Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0075679292520
Format: Explicit Lyrics, Live, Original recording reissued
Label: Atlantic / Wea
Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Atlantic / Wea
Release Date: September 12, 2000
Studio: Atlantic / Wea
Sales Rank: 44614
MPN: 92925
Disc 1:- Welcome to My Job
- Occupation: Foole
- White Harlem
- The Hallway Groups
- Black Consciousness
- New York Voices
- Grass Swept the Neighborhood
- Childhood Cliches
- Cute Little Farts - George Carlin, Cairln, George
- Raisin Rhetoric
- Filthy Words
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Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Early George Carlin at his best. A great thinking person's comic. I'm happy to have found a CD copy of this classic.
Rating: -
I ORDERED A CD. I PAID FOR THE ITEM. THE ITEM WAS NEVER RECEIVED.
NUMEROUS LETTERS TO THE VENDOR I HAVE NOT HAD A REPLY.
BAD CUSTOMER SERVICE. NO ITEM SHIPPED. USE THIS VENDOR AT YOU OWN RISK!
Rating: -
This routine is the way I like to remember Carlin. Timeless humour. Very funny.
Rating: -
Today George Carlin is as insightful, provocative, and hilarious as he ever was, but he's become something of a crank: on stage he's a confrontational, disillusioned old man who's shtik is that he's lost all hope in humanity. It gives his comedy a very sharp edge, and Carlin's current material is killer stuff. But some of the joy is missing.
"Occupation Foole," one of Carlin's best album of the 70s (a tough call between this and "Class Clown"), reveals a very different comedian. His bits on jobs, drugs, and growing up in New York are filled with sharp observations and huge laughs. Carlin's precision and timing are excellent here (as they still are today), but it's Carlin's delight in his fellow human beings that may surprise some ... Read More:
Rating: -
Today George Carlin is as insightful, provocative, and hilarious as he ever was, but he's become something of a crank: on stage he's a confrontational, disillusioned old man who's shtik is that he's lost all hope in humanity. It gives his comedy a very sharp edge, and Carlin's current material is killer stuff. But some of the joy is missing.
"Occupation Foole," one of Carlin's best album of the 70s (a tough call between this and "Class Clown"), reveals a very different comedian. His bits on jobs, drugs, and growing up in New York are filled with sharp observations and huge laughs. Carlin's precision and timing are excellent here (as they still are today), but it's Carlin's delight in his fellow human beings that may surprise some ... Read More:
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