Talking to Jim Norton About Heckling, Canada and His New Talk Show on VICE
photo by Matthew CopeJim Norton’s unapologetic views on comedians’ right to free speech was an important talking point in his keynote address at the Just For Laughs festival this year, so it comes as no surprise that his willingness to embrace controversy has landed him a talk show on VICE. It’s quite an experiment not only for Norton, but for VICE, as well, who have yet to dabble in the format until now. We caught up with Norton in Montreal to talk about the new show, Canada, why hecklers are so awful and more.
Paste: I saw the first episode of your VICE Show and I really enjoyed it.
Jim Norton: Thank you.
Paste: How does writing for a talk show compare to writing new stand-up material? Is it just you writing for the show or are other people in the mix? How much preparation goes into writing the show?
Norton: I did a lot of writing for it. Kurt Metzger wrote for it. A guy named Jesse Joyce and a guy named John Kennedy helped with the monologue. We had a couple of writers but we were all kind of throwing it together because Vice has never done a talk show and I’ve never done a talk show. So we were just kind of feeling it out as we went along. But they gave me a lot of creative control. They didn’t edit my jokes. They didn’t bother with my monologues. No, “don’t do this” or “don’t do that.” They were really great so it’s been fun. I love interviewing people and there’s another one coming out this week where I interview a guy named Freeway Rick. He’s the original Rick Ross who was a drug dealer in the ‘80s.
Paste: Wow, that’s very VICE.
Norton: It is very VICE. It was great. I talked to him in front of a live audience and we had a very good interview. He’s a fascinating guy.
Paste: How did you choose your co-host, Bailey Jay? I ‘d never heard of her before and then I looked her up. She’s got an interesting background.
Norton: Bailey is a transsexual porn star and she’s a friend of mine. I know her and her husband. I met them on a podcast that Robert Kelly did and she was a fan. I mean, I know the world of porn and I know a lot of people in it. We just became very friendly and I got along with her and her husband so well. Then when I was doing Opie and Anthony she’d come on once in awhile. People think that our audience is so hardcore, like ‘I’m homophobic,’ but they love Bailey.
Paste: Yes, in the first episode, Mike Tyson is open about his attraction to her. It was surprising.
Norton: Yeah a lot of men are attracted to her and it’s funny because you know, Bailey is so great and a lot of transsexual girls make you question what you thought you understood about yourself. Like, ‘Wow, I really am attracted to somebody I didn’t think I could be or didn’t think I would be.’ But she’s not on the show as a sideshow. She’s legitimately funny and really bright. I had an advice show that I did on the Opie and Anthony channel where people would just call in for addiction advice or whatever and whenever Bailey came on she’d give great sexual advice. The listeners loved her. So when I did this show on VICE.com, I wanted her to be a part of it. I would like to utilize her more, but in the first four episodes she’s kind of the co-host and she introduces me. But they’ll be more with Bailey Jay. People demand it [laughs].
Paste: Who would you like to have on as guest in the future?
Norton: We want a tremendous amount of people. We had a hard time because we shot four episodes over two days, so people that I would love to have and that would do it couldn’t. I asked Ricky Gervais and he couldn’t because he wasn’t in New York. Seth Rogen I asked, but he wasn’t in New York. I asked Patton Oswalt…all these guys were out of town and they said, “Hey the week after I can do it,” but we weren’t shooting. There’s a million guys I would love to have on. Mike Tyson was the one I really wanted though, and both him and Dana White did tremendous favors by flying in. They were great together because they’re friends and Dana loves Mike. It was a fun a conversation.
Paste: Mike Tyson was surprisingly soft spoken.
Norton: I’ve interviewed him before on radio and he was really sweet. The more you talk to him, the more you realize that the perception about this guy is not what you thought it was. He’s more easily affected, more easily wounded by things than you think, just like we all are. He’s not that much different than anybody else. There’s these weird things that you wouldn’t expect from a guy that’s been perceived as ferocious as he is.