Doug Loves Movies - Jon Hamm, Paul F. Tompkins, and Tom Scharpling Guest
Episode Date: April 10, 2010Doug welcomes actor Jon Hamm, comedian Paul F. Tompkins, and The Best Show on WFMU host Tom Scharpling on the show for another roundtable discussion on film.See Privacy Policy at https://art1...9.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Doug hates candy wrappers, squeaky babies, skimpy seeds
With 50-edged hopper kernels in his teeth
There's still not more that he won't see
Because Doug loves movies
Hey everybody
It's Tuesday, April 16th
2010
It is April 6th, you're right audience
Somebody quickly corrected me
Why did I say 16th?
Oh you know why?
Because the L at the end of April
Looks like a 1 at the beginning of 16
April 16th April 6th, 2010 Oh, you know why? Because the L at the end of April looks like a 1 at the beginning of 16.
April 16th.
April 6th, 2010, and I love movies.
That's right.
I'm trying to work that in better at the beginning of the show.
We're at the UCB Theater right before Comedy Death Ray, and I have everything written down on a tiny napkin tonight
because the bigger piece of paper
that I normally write all my notes on
is sitting in my living room
wherever I left it
because at the last minute I was like
I'm going to write something else down
and I was like oh the VapoBag is full
I better go hit that
I better go grab it before it explodes
oh I'm done hitting this VapoBag I better get hit that I better go grab it before it explodes Oh I'm done hitting this VapoBag
I better get out of here
My limousine is waiting outside
And uh
So yeah
So I left my notes in my living room
But I made new ones on this napkin
While eating next door
And I think this is going to work out great
Now the people that are here Viewing this in person And I think this is going to work out great.
Now, the people that are here viewing this in person have noticed that I have three microphones to the next of me.
And so that means three exciting guests.
I booked them all.
Well, I booked two.
Well, you know, I booked them all. Well, you know, I booked them.
But when it all came together,
I couldn't think of a theme other than awesomeness.
Yeah, there was a line extra early tonight.
I don't know why, because I did not leak this at all.
But my guests tonight, please welcome Paul F. Tompkins, Jon Hamm, and Tom Sharpling, everybody.
Here they come.
A lot of Jon Hamm, a lot of people yell, yeah, Jon Hamm.
It's kind of, sort of a gay crowd tonight.
This looks like a really weird panel that's about to take place.
Like, we're all about to
take questions about our
sexual promiscuity.
Tiger Woods, y'all.
So, um... Wait a minute. How come I'm the only one that gets this boring microphone stand? Tag of woods, y'all.
Wait a minute.
How come I'm the only one that gets this boring microphone stand?
You guys got exciting... We all have little Pixar characters.
You guys are in the future.
I'm stuck in the past.
I think I'm going to sit up a little higher.
A lot easier this way.
Yeah, you could totally move it around.
If you have good or shitty posture, that microphone stand is for you.
Yeah, see? There you go.
I'm calling it split the difference time.
That's the D.
Welcome, gentlemen.
That was Paul F. Tompkins' voice.
You recognize him from previous episodes.
I go like this.
That's what he sounds like.
I try to differentiate the voices early on like they would in radio,
but they do it in a much more boring way in radio.
Like they don't say things like, and Jon Hamm is wearing a hat.
I'm going for sort of a Marlon Brando in The Wild Ones meets a Newsy.
I think I kind of crushed it.
That Newsy would be dead if he met him.
And Tom Sharpling is here for the very first time in the history of my show.
Now, you're the host of a podcast called The Best Damn Sports Show in Podcasting.
Yeah, me, Tom Arnold, and John Sally.
I thought Tom Arnold got kicked out of that shit.
I got him back in. Oh, good.
Get him back.
What's it actually called? The Best?
It's called The Best Show on WFMU.
WFMU? There you go.
Fans, these people, they didn't even know
who the guests were going to be tonight, so
you're reaching a lot of people with that.
It's very powerful.
And how do people listen to it?
On the radio, usually.
Or on podcasts, also.
But it's syndicated?
Yeah, it's syndicated.
It's Citadel.
And it's part of the King Biscuit Flower Hour.
No, it's on WFMU.
But you can get it as a podcast also.
Okay, so that's the best way to go
for most of my listeners.
Paul keeps threatening to have a podcast.
When's it going to happen?
Soon.
I can't wait.
For what I want to do, it's a lot of work because I want to do a produced thing.
It's not just a conversational thing,
so it's more involved.
I thought it would be great to have a more involved thing,
but then I realized there's things involved.
It's a lot of work.
Yeah, it's a lot of work.
Yeah, that's the thing.
People are like, thank you for doing your podcast.
I'm like, you're welcome for me not preparing whatsoever
and talking about movies
for a while like I do with my friends in a bar.
What you do is important, Doug.
Yeah.
I'm lucky that I
used to play poker with John Hamm
over here.
He owes me so much money
that no matter how successful
he gets, I can still get him to come in
and do my podcast.
Wow.
It's sad but true.
I've seen that Don Draper, when he gets mad at his wife,
I've seen that at a card table.
He makes me feel like such a bitch.
I just want what's best for the kids, Don.
I lost a hand to Doug once
and then violently fingered him.
He just, you know.
Thank God it was violent.
If it was gentle fingering,
I would have been creeped out.
Well, you wouldn't have gotten the message.
Yeah.
But speaking of scary Jon Hamm,
can I just say...
Oh, here we go.
No, it's not that good.
It's just very kiss-assy.
Eh, here we don't go.
Here we don't go.
Your second stint as host on SNL, I'm sure, will be one of many more.
Hamm and Bubbly is my favorite thing that ever happened on television.
I watched that sketch over and over again, and there's not even any ladies in it.
It was just so funny.
How did that come about?
Whose idea was Ham and Bubbly?
The musical guest is Michael Bublé.
Yes.
Yeah.
Seth Meyers originally wrote the first sketch, John Hamm's John Hamm.
Seth is a big fan of puns.
Also responsible for Peter Sarsgaard's Sarsgaard.
Yep.
And so when they were pitching sketches, he came up to me and said, you know, we should probably revisit that.
And I was sort of like, wow, really?
Wait, wait, wait.
There's more to...
Probably.
There's more to puns on my name.
John Hamm.
John Hamm.
And he wrote it up, and it was very funny at the table, and it was surprisingly funny.
What if the musical guest had been Lady Gaga?
I would have ruined it.
But it was Hamm and Bubbly.
Yeah, because it would have been written the exact same way.
Yeah.
Why doesn't this work?
But Bubbly even used his buble, even used his song that now is kind of a hit.
Like, I think that helped put it out there, that sketch.
He was very game.
I mean, he hadn't seen it really up until, because the musical guest doesn't get to it until Thursday.
He hadn't seen it really up until,
because the musical guest doesn't get to it until Thursday.
And so he hadn't really seen it until we were sort of pretty far down the line.
Already using his song without even running it by him.
That's sweet.
But he's really great in that sketch, too.
I mean, that's part of what makes it work.
He seems genuinely terrified of you.
And he's a good singer, and that's a catchy song.
There you have it. I love it.
Let's go back to you for a second.
Tom Sarpling, you're not out of the
hot seat. I'm coming back to you.
This is like flying coach.
It's like a weird four seat
coach.
It's like coach minus.
We have a new version of coach. It's a little
worse. Coach minus. There are two middle Coach. It's a little worse. Coach Minus.
There are two middle seats.
There is a song at takeoff and landing on this show.
Coach Minus.
Do you get your tiny bag of peanuts?
Paul Tompkins, lots of votes for you.
I don't know if you know what's going on,
but John Lithgow is going to supposedly appear on this show sometime
in the year 2010.
That sounds fine!
He's already
here!
Doug, I love movies.
John Lithgow just showed up.
Are you sure that isn't Brody Stevens?
This guy gets it.
A lot of votes for me.
Lithgow!
So,
I think Ham has some votes too.
Tom, you gotta get in this race.
Basically, I put it out there.
Who do you want the other guests?
I'll have another guest or two with John Lithgow.
And I want it to be in the spirit of the show.
I'd like to keep it, you know,
comedians or friends of mine.
And so people are voting on a special thing.com
on the I Love Movies thread.
They're just weighing in,
and you're getting a lot of votes, Paul F. Tompkins.
Well, that makes sense to me.
Would you, just to try to maybe get more votes,
what's something you might ask John Lithgow
if given the opportunity?
Oh, I would, first of all, don't murder me in a bathtub
is what I'm going to say.
I would hold this guy's feet to the fire
about a lot of things.
Oh, wait a second.
We don't want somebody to come in and confront him.
About not giving hugs.
I think he gives a lot of hugs.
He did a children's album.
He was very friendly.
When he yelled at Harry and Harry and the Andersons,
it was for his own good.
People forget.
He wanted Harry to go back out into the wild
where he'd be safer.
He was employing some psychiatry there.
What would I ask John Lithgow?
I'm not trying to put you on the spot or anything.
I would say, like, Buckaroo Banzai.
Do you like it?
Did you understand
what you were doing?
That seemed kind of strange in a not
captivating way.
I like that movie though actually.
Did you really? Yeah, yeah.
I did. But I'd say my favorite
Lithgow performance might be
I mean he kind of did that again in Dexter
and in some ways did it better,
but I loved him as the villain in that De Palma movie, Blowout.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, I thought he was fantastic in that.
There's a film in Philadelphia where I'm from.
Oh, Philadelphia where AIDS was invented.
I believe it's where AIDS was perfected.
That's what I was gonna say
Perfected
I'm sorry
God damn it
You guys are fun
We really are
So yeah
Vote for me
To appear with
John Lithgow
On the
I Love Movies podcast
Because I'm great
Tom what would you say
To John Lithgow I'm sorry We Tom, what would you say to John Lithgow?
I'm sorry we are out of time.
Can anybody call that?
Does it have to be the host?
He's tired of talking about GARP.
Anyone can move it along.
I'm not going to bring up GARP at this point.
Because he was like a dude, like a transvestite.
He was a transvestite.
He was transsexual, I believe, wasn't he?
He had his junk removed.
Wasn't he from Transsexual?
Transylvania?
Am I thinking of the right film?
Let me check on Google Maps.
What's, what do you, do you, have you had any, Tom, have you had any
Tom have you had any involvement in the world
of film at all I know Paul and John
have been in a few films
I've been humiliated by people
who've bought scripts
and then hurt a lot
by it as they
slowly take away any kind
of like excitement about
creating things
you know piece by
piece and then the thing you just
don't hear from anyone again.
You don't care for a process that
moves slowly. It's weird that it's called
development. With little gratification.
They're not developing anything. They're like the
Republicans. What's the opposite of development?
Oh.
How dare I? Too soon.
Just lost a listener.
There's like one guy going,
I think he's conservative deep down.
I can't find anything to laugh at.
Whenever I hear a conservative possible,
I'm like, come on.
Seriously, give one of those up.
There's really no reason to be both.
All right, so let's go back to Jon Hamm
with his exciting hiatus from Mad Men.
What movie are you doing?
It's an exciting hiatus.
I assume it's an exciting hiatus.
It might not be.
You might just be shopping for hats.
Mission accomplished.
And now what are you going to do?
I'll subscore Stacey Picture.
I worked on
a few films during my hiatus.
A couple different movies?
One was a film
directed by Ben Affleck
called The Town
a heist film
I would have gotten Casey to direct that
if I were you
I don't know about that
Gone Baby Gone
was that what it was called?
was a fantastic movie
underrated I thought
this one also takes place in Boston
it's a crime heist kind of bank robbery.
So you're still doing the accent, right?
You haven't been able to let it go.
No, I can't let it go.
I'm like Jeff Bridges.
I just...
It's like Jeff Bridges.
Like he just now only makes his movies about guys that are stoned.
About super Texas-y guys ever since...
Yeah, I'll do Menace, Dirt Goats, and Crazy Heart.
Those seem like they're in my range.
Yeah, I'll do Men as Dirt Goats and Crazy Heart.
Those seem like they're in my range.
There's movies about guys that are fucked up all the time.
Yeah.
So that sounds awesome.
It was super fun, and we shot that in Boston.
And then I went and did a movie called Sucker Punch with Zack Snyder.
Oh, God, Zack Snyder.
300 and Watchmen.
Responsible for Gerard Butler, if you ask me.
He made him look pretty awesome in 300.
No one else has that lens.
Whatever it is he did.
He made him thinner, taller, and more awesome.
But what's Sucker Punch about?
I've heard a little bit about it. It sounds amazing.
It's a very strange movie.
It's somewhere between Alice in Wonderland
with Samurai Swords and Machine Guns.
So Alice in Wonderland minus Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland.
Sounds great.
There you go.
His movie is like, it's not even in Wonderland.
It's in Underland. It's like in, oh, let's not even in Wonderland It's in Underland
It's like in
Oh come
Let's hang out in Shitville
Instead of Wonderland
Is that what it's called?
Yeah
The movie doesn't take place
In Wonderland
It's in Underland
They call it Shitville
No
No no no no
Paul
I gotta see this movie
Paul no
Paul
Was that shot in Philadelphia?
Shitville was my name
That I named it
Yeah Shitville is where AIDS was perfected.
Callback.
Last week, Anthony Jeselnik and Rob Hubel
kept saying callback after every callback.
You had to be their callback.
So what have you guys seen lately?
Tom, have you been to the cinema?
I'll go
I'm sorry
I don't know
No, you go
Do you see something on the plane coming out here?
You know, I flew out here
There was no movie on the plane
What kind of plane were you on?
It was US Airways
How do they get away with
Five and a half hours, right?
Yeah, five and a half hours There was no movie and no mention What kind of plane were you on? It was U.S. Airways. How did they get away with just like coast to coast?
Yeah, five and a half hours.
There was no movie and no mention of why there was no movie.
It's just like, we hope you have a magazine.
Not even two and a half men they couldn't give you?
No.
They can't put a num 3RS in there?
It's my favorite plane show.
Oh, I love my plane stories.
I call them.
That is the best math drama on the air right now.
It really is. They perfected it.
I worked for eight years on a plane show.
I never saw Monk on a plane.
It was always numbers.
It was always the CBS lineup.
Sometimes you get an NBC lineup.
Mm-hmm.
Slight.
So you'd get a mother, a how, meat.
Yeah.
What is it?
A hymium.
A hymium.
You get a bang.
A hymium.
A bang.
Big bang.
And then two and a half.
Mm-hmm.
And then a number.
I saw a few monks on the airplanes over the years.
Now, monk was written and performed in New York.
Everything was done on the East Coast?
No, we wrote it on the East Coast.
They filmed it out here.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Because I knew you were East Coast.
Yeah.
So that's how we got it.
They were talking about TV.
Oh, you thought they were sad.
There's a TV program called Monk.
Yeah.
Starring a film actor named Tony Shalhoub.
Yes, exactly.
And all your parents like it.
Yeah, no, seriously.
My father passed away a year or two ago,
but before he went, Monk was his thing.
Yeah.
He fucking could not get enough of Monk.
And I'd always be like,
all right, Dad, that's awesome.
Why do you like it?
Did he have a license plate frame
that said I'd rather be watching Monk?
Yeah, it was on the end of his bed in the convalescent home.
Yeah, see?
I think it shows that he still had spunk.
Yeah, the guy in the bed next to him, his said brown shoe.
I don't know why.
Never got a chance to ask him.
Monk was for old people, or like weird little kids whose favorite character in Star Wars is C-3PO.
Like Han Solo?
No.
Luke? No. You like Han Solo? No. Luke?
No.
You like C-3PO?
Really?
The critics love it.
And the Emmys loved it.
Oh, my God.
The Emmys.
Tony Shalhoub wins every year.
Three-time Emmy winner.
Because John Lithgow finally stepped down from that third rock.
Oh!
Thank you!
They give it...
This is too much!
That's what I would ask John Lithgow.
Don't you want to just recuse
yourself when they just give it to you every year?
That is a dick move. Those people that win
the Emmy year after year after year,
you can't... I think Oprah was the only person
who took herself out of it, right? I think Cosby did, too.
Oh! I think Cosby
is like, I have a PhD!
So I don't need
another Emmy. Just until he got the doctorate.
Then he was like, I'm done with Emmys.
I think Larraket took himself out too.
Is that for real?
I think so. No, that's just
a fake story. Because the show was terrible?
Exactly. He finally
saw an episode.
What is the fuss about? i gotta check this show out
that i'm on when you're making movies john do you have time to see movies ever
like uh how do you squeeze that in the last few movies i've seen have been on planes yeah so what
was the last one you saw i saw two on the last uh on the last flight I was on. Nine.
Ooh.
Pretty much sums it up.
I saw that with my mom on Christmas Day.
How'd that go?
I was like, this is the only way I would sit through this thing.
It's because I'm with my mom on Christmas Day.
And then I saw one that I found surprisingly entertaining.
Paul, it might have been because I was on a plane.
Yeah, that helps.
It was a movie called, did You Hear About the Morgans?
No!
You like that?
I think it's on United this month, so I think I'm going to see it soon.
My co-star Lizzie Moss is in it, and she was very good and very funny.
Hugh Grant, I have never had a problem with that guy.
Charming.
Never had a problem with him.
Charming.
Maybe he stuttered a little too much in the early going.
Sure.
He's conquered that.
But when he's about to get eaten by a bear, you can go ahead and stutter.
When you're at a fucking four-way or a funeral, there's no reason for all that stuttering.
That's true.
They finally ramped it up so that his stuttering matched the action.
So that's good. All right. So that's good alright
so that's something
for me to look forward to
I saw the plane
coming back from
I'm just in
what
I was in Boston
where everyone
but one person
was lovely
shout out to
everyone but that
one person
but I came back
on the way back
I saw
now I forget
what it's called
because I don't know
grammar
is it Orson Welles and me or me and Orson Welles?
Me and Orson Welles.
Nerds.
But that's a very high caliber of nerd because that movie, do you know what it's about?
Besides Orson Welles?
Me.
No.
I got no guesses.
Zac Efron is you, is the me in the title.
He plays me. He plays us. He's the me in the title. He plays me.
He plays us.
He plays the audience.
He plays the everyman that is anyone who saw Citizen Kane.
Right, right.
In a drama, not much comedy, a drama about Orson Welles putting on a play.
Well, I can see where they went with Efron.
By Shakespeare.
Yeah.
So it's a guy doing a young Orson Welles yelling at everybody about Shakespeare for two hours.
So it was the best sleep I've ever gotten on a plane. it's a guy doing a young Orson Welles yelling at everybody about Shakespeare for two hours.
It was the best sleep I've ever gotten on a plane.
I was out. I woke up
two seconds into an Arrested Development
episode and I was so happy.
Now this is what
they should show on planes.
It's an eclectic flight.
We're going to show some wonder shows
next.
What?
Forget it, Doug.
Let's forget it.
Wow, this thing has been speeding along.
The movie I saw recently.
That's what I was going to say.
That's one last movie that we've seen lately.
I saw in a hotel room.
I saw The Men Who Stare at Goats.
That I referenced earlier.
Yes.
It was terrible.
I'll bet. Yeah. And I was terrible. And I was in Canada.
I was in Canada,
so it was 14 Canadian dollars,
which is 50 American dollars.
And it was bad.
Why did you pay that?
You must have had an idea going in.
It was the lesser of 19 evils.
Well, there was a bunch of stuff
that I had seen,
and then some stuff that I was like,
not even in a hotel.
It was mostly squeak-wills.
Mostly.
But yeah, because I had read the book,
which I enjoyed greatly.
Tom loves the book under the table like a seal.
I just like Paul reading.
I think he was just cheering books.
I'm clapping Paul reading.
Hooray for books.
It's fundamental.
I love books.
And yeah, it was like from the moment it started.
Doug hates loud talking, not reading, stupid assholes.
Trying to work out the theme song ahead of time for I Love Books.
Sounds like you're there.
But is there anything worth watching in Ministericals? No, not at all. Sounds like you're there. But is there anything worth watching
in Ministericles?
No.
Not at all.
Because the reviews
were so universally bad.
I was like,
wow, Clooney and Bridges
and that other guy.
Everybody got it right.
But I thought the same thing.
I like so many of these people.
Oh, and McGregor
is always interesting.
Surely there will be.
Always.
Mostly.
That's not the same as always.
And this is one of those times.
He's a really good singer
in movies, shitty musicals.
Yes, he is. That's true. He's really really good singer in shitty musicals. Yes, he is.
That's true.
He's really good.
But yeah, not worth it.
Not worth it.
Not worth it.
All right.
Everybody avoid that goat movie.
Like you've already been doing.
Proceed as you were to ignoring the many standard goats.
Do you guys want to play a little Leonard Maltin game?
I know these guys do.
And so do I.
Alright.
Let's get some contestants.
Or not contestants,
but people for you guys to play for.
Because we've got some fantastic prizes.
People for whom to play.
And people who sit right over here
with a bunch of beers between their legs are usually the ones that get chosen.
What is your name, sir?
Dan.
Dan.
And who would you like to play for you?
Tom, John, or Paul F. Tompkins?
Mr. F. Tomp.
Yeah, see, I had a feeling.
When I saw your loose, baggy shorts, I thought, this is a Tompkins man.
Classic Tompkins man.
So what's your name again? Dan?
Alright, Dan. Paul, could you remember
you're playing for Dan? Dan!
Nicely done. What's your name?
Travis. Travis, and who would you like
to play for you, John or Tom? I'd like to
ham it.
That wasn't one of the choices.
I'm gonna ham that shit.
All right.
And what's your name stuck with Tom Sharpling?
Yes.
Juan.
Okay, you get Tom.
But he's a wild card.
We don't know how he plays.
We're going to do this.
Who was my guy?
Hamming it?
Travis.
Travis.
Travis.
Ham.
Juan.
Tom.
Dan Paul.
Here we go.
The category.
I'm sorry.
May I ask very briefly, do people not like that other game, which I enjoy greatly, the Build a Title game?
They do.
By a round of applause, how many people love that game?
Silence.
By a round of applause
How many people hate that game?
Oh there's one
It's not applause
Yeah that's right I said hate
It's opposite of love
Yeah yeah that's the trouble
There's too much of a gray area
I get a lot of messages from people
I don't care for it when you
You know and I'm like as long as you don't
hate it, I'm going to keep doing it.
There you go.
Even when they hate it, I keep doing it.
I'm here to do what
I want to do.
And what I want to do is play
the Lynn Malton game.
And we'll throw in a build a title at the end
if there's time.
So you guys got to play fast.
The category. The category.
The category is...
Most of the guests don't help me along like you do.
That's awesome.
It's fun.
It's fun to remember things.
Dan.
I'm going to try it someday.
All right, here we go.
The topic is, these are Ed Norton's favorite movies.
What? According to Ed Norton's favorite movies. What?
According to Ed Norton.
He was on, I assume none of you saw it.
Recuse yourself if you saw it.
He was on the Rotten Tomatoes website and TV show.
I know, there's both.
He had to name his top five movies, and he did it.
Normally I would have seen that.
He was able to do it.
he had to name his top five movies and he did it.
He was able to do it?
He was able to do it.
He named five movies but we were only using four in the game
because the fifth movie was The Cruise
and the only person
in The Cruise is that crazy guy
that gives the tours.
Timothy Spielevich.
You fags owe each other a Coke.
You fags owe each other a Coke.
Some guy over here trying to start a kiss chant.
I know, I know, I know.
It's so funny, though, how gay that is.
Because it shouldn't be, right?
You're just two smart men saying a smart thing at the same time.
Yeah, but that thing was Timothy Spietlevich.
He's pretty gay.
He is?
He insisted that he was not in that film.
But he's super fruity?
I think he might be mistaken. I never saw the film.
I never saw it.
I'm going to because it's one of Ed Norton's five favorite movies.
It is worth seeing once, but I never understood people that would want to see that more than
one time.
And I knew people that owned it.
That's true in most documentaries, isn't it?
Well, yeah.
Once is good.
Except Paradise Lost.
You can watch that over and over again.
I watch that shit all day long.
I like, what's it called, American Movie.
I like that one.
I can watch that one a lot.
Oh, God.
That one's amazing.
There's one, it still hasn't come out yet.
There's a documentary called Winnebago Man.
It's about that guy that guy making that infomercial
where he got mad.
They try to find him
and then meet him and talk to him.
Spoiler alert.
It's called Winnebago Man.
A guy gave me a copy of it at
South by Southwest because I guess they're still trying
to get a distributor. What?
They're still trying to get stuff going.
I know. But it's an amazing movie.
It's really entertaining.
Well, do they need help?
Is there anything we can do?
We just did it.
We just...
1,700 people just heard
what I said.
No, it's really been fun
going out on the road lately
because this last weekend
we were in Massachusetts,
Graham Elwood and I,
and we were in Boston Boston and Chicopee,
Mass and Rhode Island
and Providence,
Rhode Island
and every show
there were lots of people
that listened to the podcast.
It's really,
so,
you know,
for your live shows
in the future,
Tom Sharpling
and John Hamm,
you should mention
them on podcasts.
Paul,
do you do any live shows?
Yeah.
I like your thing where you get people to vote
once there's 300 people in.
It's not a vote.
Well, whatever.
What do they do?
They bid?
People join.
They join.
They join a movement.
They join a group of people who are going to show up
if you do a show in their town.
And when you get to 300, bam, you do a show.
Yes.
It's like a tea party.
It is like a tea party.
It's totally like a tea party.
We hate black people. And you want to murder Congress Yes. It's like a tea party. It is like a tea party. It's totally like a tea party. We hate black people.
And you want to murder Congress people.
That's right.
That's right.
Now, listen, the tea party is only 81% white.
So that means it's 19% even dumber than the 81%.
I'm ethnic and I'm a tea bagger.
What of it?
All right.
Okay, so Ed Norton's favorite movies.
Let's let Tom pick a year to start with and start the bidding.
Do you want to Ed Norton's favorite movies from 1935?
No, no, I don't.
1986 or 1983? No. No, I don't. 1986 or 1983?
86.
All right, we're going 86.
And this movie is one of Edward Norton's favorites.
Len gives it three and a half stars, so Len is a fan.
And let's see what Len says about it.
Is this out of five or out of four?
Oh, this is an original comedy satire.
Comedy satire with a hyphen in between the two.
Oh, so it's both.
It's one of those.
It's a hybrid comedy and satire.
Not yet, not yet.
And it's about one of everybody's favorite subjects.
That's what it's about.
Pussy.
And it's from 1986.
And it stars, there's four names listed.
So you could start the bidding with four names
or jump all the way down to zero names.
But it's not Winnebago Man.
It is not Winnebago Man.
How many names would you like to start with?
One. You can name it to start with? One.
You can name it in one name?
Yes.
You're out of your mind.
Okay, Jon Hamm, can you name it in less names?
I can't.
So, were you going to say name that movie?
I would say name that movie.
All right, Tom Sharpley, name that movie.
The one name you get is Koji Yakusho.
Koji Yakusho. Koji Yakusho.
Bob Roberts.
That is a great guess.
Did you think you got into the mind of Ed Norton?
Yes, I was trying to picture Ed Norton in 1986.
Well, that was a ballsy move on your part,
and welcome to the game.
Which is not unlike...
Okay. See, I just go for it
in life.
You know what I mean? I'm just gonna go for it.
You did go for it. Let me list the rest of the names and see if anyone
in this room even knows what this movie is.
I don't think... I'm not sure Ed Norton knows
what this movie is.
Koji Yakusho.
Nobuko
Miyamoto.
Tshumo
Yamazigi.
Is it eat a bowl of tea?
No good guess though.
And the number one name,
Ken Watanabe.
Ringu!
It's from 1986
and it's Japanese. It's a funny original
comedy about food. I'm pretty sure it's
gung-ho.
That's right. I heard people yelling it's gung-ho. And it's called Tom Popo.
That's right, Tom Popo. I heard people yelling it out,
and then I mocked them on the microphone.
Because they had knowledge I did not possess.
Tom Popo!
How could you ever say...
I wouldn't even be able to buy a ticket to Tom Popo.
See, I couldn't even say it then,
because it's so embarrassing and weird.
But it's one of Ed Norton's favorites,
so now I'm going to check it out.
One of his five favorite movies.
Top Five.
With the cruise. The cruise and Top Five.
So now you're getting kind of an idea, a feel
for how useless this is as a category.
Yes.
The category might as well be called
Movies That Were Made.
Alright, so we'll start with Paul
on this next one. He can pick the year.
I'm Paul. I'm playing for Dan.
Would you like to go for 1935,
1983, or
1966?
I would like to go for 1935.
Oh, good lord.
Old school.
Four stars from Mr. Maltin
Classic
He gets it
He calls it a completely winning movie
That was remade
As the title of the remake
Was Fancy Pants
That is a worthless clue!
If someone on this panel knew what Fancy Pants was...
Oh, that's a remake of the 1935 gem.
Fancy Pants was a movie with Bob Hope and Lucille Ball, as a matter of fact.
Oh, do you know what it was a remake of?
No.
Here we go.
We got six names.
Let's see if I can pull it, though.
I might be able to pull it
Try to pull it
Start the bidding
There's six names
I can name that movie
In six names
Nice
Tom
Tell how bidding starts
Everybody who's laughing
You don't go in
Like barter with somebody
And say
How about you give it to me
For free
Yeah
Tom says five I'll say four John Hamm says four Five. You don't go in like a barter with somebody and say, how about you give it to me for free? Yeah.
Tom says five.
I'll say four.
John Hamm says four.
Paul Tompkins, it's back to you.
John Hamm named that film.
Oh, you son of a gun.
Four names.
Four names. I think you might be able to do it.
Four of six.
Because I realize the last three names are going to be
the people that were in every movie at that time.
Okay, 1935.
35.
Four stars.
Right in my wheelhouse.
Remade as Fancy Pants.
Completely winning movie.
Lila Hyams
was in this movie.
Roland Young.
I think I knew it.
Zazu Pits. Zazu Zazu Pitts
Zazu Pitts
and Charles Ruggles
is your fourth name
Charles Ruggles
wasn't everything
back then
35
yeah but Charles Ruggles
is
do I get a chance
to name it
that's a really good clue
if John
if John can't
name it
but not to steal
we don't do it that way.
I would never steal anything.
You're going to get this by default.
You got nothing?
The 1935 precursor to Fancy Pants.
I'm pretty sure it was called Pansy Fants.
Pansy Fants.
How awesome would that be?
They're just like,
more people would come
if we just switched two letters.
You haven't said I'm wrong.
You're incorrect.
May I ask a question? Yes. Did this movie star
Charles Lawton? Yes, it did.
And was the name of this movie Ruggles of Red Gap?
Yes, it is. You're in the
mind of Edward Norton.
You're in Norton's head.
I'm on your trail, Norton.
Tempopo.
And you get the point.
You get the point either way.
Do I really?
Yeah, because you challenged John and he couldn't do it.
So now John has a point.
These are the affairs of men.
I'm trying to lighten the drama.
I don't know what that is.
Was that a line
from Ruggles of Redgate
Red Gap
that's what I meant
that's where
Gap got the idea
for that red campaign
alright here we go
since Tom is
down here sad
and lonely
and right next to me
let's start with him
you want one from 83 or 66 83 some in the audience
is very excited that we went 83 instead of 66 they're just in the audience going before i was
born please i mean not you know what i mean three and a half stars robbed Robbed! This is a four star movie.
If ever there was one.
About it,
Leonard Maltin says,
the denouement
is a wow.
I've seen this movie 17 times
and I don't know what's so wow about the denouement. Wow. I've seen this movie 17 times and I don't know what's so wow
about the denouement.
Wow.
Denouement.
Okay.
And what I say,
it was an Ed Norton favorite,
three and a half stars,
and there are,
there's about eight names.
Let's go with eight names.
Tom, how many can you do it in?
Seven.
Seven names. Nice jump.
Thank you.
It's one less.
I'll go six.
John says six names.
Do I go now?
Yeah, you do.
Four names.
Four names. Tom Sharpling,
can you do less names than four or are you going to say Paul F. Tompkins named that movie
I'm going to say Paul F. Tompkins named that movie
I think we have a winner
And his name is Paul F. Tompkins
I don't like to predict what's going to happen
Like Alex Trebek does
But I think we have a winner
83, right
I think you can do it in one name
Show me you can do it in one name. 83, Daniel Miles or Wow. Show me you can
do it in one name. Okay.
Freddy DeCorvido.
Oh, yeah.
I believe it's the king of comedy.
That's right, the king of comedy. I knew you
could do it in one name.
Ed Herlihy, Tony
Randall, and little old thing.
Shelly Hack. I'm Ed Herlihy.
This is one of those movies where the bottom makes it easier.
It'd be harder if I just said, name a
movie that De Niro did in 1983.
King of Comedy.
Wow, you are really good at this.
You got it in one name. Twice.
Alright, so Paulus Tompkins
is our winner. That means Dan wins the prizes.
Is that right?
Yes, I was playing for Dan.
Playing for Dan.
I was the proxy for Dan Dan is also a group you can donate to
It's Dads Against Nannies
And Paul was playing for them tonight
Okay, so you win
You win a copy of
A motion picture starring me and Paul F. Tompkins
Called Super High Me You win a copy of that Look starring me and Paul F. Tompkins called Super High Me.
You win a copy of that.
Look for it at midnight on 420 on G4.
So technically it's on at 421.
Boo!
That's what I said to them.
How dare you!
And then you also win a Two Trunk to Dweet t-shirt that are available, as always, at donkeytees.com.
And you win a copy of my first album,
Professional Humoridian,
which you can get at astrecords.com.
And thank you very much, Dan, for playing and winning.
Thank you for winning.
And the other two, quote-unquote, losers,
get to name who I should call a shithead.
You gentlemen discuss amongst yourselves.
Any plugs?
Anything coming up?
Any dates you're doing you'd like to talk about?
When does this drop, Doug?
This weekend sometime.
So around 8, 9, 10, somewhere in there.
I'll be in Dallas, Texas at the Lakewood Theater Saturday the 10th.
And then I'll be in Madison, Wisconsin
Sure
May 21st
And then Seattle sometime
And then Austin, Texas
At a point
Where are you?
That kind of sounded like somebody
Who was that?
I don't know
But not somebody you want to listen to for very long
No, no
It was a good
It was just the perfect length.
Kind of sounded like the guy that did the old Levi's hats.
Yeah, that guy won't be.
The beat poet?
Nardine.
Al Nardine?
Ken Nardine.
Ken Nardine, that's right.
The Sanka man.
Did he do Sanka commercials?
Maybe Folgers.
I love Sanka.
It's a good coffee.
Was it Folgers or Sanka?
I get it now.
Now that I'm older, I get it.
Sanka? Sanka, yeah. You get Sanka? It's a good coffee. Was it Folgers or Sanka? I get it now. Now that I'm older, I get it. Sanka?
Sanka, yeah.
You get Sanka.
It's revealed itself to me.
But what about that one where you open up the lid and it goes,
Fresh, fresh, fresh!
That sounds too young.
I don't know which one it is.
Okay, so where are you playing in Madison?
I don't remember the name of the place, but it is going to be great.
All right.
There's a place called Comedy on State Street, Madison,
where I'm going to be April 15th.
Too descriptive.
15th through the 17th.
I know.
Why isn't it called Comedy on State Street?
There's a two-doing minimum.
But yeah, it's April 15th through 17th,
and I'm going to be at the Rave in,
whatever that is, in Milwaukee on 418.
It's going to be a 420 matinee on that show.
Will that be 418, 1999? 418. It's going to be a 420 matinee on that show. Will that be 418-1999?
418?
Why John Hamm?
It's called The Rave.
Oh.
No, it's The Rave, not A Rave.
Bring a pacifier and get it half-price.
Don't bring a pacifier
and get it in free.
Alright, so then...
It's all right about his fair play.
I Love Movies Live.
We're going to do another live road version
at the Irvine Improv on April 28, 2010.
I'll bring a couple of awesome guests down there with me.
And, Jon Hamm, do you have any release dates
on those movies of yours?
The Town will be coming out this fall.
Sucker Punch will be coming out, I think, around Christmas.
Award season, I like it.
And Mad Men Season 4 will be coming out this summer.
And DVDs for Season 3 coming out next month.
Nice.
So happy I just got you a whole bunch of new viewers.
You just doubled our audience.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, I also do love that Breaking Bad.
I mean, for a network, they've got
the two best shows.
What about Rubicon? What's the advanced
word on Rubicon?
I saw a promo. It looked pretty
intriguing. Who's that guy?
Who's that guy?
Paul is full of voices that he can't figure out who they are.
When does Rubicon come on?
I'm going to watch Rubicon.
Tom Sharpling, tell us again when we can listen to your best show on WMFU.
So close.
Thank you.
MFU?
Almost.
FMU.
FMU.
FMU. Friendsoftom.com. M-F-U, thank you. M-F-U? Almost. F-M-U. F-M-U. F-M-U.
Friendsoftom.com.
Just go to friendsoftom.com.
Oh, okay.
Is that, so it's like for alcoholics?
Yes.
Exactly.
All right, thank you so much.
Let's give a round of applause for my wonderful guests.
Oh, my God.
My guests, they're mine.
Mine. Mine.
Oh my god.
My guests.
They're mine.
Mine.
And as always,
Michael Phelps is a shithead and Tiger Woods is a shithead.
Thank you.