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  • TUESDAY MAY 15 2007 12:00 PM

True Stories by Rob Corddry: Suck It, Autism

My brother Nate and I went to Boston this weekend to host a benefit for local autistic children. We HATE autism. We hate everything about it. Everything. There is nothing good about autism.

Except for all of that math stuff. That’s pretty cool.

My sister asked us to host the event because her son, our nephew, is autistic, and the kids at his school need a new playground. Their current one is full of cockroaches and fire ants, not to mention a bench commemorating the death of an autistic kid that no one even remembers. Nate and I told our team of publicists to accept the invitation, that we would be happy to save a local playground from bugs and dead kids. We even paid for our own first class tickets*. We hate autism that much.

We arrived at the school for a pre-benefit tour of the offending playground. It was, in fact, unplaygroundable. I got splinters in my eyes just looking at it. I’m no private detective** but I’m pretty sure someone had let their dog defecate near the bottom of the slide fairly recently; within the last half-hour by my touch. And Fire ants were, indeed, all over the place, covering the ground as well as all of the toys. Thank god crappy jungle gyms can’t feel pain.***

Then we got to meet the children, a group that, my publicist tells me, I really, really love. Nate and I were in for a huge surprise. Who knew that autistic kids were such big Daily Show fans? What a treat for them! After we were finished autographing their tiny foreheads and answering all of their questions+ we gathered up our posse++ and headed over to the benefit.

A word about my four-year-old, autistic nephew Owen: we have some history. Ours has been a slightly rocky relationship. You see, a few years ago, my millionaire father died, leaving Owen his entire fortune and me an old convertible. So I kidnapped^ Owen and took him to Vegas where I put him to work counting cards. But my journey of revenge quickly turned into a journey of discovery. We stayed in a huge suite, I taught him how to slow dance, and we wore matching suits. Owen won an Oscar that year for best actor in a leading role.^^

The benefit went well. Nate drank his weight in Sam Adams and took control of the live-auction like he was a revivalist preacher let loose in a tent full of homosexuals. And those fags were bidding! Drunk on local beer and power, Nate single-handedly raised over ten thousand dollars pitting friends and families against each other in an orgy of bidding fervor. Nate truly found a second calling that night, conducting an auction for autistic kids. He was auction-tastic. He was auctistic.

I, on the other hand, drank Jack and Cokes and got into a political argument with an old friend of mine that had just bought land in Washington for when, as he put it, THE SHIT# goes down.

“Where is it?”, I asked.
“I told you, in Washington State.
He had, in fact, told me that.
“Where?”, I asked.
“I can’t tell you.”, he said.
“What?”
“I can’t tell you. I’m only telling my family.”
“I can’t come?”
“You’re too liberal.”
“That’s gonna matter when The Shit goes down?”
“My father hates you.”
“So what, he has cancer, he’ll never make it anyway.## What’d you do, email your family with instructions on what do and where to go when The Shit goes down?”
“Yes.”
(long pause)
“What kind of Shit are you prepared for?”
“We’ll be prepared for everything.”
“Radiation?”
“Yes.”
“Gasses?”
“Sure”
“Invaders?”
“Yup.”
(pause)
“Zombies?”
“Fuck you.”
“Because I’m good with a shovel.”
“We’ll have guns.”
“Guns’ll attract more Zombies you idiot.”
“We’ll use silencers.”

And so on…

Yeah, I did my part that night. Nate may have raised over ten thousand dollars for autistic children and their stupid haunted playground, but I convinced an idiot to argue, seriously, about the best way to kill a zombie. Who’s the real hero? Please refer to the footnotes.###

______________________________________
*We don’t ride coach. We are huge television stars and it would be confusing for people to see us paying for our own bloody mary’s
**But I “don’t play by the rules” like one.
***As far as we know.
+What’s Jon Stewart really like? Do you really interview those people or is it editing? Is the Peabody an international award? Etc.
++Publicist, sister, bodyguard, chef, autistic nephew, astrologer, etc.
^not my words.
^^He wouldn’t be nominated again until 1998 for Wag the Dog.
#THE shit.
##I didn’t really say that. That’s a comedy-joke.
###Me.


Rob Corddry is an actor. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and daughter.

 

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Comments
The_Reverend

The_Reverend

United Kingdom
September 2004

MAY 15, 2007 12:26 PM

DO you really interview those people... or is it just editing?

Tim6243

Tim6243

Cobourg, ON
January 2007

MAY 15, 2007 12:40 PM

Brilliant! (as always)
When are you getting your own show anyways Rob?
The Daily show is a hollow shell without you & Colbert.

Jennifer_

Jennifer_

Venezuela
November 2006

MAY 15, 2007 12:48 PM

The_Reverend said:
DO you really interview those people... or is it just editing?


I think parts of it are edited and staged, and a few parts are real. The interview pieces are almost as fake as the audience's constant and unnerving laughter everytime Jon Stewart does anything. (Though to be fair, they do bill it as a 'fake news show', so they are honest in their fakery). Also, why do they never show the audience in the Daily Show? Do they not want to alienate certain demographics? The whole thing just seems so staged, which I know is kinda the point but oh the illusion of it all.

And I liked the article, I'm glad to see you've sorted out your plans for zombie annihilation when teh shit goes down.

RileyStClair

RileyStClair

Los Angeles, CA
September 2006

MAY 15, 2007 01:19 PM

ahahaha zombies!
seriously though, can you really blame him for wanting to be prepared in the event of a zombie attack? at my house we have regular zombie drills.

AndersWolleck

AndersWolleck

Astoria, NY
February 2003

MAY 15, 2007 01:22 PM

Jenni said:

The_Reverend said:
DO you really interview those people... or is it just editing?


I think parts of it are edited and staged, and a few parts are real. The interview pieces are almost as fake as the audience's constant and unnerving laughter everytime Jon Stewart does anything. (Though to be fair, they do bill it as a 'fake news show', so they are honest in their fakery). Also, why do they never show the audience in the Daily Show? Do they not want to alienate certain demographics? The whole thing just seems so staged, which I know is kinda the point but oh the illusion of it all.

And I liked the article, I'm glad to see you've sorted out your plans for zombie annihilation when teh shit goes down.




they probably dont shoot the audience because to get a good shot they would have to be on the stage where jon sits, just an educated guess

Jennifer_

Jennifer_

Venezuela
November 2006

MAY 15, 2007 02:33 PM

AndersWolleck said:
they probably dont shoot the audience because to get a good shot they would have to be on the stage where jon sits, just an educated guess


They could easily put a camera on the ceiling. It might sound like it would be tricky, but for any halfway decent cameraperson (with a decent budget) it's very easy to shoot any part of the studio without ruining another shot.

(its worth pointing out now that I'd be willling to forgive the Daily Show's attempts at carefully engineering the illusion of trendiness in return for getting sexual favours from Jason Jones.)

AndersWolleck

AndersWolleck

Astoria, NY
February 2003

MAY 15, 2007 02:55 PM

Jenni said:

AndersWolleck said:
they probably dont shoot the audience because to get a good shot they would have to be on the stage where jon sits, just an educated guess


They could easily put a camera on the ceiling. It might sound like it would be tricky, but for any halfway decent cameraperson (with a decent budget) it's very easy to shoot any part of the studio without ruining another shot.

(its worth pointing out now that I'd be willling to forgive the Daily Show's attempts at carefully engineering the illusion of trendiness in return for getting sexual favours from Jason Jones.)



they could put a camera on the ceiling but they would have to relight the set in order to get a proper shot. Also since studio ceilings are very high the camera would have to be on a pole and that might throw shadows, you cant just grab a camera and throw it somewhere to get a shot. this isnt a low budget independent movie. this is a tv show that shoots live to tape four times a week, changes arent easy.

meatpieboy

meatpieboy

Korea, D.P.R.
June 2004

MAY 15, 2007 02:57 PM

AUCTISTIC!!! BAHAHAHAHA!

Jennifer_

Jennifer_

Venezuela
November 2006

MAY 15, 2007 04:30 PM

AndersWolleck said:
they could put a camera on the ceiling but they would have to relight the set in order to get a proper shot. Also since studio ceilings are very high the camera would have to be on a pole and that might throw shadows, you cant just grab a camera and throw it somewhere to get a shot. this isnt a low budget independent movie. this is a tv show that shoots live to tape four times a week, changes arent easy.


I just don't buy that it would be an impossible, or prohibitatively difficult, thing to achieve.
It's very possible for them to include the occasional audience shot and I think the reason they don't is for marketing reasons and wanting to appeal to certain demographics. It was funny (and kinda weird) on one episode watching Richard Gere trying to persuade the camera man to turn the camera round to show the audience for a few seconds, and being told they had to keep the camera fixed on Stewart at all times.

Its an incredibly staged show, right down to the weird over-the-top laughter they put in every time anyone on stage makes any kind of movement.

I do think it can be funny, and I think Rob Corddry did a great job on the show, but still.

AndersWolleck

AndersWolleck

Astoria, NY
February 2003

MAY 15, 2007 04:42 PM

Jenni said:

AndersWolleck said:
they could put a camera on the ceiling but they would have to relight the set in order to get a proper shot. Also since studio ceilings are very high the camera would have to be on a pole and that might throw shadows, you cant just grab a camera and throw it somewhere to get a shot. this isnt a low budget independent movie. this is a tv show that shoots live to tape four times a week, changes arent easy.


I just don't buy that it would be an impossible, or prohibitatively difficult, thing to achieve.
It's very possible for them to include the occasional audience shot and I think the reason they don't is for marketing reasons and wanting to appeal to certain demographics. It was funny (and kinda weird) on one episode watching Richard Gere trying to persuade the camera man to turn the camera round to show the audience for a few seconds, and being told they had to keep the camera fixed on Stewart at all times.

Its an incredibly staged show, right down to the weird over-the-top laughter they put in every time anyone on stage makes any kind of movement.

I do think it can be funny, and I think Rob Corddry did a great job on the show, but still.




its possible about the demo thing, they do have to fill the audience with whoever shows up. they also dont add laughter, i've been in the audience

MonicatheDino

MonicatheDino

Knoxville, TN
February 2007

MAY 16, 2007 09:43 AM

Politics normally leads to zombies. It's sad but true. skull

AndersWolleck

AndersWolleck

Astoria, NY
February 2003

MAY 16, 2007 10:29 AM

MonicatheDino said:
Politics normally leads to zombies. It's sad but true. skull



toothpickmoe

toothpickmoe

Los Angeles, CA
May 2004

MAY 16, 2007 12:04 PM

Great, now I'm seeing autistic zombies in my head.

Jennifer_

Jennifer_

Venezuela
November 2006

MAY 16, 2007 03:27 PM

AndersWolleck said:
its possible about the demo thing, they do have to fill the audience with whoever shows up. they also dont add laughter, i've been in the audience


Do they have those 'laugh cues' that some sitcoms have (when a sign flashes up telling you to laugh)?

I find it so hard to believe that anyone could laugh that loudly and constantly over such small comments. They either use laugh cues, or they secretly give the audience Red Bull spiked with uppers. Yes.

AceT

AceT

Portland, OR
April 2004

MAY 17, 2007 07:07 AM

yourfashionwar said:
ahahaha zombies!
seriously though, can you really blame him for wanting to be prepared in the event of a zombie attack? at my house we have regular zombie drills.


It is the duty of every American to read and memorize this book.

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