Who's on the Blower? When Carolla takes calls from the home audience, this title card is shown on the monitor and the announcer stops the show to ask ''"Who's on the Blower?"'' sometimes to Carolla's impatience. When
Carlos Mencia was the guest, the segment was retitled
"¿Quién está en el Teléfono?" Adam Explains to 1780s Guy Carolla walks in the woods with a guy who looks somewhat like
Benjamin Franklin, and plays
straight man as the "1780s guy" questions current phenomena such as
metrosexuals ("We call them
homosexuals") and
Oprah Winfrey ("
Nubian sorceress").
Germany or Florida? Carolla explains his theory that all extremely strange news stories happen either in
Germany or
Florida, and challenges himself and his guest to guess in which of these places a given news story occurred.
Andy Milonakis played a special version of this game, Super Germany or Florida? This bit originated as an idea for
Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and when the writers vetoed it, Carolla took it to
Loveline. Callers would often call in with a bizarre news story and Carolla and Dr. Drew would attempt to guess whether it was from Germany or Florida. The game also appeared during Carolla's guest host stint on
The Late Late Show and subsequently to
Too Late.
The Lightning Round In some early episodes, Carolla got so carried away with his rants that he forgot to take any phone calls from home viewers, and so the show's producers invented this segment in which Carolla attempts to answer 10 calls in three minutes. Carolla originally developed
The Lightning Round on
Loveline when, after the last commercial break in the show, he would take as many phone calls as possible as his
alter ego Ace Rockolla, giving quick answers to each caller, regardless of their question. It used the frequent sound effects of a thunder clap and a cow bell, along with Carolla's insistence of repeating the time ("It's 11:56 and 38 seconds, three minutes and 22 seconds before the top of the hour!") and temperature ("86 in LA, 84 in Culver City, 88 in Monterey Park, 83 in Whittier and 79 in Gardena!").
Can Ray Break This? In another game that is "sweeping the nation", Adam and guests attempt to predict whether or not Ray Oldhafer, Adam's childhood friend who appeared on
The Adam Carolla Project, can break certain objects.
The Listeners Speak A buffer segment in between commercial breaks that is a tape of a message left by listeners who are "drunk, high, pissed off, crazy and/or have a great accent" This segment seemed to have been picked up by
The Adam Carolla Show on the
radio. ==References==