"If they write for the human being in me." Such wisdom in that statement. Richard was truly brilliant and a class act. If only we could get past the identity politics and achieve that.
Actually, treating all people humanely is the goal of these so-called and disdained identity political movements. Movements like Black Lives Matter (BLM), for instance, are attempting to challenge a prevailing identity base policing policies that too often result in handcuffed unarmed black men getting shot in the head. A result that rarely happens to unarmed handcuffed white me. One of the most recent glaring example is the designation by the FBI of murderous white supremacist as a moderate threat while declaring BLM, who have not murdered anyone and is officially non-violent, as a high threat: they are not able to see the humanity in all of us and judge us by our actions and not their preconception about our complexion. Sad.
G11713 and getting mad and coming at people for offensive language will never have the policies of what happens to BLM change. The left has to give up the identity politics of shaming people for words regardless of context, or they will see a horrible conservative future they themselves caused with such bullshit
Agreed Sean, "Identity politics" and "political correctness" really are the curse of the modern-day! It's fucking nonsense perpetuated by so-called liberals who have no idea what free speech and intellectual debate should consist off!
@dakrawnik4208 yeah - strange from Dick, too, since he's always been a friend to everyone. I am hoping he was trying a bit that just didn't work. really awkward.
Not sure about that. What is your qualifications for that statement. Because you like him? He was a terrible person, a user, a abuser, he got thousands of second chances.
@@zebunker He doesn't need to qualify that statement. You say all this about him but what I'm seeing in this interview isn't what you're saying, so what qualification do you have to speak ill of the deceased?
These conversations need to be had. You can't tackle a problem without willing to be wrong, or making an arse of yourself. Pryor was an exceptional man 👌
You do realise these both are literally having a joke.. Its just a little sketch between the both of them that Richard asked Dick to do and Dick went along with it.
@@invisiblesun6595 the source is in the fact that this is a Talk Show and Talk Shows are always scripted and said scripts are rehearsed a bit before the interview takes place, so of course the host is going to try to push the guest's buttons a bit....it happens even now with The Daily Show, The Tonight Show and all the rest
@@TheJadedView I think Dick was terrible! So smug and elitist, and clearly looked down on anyone non-white and non-celebrity. And I say that as a Conservative woman who hates identity politics and the constant race baiting from the left.
@@TheJadedView this is why identity politics is complete and utter BS and the modern trend of "woke" writers is nonsense, they're not being progressive or diverse a all, what they're doing is perpetuating stereotypes
honeysucklecat Pryor was unbelievably funny and he made it easy for both white and black people to laugh about themselves and each other without being offended. By pointing out some of the differences between the races or really the cultures, Pryor showed us how much we had in common, all just people. And OMG honeysucklecat, you are so right, he was definitely so much more than funny!
Theres more to this interview than just "the interviewer is racist". It was a very important discussion to have on television in those days. People needed to hear Pryor. They also needed to hear what Cavett responded with and how Pryor went further to prove his point. People are far too easily offended and quick to label. Listen to the nuance. This was growth, slow growth but growth. And it was done by two mature men not calling names or belittling. It was an genuine conversation with Pryor being the bigger man by not turning to anger or immaturity but educating.
Why is it his job as the one going through the racial trauma to educate the racist. Very problematic that you self define him as mature for not showing emotion to a very racially problematic individual. It's sad that you put that burden on blackness instead of shaming the white racist.
What Dick was asking had nothing racist about it. It was actually a simple question which makes perfect sense. He just went about it wrong. Dick was asking about typical black lingo that was used at the time. Just as there is typical black lingo that is used today. You can listen to it on movies and tv and in the real world. Does every black person talk like that? Uhh, no. Do some, yes of course. He was asking if he trusted a white writer to write his dialogue the way a black writer who used the lingo would. But uh....let's just blow it way out of whack instead, as this comment section has shown. It's easy to "find" something when people are looking for it. It's like we live in the world of the brain dead. People are so damn quick to throw a label on someone, morons.
@@KingNiros Yawn. Pryor answered the question. He preferred that a writer be creative and write something interesting about a character. Cavett didn't pay attention and trivialized it into a dumbass question about writing black dialog. Cavett also double downed and made it about race in a stupid and insecure way by asking if white people could write for Pryor.
i like old talk shows. it's kinda like podcast with breaks. talk shows now are as if they are trying to entertain people with ADD: let's sing, let's dance, ok, let's shoot ball, let's run around for no reason whatsoever. go, go, go!!!
It's not only talk shows. Even in drama the actors are never sitting down or just standing. As they talk they are always hurrying down a hall or something, and if that doesn't help the viewers who drift off with their 1 second attention spans, the screen is broken up into four screens, so they can see four different scenes at the same time. And always the ra tat tat of drums and music, never any silent pauses.
As awkward as that interview was at least they were talking about something of substance . This is a conversation today's standard interviews are 4 min puff pieces where the interview sets it up and everyone laughs on queue..
The interviewer was so ignorant and racist omg. I cringed so hard watching this , the audience laughing as well like the guest was the butt if the joke sickens me
I met them both, but got to speak with Cavett several times. He is one of the best informed people on the planet. Both are Gemini, I think, and are masters of communication in their own areas. But, Cavett tried to "go there" with what he thought was a deep question, and Pryor, in a friendly way, refused to let him "go there", for his own good. Cavett is not a racist, I can tell you that. This was in that zone of years where Mike Wallace, Charlie Rose, Barbara Walters, and Katie Couric thought it was important to ask "tough" questions. But, as a comic genius, Pryor graciously but stubbornly wanted Cavett to understand where the line was, and that he was being ungracious, and if he really understood the way he thought, he would have corrected his posture a lot more quickly.
@@SQUELCH-zj7il - far too easy to dismiss Cavett as a racist from one puece of awkwardness. Dick had black comedians, boxers, and politicians on his show many more times than most chatshow folks of his era, and had them on to talk areas of real substance, where he risked making a fool of himself. If you doubt me, look up Richard Pryor and Muhammad Ali's reflections on Cavett.
j0daze people be apologizing for something they said 10 years ago. Imagine the backlash if they start saying: " well that was 10 years ago, it doesn't apply".
He is so intelligent, you can see it in his eyes. This is why he changed comedy!! He also really started to push Dick in the interview and take it over.
Hes not letting him off the hook either. Cavett probably expected him to go into a comedy routine about white guys trying to sound black but pryor wasnt playing today. Maybe he was tired of racism....
Andrea Mendenhall Pryor was more than polite and gracious. He answered Cavett’s question clearly and immediately but Cavett for some bizarre reason wouldn’t let it go. I love Cavett but here he was embarrassing himself and creating discomfort for the guest.
My Dad took my sister and I to see this when I was 13-14 yrs old. He was always listening to his comedy records . We grew up with Mr. Richard Pryor. RIP DADDY AND RICHARD 🙏🏽❤️❤️
It was good to see him admit he did wrong, even in that frivolous moment. He didn't try to insult, he played that he could understand, even tho he knew he couldn't. This was a learning experience for me.
@@J.P.1. I would be surprised if someone didn't do what Cavett did. If you can't put what you're saying into the right words and people are starting to question it, you try to get out of that territory before, like Kyle said, you dig yourself into a hole.
Cavett is usually such an astute interviewer but I feel like he just dropped the ball on this. Pryor is making a legitimate point---most, if not all white writers attempting to sound "black" end up sounding phony, or forced. Cavett thought he could do it, and he ended up sounding exactly that. Clearly no offense was intended, but he just totally proved Pryor's point. Always refreshing to see two intelligent people having a real discussion.
Not phony or forced. just ignorant, racist, (at that time) and downright offensive. At that time white writers were laughing at black people not with them.
Every interview I have seen on here, there is this feeling of quality and calmness I really miss on todays TV shows. And yes, there is always one stating this in a similar way, but it feels important.
You should go check out Skavlan. He's a great Swedish-Norwegian interviewer, doing many of his interviews in English. Generally, from my experience, many European continental interviewers never lost this calmness. It really is something from the English-speaking world to only deliver 'fast food media' these days.
@@athame4597 It's not because of TV. It's because of the internet. The same reason mainstream media promote outrage culture - they can't compete with the internet. Most people I know already don't watch TV much. They're trying to fight the inevitable by making TV clickbaity.
@@shinHis3 this conversation is strictly about TV we're not talking about the internet and yes TV has progressed even in the 90s when everyone watched it it was completely different than in the 70s and yeah who watches TV anyways lol I cut the cords around the time Hulu came out
@@terry4137 Sure, we can all imagine people consciously talking "street" "black" just like we can all imagine people talking "white" "frat boy," etc. Look at the context though- Pryor just said he wants people to write characters for him as humans. I heard him saying, "hey, can we just focus on me as a human, and let me show what I can express about humanity," and then Cavett just keeps at the, "you know, jive... I could write jive for you..." Tone. Deaf.
@@tleilaxu42 This comment just sounds a bit "self righteous", honestly... As in, when you try to make a more "astute" observation of someone, or two people in this case, but you just miss the mark somehow (but you sound utterly convinced that you have "nailed it"), it's a form of pride + you still lack awareness of others on the much deeper level you want, but not to worry, this is a rather common thing amongst humanity in general... Aka most of the comments for this video...
These interviews are great, no quick cuts and edits, just chatting and any time there is an awkward moment or aside, the two adults are just allowed to hash it out with mutual respect.
Pryor's insight into human nature and the human condition was as sharp as a knife and if you're perceptive enough, it's obvious how sensitive he was as a human being. I once heard his wife say in an interview (after his death) that they both had been invited to Bill Cosby's house for dinner with Cosby and his wife Camille and were somewhat uncomfortable when Cosby tried to lecture him about his rough language and other things he didn't approve of about his act. Pryors wife went on to say in the intervbiew that Cosby was clean on the outside but filthy on the inside whereas Richard was dirty on the outside but clean as an angel on the inside. It made me smile hearing that.
This time the interviewer was a complete jerk watch him interview John Lennon 15 years earlier Dick Cavett was the best there ever was doing interviews this was just a s***** interview. Because he came off sounding ignorant
@@johnw8984 He was exactly like that with Eddie Murphy too. In fact he called Murphy the N word. He just cannot understand how someone can be black and be a person.
Richard always comes across as a gentleman in interviews & very articulate and intelligent where other comedians just make an ass of themselves trying to be funny all the time
Cavett comes off as the classic "some of my friends are Black" white liberal in this interview although I believe he was more perceptive and sensitive to other people than this incident seems to show. He should have quit while he was behind.
@Mr. Reality , everything you said is insulting. You're guilty of what you accuse others of . You're obviously not very bright. You lack intelligence and maturity. Your parents failed you. You were obviously raised very poorly.
I like what Richard said when Dick mentioned something he had said years ago. He said then you can't hold me accountable because it was years ago and my feelings have changed.
Simply genius pairing Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder! They were so dynamic and funny whenever they were together! _Silver Streak_ (with a great "supporting cast" - Jill Clayburgh, Patrick McGoohan [ _The Prisoner_ ], Ray Walston, Ned Beatty, et al.), _Stir Crazy_ (and _Brewster'a Millions_ ), are among my favorite comedy movies, all time! Eddie Murphy would eventually (few years after this interview) also be in a fun movie with Richard - _Harlem Nights_ . Good comment
I've never thought Cavett was a good interviewer, but he has always seemed sincere, respectful, and unafraid. That said, he very often clumsily stumbled through sensitive topics and too often treated people as spokespersons for their characteristics rather than just treating them as individual people. That is, he often fixated on a trait--especially anything potentially sensitive--and then asked series of questions practically prefaced with "As an X person..." By the same token, Pryor here was a little too coy. He knew very well that in all of his acts and portrayals, he amped up a dialect that isn't at all how he sounded in this interview. He _knew_ that, and he _knew_ that's what Cavett was clumsily asking about, yet he played dumb here. In that sense, at least Cavett was making an effort. The smarter tack for Cavett would've been to ask Pryor why he talked with those affectations in his performances... not to catch Pryor out, but to provide the guest with more open-ended inquiries. (Instead, Cavett framed it with the assumption it was race-related rather than allowing Pryor to define the dialect.)
I really like the way you said that. I’m going to start using the term “spokespersons for their characteristics.” I every so often am treated this way as a black person, but never knew a succinct way of defining that experience.
God I miss the life force of Richard Pryor..."JoJo Dancer, Your Life is Calling" is one of his best most candid films. Please watch it if you haven't already. Rest In Power, Mr. Pryor.
@FiatDuster Yeah, all the great comedians are highly intelligent. Dave Chappelle, Eddie Murphy, George Carlin, Jerry Seinfeld, Richard Pryor, Bill Cosby, Bill Burr, Lenny Bruce, Dick Gregory.
It's amazing. Time really does see us all fade away. Imagine, where once these two celebrities were once well known and respected, there is now an entire generation of people who have no idea who either of these men are. And the generations of actors, actresses and performers who came before them are either long forgotten or have now been relegated to irrelevance. Fame is fleeting, celebrity is relative and the only thing that lasts are the relationships you have with the people you love and the memory you leave with them alone.
You actually don't have that either everything dies and eventually turns to nothing once you die and and everyone that knew you dies those relationships and memories die. Nothing last forever. Everything is fleeting.
Cavett is probably my favorite interviewer of all time. It’s interesting to see him jack something up so badly, realize it, and try to dig himself out...and pretty much fail. And it’s amazing to see Pryor take it for what it is, reject the premise entirely, and keep going, all without being nasty about it. Pryor’s comment about being grown up is very poignant. It definitely turned awkward in a hurry but there’s still a lot of good stuff in this one.
@@trixielane6885 Dick's show was kind of special trainwreck of a show. He put his foot in his mouth a million times because he would ask questions other shows wouldn't, or had guests other shows wouldn't have on. Dick's racism isn't one of hate, but of ignorance and wanting to be accepted by his idea of black people and be thought of as cool. Dick's ignorance here gave Pryor the opportunity to say some deep things.
drugs.....and alcohol? i find it astounding you split those into two seperate things. also why is it so often the ones on drugs who come up with the funniest things that make us laugh or end up being the best artists. pretty sure all of the best musicians were on drugs.. maybe we should demonise the ones who make them illegal, not the ones taking them haha.
I speak as someone who isn't too familiar with Dick Cavett (I'm British, his shows were never shown on UK tv), however I've noticed, whenever he has an African-American as a guest, I find Cavett is so cringe-worthy! Generally speaking, I enjoy watching his interviews, but I have seen him interviewing James Earl Jones, Billy Dee Williams, Whoopi Goldberg to name a few, and his usual relaxed and calming persona becomes so erratic and embarrassing, his questions relating to African-American culture becomes nonsensical and mildly insulting, which usually leaves his guests visibly mortified, confused and ill-at ease.
Yeah, it is so difficult to watch. He is an ignorant and defensive white person. A racist essentially. I can't believe he thought he was so WOKE he could write in some unspecified universal black vernacular. Super cringe!
Cavett just strikes me as culturally naive here. He's obviously not intending to be offensive, but it seems pretty obvious he doesnt immediately grasp the offensiveness of his speech. He does stop digging the hole which is a good first step. Pryor is just incredulous, poor guy. Im sure looking back Cavett was so embarrassed. I wonder if Pryor ever returned to the show.
You guys are overplaying this interview so fucking much, lol. Cavett was asking a deeper level question, Pryor took offense to it, and used that power to try and push around Cavett a bit.
Congrats on your 3 years of sobriety. You seem very content and in touch with you feelings and you express yourself with a sense of calm. Alcohol addiction is tough to beat. Both my parents were alcoholics and unfortunately neither of them achieved sobriety. My mother lost her life to alcohol when she was only 57. I was 31 when she died. I had my second child, who was only 3 months old. Her unexpected death had a profound affect on all of us. I never had an issue with alcohol, but I have struggled with depression, which has plagued me most of my life. My depression was a result of the fighting, beatings and verbal abuse from my parents. I made sure my children would never know the inside of a bar or experience the abuse that I suffered. My children, however, had to deal with the affects of my depression and the eventual divorce from their father because of his alcoholism and abuse. I share this with you so that you know I can relate to how difficult it is to overcome alcoholism. I am proud of you and I am sure your family is proud and thankful too. One day at a time. I wish you well💜
@show_me_your_kitties the fact that you found his comment wholesome shows me you are the kind of person that sees beauty in the world and in every little thing. Bless your heart ❤
@John Doe Yes and would say the same about whites not truely relating to the life's obstacles Hispanics have had to navigate through integrating in the North American society.
@@CloudSpirals and others would call it self awareness, confidence and being perceptive. He's not being aggressive in any since of the word, passive or otherwise. He clearly sees that cavet is not centered and just allowed him to look foolish. If you say that's passive aggressive then I guess to you that's what it is.
If anybody has ever watched Cavett, especially his early shows from 68' through 74' they know this is an incredibly rare miss. Cavett was brilliant.......
Thanks for saying it..Cavett was 99.9 times out of 100 on the money..he is human! I'm from the UK and I cant think of any chat show host who is as consistently excellent as he is..surely we must cut him some slack?
I only recently discovered Cavett, but have noted a lot of similar comments. So often, he seems to come from that well-meaning but ignorant place that makes him think he is an ally to women and black people without any real idea of their experiences. I love that he always seems so willing to be corrected and to learn, especially given that he is so willing to state his own initial (often ignorant) opinions. He scoffed at the idea that white people shouldn't take Asian roles when speaking to James Earl Jones, who quickly put the record straight.
@@eejaypea we all have our faults..he, at least, is willing to take it on the chin..he doesnt have the arrogance of many chat show hosts, and I believe his motives are honourable...its a hard world to live in these days where your every move is scrutinised and then some..I wouldnt make the grade for sure..all in all I really think Dich Cavett a very decent, balanced man.
@@eejaypea This is what comes of a conversation where one person has a tendency toward making assumptions...Rather than asking a question to discover where the other persons view or experience can inform. I had a friend that consistently used to drive me crazy and exhaust me doing that...because I was put in a position, a box of presumption and it's just a complicated way to try and communicate, especially for an interviewer. (fortunately, Richard was clear, articulate and very gracious. He was able to as he said, teach by the way he was then living).
@@eejaypea "He scoffed at the idea that white people shouldn't take Asian roles when speaking to James Earl Jones, who quickly put the record straight." are you saying black people shouldn't take white roles?
@uncletigger There's a double standard, though, where some black people want to hold on to their culture whilst reject the idea that there is such a thing as "blackness". You can't have it both ways. If you want to be seen as the same as any other person and not distinct from other races then holding onto such terms as "African American" in 2019 or saying that white folk "don't understand what it means to be black" is counter-productive. If you were born in America, and most of your family was born in America, then at some point you have to accept that you are American, and accept all the good and bad history that goes along with that.
@uncletigger I never considered it to be normal talk. I understand what you're saying. I don't agree that every white person believes they talk normal compared to anyone else. I believe everyone thinks they speak normal from their point of view. White people talk different throughout the US. They also have their accents. Southerners speak differently compared to people from California. Each state has its own way of talking. People from Minnesota speak differently. You go to Texas or Louisiana they speak another way as well. I'm not going to argue that white people know black people so well or vice versa. I do believe if a person is motivated they can learn to speak a certain way. I think that was Dick's point. Unfortunately the way he said it didn't sound so good. It was kind of awkward like you said. Let me ask you do you think a black writer can write for white actor if so what's the difference?
Ernie Llerena You can tell Richard Pryor was getting a bit irritated from the questions Dick Cavett was asking him throughout the interview, yet he kept his cool.
Is was an innocent honest conversation. Wouldn't warrant aggression from anybody. You have a very myopic view of the world. Simple milleneal generation thinking.
He made it slightly awkward on purpose, I'm sure you're still cringing from when replied 'you too' to your waiter 14 years ago when he said 'enjoy your food' cringing all the way home and for the rest of your life.
Um. This is the way television used to be. Real conversations aren't always comfortable. You would probably prefer the heaping helping dose of bullshit you get on TV today.
I have a hunch that Richard Pryor maybe wanted to make a point, and asked Dick to play the dumb white guy, beforehand, and he was classy enough to oblige. Dick is usually much more quick on his feet intellectually than that. I don't buy that he was that oblivious.
what you see here is how precise pryor was...intelligent....and cavett does not seem prepared for it....he does seem...distracted...trying to save himself with corny..tropes etc
Actually there was and still is a language that black people use and still use that white did not understand but because the gap is closing white people are using it to
"Richard, can you help me out here, I need to borrow a SHOVEL." "Well, sure, I mean, if you want". "Ok, can I have a BIGGER SHOVEL now?" "Well, ok, if you need to". "This hole's getting really deep now. But I feel like I just need to... KEEP DIGGING." "Well, I can't stop you but... what are you doing?" "Right I just need a giant shovel now. Just gotta keep digging myself deeper into this hole".
Gene wasn't in Brewster's Millions. Stir Crazy and Silver Streak were the other ones and iirc the role of the sheriff in Blazing Saddles was written for Pryor as well but he was too consumed by his addictions to do it.
@@AllenSmithe Never said they were in that movie. I mentioned Brewster's millions because it's a movie that Richard did that was quite good. [X] None of the above. And you left out HEAR NO EVIL, SEE NO EVIL.
i can’t remember which film is was... convinced it was Hear No Evil See No Evil... where Gene’s trying to do stereotypical “black guy” body language, how he walks etc, and it’s exactly a visual representation of what’s being asked about the script writing
The best part of this was when RP said that an interview that was made several years ago don't apply today as he has changed his mind. Imagine that! A person allowed to change his mind and not being persecuted for it.
I had forgotten Dick Cavett had interviewed so many actors, singers and comedians that influenced a generation, and sadly most of them that are no longer with us but Dick Cavett himself is still with us as 83.......
@Andrea Mendenhall NO! They can be HUMAN, but if their skin is WHITE then they cannot ever, not ever in a million years, ever have any idea at all about black people. EVER! And if they do then they is a racist! XD
This is how Darryl used to do Michael on The Office. Troll him but do so in a way in which you cannot be accused of being aggressive or breaking any sort of rules…….but at the same time you make the other person make a complete ass of themselves.
@@trixielane6885 probably him talking about "vernacular" and imitating said "vernacular". That being said as others mentioned these conversations were important to have and this interview was a step in the direction of progress.
White people do that all the time and most of us black people cant stand it. When complete strangers will talk to me with a forced blaccent and overly using slang and ebonics it’s really annoying like bitch you don’t even know me 😂😂😂
Dick Cavett is the genuine article. His inquiries do tend to come from a place of ignorance, but definitely not malice. He wants to understand the other. He engages both sides of the conversation and isn't afraid to stand up and challenge the truly ignorant and malicious people like Lester Maddox or Hugh Hefner. He dispels myths and taboos by bringing them up at face value with the awe of an innocent child. That's how dialogues should be.
He was just the living embodiment of that peculiar segment of our country known as "White America" (of which I make no distinction between the Liberal and Conservative; for they are two cheeks of the same ass as far as Black America is concerned). He may have been a "Liberal"...but he was palpably, almost painfully "White™"
I haven't paid much attention to Richard Pryor, only for the fact that he just never fell on my radar, but I'd wish he did. I've recently watched a bit of his stand-up and it doesn't disappoint, but his films are on a different level, especially JoJo. This guy is a legend, a hero and just a genuinely nice guy.
Thing is, and it's weird at best, bc he knew legendary Black figures and also interviewed them, that he was trying to prove a point by showing how ridiculous a thing was, then go and do that very thing, knowing better. But his White peers prob didn't get that, unless they knew the same ppl. It's crazy that sober Pryor is genuinely seeing the bs but not going tf off inside, like young Pryor would've.
Code switching. For example, I’m black and grew up in the suburbs, and have also worked in fortune 500 companies, where I’ve always been one of very few, if not the only black person around. So the way I speak at work, or around my white friends is much different than how I talk when I’m around my black friends or in a majority black setting. It just happens naturally. White people will always say “you talk white” or “you’re not really black because you don’t say this or you don’t do that”. But if I were to talk ‘black’ around them then I would be judged and most likely excluded from certain jobs and social settings. I think Richard Pryor knew exactly what Dick was referring to but he was doing a horrible job at explaining it and it seemed Richard just wanted to see him dig a hole. Or he just didn’t feel like addressing it.
It is Richard Pryor who does not make sense...as is often the case in interviews, which is quite different from performing a comedy skit, at which his brilliance is without peer or precedent.
@@scottseward9819 exactly, " code switching," still awkward to discuss, dont think they had a word for it then. Richard knew what he waa doing in the interview, way ahead of his time.
Richard Pryor was a class act. He was a great comedian, a great actor, but an even better human being. If we would all take a page from him the country would be a better place.
@@dahenry8888 One of the best black comics maybe. Certainly not the GOAT! Chappell took a little from lots of different artists, mostly white, and combined them into his own style.
Glad to see this old clip, Richard really comes off as a genuine good guy, so glad we had Richard Pryor, he was behind some of the best comedic movies of all time.
It feels like a lot of black comedians have to go through the phase of no longer wanting to be "the clown". They grow and mature, but how society views them doesn't. Makes for some interesting moments.
@Pink Salt so which one is it How can there be professional comedians if comedy is not a profession you've now said both these things you clearly have no goddamn clue what you're talking about
What is Cavett doing? After Pryor says he doesn't appreciate people trying to write "black" for him, Cavett says, "I could write for you in your vernacular because I hang out with...(pause)" Oops. Then he offers a couple of lame attempts at "black talk", proving just how bad he is at it. He needed a few lessons from Barbara Billingsley on "Airplane".
Speaking slang isn't to hide speech, it's literally telling the person you're speaking with, "Hey, relax. Be yourself with me. Without judgement. I see me in you."
AAVE is its own dialect with its own set of grammar and vocab. The problem (which the question Cavett asked readily pointed out) is that people without any real understanding of its use try to emulate it and, as Pryor said, come out sounding ignorant and repeating caricatures instead of real people. There's a relatively new term used to describe this-"Imagined Black Language". It's what Cavett started using during the interview, which is why it was so awkward for Pryor and not at all "inclusive." Interesting stuff to consider! Your intent to make people feel more comfortable could have the opposite outcome.
I have to wonder if Mr. Cavett learned a valuable lesson about black people, by Mr. Pryor’s response to, “I think I could write for you...” That was such a teachable moment and Mr. Pryor was zen like with how he handled it.
"If they write for the human being in me." Such wisdom in that statement. Richard was truly brilliant and a class act. If only we could get past the identity politics and achieve that.
Actually, treating all people humanely is the goal of these so-called and disdained identity political movements. Movements like Black Lives Matter (BLM), for instance, are attempting to challenge a prevailing identity base policing policies that too often result in handcuffed unarmed black men getting shot in the head. A result that rarely happens to unarmed handcuffed white me. One of the most recent glaring example is the designation by the FBI of murderous white supremacist as a moderate threat while declaring BLM, who have not murdered anyone and is officially non-violent, as a high threat: they are not able to see the humanity in all of us and judge us by our actions and not their preconception about our complexion. Sad.
It’s not that that deep lol get over it
G11713 and getting mad and coming at people for offensive language will never have the policies of what happens to BLM change. The left has to give up the identity politics of shaming people for words regardless of context, or they will see a horrible conservative future they themselves caused with such bullshit
@NEGUS MBARKA I hope you were trying to be ironic there.
Agreed Sean, "Identity politics" and "political correctness" really are the curse of the modern-day! It's fucking nonsense perpetuated by so-called liberals who have no idea what free speech and intellectual debate should consist off!
One of the rare times Cavett, usually a very intelligent and perceptive guy, made a compete ass of himself. Pryor's graciousness is amazing.
Lee Cohn Eddie Murphy’s is pretty bad too. Dick dropped the ball in that one too.
Nah pryor was being a dick na mean
Richard was truely growing at this time but his taking crap with a grain of salt was his whole routine especially with Gene Wilder.
He also made an ass of his self in the Brando interview too, it's great. Better than this one imo
@@sibusisokofi3497 no he wasn't. it was weird what Cavett said and where he seemed to want to go with his point.
Like most comedians, Richard Pryor is extremely intelligent and extremely sad, he is able to make us laugh at the very things that hurt him so bad.
Many comedians say most of their best material has come from their pain.
@@maliant16 yeah so amy schumer then is valid
@@wellofcire she can be valid but she will never be funny.
@@Neon_Warning basically, although she had some decent moments before she was so stupidly famous, i found
yes he is very smart
Pryor is genius. Knowing exactly what is going on and not attacking but letting Cavett digging a bigger hole for himself.
Yeah. That's called "WOKE" !!
@dakrawnik4208exactly that 🤝🏽
@dakrawnik4208 yeah - strange from Dick, too, since he's always been a friend to everyone. I am hoping he was trying a bit that just didn't work. really awkward.
@@saggy1787well his name is dick so
What do you suppose was "going on"?
I can tell Pryor was sober I never seen him so serious
Me neither.
lmao word.
I'm not sober but I'm serious. Seriously high.
Russell James but he’s still funny lol
The drink wasn't the problem, it was the free base
If they’re writing for me as a human being, then yes.
Nailed it.
brilliant
The world lost a tremendous talent when Richard Pryor passed away.
Not sure about that. What is your qualifications for that statement. Because you like him? He was a terrible person, a user, a abuser, he got thousands of second chances.
I'm still mourning
@@zebunker you think having a drug addiction makes you a terrible person? Congratulations, you've been brainwashed by the state you sheep
@@zebunker He doesn't need to qualify that statement. You say all this about him but what I'm seeing in this interview isn't what you're saying, so what qualification do you have to speak ill of the deceased?
And George Carlin. RIP to both
“What do you think I am?” - 1:57
That might be the most sincere question I’ve ever heard asked in an interview.
Michael Scott interviews Richard Pryor.
Hahahahaha not as funny as Michael Scott but I get what you're saying. No awareness by Dick.
if you really want to see an episode of The Office watch his Eddie Murphy interview.
pippity poppity give me the zoppity
I would say this is more like David Brent
"Everytime....EVERYTIME BLACK PEOPLE WANNA HAVE A GOOD TIMEEEEE...."
These conversations need to be had. You can't tackle a problem without willing to be wrong, or making an arse of yourself. Pryor was an exceptional man 👌
You do realise these both are literally having a joke.. Its just a little sketch between the both of them that Richard asked Dick to do and Dick went along with it.
@@Lyons_T-BAG and paul abdork wrote all the rest?
@@Lyons_T-BAG Source of this claim?
@@invisiblesun6595 the source is in the fact that this is a Talk Show and Talk Shows are always scripted and said scripts are rehearsed a bit before the interview takes place, so of course the host is going to try to push the guest's buttons a bit....it happens even now with The Daily Show, The Tonight Show and all the rest
100% agree
I find that Richard is so humble here. He's really open and honest about himself. Boy, his standup was the best ever.
Best comedian ever 🙂
Dick ended up doing exactly what Richard was talking about 😂😂😂
yup, that reminded me of Goodfellas!
@@TheJadedView I think Dick was terrible! So smug and elitist, and clearly looked down on anyone non-white and non-celebrity. And I say that as a Conservative woman who hates identity politics and the constant race baiting from the left.
@@TheJadedView this is why identity politics is complete and utter BS and the modern trend of "woke" writers is nonsense, they're not being progressive or diverse a all, what they're doing is perpetuating stereotypes
@@wandertree conservative woman? Shut yo ass and get back in the kitchen!
That’s right and that was close to his last show
I miss richard pryor. He was funny, but he was more than that.
honeysucklecat Pryor was unbelievably funny and he made it easy for both white and black people to laugh about themselves and each other without being offended. By pointing out some of the differences between the races or really the cultures, Pryor showed us how much we had in common, all just people. And OMG honeysucklecat, you are so right, he was definitely so much more than funny!
Man, he and Gene Wilder. The ultimate team.
Agree, he's more than funny, he's hilarious
Absolutely. Love this brutha. Rest easy Rich!
Amen! Nobody like him in the world.
Theres more to this interview than just "the interviewer is racist". It was a very important discussion to have on television in those days. People needed to hear Pryor. They also needed to hear what Cavett responded with and how Pryor went further to prove his point.
People are far too easily offended and quick to label. Listen to the nuance. This was growth, slow growth but growth. And it was done by two mature men not calling names or belittling. It was an genuine conversation with Pryor being the bigger man by not turning to anger or immaturity but educating.
The problem was that Cavett wasn't really listening to Pryor. But it was interesting to see that Part of the question was about an old Interview.
Cavett said the same with Eddie Murphy.
Why is it his job as the one going through the racial trauma to educate the racist. Very problematic that you self define him as mature for not showing emotion to a very racially problematic individual. It's sad that you put that burden on blackness instead of shaming the white racist.
What Dick was asking had nothing racist about it. It was actually a simple question which makes perfect sense. He just went about it wrong. Dick was asking about typical black lingo that was used at the time. Just as there is typical black lingo that is used today. You can listen to it on movies and tv and in the real world. Does every black person talk like that? Uhh, no. Do some, yes of course. He was asking if he trusted a white writer to write his dialogue the way a black writer who used the lingo would. But uh....let's just blow it way out of whack instead, as this comment section has shown. It's easy to "find" something when people are looking for it. It's like we live in the world of the brain dead. People are so damn quick to throw a label on someone, morons.
@@KingNiros
Yawn. Pryor answered the question. He preferred that a writer be creative and write something interesting about a character. Cavett didn't pay attention and trivialized it into a dumbass question about writing black dialog. Cavett also double downed and made it about race in a stupid and insecure way by asking if white people could write for Pryor.
i like old talk shows. it's kinda like podcast with breaks. talk shows now are as if they are trying to entertain people with ADD: let's sing, let's dance, ok, let's shoot ball, let's run around for no reason whatsoever. go, go, go!!!
Lmao
Yep. The y take their time and talk. Saw an old episode of Merv Griffin with Dick Gregory after the Watts Riot. Very entertaining.
You wouldnt like the Eric andre show at all.
It's not only talk shows. Even in drama the actors are never sitting down or just standing. As they talk they are always hurrying down a hall or something, and if that doesn't help the viewers who drift off with their 1 second attention spans, the screen is broken up into four screens, so they can see four different scenes at the same time. And always the ra tat tat of drums and music, never any silent pauses.
@@HaywoodZarathustra I agree!!!!
When the audience applauds his sobriety his face breaks my heart. Prior was a deep cat. He laughs loudly then to break apart that moment.
He's so serious in this. You could tell he grew up and was a changed man. I was not surprised to hear him mention God.
@@nickie7874people usually go mental and mention fantasy beings
Shows like this should be called actual talk shows. Shows like Fallon and Kimmel are small-talk shows.
😆
Even worse. Its devolved into scripted and rehearsed small talk.
nailed it.
@Rowan Melton That's cause bill burr can't be contained you seen the cereal clip?
Well said
As awkward as that interview was at least they were talking about something of substance . This is a conversation today's standard interviews are 4 min puff pieces where the interview sets it up and everyone laughs on queue..
The interviewer was so ignorant and racist omg. I cringed so hard watching this , the audience laughing as well like the guest was the butt if the joke sickens me
I met them both, but got to speak with Cavett several times. He is one of the best informed people on the planet. Both are Gemini, I think, and are masters of communication in their own areas. But, Cavett tried to "go there" with what he thought was a deep question, and Pryor, in a friendly way, refused to let him "go there", for his own good. Cavett is not a racist, I can tell you that. This was in that zone of years where Mike Wallace, Charlie Rose, Barbara Walters, and Katie Couric thought it was important to ask "tough" questions. But, as a comic genius, Pryor graciously but stubbornly wanted Cavett to understand where the line was, and that he was being ungracious, and if he really understood the way he thought, he would have corrected his posture a lot more quickly.
@@SQUELCH-zj7il - far too easy to dismiss Cavett as a racist from one puece of awkwardness. Dick had black comedians, boxers, and politicians on his show many more times than most chatshow folks of his era, and had them on to talk areas of real substance, where he risked making a fool of himself. If you doubt me, look up Richard Pryor and Muhammad Ali's reflections on Cavett.
@@SQUELCH-zj7il ¸oh relax you fucking queen!
@ 😭😭😭😂😂😂
Richard said "that was 3 years ago, that's not me now" Try telling that to the twitter mob in 2019!
j0daze people be apologizing for something they said 10 years ago. Imagine the backlash if they start saying: " well that was 10 years ago, it doesn't apply".
Lol.
Nice!
I thought the same thing! I mean if you said something in 1998 you must be the SAME person now in 2019! So, apologize!!!
Huh?!
I can't. Don't have one :(
Richard Pryor is the definition of humanity. I really miss this man. God rest his soul.
He is so intelligent, you can see it in his eyes. This is why he changed comedy!!
He also really started to push Dick in the interview and take it over.
Richard Pryor, knows exactly what Dick Cavett, means but just wants him to give a good explanation.
What's with the comments? Were you running out of breath writing?
Thanks. Your not getting mean. These r two intelligent people and it takes time for communication.
Hes not letting him off the hook either. Cavett probably expected him to go into a comedy routine about white guys trying to sound black but pryor wasnt playing today. Maybe he was tired of racism....
Pryor knew there was no good explanation.
@@allosaurusfragilis7782 Yeah. I really think that Richard was just tired of it all.
Cavett’s like talking himself into a corner.
That first question was kinda dumb
@Andrea Mendenhall gracious lol? It was just a lesson that needed to be taught
@Andrea Mendenhall Whose lesson is it that being gracious was Cavett's place, being the host...in a few ways.
Andrea Mendenhall Pryor was more than polite and gracious. He answered Cavett’s question clearly and immediately but Cavett for some bizarre reason wouldn’t let it go. I love Cavett but here he was embarrassing himself and creating discomfort for the guest.
Pryor what a such intelligent person....
My Dad took my sister and I to see this when I was 13-14 yrs old. He was always listening to his comedy records . We grew up with Mr. Richard Pryor.
RIP DADDY AND RICHARD 🙏🏽❤️❤️
Amazing ye were very lucky what a man.
Dick Cavett saying "Jive Turkey" and digging himself into a hole by saying he could write for Richard 😂🤣😂😱😫
Even the audience was like what are you doing...
i miss dick as an interviewer ... lost art imo
It was good to see him admit he did wrong, even in that frivolous moment. He didn't try to insult, he played that he could understand, even tho he knew he couldn't. This was a learning experience for me.
"Bc I hang out with.."
PPL THAT AREN'T RICHARD PRYOR
@@J.P.1. I would be surprised if someone didn't do what Cavett did. If you can't put what you're saying into the right words and people are starting to question it, you try to get out of that territory before, like Kyle said, you dig yourself into a hole.
Cavett is usually such an astute interviewer but I feel like he just dropped the ball on this. Pryor is making a legitimate point---most, if not all white writers attempting to sound "black" end up sounding phony, or forced. Cavett thought he could do it, and he ended up sounding exactly that. Clearly no offense was intended, but he just totally proved Pryor's point. Always refreshing to see two intelligent people having a real discussion.
"Of course I can write dialog for black people, I play with them on the basketball court sometimes!"
Not phony or forced. just ignorant, racist, (at that time) and downright offensive. At that time white writers were laughing at black people not with them.
I don’t think he drop the ball, he just prove his point, but like u said 2people having intelligent conversation seeing it from 2different views
Oh u wait till u see the one with Eddie Murphy 😂
All race sound dumb writing for other races in comedy
Richard looking pretty sharp here.
Diamond tie pin. Raw!! I'm Wisconsin Lonnie and I approve this message ™
3 years sober will do that to a man and getting to the low point that forces you to get there will make you do a lot of growing as a person.
What a man.
The importance of everything he did and said cannot be overestimated.
Every interview I have seen on here, there is this feeling of quality and calmness I really miss on todays TV shows. And yes, there is always one stating this in a similar way, but it feels important.
and someone will say it again in the next video. lets keep the cycle going!!!
TV has progressed and a formula is followed based on what gets views this is boring😴
You should go check out Skavlan. He's a great Swedish-Norwegian interviewer, doing many of his interviews in English. Generally, from my experience, many European continental interviewers never lost this calmness. It really is something from the English-speaking world to only deliver 'fast food media' these days.
@@athame4597 It's not because of TV. It's because of the internet. The same reason mainstream media promote outrage culture - they can't compete with the internet. Most people I know already don't watch TV much. They're trying to fight the inevitable by making TV clickbaity.
@@shinHis3 this conversation is strictly about TV we're not talking about the internet and yes TV has progressed even in the 90s when everyone watched it it was completely different than in the 70s and yeah who watches TV anyways lol I cut the cords around the time Hulu came out
6:16 "He didnt have to do it cause i did it.".
Eddie would be the first to agree.
How would you know?
Prior was so thoughtful and sincere in this interview, even without the contrast of Cavett sticking his foot well into this mouth.
Huh. Ok...
It's less Cavett putting his foot in his mouth than it is Pryor running circles around him.
Steven H, I got what Cavett meant! If your honest you do too. However, Pryor speaks well so I understand why Pryor didn’t get it on a personal level.
@@terry4137 Sure, we can all imagine people consciously talking "street" "black" just like we can all imagine people talking "white" "frat boy," etc. Look at the context though- Pryor just said he wants people to write characters for him as humans. I heard him saying, "hey, can we just focus on me as a human, and let me show what I can express about humanity," and then Cavett just keeps at the, "you know, jive... I could write jive for you..." Tone. Deaf.
@@tleilaxu42 This comment just sounds a bit "self righteous", honestly...
As in, when you try to make a more "astute" observation of someone, or two people in this case, but you just miss the mark somehow (but you sound utterly convinced that you have "nailed it"), it's a form of pride + you still lack awareness of others on the much deeper level you want, but not to worry, this is a rather common thing amongst humanity in general...
Aka most of the comments for this video...
These interviews are great, no quick cuts and edits, just chatting and any time there is an awkward moment or aside, the two adults are just allowed to hash it out with mutual respect.
Richard Pryor was one of the co-writers on Blazing Saddles, and hardly anyone knew that.
And he was supposed to play the black sheriff as well. But the chaos of his life took over :(
Pryor's insight into human nature and the human condition was as sharp as a knife and if you're perceptive enough, it's obvious how sensitive he was as a human being.
I once heard his wife say in an interview (after his death) that they both had been invited to Bill Cosby's house for dinner with Cosby and his wife Camille and were somewhat uncomfortable when Cosby tried to lecture him about his rough language and other things he didn't approve of about his act.
Pryors wife went on to say in the intervbiew that Cosby was clean on the outside but filthy on the inside whereas Richard was dirty on the outside but clean as an angel on the inside. It made me smile hearing that.
Cosby the dirtbird.
Cosby tried the same thing with Eddie Murphy. I was surprised his name did not come up when Richard was taking about predecessors smoothing the road.
The interviewer was acting exactly how Richard Pryor said writers should NOT
Exactly
haha right
This time the interviewer was a complete jerk watch him interview John Lennon 15 years earlier Dick Cavett was the best there ever was doing interviews this was just a s***** interview. Because he came off sounding ignorant
@@johnw8984 He was exactly like that with Eddie Murphy too. In fact he called Murphy the N word.
He just cannot understand how someone can be black and be a person.
Know what I mean?
Richard always comes across as a gentleman in interviews & very articulate and intelligent where other comedians just make an ass of themselves trying to be funny all the time
Cavett comes off as the classic "some of my friends are Black" white liberal in this interview although I believe he was more perceptive and sensitive to other people than this incident seems to show. He should have quit while he was behind.
Lololol i have black friends is not a libtard thing its a white thing
100%
@@pwnstar1369 Libtard is the word that uneducated people call educated people.
@Mr. Reality , everything you said is insulting. You're guilty of what you accuse others of . You're obviously not very bright. You lack intelligence and maturity. Your parents failed you. You were obviously raised very poorly.
Ram Lathers
... and by “behind”
I like what Richard said when Dick mentioned something he had said years ago. He said then you can't hold me accountable because it was years ago and my feelings have changed.
IN OTHER WORDS HE WEASELED OUT OF ACCOUNTING FOR WHAT HE SAID,TO CHANGE LIKE THAT MEANS
YOUR UNSTABLE AND UNSURE IN YOUR BELIEFS.
Jason Chandler no it means you changed. And developed or grew as a human
Unfortunately that’s not something you can do against all these Twitter mobs in 2020...
Sounds like you're gonna use this excuse when you cheat on some poor guy
I think jason chandler was making a joke of people that never change, hence the all caps
Richard laughed at everyone including himself. That's why he was loved so much. The world's best comedian ever!
I loved Richard Pryor playing opposite Gene Wilder. Fantastic comedy.
They were awesome together.
Simply genius pairing Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder! They were so dynamic and funny whenever they were together! _Silver Streak_ (with a great "supporting cast" - Jill Clayburgh, Patrick McGoohan [ _The Prisoner_ ], Ray Walston, Ned Beatty, et al.), _Stir Crazy_ (and _Brewster'a Millions_ ), are among my favorite comedy movies, all time!
Eddie Murphy would eventually (few years after this interview) also be in a fun movie with Richard - _Harlem Nights_ .
Good comment
I've never thought Cavett was a good interviewer, but he has always seemed sincere, respectful, and unafraid. That said, he very often clumsily stumbled through sensitive topics and too often treated people as spokespersons for their characteristics rather than just treating them as individual people.
That is, he often fixated on a trait--especially anything potentially sensitive--and then asked series of questions practically prefaced with "As an X person..."
By the same token, Pryor here was a little too coy. He knew very well that in all of his acts and portrayals, he amped up a dialect that isn't at all how he sounded in this interview. He _knew_ that, and he _knew_ that's what Cavett was clumsily asking about, yet he played dumb here. In that sense, at least Cavett was making an effort.
The smarter tack for Cavett would've been to ask Pryor why he talked with those affectations in his performances... not to catch Pryor out, but to provide the guest with more open-ended inquiries. (Instead, Cavett framed it with the assumption it was race-related rather than allowing Pryor to define the dialect.)
This is actually very true.
only intelligent comment i saw on here
I really like the way you said that. I’m going to start using the term “spokespersons for their characteristics.” I every so often am treated this way as a black person, but never knew a succinct way of defining that experience.
God I miss the life force of Richard Pryor..."JoJo Dancer, Your Life is Calling" is one of his best most candid films. Please watch it if you haven't already. Rest In Power, Mr. Pryor.
I love hearing Richard Pryor talk. Such a smart dude...
@FiatDuster Yeah, all the great comedians are highly intelligent. Dave Chappelle, Eddie Murphy, George Carlin, Jerry Seinfeld, Richard Pryor, Bill Cosby, Bill Burr, Lenny Bruce, Dick Gregory.
It's amazing. Time really does see us all fade away. Imagine, where once these two celebrities were once well known and respected, there is now an entire generation of people who have no idea who either of these men are. And the generations of actors, actresses and performers who came before them are either long forgotten or have now been relegated to irrelevance. Fame is fleeting, celebrity is relative and the only thing that lasts are the relationships you have with the people you love and the memory you leave with them alone.
You actually don't have that either everything dies and eventually turns to nothing once you die and and everyone that knew you dies those relationships and memories die. Nothing last forever. Everything is fleeting.
As King Solomon said in Ecclesiastes, “Vanity of vanities. All is vanity”. One of the coldest truths about life.
Well said.
All we are is dust in the wind, dude.
We came from nothingness & we go back to nothingness
Cavett is probably my favorite interviewer of all time. It’s interesting to see him jack something up so badly, realize it, and try to dig himself out...and pretty much fail. And it’s amazing to see Pryor take it for what it is, reject the premise entirely, and keep going, all without being nasty about it. Pryor’s comment about being grown up is very poignant. It definitely turned awkward in a hurry but there’s still a lot of good stuff in this one.
I don't understand it see what others are seeing and hearing and I never liked dc
@@trixielane6885 Dick's show was kind of special trainwreck of a show. He put his foot in his mouth a million times because he would ask questions other shows wouldn't, or had guests other shows wouldn't have on. Dick's racism isn't one of hate, but of ignorance and wanting to be accepted by his idea of black people and be thought of as cool. Dick's ignorance here gave Pryor the opportunity to say some deep things.
First time I’ve ever seen a Dick Cavett gaffe. Respect for both of those dudes, even if Dick was far from his best here.
Richard Pryor was one of the funniest men ever. A great actor also. R.I.P. MR PRYOR.
NO....he was THE funniest man EVER
@@ualreadyknow9746 he was good
@@pedenmk NO...he was GREAT!
infact he was the GREATEST
@@ualreadyknow9746 YEAH yeah yeah lol
@@pedenmk find me a funnier man than richard pryor & i will retract my comment......take all the time you need
"Excuse me stewardess; I speak jive...."
AIRPLANE LOL
This.
Classic spoof comedy movie. I believe it was Mrs. Cleaver-Barbara Billingsly that played the interpreter😂😂😂😂but not sure.
what did he mean by jive turkey
@@richardsantanna5398 Old slang, basically meaning
Richard sober sounds amazing. I wish he was still with us.
Talk about digging your own grave
This guy keeps digging and digging himself deeper and deeper lol
This was the first time I witnessed Cavett putting both feet in mouth.
No big deal, French bow.
@@crzxm I've used a French bow in the past but my bass has a German bow.
@@nemo227 you mean you're a German bow user.
@@crzxm Occasionally.
@leahcim38 Agreed!
He was incredible. If they ever make a Mount Rushmore of comedy he needs to be on it. He’s the best of all time.
It’s astounding how sharp and lucid Richard was after all the drugs and alcohol...phenomenal.
is a closed-off, arrogant sort of way
@@wellofcire kind of like what you're doing right now
@@randommthrfkr6568 ok-'peewee' h. ....
drugs.....and alcohol? i find it astounding you split those into two seperate things. also why is it so often the ones on drugs who come up with the funniest things that make us laugh or end up being the best artists. pretty sure all of the best musicians were on drugs.. maybe we should demonise the ones who make them illegal, not the ones taking them haha.
where do you thing the lucidity stems from
I speak as someone who isn't too familiar with Dick Cavett (I'm British, his shows were never shown on UK tv), however I've noticed, whenever he has an African-American as a guest, I find Cavett is so cringe-worthy! Generally speaking, I enjoy watching his interviews, but I have seen him interviewing James Earl Jones, Billy Dee Williams, Whoopi Goldberg to name a few, and his usual relaxed and calming persona becomes so erratic and embarrassing, his questions relating to African-American culture becomes nonsensical and mildly insulting, which usually leaves his guests visibly mortified, confused and ill-at ease.
Yeah, it is so difficult to watch. He is an ignorant and defensive white person. A racist essentially. I can't believe he thought he was so WOKE he could write in some unspecified universal black vernacular. Super cringe!
He seemed interested in understanding. Even if his notions were way off. People can learn and grow, and sometimes this is what it looks like.
Cavett just strikes me as culturally naive here. He's obviously not intending to be offensive, but it seems pretty obvious he doesnt immediately grasp the offensiveness of his speech. He does stop digging the hole which is a good first step. Pryor is just incredulous, poor guy. Im sure looking back Cavett was so embarrassed. I wonder if Pryor ever returned to the show.
@@kaytsippy1981 I wouldn't say he's racist, just ignorant and awkward around black people. There is a difference.
Kate Armitage I’m not sure if you (and most of America these days) knows what “racist” means if this interview is your example of it...
Did Cavett bang his head against the wall 80 times before this interview? He was startlingly dense here.
Gregg H it was fine! Wtf you people talking about
You guys are overplaying this interview so fucking much, lol. Cavett was asking a deeper level question, Pryor took offense to it, and used that power to try and push around Cavett a bit.
Luna EB release what
Luna EB oh
He was afterwards for sure
Congrats on your 3 years of sobriety. You seem very content and in touch with you feelings and you express yourself with a sense of calm.
Alcohol addiction is tough to beat. Both my parents were alcoholics and unfortunately neither of them achieved sobriety. My mother lost her life to alcohol when she was only 57. I was 31 when she died. I had my second child, who was only 3 months old. Her unexpected death had a profound affect on all of us. I never had an issue with alcohol, but I have struggled with depression, which has plagued me most of my life. My depression was a result of the fighting, beatings and verbal abuse from my parents. I made sure my children would never know the inside of a bar or experience the abuse that I suffered. My children, however, had to deal with the affects of my depression and the eventual divorce from their father because of his alcoholism and abuse. I share this with you so that you know I can relate to how difficult it is to overcome alcoholism. I am proud of you and I am sure your family is proud and thankful too. One day at a time. I wish you well💜
You know he's dead right?
Aww this is so wholesome. You talked like he is still here. I'm going to start doing the same ❤
@show_me_your_kitties the fact that you found his comment wholesome shows me you are the kind of person that sees beauty in the world and in every little thing. Bless your heart ❤
That sad slow realization that the person you're talking to has trouble seeing you as wholely, distinctly human.
Richard's act often pointed out racial differences, but feigns ignorance when called out?
If that was scripted, they didn't pull it off.
@John Doe Yes and would say the same about whites not truely relating to the life's obstacles Hispanics have had to navigate through integrating in the North American society.
It's not that deep
Well, he is talking to a black.
I dont agree . Stereotypes do exist . Black people have a voice they do and a certain vocabulary when the imitate white people .
Look at pryors demeanor and body language. He exudes confidence and control...strength and a grasp of himself and his surroundings. Great job!👍🏾
Some people would call it passive aggressive.
@@CloudSpirals and others would call it self awareness, confidence and being perceptive. He's not being aggressive in any since of the word, passive or otherwise. He clearly sees that cavet is not centered and just allowed him to look foolish. If you say that's passive aggressive then I guess to you that's what it is.
@@prowellerable
I didn't say it myself. Just that 'Some would'.
I love Richard Prior, and his work.
@@CloudSpirals no problem, I understand, I was just countetpointing
This might be the most insightful interview I've seen with Richard Pryor
Me too no lol
Richard seemed like such a great guy ...intelligent ...so much charisma
“If you haven’t stolen from Richard Pryor, then you’re not very funny.” Damon Waynes
It's Wayans, reported
Richard ain’t here for the foolishness.
Pryor was serious and wasn't playin' around today... no way, Jose..
That was really uncomfortable. Cavett had his foot 7 yards into this mouth.
@Marque Markofthebeast sounds more like you like it.... 🤔
@Marque Markofthebeast pretty sure youre the only one who thought that lmao.
nah it's scripted genius
If anybody has ever watched Cavett, especially his early shows from 68' through 74' they know this is an incredibly rare miss. Cavett was brilliant.......
Thanks for saying it..Cavett was 99.9 times out of 100 on the money..he is human! I'm from the UK and I cant think of any chat show host who is as consistently excellent as he is..surely we must cut him some slack?
I only recently discovered Cavett, but have noted a lot of similar comments. So often, he seems to come from that well-meaning but ignorant place that makes him think he is an ally to women and black people without any real idea of their experiences. I love that he always seems so willing to be corrected and to learn, especially given that he is so willing to state his own initial (often ignorant) opinions.
He scoffed at the idea that white people shouldn't take Asian roles when speaking to James Earl Jones, who quickly put the record straight.
@@eejaypea we all have our faults..he, at least, is willing to take it on the chin..he doesnt have the arrogance of many chat show hosts, and I believe his motives are honourable...its a hard world to live in these days where your every move is scrutinised and then some..I wouldnt make the grade for sure..all in all I really think Dich Cavett a very decent, balanced man.
@@eejaypea This is what comes of a conversation where one person has a tendency toward making assumptions...Rather than asking a question to discover where the other persons view or experience can inform. I had a friend that consistently used to drive me crazy and exhaust me doing that...because I was put in a position, a box of presumption and it's just a complicated way to try and communicate, especially for an interviewer. (fortunately, Richard was clear, articulate and very gracious. He was able to as he said, teach by the way he was then living).
@@eejaypea "He scoffed at the idea that white people shouldn't take Asian roles when speaking to James Earl Jones, who quickly put the record straight."
are you saying black people shouldn't take white roles?
I love Richard Pryor's composure during this. He's not quick to aggression. Got mad respect for him.
@uncletigger There's a double standard, though, where some black people want to hold on to their culture whilst reject the idea that there is such a thing as "blackness". You can't have it both ways. If you want to be seen as the same as any other person and not distinct from other races then holding onto such terms as "African American" in 2019 or saying that white folk "don't understand what it means to be black" is counter-productive. If you were born in America, and most of your family was born in America, then at some point you have to accept that you are American, and accept all the good and bad history that goes along with that.
@uncletigger I never considered it to be normal talk. I understand what you're saying. I don't agree that every white person believes they talk normal compared to anyone else. I believe everyone thinks they speak normal from their point of view. White people talk different throughout the US. They also have their accents. Southerners speak differently compared to people from California. Each state has its own way of talking. People from Minnesota speak differently. You go to Texas or Louisiana they speak another way as well. I'm not going to argue that white people know black people so well or vice versa. I do believe if a person is motivated they can learn to speak a certain way. I think that was Dick's point. Unfortunately the way he said it didn't sound so good. It was kind of awkward like you said. Let me ask you do you think a black writer can write for white actor if so what's the difference?
Ernie Llerena You can tell Richard Pryor was getting a bit irritated from the questions Dick Cavett was asking him throughout the interview, yet he kept his cool.
Is was an innocent honest conversation. Wouldn't warrant aggression from anybody. You have a very myopic view of the world. Simple milleneal generation thinking.
Milleneal are trained in school to be triggered by racism.
This interview became incredibly cringe... Extremely quickly...
He made it slightly awkward on purpose,
I'm sure you're still cringing from when replied 'you too' to your waiter 14 years ago when he said 'enjoy your food'
cringing all the way home and for the rest of your life.
yeah awful
your comment made me cringe extremely quickly. why is it that people on the internet now seem mega sensitive to any level of awkwardness.
Um. This is the way television used to be. Real conversations aren't always comfortable. You would probably prefer the heaping helping dose of bullshit you get on TV today.
I have a hunch that Richard Pryor maybe wanted to make a point, and asked Dick to play the dumb white guy, beforehand, and he was classy enough to oblige.
Dick is usually much more quick on his feet intellectually than that. I don't buy that he was that oblivious.
Richard Pryor refused to be played by Cavett...he took him to task!
This is so much more real than todays average talk show
what you see here is how precise pryor was...intelligent....and cavett does not seem prepared for it....he does seem...distracted...trying to save himself with corny..tropes etc
Actually there was and still is a language that black people use and still use that white did not understand but because the gap is closing white people are using it to
pryor is so green. white people then had absolutely no idea. they barely do now
@@Cymricus what do you mean?
@Marque Markofthebeast it's an interview. Interviews frequently go off script as it very clearly did here.
Not to many great comedians, walking the earth...Richard was one of them #Greats 😃👣💞🎭🎪
There are lots of great comedians today, there are just too many.
"Richard, can you help me out here, I need to borrow a SHOVEL."
"Well, sure, I mean, if you want".
"Ok, can I have a BIGGER SHOVEL now?"
"Well, ok, if you need to".
"This hole's getting really deep now. But I feel like I just need to... KEEP DIGGING."
"Well, I can't stop you but... what are you doing?"
"Right I just need a giant shovel now. Just gotta keep digging myself deeper into this hole".
😂😂😂
Exactly
Winning post!
Listen I've got friends that are diggers, I think I kinda know the scene
Richard is so dead serious, never seen him this way.
Richard Pryor & Gene Wilder
Best comedy duo I've ever seen.
Every movie with those guys together is always enjoyable.
Brewster's Millions...loved it!!
Gene wasn't in Brewster's Millions. Stir Crazy and Silver Streak were the other ones and iirc the role of the sheriff in Blazing Saddles was written for Pryor as well but he was too consumed by his addictions to do it.
@@AllenSmithe
Never said they were in that movie.
I mentioned Brewster's millions because it's a movie that Richard did that was quite good.
[X] None of the above.
And you left out
HEAR NO EVIL, SEE NO EVIL.
@@AllenSmithe
Gene did Willie Wonka.
The prat fall, my favorite part, at the beginning was Gene's idea/demand
YOU LOSE! GOOD DAY, SIR!
i can’t remember which film is was... convinced it was Hear No Evil See No Evil... where Gene’s trying to do stereotypical “black guy” body language, how he walks etc, and it’s exactly a visual representation of what’s being asked about the script writing
@@leofender8044
Silver Streak.
Bathroom scene.
th-cam.com/video/JgAxvukW9dA/w-d-xo.html
Really miss Richard, what an original guy.
The best part of this was when RP said that an interview that was made several years ago don't apply today as he has changed his mind. Imagine that! A person allowed to change his mind and not being persecuted for it.
"3 years, and God's been with me" -Richard Pryor.
I had forgotten Dick Cavett had interviewed so many actors, singers and comedians that influenced a generation, and sadly most of them that are no longer with us but Dick Cavett himself is still with us as 83.......
Really
He stuck his foot in his mouth as soon as he said “I’ve been around...”
nieceypiecey100 +ö
@Andrea Mendenhall NO! They can be HUMAN, but if their skin is WHITE then they cannot ever, not ever in a million years, ever have any idea at all about black people. EVER!
And if they do then they is a racist! XD
@@TheVanillatech **are
Pretty impactful, seeing Richard's wheels turning and answering calm and cool and really conveying a thought with few words
I love this… what a great example of how to disarm micro aggressions 👏🏾👏🏾
This is how Darryl used to do Michael on The Office. Troll him but do so in a way in which you cannot be accused of being aggressive or breaking any sort of rules…….but at the same time you make the other person make a complete ass of themselves.
What micro aggression are you referring to?
@@TheNormal256 what are you talking about?
micro aggressions are bullshit
@@trixielane6885 probably him talking about "vernacular" and imitating said "vernacular". That being said as others mentioned these conversations were important to have and this interview was a step in the direction of progress.
Why can't Dick just talk to a black man like he's just a man ...? Skin color should be no more of a big deal than eye color or hair color.
Dick didn't talk to Ali like that.
White people do that all the time and most of us black people cant stand it. When complete strangers will talk to me with a forced blaccent and overly using slang and ebonics it’s really annoying like bitch you don’t even know me 😂😂😂
He's the classic liberal. Racist at heart but tries to convince the world to not see color when that's all that they see and do!
@@EmauniSimone ,your whole statement was racist, lol. ..you are a racist.
@Jerome Griffin - Whoa! "My people"?? I don't own any people. That's racist. I AM TRIGGERED!
Dick Cavett is the genuine article. His inquiries do tend to come from a place of ignorance, but definitely not malice. He wants to understand the other. He engages both sides of the conversation and isn't afraid to stand up and challenge the truly ignorant and malicious people like Lester Maddox or Hugh Hefner. He dispels myths and taboos by bringing them up at face value with the awe of an innocent child. That's how dialogues should be.
Nah after some point in life you if you’re still ignorant you’re wanting to stay that way
He was just the living embodiment of that peculiar segment of our country known as "White America" (of which I make no distinction between the Liberal and Conservative; for they are two cheeks of the same ass as far as Black America is concerned).
He may have been a "Liberal"...but he was palpably, almost painfully "White™"
They're doing a bit, he's purposefully acting ignorant to be entertaining. It's a late night show.
Hugh Hefner was not malicious. He was a hero. People like you and feminists are truly malicious.
People don't like to see celebrities grow up because then they can't live vicariously through them anymore 💯
Wow. What an incredibly patient man Richard was.
I haven't paid much attention to Richard Pryor, only for the fact that he just never fell on my radar, but I'd wish he did. I've recently watched a bit of his stand-up and it doesn't disappoint, but his films are on a different level, especially JoJo. This guy is a legend, a hero and just a genuinely nice guy.
You and I same whatsapp group 👊🏾
I'm just as lost as Richard the whole time lol wtf is Dick talkin bout
Thing is, and it's weird at best, bc he knew legendary Black figures and also interviewed them, that he was trying to prove a point by showing how ridiculous a thing was, then go and do that very thing, knowing better. But his White peers prob didn't get that, unless they knew the same ppl. It's crazy that sober Pryor is genuinely seeing the bs but not going tf off inside, like young Pryor would've.
Code switching. For example, I’m black and grew up in the suburbs, and have also worked in fortune 500 companies, where I’ve always been one of very few, if not the only black person around. So the way I speak at work, or around my white friends is much different than how I talk when I’m around my black friends or in a majority black setting. It just happens naturally. White people will always say “you talk white” or “you’re not really black because you don’t say this or you don’t do that”. But if I were to talk ‘black’ around them then I would be judged and most likely excluded from certain jobs and social settings. I think Richard Pryor knew exactly what Dick was referring to but he was doing a horrible job at explaining it and it seemed Richard just wanted to see him dig a hole. Or he just didn’t feel like addressing it.
It is Richard Pryor who does not make sense...as is often the case in interviews, which is quite different from performing a comedy skit, at which his brilliance is without peer or precedent.
In those days, talking about systematic stereotypes and racism was not so open on conversation.
@@scottseward9819 exactly, " code switching," still awkward to discuss, dont think they had a word for it then. Richard knew what he waa doing in the interview, way ahead of his time.
Did y’all catch when he said “you can’t just hang my ass out here like this” @3:45
Richard Pryor was a class act. He was a great comedian, a great actor, but an even better human being. If we would all take a page from him the country would be a better place.
I loved his "passing the torch" commentary. He was a gift from God to Human kind. I miss his great heart.
He was the best comic of all ... he doesn't even have to be saying something funny.
I thought he was too...but I have to say Dave Chappell IS the G.O.A.T now..imo
Right!!! BUT!! Without Pryor you don't get a Chappelle!!
@@dahenry8888 One of the best black comics maybe. Certainly not the GOAT! Chappell took a little from lots of different artists, mostly white, and combined them into his own style.
Glad to see this old clip, Richard really comes off as a genuine good guy, so glad we had Richard Pryor, he was
behind some of the best comedic movies of all time.
Richard Pryor, Sir, this was a fabulous interview
It feels like a lot of black comedians have to go through the phase of no longer wanting to be "the clown". They grow and mature, but how society views them doesn't. Makes for some interesting moments.
Why Dave Chapelle is a legend
How is that unique to black comedians
I'm pretty sure most comedians are seen as "the clown." That's how you'd describe most funny comedians.
@Pink Salt do you have an example to your ridiculous claim
@Pink Salt so which one is it How can there be professional comedians if comedy is not a profession you've now said both these things you clearly have no goddamn clue what you're talking about
What is Cavett doing? After Pryor says he doesn't appreciate people trying to write "black" for him, Cavett says, "I could write for you in your vernacular because I hang out with...(pause)" Oops. Then he offers a couple of lame attempts at "black talk", proving just how bad he is at it. He needed a few lessons from Barbara Billingsley on "Airplane".
I speak jive.
Dick needs to catch something, 'on the med side'.
"He doesn't have to do it 'cause I did it." 100% true.
3:48 “You can’t just hang my ass out here like this” 😂
Speaking slang isn't to hide speech, it's literally telling the person you're speaking with, "Hey, relax. Be yourself with me. Without judgement. I see me in you."
AAVE is its own dialect with its own set of grammar and vocab. The problem (which the question Cavett asked readily pointed out) is that people without any real understanding of its use try to emulate it and, as Pryor said, come out sounding ignorant and repeating caricatures instead of real people. There's a relatively new term used to describe this-"Imagined Black Language". It's what Cavett started using during the interview, which is why it was so awkward for Pryor and not at all "inclusive." Interesting stuff to consider! Your intent to make people feel more comfortable could have the opposite outcome.
I’ve read a lot of comments about “the interviewer”. Dick Cavett had a very dry sense of humor, he knew exactly what he was doing and so did Richard.
“I already did it so he didn’t have to” 👊
I loved that response!
I have to wonder if Mr. Cavett learned a valuable lesson about black people, by Mr. Pryor’s response to, “I think I could write for you...” That was such a teachable moment and Mr. Pryor was zen like with how he handled it.