No lights. No cameras. No monologue.
Just Greg Gutfeld, in a navy-blue coat, walking through the rain with a bouquet of forget-me-nots in his hand.
The funeral was being held in a small community center in San Mateo, California — modest, intimate, and nothing like the spotlights Greg had grown used to. But that’s how Mr. Callahan would’ve wanted it.
Greg hadn’t seen Mr. Callahan — his 8th-grade English teacher — in over 30 years. Yet, the moment he heard about his passing from an old classmate’s Facebook post, he knew he had to be there.
Mr. Callahan was the first person who ever told Greg he was funny — not just class clown funny, but “you could do something with this someday” funny.
Back then, Greg was the short kid with the sharp tongue and no filter. Detention was practically his second home. But instead of punishing him, Mr. Callahan leaned in. He handed Greg a notebook one day and said,
“Fill this up. Not with jokes — with thoughts. I think you’ve got something the world should hear.”
That notebook, Greg later said, was the first time someone treated his words like they mattered.
So, at the service — unannounced, unescorted — Greg asked to speak. He walked up to the podium, pulled a weathered old notebook from his coat pocket, and held it up.
“This was his,” Greg said, his voice quieter than usual. “Well, it was mine, because he gave it to me. But really — this was his way of showing me who I could become.”
He read a few lines from the notebook. They were juvenile. Sarcastic. A little brilliant.
And then he paused.
“He gave me permission to be loud — but also to listen. He taught me that the best punchlines come after the deepest truths. I owe him more than I ever said out loud.”
After the service, Greg didn’t rush out. He stayed. Talked to the Callahan family. Offered to cover the cost of the headstone, quietly, without a camera in sight.
Later that night on Gutfeld!, he opened the show with a simple tribute:
“Tonight’s monologue is dedicated to the man who taught me that being a smart-ass is fine — as long as you’re smart, and you care.”