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A2 बिगिनर अंग्रेज़ी 26:10 4,850 शब्द Comedy

Conan Conducts A Staff Review With Oscars Writer Brian Kiley | Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend

Team Coco · 102,923 व्यूज़ · जोड़ा गया 3 दिन पहले

AI सारांश

In this video, Conan O’Brien interviews his long-time comedy writer and childhood acquaintance, Brian Kylie. For language learners, this episode is a fantastic study of **conversational storytelling and professional rapport.** As you watch, you will gain insight into: * **Natural Informal English:** Observe how friends use anecdotes, playful teasing, and hyperbole to build a narrative. * **Vocabulary & Slang:** Learn colloquial terms like "going blue" (using profanity in comedy) and "riffing" (improvising jokes on a specific theme). * **Contextual Nuance:** Hear how native speakers use rhythmic timing and callback humor to maintain an engaging, high-energy dialogue.

सीखने के आँकड़े

A2

CEFR लेवल

4,850

कुल शब्द

894

अद्वितीय शब्द

3/10

कठिनाई

शब्दावली विविधता 18%

सबटाइटल्स (747 खंड)

00:00

Hey, Conan O'Brien here. Uh, normally on

00:03

Thursdays, we drop a fan episode, but I

00:05

want to do something a little different

00:07

today. On Monday, I talk to Dennis Liry

00:10

and he was chatting about a comic we

00:12

both love, a Boston comic, Brian Kylie.

00:16

Brian is working with me in my office

00:19

right now on the Oscars. And I thought,

00:22

hey, Brian's in the building. Let's get

00:25

him in here. He knows all the dirt on

00:27

me. We've known each other since we were

00:29

kids. Um, anytime I do anything where I

00:33

need great jokes, uh, and everyone else

00:35

is busy, I get Brian Kylie.

00:38

>> Am

00:41

I really cast a wide net and no one

00:44

wanted to work with me? No, Brian. Uh,

00:47

we have I mean, our story is kind of

00:49

crazy. We've known each other since we

00:51

were kids because you would chat with my

00:56

brother Luke at our Catholic instruction

00:59

class that met at the Senacle. Where

01:01

what town? What town was that in?

01:02

>> In Brighton.

01:03

>> In Brighton. We were in Brighton on the

01:05

top of a high hill.

01:06

>> These nuns taught Catholic instruction

01:08

on Monday afternoons. And um I think you

01:15

and my brother Luke started chatting

01:17

with with each other about the Bruins

01:19

and the Red Sox

01:21

>> and I was in the corner doing bits for

01:23

like a for a snowman. Uh

01:26

>> I mean it's insane. We we went to CCD,

01:28

which is, you know, Catholic Sunday

01:30

school, the same place.

01:31

>> I would sit next to Luke and we would

01:33

talk about the football games the day

01:35

before, which we would still be doing

01:37

now. We were like n 8 years old or 9

01:39

years old. You were in my brother's

01:40

dance class. And then Dan, uh, Dan,

01:43

>> say that a little slower because it said

01:44

you were in my brother's, it sounded

01:46

like you were in my brother's dance

01:47

class.

01:48

>> I was not in your brother's dance class.

01:51

>> I thought that's what it was. No, no,

01:53

no. I'm sorry. My brother Dan

01:55

>> and Conan,

01:56

>> sorry, were in the same class and then

01:58

they they both

02:01

>> You were in my brother at Lamaz's class.

02:03

>> What? You were I was not in a Lamas

02:06

class. No, his name's Lamas.

02:10

No. So Dan and and and Conan were in the

02:12

same class and then they went to Harvard

02:14

together

02:15

>> and then my brother Dan would show me

02:17

the lamp Harvard lampoons and he'd be

02:20

like, "Remember our Conan O'Brien?" And

02:21

and he would show me these things. Um

02:23

which were great. First of all, the

02:24

class of

02:25

>> of 83 didn't do nearly as well as the

02:28

class of 85. We didn't we didn't go to

02:30

Harvard, Luke and I. But

02:32

>> yeah. Um dummies.

02:34

>> I know. But uh the we we'd read these

02:37

lampoons and then I kind of followed

02:39

your career because I knew you were on

02:41

uh The Simpsons and SNL, but I I would

02:43

have walked by you on the street not

02:45

known you. Do you know what I mean? Cuz

02:46

I hadn't seen you since.

02:47

>> Well, you would have been like, "Wow,

02:48

who's that guy? He's got Riz."

02:50

>> But um 80s and 90s and stuff, he'd be

02:54

like RZ.

02:55

>> He was using RZ back then.

02:56

>> Oh wow.

02:56

>> With me exclusively. That guy's got RZ

02:59

and I don't know what that is.

03:01

>> I still don't know what it is. Uh, but

03:04

so I I think you came to work on late

03:06

night. I'll never forget you came in one

03:08

day and you were wearing an Irish cap.

03:12

>> Sure. Sure.

03:13

>> And you were because you were a very

03:15

funny standup. Everyone knew who you

03:16

were and you were chatting with a bunch

03:18

of

03:19

>> of the writers in the hallway cuz you

03:21

were visiting, right?

03:22

>> And this is early early days of very

03:25

early days of the late night show, like

03:27

93. and I see you in the hallway and I'm

03:31

like, "Hey, we know each other and we

03:33

chatted a little bit."

03:35

>> I pushed a button that said, "Please get

03:36

him out of here."

03:38

>> You were immediately taken away by NBC

03:39

pages and a robot,

03:42

>> right? I kept asking, "What's Riz?"

03:44

>> Yeah.

03:47

And then shortly after that, there was

03:49

an opening for you and you came and

03:50

started writing jokes for me. And you've

03:54

I mean my White House correspondents

03:55

dinner,

03:56

>> both of them with Clinton and with

03:58

Obama. Um I mean everything I ever did

04:03

uh the the two Emmy shows um and all the

04:08

late night shows I've ever done and then

04:10

um last year's Oscars. you wrote amazing

04:13

jokes and now um you're we're working

04:16

again on this year's Oscars March 15th.

04:18

Tune in. Uh and

04:21

so I thought, wait a minute, this is a

04:23

chance to get Brian to come in and we

04:25

could settle old scores.

04:27

>> Yes. Yes. We have some grudges.

04:29

>> Ironically, my first day of work was uh

04:31

March 15th in 1994.

04:33

>> Oh, you're kidding.

04:34

>> No. No. The eyes of March. So now that's

04:36

where when the Oscars when the Oscars

04:37

are. Yeah.

04:38

>> Oh, cool. Uh it is um no you you have uh

04:44

as you know I've told you this a million

04:45

times. You're one of my favorite uh

04:47

comedians. You have such insanely great

04:49

jokes and you're so disciplined about

04:52

having great jokes. Um my favorite thing

04:55

to do is an impression of you

04:57

>> doing the filthiest material ever at the

05:00

Apollo Theater because because you and I

05:04

are the whitest comedians in the world

05:05

and you are the cleanest comic. You

05:07

never go blue and you always are wearing

05:09

in my impression you're wearing a blue

05:11

blazer which is very you and uh hello

05:14

honey how are you and then you go into

05:16

the filthy I mean stuff that would make

05:18

red fox blush and you do it at the

05:20

Apollo and kill and it's just really

05:23

like you got to wash that ass

05:27

ladies you got to wash that ass. So, I'm

05:31

going out and and your your enunciation

05:33

is always so perfect and you're so

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मुख्य शब्दावली (50)

you A1 pronoun

Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.

people A1 noun

People refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.

mean A1 verb

To have a specific sense or significance, especially when explaining a word or sign. It can also describe a person's intention or the importance of something to someone.

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