The mom and sister money scene made me cringe in ways i havent in along time. I could not imagine something like that from my mother. My older brother is extremely well off financially and still my mom goes out of her way whenver possible to support him and help him continue to grow no matter what. To think she would ever look at myself or one of my brothers as an atm machine is pain inducing. Big yikes.
its a bit from your moms house, he's brought his mom up a few times, and its' a joke how much she asks for money, he will give her money and it's not enough even though its a substantial amount, always just a little bit more come on tommy.
@@cjbarnes2010 Because she is hispanic? no dude, old school Hispanic moms do not gamble the money their kids give them. they use the money for the House not even for them
@HealthHorror Shane is my favorite comedian, I think he’s the funniest guy alive rn, but his closeness to the Rogansphere has me anticipating him to suck any minute now. I’m bracing for it.
Segura never struggled. He was a rich kid which is why he could afford to pursue this career. His dad laid his rent for a full year and was a investment manager for Merrill Lynch. When his obituary came out the details in it were pretty telling as to how much wealth Tom Segura grew up with and had access to it during his 'struggle.'
A good subset of rich people love to pretend they're poor. Then you find out their parents were loaded, that they were driven to school in a Bentley, that they had their fake struggle life bought for them with a safety net underneath, and suddenly their Joe the Plumber persona goes out the window.
@@thebunsenburner Like Billy Burr. Watching his comedy you'd say that he struggled since his childhood, and when he craps on his father, but the reality is that his father was a dentist and his mother a nurse and they lived in the safe suburbs of Boston. Not rich, but well-off. The only time that he "struggled" is when he worked in warehouses or a few days roofing in July.
@@julianyo7072 Bill Burr has never pretended to not be from that kind of upbringing though. He's candidly talked about that aspect of it, suburbs of Boston. His family was well off, but not lavishly rich or anything. Also understand the hardships families were facing in general that era with massive inflation but I know not of his families full story for sure.
That is what the well-offs call "starting out with two empty hands" - and anyone complaining about the degree to which the well-offs are huffing their own farts are "losers" that "need to change their mindset". They seem to lack any understanding for the fact that hearing about their "tenth Rolex" or their "sixth house" is not entertainment - it's listening to bragging. The notion that anyone NOT able to call a Rolex an "affordable treat" are losers is ridiculous. If all it took to wade in money was "mindset" and "work hard", half of us would be rich. The whole rant about "stop being a loser" is like he's talking to someone with a pile of cash comparable to his, that is a bit "down in the dumps". No real understanding of how most people will never be ANYWHERE near regarding any Rolex as "affordable" no matter what hyped up "mindset" they adopt. Idiot, pure and simple.
But all he ever shares is how he lived in his car for a couple of weeks when first getting to LA. No matter how much help a famous person had, they only tell you about the one short time they struggled. They don't realize that some of us struggle for decades, no matter what we do.
Eeh, I watch everything Tom puts out and I cant say ive ever heard him brag. He's been excited and joyful over his expensive shit for sure, but that isnt bragging.
I had a friend like Tom. We would always joke around and both made each other laugh by saying things that were obviously over the top. Then one day, I realized he actually wasn’t playing a character of sorts like I was, he was actually just a terrible person and a pos.
Dude yes lol. You don’t realize it when you aren’t this personality type, but there are so many people that LOVE feeing better than others. Toms first class plane joke was a huge red flag. My dad has been a hardworking entrepreneur my whole life, made good money but worked everyday. One time we went to a colts game and got upgraded to first class. I can not tell you the shame I felt sitting first class and watching the people walk to the commercial seats.
@dutchplanderlinde8883 it almost feels like watching someone slowly slide into multiple personality disorder.. my brother has been sliding in that direction since he was teenager. the change is pretty much complete at this point. the character has become the dominant personality.
Just cause you had rich parents doesn’t mean you weren’t a struggling comedian? It’s always people with retarded parents angry that someone had a couple good ones to raise them right
They all do now because it makes for a better story. Everyone was a shy introvert who grew up poor with abusive parents and used to get in trouble a lot from feeling lonely. Then boom, one day they are super positive and wealthy because they "changed their mindset". Everyone has the same story these days.
Tell that to the kid flipping burgers behind the counter who walks to work, is covered in acne and has alcoholic parents, “just change the way you think bro”, wow, I never thought of that gee thanks! Tom pulls away in Lamborghini lol
No he’s completely right. If someone talking about money sends you into a rage or makes you feel bad. That is your problem to fix. You should be able to feel happy poor, rich whatever, and if you feel angry at the world when you are poor, news flash money isn’t going to change that. It’s just something else that’s going to make you angry or sad. Stop blaming other people. You’re messaging a famous rich person saying waaah I’m not famous and rich. Lie boohoo. You wouldn’t say that to a movie star or a CEO would you? These people are making that much money…. Why are you mad at their success? You thought they were your bros and would share?
I used to cringe at these kind of “manifest” type of comments coming from rich celebrities when I was struggling to make ends meet. I was so poor that I knew how much money I had in the bank to the cent because it was hardly anything at all. I went through a breakup, the apartment building I lived in caught on fire (making it uninhabitable to live in, suddenly making us homeless in the course of an hour), and I was working two jobs to stay afloat. Thankfully, a friend allowed me to stay at his parents’s house in their guest bedroom and his mother never accepted a dime from me for the time I spent there while I was trying to figure things out. My anxiety levels were high, my outlook was pretty hopeless, I felt like an utter failure and I didn’t have the luxury of family with any sort of disposable income to bail me out. Then I had a life changing incident happen. I was involved in a freak car accident where I somehow miraculously survived with no major injuries. Even though my car was totaled, the fact that I survived and didn’t require hospitalization (I had no medical insurance) and I escaped with just a few scratches and bruises, I felt like I won the lottery. I had never thought about what an incredible gift I had by being alive, mentally and physically sound. I took it for granted, but it was a huge turning point for me. I kept replaying all of the ways the accident could have turned out, including losing a limb, becoming paralyzed, dying, or at the very least, incurring thousands of dollars in medical bills that I would have to pay off for the next few decades. Suddenly, my troubles were put in perspective. It made me reevaluate everything I had and I began to see the blessings I had that were always there, but because of my conditioning, I always wanted more. This heightened sense of gratitude made me appreciative of the smallest things and because I felt blessed every morning I had a new day to live my life, my attitude began to change. I became more driven to find my purpose and to follow my dreams instead of just settling for a life of uninspired mediocrity. I also developed a mindset that as long as I was working toward my goal, that all of the hardship along the way was simply part of the journey for someone like me with no money, no influence, not powerful network. And it became so clear that all I had to do was not give up. I began reading biographies of great artists that inspired me, even figures I didn’t personally have a big attachment to, but because these books were readily available in the public library system for free. Nearly every single one of these people faced the kind of obstacles in the beginning of their chosen paths that could have been a deterrent but they stayed the course and eventually, they got lucky by meeting someone willing to help them out and give them a chance, no matter how small it was. It was the fuel I needed to stay the course and to be able to persevere past all of the negative aspects that would have probably seemed like it was too much to deal with before I had this newfound gratitude that empowered me to stay the course. I can’t stress how important it was to have a clear vision of what I wanted for myself. And I developed small, achievable and measurable goals. I also gave myself the permission to dream big, to be audacious and ridiculous in my desires. Prior to the accident, I would have been ashamed to be so bold. After the accident, I felt like the only person who was going to believe in me was myself and I had to really and truly Pat myself on the back and encourage myself to continue moving forward. Suddenly, it seemed like I was meeting people who responded to what I was doing and their encouragement was validating as I continued taking baby steps. I stopped being so hard on myself, stopped overthinking everything and talking myself out of good ideas (or ideas that sounded ridiculous). I even started to think of what’s the best thing that could happen, instead of the worst thing. Adjusting my mental attitude and believing in myself made the journey really fun and exciting. Things started working out for me. The universe was starting to reward me, best of all, I felt like I was moving forward and after a while, I was meeting the kind of people, living the kind of life, and becoming the type of person I could only dream of in the pre-accident days when my mindset was so negative and so full of pessimistic outcomes. I became a lot more self aware and was willing to put in the work to improve my weaknesses. And I now look back at that accident with a different perspective. Perhaps it was a gift from the universe to teach me a valuable lesson that corrected my way of being self-defeating and not having much confidence in myself. I continue to set new goals and raise the bar a little higher and the younger version of myself would probably be surprised at how far I’ve come along. So I can vouch for how important having a positive mental attitude can have in how others perceive you and react to you and in turn, the energy you put out influences the energy you attract. I’m very thankful for that lesson and how it made me realize how blessed I truly am. I hope maybe this can spark just enough motivation for you to do what is necessary to create your own path in becoming the person you’ve always wanted to be. 🙏
@@drowninginI do agree with you that mindset matters I just think in a lot of ways, we’ve hit a massive wealth inequality and it’s harder for people to make time for themselves. That being said. Sometimes you really just have to make time for important things however you can. It’s paradoxical
Which makes what Toms saying true. If you are unhappy and sad when you are poor, getting money won’t change that. Why are you mad at him? You’re getting sad at other’s success… like bro that’s a character defect you need to fix
@@drowninginjust because money doesn’t change people, doesn’t mean people working full time should have to struggle. There’s a difference people are just pointing out that he’s always had a silver spoon
"Stop demanding that other people accommodate your feelings. Because when you talk shit about me it makes me upset and I demand that you stop" - Tom Segura, unironically.
@@mrpb6399 some display traits that make them easier to make fun of than others. By acting so full of himself and seemingly having no sense of self-awareness about it, he displays some of those traits. By doing so, he seems like a bigger target for comedians than the average person. Get it? Jesus
Really good video man, nice job. I couldnt agree more. I used to love Tom Segura but Ive been done with his stuff for a few yrs now. He gives me 100% douche chills.
@@blakefletcher8052 have you been paying attention to Tom over the last few yrs? You watch 69 min special. No bit, the guy turned into a pretentious asshole unfortunately. Used to be funny and down to earth. It's no bit man. Go down the rabbit hole.
Let's not forget that Tom literally grew up fairly rich. Large family, dad was high up in a corporation, family trips across the world, his story if being in the hospital costing his dad 30 grand and laughing about it. He's always lived in a bubble.
So….? Because he didn’t grow up in the hood or the trailer park, he…what? Owes you something ? Is being poor as a kid required to be a good person or to be funny? If you weren’t poor as a kid, can you get everybody off your ass by paying some kind of social justice wealth equalization penalty or something?
@@invictusbp1prop143at the very least, you don't have the ground to lecture other people who do not have the benefit of your support system. NOBODY in these comments is saying any of these people should give their money away. Everybody is saying he sounds ridiculous.
@@invictusbp1prop143the point is that he's rich and grew up in a rich house yet pretend to have grown up poor and struggling trying to relate to people have genuinely been through trouble.
The thing I dislike the most about these "just change your mind set" people is they are lying by omission. While it's true that most if not all successful people have a good mind set, their success hinders on so many other factors that saying all you need to do is change the way you think just isn't true.
What sucks is he’ll never see why this is just gross. Because his fans will just keep showing up, no matter how much he looks down on them. What a shame, makes me appreciate guys like Theo Von even more
I thought it was a podcast thing that made me stop liking Tom. He used to be my favorite because of his unpredictable and dark humor. Obviously, there's more that to it than just shity podcasting. He's lost touch and is kind of a bitch now.
I rarely watch any of them now, more just these channels making me laugh at their stupidity I felt before i realized I should stop watching these goons
Yea literally loved Tommy till this episode of two bears tbh. I don't care if he's rich, or im not. I just feel you don't shit on your audience. He just benefits from being in the comedy scene and can either lean in and make it a joke or when back lash hits play it off as a joke anyways lol. I'm genuinely happy he made it, but to dance on the people holding you up is trash behavior imo
It never fails to amaze me how money so often makes people out-of-touch. It's like they get a taste of it and completely forget what life was like before the money. It really is baffling.
He was humbled by insecurities back then, but he came from money. It didn't change him, his success and popularity did. It convinced him that people will love him for anything, even his shitty side he tried to hide pre-success.
To be fair, it's mostly an act. She's "content" and another chance for Tommy to show off how much money he can throw over his shoulder without stopping to count it. "Oh, this is what you make in a month, YOU FUCKING LOSER? Figure your shit out. Seriously!" Okay, Segura. Keep on doin' you. I won't be watching any of the shit you crap into the world, brother.
There are many comedians who are just sick individuals that go into standup to be able to openly share their sickness and then just say its all a joke and their job when anyone complains. This way they feel justified about their sickness because people's laughter enables it.
I’m so glad to see someone make a video on this!! I used to LOVE Tom; and the podcast. But in the last 2 years they ONLY seem to talk about their wealth. And the problem is that it’s not interesting & he has lost his likability, it’s not funny or interesting the way they go on about things that they buy/can afford. He’s a worse comedian for all his wealth and THAT’S the problem, not that ppl are jealous 🙄🙄!!
That “documentary” looked so self congratulatory, which is embarrassing!!!. The sad thing is his fans were happy to see him doing really well. I/we just miss when he was actually funny 🤷♀️
@@migzydrift What's crazy is Bobby Lee heard he was moving to Austin and told him he is just following the cult mindset and it will blow up in his face. Bobby stayed in LA.
The phrase "you're in control of your own situation" is really one of the stupidest things I've ever heard. You really have to be lost up your own arse to think your success is entirely your own doing.
The section from 1:33 is crazy projection. "You're being bitter. You're petty. You're insecure. You're not confident." These are the things Tom comes across as is his out of touch moments lol.
Imagine being extravagantly wealthy because people pay to hear your jokes and flaunting your wealth during a recession then shitting on people for expressing how it's salt in the wound during an already hard time
Tom comes from money, so he can't relate to that sort of struggle. This doesn't take away from his hard work as a comedian ( though I don't rate his standup as good as you and some others do ) but he's never seemed like the type of guy I would like to be around, and has gotten only even more unlikeable over time.
Doesn't Rogan tell a story about Tim Allen ruining his career by telling "jokes" about his Ferrari breaking down or similar? Maybe he should tell it to Tom. Edit: that bit with his family was so gross
When people get rich and famous and their ego gets boosted and they only have yes men around them, they will just start looking down on anyone that’s not rich and famous like them…
I unsubscribed from YMH last year cause of stuff like that. They're disconnected, forget what it's like to be poor and struggle, and forget that we live in a capitalist hellscape where 1% own most of the wealth because of gross income inequality, but sure... mock people struggling.
He was born into money. the only reason Charo doesnt have any money is because Tom's dad passed who was a vice president of Merril Lynch, a Wealth Management division of Bank of America. just seems to me Tom was born into a well to do household. hes never been an average person. he maybe got to make the decision to be average at some points. but he did not start off with the same hand as many of us are dealt
He's in a really weird space, popular enough to have people watch his specials and see him live, but not popular enough to be publicly cancelled for his narcissism. I don't see him or Bert going broke anytime soon, but I could see their pods turning into TFATK.
You can support whoever you want, I was just more saying that they're not really mainstream, they have a loyal fanbase, and probably wouldn't get cancelled. Feel free to support who you want to, personally it's not my thing listening to people talk about how much poor people (people making an average income) suck, and how hard it is to be rich. Or how the their listeners have "pedestrian brains" ... like you're born a comic and it's impossible to develop a sense of humor. I find it gross.@@robertraymond762
Bert could afford to waste his time at a fucking UNIVERSITY partying for like 7 years and get away with it. When I saw how much it'd be to go to a university, I nearly threw up and applied to a CC immediately. Yeah, I'd say he was well off, too.
For me, it's really sad to see whats happening to Tom Segura and the way people are turning on him. But the saddest part about it is that he can't see fundamentally why people are turning on him. It's not because he has more money now. It's because he is phoning it in with both his comedy and podcasting. People can forgive arrogance very easily, as long as you can back it up with genuine talent or competence (Dave Chappelle is the obvious example). Tom is in the unfortunate position of gaining more money but becoming worse at his craft, and being in this position makes it easy for people to say "money has went to his head", "he was better when he was fat" etc. I think podcasting is to blame for most of it. Being forced to speak for hours every week, you end up sharing more than you probably should with the world. Everyone brags, but most people aren't being broadcast to millions of people when they do it. 2 Bears especially has turned into a weekly dick swinging contest between Tom and Bert, and that gets really old after a while. I have no doubt that he will continue to sell out arenas, but I think a lot of the fans that were there from the start will continue to be disappointed. Feels like we are laughing at him now, rather than laughing with him.
@@ChadFarthouse-h8rexplain why, or your comment is automatically wrong by default. Not doing this shit anymore. Explain your reasoning when you make a point, if you can’t do that then you don’t have one.
I can't handle their demeanor of clearly feeling like they are special and rich and super comfortable. The way they move slowly like they are playing a role of someone royal. Some comedians still act modest like Mark Normand. But Rogan, Bert, Segura, etc all act like they are superior beings that everyone needs to listen to.
Rich people think everyone and anyone can just do something to make millions if they simply “get out there and work hard.” Unfortunately, that’s just not reality for most. This type of elitism is a big turn off to me. Some comedians can get away with it at times, like Daniel Tosh, but most comedians cannot do it in a fun, witty way.
I loved his comedy and then I saw him and Rogan talking about shooting homeless people. Notice that I said talking , not joking. They also were shocked that you aren't allowed to take their stuff, like, you actually think they deserve human rights. Can't watch either of them now without thinking about it and it completely ruins the comedy for me.
@@lauramitchemkennedy4705 Can't tell you exactly but it was in the last 6 months so I doubt it would be hard to find. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-E7-DAkUAwdk.html&ab_channel=bigSky406 I did it for ya.
@@Finnegeas Yet I was left with the impression he was advocating shooting homeless people at a time when someone was actually doing that, The fact that later he changed his mind is not OK when people like me were not there to hear it, just like the nut who hears him and decides to do something about it. Rogan throws his monkey brain around and doesn't understand that his uninformed opinions cause real harm.
Yeah, talking about driving homeless people to an island and drowning them was what turned me off. But they can go far into their real thoughts and then suddenly laugh and say "we're just kidding guys." But a thoughtful person never shares such a thought out loud.
I love Tom's comedy. This video opened my eyes to a side of him I didn't know about. What a douche, and I'm super glad I didn't pay for those tickets when I went to see him.
Yeah dude I’m with you on that. Don’t know why this guy gets props for being a good comic. I assume it’s because the other Joe Rogan tier comedians are so trash this guy kinda looks decent in comparison.
Honeslty, I understood where he was coming from with people messaging him about money. But the Garth Brookes joke is getting crazy cringe at this point. A grown man trolling at that level is wild as hell and is very off putting.
And what sane, healthy minded man even considers talking about showering with your son and touching his penis? That tells you a lot about Tom. The fact that he had this idea in the first place and then decided to share it publicly. He'll say "dude! I'm a comedian. Its a joke!" But they don't realize these jokes come from their thoughts and some thoughts are sick.
Yes, Tom was never poor. His dad was vice president of Merrill Lynch, enough said. He went to the private Lenoir-Rhyne University, a 41k a year school. Typical rich kid youth, speeding around in a new cars (he loves cars), overdosing on GHB, partying like crazy, any problems just send the bill to daddy. He detests the poor because that's the way he was raised. The whole "everyday guy slub" style, he took that from Louie and incorporated in his act. Showbiz is all act folks, if you don't know by now, geez.
You dropped the. All on this by not mentioning that most of the those comedians in Rogan's circle grow up with rich parents like Segure, Kreischer, D'Elia, Callen, Schaub etc.. It's easy making a living by coming up with jokes when daddy pays the rent. Bill Burr is someone who really had to grind for 15 years to become famous, he didn't need Joe Rogan to prop him up.
I can’t think of a more boring topic than what a person has bought or what they plan to buy. Also, those documentary snippets are giving off some serious Garth vibes. Is it possible that was intentional? If not… yikes.
Segura literally joked on his podcast how he wants to get a van and go pick up all the local homeless people by telling them he has a paradise island he can take them to. Then he drives them to the beach and just drowns them. This isn't a funny image. It's not a good joke. It's insight into his sickness, that he hides as a "joke".
Just because tom couldnt make a good joke about murdering hobos doesnt mean you cant make a good joke about murdering hobos. A lot of humor is saying things you you shouldnt say
@@rockyevans1584 But I, with sound mind, would never be a wealthy comedian and ever consider getting laughs off of the suffering of others. Homelessness is a huge issue in the US. If you are rich and living the comfy life then don't make light of those who don't have the same comforts as you have been gifted with. That is very thoughtless of something very sensitive in our current society. I understand telling a funny story about meeting a homeless person and the weirdness that unfolded but to joke that they are like insects is not funny.
@@HealthHorror see my first reply again. That was a quick circle fella, but if you get on your high horse over something like the subject matter of jokes it makes me wonder what you're over compensating for
I have seen him get pretty caught up in being rich. He def lives a very very privileged lifestyle, enjoys things because they are expensive and hangs out with people because their famous. But I think most of these clips are just him joking. It’s a very thick and deep sarcasm and he doesn’t reveal it right after, but to me I think it’s obvious. He’s playing the douchebag just like he played a psychopath. Revisit when he was pretending to be mad at Nadav. The same exact energy, it’s funny to him to fully commit to the bit. If you watch any behind the scenes clips from his tour he is extremely generous to all of his employees and others. Very very humble. I think you guys are just falling for the bit
Sledgehammer was one of the worst performances I’ve ever witnessed. I felt like I was watching an extended version of Gringo Papi. Tom, Bert, Schaub and all the Rogan clones are destroying comedy. The popularity of their comedy clearly represents the dumbing down of society.
Tommy could be the first "exclusive" comedian doing small clubs at 10,000$ a seat...that way he'll be surrounded by a handful of positive rich people without any exposure to poor negative people...
Tom is right about you being in control of how you react to whats being said. What he doesn't understand is he's not funny anymore, specifically because all he talks about is materialistic things instead of being funny.
It's an odd one. I found those comments pretty crappy from him and also kind of embarrassing for a comedian to be that butt hurt. I don't think it makes you a "loser" to bounce off those comments a bit. Watching them talking about money unfunnily isn't great content. Just like his cringey documentary
Great point. I do believe people have choices, but free will has many limitations. After all, no matter what , at the end of the day, a M----- F----'s got to eat!!!
I stopped watching these 2 bc they are arrogant. I like cars, drive a nice one and have had a Rolex, but I find people that talk about these things incessantly as self-indulgent.
talking about money and possessions is just uncouth. I get what hes saying about a conversation but hes literally doing a show. Its not a conversation that people are stumbling upon. Someone like Howard Stern has more money that any of them combined but youll never here him talk about money or houses or cars because he just wants to do a good show and he knows its not something everyone has.
What we're seeing now are the horrible seeds growing, planted in him by his abhorrent grifter mother. He went from being relatable and grounded to getting a huge ego. The 'Fluff behind the scenes piece clip says everything you need to know, while being the definition of the word Cringe.
I think comedians are a bit different to other artists in some ways. You can become very famous and wealthy as an actor or even a musician and it doesn't have to negatively impinge on the art you're making. But with stand up comedians, their whole thing has to be relatable to normal people in the audience. Most people can't relate to them buying Rolexes or their house servants being uppity. And I think this is why many of them don't tend to last long when they reach the top. Some go on tremendous self destructive binges, like Richard Pryor did, and that stuff can be mined for laughs that normal people find funny. Overweight comedian gets fit, works out and buys expensive watches and cars has very little comic potential. Tom and Bert need to get stuck into some crack if they're going to remain funny.
"Love of cars" yea you know the names but that's about it. I understand people can buy whatever they want but I hate when dudes like Joe and Tom act like car guys when in reality they couldn't even turn a wrench or do a basic oil change but yea total car guys.
I don't get it, I've never thought that Rogans pets are funny. Bert without a shirt is cringe af, Segura at best is ehhhh okay I guess? These guys arent great comedians I mean Tom is above the rest of them but overall Tony Hinchcliff is sooo much better than any of them. Oh how I miss Carlin...
Bro was never broke. His family has always had money. It takes money to make money. And his mommy and daddys money help him get to were he is. Along with siad fans