In the second part of his interview with Pete Holmes, Stephen asks the “How We Roll” star the same question Dua Lipa famously asked our host: do your faith and your comedy ever overlap? Watch to find out how Pete answers the question by explaining his own personal spirituality, and check him out in “How We Roll,” Thursday nights at 9:30 after “Ghosts” on CBS. #Colbert #PeteHolmes #HowWeRoll
And Pete’s daughter has one eye. How convenient.
ReplyImagine turning on Fallon and hearing this exchange.
ReplyThese two gentlemen are on the same spiritual inspiration heights
Reply*Tom Smallwood sounds like a very dirty name*
ReplyFaith, the word people use when they cannot supply evidence.
Reply“The other day, i was nailing a painting but I didn’t have my hammer, i was trying to figure out where i put it…. In the store room? In the tool box? But didn’t find it anywhere And then i used my 2 years old daughter Nancy and Man! she has a very strong skull and she was loving it.” Hey! I’m a aspiring comedy writter and did you like the joke?
ReplyI listen to his podcast a lot, and him compressing his entire podcast into about 2 minutes was a welcome surprise
ReplyIncoming Harvey Dent Jokes
ReplyExcept, there is nothing more than you can experience, so it is the only thing that “matters”.
ReplyEveryone has a religion, even if this be a personal one or simply a creed, mantra, philosophy or a way of being/behaving, it’s still a religion; it’s literally in the mechanics through which we guide ourselves daily and that’s exactly what Pete Holmes does. Spiriruality is linked to this. Religion and spirituality go hand in hand, they’re interdependent, one cannot exist without the other.
Lots claim to be spiritual yet not religious as a way to distance themselves from the bad reputation of misapplied religion and some, even from responsibility, yet these two cannot be separated, for in the all-too-natural practice of our own brand of personal spirituality(ies) we actually create our own (seemingly ever-shifting) personal religions (our patterns of behavior/that which through our actions, time, and dedication we value). Also, this constant change further means that either, we really don’t know much of anything regarding this hugely important topic…or that even perhaps we’re not wanting certain constants (let’s call them “realities”) to be real and so we deny them, hence our efforts to constantly change our personal belief systems (religions) as we see fit – and also often to suit ourselves in the overly egocentristic sense.
No one should get offended at this information – we get our basis of thoughts from others that came before us, there’s some cultural guides we all know about that are still with us today that others left for us.
People are free to analyze and make their own decisions and conclusions (that’s the point) and that’s exactly what we all do…from formal/informal schooling, from Hard Knocks University, or even when some experiments with meditation or shrooms, etc.
ReplyFaith is pretending to know something that you do not know. Religion and metaphysics are irrational. So, to Jews, Christians, Muslims, and QAnon folk, let me say that evidence comes before belief, not the other way around. Now, rethink your beliefs, and purge the BS from your head. Personal spirituality is a man-made construct.
ReplyLela. Nice. I’m going to google the F%$k out of that name, however… Anna is better.
ReplyI think this pandemic has taught people the importance of multiple streams of income, unfortunately having a job doesn’t mean security rather having different investments is the real deal.
ReplyThe number of atheist comedians suggests otherwise, but you do you Pete. Love this guy.
Reply1:37 “That’s what them teats are for” – Stephen Colbert
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