@@ImVengeance_22I mean “I turned the 4th of July into June” June tenth is considered black folk Independence Day so there’s that … but yeah everything else was pretty straight forward 😅
I remember sneaking watching Dolemite movies and listening to moms albums😄😄😄kids my age couldn’t understand how I knew so many jokes and cuss words. RIP Dolemite 🔥🔥🔥
Most Definitely The Most Underrated Comedian ever, he Opened the Door for the X-Rated Comedian to cross over on to the regular Record Charts with the Record EAT OUT MORE OFTEN it was Top Chart Hit.
@@donrobersonethe last poets I haven't met very many people that will mention them signs of a true hip hop head take it all the way back learned about them myself thru a show on the hustlers convention truly poetry in motion
Except what they did which was laugh and clap at every punch line!!! I’ve seen several comments like yours here and I wondering are we watching the same clip Damn🙉🙊🙈 what’s wrong with y’all??? Was the volume turned down when you were watching this???
My head hurts I laughed so hard. Amazing work, we was shielded from this as kids 😂 I remember my parents sneaking to listen to this man’s material back then.
I remember listening to this stuff when i was 10 years old! Along with early Richard Pryor albums and Moms Mabley. This guy is the original dirty rapper genius comedian of ALLLLLL times! How on earth did he come up with this stuff? Eddie Murphy was RIGHT to re-do this magical character!
Dolemite !!! No one knows where the nose goes when the doors is closed !! 🤣🤣🤣 Every kneeling ain't praying !!! 🤣🤣 Dolemite was a true Comedy legend in his era !! 💯💯 He made the blue print of comedy in his era making his jokes ryme... 💯💯..Rip Mr Rudy Ray Moore !! Aka Dolemite Aged 81 ...1927 - 2008
Saw the great Rudy Ray Moore "live" twice at Club Lingerie in Hollywood back in the early 1990s and Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall were there at one of the shows with their entourages! I bought every LP and cassette he had to offer. "I ain't lying!".
The King👑, Mr. Rudy Ray Moore aka Dolomite, put it down!😂 The audience laughed, were then a little perplexed, then they caught on and laughed even more. It probably didn't air on Def Jam because of politics, smh. They did the comedian game a disservice by not showing it. I was laughing so hard just now. We have his records, a couple classic movies (Dolomite, Petey Wheat Straw, and maybe The Human Tornado), lots of records, hip-hop samples, his Arsenio Hall performance which aired live, and now Def Jam. Salute to Rudy Ray Moore.
Thank u VERY much for posting this. I FINALLY get to see Rudy Ray Moore on Def Comedy Jam. Rudy was hurt cuz it never aired. I don’t get why it didn’t air. He was just as dirty as Martin Lawrence, Bernie Mac etc.
No wonder I never heard anybody talk about Rudy Ray Moore on Def Comedy Jam! That is so sad and shameful! Too often that trailblazers like Rudy get treated so badly! His career could have been resurrected!
@anpuarcturus Deep down, I know why it didn't air. If Rudy KILLED it like Bernie, Chris Tucker, Eddie Griffith, Bill Bellamy, etc, they would've definitely aired it. He did ok but didn't do well enough 4 the producers 2 air it. Rudy was very disappointed that it didn't air cuz the guys I just mentioned are basically talkin bout what Rudy said on all those albums he made in the '70s.
@ghanasoul that's the difference between us and other races. Other people tend to recycle people when possible that paved the way for others. Comedians like Rudy Ray Moore, Tina Dixon, Leroy & Skillet, Wildman Steve, to name a few, are from a different era. It's hard to make me laugh, but I can be amused if the routine is good. I get what you are saying, but the producers were wrong in my humble opinion. Rudy Ray Moore never became a household name. Himself and others helped future Black comedians to do so.
@@ghanasoulI've seen every episode of every season, and there are many, more than 20 comedians, that got fewer laughs than Rudy Ray Moore, but there performance aired. Also, some comedians had their sets edited to hide the dead spots of their sets. Rudy Ray Moore's set should've aired. It was more about politics than anything else.
This is a the ground work of hip-hop. Show me a Latino that was rap’n before this brotha? The term rap’n is a word created by FBAs (Negros) It is not a Latino term. FACTS!! R.I.P Dolomite! You’re a Legend in the art of Rap’n✌🏾
Rudolph Frank Moore (March 17, 1927 - October 19, 2008), known as Rudy Ray Moore, was an American comedian, singer, actor, and film producer. He created the character Dolemite, the pimp from the 1975 film Dolemite and its sequels, The Human Tornado and The Dolemite Explosion (aka The Return of Dolemite). The persona was developed during his early comedy records The recordings often featured Moore delivering profanity-filled rhyming poetry, which later earned Moore the nickname "the Godfather of Rap." Actor and comedian Eddie Murphy portrayed Moore in the 2019 film Dolemite Is My Name. Early life Moore was born and raised in the Johnson House on 1400 North 12th Street in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and eventually moved to Akron, Ohio, and then Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In Milwaukee, he preached in churches and worked as a nightclub dancer.[6] He returned to Akron, working in clubs as a singer, dancer, and comedian, often appearing in character as Prince DuMarr. He joined the US Army and served in an entertainment unit in Germany, where he was nicknamed the Harlem Hillbilly for singing country songs in an R&B style. He developed an interest in comedy in the Army after expanding on a singing performance for other servicemen. After his honorable discharge he lived in Seattle, Washington and then Los Angeles, where he continued to work in clubs and was discovered by record producer Dootsie Williams. He recorded rhythm and blues songs for the Federal, Cash, Ball, Kent, and Imperial labels between 1955 and 1962, and released his first comedy albums, Below the Belt (1961), The Beatnik Scene (1962), and A Comedian Is Born (1964). Career Dolemite records and wider acclaim By his own account, Brown was working at the world famous Dolphin's of Hollywood record store in Los Angeles in 1970 when he began hearing obscene stories of "Dolemite" recounted by a local man named Rico. Moore recorded a number of street poets, including Big Brown who, before he moved to Los Angeles, had been an influence on Bob Dylan, among other artists, while living in Greenwich Village. (Dylan said Brown's poetry was the best poetry he had ever heard.) In 1973, Moore produced Brown's album, The First Man of Poetry, Big Brown: Between Heaven and Hell. According to Moore, there was a wino named Rico, and Moore heard him on the street corner doing all these raps and rhymes: Rico, you do "Dolemite", I'm gonna give you some money for soup. He did "Dolemite" in the middle of the floor in the store I was working and the people just rolled. So I thought then, he's not a professional; I'm a professional comedian. What if I did "Dolemite"? Sure enough, I invited him to my house, give him a little reefer and some wine. He put "Dolemite" on tape, I recorded it, the rest is history. Moore began recording the stories, and assumed the role of "Dolemite" in his club act and on recordings. In 1970-71 he recorded three albums of material, Eat Out More Often, This Pussy Belongs To Me, and The Dirty Dozens, where "with jazz and R&B musicians playing in the background, [Moore] would recite raunchy, sexually explicit rhymes that often had to do with pimps, prostitutes, players, and hustlers." Moore was influenced by more mainstream comedians such as Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor, as well as by traditions such as the Dozens. The recordings were usually made in Moore's apartment, with friends in attendance to give a party atmosphere. The album covers and contents were often too racy to be put on display in record stores, but the records became popular through word of mouth and were highly successful in Black American communities, where his "warped wit and anti-establishment outlook" were embraced. Dolemite movie and later success Moore spent most of his earnings from the records to finance the movie Dolemite, which started filming in January, 1974. It was released and distributed nationally beginning in April 1975, and has been described as "one of the great blaxploitation movies" of the 1970s.The character was "the ultimate ghetto hero: a bad dude, profane, skilled at kung-fu, dressed to kill and hell-bent on protecting the community from evil menaces. He was a pimp with a kung-fu-fighting clique of prostitutes and he was known for his sexual prowess." The film was successful and was followed by The Human Tornado, The Monkey Hustle, and Petey Wheatstraw: The Devil's Son-in-Law. Moore continued to release albums that appealed to his enduring fanbase through the 1970s and 1980s, but little of his work reached a white audience. His "rapid-fire rhyming salaciousness exceeded the wildest excesses" of Foxx and Pryor, and his highly explicit style kept him off television and major films. At the same time, Moore often spoke in his church and regularly took his mother to the National Baptist Convention. He said that: "I wasn't saying dirty words just to say them... It was a form of art, sketches in which I developed ghetto characters who cursed. I don't want to be referred to as a dirty old man, rather a ghetto expressionist."
This isn't that funny. I'm a Dolomite fan. Once the old generation is passed, it has to be accepted and understood. Just give them homage for stepping on the young man's stage.
The way he said "Biiiiiiittttccchhhh!" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Lol...
The Original King of Comedy!
The O.G original King of comedy.
Never knew he was on Def Comedy Jam😃. RIP Dolemite ✝️💪🏾👑
Fo sho
Me either
Me too
Never knew this.
ME EITHER...& I'M A CHILD OF THE 90's
The Fact That He Was In His 60's When He Performed This Is Amazing!
The man who started it all!
RIP Rudy Ray Moore
Babay, no one will ever say 'BIiiiitttcccchhhh" like him! R.I.P. KING
Too Short 💯
@@FreddyKocane2011 forgot about him🤣
Hell yeah! 👍🏽😂
Salute to one of Goats! The Legendary Rudy Ray Moore! Funny as hell still in 2024 😂😂! Rest in Power!
Damn!!! RUDY was Ruthless 😂😂😂
Good god, this was a masterpiece
My mother use to listen to Ruddy Ray Moore , Skillet and Leroy.
All of Redd Foxx friends!
The crowd didn’t knw what to say 🤣😂
Cause even back then that style of Comedy was Ancient 😂😂
They didn’t need to "say" 💩
What they did do was Laugh, Clap and Holler at every punch line!!!
Damn does anybody know how things work anymore???
@@md3dasnipa386really is that why the crowd laughed and clapped at every punch line???🤦🏾♂️
~Don't ever let someone tell you, "You can't do something." Forever Rudy Ray Moore✊🏼✨️...
Damn right
He was lowkey sayin sum crazy lines that went over their heads
they were pretty simple lines. 😂😂😂😂 Wym I don't think it went over their heads, they weren't used to his style of comedy
@@ImVengeance_22People always wanna make it seem like they're the smartest person on the Internet.. lol
@@byronp8158 shit be annoying man 😂
@@ImVengeance_22I mean “I turned the 4th of July into June” June tenth is considered black folk Independence Day so there’s that … but yeah everything else was pretty straight forward 😅
@@garcel1251 yeah I understood everything he was saying 😂😂😂😂
Respect the OG's of the game!
I remember sneaking watching Dolemite movies and listening to moms albums😄😄😄kids my age couldn’t understand how I knew so many jokes and cuss words. RIP Dolemite 🔥🔥🔥
When I was in the 8th grade back in '78.. we use to seat on the back of the school bus reciting Dolomite..🤣😅😅
A true Legend of Comedy. Long Live Dolemite.
Dolemite is a piece of ART!!❤😂
The Human Tornado 🌪 lol 🤣
Most Definitely The Most Underrated Comedian ever, he Opened the Door for the X-Rated Comedian to cross over on to the regular Record Charts with the Record EAT OUT MORE OFTEN it was Top Chart Hit.
Hollywood wasn't ready for Rudy Ray Moore.
He was" too Black" for Hollywood.
I first heard him in the 70’s. I still listen to him.
Funniest thing about this is his delivery; it sounds like he's giving a televangelist's Sunday morning sermon from the pulpit LOL!
The simease twins joke is crazy lol
🤣 yeah it was
Good Show, R.I.P. Dolomite, Rudy Ray Moore.
This man's got Lyricz Fi Daayz Taaa Raasklaart 😂
A Damn fool!... I mean an absolute nut!.. I was blessed to see him live at club 559 in Atlanta in the 90's
This brotha is Legendary! This is where rap first started!😂😂😂😂😂
Also props to The Last Poets, and Gil Scott Heron
We gotta mention Blo- Fly ...look him up. He's the real Originator of rap. R.I.P Dolemite
You're right!! People just don't know
@@donrobersonethe last poets I haven't met very many people that will mention them signs of a true hip hop head take it all the way back learned about them myself thru a show on the hustlers convention truly poetry in motion
@@matthewyoung4520 They were very influential during college days. Also Gil Scott Heron
I’m just finding out this exists! Wow!
The Greatest Rudy ray Moore Dolomite
It's been a long time since I've heard this great comedian Rudy Ray Moore 😅😊😅
That's right everybody on their knees ain't praying 🤣💯
😂😂😂❤I LOVE IT I WAS BACK IN THEM DAYS MONKEY AN THE LION 😂😂😂😂 YEAH ❤❤
DOLOMITE The King of The X-Rated Rhymes and Jokes, Never will be another Damn one like Him.
Had this Comedic Legend on cassette as a youngster
An still recite Many of Shines lines.....
Blows the younger gens mind...
You’re rhyming
I remember when I used to listen to my father's albums when my parents went to work
Dolomite.. coldest lines ever him and and Robin Harris
This crowd didn’t know what to do with him. Dolemite is my name❤
Except what they did which was laugh and clap at every punch line!!!
I’ve seen several comments like yours here and I wondering are we watching the same clip
Damn🙉🙊🙈 what’s wrong with y’all???
Was the volume turned down when you were watching this???
Respect always to a Great Pioneer
I loved Dolemite and the Mack when i was a kid. Hilarious movies
My head hurts I laughed so hard. Amazing work, we was shielded from this as kids 😂 I remember my parents sneaking to listen to this man’s material back then.
I'm here after the Eddie movie.can wait to see the real movie.ived just discovered a legend
This 7 minutes felt like 10 seconds. Force of nature.
One of the GOAT!💯
Never got his flowers 💐
“No one knows where the nose goes, when the doors are closed!”
I think George Clinton bit off a little bit of Rudy🤔😅😆
I remember listening to this stuff when i was 10 years old! Along with early Richard Pryor albums and Moms Mabley. This guy is the original dirty rapper genius comedian of ALLLLLL times! How on earth did he come up with this stuff? Eddie Murphy was RIGHT to re-do this magical character!
👍🏿
Dolemite !!! No one knows where the nose goes when the doors is closed !! 🤣🤣🤣 Every kneeling ain't praying !!! 🤣🤣 Dolemite was a true Comedy legend in his era !! 💯💯 He made the blue print of comedy in his era making his jokes ryme... 💯💯..Rip Mr Rudy Ray Moore !! Aka Dolemite
Aged 81 ...1927 - 2008
Rudy Ray Moore is one of the best comedians ever 😅
This man right here is legendary,iconic all in one R.I.P Rudy ray
One of the greatest 💯💯💪🏾💪🏾
Classic one of the best to ever do it😂😂😂
One of the greatest to ever do it!!
Saw the great Rudy Ray Moore "live" twice at Club Lingerie in Hollywood back in the early 1990s and Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall were there at one of the shows with their entourages! I bought every LP and cassette he had to offer. "I ain't lying!".
Respect, and Rest In Power to his Great Father Kingship Mr. Rudy Ray Moore aka(Dolomite)
I was watching Dolemite movies since I was 8. Telling his rhymes to my friends on the playground.
This that old school comedy
Legendary fellow Arkansan.
Arkansawyer. Not Arkansan.
Wow how did I miss this
He was the reason why we needed a Def Comedy Jam
Dolomite was 1 of the best back in the good ol days! 💯
The King👑, Mr. Rudy Ray Moore aka Dolomite, put it down!😂 The audience laughed, were then a little perplexed, then they caught on and laughed even more. It probably didn't air on Def Jam because of politics, smh. They did the comedian game a disservice by not showing it. I was laughing so hard just now. We have his records, a couple classic movies (Dolomite, Petey Wheat Straw, and maybe The Human Tornado), lots of records, hip-hop samples, his Arsenio Hall performance which aired live, and now Def Jam. Salute to Rudy Ray Moore.
One of my idols from when I was young.
There will never be another
Thank u VERY much for posting this. I FINALLY get to see Rudy Ray Moore on Def Comedy Jam. Rudy was hurt cuz it never aired. I don’t get why it didn’t air. He was just as dirty as Martin Lawrence, Bernie Mac etc.
No wonder I never heard anybody talk about Rudy Ray Moore on Def Comedy Jam! That is so sad and shameful! Too often that trailblazers like Rudy get treated so badly! His career could have been resurrected!
@anpuarcturus Deep down, I know why it didn't air. If Rudy KILLED it like Bernie, Chris Tucker, Eddie Griffith, Bill Bellamy, etc, they would've definitely aired it. He did ok but didn't do well enough 4 the producers 2 air it. Rudy was very disappointed that it didn't air cuz the guys I just mentioned are basically talkin bout what Rudy said on all those albums he made in the '70s.
@ghanasoul that's the difference between us and other races. Other people tend to recycle people when possible that paved the way for others. Comedians like Rudy Ray Moore, Tina Dixon, Leroy & Skillet, Wildman Steve, to name a few, are from a different era. It's hard to make me laugh, but I can be amused if the routine is good. I get what you are saying, but the producers were wrong in my humble opinion. Rudy Ray Moore never became a household name. Himself and others helped future Black comedians to do so.
@@ghanasoulI've seen every episode of every season, and there are many, more than 20 comedians, that got fewer laughs than Rudy Ray Moore, but there performance aired. Also, some comedians had their sets edited to hide the dead spots of their sets. Rudy Ray Moore's set should've aired. It was more about politics than anything else.
@@anpuarcturusRudy Ray Moore is like Andrew Dice Clay, you have to be able to appreciate their art because it's different from most.
Hero of Earth! Planet of my birth!
He's an absolute American Treasure.
Not enough flowers in the world for him⚘️
Me and I remember when I used to sneak to listen to his records one of the greatest
It's a shame he never got the recognition he deserved
Love Dolomite❤!!! Classic !😂
This dude straight up gangsta rip big homie
This is a the ground work of hip-hop. Show me a Latino that was rap’n before this brotha? The term rap’n is a word created by FBAs (Negros) It is not a Latino term. FACTS!! R.I.P Dolomite! You’re a Legend in the art of Rap’n✌🏾
The first time I heard Rudy Ray Moore, I nearly choked to death laughing.
the man is a f'ing poet 😢😢😢
That man is a legend he broke a lot of barriers
RIP DOLEMITE ✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
Best rapper ever! Seriously!
Put 4th of July in June... Reference to Juneteenth?
Anyways he's a legend
He got bars 😂
Ain't no Richard, Eddie, Martin, Chris, Chris, Kevin or Mike without...
DOLEMITE!!! ✊🏻🤣
Oh I love it such true comedy Ledgend I've never seen this episode but I'm glad I found it RIP Rudy❤❤❤
Home boy was tooooo funny !!! Loves me some Rudy !!!
they ain't ready!
Real Black OG Will Live 4Ever
The World Need More Real Black Men
Me in 1990, "Hei maaaamaa! Why yu watching "DOILY MIKE", he be saying bad words mamaaaaa! HA! Where has the time gone....
Pure legend gaddamnit 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
Salute to a legend
LEGENDARY...
Hand spitting at its finest 💯💪🏾
😂😂😂😂😂😂🔥🔥🔥he snapped !!
Legend!
2024 and he is still ahead of his time. 🤣
Rudolph Frank Moore (March 17, 1927 - October 19, 2008), known as Rudy Ray Moore, was an American comedian, singer, actor, and film producer. He created the character Dolemite, the pimp from the 1975 film Dolemite and its sequels, The Human Tornado and The Dolemite Explosion (aka The Return of Dolemite). The persona was developed during his early comedy records The recordings often featured Moore delivering profanity-filled rhyming poetry, which later earned Moore the nickname "the Godfather of Rap." Actor and comedian Eddie Murphy portrayed Moore in the 2019 film Dolemite Is My Name.
Early life
Moore was born and raised in the Johnson House on 1400 North 12th Street in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and eventually moved to Akron, Ohio, and then Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In Milwaukee, he preached in churches and worked as a nightclub dancer.[6] He returned to Akron, working in clubs as a singer, dancer, and comedian, often appearing in character as Prince DuMarr. He joined the US Army and served in an entertainment unit in Germany, where he was nicknamed the Harlem Hillbilly for singing country songs in an R&B style. He developed an interest in comedy in the Army after expanding on a singing performance for other servicemen.
After his honorable discharge he lived in Seattle, Washington and then Los Angeles, where he continued to work in clubs and was discovered by record producer Dootsie Williams. He recorded rhythm and blues songs for the Federal, Cash, Ball, Kent, and Imperial labels between 1955 and 1962, and released his first comedy albums, Below the Belt (1961), The Beatnik Scene (1962), and A Comedian Is Born (1964).
Career
Dolemite records and wider acclaim
By his own account, Brown was working at the world famous Dolphin's of Hollywood record store in Los Angeles in 1970 when he began hearing obscene stories of "Dolemite" recounted by a local man named Rico. Moore recorded a number of street poets, including Big Brown who, before he moved to Los Angeles, had been an influence on Bob Dylan, among other artists, while living in Greenwich Village. (Dylan said Brown's poetry was the best poetry he had ever heard.) In 1973, Moore produced Brown's album, The First Man of Poetry, Big Brown: Between Heaven and Hell.
According to Moore, there was a wino named Rico, and Moore heard him on the street corner doing all these raps and rhymes:
Rico, you do "Dolemite", I'm gonna give you some money for soup. He did "Dolemite" in the middle of the floor in the store I was working and the people just rolled. So I thought then, he's not a professional; I'm a professional comedian. What if I did "Dolemite"? Sure enough, I invited him to my house, give him a little reefer and some wine. He put "Dolemite" on tape, I recorded it, the rest is history.
Moore began recording the stories, and assumed the role of "Dolemite" in his club act and on recordings. In 1970-71 he recorded three albums of material, Eat Out More Often, This Pussy Belongs To Me, and The Dirty Dozens, where "with jazz and R&B musicians playing in the background, [Moore] would recite raunchy, sexually explicit rhymes that often had to do with pimps, prostitutes, players, and hustlers."
Moore was influenced by more mainstream comedians such as Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor, as well as by traditions such as the Dozens. The recordings were usually made in Moore's apartment, with friends in attendance to give a party atmosphere. The album covers and contents were often too racy to be put on display in record stores, but the records became popular through word of mouth and were highly successful in Black American communities, where his "warped wit and anti-establishment outlook" were embraced.
Dolemite movie and later success
Moore spent most of his earnings from the records to finance the movie Dolemite, which started filming in January, 1974. It was released and distributed nationally beginning in April 1975, and has been described as "one of the great blaxploitation movies" of the 1970s.The character was "the ultimate ghetto hero: a bad dude, profane, skilled at kung-fu, dressed to kill and hell-bent on protecting the community from evil menaces. He was a pimp with a kung-fu-fighting clique of prostitutes and he was known for his sexual prowess."
The film was successful and was followed by The Human Tornado, The Monkey Hustle, and Petey Wheatstraw: The Devil's Son-in-Law. Moore continued to release albums that appealed to his enduring fanbase through the 1970s and 1980s, but little of his work reached a white audience. His "rapid-fire rhyming salaciousness exceeded the wildest excesses" of Foxx and Pryor, and his highly explicit style kept him off television and major films. At the same time, Moore often spoke in his church and regularly took his mother to the National Baptist Convention. He said that: "I wasn't saying dirty words just to say them... It was a form of art, sketches in which I developed ghetto characters who cursed. I don't want to be referred to as a dirty old man, rather a ghetto expressionist."
Excellent Summary of Classic Comedian Life! TY
The legendary Rudy Ray Moore
I played poker with this cat. He be falling asleep at the table!
"Yu gonna have to take me!" 😮 💛
A Legend!!!
I never knew he was on def jam comedy 😂😆😂
The Goat💪
Dolomite true true Legend facts 😅
Rip Rudy ray Moore
This crowd ain't use to this type of comedy
Who is, if your not in your 20's in 1970
This isn't that funny. I'm a Dolomite fan. Once the old generation is passed, it has to be accepted and understood. Just give them homage for stepping on the young man's stage.
Yup
It doesnt help that he's not funny.
@@silentsir2446 he's not for everyone. This is a classic routine from 50 or 60 years ago.