Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lewis Black’s as angry as ever, but his blood pressure is just fine

- BY RODNEY HO NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

ATLANTA — Comic Lewis Black is so defined by his anger that he was literally cast as Anger in the 2015 animated hit “Inside Out.”

But get this: The 70-yearold stand-up has normal blood pressure and takes no medication­s related to it.

“My blood pressure is spectacula­r,” Black said.

One time, he said, an Esquire reporter gave him blood pressure tests after went on a rant or two. It took all of three minutes for his blood pressure to bounce back to normal.

“I think it helps that I let it all out on stage,” he said. (He now does about 120 dates a year.)

Black has good genes and could be around a few more decades: Both his parents are alive and well at age 100.

And after 15-plus years doing theater tours, he can afford to provide them both 24/7 care. His mother knits and does puzzles. His dad loves watching golf “although he never played,” he said.

Black is not invincible. He suffered severe pneumonia in Ireland in 2017 and spent 10 days in the hospital. Care was great, he said. But what astounded him was the (relatively) modest bill: $8,500. He figured it would have cost at least $45,000 or more in America.

“My insurance company just got away with murder,” he said. “And they still made me pay part of it.”

And like any good comic, he was happy to suffer for his art: “At least it was good for my act.”

Black also continues to make occasional appearance­s on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” something he has done since 1996 when Craig Kilborn was host. And he deliberate­ly does rants that have nothing to do with politics.

For instance, earlier this month, Black vented about

electric scooter-sharing apps.

“You can get to you destinatio­n five minutes earlier and all you have to do is give up your dignity!” he groused. He marvels that in one city, he saw the scooters just scattered around sidewalks, not even docked anywhere. “That’s not sharing!” he opined. “That’s littering!”

He said during his current stand-up show, he deliberate­ly avoids mentioning Donald Trump by name. “He is mentioned way too much already,” he said.

But that doesn’t mean he’s not ticked by the state of affairs. His current tour is called “The Joke’s On You,” and he describes what’s going on as “epic insanity.”

While Black has always had bones to pick with both Democrats and Republican­s (and believe me, he’s as sick of Chuck Schumer as he is Mitch McConnell), his animus is currently more directed at those who are in power.

“You’re selling out so cheap,” he said of Congress. “Don’t you have any sense of leadership, any sense of dignity? Your whole thing is to just come out there and continue to hold his hand and pretend it’s not happening.”

While he sees societal progress, he sometimes feels like it’s two steps forward, three steps back — “and we’re putting on the Depends.”

Black is working on a new comedy special though he’s not sure where it will land.

For now, he hopes to dial back his travel and stand-up dates and focus more on writing. Right now, he has a one-man play in mind and a book.

 ?? PHOTO BY DAN STEINBERG/INVISION/AP ?? Lewis Black, from left, Bill Hader and Amy Poehler attend the Los Angeles premiere of “Inside Out” at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles. Black did the voiceover for Anger in the Disney-Pixar animated feature in 2015.
PHOTO BY DAN STEINBERG/INVISION/AP Lewis Black, from left, Bill Hader and Amy Poehler attend the Los Angeles premiere of “Inside Out” at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles. Black did the voiceover for Anger in the Disney-Pixar animated feature in 2015.

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