Dan Whitney had a pretty good comedy career, including a TV appearance on A&E’s An Evening At The Improv. But Whitney’s career as Larry the Cable Guy has been far more lucrative and longer-lasting, going on some three decades since he first started calling into radio stations as the character who still says, Git-R-Done! Larry became the breakout star from the Blue Collar Comedy Tour and its subsequent TV series, becoming the top Billboard comedy artist and touring act of the mid-2000s. He got his own Comedy Central Roast in 2009, hosted three Christmas specials for VH1 and CMT, starred in four movies as Larry, voiced a tow truck in the two animated hit Cars movies for Disney/Pixar, and hosted a History Channel show for three seasons. He continues to co-host a SiriusXM comedy channel on satellite radio with his comedy pal Jeff Foxworthy, and they put out a joint Netflix special together. He and his wife also have run the nonprofit Git-R-Done Foundation since 2009 to benefit childrens’ and veterans causes. Dan sat down with me from his kitchen in Nebraska to talk over Zoom about all of that and more, including his newest solo stand-up special, Remain Seated. So let’s get to it!
Larry the Cable Guy’s new stand-up comedy special, Remain Seated, released April 7, 2020, through the Comedy Dynamics network, their hybrid distribution system composed of Comcast, Amazon Prime Video, Spectrum, Apple TV, Dish, Google Play, DirecTV, Vimeo, YouTube and more. The album came out April 10 through SirusXM, Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Music, Pandora, Sound Cloud and more. You can read my review of his special on Decider.com.
In the course of our half-hour or so talking over Zoom, Dan tells me how comedian Tom Ryan (one of my neighbors in NYC) became his first and longest comedy buddy, about the Florida comedy scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s — telling a story about West Palm Beach clique going up to Orlando and hang with them, afterward at Denny’s, Tom Rhodes was the only working comic at the time, sitting with Jim Breuer, Chris Baker (syndicated radio host), Tom Ryan, Carrot Top, Billy Gardell, Darrell Hammond, when none of them were famous. He also goes way back with SiriusXM’s Ron Bennington, as The Ron and Ron Show syndicated out of Tampa helped spawn Larry the Cable Guy. We also reminisce about his 2009 Cornhusker Stadium gig, about how his merchandise might be the last thing to sell off the supermarket shelves during the coronavirus pandemic, about how Larry’s personality is becoming even more like Rodney Dangerfield as he ages, the recent death of his dear comedy friend Vic Henley and more.
And you can count Dan Whitney among the folks eager to get America re-opened and back to work. Of course, that’s easier to say and believe when you’ve got 180 acres to social distance in Nebraska.