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Larry the Cable Guy

The man who add the catchphrases "Git-R-Done" and "Lord, I Apologize" to the American lexicon and draws fans by the pickup truck load to his shows has proven to be one of the most successful comics of the early 2000s. Dan Whitney, known better as Larry the Cable Guy, claims he was born in the back of an El-Camino during a Foghat concert. His drawl may sound Southern, but Larry was raised on a pig farm in Pawnee City, Nebraska. His upbringing was conservative, traditional, and church going. That didn't mean that strip-bars were out of the question when Larry reached 18 (maybe even a little earlier). Fascinated by this redneck life - "redneck" being a term he is not only fine with, but endorses - and always looking to comment on it, Larry's friends were captivated by his humorous observations and dared him to try his hand at stand-up. He did in 1986 and the fans reaction to his slow, approachable style had him hooked. Two years later, he relinquished his title as funniest bellhop at the Ramada Inn and set out for a career in comedy. His one-liner filled act soon caught word-of-mouth fire in the South and brought him to the attention of television. Appearances on Evening at The Improv and Comic Strip Live increased his fan base past rural America, but it was on the nationally syndicated Bob and Tom Show on radio that Larry got the most exposure. His success with radio continued when he became a regular on Jeff Foxworthy's Country Countdown Show and Larry soon started syndicating his "commentaries" to 14 markets across the country. Foxworthy invited the comic to join his Blue Collar Comedy Tour -- along with Bill Engvall -- in 2000. The successful tour grossed $15 million, sold more than 1 million copies when released on DVD, and turned Larry into a superstar. His debut CD, Lord, I Apologize, appeared in 2001 and has since been the Dark Side of the Moon of the comedy charts -- sticking in the top 20 for two years running. In 2002, a Comedy Central airing of Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie became the network's highest-rated movie in its 12-year history, even with the DVD widely available. Larry the Cable Guy: Git-R-Done became his first solo DVD in 2003 and a year later, Larry, Foxworthy, and Engvall would turn their tour into the highly-rated television show Blue Collar TV. Wearing his redneckness as a badge of honor while hating political correctness and racism equally made Larry a hard target for detractors, but he made news with a 2004 appearance on the morning talk show, The View. Clay Aiken fans bombarded the show and the comic with hate e-mail when the comic declared, "I'm on the Clay Aiken diet. That's where you pop in a Clay Aiken CD and try to keep food down." Ignoring the "controversy", Larry spread holiday cheer at the end of the year with his new CD, A Very Larry Christmas, and appeared on Blue Collar Comedy Tour Rides Again. The Right to Bare Arms appeared in March the next year. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide
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Formed:
December 31, 1969


Url:


albums

The Right to Bare Arms
The Right to Bare Arms
released: 2005 on
Brash, politically incorrect, and "one of the dumbest shows you ever heard" according to the man himself, The Right to Bare Arms captures proud redneck Larry the Cable Guy live in Houston in front... More[+]

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Larry's an alright comic.
FULL REVIEW
posted Jul 21, 2006

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