Dynomite!: Good Times, Bad Times, Our Times -- A Memoir

Dynomite!: Good Times, Bad Times, Our Times -- A Memoir

by Jimmie Walker, Sal Manna

Narrated by Jimmie Walker

Unabridged — 9 hours, 52 minutes

Dynomite!: Good Times, Bad Times, Our Times -- A Memoir

Dynomite!: Good Times, Bad Times, Our Times -- A Memoir

by Jimmie Walker, Sal Manna

Narrated by Jimmie Walker

Unabridged — 9 hours, 52 minutes

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Overview

Raised in the South Bronx projects, Jimmie Walker made his way out of the perilous ghetto thanks to an ability to make people laugh. Performing in small clubs alongside friends such as Richard Pryor, Freddie Prinze, David Brenner, and Richard Lewis; opening for Black Panther rallies; and emceeing at the Apollo and for Motown tours, he was a young, brash stand-up comedian for a new generation.

By landing the role of J.J. Evans on Good Times, Walker became an icon of the '70s and beyond. The first young black sitcom star - dubbed “the black Fonzie” - his catchphrase “Dyn-o-mite!” remains an often-quoted indicator of the era. As the show's breakout star, he navigated the pressures of a pop culture popularity that rendered J.J. into a talking doll (pull the string!). At the same time, he was the epicenter of a major controversy over black stereotypes. Walker candidly remembers the communication breakdowns on the set that contradicted the show's image of a close-knit, blue-collar family. Meanwhile, he worked at his craft, including hiring then-unknowns David Letterman and Jay Leno to write jokes for him. When the Late Night War erupted, Walker had a uniquely personal perspective that he writes about here for the first time.

In Dyn-o-mite! he also reveals, in characteristic bemused if lacerating fashion, the lessons he's learned along the way about self-reliance, freedom of speech (the n-word and more), and belief in the individual - subjects he frequently talks about on talk radio and television. Imparting a vivid, insiders' look at the edgy scene of the '70s and '80s, perhaps the most groundbreaking and vibrant era in comedy history, Walker paints a portrait of the life and times of a quintessential road comic.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Comedian and actor Walker delivers a solid, thoughtful, and provocative memoir about his nearly four decade–long career—which should surprise almost anyone who first discovered Walker as J.J. on the hit 1970s television show Good Times. As the “always-getting-into-trouble” 17-year-old son in a “lower-class, urban black family dealing with the world,” Walker improvised an exclamation—“Dyn-o-mite!”—that became his character’s trademark catchphrase as well as entering the American lexicon. “Little did I realize at the time how one word could change your life,” Walker wryly notes, since he had been working in New York City during the late 1960s honing his standup craft on a range of stages (Walker once opened for jazz legend Miles Davis) alongside stars such as Robert Klein and David Brenner as well as future superstars including Richard Lewis and Jerry Seinfeld. While Walker does an excellent job showing how much of what has been written negatively about Good Times has been “revisionist history”—(“For nine of the last ten episodes, J.J. never said ‘dyn-o-mite’”)—the best parts of his memoir deal with his early days, his post Good Times career (“I was as surprised as anyone that my character became the breakout star”), his insider involvement in the Jay Leno–David Letterman feud, and his many perceptive observations about comedy and current influential comedians such as Chris Rock: “He works hard, is aware of all aspects of life, and knows not only comedy but also the history of comedy.” (July)

From the Publisher

Kirkus Reviews, 4/15/12
“A fast, funny and informative stand-up routine/memoir from one of the major comic stars of the 1970s…A unique perspective on the perils of modern comedy from a survivor with a long memory.”
 

Publishers Weekly, 5/21/12
“A solid, thoughtful, and provocative memoir about [Walker’s] nearly four-decade long career.”

Spittake.com, 6/27/12

“Without a healthy dose of humility, he couldn’t draw such a painfully honest portrait of life as a comic on the road. Whatever his reputation, he has persevered, and his story is thought-provoking and well worth the read.”

Kingman Daily Miner“A dyn-o-mite read about a true pop culture icon and comedy legend…This is a fun read, a book, which you will remember, and one that might make you stop and pause for a moment as you ponder some of his pithy sayings. This is a five star book and one you will want on your bookshelf.”

American Profile, 8/12/12“Paints a revealing self-portrait that also depicts the changing times of a socially charged era….It’s a dyn-o-mite read.”

Cleveland.com, 10/2212
“[An] immensely insightful, humorous memoir.

Kirkus Reviews

A fast, funny and informative stand-up routine/memoir from one of the major comic stars of the 1970s. Walker--who made his name as J.J. Evans on the sitcom Good Times--recounts his life in the ghetto, on TV and on the road. He gives a good inside look at the TV show, where he was cast as the teenage J.J., surprising producers and angering the cast by becoming the breakout star. At the peak of his fame, he would also play a supporting role in the careers of both David Letterman and Jay Leno, two of the many struggling unknown comics who wrote jokes for him. He also had a front-row seat to the decades-long friendship-turned-bitter rivalry that would lead to the late-show wars of the early 1990s; long after the dust has settled, he remains strongly Team Letterman, holding Leno in contempt. As for the rest of the competition, he admired Richard Pryor, had limited patience for Andy Kaufman and thinks Cosby is king. (He also admits he isn't always the best judge, having once advised Steve Martin to find another career.) Walker also acknowledges certain limits that come with his choice of career: "The problem is that white comics don't have to be white, but black comics have to be black." Other limits are self-imposed; although uninhibited in his lifestyle, this self-proclaimed "Johnny Mathis of Black Comedians" has long adhered to his friend David Brenner's advice that you can't be successful if you can't work clean. He is similarly conservative in his politics. Walker, once the comic relief for Black Panther rallies, takes a little too much delight in being a "black sheep among black people." Rants aside, a unique perspective on the perils of modern comedy from a survivor with a long memory.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172301513
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 06/26/2012
Edition description: Unabridged
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