Tim Heidecker quotes:

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  • Back in high school, there was something fun and dangerous about inhabiting a different personality.

  • There's a generation of people I think without a strong connection to family, to religion, to civic duty. They have a real disassociation from the problems of the world.

  • There is nothing funny about a well-adjusted, intelligent person making the right choices.

  • When I was in college in Philly, there was a lot of post-punks... hardcore... like, rock. Sixties, retro, proto-Strokes kind of bands.

  • Online piracy needs to be dealt with itself, because people are just wholesale stealing people's work and not paying for it. It's very hard to figure out a way to fix it.

  • I want people to think about movies and how we watch them. Let them know it's okay to question the structure or how we're sometimes duped into a false sense of normalcy. Most of all, I want people to question the old standard practices of, 'This is how the structure of something should work,' or, 'This is how a character must behave.'

  • My dad is a very quick-witted, sarcastic, dry, humorous guy, whereas my mom's very silly, and that side of the family is very musical.

  • When I was a kid I went to Catholic school, and they used to drag us out to pro-life rallies and stuff full of crazy people.

  • In a crazy world where he would get nominated, I'd like to see Obama run against Herman Cain. That would be fantastic. If Herman Cain became president, there'd be a certain sort of morbid curiosity for me.

  • Nothing impresses the ladies like a clean, pressed pair of khakis and a large pattern shirt featuring either classic cars, mojitos or men playing golf.

  • Dads are awkward because they're older guys who aren't cool anymore and are figuring out who they are, and they often make bad choices in fashion and music.

  • Most books that come out with a comedy label seem to be, Eric [WAREHEIM]and I could have written, "This is our story, and this is who we are," and sort of this navel-gazing, narcissistic approach to comedy we're seeing these days.

  • I don't have a big hang-up about my body.

  • I'm very wary of doing political stuff for a lot of reasons. One of the big ones is that the shelf-life for them is not very long, and the joke becomes old news very quickly.

  • Costumes are fun. Dress up like a pilot some night and watch as people stare!

  • I'm always in situations where you can't be funny, and yet I want to do it anyway.

  • Most of my ideas just come out funny.

  • There are a lot of young, well-educated, artistic people out there that like to be entertained.

  • At Temple University, and I'm sure this was the way in a lot of film classes, comedy was not an option, and not considered a serious form of expression. You had to make a film about an issue.

  • It's never fun to read death threats.

  • I have been skeptical and not trusting of traditional models of the entertainment industry. I never got a manager.

  • There's a lot of dopes in life, and in film school. The interesting people are usually easy to find.

  • I'll go to see movies, but I also love being at home on my couch and pausing every 10 minutes to pee.

  • Abbott and Costello were huge for me as a very young person.

  • The idea of trust-fund guys who live in Brooklyn in their 30s is really interesting to me. There's a time and a place where that kind of bohemian lifestyle is appropriate, soon after college, in your 20s. But there are people still living that many years later; they haven't evolved to the next phase.

  • A good example of a lyric that makes me laugh but might not hit anybody right away is, "Sit behind the guitar and play the chords," just because it's such a lame image. It's not rock'n'roll at all to be sitting behind a guitar.

  • A lot of movies aren't intended for everybody.

  • I was in a band in high school and college and I always had a love for music, but I didn't go to a conservatory or anything like that. I was fairly self-taught.

  • I think there's a fine, healthy tradition of, you know, the people on the fringes satirizing the process of Hollywood.

  • My dad is a very quick-witted, sarcastic, dry, humorous guy, whereas my mom's very silly, and that side of the family is very musical."

  • I always liked records that didn't explain themselves too well - ones that you had to listen a few times.

  • I feel like when you do Twitter, sometimes you just have an idea and you fire it off and don't really think too hard about the consequences of that. I think my reputation there is as a comedian and not someone to be taken seriously. But I like the idea of getting out false information and just muddying up the story and making it as confusing and, you know, schizophrenic as possible.

  • I sort of fell out of new music. I'm old, I like what I like, and that's that.

  • I think comedy has to come from a real place. It has to come from an honest place.

  • I think the great sketch shows, like 'Python' and 'Mr. Show,' they didn't stick around for very long. There's something kind of cool about that.

  • I think, you know, I'm German, and um, probably not very expressive in my emotions.

  • I'm a little bit of an amateur political junkie.

  • In the world of 'Tim and Eric,' everything is big and ridiculous and absurd.

  • Nobody hates hipsters more than hipsters.

  • On movies, you have a lot of stylists that get things too pretty. Everything gets steamed and ironed. It's just not the way we really behave.

  • The scariest thing about screening a comedy if you screen a drama, you know, there's no real way to tell in real time if people are enjoying it or not. But in a comedy, it's like, if people aren't laughing, it's sort of scary.

  • There's probably some buried conservative inside of me, coming out like a little gremlin in my belly that I've suppressed. This is a sort of character I've done before: He's kind of dumb and he's kind of arrogant, and a little seedy. A little coke-y. He's gotten into the cocaine or he's had too much coffee. It's been pretty fun. Not all the songs are like that but it sort of creeps in there.

  • We, the comics that we like, we're all, like, post-humor.

  • Well, I love Bob Dylan, let's make that clear. He's one of my musical heroes.

  • When anything doesn't hit with a huge laugh, as comics, it feels like, Oh no, oh no, we're sinking.

  • When I was in college in Philly, there was a lot of post-punks hardcore like, rock. Sixties, retro, proto-Strokes kind of bands.

  • When you get older your dad becomes this other man rather than a scary man, and you have a friendship.

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