I Only Roast the Ones I Love
I ONLY ROAST the ONES I LOVE
I ONLY ROAST the ONES I LOVE
BUSTING BALLS WITHOUT BURNING BRIDGES
JEFFREY ROSS
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First Simon Spotlight Entertainment hardcover edition September 2009
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ross, Jeffrey, 1965– I only roast the ones I love : busting balls without burning bridges / Jeffrey Ross.—1st Simon Spotlight Entertainment hardcover ed.
p. cm.
1. Roasts (Public speaking) 2. American wit and humor. I. Title.
PN4193.R63R67 2009
808.5’1—dc22 2009021130
ISBN 978-1-4391-0140-7
ISBN 978-1-4391-6420-4 (ebook) This book is dedicated to everybody I have ever made fun of. Thanks for being such good sports. (Especially you, Bea Arthur!) This book is also a love letter to all the great Roastmasters who came before me. I hope they are taking turns insulting me from that big podium in the sky.
And to the Roastmasters who will come after me, I say … fuck you and happy roasting.
The first human being who hurled an insult instead of a stone was the founder of civilization.
—SIGMUND FREUD
INSULTRODUCTION
MY NAME IS JEFFREY ROSS, but I am commonly known as the Roastmaster General. I’m not entirely sure how I got this title, but it has stuck and I am proud of it. Most stand-up comics are self-deprecating. I’m all-deprecating. Sure, I occasionally make fun of myself—but I specialize in making fun of others. I’m what is commonly known as an insult comic. Diss is my life.
I never planned on making fun of people for a living. It happened by accident. In fact, my whole life has been a series of happy and not-so-happy accidents that have transformed me into the black belt in busting balls that I am today. I am very fond of my reputation, but I must admit that it’s a blessing and a curse. I may make a nice living—but every now and then somebody wants to kill me.
With this book I offer you my philosophies of roasting, which are also my principles for a better life. If you adapt these principles to your own experiences, they will surely help guide your journey through an increasingly harsh world.
WE ALL HAVE AN INNER ROASTMASTER
OUR WORLD IS FULL OF Roastmasters. Some of them are well known. But most of them are completely unknown. They live amongst us. They live inside of us. They are the part of us that occasionally says out loud what most people only dare think to themselves. The part of us that isn’t afraid of severe consequences. The part of us that isn’t afraid to die for a laugh. The part of us willing to take a punch from Courtney Love, if necessary.
It is the Roastmaster’s belief that gracing someone you admire with unfiltered honesty is the highest form of respect you can pay them—especially when it’s delivered in the form of a well-crafted joke.
Of course, not everyone has the guts to channel their inner Roastmaster. In fact, most people have the good sense NOT to insult people to their faces.
Instead, they talk behind people’s backs after they leave. They gossip. They whisper. They say mean things. They laugh at the weaknesses of others. This is just human nature. But a Roastmaster defies human nature. A Roastmaster goes for it. A Roastmaster tells it like it is. A Roastmaster says, “Fuck ’em if they can’t take a joke.” A Roastmaster kills.
A ROASTMASTER MUST HAVE THICK SKIN
IF A ROASTMASTER IS GOING to dish it out, he’d better be able to take it.
I first began developing a tough exterior when I was just a baby crawling around my grandparents’ cramped apartment in the Bronx. My nana Helen was making tea. While lifting the kettle from the stove to the table, she stumbled over me and spilled some boiling water onto my back. I didn’t cry. No doubt I was in some kind of shock. My grandfather Pop Jack scooped me up with his giant hands and ran me fifteen blocks to the hospital. Since then, the scar behind my left shoulder serves as a reminder that my skin is thick enough to withstand anything life has to drop on it, especially insults.
I love it when other roasters take shots at me. It’s a sign of love and affection. Below are some of my all-time favorites: “Jeff Ross has a very active sex life. Every night he fucks an entire audience out of fifteen bucks apiece.”
—Lisa Lampanel
“Jeff Ross, forgive me for not recognizing you earlier—it’s just that when I see a face like yours it usually has a bag of oats hanging from it.”
—William Shatner
“Hey, Jeff Ross—I’m gonna give you a rap name, ‘Old Ugly Bastard.’ “
—Flavor Flav
“You know, Jeff does these roasts every year. It’s like a holiday for him, ‘Bomb Kippur.’ Yeah, nigga! I know some Jew shit too!”
—Snoop Dogg
“I get a lot of flak from critics for being homophobic, but lemme tell you somethin’ … I think having invited Jeff Ross here tonight proves how much I love the queers.”
—Larry the Cable Guy
“Jeff Ross and I, we both perform for the troops. Difference is, Jeff charged for his shows.”
—Toby Keith
“For your safety please avert your eyes and welcome the pork–Roastmaster General … Jeffrey Ross!”
—John Stamos
“What’s up with Pam Anderson’s implants? Pam, you’ve been flattened out and reinflated more times than Jeff Ross’s prom date.”
—Greg Geraldo
“You cannot have a roast without our next comic, but it would be great if for once we tried. He is the Michael Jordan of baseball of roasts—and is literally the only person in this room Pamela Anderson wouldn’t fuck.”
—Jimmy Kimmel
“Jeff Ross’s dick is so small he can pee on his nuts.”
—Jamie Foxx
“Jeff, we’re buddies, but I’ve always wanted to tell you this … you look like they took the Friars Club and beat you in the face with it. If you looked any more like a horse, Norm Macdonald would lose ten grand on you.”
—Bob Saget
“Jeff, I’d just like to thank you for doing the jokes my father used to tell me when I was seven. I’m sure this is the first time you’ve ever made a woman happy.”
—Cloris Leachman
“Jeff Ross wants to be an old comic so bad he’s having his balls lowered.”
—Brian Posehn
“Jeff Ross, you’re a failure and you’re nothing to look at. I look at you and I remember to shave my taint … Jeff Ross is so ugly when he jerks off his hand throws up.”
—Lisa Lampanel
Equal opportunity ego bruising—that is the very definition of the roast. For every insult you hurl, be prepared to be insulted in kind. Your fellow roasters will be packing heat, and as my friend Snoop Dogg once
told me, “Never bring a knife to a gunfight.” A thick skin and a sharp wit are your best defense, so bring your A game to the podium and make every joke count.
THE ORIGINS OF THE ROAST
HUMAN BEINGS HAVE BEEN BUSTING one another’s balls ever since we grew sacks. Early attempts at edgy humor took many forms, from the prosaic to the artistic. Evidence of prehistoric insult comedy is being unearthed as we speak. Someday soon, I hope a tape of Don Rickles roasting Frank Sinatra will surface and claim its rightful place in the Museum of Natural History—beside a North African cave drawing of a limpwristed Homo erectus fucking a triceratops in the tuchus, where it belongs.
A growing minority of biblical scholars believe that the first use of insults in a formal dais-type setting occurred at the Last Supper. Experts believe John the Baptist stood up shortly after dessert and started making fun of Jesus’s outfit. “Hey, JC, thanks for dressing up for the occasion. Seriously, nice flip-flops. I wish I kept everything I made in summer camp.”
However, it wasn’t until the year 1783 that a great American patriot named Emmanuel J. Roastenberg conceived and organized the first formal insult-themed testimonial dinner.
His client and childhood friend General George Washington was about to be sworn in as the young nation’s first leader, and Roastenberg thought it might be fun to honor his wooden-toothed compatriot by “dishonoring” him in front of Virginia’s landed gentry.
Roastenberg decided to call the night “An Evening of Unkind Words in Tribute to Our Dear Chum,” with ticket proceeds going to scurvy research.
Over cigars at Washington’s Mount Vernon estate, Roastenberg explained that the evening would be a “… fair and egalitarian exercise in wit and bawdiness.” With great passion, he further reasoned that if a war hero and first president was willing to endure such a verbal lashing, it would not only add to Washington’s already immense popularity but prove irrefutably to all citizens that they were finally free to criticize their leaders without fear of persecution.
“The right of the people to bear arms and hurl insults shall not be infringed. Fuck King George! Let freedom zing!” Roastenberg famously proclaimed.
Although Roastenberg was an eminent figure in colonial life, his origins are shrouded in mystery. Some historians think he was descended from a family of Prussian Jews who catered the first Thanksgiving. Another theory posits that his great-grandfather provided comedic entertainment on the Mayflower, and bombed so badly that he was thrown overboard. One contemporary, writing anonymously in a legal pamphlet dating from 1779, describes Roastenberg as “an irrepressibly saucy and ebullient attorney blessed by the Lorde with a sagacious wit, which has the power to illuminate truthe even as it offends gentle hearts,” while another observer calls him simply “an asshole.” Roastenberg was renowned for his ability to demolish friend and foe alike with a pithy, perfectly timed bon mot, which made him a formidable opponent in the courtroom. Look at this jury. What is this, a trial by ugly?
Some say that Roastenberg employed an indentured Irish servant to write jokes, while other accounts say he even owned a gag-writing slave. We do know for sure that invitations went out soon after General Washington agreed to participate. Roastenberg commissioned a local carpenter to build two long narrow tables, “long enough for ten men of considerable girth to sit side by side without knocking knickers.” Between the two tables Roastenberg placed a preacher’s pulpit borrowed from a local church, so the invited speakers would have a place to rest their notes and libations.
According to a brief report in the Virginia Gazetteer, the event was a rowdy and raucous affair that lasted well into the night. Legendary brewer Samuel Adams was the first to speak.
“It’s no secret that leading the Revolution has given our friend George a bulgy ego. Yes, that’s right, bulgy—like Ben Franklin’s tits or Betsy Ross’s clitoris.”
“Or your liver!” yelled out John Hancock to thunderous laughter.
Betsy Ross herself leapt out of her chair to reveal a skimpy outfit she had made. “Oh, you’re just jealous, Mr. Adams! If memory serves, your extremities are small and bent—like the colony of New Jersey! I do, however, apologize for my scandalous attire. I just came from the Boston T & A party!
Georgie likes to salivate at the sight of my ample bosoms anyway, and I call that masturbation without representation!” America’s Seamstress was a surprise hit. But it wasn’t until Emmanuel J. Roastenberg himself took the pulpit that the show reached full gallop.
“Dearest Lord, I never saw so many bigwigs wearing bad wigs. I see Thomas Jefferson is here. Is this a benefit for scurvy or jungle fever? Seriously, Tom, we should party later—I hear it’s singles night on the Amistad.
“Ben Franklin, thanks for polishing your scalp for the big show tonight. Poor guy invented electricity, bifocals, and the fire department, and he still can’t get laid. He should have invented the toupee—that’s about as close as he’d ever come to giving a beaver head.”
After ribbing everyone in the room, Roastenberg finally focused his attention on the guest of honor. “George’s wife, Martha, wanted to be here but she’s having a splinter removed from her pussy. You didn’t give her crabs, you gave her termites. Folks, I’ve known George since he was a kid. And I think the real reason he chopped down that cherry tree was because it had more of a personality than he does!” As for Washington, the normally stoic general took the jokes in stride, claiming it was all for a good cause. Indeed, Roastenberg’s “An Evening of Unkind Words in Tribute to Our Dear Chum” raised more than thirty dollars for scurvy. Despite a minor protest from the Federation of Colonial Censors (FCC), Roastenberg’s bold experiment was a rousing success.
The historical significance of this night became evident a short time later during Washington’s inaugural address, in which he called for a Constitutional Amendment guaranteeing free speech to all Americans. Most scholars agree that it is difficult to imagine a more influential event in our nation’s history than Roastenberg’s “roasting” of his dear friend and the father of our country.
RECIPE FOR A ROAST
JAKE A WALK, BASEBALL! GO fuck your sister, NASCAR! Roasting is quickly becoming America’s new national pastime.
Whether it’s professional insultarians making fun of a celebrity or just regular folks roasting a loved one, the art of busting balls is boldly on the rise.
You may have noticed that homemade roasts seem to be popping up every weekend in backyards, catering halls, dormitories, and convents all over this great land. As Americans, there is no healthier way to exercise our right to free speech than by saying atrocious things about other people in public.
However, you can’t always wait for an invitation. Occasionally you may want to whip up a roast yourself. But beware—ingredients may vary and no two roasts ever turn out the same. But one thing is for sure, people will talk about it forever.
Ingredients
THE HONOREE
As you might expect, the hardest part of producing a roast is getting someone to volunteer to be ripped a new one in front of other people. That is why your honoree must feel protected. That’s why we only roast the ones we love.
Ideally, the honoree should be an exceptional individual of high regard. You know, someone who deserves a pat on the back and a kick in the pants. I believe the best roasts occur when you laud an accomplished person on a special occasion. Perhaps they are Teacher of the Year or Employee of the Month or Fuckface of the Century. Maybe they just got a divorce or a hysterectomy. A personal roasting can even be the perfect birthday gift for the man who has everything. That’s what I gave Jimmy Kimmel for his fortieth birthday, at a party where he was surrounded by his huge and hairy extended family —most of whom are also employees on his long-running late-night TV show.
“Congratulations, Jimmy—how is it possible to give nepotism an even worse name? Seriously, I haven’t seen a family bond like this since Jerry Lee Lewis fucked his cousin. And imagine how much better off your relatives would b
e if they were related to Jay Leno?”
When I was asked about producing a roast for boxer Mike Tyson I felt I had to decline because under my own criteria he just didn’t seem a worthy recipient. I just couldn’t wrap my brain around honoring a convicted rapist and part-time cannibal. I also once refused a request by the great Howard Stern to roast my fellow Jerseyite Artie Lange on the radio. When I asked their producer Gary Del ’Abate what charity they were raising money for by roasting Artie, he said there wasn’t one. “We’re just doing it for shits and giggles,” Gary said. I responded that that wasn’t a good enough reason for me to honor somebody I love as much as Artie and politely declined.
Months later, Artie mentioned on the radio that he would soon be traveling to a war zone to entertain the troops. When I heard this I called Gary back and asked if I could come give Artie a personal mini-roast in honor of his upcoming trip. He agreed, so I came into Howard’s studio and let it rip: “It’s no coincidence that Artie has become patriotic because his weight just hit 9/11. Artie, be careful—it’s dangerous over there. What are you gonna do? Wear a bulletproof and a button-proof vest? I hear Artie’s USO codename is Blob Hope.”
All I’m saying is you never roast somebody just because. I believe it should benefit a good cause or be based around an important moment in the honoree’s life, like a marriage, graduation, or retirement. I once roasted my cousin Mikey at his going-away party. After two years of living in my guesthouse, it was finally time for my comatose Cuban cousin to migrate back to his natural habitat in Miami. Don’t get me wrong, I love Cousin Mikey with all my heart and half my refrigerator—but when he wasn’t lounging by my pool or playing Xbox, he was sound asleep on my sofa. Now he was finally moving on with his life and what better farewell could there be than creating a special night in his honor? I also knew Cousin Mikey would be a great guy to roast because he has a huge heart and even huger ears. Plus, he had just spent two crappy weeks in the hospital because his diabetes had spiraled out of control and an evening of laughs seemed to be just what the doctor ordered.