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1.31 MB

Extraction Summary

5
People
3
Organizations
1
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Manuscript excerpt / investigative evidence
File Size: 1.31 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir included in House Oversight evidence. It details anecdotes about comedian George Carlin, including a conversation about drug use methods, a comparison of his legacy to Richard Nixon's, and a specific discussion with producer Dan Pasley about why racial slurs were excluded from his famous 'Seven Dirty Words' routine. The page concludes with a mention of his daughter, Kelly, reading his burial instructions from 1990 at his memorial service.

People (5)

Name Role Context
George Carlin Subject
Comedian discussing drugs and language; deceased at the time of the memorial described.
Unidentified Narrator ('I') Author/Speaker
Person recounting interactions with Carlin, specifically informing him about 'vodka tampons'.
Richard Nixon Former US President
Mentioned for comparison regarding obituaries and legacy.
Dan Pasley Producer
Asked Carlin a question in the Green Room about his 'Seven Words' list.
Kelly Carlin Daughter
Read burial instructions at George Carlin's private memorial.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
Supreme Court
Referenced regarding the ruling on 'The Seven Words You Can't Say on Television'.
Warner-Grand Theater
Location of the conversation between Carlin and Pasley.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015380'.

Timeline (2 events)

Post-2008 (Implied)
Private memorial for family and friends for George Carlin.
Unknown
Unknown
Conversation in the Green Room regarding the 'Seven Words' list.
Warner-Grand Theater

Locations (1)

Location Context
Specifically the Green Room.

Relationships (2)

George Carlin Professional Dan Pasley
Pasley (Producer) spoke with Carlin in the Green Room.
George Carlin Family Kelly Carlin
Kelly is identified as Carlin's daughter.

Key Quotes (3)

"Why are there no recreational drugs in suppository form?"
Source
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Quote #1
"There's nothing funny about it -- that really is a dirty word -- but repressed words about sexual functions and bodily parts were truly funny."
Source
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Quote #2
"That's fun, that's some funny shit."
Source
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Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,357 characters)

Carlin had long been vocal in support of the right to smoke and
ingest various drugs, and he posed this rhetorical question: "Why are
there no recreational drugs in suppository form?" I was pleased to
inform him that teenage girls have been experimenting with tampons
soaked in vodka, inserting them vaginally or rectally as a way of getting
intoxicated without their parents detecting booze on their breath.
No matter what else Richard Nixon accomplished in his lifetime, his
obituaries always mentioned him as the first American president to resign,
and no matter what else George Carlin accomplished in his lifetime, his
obits always connected him with the Supreme Court ruling on "The Seven
Words You Can't Say on Television."
When asked in the Green Room at the Warner-Grand Theater by
producer Dan Pasley why he didn't include the word "nigger" in that
list, Carlin replied, "There's nothing funny about it -- that really is a dirty
word -- but repressed words about sexual functions and bodily parts were
truly funny. I had only been thinking about the 'dirty' words in terms of
sex and bodily functions, and how uptight these religious freaks have
made us. That's fun, that's some funny shit."
At a private memorial for family and friends, Carlin's daughter Kelly
read from his burial instructions, written on May 1, 1990:
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015380

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