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Q: You’ve talked about rap as a means to get into comedy and television. My album is going to be incredible, but it just needs the finishing touch.
LIL DICKY PROFESSIONAL RAPPER LEAK TV
With TV and comedy, the way I express my perspective naturally flows out of me easier than with music. Part of it is because I'm a perfectionist and I overthink things and I want things to be great. Even before I started working on the show, it had been, like, two or three years and no album, because it just takes me that long to make music. When I finish working on the season, I'm going to devote a large chunk of time to finishing my album.
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From writing, editing, shooting and acting, I work seven days a week, 12 hours a day. What's the status of your second album in real life?īurd: The album is being worked on, but not right now. Q: TV Dave has writers' block while working on his album.
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It's very liberating to be honest and open about it.ĭave (Dave Burd), second from right, and his manager Mike (Andrew Santino), right, talk to Korean rap star CL (playing herself), left, and her manager, Jae (Karl Yune), in the second-season premiere of FXX's "Dave." The years in my life where I didn't take my shirt off at a pool or didn't have the lights on when I'm with a girl because of body acne or my penis, that's all true. It just means the world to me, what you're doing." When people come up to me like that guy, it is meaningful. I was at a party and a guy came up to me and said, "I just want to tell you I've got a micro-penis. Everyone has insecurities, but the more we're able to cope with them and possibly even embrace them, (the better). Q: How important is it to talk about insecurity, especially masculine insecurity, in your music and "Dave"?īurd: My rap name is like literally a small penis joke, you know? This is all ingrained in the DNA of who I am. I obviously have dealt with some things in my career, so that probably inspired some of the thinking in the episode.
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I don't like offending people, but I'm sure I have in the past. Is that a reference to "White Dude," a YouTube video that you later removed?īurd: I wasn't drawing from one particular thing or another, but I'm a comedian and I put a lot of work out that can sometimes be insensitive, even though I'm a very sensitive human being. Q: In the Kareem episode, a fictional rap video from Dave's past causes him present-day heartburn. NBA and college basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, left, challenges Dave (Dave Burd) while interviewing him on FXX's "Dave." Q: What inspired the pool scene early this season in which Kendall Jenner, Hailey Bieber and Elsie Hewitt laugh at Dave's witty comments, before fooling him into thinking he might have a chance with Jenner? (Jenner's half-sister, Kourtney Kardashian, and Bieber's husband, Justin, appeared in Season 1.)īurd: I remember the first time I ever met Kendall and Hailey, we happened to be swimming and I was making a bunch of comments and they were laughing and I was feeling like, 'Oh my God, I'm being so impressive right now conversationally.' I thought that'd be a cool scene to have them in the show. We were talking about having an interview-go-wrong episode and he (came to) mind. What a life he's led, where he's the leading scorer in NBA history and then also an incredible cultural writer. Question: How did Abdul-Jabbar's appearance happen?ĭave Burd: I'm a huge fan of basketball and Kareem. Burd, 33, who's known for such songs (and videos) such as "Ex-Boyfriend" (2013), "Freaky Friday" (2018), "Earth" (2019) and his album "Professional Rapper" (2015), took time Sunday to talk about "Dave," the comedy of discomfort, handling criticism and when his second album might be arriving.