He defended Nicaragua, rained hell down on Reagan and Bush and put his anger into waking up audiences to injustice.

“I will no longer provide distraction for the American people,” he says in one interview at the time, “because the world is on fire and one of the primary fuels is the ignorance of the American people.”

Smashing the hypocrisies of political power and attacking bullies made sense for a man who, unbeknownst to even those closest to him, had suffered horrific abuse as a child. Barry’s gruff, hard-drinking, curmudgeonly persona was what he’d struggled with since the age of four – the relentless rapes that nearly killed him.

“Before Stewart, before Colbert, before Maher, there was and thankfully still is Barry Crimmins. The premiere political comic in America and also one of its sharpest and most passionate minds.” David Cross – Comedian, Actor, Writer

During a benefit for the Southern Poverty Law Center, Barry finally brought the personal into his political act and shocked everyone with the on stage revelation of what he wanted no one else to ever have to go through.

After this shocking revelation, Barry’s journey to uncover and recover from his abuse compelled him to seek others who had suffered as well. His quest revealed even more shocking discoveries. As the internet was emerging as a social media tool, Barry found that AOL chat rooms were rife with the trafficking of child pornography. After fighting the perpetrators by posing as children online, he took the evidence to AOL, the police and finally, the senate, Barry became responsible for the first pedophile arrests using online evidence. Barry’s tireless efforts helped lead to law enforcement focusing on doing the same.



Barry’s obstinate attitude was becoming a force for good and his work on himself and for other victims was strengthening and softening him at the same time. Barry wrote books, newspaper articles, and became a leading political activist. His comedy continued to be biting but his bark was no longer threatening to those close to him.

His fight for social justice continued. While working for Air America, Barry became instrumental in making the story of Cindy Sheehan, who had lost her son Casey in the second Iraq war, part of the national debate. His efforts led to the shining of the worldwide media spotlight on Camp Casey, a political rally seeking answers right at the president’s door.

When longtime friend and protégé Bobcat Goldthwait approached Barry about committing his powerful life story to film, Barry was at first skeptical. But the unique bond the two comic greats have shared over the years that saw them each weather many a trial and tribulation in their personal and professional lives allowed Barry to literally trust his life to Goldthwait, who has also established himself as a fellow upstart willing to go where others don’t in his filmmaking career. Aided by a refined cinematic beauty from Bradley Stonesifer, Barry’s story is given its proper due in CALL ME LUCKY, a documentary as equally uplifting as it is eye-opening.

During the making of CALL ME LUCKY a certain alchemy occurred. In tracing Barry’s steps back from his current life in the Finger Lakes, where he’s built a home for himself in the middle of nowhere, to Boston where he set off the careers of so many comics, back to his childhood home, also in upstate New York, and into the basement where the abuse happened; the healing of the man is palpable.

“Crimmins uses his sharp sense of irony as a political weapon. In his hands, the subversive joke is the first small act of resistance.” Billy Bragg – Musician, Songwriter, Activist

His attitude of forgiveness and hope is an inspiring one. Through talking to friends of Barry’s from celebrated comedians to his local mechanic, stories of others’ own battles with the ghosts of past abuse came out. What began as a personal human story deepened into a far reaching clarion call of disclosure and action for all.

Barry, alongside Dr. Maya Angelou, was presented the Peace Abbey’s Courage of Conscience Award by Howard Zinn.

A changed man, Barry Crimmins no longer carries his earlier rage and he has gone on to change many other people’s lives. We believe CALL ME LUCKY can do the same.

Keep up with Barry by following his Twitter feed @crimmins