was, and may still be the biggest selling comedian (tour dates) ever. He repeatedly sold out Madison Square Garden, and other large venues across the country, although, he was banned in a lot of cities for vulgarity. He was what they called a "Shock Comic". He reigned supreme from 1989-1991. People would recite these poems in bars, and do their own little " OOOhHH!!" impersonations of him all the time. That "Oooh": has even been sampled into pop music of the time (You're Unbelievable - - INXS) .
Dice was the man. Rodney Dangerfeld gave him his big break, on his HBO show; you guys should watch that clip. There was no one like Dice before, or since. He is a legend. People back then actually had a sense of humor and could laugh at themselves, and others, without getting offended. I often long for those days.
What exactly does Bro mean this week? I'm old, I have a hard time keeping up. Does it mean white people? It used to mean black people bitd but what do I know?
Dice was part of a comedy generation that was either super clean or super dirty. And you can honestly say that about any comedy generation but the 80's were something else. You had your Tim Allen's and Drew Carey's but you also had your Dice Clay's and your Sam Kinison's. What a time to witness hahaha.
I rented a few VHS comedy tapes to run while I was setting up for a house party. Based on where I was living this was 1984-1987. No one ever heard of Dice Clay. He was introed as a new comic by either Red Fox or Rodney Dangerfield. Not long after Dice took off. He may still hold the record, he sold out Madison Square Garden two nights in a row. Then he came under fire due to the content of his show and he was one of the first people that the media and certain groups tried to do what is known today as, "cancel." Guy is actually a very good actor.
Things are so sterile today, almost forgot about this. Though Clay did end up on a cooking show in his older days lol. That fact y'all were more shocked than laugh speaks a lot about the mood of the generation today.
Funny fact: Offstage Andrew was a devoted family man (although he had 3 marriages, 2 were short.) who wore dockers and a casual shirt, was respectful and lived a clean life. The opposite of the stage act he created for a living. His son is also a comedian who often opens for him.
God I loved the '80's. So there were two movies with Andrew Dice Clay that I remember, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, and Brainsmasher: A Love Story. You two should react to those as well
You can see the conditioning that the younger crowd have gone through. This comedy, pretty much summed up the 80’s: people laughed at everyone, and everything. Nothing was off-limits and it was absolutely incredible.
Todays youth or for that matter anyone under 40 have no idea how popular Dice Clay was and would not be able to handle these jokes today. It was a great time.
There are some episodes of Joe Rogan's podcast where Joe & guests discuss Andrew Dice Clay. One thing I remember them saying was that at some point he decided doing the Dice Clay character was more fun than his real life and he became Dice Clay full-time.
Congratulations to Brad and Lex for featuring the Diceman. Lex hung in there tough in spite of likely never having heard any of the words in Dice's normal vocabulary.
Andrew Dice Clay would have been provocative in any period of history, so I cannot blame anyone today for finding him disgusting. I was 18 or 19 when I first heard him in my freshman college dorm. There was a guilty pleasure in the shock value of what he said. One night, I and a few other guys were listening to him when some female friends came to visit. They were bored and asked what we were doing. Someone told the truth, and then we all listened to Dice. The women were initially shocked and then laughed, although with embarrassment. You can see from the audience that at least a few women found him funny at the time. I can only speak for myself, but I never thought less of women after listening to Dice. I can separate the need to treat people with respect in the real world from enjoying vulgar humor.
I was young when he came out but I still remember that naughty feeling I had listening to him. I thought he was hilarious. Back then you also had The Jerky Boys. See if you can get a listen to them. I used to laugh to the point of crying listening to them! Anyone else remember them?
Oh snap. You want some poems? I was 18 years old when this came out and I was laughing like a seven year old. I loved it. I know every single poem by heart. 😂
LMFAO, poor Lex looks like she is in shock. Someone should have warned you that Diceman is RAW. He doesn't hold anything back. He is one of the original adult comedy entertainers.
When I was reading nursery rhymes to our kids and would start with the Dice impersonation, my wife would be looking at me like, don't you dare. 😂 Don't worry, I didn't.
Wow - this brought back so many memories - this was all the rage when I was 18! And I'm not ashamed to admit I still remembered and recited each of these word for word. That stuff would never see the light in todays uber sensitive world, but his "persona" was so beloved by young people. such bravado and machismo.
That was the 80's, the decade of decadence! Hair metal & raunch...a good time was had by all and (mostly) no one was offended...except Tipper Gore! 😅 Luv u guys...😎
It maybe didn’t age that well, but it was world-shaking at the time. Fun fact, ADC was just a character, but apparently the comedian eventually turned into him in real life, and his original personality faded away.
Haven't heard most of these in decades but I still know them by heart.
Facts
Yup
Waiting for Jack Be Nimble, Jack Be Quick, Jack Burned Off His…. It must have been edited from the clip.
@@steelehere1 why didn't you say dick? This is Dice World, baby! You get to say anything that pops into your id. I hope it wasn't edited from your remarks.
Bend over honey I think I know you.dice is engraved in my memory.
The Diceman was huuuuuge in the 80s. Everyone had this stuff memorized. Back when people could take a joke for what it was. Ah...The good ole days.
Brad & Lex - Are you guys even familiar with these nursery rhymes? They 'are' from way back in the day.
Guilty pleasure
Absolutely agree with everything you just typed. I remember being about 13 when Dice hit like an explosion. He's hilarious but yeah I could see how in current year Andrew would be seen by some as *problematic.* While it sucks getting older *growing up in the 80's was freaking awesome music, movies, comedies, and best of all wokeism wouldn't be a thing for decades.*
The shocked look on Brads face was as funny as Dice’s routine 😂
Dice's routine was...Juvenile...Not Funny
Boy will I write some poems about you
@@poppiethestable1090 WAAAAAAHHHHH!!!!!
@@poppiethestable1090 I grew up in the 80's and saw him three times. Everyone thought he was the greatest.
@@James-ko3gw I don't doubt you.... Although in retrospect...Do you still think he's the greatest??...Or was this a topical case of sheeple group think ...
These nursery rhymes went right over your heads.
Man, I miss comedy
That was hilarious. You two were absolutely speechless. The look on your faces. Gold.
Today's generation simply can't handle Andrew Dice Clay's style of humor.
looking back, it really wasn't all that clever, just different and way over the top.
I wonder how many in that audience would cringe seeing themselves now,
Because they're a bunch of hypersensitive sissys. "Dice" was an act.
I enjoyed it then when I was a teen, I enjoy it still today. Of course, I'm single 🤣😂🤣🙂
@@jethro1963 I don't. I'm proud to have lived in an era without hypersensitivity. People of that generation are stronger individuals.
I worked in a factory. This kind of joke was told every day at work and no one was offended. It's meant to be ridiculous and that's how we all took it.
A factory is exactly where this low brow, turn your mind off first, type of humor went over. Thank the god's of comedy it was so short lived that it blew over with barely a blip
@@corybritton1966 Have you figured out the correct bathroom to use yet?
@@corybritton1966 It went over everywhere because people didn't get butt hurt over jokes. It's called a sense of humor professor. I'll bet you're a blast a parties. lol
Not today! Off to Human Resources for reprogramming.
@@corybritton1966 Can you get any more Beta?
He came out in a time when the topical/observational comics were saturating basic cable tv comedy shows with kind of funny but tame stuff like: What's the deal with airports? What's the deal with basketball shoes? Don't you hate *insert topic*?, etc., etc..
He went against the grain in every way. His comedy was a breath of fresh air for millions of people.
exactly. in a time of jerry seinfeld lame humour, then along came kinison and clay. i loved kinison, didn't really care for clay. eddie's delirious was the best.
And he was playing a character.
@@zzz7zzz9 delirious is one of my favorites
Comedy is funny/humorous - that wasn't comedy. I didn't laugh once. That was just trash. Of course, Brad and Lex apparently didn't know many/any of the nursery rhymes which made it suck even more for them.
@@hmichaelr1 everyone has their own sense of humour. Adam sandler is huge, yet i don't find him funny at all.
In the 80’s Andrew was on fire.
These are nursery rhymes I grew up with as a child
Dice is actually a character he's playing! Watch Some more of his stand up and you'll see behind all the raunchy and edgy context he's really funny with great timing!!
The impressions he did were good, remember John Travolta toasting marshmallows with Rocky and DeNiro? lol
Back when people had a sense of humor and weren't offended by jokes. Good times. I still know all of these by heart! 😄
I've seen his shows though, sometimes women stood up and left offended, they probably didn't know what his jokes were about before they went there, who knows
Dice in the 80's was basically as big as Chapelle is today. The guy was a superstar.
I love how Lex is looking at Brad before she laughs, but Brad gets the locker-room jokes.
Yes, I see that too.
Please correct me if I'm wrong. From your reaction, you both may not have been exposed to nursery rhymes growing up. Many of these rhymes were attributed to Mother Goose. Dice is taking these rhymes meant for children, rhymes many of us grew up with, and making them dirty. As an example, Blue is substituted with blew in one of the rhymes. I've read that nursery rhymes were dying out or have already died out. Mother Hubbard is from 1590! I learned these rhymes in the 1970s. Thanks for the reaction!
oh Andrew Dice Clay was always the poster-child for the classic "man's man" 🤣😂🤣😂
I love seeing the confusion in your eyes watching this maniac. He was a moment in time
The Dice Man is EPIC! No filter, not PC, just plain high school humor!
Dice was the first comic that did not care at all. He caught a lot of hell in the late 80's. He was so different that people did everything to see him live or get his show on cassette. It seemed like every day someone was up set with Dice. He made my high school years fun.
Lenny Bruce was first. . . . . in the sixties.
He was huge back in the late '80s - mid '90s.
@@wesalker3479 Jennifer Lawrence was first.
@@theritchie2173 LOL. good one
Sam Kinison was 10x funnier, and predated Clay by years. Sam's tv debut was in late 1984 at Dangerfield's. Clay's album Dice came out Jan 1st 1989.
The Diceman. It was more the shock than actually funny. Evidently, he was the first comedian to sell out two nights in a row at Madison Square Garden. He was in two movies that I enjoyed. He had a supporting part in "Casual Sex?" in 1988 then as the star in "The Adventures of Ford Fairlane" in 1990.
I loved Ford Fairlane. Actually had the same year/model but hard top and blue.
He's actually a good dramatic actor
He was in another good movie called Brain Smasher: A Love Story with Teri Hatcher
If my memory is correct, he also played Lady Gaga's father in the recent remake of A Star Is Born.
Dice was also good in Entourage.
One of the best shock comedians of the 80's.
Remember watching him on HBO in the late 80s ... I was laughing my butt off this entire video mostly at your reactions!
Dice was not that funny watching it alone, but watching other people react was the best part. I literally had tears in my eyes watching other people get shocked by his act...lol
Andrew Dice Clay a legend 👏 🙌
Those nusery rhymes are known to the 70's gemeration and below they been around for years when we were kids.
I went to see him and my friend wore a sweatshirt that said Just Do Me. Instead of the Nike tag of Just Do It and he made a joke about her. We were laughing so hard and it was just to get noticed ny him. 🤣This was definitely in the 80s we weren't offended so easily back then😍🤘🤣
I remember seeing t-shirts with that slogan. Man, the world is so boring now.
What was the joke?
@@lastchild6153 we were laughing so hard i didn't hear it, which pissed me off. He had asked her if she was wearing panties and she said no then he slammed her but it was too loud to hear what he said🤣🤭
@@aveemarie268 That’s cool. Yeah With Dice I could only imagine. But I’m sure it was something hilarious.
Dice was the man!! I knew my wife was the one, when she watched his show, and blushed, yet laughed! Thanks!!!
One word - CLASSIC
I used to sneak out into the living room after 11:00 p.m. to watch this, and other R-rated stand-up comedians on HBO and Cinemax. I was like seven or eight. My uncle was a tv repair man, and back then access to the movie channels required tubes you screw on the back of the tv, people would leave their tvs behind with them still attatched and never came back for them so he would hand them out to family. Only way we had anything besides analog antenna, lol.
Andrew Dice Clay was huge back in the late '80s - mid '90s. He had that east coast bold in your face, rude, nasty swagger and accent. lol. NYer.
The media and women weren't too fond of him obviously . MTV even banned him for a bit. He was also in funny movies.
BTW, it's missing the part when he said "and Rover gave her a bone of his own"! lol
Lol 😆 the look on your faces was priceless 🤣 I grew up watch Andrew Dice Clay.
Andrew Dice Clay was a legend. Came from a time when people enjoyed being offended. Nowadays people are too damn sensitive for Dice.
Dice was a big hit performing at college campuses back in the day. as you can see the reaction was crazy!
This is why people from that generation (my generation, I'm 42) do not get this new generation. People now a days are wimpy. "You can't say such things, you may hurt someone's feelings"... My generation says "F" your feelings, we did and said whatever we wanted. We grew up with Andrew Dice Clay, Dukes of Hazzard, Ren & Stimpy, Beavis & Butthead, Married With Children, etc. If we did not like something, we just didn't watch it. We did not go on Twitter and cry.
It’s the same reason why people like Stern and Opie & Anthony got big on the radio, and the comedians that were on those shows.
Wimpy is an understatement.They're like limp dicks.Offended by a fuc*ING fart.If you had've said you "were offended" in the good old days you would've been lead away in a straight jacket to the funny farm.Terrible society now
Respectfully, I feel your comment is inaccurate for everyone. I’m 36 and can identify with my generation and the generation today, my children’s generation. Times change and when we don’t adapt, we suffer in silence. Life is beautiful with or without offensive jokes. I do agree with the last thing you said - if someone doesn’t like something, change it…or open the mind to a different perspective. I respect how Lex and Brad stuck with it. Even I didn’t get the jokes and was raised with those nursery rhymes 😂❤❤❤
this why you live in your mom's basement?
36 is still too young to fully get it@@alexi.de.charle
Oh boy, The Diceman,,,Hickory Dockery Dock...we all thought Murphy was filthy.
Dice said "Hold my Beer" 80's we didn't have hang ups like it is today. Almost everyone except for the most conservative loved the Diceman...
You guys have to understand that Dice was a bona fide rock star. His arrival was like going to sleep with your parents' Bing Crosby records in your head and waking up to hearing Led Zeppelin for the first time. This was a kick in the comedy teeth for people and a relief that someone finally let you laugh at the absurdity in your head. It was... fun.
Lol, I grew up on the Diceman. Good times.
Watching you two was hilarious. 😂
Brad's face when he heard the Little Jack Horner rhyme, though. LMFAO!!!
You're disgusting, you said FA!!!! lol!
Dice was like The Sex Pistols of comedy - he was there to shake things up.
This!⬆️⬆️⬆️
Which he did, and like the Sex Pistols, talentless. IMHO
@@jamessimmons1486 Talent is overrated.
I was lucky enough to see him live back in the day and he was freaking hilarious!
The Dice Man rules!!!! 😂
DICE!!!! OHHHHHHhhhhh
Dice is one of the oddest phenomena ever. Funny to watch you guys watch it
Dice Clay single handedly revived the feminist movement in America.
"The Diceman" was, and may still be the biggest selling comedian (tour dates) ever. He repeatedly sold out Madison Square Garden, and other large venues across the country, although, he was banned in a lot of cities for vulgarity. He was what they called a "Shock Comic". He reigned supreme from 1989-1991. People would recite these poems in bars, and do their own little " OOOhHH!!" impersonations of him all the time. That "Oooh": has even been sampled into pop music of the time (You're Unbelievable - - INXS) .
DICE Is a character.
The Dice Man was awesome. Today’s generation could not handle a full Dice set.
Today's generation can't handle that Elmer Fudd carries a gun lol
Dice was HUGE in the 80s and early 90s!
Dice was the man. Rodney Dangerfeld gave him his big break, on his HBO show; you guys should watch that clip. There was no one like Dice before, or since. He is a legend. People back then actually had a sense of humor and could laugh at themselves, and others, without getting offended. I often long for those days.
the look of shock on their face is funny. back then we knew how to take a joke =P
He sold out stadiums at one time. People knew his act and would yell his jokes like people at a concert sing the songs.
The video clearly shows it was not just Bro's, it was the 80's
What exactly does Bro mean this week? I'm old, I have a hard time keeping up. Does it mean white people? It used to mean black people bitd but what do I know?
Dice was part of a comedy generation that was either super clean or super dirty. And you can honestly say that about any comedy generation but the 80's were something else. You had your Tim Allen's and Drew Carey's but you also had your Dice Clay's and your Sam Kinison's. What a time to witness hahaha.
Your reactions are truly priceless. You guys are the best.
I rented a few VHS comedy tapes to run while I was setting up for a house party. Based on where I was living this was 1984-1987. No one ever heard of Dice Clay. He was introed as a new comic by either Red Fox or Rodney Dangerfield. Not long after Dice took off. He may still hold the record, he sold out Madison Square Garden two nights in a row. Then he came under fire due to the content of his show and he was one of the first people that the media and certain groups tried to do what is known today as, "cancel." Guy is actually a very good actor.
I can still recite all of them word for word. Dice and Sam Kinnison ruled the 80's. Eddie Murphy too, back when comedy was funny.
Comedy is different, but still plenty funny. Clay and Kinnison were good, but one note. Guys like Chappelle, Burr, CK, have much more to offer imo.
@@Kaddywompous And you're entitled to your opinion.
over their heads❣
Things are so sterile today, almost forgot about this. Though Clay did end up on a cooking show in his older days lol. That fact y'all were more shocked than laugh speaks a lot about the mood of the generation today.
Funny fact: Offstage Andrew was a devoted family man (although he had 3 marriages, 2 were short.) who wore dockers and a casual shirt,
was respectful and lived a clean life. The opposite of the stage act he created for a living. His son is also a comedian who often opens for him.
God I loved the '80's.
So there were two movies with Andrew Dice Clay that I remember, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, and Brainsmasher: A Love Story. You two should react to those as well
He was in Casual Sex, also, with Victoria Jackson and Lea Thompson..
You can see the conditioning that the younger crowd have gone through. This comedy, pretty much summed up the 80’s: people laughed at everyone, and everything. Nothing was off-limits and it was absolutely incredible.
Todays youth or for that matter anyone under 40 have no idea how popular Dice Clay was and would not be able to handle these jokes today. It was a great time.
The Dice Man🤣😂🤣
There are some episodes of Joe Rogan's podcast where Joe & guests discuss Andrew Dice Clay. One thing I remember them saying was that at some point he decided doing the Dice Clay character was more fun than his real life and he became Dice Clay full-time.
Man you can't just spring Diceman on younger generations like this. You have to prepare them and soften the blow.
things were different in the 80's
The equivalent of the bus station bathroom wall .
This guy used to actually sell out stadiums back in the day
Congratulations to Brad and Lex for featuring the Diceman. Lex hung in there tough in spite of likely never having heard any of the words in Dice's normal vocabulary.
Andrew Dice Clay would have been provocative in any period of history, so I cannot blame anyone today for finding him disgusting. I was 18 or 19 when I first heard him in my freshman college dorm. There was a guilty pleasure in the shock value of what he said. One night, I and a few other guys were listening to him when some female friends came to visit. They were bored and asked what we were doing. Someone told the truth, and then we all listened to Dice. The women were initially shocked and then laughed, although with embarrassment. You can see from the audience that at least a few women found him funny at the time.
I can only speak for myself, but I never thought less of women after listening to Dice. I can separate the need to treat people with respect in the real world from enjoying vulgar humor.
LOL...Lex stunned into silence...😄😄😄
I was young when he came out but I still remember that naughty feeling I had listening to him. I thought he was hilarious. Back then you also had The Jerky Boys. See if you can get a listen to them. I used to laugh to the point of crying listening to them! Anyone else remember them?
LoL prank phone calls... classic.
Just spun roofing for my sister n law , we were crying !!
I had every one of those memorized in my early twenties LOL
He was raw and very famous in 80's
Even today, his fans can recite every word: "You just don't get it."
Arguments about whether Dice has merit are more nostalgic than the clip itself.
He’s too funny 😂😂
the look of horror on your faces is funnier than the poems
The whole routine is brilliant. Not just the crude “poems”.
Oh snap. You want some poems? I was 18 years old when this came out and I was laughing like a seven year old. I loved it. I know every single poem by heart. 😂
Little Jack, cover your ears!!
Now I have to check and see if you two have done a 2 live crew reaction
The only person to be banned from MTV for life
Never mind, read that as SNL not Mtv...
**EDIT3** That said, several members of "The Challenge" have perma bans....
LMFAO, poor Lex looks like she is in shock. Someone should have warned you that Diceman is RAW. He doesn't hold anything back. He is one of the original adult comedy entertainers.
Check out Robert Schimmel from Dangerfield’s 1988, it’s 8 minutes of hilarity 😂
Damn I miss him
@@unclehollywoodshouseofther995 me too
When I was reading nursery rhymes to our kids and would start with the Dice impersonation, my wife would be looking at me like, don't you dare. 😂 Don't worry, I didn't.
LOL
you had to be there!......Dice used to sell out arenas like MSG
Brad and Lex look like they were slapped! 😂
Dice Clay was one dimensional. That's his entire act basically.
The Man, The Myth and The Legend. The Dice Man was great. Too offensive for Snowflakes today ☠🤡☠ Jill came down wit two fiddy
Wow - this brought back so many memories - this was all the rage when I was 18! And I'm not ashamed to admit I still remembered and recited each of these word for word.
That stuff would never see the light in todays uber sensitive world, but his "persona" was so beloved by young people. such bravado and machismo.
You guys looked terrified as to what was coming next.
That was the 80's, the decade of decadence! Hair metal & raunch...a good time was had by all and (mostly) no one was offended...except Tipper Gore! 😅 Luv u guys...😎
Tipp was a tripp.
LOL, I couldn't believe they listened to this...RAW humor from the 80's!
Nobody like Dice and Kinnison. Gotta have a certain taste.
Never has a man gone so far on so little (talent).
Dane Cook
Man that brought back memories....
Man that brought back nightmares.
I like how rather than laugh, Lex's reaction is to bark like a dog 😄
He's one of the "Great" minds of alltime.
Yeah...the 80s.
A lot of yelling, swearing, and crude humor.
lol
This is my generation.
It maybe didn’t age that well, but it was world-shaking at the time. Fun fact, ADC was just a character, but apparently the comedian eventually turned into him in real life, and his original personality faded away.