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हर वीडियो से तेज़ी से सीखने में मदद करने वाले शक्तिशाली टूल्स तक पहुँचने के लिए साइन अप करें।
Conan Conducts A Staff Review With Oscars Writer Brian Kiley | Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend
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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.
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सबटाइटल्स (747 खंड)
Hey, Conan O'Brien here. Uh, normally on
Thursdays, we drop a fan episode, but I
want to do something a little different
today. On Monday, I talk to Dennis Liry
and he was chatting about a comic we
both love, a Boston comic, Brian Kylie.
Brian is working with me in my office
right now on the Oscars. And I thought,
hey, Brian's in the building. Let's get
him in here. He knows all the dirt on
me. We've known each other since we were
kids. Um, anytime I do anything where I
need great jokes, uh, and everyone else
is busy, I get Brian Kylie.
>> Am
I really cast a wide net and no one
wanted to work with me? No, Brian. Uh,
we have I mean, our story is kind of
crazy. We've known each other since we
were kids because you would chat with my
brother Luke at our Catholic instruction
class that met at the Senacle. Where
what town? What town was that in?
>> In Brighton.
>> In Brighton. We were in Brighton on the
top of a high hill.
>> These nuns taught Catholic instruction
on Monday afternoons. And um I think you
and my brother Luke started chatting
with with each other about the Bruins
and the Red Sox
>> and I was in the corner doing bits for
like a for a snowman. Uh
>> I mean it's insane. We we went to CCD,
which is, you know, Catholic Sunday
school, the same place.
>> I would sit next to Luke and we would
talk about the football games the day
before, which we would still be doing
now. We were like n 8 years old or 9
years old. You were in my brother's
dance class. And then Dan, uh, Dan,
>> say that a little slower because it said
you were in my brother's, it sounded
like you were in my brother's dance
class.
>> I was not in your brother's dance class.
>> I thought that's what it was. No, no,
no. I'm sorry. My brother Dan
>> and Conan,
>> sorry, were in the same class and then
they they both
>> You were in my brother at Lamaz's class.
>> What? You were I was not in a Lamas
class. No, his name's Lamas.
No. So Dan and and and Conan were in the
same class and then they went to Harvard
together
>> and then my brother Dan would show me
the lamp Harvard lampoons and he'd be
like, "Remember our Conan O'Brien?" And
and he would show me these things. Um
which were great. First of all, the
class of
>> of 83 didn't do nearly as well as the
class of 85. We didn't we didn't go to
Harvard, Luke and I. But
>> yeah. Um dummies.
>> I know. But uh the we we'd read these
lampoons and then I kind of followed
your career because I knew you were on
uh The Simpsons and SNL, but I I would
have walked by you on the street not
known you. Do you know what I mean? Cuz
I hadn't seen you since.
>> Well, you would have been like, "Wow,
who's that guy? He's got Riz."
>> But um 80s and 90s and stuff, he'd be
like RZ.
>> He was using RZ back then.
>> Oh wow.
>> With me exclusively. That guy's got RZ
and I don't know what that is.
>> I still don't know what it is. Uh, but
so I I think you came to work on late
night. I'll never forget you came in one
day and you were wearing an Irish cap.
>> Sure. Sure.
>> And you were because you were a very
funny standup. Everyone knew who you
were and you were chatting with a bunch
of
>> of the writers in the hallway cuz you
were visiting, right?
>> And this is early early days of very
early days of the late night show, like
93. and I see you in the hallway and I'm
like, "Hey, we know each other and we
chatted a little bit."
>> I pushed a button that said, "Please get
him out of here."
>> You were immediately taken away by NBC
pages and a robot,
>> right? I kept asking, "What's Riz?"
>> Yeah.
And then shortly after that, there was
an opening for you and you came and
started writing jokes for me. And you've
I mean my White House correspondents
dinner,
>> both of them with Clinton and with
Obama. Um I mean everything I ever did
uh the the two Emmy shows um and all the
late night shows I've ever done and then
um last year's Oscars. you wrote amazing
jokes and now um you're we're working
again on this year's Oscars March 15th.
Tune in. Uh and
so I thought, wait a minute, this is a
chance to get Brian to come in and we
could settle old scores.
>> Yes. Yes. We have some grudges.
>> Ironically, my first day of work was uh
March 15th in 1994.
>> Oh, you're kidding.
>> No. No. The eyes of March. So now that's
where when the Oscars when the Oscars
are. Yeah.
>> Oh, cool. Uh it is um no you you have uh
as you know I've told you this a million
times. You're one of my favorite uh
comedians. You have such insanely great
jokes and you're so disciplined about
having great jokes. Um my favorite thing
to do is an impression of you
>> doing the filthiest material ever at the
Apollo Theater because because you and I
are the whitest comedians in the world
and you are the cleanest comic. You
never go blue and you always are wearing
in my impression you're wearing a blue
blazer which is very you and uh hello
honey how are you and then you go into
the filthy I mean stuff that would make
red fox blush and you do it at the
Apollo and kill and it's just really
like you got to wash that ass
ladies you got to wash that ass. So, I'm
going out and and your your enunciation
is always so perfect and you're so
पूर्ण उपशीर्षक वीडियो प्लेयर में उपलब्ध
मुख्य शब्दावली (50)
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 refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.
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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