
ยทE18
Mac King
Episode Transcript
Hey, everybody, this is Life is a Gamble and my name is Richard Bunchkin.
My guest today has been a staple in Las Vegas for twenty five years.
His name is Mac King, and Mac is a comedy magician and his show is hilarious.
So I highly recommend if you haven't seen this show, you can catch it at the ex Caliber.
But now let's talk to Mac.
Matt King, Welcome to Life as a Gamble.
So happy to have you here today.
It's a real pleasure for me, so thanks for having me on.
I guess I wanted to just start with you remember the first magic trick you ever saw?
Speaker 2I do actually pretty vividly.
My my paternal grandfather, my dad's pop.
He uh, he knew a couple of tricks, but this was the one I remember.
I mean, I have such a bit.
I mean maybe I maybe I built it up over the years in my head, but I believe I remember him picking me up in his kitchen, placing me on the counter, his kitchen counter.
And this is how long ago it was.
I mean, he was I was able to be picked up and put on the kitchen counter by my grandfather.
Speaker 1But also.
Speaker 2It was you know, there were matches to light that stove next to me, and so and he was the kind of fellow who always carried a pocket handkerchief, you know, with a little k in the corner.
And uh he uh took that handkerchief and wrapped up the match stick in there and put it in my hands.
And I broke that match, and I you know, I heard it break, felt it break in my hands, and then he opened up that handkerchief and that match was unharmed.
And I mean, I mean, I can vividly remember the kitchen counter.
He was for a few years, he made his living as a cartoonist, and so he was, you know, an artist all his life.
But once he had a family, he started he started an insurance business, and that's what he did when I was around.
But early in his life he was a cartoonist and so he had he had painted hand painted like the kitchen counter to look like marble.
And so, I mean, I have a vivid memory of this kitchen counter and him him placing me on it, and you know, his pocket handkerchief.
He always carried, you know, handkerchiefs.
He was pretty dapper fellow.
Speaker 1You know.
It's funny when I was thinking about this.
In preparation for this, I was thinking about the first trick I ever remember seeing, and it was actually my grandfather's friend.
And I had to be very young to be able to you know, I mean three four five, I don't know.
But it was also in the kitchen and he took me in the kitchen and took little pieces of an He tore little pieces of a napkin into little squares and then he wet a butter knife and he put the squares on the butter knife and then was doing a paddle move trick.
Speaker 2Yeah.
No, that's that's I mean, that's I mean there are a lot of really great professional magicians who still do that trick.
I mean John Carney, a great sleight of hand magician, still does that trick in restaurants.
I've seen him do it for people, and it's on a knife.
It's, yeah, on a butter knife with little pieces of paper that he's torn from a paper napkin and wow, and his little routine for it is really visual, really magical, and that yeah, oh yeah, that's a great, great trick.
Whoever your grandfather's friend was knew some magic, I think.
Speaker 1Yeah, And you know, I'm sure he you know, pulled coins out of my ear something, you know.
But but that was the one thing I remember.
And I also remember whenever we would see my grandfather's friend, I would always ask him, you know, to to do some magic for him.
Speaker 2Well, no, that's a memorable thing, right.
It's such an odd procedure, right, dipping the knife in the water and tearing up to get little pieces of paper.
I mean, I mean it's a some that somehow that fixes in your brain.
Speaker 1I think, yeah, it's a whole kind of ritual.
Yeah, So when did you start doing magic yourself?
Speaker 2Well, I mean he taught me that trick.
I remember that too, you know, so I mean having my mind blown, And then even more mind blowing was seeing how relatively simple that was, right, I mean, he he had before he decided to show me this trick and taking a little match stick and put it in the hem of his handkerchief, and so that when he put it in my hand, I was breaking the one in the hymn.
And when he opened it up, you know, that one remained hidden in the him, the broken one in the hole one tumbled out on the counter, and I was like, oh my god, because you know, I I think you think, you know, I probably was five years old, and I think up until that point you just think magic is real maybe or or people are you know, imbued with magic somehow, and so the fact that I could do that was just eye opening.
Speaker 1Yeah.
And you know, one of the sort of themes is this show is about the gambles people take in their lives, not necessarily for money, but just the risks that they take.
And anybody who goes into the art is sort is absolutely you know, taking a big risk.
So when did you actually start performing magic?
Speaker 2I've always said, and I believe this to be the case, that the first show I did for money, you know, was like, you know, a neighborhood kid, you know, Sissy Herbert's birthday party and I got like five bucks in cake.
Speaker 1I think that was you know, that sounds like a deal.
Speaker 2But so I was probably twelve years older around around and there when I did that.
I want you but I've been you know, sort of working on magic really, I mean, seriously is hard.
That's a strong word for an eight year old, right, But but i'd been you know, fiddling around with magic and you know, really interested in it as a hobby, you know, starting around eight, and so I think that was the first show that i'd done for money.
But my my mom's dad actually had some magic books at his house, and so I had, you know, poured through these books pretty good by that time, and and he was They were always really sweet and encouraging to me.
My mom's parents, you know, they lived, we didn't live in the same town, but whenever we would go to visit them, they would you know, invite their neighbors over to sit in their living room, and I would do shows for them, and it was just you know, and there was one particular neighbor I remember, a woman named Dorothy Merrell.
I mean I was ten years old and still Dorothy Murrell scarred me.
I remember her name, Dorothy.
You know, she she wasn't going to let a ten year old get by with, you know, something that was lame.
She was really critical and you know, if she saw something, she would point it out.
And at the time, you know, my grandparents were sort of mortified that their friend would you know, sort of be an asshole to their old friend son.
But but looking back on it, I think it was really useful right to have somebody like that, And so that was kind of.
So the I did little shows for my family and friends, you know, and I did shows at school and the Talent Show and that kind of thing.
But that first that Herbert Birthday party was the first paid show.
Speaker 1Was your plan, like, when you get to high school or whatever?
Was your plan?
Okay, I'm gonna finish high school and then I'm going to go be a professional magician or did you have some other.
Speaker 2No, it wasn't.
I wasn't I my plan.
I didn't.
I've never had a plan.
Really.
I feel like I've been buffeted about by the universe and it's always worked out.
Okay, So my plan was to go to college.
I I did pretty you know, I was pretty good student and got a number of scholarship offers kind of around the country.
My only real plan was to go to school far enough away that I couldn't drive home and that my mom couldn't drive to visit me easily.
Speaker 1And that's the way kids were back then right now now they were.
Speaker 2Yeah, I wanted to get away.
I wanted to get away.
Yeah, and so and I went with the idea of majoring in math.
Actually I had some aptitude for that.
And when I got to college.
It turns out you had to go to class every day to be really good at math, and at that.
Speaker 1Level, I hate when that happens.
Speaker 2Yeah yeah, so uh so.
But I was on a you know, pretty pretty great scholarship and at one point I thought about quitting school to become a chef.
But a local friend of mine in Louisville, uh, you know, convinced me that that was you know, look, you're this job.
I had been offered a job in Kentucky to that was.
That's sort of I've feel like I'm pretty good at three things.
I'm pretty good at math at that time.
That's like a language, so I think if you don't use it for you know, a long time goes away.
I still use this.
I'm pretty good cook.
And then I'm pretty good at magic tricks.
And so it was those three were kind of battling it out, and math lost out first because it was it got way harder and uh uh and so I switched to anthropology in college, and I have a fine degree in anthropology.
And then oh yeah I can.
I can reassemble chicken skeletons after a nice dinner.
But uh uh so uh then uh then I thought about being a chef, decided to stay in school that would be there when I was done.
And and then during the summers in school, while I was cooking the one summer in a really nice restaurant in Louislle cat in my hometown.
He's called six ten Magnolia's still there, I got a phone call in the while I was doing some prep stuff to go audition for to do a magic show in this theme park like two hours outside of Louisville in Cumberland Falls, Kentucky, at a place called Tombstone Junction.
And it was like an old Western theme town.
They had a train ride where the gunfighters would you know, the bandits would rob the train, the sheriff would shoot the bandits and the train would drive on and and then doing a little magic show and what they call the saloon, but you know, they sold Hamburger's and cokes, no outcohol, not really much of a saloon.
And with and that was so.
And at that point I was doing some shows with another local magician, a guy named Lance Purton, who was a pretty successful Las Vegas magician.
And uh so he and I were doing shows together a kind of you know for here and there just one off birthday parties, corporate things.
But this was while I was in school, and so in the summers we would do shows together.
So I said, can I bring my buddy to this audition.
I went down there and we got this job.
So during the last two summers of school college, I worked in this amusement park.
Lance and I did and so doing three shows a day, seven days a week.
And so at that point that's kind of when I thought, you know what, when school is over, I think I can maybe make a run this as profession.
Speaker 1Wow.
So when you were working with Lance, was it like a duo or yeah?
Speaker 2Yeah?
We oh yeah.
So he would come out and he would do I don't know whether you ever saw Lance's show here in Las Vegas, sure, but yeah, so he sort of sprang the fame with this twelve minute act with producing cards and candles and doves, and so he sort of already had that act, and so he would do that act, which was like eleven twelve minutes, and then I would come out and do like a eleven or twelve minutes, and then we would close with a thing together.
So we were doing like we were doing like thirty thirty five minutes and so and so we lived there in this park.
It was great for both of us.
I mean we did, like I said, three shows a day, seven days a week, and sometimes more on Sundays when it was busy.
And they had a big amphitheater that we would work in on Sundays because they would have country music, you know, you know, Conway Twitty and Barbara Mandrel and whatever in this big thing.
And so we would open for those guys when they would come on Sundays, and so we would do extra shows Sundays.
It was just a great training grant.
And we lived there in the park and we had access to our little theater at night after the park closed, and so we could really work on our acts.
It was I mean, it was kind of a dream job for you know, we were like seventeen, eighteen years old.
Speaker 1It was nuts and getting a lot of reps.
Speaker 2Yeah, no, that's the main thing.
A lot of reps in front of people who you know, are genuine critics, right they they're it's not your friends or your family, they're people who you know, if if they don't like it, they don't clap or laugh.
Speaker 1Right right by the way, I wanted to add, you said you were good at three things, but I think you also should add a fourth, which is you are very good at comedy.
Okay, thank you.
Yeah, the famous quote tragedy is easy, comedy is hard, or dying is easy.
Speaker 2Yeah, dying is easy, comedy is hard.
That's right.
Speaker 1Yeah.
So, so did you and Lance talk about after that taking your show on the road or you just kind of parted naturally and you're.
Speaker 2So we he he move.
I still had one more we finished.
We did three years there together, so I guess it was my between my freshman and sophomore and between my sophomore and junior, between my junior and senior year.
We did.
We I'm bad at those timelines, but we did three summers together, and then I still had some school to do.
I still had another year.
And so he moved to Los Angeles at that point because he'd gotten this offer to be on this big prestigious magic show in LA and they they always booked somebody from that show.
It was like a ten day run of magic shows in LA, and they always booked somebody from that show on the Onto the Tonight Show Johnny Carson, and so they decided to have Lance on there and that was his like big giant break, and so he was already you know, at that point, I was still in school, but he was kind of soored into who you know, a kind of another level of show business that I was in.
Speaker 1So this ten day show was a live show with live It was a.
Speaker 2Live show in the theater.
It was called It's Magic.
It was produced by Milt Larson and Bill Larson, who started and ran the Magic Castle in Hollywood.
But it was it wasn't at the Magic Castle.
It was in big theater in la And because the Magic Castle is exclusive, you can't get in there unless you know, remember, but this was a big show for the public and they people would, you know, magicians would kind of come from all over the world to be a part of this show.
Speaker 1Huh.
So what happened to you then when you finished?
Speaker 2So then when I finished school, I went back to that amusement park by myself and worked on my own my show at that point.
So I was doing the full thirty thirty five minute show by myself at that point.
And then I got pretty lucky in that comedy clubs.
This was like eighty one or eighty I got a college in eighty one and so comedy clubs were just kind of springing up around the country outside of LA and New York, in Chicago, you know.
And so and there was a guy in Louisville, my hometown, who was at one point been booking jug bands, but started booking comedy, started booking comedy in these you know, small bars, you know, in Kentucky and Tennessee and Ohio and Michigan and West Virginia.
And so I kind of got in on the ground floor of that.
And because I'd already been working on my own show for quite some time.
I mean I was twenty one or so at this point, and so because I've been working on my show for some time, I already had, you know, the thirty five minutes or thirty minutes of material that you would need to be a middle act in those clubs.
So I didn't have to start at the very beginning as with a fifteen minute spot.
I got slotted immediately into the middle act spot.
And so so I I got in, like I said, I kind of on the ground floor of that.
And then after a few years of that, I moved to LA too and started you know, headlining those clubs around the country.
The improms and the funds and whatever around the country.
So that was you know, that was in the early mid eighties, and I did those clubs for you know.
I mean I was on the road two hundred and twenty days a year starting around eighty three until two thousand when I started in Las Vegas.
Speaker 1So yeah, man, that's a tough I was on the road for decades as well, not doing magic.
I don't know if you know my background or not at all, but you know I I gambled professionally and right, so yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so yeah, life on the road, man, that gets over you.
Speaker 2I mean I assume you were kind of just staying one step ahead of the law at all times.
Speaker 1Well no, no, I I always played on the square.
So but that that was kind of my intersection with the magic world was because I started out before I started playing in the casinos, I was playing backgammon and poker, and I was very interested in magic to make sure I wasn't being cheated.
Speaker 2So yeah, that's right.
Yeah, yeah, I mean there's a lot there's there's there seems to be kind of a lot of crossover among those worlds, right, you know, uh, people that are interested in card cheating and people that are interested in that.
Speaker 1Yeah, and and people that are interested in gambling I mean legit I mean legal gambling.
Speaker 2But no, but I mean but but but like you said, I mean, but the gamblers are interested in magic like sort of like you.
I think they don't want to they want to be able to spot somebody who's us and them.
Speaker 1Yes, yes, exactly, although although some of them do have legitimate just they're interested in magic, you know, they like y.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1But you know you mentioned you were good at math, and so when you got to Las Vegas, did you investigate gambling with an edge?
Speaker 2I did not.
Speaker 1No, that's surprising to me.
Speaker 2Yeah, No, that's uh, it's never that's never been an interest of mine.
I don't you know.
I mean I have a number of friends who made their living, you know, doing gambling, and yeah, but it's never been something that, uh, I don't know.
Speaker 1Yeah, no, I get it.
Some people aren't interesting.
Speaker 2It's not something that I kind of am thankful, right because I'm you know, that's a that's a that's another you know obsession that uh that you can you know that you can uh go down that rabbit hole.
Yeah, And so I've got enough of those.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, you know when you got here to Las Vegas, I have to tell you, I your show is when people ask me what show to go see, your show is the one I have recommended by far more than any other show.
It's you know, A, it's hilarious.
B.
It's much cheaper than the other shows.
It's a great show for kids.
And you know at Harrah's you were on in the afternoon.
I'm not sure when are you on it now?
Speaker 2The same I'm on in the afternoons at ex Caliber too.
Yeah, and you know it's so funny.
It seems brand new right at ex Caliber and I in June it was four years, but I've been there and it seems like just brand new.
But that's I think that's because Hara's was so long.
I was there twenty two years almost, you know too, yeah, twenty a little over twenty years.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Just to get a little inside baseball here, do you four w all the theater or are they or is the casino actually producing the show.
Speaker 2There's a guy spy entertainment, Adam Steck.
Okay, so he controls that room at ex Caliber.
At Harris, I was partners with the casino, and now I'm sort of partners with Adam Steck and he has Thunder from down Under and the BEG shows in that room, but he also has done other shows around town.
He had the Mike Tyson Show and that was going in town and some other other stuff.
Yeah, so sho, I share the stage with those Thunder from down Under guys.
So it's hard to tell the difference, really is hard to tell the difference, right.
Speaker 1So be having also been a performer, everybody has stories about things that go wrong, either audience members that don't do what they're supposed to do, or I had a friend who worked for a for a headlining magician here in town.
It was one of the boy dancers, you know, to wave at the box when it opens some things.
And they opened the box and the leopard had died in the boats, you know.
So yeah, But anyway, so I'm wondering if you could share any of your sort of greatest hits of things going wrong on stage.
Speaker 2Yeah, well I don't.
I mean, I don't have anything to compare with a dead giant.
Speaker 1Yeah what.
Speaker 2Yeah, but I have certainly had my share, I mean, And that's what that's what I mean I've been doing the show a long time here in Las Vegas and before that a long time prior to Las Vegas, and so uh, I love it when something goes wrong, really, it keeps It's what one of the things that keeps it fresh.
I mean, I like leaving sort of it's weird to say, like open spaces for things to happen every show.
Not every show.
Do things happen you know, that are that are out of the ordinary.
Sometimes it's just, you know, as it's normally planned.
But I like having I like leaving an opportunity for unplanned stuff to happen.
Speaker 1It forces you to improvise, which many people are not comfortable doing, but obviously you are.
Speaker 2I I I feel like I'm yeah, I'm comfortable at it, and it does keep the show fresh for me, right.
I think that's one of the things that you know, people say, how do you keep doing these shows and stay fresh?
And you seem like you're still really engaged.
And I think that's part of it, is that I'm open to these things happening and and like it, and I like having I like having to deal with those things like this is this is years ago, but I do it.
The show opens with me doing a rope trick and doing trick with rope, and it gets more and more complicated and more and more I hope amazing as it goes on.
But I've done it a long time.
It was a trick that I kind of you know, I mean, the magician cutting a rope and putting it back together is an old trick.
But over the years I've added some stuff that I've come up with too, I hope make that even more mysterious and even funnier.
So, but I've been doing it a long time and I can do it sort of without thinking about it.
You know.
It's muscle memory, really and so and so one of the things that I'm doing I open with this trick, and one of the things I'm doing is kind of scoping out the audience, watching for people because there's a lot of audience participation.
And during that trick, I pick out at least two of the people that I'm going to use later in the show, and by you know, facial expressions and body language and if they seem to be open and having a good time.
And so I'm picking those people.
And so sometimes this particular time, I wasn't paying enough attention to these really super sharp scissors that I have, And so I cut the end of my thumb off just a little out that you could see it arc in the light in this club, like you know, And in my mind I don't think this is true, but in my mind it it made it.
There's like a sound effect went.
I don't believe that really happened, but it did.
And this was a comedy club, and so there were it was a club in a hotel lounge actually, and so and there was a table right right up on the edge of the state and so this little piece of me landed on the front table.
And so and I'm sure you've cut yourself many times and and what you know, I put my finger over that the end of my thumb and sort of, you know, say a little signent prayer like hopefull, hopefully it's not bad.
Hopefully it's not bad.
It's not bad, it's not bad.
And then you look and it's like, oh, it's okay, and then whoosh, a bunch of blood and so uh and so I I've got my little suitcase of props next to me, and I was working on a trick that had that involved band aids, and I thought, oh, maybe I have a band aid in here.
I wasn't a trick that was in the show yet, but I thought, maybe, oh, from that trick, maybe I have some band aids in here.
I didn't, but I did have some like clear like scotch tape, And so I tried to manage my thumb.
Speaker 1Up did you retreat the peace or or leave that on the terrible Uh?
Speaker 2It was terrible.
I mean it didn't do anything.
Yeah, they just directed the blood, you know, Damn, I don't it's but I managed to get through.
So I kind of I pulled that off and kind of managed to get through the end of the rope trick.
You know, there's blood on the rope.
And it was just sort of really in a terrible way of discussing.
So wait, wait did the audience audiences, well, the audiences, I don't you know.
Speaker 1I'm like, like, if you would think this was part of the trick, right, I.
Speaker 2Think, yeah, I don't know what.
I couldn't tell you.
I was so concentrated on my thumb and getting the physical actions.
Now I had to really think about it, right, trying to get through these things with a sort of crippled thumb and not get too much blood on the rope and whatever.
So so, but I get through it, and and I did what I normally, I didn't do what I normally do.
I said, uh to the audience.
Normally at this point I would get a random person from the audience, but I think under the circumstances, it's better if we uh get a nurse.
Is there a nurse here tonight and a woman I'm a nurse, come on up.
So this woman comes up and uh, she I mean, she looks at my thumb and she immediately goes into nurse mode.
Right she steps between me.
I'm on, I'm working with a mic on a stand, and she steps between me and this mic and she just takes over and she and there was a bar in the back of the room, and she calls back to the bar on the mic.
She says, uh, send up a first aid kit and a shot of vodka.
Like I don't really drink hard alcohol, so uh, but it turns out, I mean, so they sent up they had a little first aid kit behind the bar, and they sent up some vodka.
And she made me dip my thumb down into this.
Oh, I mean it's I mean I felt like a you know tech savery cartoon, you know, steam shooting out of my ears.
Right, I felt like so that, but then it's instantly shot through, right, I mean the vodka.
Uh.
And I you know again the improv thing that you're talking about.
I say water to wine and uh and then I uh, then I say to the front I put it.
I put it down on the front table and said, thank you for being patient, and I have a little gift for you.
You get a bloody married.
I had those two little I had those two little jokes.
She bandaged up my thumb and I got through the show.
And at the time, uh, this is before we moved to LA.
My wife and I were traveling together.
She was traveling with me.
She's from Kentucky.
Also.
We were traveling together, and we were living in hotels because I was traveling around the country and we're gonna we were going from Louisville to the East coast and then back across the country and end up in La where we had an apartment that we had rented.
But we had like six or eight weeks that we were traveling around in living in the hotel.
So she was in this.
She was up in the room and I've done this show, and so I leave and go back to the room and she, you know, I'm I'm mean to her sometimes, I like mean practical jokes on her.
So when I she said, how was it, And I said, well, I cut off part of my thumb and she's, ha, ha, you're very funny.
Oh no, and I said, I really did cut off just the very tip of my thumb.
Oh my god, we have to go to the hospital.
I said, I think you're right, but I have a second show, so I'm going to do the second show and then we'll go to the hospital.
And so that's what we did.
I mean, you know, show must go on.
So I go do the second show and she as you know, she's she's in there watching now because she's curious about me doing the show with my thumb band.
So and then but she knows the order of the show and show she knows, like, you know, he's got like fifteen minutes to go.
I'm going to go get the car.
She said, I'll meet you, you know, we'll zoom out of here.
I'll meet you, you know, I'll pull up in the front of the hotel and we'll in the car and you can just get right in the car and we'll go to the Burdency room.
And because it's like, you know, by this point, it's probably eleven o'clock at night.
And so so I finished that show and I'm leaving, and this guy just will not stop complimenting me an audience member.
Right, He's like tugging on my sleeve.
It's like Matt King, he was so good.
I just want to tell you how much I am.
I'm like, thank you, I'm really sid it, but I'm trying also to extricate myself to make my way down to the first floor.
And so he he says, no, I just want to tell you how much it was.
And me, he said, I came to the first show and I thought it was so good.
I bought a turn around and bought a ticket for the second show.
And I was a little disappointed in your second show.
And now you know my ego, I go now I stopped right.
I want to hear why suddenly it's like, okay, uh, this trip to the emergency room isn't isn't as all of a sudden.
I want to know why he was disappointed because I felt like especially for you know, doing it with the band aide on my thumb, bandage on my thumb.
And he says, yeah, the first show, it's so good.
Second show a little disappointed.
I you know that that bit you did where you cut off your thumb, you didn't do that in the second show.
And I thought that was the best part of the whole show.
And so he he thought that was a trick.
So that's pretty good.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's great, if you got if you've got.
Speaker 2Time for another one there.
Speaker 1My favorite one, yeah, absolutely, my.
Speaker 2Favorite one is, uh, I do this bit in the show or I toss a rope into the audience and I get a woman up on stage and I say, you and I are going to do the Houdini Challenge naked rope escape.
I want you to take off your clothes and tie me up.
And then then then I tossed the rope aside, so you don't have to tie me up.
We're gonna do a quick card trick and then I do a card trick with it.
And so I'm working this club in Knoxville, Tennessee, and the club owner calls me, uh, Sunday afternoon, and he says, hey, I'm bringing a date.
This is our first date.
I'm going out with this woman bringing to your show tonight.
We're gonna sit right in the front.
I want you to get her up for that trick.
The guy's name was Barry, and I said Barry on them.
I don't really like getting people up that I know or that a friend of friends, because they're you know, a big part of my show is they're genuine reaction.
And if they if they're connected to me somehow, then I feel like sometimes that reaction is He explained to me that he was writing my check and so, and I'm like, okay, I'll get her up and so.
And like I said earlier, I'm I'm spending the rope trick.
I'm looking at her, like you know, Barry and this woman are sitting at the table in the front, and I'm spend this whole rope trick looking at her, and she's always in the shadows.
I can't really get a good look at her to see how she's reacting to the rope trick and see whether she's going to be good and and so.
But I throw the rope and I get her up on stage, and once she gets into the lights, I see that she is the exact wrong person, I mean, just the meekest little mouse of a woman.
I feel terrible for her, But you know, you say, you know, you perform before and for anybody who else who has there's you know, you're saying words, but there's also another voice in the back of your head talking to yourself at the same time, right, And so this little voice in my head is like, well, I hope she does cry.
It will serve him right for making me get her up here and screwing up my show.
Blah blah blah.
So but I'm I'm you know, I'm going, you know, like a devil on one shoulder, and they don't do it, do it, do it whatever?
And finally I say, okay, we're gonna do the Houdini Challenge naked rope Escape.
I want you to take off your clothes and tie me up, and boom, she whips off her dress.
Oh Mary, the club owner is standing up taking photos of me and this stripper that he has hired to play a joke on me.
It was, it was, I mean, I mean I literally fell on the stage.
I was laughing so hard I fell down, my knees buckled, I was laughing so hard.
And so that's that's one of my favorite things that's ever happened to me.
Speaker 1That's great, that's great, And I mean it sounds like they did a really great job of.
Speaker 2She was an amazing actress, right, I mean she was.
It was crazy and and and also I mean if you knew this guy Barry, you just would not think of him as capable.
I mean, he ran a comedy club, but to me, it wasn't a funny bone in his body.
And yeah, I would just I wouldn't have thought him capable of doing something so perfect, hilarious.
Speaker 1That's great.
How how many shows a week are you doing now?
Speaker 2Uh, depends on the week, but mostly five weeks, so one show a day, five days a week.
Speaker 1Yeah, and you're I've sort of cut.
Speaker 2Down over the years.
I mean I'm really super busy, you know, super busy weeks.
I'll still do two shows a day, but it's I don't know, I don't want to say I'm getting old, but well.
Speaker 1I was just going to say, you are, you know, getting there to social security age, any plans on retirement or you're just going to keep going?
Speaker 2And no, I'm going to keep going.
I mean you know, if you saw how miserable I was during the pandemic when I was off work for like fourteen months or whatever it was, I mean, it just I mean, it really drove home for me how much I need it, right, I mean how much it means to me to be up there.
And you know, so far knock on wood, I'm I still feel like people are coming and they still seem to enjoy the show.
I mean, you know, I had a good friend of mine say I feel like say to me, and it's just the most I mean I don't maybe my wife paid him to do it.
I don't know, but but but it was like, hey, I feel like, you know, you're at the height of your powers right now.
Your your show is better than it's ever been.
So if even if that's not true, it's I still feel like it's uh, it's it's good enough to keep.
Speaker 1Doing Oh there's no question, yeah of that.
Speaker 2You know, and doing it.
I still love going in every day.
Speaker 1Yeah that's there's that.
And and what are you going to do if not sit at home and watch TV?
I mean that's well, that's right.
Speaker 2Yeah, So I mean I might you know, there could be a point where I go.
You know what, I'm not going to work five days a week every week.
You know, I where I could just start doing like private shows or whatever and do three or four a month, but you know, I'm not nearly to that yet.
I mean, I've still got almost two years on my current deal, and I think I'll at least up for another three.
Speaker 1Yeah, what do you do when you're not When you're not?
Speaker 2For me, I've got a lot of buddies here in town.
You know, we share some of the same friends, I think, and uh so we have a we have a pretty bloody croquet match every now and again my backyard.
Uh So, I like cooking and hanging out.
Speaker 3With pals, and you know, my wife and I try to travel some but I mean most of it's tied to work, right, I mean I I just had it worked in touring Italy for like four days.
Speaker 2But then we took another week to just kind of go around Italy.
So you know, I try to take off some time, but you know, I can't take off too much show these the ticket vendors around town don't care for that.
Speaker 1Well, this this has been great.
I just want to thank you again.
This has been a real, real treat for me.
Speaker 2Well, thank you so much for having me on.
I really do appreciate it and I hope I get to see in person soon.
Speaker 1Yeah, that would be great.
Well, there you have my interview with Matt King.
If you didn't get it from the show, let me just say it again.
If you're looking for a show to see while you were in Vegas, I can't recommend this show highly enough.
I guarantee you that you will enjoy it.
Anyway.
You can reach me at life isagamblepod at gmail dot com, or you can find me on Twitter at RWM twenty one.
So until next time,