George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing

E78624

George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing is a 2005 stand-up comedy special in which George Carlin delivers dark, incisive social commentary and observational humor on topics like death, addiction, and modern society.


Statements (46)
Predicate Object
instanceOf stand-up comedy special
television special
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: "United States"
director Rocco Urbisci
distributor HBO
features black comedy
observational humor
social commentary
followedBy George Carlin: It's Bad for Ya
follows George Carlin: Complaints and Grievances
genre stand-up comedy
hasPart A Modern Man
Coast-to-Coast Emergency
Extreme Human Behavior
Life Is Worth Losing (closing bit)
Rights in America
Suicide Guy
The All-Suicide Channel
Three Little Words
You Have No Rights
location New York City
mainTheme American culture
addiction
consumerism
death
modern society
religion
suicide
medium television
notableFor critique of American rights and freedoms
dark treatment of death and suicide themes
originalLanguage English
originalNetwork HBO
partOf late-career George Carlin specials
partOfSeries George Carlin HBO specials
performer George Carlin
producer HBO
publicationDate 2005
recordedAt Beacon Theatre
releaseFormat DVD
television broadcast
runtime approximately 74 minutes
starring George Carlin
tone dark humor
satire
writer George Carlin

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

George Carlin: It's Bad for Ya follows George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing
George Carlin notableWork George Carlin: Life Is Worth Losing

Please wait…