The idea is to create a museum that will become for comedy what Cooperstown is for baseball, bringing fans and newbies together. While the main halls will be dedicated to family-friendly humor, the basement of the facility will be dedicated to no holds barred, adult comedy. It's here that the Carlin hologram will perform "like old times" in a "fake comedy club in one corner." Nesteroff also adds that there will also be live shows in the venue, where budding circuit comics can see what will happen to their legacy should they be successful enough in life.

Update: Looks like George Carlin might not be immortalized in hologram form after all. His daughter Kelly tweeted that The Hollywood Reporter and Rolling Stone misreported the story. And it doesn't appear that the National Museum of Comedy has confirmed which personalties will be stuck performing sets as hologram in perpetuity.