As I’m a huge Howard Stern fan, I’m also a fan of Artie’s, so, duh, of course I read this book. Like his other two books, which I’ve read and enjoyed, this book was also a memoir. Only this one focused more on his gambling habits. I always knew he loved gambling but in this book he really got into the psychology behind it and how that love of gambling has more or less shaped his entire life. The reason he gambles so much is astonishingly simple: he hates being bored. Which means that if his life is normal, if he has, say, a regular job on the biggest radio show on the planet that has him on a set routine, he gets bored so he has to ramp up the action, which often results in him losing work, like he did with the Stern Show. Other people look at it as Artie fucking up, as him blowing a HUGE opportunity, which he admits is definitely what it is - he’s blown huge opportunities, but he’s also gotten to a point in his life where he’s accepted the fact that this is just how he is: he needs action. Also, he enjoys challenging himself. He likes digging a hole to see how and/or if he can get out of it. So, according to this mentality, he got himself fired from the Stern Show just to see whether he could survive without it. And son of a bitch, he did. His career might not be as big as it was on Howard, BUT he’s still working, he’s still relevant, and he still continues to dig himself out of the holes he’s gotten himself into. When you stop and think about it, it’s self-destructive, sure, but it’s also pretty impressive. I mean, to knowingly fuck things up just to see if you can overcome the obstacle of fucking up, well, that does take balls. A certain amount of insanity, too, of course, but it takes balls as well. Because he talked so much about gambling, he also talked a lot about his life growing up and how he got into gambling and how gambling exposed him to a seedier, more criminal side of life. A lot of what he talked about I was only marginally aware of. He talked about his time working at the port as a longshoreman on Stern but he never got that granular on the details. Like in the book he talks about how he started working as a bagman for some sort of mob outfit and how he could’ve very well gotten killed doing it. He also talked about how he used to monitor a pay phone at a diner for some car theft racket, wherein he made tens of thousands of dollars doing it. Again, it was another gig where he could’ve very well gotten arrested and killed. But Artie being Artie, he didn’t. He rehashed some old stories, too, such as when he went and did the USO tour in Afghanistan. But he did give some new details, which was interesting. He also talks a lot about how safe everything has become, comedy especially. He says that up-and-coming comedians don’t take many chances now because they don’t want to offend anybody because EVERYBODY is so easily offended, which makes Artie nuts. He thinks that comedy is supposed to be edgy and risky because that’s what makes it funny. And, in my opinion, he’s right. He equates being a stand-up to gambling: it’s supposed to be risky. Every time you take the stage, you’re gambling - will you bomb (lose) or will you kill (win)? According to Artie (and most other seasoned comics, really), the bigger risks you take, the bigger laughs you’re likely to get. Which I also agree with. That was actually one of the themes in the book - how things have changed in comedy, how nobody takes risks anymore. He sounded resentful of the comics coming up today as well as comedy acts that have, in his opinion, become safe and sanitized. Of course, he said that the Stern Show has become boring and “just bad,” though he gives no specific examples as to how, which I thought was lame. Artie also talked about how he went on a bender that resulted in him snorting salt-and-glass-filled Oxycontin, which tore the shit out of the inside of his nose, which is now permanently swollen. That just made me sad, how he can’t seem to kick his habit. But as he admits, he doesn’t think he’ll ever be permanently on the wagon. He likes the rush of being bad too much. I will say he’s gotten quite self-analytical as he gets older and he’s just given himself over to these impulses and accepted them as part of who he’ll always be. That made all of his stories of self-destruction a bit easier to take, but I still wonder where he’d be if he could just live a normal life while still being funny. Shit, maybe his lack of control is a big part of what makes him so funny. Whatever the case, I’ll continue to read Artie’s books because he’s a funny fucking guy and a hell of a storyteller.