Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - James Marsden
Episode Date: February 3, 2025James Marsden (Paradise, Jury Duty, X-Men) is an Emmy and Golden Globe-nominated actor. James joins the Armchair Expert to discuss paying the price for such a dominant chin, the reality of be...ing an Oklahoman in Los Angeles, and still feeling like every job is his last job. James and Dax talk about the story of meeting after Dax lost a role to James, sharing an enduring appreciation for mens’ bodies, and comparing notes on starring in shows that trick people. James explains that being a middle child is the sweet spot of siblingry, learning that he was the subject of a Corny Collins fantasy, and how acting in Jury Duty really was the tight rope of all tight ropes.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early
and ad free right now.
Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts,
or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert.
I'm Dan Shepard and I'm joined by Lily Padman.
Hi.
Today we have a very handsome guest.
We sure do.
He was one time named GQ's handsomest man.
Golly, what does it feel like?
Would you rather have, does people do sexiest man?
Sexiest, yeah.
Would you rather have handsomest man GQ or sexiest man people?
Wow, great Q.
Great Q.
Great Q.
Great GQ.
I would rather have handsomest.
That feels like-
Timeless?
Actually, no sexy.
I want sexy, yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
A sexy boy.
Sexy guy?
Sexy man.
Sexy person.
Friendly boy.
No, it's best boy, sexy man, cool guy.
Cool guy.
Get it right.
Okay, James Marsden, you've been watching him forever.
I've been losing roles to him for a good 25 years.
X-Man, Enchanted, The Notebook, 27 dresses.
But I think where he really absolutely blew our minds
was Jury Duty.
So good.
If you haven't seen Jury Duty,
stop right now and go watch it.
Find it, watch it.
He's absolutely incredible.
And he has a new show out on Hulu, streaming now,
called Paradise, and now, called Paradise.
And I am not lying, it's got its hooks in the whole family.
You're in, I'm so excited to watch it.
Yeah, we're very, very in.
It's Dan Fogelman.
Yeah.
Very loved and esteemed writer and an incredible premise.
So please enjoy James Marston.
Incredible premise. So please enjoy James Marston
Did you happen to hear me interview Toto I I did not. You're missing out on one of the greatest
visual experiences ever to watch Toto Wolf
be charming for two hours.
I'm so out of it.
I'm like, the band Toto?
Oh, Toto Wolf from Mercedes.
Toto Wolf.
Chief.
Toto Wolf.
Lewis, I know the car is no good.
You have to drive it.
I thought if one would come across your desk, that would be the episode. Several have come across my, hello. Louis, I know the car is no good. You have to drive it. I thought if one would come across your desk,
that would be the episode.
Several have come across my, hello.
Okay.
How are you?
Nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you, Monica.
You gonna go squirt or anything?
Take a little pee?
I think I'll go squirt.
Not good, actually.
You wanna go number two?
You wanna hop in?
We can step out.
I feel like this is a trap.
We can always stop if you change your mind.
I think I'm all set.
My bowels are comfortable.
Okay, good.
You're fully evacuated.
My bladder is evacuated. I
Remember I ran into you in Austin at the not this last year's race
It was the prior year we friend to each other jury duty. Yeah few times. I want to say Miami
Were you there inaugural? I was there first and second year first year was a mess
Wabi I sound crazy.
I don't know if there's been an adjustment.
Maybe the tea cup will go on nuts.
Oh, that's probably probably.
Just turn me down a touch.
James is a little hot.
Believe it or not.
I can back off.
No, no, I want your full.
Can you whisper?
Timber and tamper.
We can do some, what's it called?
Ooh.
E and T, J, whatever it is.
Oh, ASMR. That's a personality test, right? ASMR. If you'd like me to back, we could do some, what's it called? EMTJ, whatever it is. Oh, that's a personality test, right?
ASMR.
If you'd like me to back, we could do ASMR,
but we could also do EMT therapy.
EMT therapy or TMJ,
that issue people have with their jaw.
Yes, with your mouth.
Oh, it's so funny you say that.
Uh-oh.
Because you ever get one ear that's clogged
from going in elevation, up or down?
Yes.
Had that now for like 45 minutes.
And I keep doing this thing with my jaw
that makes me look like a crazy person.
Can you yawn?
You know how to yawn?
That's what my son told me to do.
But I'm like, how is yawning different
than just doing that?
No, it opens, it does something.
Try it.
It's so much effort to actually yawn.
Give us a good, good yawn, James.
Your very best yawn.
Now it's like acting yawn.
Your audience is gonna be like, terrific. This is best yawn. Now it's like acting yawn.
Your audience is gonna be like, terrific, it's gonna be a great chat.
We're gonna be yawning.
I like the notion that you are paying some price for such a dominant chin.
And jawline.
That is probably why.
You have that really cute kind of cleft.
Just a touch of a cleft, right?
You would agree.
I don't know about that.
Yeah.
This little old teacup chin.
Not very manly, is it?
This little teacup chin has taken you
all around the world, my friend.
My first band.
This little teacup chin has taken me around the world.
I'm very grateful.
Back to Toto Wolf.
Do you share in the world's obsession with him?
When I think of who the sexiest, coolest guy in all of F1
is, it's not any of the drivers.
It's actually Toto.
I agree.
And there's a mystery always following the guy around.
And you've stood next to him.
I have, and he's always very kind.
He'll make a point to in the middle of the race,
come in from the garage and go through the hospital
and come over and say, hello, how are you?
I'm gonna fuck up the accent.
No, I know you can do it.
But yes, have you been in the garage?
Oh wow, that's pretty good.
That's not terrible.
Very nice guy, but he's an enigma.
He is, and he's such a towering Hulk of a man.
And fit.
Do one of those slap him on the arm things
and it's like marble.
Scares you.
Do you like men's bodies?
That's a great...
Diving right into this.
Yeah, we gotta get there fast.
This is what I was prepared for.
On a scale of one to ten.
On a scale of one to dex, how do I like men's bodies?
Yes, I'm fully obsessed.
I can appreciate a great men's body.
Hit me with a couple that you love.
Like I'll go first.
Dennis Rodman, when with the Bulls or the Lakers.
What was specific about his body?
He had really, really big shoulders,
yet really thin long trunk.
Remember David Robinson?
Oh yes.
The Admiral.
You could land a plane on him.
Yeah, yeah.
He was popping out.
Okay, Rodman.
We would all agree on Brad Pitt Fight Club. Brad Pitt Fight Club. I was gonna say Brad Pitt on it. Yeah, yeah. Okay, Rodman. We would all agree on pit fight club.
I was gonna say Brad Pitt Fight Club.
Yeah.
Because it was on display as well.
But he's very tiny in that.
He's like around 140 in that.
He's just so cut.
He's got one of those long torsos too,
which I always wanted.
I'm not a super tall guy,
but my legs are longer in proportion.
That's how mine are!
They're longer than my torso
and I wanna stretch this out.
You guys should have a child that's an ostrich together.
Just huge legs, enormous legs.
Not even torso, just neck to legs.
Dax just sent me a video on Instagram
of the tallest woman and shortest woman.
I think I saw this was like a puberty post.
They got together for tea.
Are the mugs separate sizes as well?
I hope, cause the tiny is.
The mug is bigger than the girl.
She's kind of inconceivably tiny.
If you saw her at a distance,
you wouldn't really have any idea.
She looks kind of proportional.
Oh yeah, next to the giant woman, of course.
Yes.
Is there anything bad about it?
No, nothing's bad about either of them.
How tall is she?
She looked eight foot something.
Yes.
She's probably eight foot something.
And I said it looked like a version of you and I.
Sure, sure, sure, sure.
Because the girl kind of looked like me
and the woman kind of looked like you.
I kind of look like the woman.
Something about it felt just so science fiction-y.
I think it's crazy that a mastiff and a chihuahua
are the same species and can have an offspring.
Is that true? Yeah.
The definition of the same species is they can have a fertile offspring.
Sure, but that would need some help.
I don't know if you got the Chihuahua male little stool.
So yeah, that's help. That would be assistance.
Yeah. They're the same species.
And you're looking at them going, oh my God, we're so hung up on these little differences,
like skin color. And I look at a Chihuahua and a fucking massive, I'm like, that's a gap.
That's a delta in a species.
So in general, it's not a lot of variety,
but then when you see that video, you go, okay,
it can also happen with us.
I see the variety when I go to sit court side
at a NBA game.
In proportion to these guys, and so athletic,
like some people who are just tall,
you see these guys just sprinting twice as fast as you could and they're six nine I think LeBron might be the best
example of that I don't know is he six of ten or eleven eight six nine okay
but he is sprinting down the court with great ball handling he's a donis there's
a body you like yeah let's add him to the list but he could have been a tight
end in the NFL exactly by the way I saw your recent post about the Lions.
I couldn't believe that.
But very, very elegant and graceful acceptance.
Oh, oh, oh, thank you.
I gotta say, it did go from one of the true
top five highlights of My Best Friend and I,
we've been friends since we were 11,
to be on that field, to meet Dan the coach and hug him.
We were just peaked.
We were like at a 12.
And then to sit down and for the air to come out of the balloon
in the manner that it did,
and then to leave completely heartbroken.
I mean, it was the full range of human emotions.
But the human condition too.
Oh yes, absolutely.
Okay, so you and I know each other a little bit,
and it'd be fun for us to go through our memory
because I have the very most specific memory of meeting you.
And I can't imagine you would have the same memory,
simply because there was a big time sim moment
just preceded us meeting for the very first time.
And I don't think I've ever told you this.
Kristin and I were going out to a restaurant on La Cienega,
which we almost never do, and we're driving from the East side.
And I had just recently lost some role to you,
which has happened to me several times.
No.
Yeah, yeah, I've been up for a few different things that you got, has happened to me several times. No. Yeah, yeah.
I've been up for a few different things that you got, and I think rightly so you got them.
But it had just happened, and I said, I gotta meet this guy.
This guy must be one of the most charismatic folks there is.
I hope this story goes well.
I am saying this on the ride to this restaurant we've never been to.
We pull up and get out to valet and you're standing there waiting for your car.
And you're immediately like,
hi guys, I'm James.
Came over, introduced yourself.
You were insanely nice.
Oh my God.
Chris and I were just looking at each other like,
this is impossible.
I was just saying, this guy must just be electric.
We meet you, you're everything I thought you could be.
And then we walked in, I was like, oh my God, yes, it's exactly what I thought.
So that's the first time I remember meeting you.
Well, you're right. I don't remember it. No, I think people say the same thing
about you. I like hearing about those people in this business that are like,
you know what? I can't think of one bad thing to say about that guy.
Well, lovely. And then since then though,
you and I bump into each other at Formula One kind of frequently.
I'd say of any other actor, you're the person I've seen most at races.
I obviously love the sport. I came into it. I was dating this wonderful woman who was English.
You know, Ron Dennis, who used to be the head guy at McLaren when Senna was raising.
I did not know that.
OK, so Ron Dennis was like her godfather.
So she was raised in F1, and so she kind of turned me on to the sport.
This was back in 2015, pre the Netflix show.
Drive to Survive.
Yes.
That's how I got into it.
And it's a bit of shame I have.
Well no, you shouldn't have shame.
When I saw it on TV I was like, this is the stupidest racing I've ever seen.
There's no fucking passing.
Why does anyone watch this?
Well I had the same questions.
I was like, so whoever's got the fastest car wins.
If you put this guy in this car, it's a procession at Monaco because no one can pass.
I also worked for this watch company for a while, IWC, and they were very kind
and gracious to invite me some of the races. And so I got to be friends with Lewis. This
is before Lewis became Lewis. Oh, wow. I mean, he was Lewis, but he wasn't stratospheric.
So we got to be pals. He would invite me to a couple of races. I remember we went to Barcelona.
I'm kind of the only person there if I'm calling myself a celebrity or whatever, I feel weird saying that.
A known person. Yeah.
I started to get into it.
Then you get immersed in it.
And then you start to see all the nuance of the race.
And like, OK, now I got it.
There's a ton of strategy that's not necessarily visible.
It's kind of like how I viewed soccer for a long time.
And I kind of admittedly still do, which is I grew up with American football,
basketball, and I watch the Europeans play football and it's soccer and I know their strategy
I know these are really gifted athletes, but it does look like chaos and it may look like luck
It's such a low scoring game
Yes
That a ball goes off somebody's heel and it goes in the goal and they win the game
Forget who had the momentum for the whole game. But the more I learn about that sport
This isn't suspicious that the same guys get lucky off their heel all the time.
Right. No.
I think that's all sports if you don't know it.
Exactly my point.
The more familiar you are with it.
I think that was with F1.
OK, now I get what's going on.
Managing tires and your teammate and your pitting and your strategy of one stop
versus two stops.
But there is a margin for things that you just don't think are going to happen.
So if you started going then, you've gone to what?
20 races?
Yeah, something like that.
I gotta say, in the last couple of years, I haven't been to many.
I think that's what you and I agreed upon the last time we saw each other, which is
I really loved the opportunity to go.
It's such a special experience.
But in truth, I'm such a diehard fan.
I need to be at home where I can really concentrate
on the radio communication and what the announcers are saying.
And I miss a lot of the tiny details
when I'm there in person.
I love that the sport is getting highlighted.
But what I was saying is like, now it's become,
I remember the first year in Miami,
it felt like I was at the Met Ball.
Sure, sure, sure.
It felt like it was like.
CMV scene.
Yeah, you were the 25th most famous person there.
Yeah.
It was the 29th.
Were you resentful?
Yeah.
And let's get to the real reason why we don't like it now.
Yeah.
You're like, I was day one.
You're from Oklahoma, and we interview people from all over the country on Fridays.
We have a show which is just listeners.
And certainly the fewest number of callers we've received is from Oklahoma or Alaska,
maybe. You don't meet we've received is from Oklahoma or Alaska maybe.
You don't meet a lot of folks from Oklahoma.
And I have to imagine, have people not found that charming in this town?
Because I know people have found it charming that I'm from kind of a hick area and do hick things.
People are charmed by that in Hollywood.
They are.
Has that been your experience being from Oklahoma?
It has been, but it feels like to me, I've only met Oklahomans in LA.
Oh, really?
So maybe we have a way of finding each other. I love the place. I'm so happy I grew up there,
but you either stay or you go somewhere else. I guess that's any place. Now that I think about it,
wow what a profound statement. It was pretty poignant. I know what you said. You either stay,
explain it to me guys. Maybe there's something in there for like oh you can go and come back.
Maybe you go chase something. I think so., one thing you might be saying. Maybe you go to chase something.
I think so.
Also, one thing you might be saying
that you're not articulating is that
there are many states where you may move around
within the state.
Oklahoma, maybe you either stay where you were born
or you get the fuck out of the state.
That's not what he meant.
You're right, and you're right.
It's not what I meant.
Nice that you tried to sort of soften that a little bit,
but it's not.
It's like, you either stay there, post up.
I'm like, I ain't leaving.
Yeah, or you're married to your high school sweet.
Yes, and now I'm careful with that
because I don't want to disparage
or say anything negative about Oklahoma,
but it does feel like that to me.
I'm trying to figure out why I've run
into so many Oklahomans.
I run into Detroiters, but we kind of like Detroit shit.
I'll be at the Kings-Redwings game.
There was a Coney Island for a while
on Sunset that Mike Bender owned.
I go in there and sure enough,
every guy from Detroit is in there.
So maybe there's some shit you guys are all drawn to
that you're not even aware of.
And going into a new big city, I don't know,
it feels like you find each other somehow
because you do feel like an outsider.
Culture shifts are massive, but exciting.
I guess the conversation is, where are you from?
Oklahoma.
Oh, you know what?
Jean Triple Horn is from Oklahoma.
All of a sudden, somehow you're chatting with her.
Well, growing up there, your mother was a nutritionist
and your father was a food safety person.
And that's basically how I describe it as well.
Yeah, okay, great.
I love one of the words.
He's so much smarter than me.
He's a microbiologist.
Whoa.
Okay.
But he deals in food safety.
Anytime you hear about Salmonella
or E. coli breaking out in food,
he's usually in the news.
Oh, no, sh-
That's cool.
It's like one of the guys you call-
Oh, it's kind of Munchausen-sy.
Well, that's what I was gonna ask.
So with a mother that's a nutritionist
and a father who's a food safety expert,
was food a topic?
Was it being talked about online?
No, that was their work.
They left to hit the office.
Okay.
And came home and ate a bowl full of fruity pebbles.
Didn't think twice.
Wow, hypocritical.
That's not really true.
I mean, we didn't really have the best,
but Oklahoma food was chicken fried steak,
gravy and mashed potatoes, really good stuff.
It's not what you would think a nutritionist is.
Right, no, especially now,
having lived in LA for 30 years.
Well, it's a religion here.
We're a godless city and our religion is worried about food.
Is our bodies.
Yes, our bodies. Yeah, could be worse. Could be worse, it's a good thing. Yeah. I was wondering was there a issue of the day in the 80s when your dad was doing this that now seems kind of cute or rather is something today kind of cute compared to what? Do you even remember the things he was tackling? No, because it started, he was working at a meat packing facility, and he was sort of
working in tandem with the FDA.
I just didn't know what any of it meant.
And frankly, when I was young, I didn't really care.
Uh-huh.
And nothing against my dad.
He's exceptional at what he does.
He was a professor at Kansas State University teaching about microbiology.
That's cool to talk about, but I didn't really know.
Of course.
And there's no movies when we were kids where the stud who was slain was a food safety
Yeah, that hadn't come around. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He was before his time. Okay, so dad very very smart clearly and he was a professor now
You go to Oklahoma State and you're gonna do broadcast journalism
You're there for a year and a half and you bail were they like, what are you doing?
Was that a hard thing for you to announce?
I didn't take anyone by surprise
because I had been talking about wanting to move to LA
to pursue an acting career.
From what age?
16.
You had started acting in high school?
Yeah, I was like junior high, 14, 15.
And I was taking those classes,
you know, you select your electives and I was like,
well, what's gonna be the easiest?
GPA booster here, drama, choir.
I got into choir, didn't know I could sing.
And I just sort of later discovered that I could fake it.
But then I started getting on stage
and I started enjoying it.
And then I went to Hawaii with my father
on a little family vacation
and met Candace Cameron from Full House.
Yeah, that whole family.
Kirk Cameron.
Yeah, and they were very nice.
We hung out the whole trip.
No way.
Was there romantic sparks?
No, I was 15.
How old was she?
She was 13.
I'm not seeing the problem.
I'm not seeing the problem.
I'm not seeing the problem.
That 10th grade and 9th grade.
There's nothing statutory about that.
No, no, but it was pretty innocent, I guess.
It was just fun.
Now here's some fun overlap I didn't expect.
So my first agent was the mom
No way Barbara Cameron. That's right. She was an agent. She was for commercial Harry gold or something
Well, she started her own thing Barbara Cameron agency Wow, so you met them. So then it kind of became oh, that's real
Well, this is something I kind of wanted to do anyway
Yeah, cuz I was a big movie buff TV big SNL fan
You said you used to memorize Pryor's stand up
and all these different stand up routines.
Pryor, Eddie Murphy, I would go to school
and that's how I would get attention.
I was never really the hot guy.
Don't say that.
No, no, no, no, no, it's really true.
It's such a weird thing when you hear people go,
I was such a weirdo.
Hey, that's so gawky.
But it's kind of true.
I was just like kind of odd dude
who didn't really have a lot of friends.
I saw the picture you showed on Colbert of you in high school and you're a fucking babe your shirts undone
I don't know what guy had the confidence in his high school photo to wear a collared shirt
That's undone like three buttons. Your physique is nice. I think this was probably on my way to LA
I'm not sure that was a high school day. First of all, you were objectively very cute
I saw the picture so I'm not sure that was a high school day. First of all, you were objectively very cute. I saw the picture, so I'm not gonna stand for this.
But what I will stand for,
because I came from a redneck area,
is the thing that was prized at my school
wasn't necessarily cute.
If you were in drama, you were dead.
I was in a big high school,
and they actually did have a pretty decent performing arts.
You chose it so obviously.
Yeah, I was gonna set myself up for a pummeling
in the parking lot, but it wasn't that bad
where I was from.
You're not the captain of the football team,
but by the time senior year came around,
some of the football players were getting into drama,
like doing musicals.
And you're one year older than me, I like pointing out,
which is crazy, because I can imagine that being the case
six years after me.
Then that means your five zero is gonna be.
It was two weeks ago.
Oh, happy birthday, my friend.
Oh, thank you, thank you, thank you.
What did you do?
I didn't do anything.
I cared for my child who was dying of norovirus
in Mexico City. Oh my God.
And I was debating whether one takes one
to the hospital there or just waits it out.
I waited it out.
But that's fine.
We did a fact check that was really fun.
I had had it the day before
and it was kind of a birthday miracle.
I woke up feeling okay.
So is that just a delay of the celebration?
No, I'm not built for that.
I'm usually not either.
It's rare you meet someone that understands what I'm saying.
I'm so afraid everyone will have a bad time,
and I'll just worry about it for weeks leading up to it,
and then I'll go, why am I doing this to myself?
Well, if you're anything like me,
it's like I'm now by having this party for myself,
seeing every one of my friend's eyes roll back into their head,
like, oh my god, this is a fucking thing I have to go to.
Like, what are we getting?
Do you have to bring a gift?
We'll go for an hour and a half.
We'll leave.
And so all of these scenarios play in your head.
And you're like, you know what?
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry I invited you.
And I've actually done that my whole life.
Never been a big birthday celebrator,
because you're kind of one of the other.
You are.
Now, my wife, and I don't judge her.
And Monty to some extent.
They really love their birthdays
and they want a big party.
Less and less older I guess.
But there's nothing wrong with that.
No, I think it's great.
I wish I was more like that.
Me too. I think we are defective.
Yeah, it's more pretentious almost to do that.
It almost sounds faux humble or something.
Right, exactly.
Than to actually just say,
fuck it, I'm having a party
What's wrong with that? Also? Then it can get complicated because people do want to celebrate you so then they're like well
Then let's just do a dinner just us you're still putting people out when you don't have a party
Just letting you know yeah, yeah, it's true. Well. This was 50. Did you do something? I did what you do
I'm proud of you. It was against my will friends. Who are like you are doing this this year
Uh-huh, I rented an obnoxious house in the Hollywood Hills
You probably know it. It's an old Lautner mid-century house with like cement. Oh ceilings
It's the famous guy who goes to all the Lakers games. Is it James Goldstein?
That's where we went to our Spotify party. An incredible house. Incredible place. You're not allowed to drink red wine there. Not in the grounds anywhere
It's forbidden. The two caveats we heard is he said there's no red wine on the property
and I have to be invited to the party.
It doesn't mean I'll go.
Was that the case?
Exactly the same.
I love it!
Did you talk to him?
There's no world where you're not invited to this thing.
In fact, I'd like for you to be there
before everyone arrives.
Yeah, you're the star.
And after everyone leaves.
He's a Hollywood icon.
He's a real estate guy,
but he always sat next to Jack Nicholson
at the Lakers for like 30 years.
So he's like one of our mascots.
The cowboy hat. He's got the white hair.
He's like 109 pounds.
Wearing a leather jacket.
Iconic.
Super cool. Anyway, he rents his place out and he's got a club inside the house and it's called Club James.
Oh.
And when I was looking at these locations, I said, you got to maybe hide the Club James thing.
Oh, I didn't even put two and two together.
And I didn't tell the party planner. And then when it happened, it was like, they lit it up.
Oh my god.
They put like spotlights on it, Club James. So then it became like, yeah, I'm doing it as a joke.
Are you glad you did it?
I'm glad I had it. And it actually made me realize, why haven't I done this before? It almost felt like a wedding.
Yes, all the people that have been in your life,
all in one spot, it's lovely.
Yeah, I think Poehler said it best,
maybe I'm making this up that she said this,
but you get to look out and see these people
are the proof of the life you've built.
And it's kind of satisfying,
because you put yourself out there
and you've made these connections and it is beautiful.
And I really wish I had had a party now.
Well, you have the excuse though to have a belated
because you put your child's health in front of your own self celebratory.
So it'll both be like a congratulations party and a birthday party, right?
You tell the story about it. You can get on the microphone.
As many of you know, we were scheduled to do this back in January.
But I just couldn't do it because I love my child too much.
Yes.
How affected were you when your parents got divorced at nine?
Was that a big one?
I don't feel like I held or do hold still
a lot of trauma or disappointment or sadness
because of that to the degree where I'm like, should I?
You talk to people who come from split families.
I can be really life-changing.
And maybe I just haven't come to terms with it yet.
That's totally a great answer.
It's the most honest.
Yes.
And you have four siblings?
Yeah, I've got two brothers, a year and a half apart.
Irish triplets.
I'm the middle, so I have a second child.
You feel like a middle.
Yeah.
I'm a middle.
Middle's good, right?
I think.
You kind of flow with everything else that's going on.
You see how annoying the people older than you and younger than you can
be and you make a mental note like, oh yeah, don't do that. I'm gonna adjust. The
older siblings are like at the canary in the coal mine. You're watching them take
these big swings, you know, like those don't work. Well, not only that, it's the
parents doing it for the first time and so they have all of these ideas and
standards that they're going to instill on their child or the child's going to doing it for the first time. And so they have all of these ideas and standards
that they're going to instill on their child
or the child's going to fall over and scuff their elbow
and they're gonna freak out that some strange germ
is now in their body and they're gonna die.
Whereas the more kids you have,
the more relaxed you become.
The less you care.
But my father remarried, had another child.
So that's my other sister.
Yeah, two sisters, two brothers.
When I was growing up, my brothers, we were so close in age.
Were they cool guys?
Did they protect you in high school?
Yeah, we were pretty close,
but I think we were so close in age.
There were moments where it almost felt like
we were fighting each other for our own identity.
Of course.
Get away, these are my friends,
not your friends, go make your own friends.
We were constantly fighting and shooting each other
with BB guns, BB guns from Oklahoma.
Yeah, yeah.
It was like a hostile environment.
It was just boys being boys.
And my mother kind of going like, don't know what to do.
Now in my school, there were groups of boys
that were brothers and you were like,
don't fucking even talk to the Jacksons
because there's four of them and they're violent.
We weren't big enough to be formidable.
Okay, okay.
But we were a little rough around the edges.
Sure, scrappy.
Who are the Maristons?
I know, sound like I'm making this up.
A lot of kids are like,
I don't buy this bullshit.
Sounds like the best Christmas pageant ever.
Yeah, he wasn't hot.
Yeah.
Now he's a dirtbag.
Everyone was afraid of in school.
BB guns.
Smelled.
I kind of felt like we raised ourselves,
not saying anything about us, like parents.
My mom was there most of the time.
My father was gone a lot for work.
He traveled quite a bit.
E. coli doesn't stay in the backyard, my friend.
Does not. No, no, no.
It knows no borders.
And he was one of those who had to get out and go chase the E. coli.
I remember him being on Donahue.
He was on Phil Donahue?
On Phil Donahue. Remember Jack in the Box is gonna love me for this.
Oh, the big outbreak.
Yes.
It was one of the worst ever. People died in Texas.
And he was on the show explaining
basically what happened.
How did he do?
Was he confident?
I didn't really watch it.
Oh, pfft.
Old people talking.
I've got an acting career I need to pursue.
Wait, are you a hypochondriac by chance?
No.
Oh, god.
Not really.
I'm surprised.
I would be, well, I am, but I would
be if I grew up in an environment where
everyone was talking about E. coli and chasing it down.
I guess because he knew so much about it, I was actually less scared of it all.
That makes total sense.
He actually understood it and he could probably tell you when and when you shouldn't be afraid.
Yeah, and he was like, you're fine.
I remember I was like, dad, what's actually in a hot dog?
Oh, God.
A big question.
And he goes, well, actually an all beef hot dog is better for you or cleaner than getting
like a turkey dog. I said, what? How is that? He's like, cause in a turkey dog, they roll in
cartilage. I don't know if they still do. I was like, Oh, okay. Okay. So I felt like I had sort
of the inside line. You didn't have an inordinate fear of getting sued by. I know. I was just
category. What's the fear of getting sick? What's the fear of? Getting sued. Yeah, lawsuit. What phobia is that?
And pilotages.
Nothing against Jack in the Box,
nothing against Oscar Mayer.
Well, the best was you didn't even name Oscar Mayer,
just in general, turkey dogs.
I hope the Turkey Dog Coalition
doesn't write me a letter of cease and desist.
Come after me.
I think we can say most hot dogs, yeah,
are just cramp packed full of everything
they couldn't sell in another version.
My grandpa used to tell me,
he's like, hot hot dogs out of Michigan.
He told me Michigan had really high hot dog standards and not every state did.
Now that probably doesn't hold up.
The Michigan hot dog standards.
Exactly.
Which were really high according to him.
Why would that be?
Why so specific?
Michigan.
I know they have their own.
And there's like a big German colonization there or something.
Nothing wrong with the Germans.
Well, there's plenty wrong with the Germans, but we love them.
OK, so you bounce out of school and you come to LA in 93.
You land pretty quickly some employment.
This boggles me because it's years for me trying to figure out,
how does one get on this television set?
But you were on The Nanny really quick.
I got pretty lucky when I announced that I was going to move to LA and try to pursue
this because through that family I met a few people who were in the business.
Through Cameron.
Yeah, and my father said, I think you're good at this.
My mother said the same thing.
Give it a shot.
You're not going to be going out there without knowing anyone.
And my father said, I went to high school with someone who moved to LA and now he's
a very successful casting director.
I wonder if he'll set you up with a proper manager
or agent and he called the guy
and I had some really nice head shots done in Oklahoma.
The guy was like, well, we'll get some new ones
when he gets out here, but he's a decent looking kid.
We're gonna have him button up
just one more button on that.
One more button and he can lose the studious eyeglasses.
Character shots, remember those?
Remember that?
Look, I'm holding a gun.
Look at me bowling.
But people don't understand this, right?
When you first moved to LA, or if you're just in LA,
trying to pursue an acting career in the 90s or late 80s,
you had to have these head shots showing you
in different scenarios.
Well, how people wrap their head around you
is all these different occupations.
Yes, I should not be pigeonholed.
I can play a gangster.
This is me in a karate gi.
Exactly.
Karate gi. Exactly.
Karate gi.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert.
If you dare.
Hey everyone, it's your girl Kiki Palmer.
Did you know I host a podcast called Baby?
This is Kiki Palmer.
And you're not going to believe the conversations I've had.
Like is OnlyFans only bad?
How has dating changed in the digital age?
What's the deal with Disney adults?
I've talked to John Stamos, the VP, Kamala Harris,
to Jordan Peele, Raven Simone,
and yes, the one and only Jamila Jamil.
And just wait until you hear our conversation.
We talk Twitter drama, bad dates, and then some.
How the hell do you actually get sexy?
Like, what the hell does that mean?
Like, I know how to be funny.
I know how to be like, you know what I'm saying? Ah what the hell does that mean? Like I know how to be funny.
I know how to be like, you know what I'm saying?
Like I don't really know how to be like,
and take your clothes off.
I'm not robbing fucking Givens.
You know, it's like, how do people do that?
I've been in this situation too many times
and not felt any of those things.
The girl eyes, the quiet,
like I've never been quiet a moment in my fucking life.
Yes.
Baby, this is Kiki Palmer.
No topic is off limits. Follow baby this is Kiki Palmer, no topic is off limits.
Follow Baby This is Kiki Palmer on the Wondery app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and ad free right now
by joining Wondery Plus.
Behind the closed doors of government offices
and military compounds, there are hidden stories
and buried secrets from the darkest corners of history.
From covert experiments pushing the boundaries of science
to operations so secretive they were barely whispered about.
Each week, on redacted, declassified mysteries,
we pull back the curtain on these hidden histories.
100% true and verifiable stories that expose the shadowy underbelly of power.
Consider Operation Paperclip, where former Nazi scientists were brought to America
after World War II, not as prisoners, but as assets, to advance U.S. intelligence during the Cold
War.
These aren't just old conspiracy theories.
They're thoroughly investigated accounts that reveal the uncomfortable truths still shaping
our world today.
The stories are real.
The secrets are shocking.
Follow redacted, declassified mysteries on the Wondery app
or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to Redacted early and ad free right
now on Wondery Plus.
So that person knew someone who was a successful and legitimate manager.
Oh God.
And the guy sent me out upon arrival like three or four auditions a day.
Oh, very, very lucky.
Man.
Doesn't happen.
And also my family were like, we will financially support you for a year
so you don't have to worry about pulling your own financial side of it,
which I should have had to do, but I wasn't waiting tables and doing all of that.
I was focusing on making this work.
Everything is aligned for success here as long as I show up.
Did you avoid ever having to get a shit job here?
When I look at your resume,
it seems like you could have cobbled together enough income.
No, I didn't have to do that.
Wow!
That's incredible.
You're a unicorn.
But lucky.
Yeah, it's okay, you don't have to feel guilty.
You just have to admit it, that's all.
But I also just kind of lowered my head.
You know when you're younger too,
I feel like you swing for the fences a little harder
than you do when you're older because you can see how far you can fall.
You're delusional in the best way as well.
I maybe auditioned for Enchanted and then you got it. And
when I look back now in photos of myself at that time versus you and it was to play a handsome Prince who comes to
New York, I'm like, of course you are not in running for that.
They brought you in.
I have skills. It wasn't that against you, not a chance. When I look at pictures of York, I'm like, of course you are not in running for that. I have skills.
It wasn't that against you, not a chance.
When I look at pictures of me then I'm like,
I can't even believe you went on that audition.
You can't play a prince with that nose
and that skinny neck and all this stuff.
Well, I mean, you're constantly trying
to twist yourself, convince yourself.
Yes, that's my point, is I was blessed with some delusion.
I had the same thing, I still do have the same thing.
Yes!
I can do that.
That creates some level of confidence,
even if it's completely false confidence.
Yeah, it can be built on a house of cards.
When I was young, it was borderline overly cocky.
Errogant, okay.
I'm here, everybody, stop what you're doing.
Yes, gather round.
What's that role?
I'll take it. But then you did. What's that role? I'll take it.
But then you did.
What's that role?
You should give it to me.
Jaws is one of my favorite movies of all time.
When I read interviews with Spielberg at the time,
he's taking chances and doing things
you wouldn't normally do if you had more experience.
He was like 24 or something.
He was so fucking young.
But he talked about that.
When you're young, you have a confidence
that you try to hold on to.
If you're lucky enough to move through a career, but you're also like,
oh shit, now I know how bad I can be or how bad the job can be or how far I can fall.
And so you sort of get a little bit more careful.
I've gotten more scared over the course of my career.
I got more comfortable just being me.
But on the other side, it's like there's roles I took then.
Like, idiocracy, if that came my way, I'd be like, I don't fucking think I can do that.
Yeah, and when you're younger, you're just like,
I'm just gonna give it my best shot.
That's right. You have to.
You have to take what's there.
Absolutely, and I'm gonna go to Cinema Secrets
and buy a fake nose, and I'm gonna stick it on myself,
and I'm gonna be Larry from The Three Stooges.
But when you get older, you're like,
is it okay if I don't go on this?
I don't think I'm the right guy.
It's funny how it flips. They don't think you are when you're young. You're like, let it OK if I don't go on this? I don't think I'm the right guy. It's funny how it flips.
They don't think you are when you're young.
You're like, let me show them.
And then people start believing in you.
You're like, hold on. Don't believe in me too much.
I've done that before.
I don't think they were guaranteed jobs, but I've said no to things
that I think this doesn't feel right.
I don't feel like I would cast myself in this or want to see myself in this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a hard thing to do.
And then you feel guilty.
In my case, you get superstitious.
Like, well, that's the beginning of the end.
You have to take every opportunity in the second
You stop doing that the ride will be over because you'll have gotten too big for your britches that encapsulates
What it's like to be an actor this business and obviously we don't sit here and cry about how difficult it is
But you're like, okay, I finished that job
That's it. I'm done starting. They're not gonna catch me again. They realized I'm a fraud. I'm done
I certainly felt like I was faking it. I still feel like I'm a faking it,
to be honest. Well, I think you're really quite good.
I think at the beginning I felt jealous of you.
There were roles I'd go out for and you would get them. And then I was jealous.
So then I was hyper critical of you cause I felt insecure and was pretty sure I
could have done the thing that I was mad you got. But point is,
I've seen you be really fantastic on numerous occasions. As have I and I think that that's just the actors thing you're just always
gonna go fuck what's that guy getting Dax is doing this and he's so good at
that and wish I could do that and I can't do that fuck him he's talented I
don't belong here I'm not worthy of it this person is so I hate them did you go
to an acting school or something no me neither I went to the roundlings that's
where I learned to act is on that stage.
Way more than I ever did.
I was a mimic in high school.
I would memorize stand-up bits and SNL sketches
and do them at school and everyone thought they were kind of funny.
So like, oh, maybe I'm good at this.
But that was it.
You didn't have a craft.
No, I didn't go to the fancy school in Chicago with Christopher Walken and John Lithgowen.
But you feel like, oh shit, well, I'm just kind of faking it. But you do learn it along the way.
Exactly. And that's okay.
One early job you had that I want to ask,
what did you do on Party of Five?
Oh!
I was on one episode of that show
and it was the finale of, I think, the first season.
But I had done a TV show called Second Noah
with Daniel Hugh Kelly.
Did a season of the show.
We were waiting to see if we were picked up. then I was cast as this guy Griffin on party of
five who was basically that show trying to do what my so-called life was doing
at the time with Jared Leto brooding mysterious looking guy I was like okay
well I guess I got to get my Jared Leto impression
do a nice blowout.
Were you Nev's love interest?
Yes, she was watching me drink out of a water fountain
and I like walked towards her in a sort of sexy,
menacing way or I was trying to be sexy.
I was like, this is not me.
And I was on for that one episode.
But the character was meant to be a regular.
And in fact, he was a regular.
But what happened was after I did that episode, my other show got picked up and I couldn't do it
So I went back to that show. Were you in love with Neville like I was? Yeah, of course. Oh, she Canadian
She is and a ballet dancer. Yeah, Canadian ballet dancer
Did they bring in a new Griffin because I recognize that name yes, do you remember the London brothers Jason and Jeremy London?
from Oklahoma? Yeah, so that role was recast I think with I remember their love interest for sure
He was on the show for a long time several years. He should send you a little thank-you card
Yeah, I guess so. Okay. So knowing that you think you're faking it when you get x-men in 2000
Is this the first time you're in the big big leagues? Certainly the first time I felt like I was. Yeah I mean you're there with people
who you recognize from movie posters right? Yeah.
Excuse me. Take your time. Is there? Oh there's water right? Yeah. Great.
I'll join you. Yeah great. You can tell I have a little raspy voice.
Yeah so when X-Men hit I felt like I certainly didn't belong there.
It was Halle Berry and Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen and all these legends.
Geez.
Hugh Jackman, no one knew who he was at the time, but then became a superstar.
Did you feel sandbagged by the character?
You're cyclops.
Here's what I'm thinking.
I'm looking around, all these people have been doing forever and they're professionals
and some of them are legends.
I already am going to feel like I'm a bad actor and then I'm gonna look at myself in my trailer
right before I walk out and go,
Jesus fucking Christ, they're also gonna be looking at
this one eye that's not my eye.
Yes.
I didn't feel like a superhero, I'll put it that way.
Yeah. Uh-huh.
You know, wearing boots that are extra heeled
to make me taller.
I was also the youngest of the group.
I think I was 25 or 26.
Everyone was not much older,
but older, Pomka and Hugh and everybody. But also also there was someone else that was cast in that role.
Before you? Yes.
Someone already didn't make the cut. Right. So I was like on deck.
That's scary though because they've already fired one person in that role. That would up my anxiety.
I don't think it was a firing thing. It was that person ultimately opting out of it.
So you knew you were a second choice basically. Yes.
Was that Jeremy London?
No, it was another Oklahoman. It was Nick Nolte.
Is Nolte an Oklahoma?
Yeah, I think so.
Is it Brad Pitt Oklahoma?
No, he is Missouri.
Ray's in Missouri, but I think born in Shawnee, Oklahoma.
Don't you dare take credit.
No, I think that's right.
He's a Missouri boy.
Shawnee, Oklahoma.
You wouldn't have said it for no reason, right?
Yeah, it was in there.
Give us old Bradley, will ya?
That's too much to give you.
Give us old Bradley.
Come on.
We gave you the Dust Bowl.
You're already famous.
Michigan needs Bradley.
Oh my God.
Yeah, so there was another actor that was cast and he had gone through wardrobe fittings
and everything.
So I was like, well, shit, I didn't get that.
But I'd gone back for callbacks three or four times with Fomka.
Okay, well, I'm as close as I can be.
And then when for whatever reason it didn't end up going forward, I was called.
And then he asked if I'd be interested in going to do a role in the Superman Returns movie.
First Superman movie since Christopher Reeve.
Our Superman.
Yeah, Richard Donner Superman movie.
I was a big fan of that.
I'll say yes to that.
I'm not Superman. I don't care. We shot that in Australia, Superman, I was a big fan of that. I'll say yes to that. I'm not Superman.
I don't care.
We shot that in Australia for a year.
For a year?
Yeah, yeah, Fox Studios down there.
Did you like it?
I loved Australia.
Oh, I love Australia.
I just don't know if I'd want to be living somewhere for a year.
My wife at the time who was pregnant and my son who was four years old, we all went down
there together.
Okay, that works.
Then you don't feel like you've paused your existence to be on location.
No, no, no. Exactly. In a really important time as well. When it was seven, eight months,
and the baby was getting closer and closer, she wanted to go back. She was like, I want to go
back to my comfort zone. Because down there, you can have different opinions on this, but they don't
baby you really like they do here. Every time my wife went to see the doctor, which is like every
two weeks or something to check on the pregnancy, you would get an ultrasound.
And in Australia it was like, yeah, you're good.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tap on it with your fingers like, yeah,
baby's doing vaunt.
You good?
She was like, this is a little too au natural for me.
Yes.
But they don't treat it like you're sick.
They treat it like this is the most natural thing
you'll ever do.
But yeah, even in England,
it's like you look at their C-section rates
compared to ours.
You look at the epidural rate,
it's handled much differently.
We've really medicalized it.
Yes.
Okay, I just have a couple of fun
throughout your career.
You've been in so much shit too.
I hope you're able to look back and go like,
my God. When you say shit,
do you mean like- Good stuff, good stuff, good stuff.
No, no, no, no.
No, no, no, I wanna talk about the shit stuff.
I think we're at an age where you can kinda look,
like I had a really funny conversation
with my 10-year-old Delta while I was in Detroit last weekend.
We're laying in bed and she said, Dad, what did you do before the podcast?
And I go, well, Delta, I was an actor.
You've seen the movies I was in.
She's like, oh, you're really doing it.
It's really funny because for the last three years I haven't acted.
I just do this. And then mom is clearly an actor.
That's obvious. And I think she has some understanding that maybe I fucked with it for a minute and I go well
Yeah, and I've been in I don't know 15 movies and seven series
You know I found myself defending the fact that I had actually had a career as an actor which is ten
Yeah, yeah
So maybe six or seven was the last time she saw me go to a set and you know
They don't remember when they're six or seven. I found myself going myself going oh no I've been in like 15 or 20 movies and I've
been in like six series she's like what are they so I'm listing my entire
resume to my ten-year-old but I did have a moment where I went yeah you actually
have a lot of things to say I don't think you ever feel like you've
succeeded in this business or at least certainly I don't no that's woven into
the DNA of this ambition.
But we're both at an age and we've been doing it long enough that you actually can list things you've done for a while to your 10 year old.
And that felt kind of good. Oh, wow. I really did do it.
I have a strong case against what she thinks.
And so when I'm going through your history today, I'm like, Oh yeah,
and that was a huge movie. And that was a huge movie. Wow. And that was a huge movie. That was a huge movie.
Wow, that was a huge movie.
You've really racked up quite an impressive career.
I'm sure it doesn't feel that way to you,
but in black and white, it is.
It doesn't eliminate the feeling of,
oh, you might not work again,
but you look back and go, oh wow.
I don't know about you,
but it took me a long time to get to that feeling,
which is whatever your definition of if I've made it,
I feel like this has been a success.
Yeah. And I'm so grateful for that. That's hard to get to. Yeah, yeah is whatever your definition of if I've made it, I feel like this has been a success.
Yeah.
And I'm so grateful for that.
That's hard to get to.
Yeah.
But nothing like a child is going to humble you.
You were an actor?
Sincerely.
No, no, no, no.
Mom's an actor.
Oh my God, we just watched Hit and Run.
It's like that movie Mom was in.
That Mom's movie?
Anyways, Hairspray, I'm deeply envious that you got to spend time with John Waters.
Was it a spectacular experience?
Yeah, I'm gonna break your heart here,
but I didn't really get to spend much time with him.
He wasn't on the set much.
Adam Shankman directed it.
It was more like the Broadway musical.
He came to set a couple of times.
He did a little cameo.
Okay.
But a very good friend of mine,
his girlfriend, now wife,
when they were still engaged,
but been together for a long time,
wonderful people, all very open about everything.
Turkey hot dogs are great.
Yeah, and we were at one of these Hollywood events
of like GQ Men of the Year.
Go ahead, you got Handsomest Man Alive by GQ Magazine.
It was probably that event, okay?
So you're at Handsomest Man Alive.
At this thing, thank you.
You came right into my story.
I see the breadcrumbs you laid out for me.
And I was with my son actually, who was at the time 16, 17.
I'm standing next to the girl. I've known her for a couple of years.
Known him longer. And she had a couple of drinks and he had two.
And she goes, I have something to admit to you.
And I said, are you okay that my son is standing here?
And your future husband?
And she said, the first time I ever masturbated was to you and the movie hair.
Oh wow.
Corny Collins.
What?
James, I can't imagine something more
I'd rather hear.
Great compliment, of course great compliment.
But of course my mind was going into the,
what? What?
What?
Wow.
Check me out on party of five if you wanna beat off.
I got long hair.
Or the prince. I bet a lot of five if you want to beat off. I got long hair. Or the prince.
I bet a lot of people's first times was the prince.
Could have been worse though,
cyclops might have been freakier.
Yeah, I don't know.
But I just thought that was the strangest.
It says a lot about the woman in a cool way.
Also it was kind of innocent and pure.
I'm so envious that's never been told to me.
It has happened, my friend.
To Fredo?
I think there's a dude out there
who has a fetish of watching an overweight man
eat flat churn out of a tube while he sits on a toilet.
So maybe.
No.
I learned this today, but in Enchanted,
it didn't make the movie or the soundtrack,
but you had a duet with Adina Menzel.
Yeah.
Is that, like talk about LeBron playing one-on-one.
Yeah, no joke.
Weirdly with music and singing,
the sort of imposter syndrome wasn't as strong.
When you come to LA to be an actor,
you're presenting yourself as, hey, I'm here, I'm good.
When people don't know you can sing,
the expectations aren't there.
You were never declaring I'm a singer.
No, I thrive in those situations
where no one's expecting anything of you.
It's like when you tell them on a set,
like, yeah, I could juggle on this scene.
They're like, you can juggle?
Do you think anyone's listening to the last three minutes
or just still thinking about the masturbation thing?
I've moved on.
Yeah, because I'm still thinking about it.
What are you thinking?
I'm thinking about her first and foremost.
I'd love to meet her.
Sure, but also what an interesting thing to say
to someone in front of your boyfriend.
He was in earshot as well.
Right.
I find this very interesting actually.
There must have been four words that he can hear that come out of her mouth that will
stop him in his tracks no matter how engaged he is with somebody else.
Obviously.
And I saw his head on a swivel when she said it turned.
Who wouldn't?
It almost feels like a move.
I'm not sure that he knew this information.
He turned and smiled.
It was like, what is my girlfriend saying?
Exactly.
And she was like, I'm sorry.
I had to tell him because it's just so sweet and innocent.
Yeah.
Oh, your sweet and innocent masturbation story.
Yeah, this is wild.
Plus, you have to see her again.
And then do you think about it when you see her?
Did you then masturbate later that night
at the thought of her?
Yeah, I mean, this is, there's a lot.
I have so many questions.
I just want to be on record applauding
that she told you that.
What a gift.
Well, and it wasn't steeped in shame or anything.
It was like, hey, this is a funny story.
You're not gonna believe this.
I never thought I'd meet the person that I first, this is funny. Yeah, and I was like, hey, this is a funny story. You're not gonna believe this. I never thought I'd meet the person that I first,
this is funny.
Yeah, and I was like, good for you
for just coming out of the gates and saying that.
We were friendly, but we're not best friends.
But the way she with abandoned,
just like unapologetically saying, abandon.
Yeah, big time.
Like if you were directing her in the scene,
is like the director had just told her, throw it away more.
Let's take that back. This is nothing. Yeah, yeah, throw it away more. Let's take that back.
This is nothing.
Yeah, yeah.
Just throw it away.
Oh yeah, when you did the corny confidence dance.
I almost forgot to tell you this.
Yeah, the first time I remember Miss Ray,
I was watching you.
It was really good.
See, just throw it away.
Go do that for Delta so she can know you're a great actor.
How dare you.
Don't bring her up as a sentence.
One more for fun.
Do whatever you want to do.
Okay, whatever.
You were great on 30 Rock.
We're gonna have to move on, Monica. Sorry. Okay, whatever. You were great on 30 Rock.
We're gonna have to move on, Monica.
Sorry. At some point.
You were great as Liz Lemmon's lover.
What an honor to be able to be Tina's.
That was fun.
That was another moment though.
It was like, was this mistake?
There were moments where I was like,
all right, I loved the enchanted role.
I can do this.
I've ripped a little bit off of movies
from the past that I saw.
That was like, who came in here before me?
Matt Damon, Jon Hamm. oh boy, all these guys,
and Tina Fey, and that show is a masterpiece
of comedy writing.
She's intimidating.
The whole experience is intimidating.
She's lovely.
Had you done Anchorman yet or no?
I don't think so.
Because to me, stepping onto the set of Anchorman 2,
as a non-established comedian that didn't come
from a comedy school
Coupled with they've already done it together. Yeah, this is like a double fucking whammy
This is one of the roles that you blew my socks off. Oh, man. You're so fucking
Confident you look awesome in that era
By the way, if you had to live in an era you look so sexy in that first scene where we meet you.
Are you in all white or something?
A light blue suit.
Fucking blown out hair.
Yeah, the blown out.
Hair sprayed as well.
And a lot of like flicking your wrist with the watch.
You completely hold your own
with a handful of the greatest to ever do it.
Were you shitting your fucking blue suit?
I was.
Nice of you to say all that.
Comedy was always something that really ignited me.
I never really felt comfortable being a beating man guy.
I was always looking for the character roles.
I wanted to be a character actor.
You know, I would hear back from casting directors,
well, they don't know you're funny.
Do you feel like you were trapped
in rom-com jail for a second?
I was more afraid that I was getting trapped
in the other guy thing.
Where I was like, the other guy who gets cuckold, is that it?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The good guy who she cheats on with the other guy.
X-Men, The Notebook.
Oh my God, The Notebook!
Oh my God, I forgot.
That's the first time you masturbated, I think you told me.
Oh, okay, we'll circle back around to that.
Is that what you told me yesterday?
No, no.
It was to Ryan, though, let's be honest.
Let's be honest.
That was my first time asking that.
Yeah, yeah.
But I was becoming known as the guy,
like you cast him, even Superman returns.
Superman has left.
I totally understand why you would be afraid of that.
I was like nice guy.
Yeah, like nice guy.
That fire isn't there in the relationship.
Well, you like him enough that you feel bad he got dumped,
but you don't like him so much
that you're not still rooting for the girl to dump him.
That's an interesting zone.
And I don't know what that says about me,
that I'm like, yep, give it to me.
It's gonna be a fucking buffoon.
He doesn't win, right?
Okay, this is my comfort zone.
You're saying he doesn't get the girl?
Oh, look no further.
Terrific.
Hey, let's keep the expectations set, though.
So then 27 dresses, you're pumped pumped because that's an enormous hit.
Huge.
Yeah, that was really what I felt like was my first romcom.
Anne Fletcher, who was one of the choreographers and very good friends with Adam Shankman on
Hairspray came in one day while we were filming Hairspray and said, hey, I just got my first
movie I'm going to direct.
I said, fantastic.
What role am I playing?
Making a dumb joke.
And she laughed, laughed, laughed.
And the next day she came in and she's like,
you know what, you should be in this movie.
And it's with Katherine Heigl.
She said, well, I want to bring you in to read with her,
if you can.
So we did a whole reading and everything.
And then we made the movie, it was cool.
It was an enormous hit.
Yeah, when you're making something
that's gonna be a success
or people are gonna talk about for a while,
do you know that when you're making it?
I don't ever know.
When we were making the notebook,
it was like, I think everyone's really good,
but this could be a schmaltzy bad.
And then 27 Dresses is the same.
This is probably just going to be your formula.
It's going to make $38 million and go away.
Yeah.
As most of them do.
And then it's an enormous global hit.
And then Westworld.
And I think I'm a little late on the train on Westworld.
I think it had already had all the hype and the acclaim.
It is still the most watched first season
of an HBO show of all time.
It was just a Goliath hit.
That felt like something special
before we even showed up on set
because it was talked about like it was.
It was like, this is Nolan.
The budget's gonna be crazy.
Anthony Hopkins and Harris.
This is all the markings of this is gonna be good.
And the first season of the show was pretty transformative.
It was a very cool thing to be a part of.
The only other first season I would say is as flawless
is Jonah's new show, Fallout.
Every episode is a fucking banger.
It's almost impossible for the first season of a show
to be that way, but Westworld, that first season
is just a masterpiece.
I just felt like I was along for the ride on that one.
You're really great in that. Did you get on with Jonah?
We interviewed him and I really fell in love with him.
I think he's the coolest dude. Yeah. Well, you guys chatting.
There's my masturbation story.
He sees Oklahoma man or was he? He's Chicago.
Yeah. He has that vibe. By way of England.
Great man. And Lisa Joy, his wife.
Sorry, I don't want to leave her up.
They co-write on these and wonderful people. Intimidating. Intim and Lisa Joy, his wife. Sorry, I don't want to leave her up. They co-write on these and wonderful people.
Intimidating, intimidating because of his intellect.
But he doesn't present as that.
No, he doesn't.
You guys probably talked a lot of car stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, he rolled up into Ariel Adam.
I was like, you're the only person that's ever done this
and you'll be the last.
I remember going to Fontana for some carding
out there with him.
Oh, wonderful.
Yeah, yeah.
Great guy, Midas Touch.
Brilliant writing, always curious about what hasn't been done before.
Those sets, where were you?
That's still the most impressive world I've ever seen created.
Yeah, we were Santa Clarita.
Santa Clarita?
Yeah.
For the most part, Lake Piru.
Oh, sure.
Oh, I've shot so much up there.
Melody Ranch.
But that was a really special experience.
It was another one of those I didn't feel as sure-footed as I'd have liked to because the show was so...
Such a high level.
Yeah.
Everyone was perfect.
There was a scene in I think the fifth or sixth episode,
it was me, Anthony Hopkins, and Ed Harris.
And the scene was between them.
Make no mistake.
I was on the verge of dying as I usually am on the show.
Sure.
Bleeding out.
You've probably died more on film than anyone else.
Probably. Whether it's actual death
or just being dropped by-
Or cuckold.
The other woman, yes.
The death of the relationship.
And Ed and Anthony, they were like,
can we talk about this scene a bit?
Cause it's a long one and it's the first time we meet.
And Jonah was like, yeah, let's all get together.
So the four of us got together.
You're like, I better get in here too.
Yeah, why the fuck am I here?
I'm pretty sure that when I come to life for one second,
and I think I stabbed the table with a knife or something,
and then just go back to sleep.
I'm happy to sit here and just listen to you guys.
But they were talking about the scene,
and Jonah has this really beautiful way
of answering your question without really answering it.
But I think he did answer the question,
but to us, it was like, well, that was the most abstract.
I think you started talking about something about the Sistine Chapel. Oh,
and if you look inside the robe, I'm gonna mess this up.
I guess it's God's robe, but you see the human brain inside.
And he told this really beautiful, elaborate story.
An allegory. Yeah. Excuse me.
We're right in sync. I need a drink and clear my throat at the same time.
Yeah, we need to drink.
Yeah, let's do it.
Mm-mm.
Monty, do you feel left out?
You're not drinking.
I'm my voice for this podcast.
Do I need to be in the water?
Uh-uh, uh-uh, uh-uh.
Do it.
You need to blow your nose or anything?
No.
Oh, look at you.
Thank you, so I can be a part of it.
Yeah, I don't want you to feel left out.
Left out.
Yeah, take a big long sip.
Now cough.
I'm good. Did you cough a little bit?
This is the most water I've drank.
This is that time of year.
Three weeks.
Okay, so he gives this kind of abstract allegory.
I remember walking out with Anthony Hopkins
and he turns to me and he goes,
what I still don't fucking know what the scene's about.
Interesting.
So that made me feel better.
That's good.
Yeah.
Okay, okay.
He doesn't even get it.
I've never met or worked with Ed Harris,
but I have a hunch and I want to ask you.
So I have worked with a single actor,
which was beyond unique, Robert Duvall.
It didn't really matter how he modulated.
It was true every time in a way
that I just have never experienced
with another actor, and I've worked with great,
great actors, but there's a couple folks
that they just cannot sound anything but true.
No matter what the adjustment they're given is,
I feel that Ed Harris is that person as well.
For sure.
Tell me about being in scenes with him.
Does he just suck you into his bubble?
Well, yeah, in a great way,
but also not so much so to make you feel like
you're anywhere near as captivating or as good,
but you do feel like, all right, I've gotta pay attention.
I've gotta pay attention.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Be really present in this.
You can see him do something different every time,
but the gravitas and the focus,
all of it was just effortless.
It was just like, he's not acting, I'm acting.
Right, exactly.
I'm acting, I'm acting like a character.
Yeah.
I've always said that.
I'm making choices, he's existing.
Yes, and you've been really nice to say nice things
about roles that I've done and everything,
and I still get weird like, yeah, I don't know.
I'm not great at taking compliments,
because I feel that way.
And I'm not trying to discredit what I've learned
or what I've achieved, but there is still
that little part of you that's like, I'm acting.
And there are people, there are actors,
you call them actors.
There's a handful.
Yeah, right.
There's not a lot.
No, but those few, I think that's when they say it,
you have it.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what it looks like.
Okay, but sorry, and not to jump ahead,
we're probably in maybe there now, maybe, maybe.
Did you feel like that in Jury Duty?
Well, that's the next.
I know, that's what I was saying.
Okay, we'll get right to it.
So the next most spectacular thing in the world,
this has gotta be the greatest thing
you've ever done is Jury Duty.
We have to find out how you become willing
to even participate in that.
Because talk about a fucking high risk swing.
I hear people say that.
I mean, yes, it was a risky high wire act.
Let's just start with the most basic thing that you're going to go from Westworld
and you're going to be on a reality show.
In case people haven't seen it, maybe we give a premise.
They need to fucking stop what they're doing and watch it.
This is one of the greatest shows ever made.
I agree.
There is one man who sincerely believes he's on a jury
deciding a court case in Los Angeles,
but everyone else is actors.
The judge is Ike Barinholtz's father.
Yes, who was a real defense attorney.
Yeah. Yes.
He's phenomenal.
He should have been an actor his whole life.
He wanted to be.
He got a late break.
Yeah. He's great.
And then this unsuspecting guy comes to find out that the actor
James Marsden is also on the jerk. Yes. I'm sorry, but when I hear that premise, I'm like,
is anyone going to believe this? I thought the same thing. And did your fear go where mine would
have been, which is either a they'll know me and not believe it. But I think more likely this person
won't know the actor, Dax Shepard. Do you have any fear that like, oh, this person might not even
know who he is? And that's kind of part of the premise. I felt like if't know the actor, Dax Shepard. Do you have any fear that like, Oh, this person might not even know who I am.
And that's kind of part of the premise.
I felt like if that were the case,
that would be like a goldmine for comedy.
For me making an ass of myself,
trying to get him to appreciate me and Delta.
Yes.
Cause that role is what I'm way more comfortable playing,
which is how do I make fun of what we do?
Not in a disrespectful way.
Point at the vanity, the self-consumed...
The celebrity of it all.
Yes.
And the subtle entitlement that just kind of gets dropped here and there.
Anyway, I just thought, oh, I'd love to just play this version.
The juiciest version of yourself.
Yes.
And it's for the most part, complete fiction.
But the scariest thing was, what is this show?
There were no comps.
Yeah.
Joe Schmo.
It was nothing like I'd done before.
But my favorite show, so
Curb, Larry Sanders
show, you know, where the feeling is
you're not sitting here looking at the
script going, oh, I said and
instead of the like, it's got to be
verbatim. It's more like a here's a
funny outline.
Let's make it a scene.
Play and play with it.
Christopher Guest.
They was waiting for Gufman and
Besson show and it's final to happen. I want to it. Christopher Guest, they was waiting for Guffman and Besson's show and Spinal Tap.
And I want to do something like that where I'm in a room full of funny people
who can get on that frequency where you're like, I see where you're going with this.
I see where you're going.
And Anchorman 2 was watching those guys do that.
The generosity.
It wasn't Steve trying to steal the spotlight from Will.
It was them complementing one another, setting each other up for these jokes.
And I was like, I want to do this
in this sort of environment with like people
from the Groundlings and UCB.
And I don't think I was prepared for the other side of it,
which was the choreography, the technical challenge
of the whole thing.
But we were surrounded by really great people.
It was Todd Schulman who did Borat
and Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky, the office and David Bernad, a friend of mine,
had done a couple of things with him.
He's my closest friend.
And he was like, I have this project for you.
And it's so hard to cast because it has to be someone who is willing to poke fun
at himself. People will know, but not like a superstar.
And I'm like, yeah, yeah, OK.
Yes, I like it.
I'm already comfortable. Do I lose a girl at any I like this. I like it, I like it. I'm already comfortable.
Do I lose a girl at any point?
Yeah, how many times do I get dumped?
Oh, in my sleep.
And I came in, there were scripts,
but there was no dialogue really written
because you can't, you don't know what he's gonna say.
You know, you can set certain scenarios up.
And I thought the scripts were so fucking funny,
brilliant writing.
And I was howling, reading them, going,
oh my God, I'm taking a shit in his hotel room bathroom.
I'm trying to get him to take the blame for it.
Some of the swings, I can't believe you guys land.
And I was on punk.
I was thinking about you all the time.
Yes, when I was watching, I was like,
I know how he feels.
I've been in this situation a bunch of times.
I'd argue it's the best acting you'll ever do in your life. Thank you. That is the closest thing I ever got to. Like I'm not acting.
The laws of cause and effect have been turned upside down. The lines between reality and fiction
are blurred. There's no second take. If you go too far, you fucked up. You fucked up. That's a
really interesting third element in the room at all times. That's exactly it. And what kept it
feeling so real is everything you didn't see in the show,
which is everything that was cut out each episode's what? 25 minutes.
We were there doing this with him for three weeks.
It was five, six hour days of just being in court.
And in those five, six hours,
you find little moments to insert the bit that's in the script outside of that
moment. You're fucking laying on the floor taking a real nap.
Oh, right.
In the deliberation room,
not caring where the camera is.
When you're acting in a movie,
I'm always so aware.
You have to be.
I have a great appreciation for people who are technicians
and recognize, okay, where's your light?
Here's my space I can kind of play in.
This was like free for all.
Yeah.
The camera guy is just gonna follow you around
whatever you're gonna do.
Just gonna be ready for everything. And they're gonna capture all of it and some poor bastard
Oh, it's got to edit this together that I'm almost serves the biggest
Yeah, and I think that's where my hat goes off to those people that found the show and crafted it
They had the outlines and the scripts were like, okay
These are the moments we can shave the other stuff off that we know is not gonna be there
But when Ronald's god bless Ronald, like this sweetheart man.
Listen to me, there's a lot of gifts in that show.
You're one of them.
But you couldn't assemble a think tank and come up with a better person.
Yeah, because he was so kind and you never felt bad for him.
He's confident, he's tall, he's fucking generous.
His spirit is so positive.
Smiling and helping people out.
But not a victim.
Right.
This is something you just get lucky or you don't get lucky.
The heart of the show is what a good person Ronald was.
Yes, he was.
And that's how they sold the show to me, which is this isn't a prank show.
We're not trying to make an ass of somebody other than me and the other jurors, but not
him.
This is what we were calling at the time, a hero's journey.
And I was like yeah sure
That's a pretty way of saying we're doing a prank show
Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare
So I kind of held the writers the the producers, everybody in check for that.
We better be doing something nice here.
Because my other concern was, we're fucking with this guy for three weeks of his life.
That's a long time to mess with someone's human experience and to fool somebody.
And you're going to forge relationships and friendships during that time.
And we're going to lift the curtain.
Yeah.
And he's like, that was fake.
That was fake.
Yeah. And I know how I would feel.
I don't even like a surprise birthday party.
Right. Not to mention, like, I think I'm friends with James Marsden.
And now you're telling me maybe we're not friends or feel like a total asshole.
You know, you've been bamboozled.
Yeah. So my struggles were every night I would get on the phone with the producer.
What's tomorrow's stuff?
We're hitting these moments.
And what do I not feel comfortable with? Every night I would get on the phone with the producer. What's tomorrow's stuff? We're hitting these moments.
And what do I not feel comfortable with?
I was very firm on,
I cannot turn the screws to this guy
any more than just the situation itself.
Right?
I'm not going to make him the butt of any jokes
because I just feel like that's where this show
is going to work is if we're not mean to this guy.
And by the way, it's low hanging fruit
and it's very tempting.
You probably have to resist nonstop.
There's a scene in the show where I ask him
to do an audition tape with me,
to read off camera for me.
Which really quick, let that sink in
if you haven't seen the show.
Non-actor, I think he sold either solar panels or wind.
I think it was solar panels.
He's gonna be asked to act in a scene with you
for an audition.
Now just imagine you, with zero acting experience, being asked to act with James Marsden.
What a mensch that he's even willing to do it.
And he got so into it.
At the beginning of the show, he didn't really know exactly who I was.
I think he recognized me.
He recognized you.
He's so kind, he recognized you and then actually did
some research to help you feel good.
He couldn't do that until we were done
with the first day of shooting.
So we had a woman that was planted there
in the check-in room or whatever,
and this was part of the script.
In case he doesn't recognize me,
this woman's gonna come over and ask for a photo.
So then he goes, why are you getting your photo taken?
And then she took a photo and he still didn't say anything.
He just got a thinking.
And so then I get to play with it and be like, oh boy,
this guy's socks over there.
I thought they said Sonic on it.
I'm in this movie, Sonic.
So I'm like doing that whole bit.
And then he just completely instantly goes, oh, oh, yeah,
you were in Sonic.
I heard that was not a good movie.
Oh, wow.
And I was like, don't fuck this up now,
because this is perfect.
Gold.
This is what you were after.
Yes, exactly.
He felt bad about that later, which made me feel bad.
Because I've already known what we're doing to this guy.
But it was such a mensch, it's such a sport.
When you tell somebody the premise of the show, you're like, come on, he had to have known.
What about the cameras? There's cameras everywhere.
Well, he was told that we were making a documentary about the core system is serving jury duty.
He just thought it was gonna be boring
and then just happens to be this actor guy
who's also stuck on it.
And he's so self-absorbed,
he's gonna stay and allow himself to be on camera
is because he thinks this documentary might qualify
for an Emmy or something.
You know, some dumb reason like,
all right, well, I'll be on camera.
Because normally I've got a quote.
But yeah, I was worried about doing something traumatizing to him for the rest of his life.
This hero's journey.
You know, if you're celebrating someone's good character or their humanity, this is
a pretty unconventional way of doing it.
Right?
You're punching somebody in the face.
And when they don't punch you back, you go, you are a good person.
Exactly.
There were conversations about he seems to be a good sport, he seems to be handling it good, and he talks to people
afterwards, and seems to be doing good.
And I'm like, all right, well, just keep an eye on him,
because this doesn't feel good to me.
I love playing with all the comedy and everything,
but I'm just worried that this guy is going to have
a breakdown after this.
So every day, it was like, all right,
let's be nice to this guy first of all.
In that audition scene, I could feel
that the creative minds behind the show
were kind of like, get him to act bad.
But they weren't saying it.
There's just a feeling.
Well, it's right there.
It's right there, like you said.
They've been writing comedy forever,
and it's very obvious this is the move.
And I was like, I just can't do that to this guy.
One, he's a great guy that I should be more like.
Yeah, totally.
You know?
And two, you punch him below the belt. It's not level playing field here. Yep. It actually was way better than he was like. Yeah, totally. You know, and two, you punch him below the belt.
It's not level playing field here.
Yep, it actually was way better than he was good.
Yeah, it was great.
Yeah.
And I got to play with him a little bit and like,
it's kind of all about what I'm doing in this.
And then once we start, I'm like,
hey, can you adjust that just a little bit?
Yeah.
But I would always try to do it in a real way.
You handled it so well.
When you see in your mind this project
that you're working on, the best version of it,
you're like, this is what we're going for.
I don't know if we're going to get there, but if I see that and I just kind of follow
that, then I'm jumping out of bed in the morning to go to that fucking courtroom in downtown
LA somewhere.
Yeah.
But I also kind of felt like, well, shit, I've really never been trained in improv, groundling stuff.
I feel like I can do it because I've been such a fan of that for so long.
But I don't know if I can.
We had a, boy I don't even know if I'm allowed to say this, but I guess maybe there's a statute
of limitations of what I can say.
I'll check after.
Okay.
But we had a test run.
We do the first day and that's it.
And the judge comes out and is like, we settled, everyone go home.
Just to kind of see
Yeah, to burn it as a mulligan a rehearsal see if we get to his first day and the guy
Looked like he was having a nervous breakdown halfway through the day. Uh-huh sweating
Because we did this bit where as he walks from the parking lot after a little on-the-fly interview
He witnesses a woman pulling a stroller out of her car and she accidentally smashes the window of the car
next to her.
Well, it's all been planned, obviously,
and that's the judge's car.
And he witnesses it and the sweet guy comes over and like,
I'm so sorry, are you okay?
And she's like, yeah, I'm just frazzled
and I don't know what happened here.
And he didn't know what to make of it
because here he is like now starting his first day
on this documentary about jury duty
and something really strange is happening.
Then we get into the courtroom,
judge leaves for a while,
comes back with like a bandage around his hand.
Someone like Farrell's father with a Chicago accident
broke into my car.
Did anyone witness what happened to my car?
Someone stole my Eagles CDs.
Oh no!
Oh my God!
It was a hilarious bit, but he was shitting himself and like beet red.
It was his lot.
Sweating.
Yeah.
He turned to me and he just looked like he was really, really panicking.
And he said, what do I do?
I said, what do you mean?
He was like, I saw it happen and the woman looked really nice, but I didn't know she
would steal a CD.
Oh no!
At that point in my head I was like,
okay, well this is just a rehearsal
and nothing's worth someone actually having a genuine
Yeah.
coronary, right?
Yeah.
And I just went, just maybe go tell the bailiff.
I wasn't supposed to do that.
I was supposed to continue on with what our narrative was.
Yeah.
I was like, no.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
I of course was in that situation several times myself.
Yeah, tell me, man, did you ever get into moments
where you're like, I just don't think
I can do this to somebody?
You weren't deliberately mean.
By the way, same thing.
Often, the premise was, and as the show went on
and I had more leverage, I was less and less willing.
I can give you a great example.
It was one of the last episodes we shot.
In fact, it was one of the only ones
we ever shot after it aired.
Because so many people were watching it,
they were naturally afraid I couldn't do it anymore.
So I had a wig and a mustache and all this stuff.
And it was a NFL celebrity golf tournament.
And I got there on the day and I had my wig on.
And I go, okay, so what's the bit?
And they're like, okay, you're gonna sit down with this guy.
He just cheated on his wife.
You're gonna bring that up.
Because they had been told you have to sit down
for interviews at certain holes
as part of this charity event.
They were just all very mean.
It was like airing people's dirty laundry.
And I go, I'm not gonna do it.
It was too late for them.
I had enough leverage at that point.
And they go, what the fuck are we gonna do?
And I go, give me 20 minutes and I'll think of some shit.
I convinced Jerome Bettis to tackle me on camera.
The bus.
Yeah, the bus, and pretended my back was broken and he believed it in panic.
So that was funny.
Garcia, they wanted me to talk about him being gay, which was a rumor.
Right.
And I'm like, I'm not doing that.
So I told him, Mr. Garcia, you're listed as 6'2", 220, a lot of young people in America here,
trying to grow up and be you. But we just shook hands and I'm 5'9", and I'm taller than you. So
how do you explain that? Why are you lying? And it becomes this whole thing. We're standing back
to back, four guys defending his height, which is preposterous. I'm claiming I'm 5'9". And then
another guy who I had heard had one of the bigger egos in the league.
Every 40 seconds in the interview, I kept touching my ear like I had a earpiece in.
I'm so sorry, we're going to... Who are we going to?
And I would list players that were much lower status than him, and I kept cutting away.
And then he kept giving up on the interview, and I kept getting him back.
I'm so, so sorry. That wasn't my choice. And I just do this over and over again.
So, you know, that's what I came up with,
but bringing out their dirty laundry
or allegations that they're gay
or all this other stuff that again, is just low hanging.
Right, and I'm sure that all of those guys
are afterwards are like,
ah, actually, you know what?
Yeah, when Jerome Benes finds out my back is not broken,
he's delighted.
He thought for a second he's gonna get sued
by some Canadian reporter in a wig.
And it's celebrities.
That's the inverse of what you're doing.
The other thing I was gonna add is I was also
far more desperate.
You're already at a point where you've had a big career
and you're financially fine.
That was my first time on TV.
So I was also willing, my moral standard
was probably much lower than it would be today.
I remember having this conversation
with one of the producers who had also worked on
Borat, you know, all of Sasha's stuff and he was like if
you're a really good guy this might not be for you. Oh right right right. And he
didn't say that directly at me but it was kind of like this is fucking hard.
How you navigate getting the comedy people actually want to see. Yes it's at
the expense of somebody. The nature of the show is that. Yeah that's why this
show was so awesome is Ronald just shined.
It made you love him.
I was happy for him that he got to display what a wonderful, beautiful human being he is.
Like, yeah, I think everyone who saw is like, I would love to be friends with that guy.
That's a good person.
And that's what actually happened as we all became actual friends during it
because he was such a good guy and fun
to be around. There were moments we were like, shit, I don't know if I can do this bit to him
today because he's going to kind of go like, well, that's an asshole thing for you to do here when
we were just chatting about all of our favorite movies and favorite childhood memories. And we
would have real conversations in between the bits that we had to hit that day.
Yeah, of course.
And then you sort of draw him in.
And he draws you in.
You do all the awful things,
which is gain someone's trust.
Exactly.
And then take a giant shit on it, literally.
Yeah.
But did you talk to him after?
And were you like, hey man, how are you?
I mean, I was the most nervous.
When Ike's father turned to him and said,
this is all
fake.
And for a split second, I saw his eyes kind of go dark and scared for like a millisecond.
Trying to compute probably.
Yeah, exactly.
And I hated that.
Yeah.
And I already knew what I was going to do and we all were going to do was storm the
box where he was sitting and just let him know, yes, this is probably a lot to comprehend and to take in and process right now.
But if you're wondering if all of this was real, this was all real.
And we adore you and love you.
The last thing I want to do is like, okay, that was fun.
Cool.
See you around.
Give me your number.
Let's hang out.
Let's have a wrap party.
I don't even know we're going to do that at first.
Like let's have a party with this guy. He's perfect. Reassure him that, yes, we took you along for a ride,
but you are a shining star in this.
Big time.
And here's what the show's about.
It's about you, my friend.
And everything about you that people are gonna love
about you, we love about you.
And so it was a love fest after that,
cause I really was like, is it gonna be an insult
when we hold up a check for 150, whatever he got paid?
Like that lets us off the hook somehow.
Yeah.
Right.
Yes.
Can the two coexist?
Can we find really, really funny moments and have this be a comedy and also be kind?
Can we be celebrating this dude while we're-
Exactly.
In an organic way.
It was the tightrope of all tight tight ropes and it really landed and we would have
hated it. I did not like the second borat. I was like,
these are nice people who trusted him and offered to bring them in to the house.
And now we're, yeah, I don't like it.
He's brilliant at what he does,
but if he's going into an antique shop and breaking everything in the antique
shop, I'm sure most people out there find that hilarious. And I was like,
I know.
But the funny how when somebody you feel like deserves it.
Yeah, something like, you know, justice.
I'm more OK with it.
But this guy was just so pure. Yeah.
OK, so paradise.
I took a huge gamble last night and started watching the screeners
that were sent to me with my whole family.
The aforementioned 10 yearold and her older sister,
who's 11, and then Kristen.
You're the president.
This is your second time being a president?
You were JFK?
Yeah.
Have you been a president a third time?
No, just two.
Okay.
That's a bad signal of your aging, by the way.
That's plenty.
Right?
Jesus, it's true.
You know, when you get hired to be the president,
you're like, okay, guys, I'm not 30 anymore.
Guess I'm not 30 anymore.
Yes, I'm not going to prom anymore.
Sterling K Brown is your Secret Service.
And Kristin, within about eight minutes, started going, my God, this chemistry is white hot.
I really want them to kiss the chemistry so good.
So first out of the gates was the chemistry between you guys is incredible.
He's so awesome.
Yeah, he's something else.
What a fucking beast of an actor.
Well, he's one of those Ed Eris. Yeah.
He's one of those like you were born to do this.
And I found my favorite male physique.
Oh, circles and Adonis the guy.
We meet him with his shirt off.
Thank God.
Well, you don't make me wait.
We like to hook him early. OK, so right out of the gates, you Adonis, the guy. We made him with his shirt off, thank God. We don't make him wait.
We like to hook him early.
Okay, so right out of the gates,
you're kind of a rogue president.
You're young, you're rich before you even got there.
You kind of want to coast through your next four years.
And crazy series of events happens.
We're now flashing back for a lot of it.
But the true premise of the show
doesn't even hit us to the end.
And my kids don't do well with blood. And there is some blood. And I'm reassuring them,
I think this will be the only blood and then we're going to investigate this for most of
this show, which they were able to get through. And then they were so fucking hooked that
we had to stay up till midnight last night. Going on, Dan Fogelman wrote it, who did This Is Us.
He did Crazy, Stupid Love, Incredible Writer.
The premise of this is so radical.
How can you explain the premise
in a way that you're allowed to do?
That's tough.
I've been actually coached on this.
That makes sense.
I assumed.
Because you have to know that Dan Fogelman,
one of his signatures is twists and turns.
It's really an exploration of power dynamics,
relationships, choices you make in life, and loyalties.
Let's speak like Nolan now and just speak really vaguely
about the brain and the robe on the Sistine Chapel.
I can say this, you're in a community
that appears to be designed.
It made me think of, I know there's some communities
like Gulf Shores, Alabama, where it's like,
the whole thing was constructed to have
its own convenience store in its own neighborhoods.
It's a little pleasant ville.
That's a great one.
It's a very Truman show, it's very pleasant ville,
and it just has the greatest turn at the end of the pilot.
You see the trailers and it's like,
this is a political thriller
and it's really not about politics.
The only thing I didn't like about it was,
I'm watching how much you drink and smoke.
And I'm like, we don't have this physique at 50
if we're drinking and smoking that hard.
I mean, we do see you working out.
So I guess you're pushing through like, oh,
speaking of which, Mr. Dags, Mr. Dax. Oh, that's pretty damn good.
I heard you doing it and I was like, this guy's got the rhythm.
He understands the essence. He knows about the spirit. He understands.
That's fucking really good.
It's a tough one to do because the hardest impression is the one that
everybody feels like they can do a little bit of Arnold and walk in.
But that one's just like, how do you get the little extra bits in there?
I did this movie with Woody Harrelson
and he had just done True Detective with him.
So he came to set with all these Matthewisms
and I just soaked it all up and like,
no, he didn't say that.
Yes he did brother, he wouldn't believe it.
He wouldn't believe it.
They're best pals.
Say what you said to Woody though.
What did I say to Woody?
Because I love that you spelled it out there.
Oh yeah, he said,
why don't we head on over to my AIR stream?
Make it M-A-R-G-E-R-E-T-O.
Blow your horns off.
Blow your horns off.
That was good.
Yours is really solid.
I think yours is the only one that I've heard that I think is really spot on.
I just felt like everybody did it. Matt Damon's pretty great. He does one.
But that's sort of making the viral rounds. Three years later, something like, oh, you do a great McKony.
And three or four months ago, I think Matthew posted it on his Instagram.
Like, oh, well, that's kind of cool. I know he does it like Marge.
Marge has got to go check it out
and do the ashes and the whole thing.
That's pretty fucking cool.
All right, I'll take it.
I know I've struggled with the fact
that I've kinda become buddies with him.
And I'm like, am I supposed to hang this up
or am I gonna keep pushing?
I've decided to keep pushing.
I've even sent him messages as him.
He's got a great sense of humor about it.
He leans into it.
It's a green light.
Well, yeah, he's another one that's in shape.
That's what made me think of it.
Right.
Because my first conversation with him is I said, listen, I'm overly obsessed with drinking
because I'm an ex-addict and I've got a handful of people where I'm like, did they slide through?
Are they the one unicorn?
I know the stories of you drinking and I know you're up at five working out.
Do you just have some kind of constitution?
He goes, yeah, I guess I got a constitution. Some of my favorite workouts, I wake up hungover
and I push through and then you feel that break
and you're on the other side of it.
Those are some of my favorite workouts
because at night when I'm gonna go for it,
I look in the mirror and I say,
we're gonna go hard tonight,
but you're gonna wake up tomorrow morning,
you're gonna hit that gym, you're gonna do eight miles
and that's how it's gonna be. He makes a deal of himself and I'm like, yeah, you just have a fucking Constitution
I didn't have it. I
slept till 2
Some people can just do that
I think he's totally normal now, but he used to go hard and he'd show up for everything and he looked fucking great
So you're right. It could be done. This president could be McConaughey. I didn't think about that. Maybe he's got the
Waking up five, put the towel in the treadmill,
get on the booty burner.
Burn off these LBs and then creep around the wayside.
I can't really describe the show other than to say
it's fantastic.
When you pulled up, we were watching it midday.
It's the holiday, so they're not at school.
I can promise you, we'll have binged this entire thing
within 48 hours.
It's a fucking banger of a show.
It's awesome, I appreciate that.
And I've had this tickle in my throat for three weeks.
Ooh.
A long time.
Annoying, because my voice is not fully there.
It still sounds really nice.
Well, and I just made you do McConaughey.
You can kind of use the voice for that one.
Do you have a word that gets you into it? Because mine is, first time I talked to him, not fully there. It still sounds really nice. Well, and I just made you do McConaughey. You can kind of use the voice for that one.
Do you have a word that gets you into it?
Cause mine is, first time I talked to him,
he came up to me and he's behind me,
so I said, Mr. Dax, Mr. Dax.
Mr. Dax.
Yeah, it's the S's, isn't it?
Yeah.
The old Texas whistle.
Really good.
But back to Nolan,
it has a lot of parallels with Fallout.
A lot of these shows are starting to tackle
in subversive ways
income inequality. Everyone's got the sense it's like, wait, some people are living one way in this country and the rest are living dramatically different. And I think art's starting to tackle
that in a not so obvious way, but in other ways. That's the answer I wish I had in my mouth when
you asked me what the shows are. Because that's really it. It's class, it's power dynamics.
It's giving everybody a snapshot of like, what if,
and is this happening now?
Again, you watch the trailer and like, okay,
this looks like a murder mystery.
I'm laying there dead.
The murder is a mislead.
It's an appetizer.
It's the backdrop.
So it's a tough one to talk about for sure
without spoiling it.
How have we done, Monica?
Do you want to watch it?
Yeah, very badly.
Or she's like, I don't care.
I don't know anything.
Neither one of you said anything about the show.
No, it sounds exciting.
Sterling, I guess.
Sterling has his shirt off.
Titles, Paradise?
Think I got that part right.
It's Paradise.
Well, that son of a bitches on Hulu.
That's some bitch.
That's some bitch.
That's streamin'.
Some bitch on Hulu. You can stream it. That's on bitch. Streaming. So bitch on Hulu you can stream
and stream. You can stream it. You can air stream. You can stream stream. Yes on Hulu.
Officially the hardest project to talk about. Maybe other than Westworld. This is your niche.
Shit you gotta go out and promote and you can't. Great. And I don't have the brain to do it
anyway. I can't tell ya.
I don't know.
So I have no answer for your question.
It's filled with some good twists and turns
and there's a little lost in there as well.
The audience is gonna be trying to figure out
what the hell's going on through the whole thing.
Is it a week to week drop or are they all out?
Do we know?
Yeah.
Cause that makes a difference in a mystery.
Maybe I should ask my old contact at the ol' Oolu.
I think they're dropping the first two or three.
And then you're going to have to wait every week.
Which give me your thoughts on that.
I like it.
I'm back to liking it.
I hate it and prefer it.
Of course, well that's what we want you to be.
Cause I'm annoyed.
And then I love that it gives me 10 weeks of enjoyment
instead of one night.
Something to look forward to.
I'm gonna sound really old now,
but when you live in the world where you can just get it
whenever the hell you want it,
no one's being told no anymore.
Like there's a good thing to limits.
Even in entertainment, I think it's a good thing too.
Like, you know, when the Beatles came out.
You didn't get all their albums at once.
No, you didn't get them at once.
Probably impossible to see them live.
You got a couple songs before the album even came out.
It built up to now I can go get the whole album.
Or movies back in the day where they would come out and you would have to wait six months
to see it again.
I feel like there's something about the psychology of that that makes us enjoy it more or you
even think something's better than it is because of that.
It's delayed gratification, which ultimately is always good.
But if you don't buy into that, just fucking wait till March 28.
They'll all be out, and then you can sit down and plow through.
Option's yours.
Yeah, you can do whatever you want at that point
if you really want to fly through it.
However you want to consume it, consume it.
Well, Marzen, this has been a blast.
I love bumping into you.
We as actors, I feel like we're kind of somewhat solitary lives,
or can until the award shows the events that everybody goes
Which is the weirdest place to meet always the weirdest like oh, hey bud
Hey bud, and everything feels contrived a little bit a little bit
Well, you know the most telling thing I walked away with after the Golden Globes this year is I just had this moment where I realized
Oh, everyone I talked to told me I looked great. And I told everyone they looked great.
And that's a weird thing.
But everyone's nervous they don't look good
because they're gonna be in photos and then on TV.
So it's like, you wanna comfort everyone you see,
you look great.
And they're saying you look great.
And then I leave it, I'm like,
these are some of the greatest artists in the world.
And what we're telling each other is that we look great.
This is a lot.
I imagine that must be insufferable.
It's just a lot. I think it's a good note.
That is what everyone's afraid of.
That's the insecurity at those things.
I can always handle so much.
I want to go like, I'm in a tux.
I don't even deserve that.
I look the way I look at every one of these.
I can't look good or bad.
The way you feel about that is the reason why
I want to rush to your side at these events.
And I'm like, this is a real human being.
So it's nice to see you outside of all this BS that we do.
I didn't tell you you looked great when I saw you at F1.
Please don't.
By the way, you always look great.
I know, you don't even have to say it.
I feel redundant to tell you.
No.
The easiest path to my heart is insult me.
I can be honest.
There's one thing I did think at F1 a few times.
I had this thought, I was like, Marzen's kind of classy.
I literally had that thought.
I was like, he's like kind of dressed pretty nice
at this thing and he's got like a nice watch.
I think he's classier than me.
He represented a watch.
That's classy as hell.
Woke up in a dark room and fell into a closet.
It's a race.
Why am I wearing a pinstriped seersucker?
Cause you look rad.
Why wouldn't I?
All right, James, do your buddies ever call you Jimmy?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
So can I apply?
When I see you, can I call you Jimmy?
You may.
I don't know why or when I changed that.
I mean, my name was always James,
but I grew up, my mother and my brother, sisters
called me Jimmy.
And then when I got to LA,
I was in that phase where you want to be serious.
I gotta be taken seriously.
So I don't want to be in the teeny bop magazine.
So little Jimmy Marsden.
Yeah, I think the first year I was here, the projects I did do like Boogie's Diner
with Jim J Bullock, which is like a saved by the bell knockoff.
It was billing as Jimmy Marsden.
So when I hear somebody say Jimmy, I'm like, oh that person's known me for a long time.
It is, isn't it? This is the most subtle way to reclaim and integrate who you were.
That's what I think is sweet about it. You come here,
you're trying to hide who you were because you're afraid that that would expose you as not belonging here.
And then at a certain point you have some confidence and you go, I'm gonna start
you was not belonging here. And then at a certain point, you have some confidence
and you go, I'm gonna start reintegrating
the person I tried to distance myself from as a kid.
I think that's like part of your journey as a man.
Yeah, I totally see that.
Why am I shoving that aside?
Oh Jimmy, I'm not trying to be so serious anymore.
And it wasn't that silly.
Well, Jimmy, I can't wait.
Yeah, Jimmy.
Well, D-S.
Jimmy.
D-S, baby.
All right, well come back. This was a blast.
I absolutely will, and hopefully have my whole full voice
when I return.
Oh, I can't wait.
The whole interview will be McConaughey.
Oh boy, I'll probably skip that.
You might get that one out.
Yeah, I'll probably skip that.
That wasn't riveting to you?
No, I love it.
I can only handle it in small chunks.
She works with me every day,
and I'm constantly doing somebody's voice.
He can't stop.
I'm like her little brother and her dad. It's very confusing.
A lot of dynamics at play.
I juggle in a lot of identities.
So you've got a frequency for him that you can kind of turn down.
I do tune it fully out.
And it's so obvious.
I didn't see in her face the second I've lost her, which is quite regularly.
All right, well, be well, everyone check out Paradise.
He is an armchair expert,
but he makes mistakes all the time.
Thank God Monica's here.
She's gotta let him have the facts.
Do you feel extra fresh on your way to this award show
to look extra stylish? That's a great- Does it feel like to look extra stylish?
That's a great-
Does it feel like you look extra stylish?
Because of my big pants.
You were wearing an inclement weather jacket
when you came in that you denied was a rain jacket.
Look, I understand why you think it's a rain jacket.
Because of the noise it was making.
It was a shh, shh, shh.
Yeah, kind of windbreaker-y material-ish.
Yeah, yeah.
I bought it vintage, so it could have been a range out there.
Oh, great.
Yeah, sustainable.
Sustainable.
Yeah.
Do your part, do better.
Yeah, so BTS, I'm going from this, thank you.
You rearranged the time a couple of times,
which is very nice.
Oh, didn't mind one bit.
Because you're betrothed.
Yeah.
Kristen is hosting the SAG Awards this year.
Correct.
The Screen Actors Guilds Awards.
That's right.
And she asked if I could come in.
Once again.
Return.
Once again, that's right.
Because she was the first host ever.
2018.
That's right.
And so I, you know, wrote her stuff back then.
And so she asked if I could come and do that.
Out of retirement.
Yeah, exactly.
And do that for her.
And of course I said, yes.
So we are about to go shoot a promo for it.
Right.
I didn't really think about being extra stylish
because it's not a fashion campaign.
No, but it's, I don't know, it's a shoot.
Yeah, I mean, maybe subconsciously.
Subconsciously.
Yeah.
New group of people,
minimally you wanna put your best foot forward.
Yeah, I wanna be cool.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, I'm tired.
Oh great, me too.
Why are you tired?
I'm tired because of a big ding ding ding.
What?
I started Paradise last night.
This is for little Jimmy Marsden.
Oh, oh, baby Jimmy Marsden.
Yeah. Okay.
The first three episodes are on Hulu. Oh, okay.
And I was so in.
What a concept, right?
Yes, I was so in, and then I panicked
because I needed more.
Oh.
And we have screeners.
Yeah, yeah.
We're lucky enough to have screeners.
And even though it is my stance, like with Severance,
that I don't, I learned quote, learned my lesson
from Only Murders in the Building.
And cause I watched all of those in one night.
No, you didn't delay your gratification enough.
I didn't because they only give you so many
and then you have to wait a really long time.
So I promised to myself,
I wasn't gonna do that with Severance and I haven't.
Good job.
But with Paradise, I did, I watched all of it.
Except. All of it.
I didn't know they were gonna do the same thing.
They always do this.
It's not the end.
Right.
Again, I only have seven episodes.
Oh, oh, oh, that version.
I thought you were saying that the season finale
ended on a cliffhanger or something without a resolution.
No, there's eight episodes.
We got seven.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah, well this happened, of course, with Severance.
Yeah.
And then we started hounding Adam.
Well, actually, when we did the podcast, they offered to get us the remaining three, but
then that never happened.
Right.
I mean, those are under real lock and key, I gotta assume.
That brings me to another thing, actually remaining four.
So anyways, we've been hounding him, leaving aggressive messages.
And I think they just came in.
But they came in in a different screening platform, which every time,
I know it's such a baby thing to complain about.
But it takes sometimes 90 minutes to sign into these screening apps,
because you have to use the Google Authenticator.
You got to get a text.
You got to do a magic link to another website,
you're on your phone,
but you realize an email's come through
and you need to see the email,
but you follow the link through the original email.
So to go, so you need like two or three devices
going at once.
All to say I'm finally in on Apple screeners
and it's easy, but the next batch are on a different one.
Oh, okay.
So that's almost been a hurdle enough
for me to slow it down.
Yeah.
Well, not almost, it has been.
I watched the first two, I'm caught up on severance.
Right.
And, whew.
But you're not ahead at all.
God, it's good.
Yeah, it's a goodie.
It's so good.
But you loved, though, Paradise?
I love it.
What a hook, right?
Yeah, we ran into this problem in the episode
where you can't really say anything.
I know.
So that's just frustrating for people,
but I'll just say I watched seven episodes last night.
That says a lot.
Yeah.
I think that's enough of a testament to how good it is.
And everyone's great.
He's great in it.
Jimmy Marsden? Yes. Yes, of course. He's great in it. Jimmy Marsden? Yes, of course.
He really, he really...
I told I was saying, you know, he's just legitimately good.
He is. He is very natural and he plays that character very well.
But I love that he was acknowledging.
He's like, I just think I'm acting.
Yeah, he's like, I'm always acting.
Yeah, that was really refreshing
because you can also be really good
even if you have that feeling.
Yes.
You can let yourself off the hook.
Yeah.
I don't think everyone's having the experience
that Dan Lewis and some of these others are having.
I know.
Well, we don't know, maybe he feels like that too.
Dan Lewis?
Yeah.
Well, he is acting. I mean, he's't know, maybe he feels like that too. Dan Lewis? Yeah. He is acting.
I mean, he's not even, yeah.
There's no him there.
If ever there was some acting.
He's morphing.
He's morphing, he's channeling, he's transcending.
He's got a liberal arts education.
I wanna give a shout out to Lincoln.
She, they had their last soccer game last night
and they had a perfect
They achieved their perfect season Wow zero goals zero They didn't they didn't goals. Yes zero. They scored zero times and it got close
I got scared there was a there was finally a kick on goal last night and it almost went in I kind of panicked like
Oh, don't don't mess up your record Wow and
almost went in, I kinda panicked, like, oh, don't mess up your record.
Wow.
And, but what's great is I think the girls too
had a good sense of humor about it,
that they joked about having a perfect season
at this point. That's funny.
Yeah, but this is tied in because a good friend of mine
who works at HBO was there,
and he was talking about having just watched
episode eight of White Lotus.
Oh my God.
And I had an envy, it brewed up in me.
Yeah.
Oh.
He's allowed, he's gonna be killed.
Well, he's the producer.
He has to watch them.
Now that you said it, he's gonna be killed.
This is an Easter egg for an upcoming episode.
Yeah, yeah, truly.
Couple episodes from now.
Five or six episodes from now.
So TV is doing great right now.
It's doing great.
We're finding we have some big shows coming back,
which is a huge relief.
I felt like it slowed down quite a bit there,
but we got some offerings now,
and I feel comforted by that.
I do wanna do 40 seconds of navel gazing,
and then I'll table all the navel gazing for some period.
But people, as you would probably guess,
a lot of people felt very strongly
with the point of view you were making,
I guess it would be two fact checks ago,
Erin was previous fact check,
when we had our discussion about being authentic
and sharing feelings.
And versus entertaining and a respite.
So, you know, people supported us on both sides.
Yeah, I support us on both sides.
Me too.
I only wanna be clear about one thing.
Neither of us are pitching all sadness or all entertainment.
We're both pitching some balance.
And I think most importantly, people should know
there's no pressure for us to be making it anything.
Some people were nervous about that.
My goal is for it to have the balance it's always had.
And I know it's your goal too.
We both have the same goal of having the balance
we've always had.
And then we have differing opinions on, you know, sometimes we-
To me it will, hopefully, and not always,
but I trust that it will always strike that balance
because of the nature of our dynamics.
So even when there's sadness or bad things or hard things,
we talk about that, but then something funny will come up
or something light will come up too, and that's life,
and that's the true to us.
Okay, and then the last thing is,
and I've said this before probably in interviews and stuff,
and I don't know if I've ever said it explicitly on here.
There are people saying really heartfelt
and moving things like you have to understand
we value your perspective on this.
It helps us process the thing going on.
And I mean, mostly people are feeling that way
about me not commenting or spending a lot of time
on the election or the first week.
I just want people to understand why that's my position,
which is I would never want
a young dude who voted for Trump,
who's a sexual abuse survivor, do not feel welcome here.
I would not want an addict that voted for Trump
to not feel welcome here.
I just have a certain purpose that's clear to me.
And part of that purpose is,
I don't want anyone to feel unwelcome
Yeah, I think if I hunkered down on either side of the political spectrum
I would just be kind of
Disinviting half the people and so I hope people understand that's where it's coming from
It's not like just an obstinance or a sorry word. Yeah. Yeah, I don't want to talk about it
It's just I want everyone to feel welcome. Yeah, that makes sense to me.
And if you take it from the perspective
of this is sort of an AA meeting type setup,
then yeah, you would never, I don't think,
say you can't come here.
Right, anyway, that was my navel gazing.
Got it.
Yeah, I can move on now.
Well, back to Paradise, little Jimmy's fantastic.
And now I feel comfortable calling him that
after watching it.
After watching it, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Did it make you wanna smoke and drink?
No, well, I already drank, so I got that one down.
It did not make me wanna smoke.
Do I tell you about one of my favorite
birthday presents I got?
What?
From Matt and Laura.
Oh!
It's a wooden box with a glass face and a little hammer and the glass says, break in
case of emergency and behind it is a pack of Camel cigarettes.
That's fun.
Isn't that great?
That's great.
What a great gift.
That's a really good gift.
It really cracks me up and I like it.
Yeah.
And I will break it in case if like something,
if they go, the meteor is gonna hit earth in eight hours,
I'm gonna get it, rip them out.
I know, I've been thinking about what to do
in the last hour.
Oh, uh-huh.
If some bad event is happening.
Yeah.
Do I try to get to safety?
Well, this like, Jess and I were talking about,
or maybe we talked about it here also,
but during the fires, we were thinking, you know,
oh, we said it on Josh Gad's episode,
like who are you on the Titanic?
Which person are you?
Are you the person who's really trying to figure out
how to get off? Are you the person helping's really trying to figure out how to get off?
Are you the person helping arrange people to get off?
Are you those people who just,
they're like drinking wine as it's going down?
I mean, we sort of said that was gonna be us.
Yeah, I was like, I'll be playing the cello still.
Yeah.
So I wonder, I wonder.
What you would do.
What I would do.
And if I'm gonna try to like save myself
or just be like, you know what?
Good ride.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's been a great ride.
For Eric and I, this topic comes up in,
for Eric and I, it's always so simple, so clear to us.
How do you wanna die?
You just wanna OD on opiates
because you'd be feeling very blissful
and then you just wouldn't wake up.
Yeah. Yeah.
That's probably-
I think most addicts kind of have the same.
I hear people, well, I guess I'd want to,
I guess get shot, that's fast.
Or die, fall off a building.
Or I don't want to drown.
I'm like, what about a nice gentle send off?
I think that's the preferred.
I kind of agree.
Oh, I've done some doctoring on myself,
as I tend to do.
And I think I was complaining about it
the last fact check.
I've been seemingly sick for like eight weeks,
something like this.
And then when we were in Mexico,
the elevation's quite high,
so my nose was kind of bloody and dry.
And then when I got back, it was really, really bad.
And so I was like, what cold do I have?
I was thinking, thinking, thinking,
and all of a sudden it occurred to me yesterday morning.
I'm like, oh my gosh, you know what might be happening?
I started thinking of my nasal passages
like an anal fissure.
Like I blew it out so bad, honk, honk, honk,
I'm really going at it.
Try, you know. Oh yeah.
Way too aggressively.
We're like, I had my eye bulged out at one point in Mexico.
Oh God.
It's like, we gotta throttle back on this exhaust
because it's pushing on your eyes or whatever.
So it occurred to me,
maybe I just like, I have a lot of damage in there.
The body's sending white blood cells to heal it,
which is snot.
And then I'm honking that out a second.
And I'm just in this endless loop of trying to repair.
So yesterday I'm like,
you're no longer allowed to blow your nose.
And Monica, of all the things I've done,
quit cigarette, you know, anything,
this one's crazy hard.
What about-
Cause I've been blowing, it's definitely a tick now.
It's definitely like any time I feel it, I have to do it.
It's a thing.
And I have to just not blow my nose.
I of course did have to blow my nose
cause it's still building up.
That's what I'm saying, can I have it twice a day?
I probably hit it about six times yesterday,
but down from probably 600 the day before.
Yeah.
And I'm only allowed to basically go like, hmm.
If I have to blow harder than that to get it out,
I'm not allowed.
Oh, I see.
So that's.
I can even just talk a lot and say, hopefully I'll just,
hmm.
You know, it's like a cheat.
And are you worried stuff's going to start coming out?
Of course, yeah.
And guess what? It's not. And already it's stopped. It's not it's like a cheat. And are you worried stuff's gonna start coming out? Of course, yeah. And guess what?
It's not, and already it's stopped dripping as much.
Wow.
So I really think thus far this diagnosis might be on.
I think that's good.
Is it bad to have tissues right there?
That feels very taunting.
Right, like a little mirror and a straw.
Yeah, it's not very, you should move that out. My old friend.
I'd be so happy to say goodbye to that old friend.
I mean, we've talked about this.
You are obsessed with the tissue box.
Like for you, that's a, that is an indicator
of whether it's a nice hotel or not.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Absolutely, yes.
And I've never noticed it.
I never notice it.
It's also, it is reared itself in like photos
I'll take in post.
And I think people sometimes call out.
Like I, it looks a little perverse.
I always have a box of tissues with you.
Oh my.
It looks like I'm always about to
or just finished self-pleasuring.
Do you have a deviated septum?
Yeah. Go to show what an addict I am.
I can even get addicted to like blowing my nose.
I am proud of you for noticing and stopping
and I will say I'm grateful.
Grateful.
It's a lot to cut around.
And I, and on video, it wasn't an issue before It's a lot to cut around.
And I, and on video, it wasn't an issue before,
but now we're seeing it.
And so I do have to tell, I do have to make it clear,
like never be on a shot.
You can never be on a shot when Dax is blowing his nose.
I've made that clear.
Okay. That's one of the edicts to the editors.
Okay, it did just make me think,
you almost never see anyone blow their nose in a movie.
Unless they're playing super sick.
Sure. And it's very achooey.
And they're over the top.
They're like tongue acting to hit their nose.
Yeah, they're like this.
They're like this.
They're like, oh honey, did you bring up,
did you bring up, their voice is always like,
no I didn't, I wasn't able to stop and get it.
Yeah.
You know, it's more of a-
You booked it.
I booked it.
You booked it for Marshall.
Oh, thank you, thank you, thank you.
That was good.
And occasionally you'll see this too.
You'll see in a movie,
you'll see a woman go into a purse and then.
Of course, she's really sad.
She's very sad.
But I can't think of a time I've seen Robert De Niro
blow his nose.
Is it really unsettling when you've seen it on video?
Because obviously I've never seen it.
Is it like my drumming phase?
I don't like it. It's bad,
it's a bad look.
I mean, no one wants the,
it's like you just said, we don't see it.
So it's very, it is like, I'm not supposed to see that.
It's like someone wiping their butt.
And it feels like, oh wow, he just like,
really just doesn't give a fuck.
Okay, sure.
There's like some subtext to it.
He just really doesn't care, but that's not it.
Of course it's just that you're in the zone.
Yeah, and I'm pretty sure it's gonna start rolling
out of my nose if I don't give it a.
But it is a, I have noticed,
and I do think it's gotten.
Worse.
Worse, or more.
I wouldn't say worse, but.
Well, I think it's okay to label sometimes worse.
More, and so I'm personally delighted.
But the human battle just doesn't quit.
Yeah.
It won't end.
It's relentless. I wanna give you a compliment.
I think you often in life come to the right conclusions
about things, but I do think it takes you a long time.
But I always-
Sure, in this case, like too much.
I gotta be uncomfortable and miserable for a while.
Right, I just think you do get there.
Like I do know this as a pattern.
Again, I was talking to Jess, obviously.
Well, I did something sort of mean to him
because he's my brother, right?
So wow, this is such a ding ding ding.
He has this amazing job.
He runs his business with this other guy
and it's a service business.
He goes to restaurants and teaches people
how to give perfect service.
And it's incredible and it's doing so well.
I'm so proud of him.
That's great.
It's really awesome.
But when he does these classes for them
and he's just, it's very animated and loud.
It's an improv class. Yes, and he's very like, it's very like animated and loud and- It's an improv class.
Yes, and he's very on for all of it.
So he is struggling with his voice.
Oh, that's great.
And he's been complaining about it a lot.
And so I said, well, what are we gonna do?
We should like, you know, Grether's,
I also offered that here.
Throat Co.
Throat Co, maybe a medicine,
but he's just been complaining a lot about it,
understandably.
This is where my impatience comes in.
Sure.
We were gonna hang out, so we FaceTimed,
and the first thing he said was like,
oh, my voice, and I said, well, I can't hear that again.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm lucky, I'm lucky, but I also, this is the conversation I want to get to.
I know he can take that.
And he did.
He just like sat there for a second and he said, okay, I'm fixed.
And I said, I'm not saying that, but also like, we do need to figure it out.
Yeah, right.
Or we can't complain anymore.
It's time to get into solution.
Yes, exactly.
This is one thing I love about him.
He like brought that up as a positive thing.
And he was, and he said, I feel, I feel really lucky that you feel you can be that way with
me or say a thing that is true.
Yeah. And he said, do you do that with everyone? Yeah. you can be that way with me or say a thing that is true.
And he said, do you do that with everyone?
75% is the same, but there's like a 25%
that's adapting to who I'm around.
So I'm not saying that phrase to everyone.
For sure.
But I would still- I would argue it's pretty gendered too.
Like I think your dad gets it, your brother gets it,
I gets it, Jess gets it, and yeah, your mom gets it.
So that's four to one.
It's family, I guess I would say.
Although I would never say that to Kristen.
I feel that, right, right.
I've made this point before.
I am able to speak to young men in a way
I just wouldn't speak to.
You know, previously, I think I've told this story
is like my friend who I adore, Jay,
who's like would wash my razors and stuff.
Yeah.
And he would list all this stuff.
And I just wanna tell him that,
listen, this is how you'll win in life.
Just make shit disappear.
Don't try to get any approval for it.
Just make problems go away
and you will fucking own a company.
Right?
Like I'll just, but I wouldn't,
I can just be that way to dudes.
I don't know.
Well, cause we were talking about another friend
who I won't name.
He was asking, would you say this to her?
It was a girl. Yeah.
And I said, no, definitely not.
That person is very sensitive.
Like I know them and I, but I would say something.
I would say like, well, what can we do?
Like, what can we do?
How can I help something like that?
So I'm still, the point is the same.
Yes.
You just have different bedside manner.
But do you think you do that?
Do you think you're 75% one thing and then you adapt?
Or do you think you're like a hundred always?
I was just talking to this, it's adjacent to this,
which is, no, I think I'm, I think I'm kind of overly soft when I,
I will always say my thing.
It's not like I'm a people pleaser.
Yeah.
But I have been in a position many times
where I have to give notes to people who work for me.
So I have gotten very good, I think,
at laying out notes in a positive way.
To the degree that one of the first habits I had to break
when I was
messing around with AI is I would go generate an image of a van and the blah
blah blah with the blah blah blah and it would come up and then I would go I
swear to God I was doing this like the first 20 times I use it I was like
really great start this works this works this works now could you add blank? And after about five,
I was like, Oh, I don't need to fucking say any of that to this thing. Let's go like,
make the wheels bigger. Yeah. Next thing, make them taller. No, but I was saying great
job to AI. Yeah.
Stay tuned for more armchair Expert, if you dare.
That brings me to something that I'm afraid to talk about, because I do not want to hurt
anyone's feelings in my life.
Okay.
But I also find the punchline of this is just too comical to not say in public
Okay, so there is a bit of a gender divide right now in our pod
about how nervous
Men are about their quality and how
Nervous the women are
And I know there's a lot of chains going on about different air purifiers and whatnot
And so Kristen's quite concerned about their bulb.
Yes, she is.
She's reading a lot about it.
I thank her for that, for our family's safety.
And also every day more air purifiers arrive.
To the degree that when you enter our house, it's like going into the reefer unit at a Costco.
It's like,
like it's, we've got,
we got six of them that filter out this particulate
at 0.01.
We've got a handful in the corners that are doing 0.003.
They're all running.
It's like, there's a hum in the house.
One of them was on auto and in the middle of the night,
I think it thought there was a biological weapon
went off in the bedroom.
Cause all of a sudden it was like,
there was a jet engine going on.
I was like, what is that?
And then I'm flying and I'm trying to fucking turn it off.
And I got, so this has all been building.
And then there's some concern about water.
This has gotten in the water.
All of this, this has been escalating
and there's more and more air purifiers.
And we're trying to navigate it.
She knows I'm not.
Yeah.
She'll even say like, I'm afraid to bring this up,
but right, so it's, but we're getting through it.
And I think it's going pretty well.
And then I had overheard that, you know,
we have these rulers to cool you down in the bed.
Yeah. And I had heard Car that, you know, we have these Oolers to cool you down in the bed. Yeah.
And I had heard Carly was going through
and running peroxide through all of them.
But I use distilled water,
so I'm not actually nervous about it.
So when I saw that this was going on,
I was like, you know, you just stay right out of it.
So last night I go to bed.
Yeah.
And I turn on the Ooler and it's making insane noises.
I don't know what I'm hearing all kinds of weird new noises.
And then I realized, and all of the little water capsule
wasn't set in correctly.
So I get that going and now I realized,
oh, it's out of water.
Cause maybe the peroxide thing.
So I'm filling in with water
and it just keeps making all these noises,
all these noises.
And I can't figure out what's going on.
And then at some point I can hear gushing water.
Oh no.
And.
Oh God.
I'm like, oh my, what's going on?
And I pick up my pillow and where it goes into the bladder,
that has been torn at some point in this cleaning.
Okay.
And it has just pumped a gallon of water onto my bed. Oh no. And I
was really tired. Yeah. And I saw that and poor Kristen saw that and I'm sure
she immediately was like oh no. Of course. And I just walked into the bathroom
and I leaned over the sink.
And I said to myself,
she's trying her hardest to keep the family safe.
That's right.
What I was really screaming in my head was like,
just leave my things out of it.
Just go crazy.
But I just, I really have three, I need my ruler and my coffee out of it. Just go crazy, but I just, I really have three,
I need my Oolar and my coffee in the morning.
So I was being, I went to self pity
and then I said, stop, stop, stop.
This is a human being who's trying her hardest
to keep everyone healthy.
Yeah, she is.
And then I came back in and I was very pleasant
and I said, I'm going to go sleep downstairs.
Oh.
Because my bed was soaking wet.
Of course.
And I walked downstairs and I realized
I can't sleep in the guest room
because that's where whiskey's fucking cage is.
And whiskey wakes up all night long barking.
And then I said, no, I'm gonna go outside.
Outside?
Yeah, so I slept in the guest house.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, okay.
Yeah.
So I was sleeping in the guest house
and I was thinking,
maybe I could claim this as my house.
Okay.
Now listen, listen.
I wanna say something to you.
Okay. I understand all say something to you. Okay.
I understand all of this.
Both sides.
Yeah, of course.
I think, and I, this probably isn't the place to say it,
but I do feel safer saying it here.
I think you're feeling a real lack of control in your life right now.
Oh, well, yeah, yeah, yeah.
From a lot of angles.
And so these things are very heightened.
Yes.
And anything is very heightened.
And especially interpersonal things get very heightened
when anyone feels like they have a lack of control,
but especially you because that's a, that's a,
that's hard for you. Yeah, you're right. And I felt like I lost control of my bed. Exactly.
Oh my God. I can't, I can't even count on sleeping in my bed now. This is a self-pity.
Exactly. That's the thing. Like again, understandably that's like the bedrock of your trauma is not having control.
So, you know, a flooded bed where people
who don't have that background are just gonna be like,
oh, they'll be annoyed.
Like it's like, oh, now I have to deal with this.
This is so annoying.
You're probably not gonna go to,
well, now I don't even have a bed that's mine.
I have no control over my bed.
I have all this stuff in no control over any of it. And I live with dogs and I don't even have a bed that's mine. I have no control over my bed. I have all this stuff in no control over any of it.
And I live with dogs and I don't want to,
I don't get to control whether I have allergies.
Yeah, you're right, I start compiling.
But it's not out of nowhere,
it's because there's been a lot of stuff
that is priming you for this,
it's just gonna get triggered easily
until we can let some of that go. Yeah, yeah.
I don't think it's a horrible idea to contact Mark.
Ah! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha It's never hurt. I'm just saying, I see why. And that's coupled, it's all coupled. The timing's perfectly.
I even said this out loud yesterday, said it out loud.
I'm like, there's some huge growth around the corner.
Yeah.
But I can feel it because it's also,
it's all coinciding, maybe I already said this,
with me writing about something
I was never gonna write about.
I don't think I knew that.
I'm at the point in the memoir
where I'm having to write about the thing I was never going to write about. I don't think I knew that. I'm at the point in the memoir where I'm having to write about the thing
I was never going to write about.
Oh my gosh.
Like I don't mind saying I was molested.
I had no intention to ever detail to anybody ever
on this planet what happened.
The details.
And so I've been for maybe eight days.
Oh my.
Going through that every morning, you know?
Wow, yeah, that's a lot.
So I think that's in the stew.
Of course.
I think being made fun of and all these award shows
is in the stew.
I think the fires are in the stew.
I think the fans in the air purifier.
Yeah, I think you're right.
I think there's a lot, like I'm spending time revisiting
that apex of loss of will.
The impetus of that really.
Yeah, and then all these other things are coinciding
in a very sim-like, impossibly coincidental way.
Yeah, January.
Yeah.
And so yeah, I'm hanging on at times by a thread.
But I'm very proud to say I haven't had any kind of blow ups.
That's great.
I haven't had any fantasies about escaping.
Maybe going to Nashville to get my bus.
Oh yeah, but then you didn't know.
That was gonna be like two days of, you know,
where I'm just driving a vehicle I can control.
That seemed very appealing. Right.
But I flagged it as, you're just trying to escape.
Like you're trying to not walk through all this.
You're trying to take a little break
there's the logical stuff and then there's what's really going on and I think I
Did go like yeah, you're just you want to escape right now
Well, that's good. I mean it's good that you recognized it. Yeah, it'll all pass it'll all pass
Yeah, I didn't know you were doing that and that obviously
Is gonna be a that's how I start my day.
I don't know.
Of the orders.
Yeah, maybe you should do it at night.
Yeah, but then maybe I couldn't sleep.
But then sleep is bad, yeah.
But I've been waking up, you know,
I've been having like two hour chunks
where I'm up at night too.
Yeah.
So. Yeah, I mean,
growing pains I guess.
But also, it is kind of funny that you just brought up
the fires because during COVID, at the beginning of COVID,
you've said it, that your goal is to reduce panic
with all of us who are panicked or like-
Heightened.
Heightened, yeah.
And you're trying to bring that down. You, in some ways in doing that, you know, like. Heightened. Heightened, yeah. And you're trying to bring that down.
You, in some ways, in doing that, you're like, it's not,
you're not saying it's not that big of a deal,
but like, that's like the energy, right?
Yeah. Uh-huh.
And then, you know, a year and a half goes by,
and you have the recognition, like,
oh, that did affect me.
Yeah, uh-huh. Even though I was like, oh, that did affect me. Yeah, uh-huh.
Even though I was like, it's not that big of a deal.
I'm not, it did.
And so when the fires were happening,
and to me it was like a little tangential,
like they were, it was a similar thing.
Oh yeah, yeah, it felt identical.
Yeah, exactly.
The masks and the evacuees.
Oh yeah.
And the fear versus the panic
versus it's not that big of a deal.
I thought like, I mean, in some time
there's gonna be a realization that had an impact.
I totally agree with you,
but I don't know if I think it was COVID that scared me.
But I do think living with people
that had heightened
emotions that were scaring me.
Yeah.
Did have a pretty big impact on me.
Well, no, but even just like the whole experience of it,
the isolation, the time together that was so intense,
the unknown, how long is it gonna be?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like all these things that we just all lived with
and dealt with very differently.
And I do think some people immediately know the feeling.
Right?
It's like they have the feeling minute one.
And I, and-
That's true.
You're in a zone of helping.
I didn't cry over my dad to like four months later. Yeah, it takes a minute. I didn't cry over my dad till like four months later.
Yeah, it takes a minute.
I didn't cry over the USO tour
till I was telling my mom about it
when I was out of the situation.
Yeah.
So maybe it's just now it's like catching up a little bit.
I heard that dude shared in the meeting on Monday
that he has this weird come down.
He was like, oh, I don't know what the fuck to do now.
I knew how to get the hoses out
and I knew how to do this and I knew how to do that.
Now I don't really know.
Yeah.
This, you know, the air quality.
I can't get a hose out.
I don't know. Right, right.
What can I do? Right.
Other than buy a couple dozen.
I think you have some you could lend.
Oh, speaking of other, something else uncontrollable, well.
Diarrhea. What? Diarrhea. No, I else uncontrollable, well.
Diarrhea.
What?
Diarrhea?
No, I don't wanna talk about that.
My friend's house was robbed.
Yeah, tell me about that.
I'm quite curious what happened.
Were they home?
Completely unrelated, no, not home, thank goodness.
But also on purpose, I'm sure.
Like, I think these people probably were staking out the joint. Yeah, yeah, I'm sure. Like I think these people probably
were staking out the joint.
Yeah, yeah, casing the joint.
Exactly, and so they knew they weren't there.
That's preferred.
Of course, yes, but unrelated to the fires,
like they were out of town for just a night
and what's really such a weird, sad bummer
is she had just put all her irreplaceable items
into a safe.
A fire or a safe.
Because of the fires, obviously.
Yeah, and they assume there was valuables in there.
And they took the whole safe.
That's what's tricky about a safe.
I know. You know what the tricky about a safe. I know.
You know what the move is probably?
To just leave it unlocked.
Yeah.
If you're just gonna put memorabilia in there,
like leave it unlocked so they can see there's nothing.
So you could still grab it easily, I guess.
And if there's a fire, you hit lock.
But while it sits there, you leave it unlocked. Cause it doesn't need to be locked to be fire retardant.
It can have the door shut without you having locked it.
That's sad.
That's a good idea, maybe.
I know.
Because I was gonna say,
I don't really understand modern robberies
because there's nothing to fence.
Unless the people have some crazy jewelry collection
or a bunch of watches,
but like all this stuff people stole in the 80s and 90s
is like valueless in the second hand.
You can't sell a 55 inch TV for more than $100.
Like I'm not sure what they think they're gonna get.
I think the jewelry is the big thing.
And yeah, watches, I mean, that's what they stole.
And she even said, you can have that stuff.
There was one valuable piece of jewelry in there
that was her wedding bracelet
that was gifted from a family member.
But the rest of it is all,
definitely not things the robbers want.
And I said, maybe you could put a note on the door saying,
if you stole my stuff,
can you just bring back these items, please?
That's sad.
But she's doing okay.
And is the husband now wanting to like arm himself
and get a heat like.
He's not but of course.
Are they rolling with it or are they?
I mean, they're doing okay, but they,
I mean, this is always what happens
in any of these circumstances where there's violation.
You feel guilty.
Right, like you did something wrong.
You did this and that caused this
or you didn't do this and now this happened
and it's the same, it's like, we're wired that way.
I assume soon it'll happen again.
Well, because you wanna learn from your mistakes.
I know, but it's so unfair.
You should be able to recognize it
without the shame or the guilt.
Yeah, yeah.
I think they might,
they're both struggling a little bit with that.
We're reading the new Unstoppable Books
by Yuval Harari at night to the kids,
by we christened reading it to them
and I listen and sometimes fall asleep.
But he was describing a scene where the Sapiens
might've seen a group of Neanderthals approach.
And because Neanderthals were there
and then they all, they went extinct
or some got absorbed into our genes.
But in general, they were killed out.
They were out competed by Sapiens.
And they were, he was setting, describing this scene.
But also in the book, there's the Dovion,
I can't say the word, but these Dovion people
that were on an island, so they got smaller.
Really tiny, like two feet nine.
Okay, this is at Easter Egg for a future fact.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
And I'm just laying there listening
and I was thinking to myself
how predictable we are.
If you're a group of a hundred sapiens
and you see these Neanderthals, you see 12 of them,
and they're bigger than you, you're scared.
Yeah. And so you try You're scared. Yeah.
And so you try to neutralize this thing. If the De Noviens had rolled up,
they would have probably been kind to him.
Yeah.
And he even talks about often they kill off the Neanderthal parents, but then they would care for
the kids or babies of the Neanderthals.
Interesting.
And I'm like, I was like, girls,
this is the crux of violence is fear.
Yes.
You know?
Yeah.
If you see little people walk up on the scene,
you're like, Oh, get you get you go,
want some food, come in here.
Unless they are called demons or something.
Like they make them a different type of threat.
They could be mis, yeah, as magicians.
Evil magic powers.
Yeah, exactly.
So, fact, James, the tallest and smallest woman.
Women.
Yes, yes, oh yes, yes, yes.
I saw them again.
They came up organically in my feed.
Hanging out again?
Same stuff we already saw.
But it was back.
I think it's gaining popularity.
I hope.
Yeah.
The world's tallest woman is
Ramisa Gelgi.
Beautiful.
Yeah, I don't know how to say it.
And the world's shortest woman is Yodi Amji.
Which again, it really sounds like a short person's name. I know. I know. Well, it just sounds cute, Yodi Omji. Which again, it really sounds like a short person's name.
I know.
I know.
Well, it just sounds cute, Yodi.
And like Yoda.
Right.
And Yoda is very, very small.
Yeah, and to be fair, it's J-Y-O-T-I,
so I don't actually know.
Could be Jodi.
Yeah, or J-O-T or something.
Yeah.
They met in London in November for afternoon tea.
And Rumeysa is 7'0.7",
and Yodi is 2'0.7".
I think it's just a miracle
that they're exactly five feet apart.
I know.
That they're both 0.7'.
It's like how me and you have the exact same IQ.
Yes.
It makes no sense.
Suspicious, suspicious.
And this was from the, the Guinness through this,
Guinness World Records, obviously.
Yeah, they're the only ones that could ethically
host this kind of thing.
Yeah.
If it was Barlin and Brothers, Barlin and Bailey.
Barnum and Bailey.
Barnum and Bailey.
They are not allowed.
You go, come on guys, knock this off. That Barnum and Bailey. Barnum and Bailey. They are not allowed.
You go, come on guys, knock this off.
That shit's.
True.
We gotta retire that.
That's true.
So again, as you're like, get them together.
Yeah.
A couple of world record holders.
I know.
I wonder what the volume difference was in tea
that I drank.
That interests me.
They're so awesome.
And we think they look like us.
They do.
They look quite a bit like us.
Rumaissa looks like you and Yodi looks like me.
Uh-huh.
And we desperately, although I don't know
if this puts us in the Barnum and Bailey category.
Oh no, no.
We desperately want them to come to the garage
and have tea.
Yeah.
So that we can all stand in a perfect
linear line going up.
That's right.
From Yodi to Monica to Daxie to Ramesa.
Yeah.
Well, that would be a stunning photograph.
I agree.
You also wanted to do boxes
where we all reached the same height.
That's right, where we're all exactly 7.7 inches tall.
But we said that's a little scary for Yodi.
It's quite scary for Yodi,
but what I like about that proposition
is that her box will be exactly your height.
Yeah.
That's really cool.
So you're three feet taller than her,
and I'm only one foot taller.
Ramais is one foot taller than me.
So to be honest, we do have to invite someone
who is four feet tall just to make it fucking perfect.
You need Calvin.
Calvin.
Oh, that actually works color wise.
It's a gradient.
Calvin's a beautiful transition.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But he's on the wrong side.
Yeah. Oh yeah.
Yeah, because Ramisi is whiter than me,
which is hard to do.
Right, she's whiter than you.
Yodie looks similar to my coloring.
But she looks just similar to you, period.
Yeah.
Oh.
She really does. You know what we were discussing? Last fact check, if you were a great artist, I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you.
I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. I'm not gonna lie to you. and we were, this is no offense to anyone, but we were at a crosswalk and she said,
is that you?
And I looked over and there was a woman there.
She was wearing a mask so I couldn't see her full face,
but I think she was wearing a mask.
Maybe I added that in my head.
Oh wow.
This doesn't sound like the clearest memory.
Yeah.
Well, it was traumatic because I saw her
and I was like, oh, and then she got closer
and I was like, I don't know.
Yeah, but that's a common occurrence.
I know for- Yeah, but that's upsetting. It's upsetting. You didn't like the comp.
I didn't.
Right.
But also-
She was a beautiful woman.
In Ana's defense, I have the experience quite often where you see someone from a distance
and as they get closer, you start realizing, oh, this is a different person than I saw.
Okay.
But she didn't say, oh, actually not.
But maybe she got in her head.
She got in her head. She went like she didn't say, oh, actually not.
But maybe she got in her head. She got in her head.
She went like, oh shit, that was a bad comp
now that she's closer.
But now what do I say?
She could have said, oh, actually nevermind.
She says bad comp.
Bad comp, that's all you have to say.
Yeah, bad comp.
Also, maybe it's right.
It's probably a good comp.
That's the, this is where things get tricky.
I doubt it.
I'm a good comp for Yodi.
Okay, now, does yawning help ear clearing?
Yes, it does.
It opens the eustachian tubes, which allows air to flow into the middle ear and equalize
pressure, popping your ears.
So that would have worked if he had just tried it.
Yeah, he was being insolent.
He was.
Can a chihuahua and a mastiff have an offspring?
The Great Dane is what I found.
People are most curious.
Yeah, chihuahua and Great Dane.
It says highly unlikely to produce viable offspring
because of their extreme size difference,
making natural mating nearly impossible
and posing significant health risks
for both the mother and potential puppies.
Therefore, responsible breeders
would never attempt such a cross,
but it is technically possible.
Yes, and we would want it to be a male chihuahua
impregnating a female Great Dane, because a Great Dane offspring be a male Chihuahua impregnating a female Great Dane
because a Great Dane offspring inside of a Chihuahua uterus
could be lethal.
Exactly.
Also, the boy, it would be almost impossible
for the Great Dane male to enter the Chihuahua,
to stoop down low enough to get the penis.
Yeah, it would have to.
But a little Chihuahua, if a Great Dane
was taking a nap on its side, also it consented. Let's just say it consented before. Sure, it would have to. But a little chihuahua, if a great name was taking a nap on its side,
also it consented. Let's just say it consented before. Sure, sure, sure. It was like, I'm drowsy,
but whatever you want to do while I'm out. And then it was laying perfectly on the side. It could
definitely get up there. It's laying on the ground. And it's the, oh, the chihuahua is the penis,
right? Yes. Okay. Yeah. So the great name female or gal is laying on her side.
Or her back.
No, her side.
Oh.
And then the little chihuahua just comes up
and hump, hump, hump.
He's at the right height if she's laying on her side.
Oh, I see, I see what you're saying.
And then she could probably have 13, 14 pups in the litter,
not even notice.
Yes.
Those little tiny pups.
She just thinks they're little mosquito bites.
Yeah, like a heavy, heavy flow. Oh, wow. Yeah, so if it's gotta be done, not even notice little tiny pup. She just sings to little mosquito bites.
Like a heavy, heavy flow.
Oh wow.
So if it's gotta be done, that's what we recommend.
Yes.
Update, I am leaning more and more,
but don't hold me to this,
but I'm leaning more and more towards eventually,
potentially getting a dog.
Wow.
I know. Wow. When I move into a dog. Wow. I know.
Wow.
When I move into my house.
Yeah.
I think that's a great idea.
I need to, I think I will feel safer.
Yep.
Get a big boy.
Yeah, a big boy.
Erica and Charlie have been fostering this German Shepherd.
Yep.
And a very, very smart dog.
Even a puppy is very smart.
They're great dogs.
I'm terribly allergic to their hair, but I-
Oh, you are?
Yeah, my mom's dog Breezy, who I loved.
And I love PP.
Yeah, PP.
But boy, they shed like a mother.
And when I'd be at my mom's house, I couldn't breathe.
Well, I don't want shedding.
Get a doodle.
Get some kind of a doodle.
But are they going to protect?
Well, that's a good question.
I need one that is nice.
And a killer.
Yeah.
A reformed battle.
I think German shepherds are that.
Yeah, they are.
But I don't.
My house is going to be so pretty.
I cannot have it covered in hair.
Oh, and they fucking shed so bad.
You gotta get something that doesn't shed.
Ah!
Back to the drawing board.
Yeah.
Okay, you said the fewest among the armchair
anonymous callers are from Oklahoma.
I'm not gonna second that.
Can't substantiate that claim, no.
The house with, that James had his party,
his 50th birthday party, this is the episode.
Yes, this is the episode.
That was hilarious because we were talking about
surprise parties and 50th birthday parties
and yours was in the works.
So you didn't know.
Yeah, so mine was a couple days out.
Yeah.
James Goldstein, the Sheetz Goldstein residence
is the home that he had the party,
that's a big iconic home in LA.
Gorgeous place.
Yeah.
Oh, the phobia of getting sued is litigaphobia.
That makes a ton of sense.
Litigaphobia.
Nick Nolte is not from Oklahoma, he's from Omaha.
Okay.
Easy mistake.
And Brad Pitt was born in Shawnee, Oklahoma.
Congratulations, Shawnee.
I know.
Yeah.
That's it.
Would you rather be known as the town
that produced the tallest woman in the world,
the shortest woman in the world, or Brad Pitt?
Tallest.
Same.
Yeah.
I don't know why. It's the rarest.
Yeah, and I just imagine you could put a statue in town
for that person. Oh, and it would drop people.
And if you did the shortest person, you'd miss it.
If you wanted to break stereotypes,
the move would be to put a statue of the tallest woman
next to the statue of the tiniest man.
Yeah.
That was your goal.
Yeah, I like that.
And Calvin in the middle.
Calvin right in the middle. Calvin right in the middle.
All right.
All right.
Love you.
Love you. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by joining
Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple podcasts.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.