Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald - 113: My Balancing Act
Episode Date: May 19, 2020On this week's episode, JD tries to balance his new girlfriend, and his job as a medical intern. In real life, Zach and Donald speak with Michael Spiller about directing episodes of Scrubs, and how he... made the move from cinematographer on Sex and the City to directing his first episode of television. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Man, do we have an exciting show today, Donald Faison.
We do have an exciting show today.
You know, we promised the people, we promised the listeners
that we wouldn't just have stars of the show on,
that we would bring on crew members.
You're totally about to geek out about this.
You brought on a director.
I am going to geek out.
And as a fellow director, you're like,
yo, I'm going to ask him about this shot.
I'm going to ask him about this shot.
Well, I am going to talk to him.
I think people, if I, I sometimes think when I'm preparing for this,
and you know, I do a lot of homework.
I have, I have, you should see my desk.
It looks like I'm about to write a novel.
I was thinking about if I was a listener,
I'd want to know some behind, like,
what's it like to be a director of a TV show?
Michael Spiller, who we're talking about,
is a very big television director,
one of the biggest.
In fact,
he recently won
the Emmy
for directing
Modern Family,
and he's a very talented guy.
Wait, wait, hold up.
Which,
for like the final season,
he won the Emmy?
I don't have the exact Emmy.
I want to ask him
about some of this stuff.
Like, how many shows
have you directed now?
Is it like,
you know,
have you lost,
can you keep count of the amount
of shows you've directed? Well, save your spiller questions.
Have them pent up inside you
and just have them ready to explode
when he comes in the room. Okay.
How are you? I only got a couple. I'm great.
How are you, man? I'm good. I'm good.
Did you work out? Are we going to have a post
Peloton Donald today? I didn't want to talk about
it because I did work out today and I
finished the workout.
But I'm now disappointed with said instructor that we talked about.
Why?
He was different today.
He talked too much.
Started singing.
And then also singing off beat.
Right. I don't do Peloton to be talked to off beat.
I don't appreciate that.
Was it still the, you know what I love about, you know, I still, well, the thing I liked
about spinning was when you could get in the groove.
Right.
And so it's important that your spin instructor is like a DJ.
You know what I mean?
Right.
So he or she should be riding with the beat.
So the music's going
and then you need to be going with the music also.
Does he say stuff?
I like it when they go like,
they just make noises like,
hey, hip, ho.
When they diddy that shit.
I love that shit, yeah.
It's like diddy.
Diddy used to be like,
eh, eh, eh, hey.
And you know what's so embarrassing?
I find myself, it's so fucking embarrassing,
but I find myself on the treadmill, not even spinning,
and I'm listening to a good song, and I'm like, hey.
Oh, yeah.
And I'm doing the fucking Diddy spin instructor thing.
Uh-huh, uh-huh.
Take that, take that.
Eh-heh, eh-heh.
Before I knew Diddy was like a big producer and I was watching those, I'd be like, so this dude just makes a living going, eh-heh, eh-heh. Before I knew Diddy was like a big producer
and I was watching those, I'd be like,
so this dude just makes a living going,
eh-heh, eh-heh.
Yeah.
Eh-heh, eh-heh.
I couldn't take it.
It was like just too much talking,
not enough motivation.
Like when you talk, you're supposed to motivate.
You're not supposed to talk about how dope the song is
and stuff like, I don't want to hear all of that.
I already know the song is good. You know what I mean? to hear all of that. I already know the song is good.
You know what I mean?
I hear you, man.
I chose the class because I saw the playlist.
Right, and you like the music.
Right, the playlist looks dope.
I can ride to this.
Isn't it amazing?
And I know this is the stupidest thing.
Everybody knows this, but I was realizing it today.
If the fucking music is good and you love it,
you can do so much more of a workout.
Absolutely. Because I've gone to so many spin classes because I do like spinning, fucking music is good and you love it you can do so much more of a workout absolutely
because i've gone to so many spin classes because i do like spinning and the music is just so not
my thing i mean it's other people's thing i'm not you know to each their own but i'm like
and then today i had made this like awesome mix that i was fucking grooving out to and i was like
i could really work out a long time to this amazing mix I made.
But I don't know where you work out.
You like to work out to rap, right?
I do like to work out.
Wait, what do you work out to?
You don't work out to like... Wait, wait, wait.
Hold on.
I didn't realize there was other music you could work out to other than like...
Yes, Donald.
Yes.
In this country, you don't have to just work out to rap.
I can understand house music.
No.
Wait, hold up.
What do you work out to?
I like to work out to pop, but up-tempo pop.
I'm opening up the fucking playlist right now because there were some fire
songs on here. Here we go. Recommendations from Zach Braff.
Avicii has this song. It's his most popular song. It's Wake Me Up.
It's up-tempo, and it makes me think of this time because when you're in this time and you're
working out, you're like, wake me up from this fucking horrible nightmare.
So I like that.
I had Michelle Branch on here, because you know I love my girl Michelle Branch.
I had, oh, Sia.
I love Sia.
Which song?
Sia, unstoppable, unstoppable today.
And I had Ed Sheeran with Chance the Rapper.
You cross me. You cross me.
You drop me.
Joelle's jamming. She knows that song.
Oh, and also Fleetwood Mac. This is an
old school one. I don't want to know
if I...
You know that song?
I worked out to
Ten Crack Commandments, Notorious B.I.G.
Okay.
We're on a very different plane right now.
You don't know that song?
I know who the Notorious B.I.G. is.
But do you know that song?
No, sir.
10 Crack Commandments?
Give us a sample.
It's the 10 Commandments of Selling Drugs?
Yeah.
I'm dancing and working out to Michelle Branch, and you're listening to a song about crack.
You know, we grew up differently.
I guess we grew up differently.
We did, buddy.
Hey, should we get into the show?
Let's invite in our special guest.
Five, six, seven, eight. Here's some stories about a show we made.
About a bunch of docs and nurses in a Canada who love to hate.
I said here's some stories that we all should know. What a song.
Lots of talk about the song.
The song, I got to tell you something about those numbers.
My whole timeline is people laughing at bill and and uh saying the
numbers and just writing them non-stop in my timeline right that's becoming unfortunately
to me but of course bill will love it he's become a huge hit with his whole bit about saying five
six seven eight yeah he's like the pc well he's not pc but he's like todd he's like the PC. Well, he's not PC, but he's like Todd. He's like the Todd of our show. He comes in and he delivers every time, dude.
He's an assassin.
He delivers every time.
He's like UPS.
Always delivers?
He always delivers.
All right, let's bring in our guest.
Let's bring in our very special guest.
Turn him on.
Bring him in.
Ladies and gentlemen.
Oh, my God.
I haven't seen him in years.
Yay.
Yay.
Ladies and gentlemen. Oh, my God. I haven't seen him in years. Yay. Michael Spiller.
Ladies and gentlemen, Michael Spiller.
Listen, Michael, you are the very first guest we're having on the show who is a member of the crew, not an actor or a writer.
And I'm just so we're so thrilled you're here.
It's really awesome. I'm thrilled to be here.
I would say you're our first
director but Zach has directed an episode
and Bill has directed an episode.
Right, but not before Michael Spiller.
Michael is our first director
from season one.
Well, no, Bill directed
season one. No, he wrote it, that's right.
No, and I want to say that
Michael, I would say i think
maybe directed the most spiller do you know that trivia is that true it it is true i often how
many episodes 20 20 episodes 20 episodes you know as i go and i work on other shows and stuff i
always meet scrubs fans and without fail i, I've directed more episodes than any other human,
leaving the possibility that someone from another species
has directed more than me.
Right, but I can confirm they haven't.
I would also confirm, Michael, that you are one of our favorites.
If you look at IMDb, you'll see there's lots of directors of Scrubs.
Some came in for one episode and then never came back for other Bills reasons or their reasons, mostly Bills probably. And then there's people like you that everybody loves so much, and you did 20.
connection, how you got this. I know that back in the day, Michael was a cinematographer. He was shooting the show Sex and the City. I don't know if you've ever heard of that show, but
Michael was the cinematographer on that show and then began to direct that show.
And then Michael, just talk a little bit about how you got it, how you transitioned from shooting
into directing TV. Well, I mean, I went to film school. I went to SUNY Purchase,
well i mean i i went to film school i went to suny purchase upstate new york new york new york that's right and i i started making my own films when when i was a kid in brooklyn uh
saved up money for my paper route and bought a super 8 camera and went went to film school and
i wanted to be a cinematographer i didn't want to be a director because actors were crazy let's face
it they are and you know it was mainly i i shot a lot of indie movies music videos and documentaries
and traveled all over the place and then i got married and wanted to start a family and tv
sounded like well maybe that would provide a little more stable lifestyle. And I was shooting on Sex and the City.
And at the end of the first season, my agent said,
if the show gets picked up,
I'm going to ask for an episode for you to direct, season two.
And I'm like, nope, I'm good.
I'm good.
I'm happy where I am.
I don't need it.
He said, no, you're going to do it.
And I did.
And then I did, went really well.
I also DP'd that episode.
Wow.
I don't recommend doing that for your first episode of TV.
That seems like a lot of work.
It's a huge amount of work.
And then the third season, I did two more.
And the fourth season, I did four episodes.
And by that time, we had moved to L.A., bought a house, moved back for the fourth season, I did four episodes. And by that time we had moved to LA, bought a house,
moved back for the fourth season, uh, and then moved to LA finally right after 9-11,
but not because of it. Uh, and I had already signed with my current agent who,
you know, after three episodes, you know, seeing what I did said, said, I want to rep this guy.
And he was at the same agency where Bill Lawrence was represented.
Oh, see, it is all about connections in Hollywood, everybody.
It's true.
No racism.
So Scrubs, was Scrubs your first non-Sex and the City gig?
It was meant to be.
So my agent, sight unseen, you know, convinced Bill.
He did a great job presenting me to Bill.
And it was meant to be my first episode after Sex and the City.
I wound up doing an episode of Greg the Bunny.
Oh, wow.
Remember that show?
Oh, my God.
Who was that?
Who was the star of that show?
Sarah Silverman, Eugene Levy, Seth Green.
Yeah, there we go.
That's the name I'm looking for.
It was a great cast, but it was like with huge puppet sets and all this other stuff.
It's like, why these?
I've never done a puppet show.
You had to build sets that were all like four feet off the ground so people could stick their hands up through and manipulate.
Anyway, Steve Levitan was the executive producer on that.
So I met Steve on my first episode.
I later did Modern Family and a bunch of other shows with.
And then Bill Lawrence on my second show.
So very, very good agenting.
lawrence on my second show so wow very very good agent thing by the way if you're gonna meet two showrunners uh when you get to hollywood um it's pretty darn good that it's steve levitan and bill
lawrence yeah right your agent's pretty good uh he's sean frieden icm hey how many wow shout out
how many uh how many how many episodes of modern Family did you direct? Did you direct
the most Modern Family episodes also?
No, I didn't, but I did
22 episodes.
22 episodes and won the Emmy.
Won the Emmy. That's right. I wish we
could have given you an Emmy, Spiller. You deserved it.
We tried. We tried.
I know. We were shunned.
I know you did. Now, Michael,
I just want to say, you know, again, season one, we're meeting all these directors.
For those of you who don't know, it's usually a different director every week because they have to prep.
They have about a week's prep before they shoot the episode.
And so you're always alternating.
And some come in and, you know, Donald and I would like some more than others.
Some were really good with comedy and others were good with moving the camera.
One of the things I think we loved about you, Michael, is that because you were a cinematographer first, you really were amazing with moving the camera and doing interesting things with the camera.
But also you did know how to talk to actors and make jokes funnier. And I thought maybe you could just talk to that about how you approach something, how
you approach a script and your experience with what it's like having the DP background.
Also, we should go over the process of what it takes to, since we have a television director
on right now, we should go through the process of what it takes to, I mean, directing is
like the end of the journey. I mean, that's
not even close to the end. Well, it's the middle of the
journey, really. There's prep, there's
all of pre-production, and then
there's post-production. We should also talk about
that. Our listeners might be interested in that.
Yeah, they will. So, Michael, we just gave you a lot.
Answer all of that. Go.
No, talk first about
having a DP background and how that
affected the way you work.
Well, I think there's no question that having the background as a DP was extremely helpful.
I mean, first of all, it meant that when I came on the set, I could usually bond with the crew very quickly because I spoke their language.
I sort of got it. You know, I would stage scenes in such a way that worked first and foremost for the story,
yet also kept the logistics in mind and the practical aspect of it.
And I was flexible enough that I encouraged and I love to collaborate.
I want the DP's input.
You know, obviously the cast would give input to the showrunners give input as well,
but the nuts and bolts of it, you know, I understood. I've also been a grip and electrician.
Yeah. I've pushed Dolly. I've, I've pulled focus. I've operated camera for other people. So,
you know, I, I love the crew. I mean, these are my people and, and I think most people I've worked
with can pick up on that. So, And I have a deep respect for them.
And that's half the battle.
When I was shooting Sex and the City, if we had a new director and if Sarah Jessica Parker wasn't in the first scene that that director was shooting,
when she would first come on to set, she would look at me and gauge gauging like how is this person and if if i gave her like the
i don't know look then that person had to work you know it's an uphill battle just to get back to
you know zero right so you know it's enormously important because i mean you guys know it's like
you love your crew and it's like it's one big family. So a director walking onto a TV show has to be both a leader, right?
And, you know, they're not the ultimate top of the pyramid, but they still got to lead the crew.
They've got to get the crew behind.
They've got to work with all the elements that are already in place.
And you have to respect that,
that family that you're walking into.
That's what's so bizarre about it. That's what's so bizarre about it is,
and I've only done it, uh, I think once or twice, um, Michael,
that is come onto a show that is an entity and say, Hey everybody,
I'm the leader for the week. And you know,
it's one thing when you come back and like you came back, you know, 19 more times, but on the first one, it's like, Hey everybody, I'm the leader for the week. And you know, it's one thing when you come back and like
you came back, you know, 19 more times, but on the first one, it's like, Hey everybody, I know that
you guys are all friends and have inside jokes and have a way that you do things. Well, I'm the boss
for the week. And it's really tricky, right? It's sort of like, I liken it sometimes to,
you're going to be a conductor on a train.
You're going to take it from this station to the next station.
The track has already been laid.
You know, everywhere the train already was is established.
We have a very good idea where the train is going to keep going.
And yet you can slow down around this corner because you like that view, or you can speed up at this section,
or, you know, you can lean a little left or a little right, but you can only go so far because the train's got to stay on those tracks. You can't suddenly say, you know, we're going to make a left
here at Des Moines and go somewhere else. That's a really great analogy, Michael,
because I think that- You were just talking about this,
actually, the last episode we did. Well, I was talking about how it's so tricky.
And, you know, again, just to remember, Bill spoke a little bit about this, but to remind people who aren't in the business, you know, you know, the the pilot director and the showrunner will create sort of the look of the show.
How does the camera move?
What is the what's sort of the language of the show?
In our show, we had fantasies and we had, you know, big camera move.
The camera was sort of a character.
And then other directors that come on, they need to use that language. They can,
they can, like Michael just said in his train analogy, they can slow down. They can look at
this view, but they can't, you have to use the language of the show. If you look at The Office,
for example, it's shot like a mockumentary. Modern Family, I believe was as well. Whereas
Scrubs is crane shots and dolly moves and, and steadicam shots so you have to use that language but then somehow find a way
to make it your own and i'm glad we're going to watch the episode with you because i think there's
a lot of cool stuff in here that you that you found a way to make your own i like that i do
like the train analogy you know what i mean it's the same route every time it's the same track
same route every time it's the same track every time how you can bend it and move it you know to make it your your own so like if a different conductor you know what i mean so there's i don't
know i love that analogy that's really awesome and in season one i would say you know even on
episode whatever this is um uh one uh it's 113 you're still you're still finding that you're
still shaping it now i noticed mich, you did some things in here
like going into blacks and coming back.
I don't think we had done too much of yet
that became part of the lexicon.
So as an early director in the show,
I just directed episode two of one of Bill's new shows,
I still felt like, okay, it's early on.
I'm still contributing to what the look of the show is.
Right.
For sure.
When you're lucky enough to direct early in a show's run, there's still a lot of discovery going on. The actors are really finding their characters, so they're still open to someone else's input. The writers are discovering what the actors are good at, and they're tailoring the writing to help those words fit better in their mouths and find the comedy if you're doing a comedy.
you know, help those words fit better in their mouths and, you know, find the comedy if you're doing a comedy. Um, and, and similarly for a director, it's like, yes, you've, you've been
given the overall template, the framework, but it's a jumping off point. It's not like this is
meant to just box you in. You're allowed to, to, to push things a little bit further. John Wells, I think, is credited as saying to Paris Barkley,
I want you to make
an episode of ER
only
better. It still
has to feel like an episode
of the show that you're already watching
and you've grown accustomed to,
but push it a little bit.
Get your thumbprints on it and in consultation. thing. It's like I could have what I think is a great idea. If it's a little outside the box, you would,
you would run it by the showrunner and say, Hey,
what do you think if I do this? And I imagine Bill usually said, yeah,
go for it. Right.
Bill was so amazing that, I mean,
he was such a great guy to work with so early in my career, you know,
as a freelance director, because I mean, he,
I think this episode has a good example
the end where we did we we have a music montage you know it's like and they kept the song on hulu
i was so excited yeah that was pretty cool right they didn't they didn't swap it out yeah and
you know i can't remember how many there were leading up to this but this felt like it was
one of the sort of bigger ones like
we're committing to this song it was in the script early you know it's like it wasn't just like
there'll be a rock song here and you know do some cool shots and and it may not have been on this
episode but early in the run with with you guys bill said to me because i was like enthusiastically
pitching this you know montage i want to do and all these transitions.
And he's like, dude, if I will cut story, if you give me a beautiful piece of cinema.
Oh, great.
And that's just insane.
I mean, writers never say that, you know.
And so I really felt empowered and encouraged by Bill.
And he also, you know, there's no bullshit with him.
If he doesn't like you, he just tells you.
Well, there's plenty of times he would come to rehearsal.
I'm sure this never happened on one of your episodes, Michael.
But there's plenty of times, you know, the way it would work is the director would sort of block out where everyone's going to go, where the camera's going to go.
And there were definitely times.
And then Bill would come to the rehearsal, arrive at the rehearsal and be like, yeah, that makes it not funny at all.
We're not doing that.
We're not doing that.
And then, you know, you watch some directors be like, it was, you know, he was, even for Bill, he was tactful about it sometimes.
But, you know, it was like, he's like, no, I'm not doing that.
If you put him over there and her over there, it's not funny anymore.
So we got to do this.
And, you know, you have to be a little bit humble about it as a director because you're like, oh, you know, I didn't.
Now I see, you know, I think that most of the time when when writers have clear ideas about that.
They're generally right. You know, if they're if they're if they're people, you know, of the Steve Levitan, Bill Lawrence, Mindy Kaling caliber, they get it.
And you listen to them.
You don't fight them.
And they're generally right.
Now, I did see that happen with other directors when I'd be there prepping.
Didn't happen very often with me.
Not with Michael Spiller.
No, sir.
Not with Michael.
Not with, sorry, Emmy Award winning Michael Spiller. No, sir. Not with Michael. Not with, sorry, Emmy award winning Michael Spiller.
I mean, what I do remember happening a lot is like we'd be waiting for Bill to come up from the writer's room and, you know, must have been in the middle of a very fancy paragraph or something and dial.
We had to wait, but, you know, the clock is ticking. We're losing a light. So generally we wait for him to arrive but sometimes i would rehearse
without him yeah and inevitably inevitably as soon as we finished the rehearsal bill come walking
through the doors and i'd have to scramble back okay so for this shot i'd like fake like we're
starting the rehearsal from the top and not just finished it right well yeah you know another thing
that people might not know is that the onus to deliver the show in five days is all on the director's hands.
I mean, obviously working with his or her assistant directors.
So you not only come on to this set where you don't work every day to lead a crew of people that are all friends, but it's your job to be like, guys, we got to go.
We got to go.
We got it.
We got to get out of here.
So that's,
that's another thing is that you have to,
well,
you've,
you've signed on to deliver this episode of television in five,
12 hour days.
You have a ton of support though.
You have,
you know,
you,
if you have a good first,
you're,
you're golden.
We had some pretty cool first ADs.
Our show, Franklin got better and Scott Harris and Richard Wells, You're golden. We had some pretty cool first ADs on our show.
Franklin Godbetter and Scott Harris.
And Richard Wells, who was an incredible first AD.
Paul Pedrera.
We had a few of them.
You know what I mean?
And you worked with all four of them, right?
Yes.
I worked with them all.
Yeah.
Which one was your favorite?
No, you don't have to answer that.
You don't have to answer that.
Should we get into the episode?
Because I think it would be fun to just...
Sure.
What do you think?
So, Michael, the way we do this is there's really no order.
We just start to talk about the episodes.
Well, you've heard it.
You listen to your new favorite podcast.
Exactly.
The first thing I noticed, first of all,
we have to say that Elizabeth Bogish is not only beautiful, obviously,
but she's really funny.
She's a very good actress.
I thought she did a fantastic job.
Just great moments in this episode.
And it's also, this is big.
She's the first love interest for JD.
And so, you know, this really set the tone for all of the other actresses
that would come on to play your love interest on the show. And she did such a, she did such a phenomenal job and it, you know,
you're right. She is very funny and it made it so that whoever else came on had to be like,
all right, well, let me, let me, let me see what, let me, let me, let me step up and.
Yeah. They couldn't just be, they couldn't just be a pretty face. They had to really be
good actresses and be funny.
And I think that Liz was all those things.
She had really good timing.
I thought she was good in her dramatic moments.
And of course, Spiller, when you do that beauty shot of her at the end,
arriving with the picnic basket, it's so romantic and pretty.
Yeah, all my Sex in the City training came in handy. Yeah, I was thinking about that.
All your Sex in the City lighting women things all came together in this episode did you have anything to do with casting
on that like i know that some directors sit down and uh help out with casting on television shows
or bring in their own uh typically typically we are you know we're contractually we're we're meant
to be involved in all the casting decisions. I mean,
every creative decision on the episode that we're directing, we're supposed to be involved in.
Sometimes an actor will span several episodes, so it's sort of a bigger decision,
or maybe an actor's availability is being challenged and you need to book them before
the director has technically begun their prep. I can't recall what the situation was with liz i mean she was fantastic hard to imagine anyone who i would
have rather seen in the role right but she did have a technically a three episode span although
i directed two of her episodes yeah the two the second two right not the first one where she's in
the mri machine right right all right but have you
have you gone on to do other shows and be like you know what i got the perfect person and gone
back to use actors that you've had from oh sure let's say from scrubs or from or from uh sex in
the city or whatever yeah i mean whenever i can i try to recommend people who i know are cool and
they're gonna deliver and because we've all worked with people who are super funny on screen and
really difficult to work with. And some, some even, you know,
with like a toxic personality that could kind of poison the set.
Cause it only takes one person to poison a workplace.
That's a lesson to all you, uh, young aspiring actors out there that everybody
talks, everybody that everybody talks you know everybody that's a small town everybody talks so you might have been a jerk one day and
michael spiller was the director on sex in the city and you think you went home and went oh all
right well i had a bad day and then later and then later michael's directing another show where your name is suggested, and he goes, no, oof, no.
So you have to behave yourself.
My wife always says this town's way too small to be an asshole.
Yeah.
Exactly.
That's the perfect way of putting it.
And, I mean, the fact is, you know, my wife used to be a costume supervisor, a wardrobe supervisor.
And often it's the people behind the scenes that get the brunt
of an actor's wrath you know or bad behavior and it's like if you're making you know your hair and
makeup people or the people who are adjusting your clothing if you're making those people cry
you're not a good person or you need some therapy or you got to work some shit out
but my she told me there are a couple people that that made her cry, you know, back in the day.
And I have had the pleasure of passing on some of that.
Sweet revenge.
And you ran home and told your wife, didn't you?
You're like, guess who I passed on today, baby.
You're not going to believe who they tried to push on me today, but I said no.
And his name was Donald Faison.
So, Michael, my first note for you is at 24 seconds,
why does my character have a giant entire piece?
It's a whole chicken on my date plate.
I would never order such a large meal.
I had to stop and pause.
I'm on this date with this beautiful woman.
I'm just staring at her, and I have a full roasted chicken on my plate.
You know,
all I recall about that is that there was part of,
because it was this,
the sequence is that you can't take your eyes off her.
You're so fixated on her that you almost forgot to eat.
I didn't eat.
Having a,
having a,
a,
a vertical, a large meal that would read in this shot, because there's a lot of people to look at in this shot.
I see.
Most people are looking at you.
Yeah, I see.
So your rationalization, or real genuine rationalization, you wanted it to quickly read that I hadn't touched my plate.
Yes.
It looks like Thanksgiving dinner has been served and no one has
carved the turkey.
We were on location for that
and we didn't do that very often on
Scrubs. And certainly my first episode, I
hadn't done it before with you guys.
And, you know, that
may have been what the place had to offer.
What Hugo's had to offer. Oh yeah, it was
Hugo's. I think it was. I was going to
ask that. Is that Hugo's? I think so. Where is it? Riverside in the Valley? yeah, it was Hugo's. I think it was. I was going to ask that. Is that Hugo's?
That's Hugo's.
I think so.
Where is it?
Riverside in the Valley?
Yeah, it was right next to the hospital.
Just down the street.
The photo booth in the middle of the supermarket.
Or is that a pharmacy?
Yeah, what was the deal with that, Michael?
What is that about?
Who would put a photo booth in the middle of an aisle of a supermarket?
Michael, you can reach through the photo booth to get items off the shelves.
Well, maybe they're handy props.
You know, this is before the days of, like, giant hats and oversized sunglasses and big foam pointy fingers.
Wait, was this a set?
Or do you remember?
I think it was a set.
And it was just, like, we pulled it out of our ass.
I was going to say, because I remember photo booths being in it was just like, yeah. What do we got? Cause I remember photo being on like,
in like bowling alleys or I miss,
by the way,
I miss photo booths.
Let's keep it.
I love photo right now.
That was like the set off for that is the,
because I guess cause of the movies too.
It's such a romantic set.
I know,
especially when they're black and white,
not this,
not this modern bullshit,
the old school black and white neon light that freaking surrounds the camera
and shoots in your face.
I totally miss photo booths.
I got some good photo booth pictures of me and my wife when we first started
dating and you know,
it's so romantic when you look at them and you feel like you're old school and
I love a little four strip photo.
I mean,
for those of you out here who are doing like photo booths at like parties and
stuff like that,
it doesn't, it's not the same if it's not in an actual booth.
If you're in Manhattan, okay, there's a restaurant called The Smith on 4th Street and like, what is it?
Like 4th and 10th-ish.
You just Google it.
And in the basement of The Smith, which is a good restaurant, there's an old-school black-and-white photo booth.
So there you go.
I just hooked you up.
Nice. Next time you're on a trip with your loved one,
go take a romantic picture there.
When we're allowed to travel again.
Yeah, when you're allowed to travel again in August.
And, yeah, so, Michael, I don't know how they do it on Sex and the City,
but we certainly don't put photo booths in the center of supermarket aisles
here on Scrubs.
Well, apparently you do. Yeah do i want to say this is very vain but i looked very skinny in
this photo booth and i yeah but what was up with your hair dude your hair was a little different
in these episodes man they were very spiky i was probably you know what i was probably the truth
the the spinning of the hair on the top of the head in the the photo booth, I looked like I had more makeup on than usual.
I can only rationalize that I was probably nervous in front of this beautiful actress.
And I was probably like, more makeup.
More hair.
Okay, now, is this your first love interest in projects that you've been?
Because you hadn't worked that much.
That's a very good question.
Had you dated on camera before?
Very good question.
No, I had done an after school
special called My Summer as a Girl.
And
basically it was an after school special where they just
stole the whole plot of Tootsie. And you know, in order
to get the job, I had to dress up like a woman.
Got it. And then I fell in love with her.
But I remember, it's
interesting remembering that, that I remember
that there was supposed to be a scene where I kind of got like
too aggressive with trying to make out with her. And I remember the director
was disappointed because I was, I couldn't, I, I was too nervous to do it. I wasn't doing it enough,
being aggressive enough with her. Why, why, why are all afterschool specials? Why do the guys
have to be so aggressive? Well, the lesson, they always taught a lesson, right? Well, this one was,
I was kind of a guy and I was kind of a play, not a playboy, but like I was a cocky guy. And, and then I, in order to get, in order to go after the girl, I dressed up like a girl because she had gotten the last, last job as a chambermaid on the island. And I wanted to do that too. So I dressed up like a girl, like totally the plot of Tootsie, exceptie except you know a chambermaid on an island and
then i fall in love with a girl and then i'm too as when i'm a man i'm too aggressive with her
and she's like get away you're you're moving too fast and then there's a guy who's in love with me
when i'm dressed as a woman and he starts doing it to me and i'm like kicking her in the nuts and
the lesson was like how do you fucking like it right treat a woman with respect right
shoes on the other foot now yes so you can all go google my summer as a girl and watch that bit of
artistry but that's a good point you brought up donald i i don't think that i had really
had a a pretty love interest other than sarah chalk but we hadn't really you know
delved into that yet not on the show you guys yeah we're Yeah, we're about to. We're in a few episodes.
We're about, I think after Liz
is the first time that it comes up.
So yeah, I bet I was very nervous around her.
I do seem to me to look like
I have a little bit too much makeup on
in this photo booth.
Like I was trying to look like-
It was important for you to look good.
You wanted to-
I wanted to look the best I could for Liz.
Well, yeah, I mean, it is so funny.
It's like it's been scanning
a lot of attention these days
because people are, you know,
in this business are evolving somewhat.
But, you know, when you have two actors
or more, depending on the show,
you know, who have to have a love scene
or be intimate, physically intimate with each other,
I mean, it's awkward.
It's weird.
And it can be really uncomfortable for people.
So, I mean, I totally get it, even as sort of PG as this was.
Right.
Well, this was pretty PG.
You know, when we get into some of the Saturday stuff, I can't even believe that we were doing what we were doing for network TV.
And I remember it being, like, awkward.
Like, this is so bizarre.
I remember feeling like, are we on, like, HBO?
Like, how are we doing this for NBC?
You know, that was pretty risque stuff this stuff with liz was was was pretty tame but you know you're still lying
in bed with a with a beautiful stranger i was about to say at the end of the episode i'm on top
of uh judy and it's we're simulating sex dude right this was a sexy episode there's a lot of
talk of orgasms and and yeah and sarah masturbating on a washing machine? I couldn't believe it. I wonder if that shit works.
Does that work? I couldn't believe it. Is a washing
machine that powerful?
Does it work like that? Yeah, or jump in the head.
Because I can't... I don't...
Apparently, I definitely don't produce like
the washing machine can produce, obviously.
Listen, first of all... Let's just be honest
with everyone out there.
The washing machine is that good to where
at the end of it, you fall off the motherfucking washing machine? I can't compete with a out there. What kind of washing machine is that good to where at the end of it you fall off
the motherfucking
washing machine?
I can't compete
with a washing machine.
What am I useful for, honey?
I've been helping
you raise these kids.
What am I useful for?
Hey, Donald,
the washing machine can't...
And the crazy shit is
my wife's always like,
I'm going to go
put another load in.
Yeah.
Yeah, she is.
She's definitely going to...
Hey, Donald,
that washing machine
cannot provide for those children.
Only you can.
Only I can.
That's what's up.
Well, I don't know
whether or not,
you know,
we three men
have no idea, obviously,
if a washing machine
can do that to a woman.
But I got to say,
Sarah,
it worked for Elliot.
It really seemed to.
It worked for Elliot.
It definitely worked.
Well, and it worked
for Carla, too,
because she's the one that suggested it.
Yes.
She said, when are you doing laundry next?
Right.
Now, we had a lot of female writers on this show.
I can only imagine that they had a conversation in the writer's room like, y'all ever ride a washing machine?
We'll never know.
Let's move on from there.
Or you could ask Bill.
Could be an ask bill moment
no no no no no i don't want to waste it on that hey listen i don't have anything do you guys have
anything before sarah shitting a brick because i laughed out loud at that yeah i laughed out
loud at that that was funny especially sarah first of all who when did you think you'd ever get to
see sarah chalk you know pooing face and there we saw it but that's that's right that's the one
thing usually somebody makes a pooing face on television,
they get real big with it.
It was pretty subtle.
She did this eye close thing.
She did an eye close thing.
She closed one eye.
There had to be just enough
push.
You bought that brick.
What's funny about it, Spiller, is that
she just does a little bit of a push,
but then a giant brick falls.
I just realized that in one episode,
levels in one episode of brilliant television,
uh,
in 22 minutes,
we have Sarah's poo face and her orgasm face.
That's right.
So we opened the whole gamut.
We,
we opened the show with her poo face and close the show with her orgasm face.
What,
what art we made.
From O to poo.
Okay, so I think
the yeah was impromptu.
When Carla pushes me down. I remember
that. Yeah!
I think that was impromptu. I don't
remember if that was in the script or not.
It wasn't because who the hell would ever guess that your
t-shirt would say yeah on it. Right, that my
t-shirt would say yeah on it. It didn't say on the script, Turk wearing a yeah t-shirt.
Points to said phrase.
Yeah, but that was funny, Donald.
I wanted to point out a little trivia that I saw on the Scrubs wiki at 3.05
right before your yeah thing, that Dr. Cox knows Doug's name.
And the Scrubs wiki was pointing out it might be the only time he ever says Doug's name
because he goes, Doug!
And I don't know if he ever...
Well, he also uses it as, like, he's going to pick on Doug.
Yeah, but I'm saying Cox never...
You know, his whole thing was he doesn't know people's names.
He calls them all these nicknames.
But he randomly knew Doug's name.
But you two are jamming in this episode also.
You two have developed, like, a camaraderie.
Yeah. You know, you're his go this episode also. You two have developed like a camaraderie and are, you know,
you're his go-to now.
This is the first episode. I know we established it
in the last episode, but yeah, now you
two are, it doesn't seem like you're
a fresh newbie, even though
he calls you newbie and everything like that.
We're starting to see your
relationship as colleagues form.
That's true, and I think I wrote down
this is the first episode.
To me, it seems like he genuinely likes JD.
Like he's usually good at hiding it.
But in this episode,
I felt like Cox was really bonding with JD
and liked him,
even though he was, you know,
still trying to hide it,
but he couldn't hide it.
And then in the end,
he really bonded with him and said,
you know, don't be me.
Don't be me.
Go have a life, which I thought was moving.
I thought that was, you know, a side of Dr. Cox we don't always see.
Yes, Spiller.
Since we're – that's a nice segue into what it's like working with Johnny C for the first time as a director.
Yeah, was he scary?
Yeah, let's go.
Well, I mean, first of all, he's so damn good.
He's so damn funny. But he is a very, very intense guy, particularly when, you know, and spend as much time as you can on set so that
you're getting to know the cast in a more informal way. You're starting to connect with the crew,
learn people's names, all these things that are essential to, you know, when you're handed the
baton the next week that you'll have a good episode, right? So, you know, you'd hang out
and observe and try not to be in the way. And I'd watch another, you know, like Mark Buckland work with Johnny C or something.
And Johnny is intense.
You say cut and he stands there.
His jaw is like clamped shut.
His cheek muscles are like fluctuating.
And like he's he's ripped, you know, he's like so awe inspiring.
Right.
It's like, OK, I knew you have to give that person a note.
awe-inspiring right it's like okay and you have to give that person a note so the very the very first time i did it i said cut went up to him and it's like you got the sense that if you said the
wrong thing he might actually hit you because he's that tight he's he appears to be that tightly
wound right right so i can't remember what the note was but you know
i said johnny can you try that you know i have an idea blah blah blah he looks at me for a sec
cheek muscles still you know rippling away and he says fuck yeah let's do it and we just we went
it's like okay i made it i bet that was the first hurdle that was your test in one or two sentences
he has decided
if he liked you
or not forever
exactly
thankfully
well I think
Johnny
Johnny has
so much
had so much experience
you know
and I've worked
with so many directors
at that point
and I think he
he
you know
if you gave him a good note
he was down to do it
and then you know like all of us we sometimes got note, he was, he was down to do it. And, uh, and then he,
you know, like all of us, we sometimes got notes from directors and we were like, I'm not doing
that. And, you know, so I think that he, in that moment, he decided that he liked you and respected
you. Well, I mean, listen, from, from an actor's standpoint, I completely get it because it's like,
okay, he's a new director every week. And some of them are not going to be great or some,
you're just not going to get along with.
And some are going to ask you things that may not even be their note,
maybe a writer's note. And you know, you can't,
you can't go up to an actor and say, Oh, well,
the writer asked me to say this, you know, that's not a good thing to do.
It's like, well, then you're just the messenger person.
Yeah. And then, and then it just shows that you're weak.
I think you have to be like, you have to be like, you know, what I try to be like is,
do you want to, you know, if it's my thing, then I'm like, let's try this.
But if I'm coming on to a show like this, I would say,
I was thinking this.
Do you want to maybe try this?
Because, you know, you don't know if the actor is going to say,
oh, my character would never do that, you know, that kind of thing.
Hey, we need to go to a break.
Hold that thought, Donald.
Donald, we're going to a break. Hold that thought, Donald. Donald, we're going to a break.
Hold that thought.
Don't you forget it.
My thought's going to be irrelevant after the break.
No, don't you forget it, Donald,
because I know that you've tried some of God's lettuce
and that affects memory.
Hold on to that thought.
I haven't tried some of God's lettuce in a few hours.
Let's go to break.
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okay we're back from break donald did you remember did you hold on to the thought
i forgot oh fuck and you kids say weed doesn't cause memory loss. Wow.
It's like a case study.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like a case study.
So, Donald, we're doing a podcast about the show Scrubs.
I had to remind him after each break, Spiller.
I understand.
Hi, my name's Mike Spiller.
This is Mike Spiller. He directed you.
We worked hard a few times.
20 episodes.
I don't remember.
I don't remember.
I don't remember.
I remember hanging out with you outside of Scrubs 2, Spiller.
Me too.
For everyone out there that's sitting there and they're like, wow, this is a director on the show with the two actors.
And he directed 20, so that makes him special.
That's not all that makes Spiller special.
We've all gone out and hung out and eaten together and stuff like that.
So it's very cool to catch up
with you. I've swam in your pool
before. I've swam in your pool, Spiller.
You still live in the same house, Spiller?
No, we moved.
You have to come see the new crib.
Now that you got that Emmy.
Now he's got one of those Emmy houses.
One of those Emmy houses. It's like three levels.
Now listen. The house It's like three levels. Now listen.
The house is shaped like an Emmy.
If he wasn't responsible,
there'd be a water slide from his bed to the pool.
Yeah. When we met him, he had a DP
on Sex and the City house. Now he's got a
modern family Emmy house.
Spiller, I have a great memory
of you too in that you came over and
helped me install a doorknob.
Do you remember that?
Wait, what?
I mean, that totally sounds like me.
It's completely on brand.
Wait, hold on.
I need to understand this.
You have questions.
Yes, I do remember.
Here's what happened.
I have questions.
Here's what happened.
How did you know?
You don't know how to put a door?
No, let me explain.
It's a very sweet Michael Spiller story.
I was talking to him on set.
Now, Spiller, you could say this never happened and I dreamed it, but I haven't done hallucinogenics since college.
So I remember that I was talking to Michael.
Michael's handy.
Aren't you a handy around the house guy?
Like you can fix you.
I'm very handy.
I love building.
And I was saying, God, I wish I knew how to build stuff.
Like I have to put a doorknob on a door and I have a door without a doorknnob and I got to go hire someone to do it. I wish that I knew how to buy the right
drill bit and install this doorknob. And Michael said, I could teach you. And I said, really?
And he said, yeah, I'll come over and show you how to do it. And I said, that would be so awesome
because I don't know anything like that. And I'd love to actually learn. And Michael came over and
helped me install a new doorknob on a door. Isn't that true, Michael?
That is true.
I don't like to blow my own horn, but yes, that is true.
And you remember this, Michael?
Yeah.
I don't think of it daily, but I do remember it.
He charged me $35 an hour.
I got a great Michael Steele story, too.
So we just finished the screening of Garden State.
Zach invited a bunch.
Good film.
Good film.
Great film.
Excellent film. I got special thanks on it. Zach invited a bunch. Good film. Good film. Great film. Excellent film.
I got special thanks on it.
Yeah.
Zach invited a bunch of people over to the screening room.
Danny DeVito was there.
Oh, God.
A bunch of people were there.
Mike Spiller, myself, we were there also.
And I remember the movie ends, and we're all like, wow, the movie was really good.
I had notes, though.
Oh, God. This is the worst yeah dude and i wanted to figure out a way to tell zach all right i've got
a couple of notes about the movie and i remember i see spiller and we're i don't know if we're
drinking or we're eating it's after the movie's over probably drinking and we talk we're talking
and you're like wow that was pretty good and i was And I was like, it was, right? I was like, I've got some notes.
And you said to me, you know, now might not be the best time to deliver said notes.
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
Said notes.
To Zach.
And I was like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, of course.
I'll figure out a way to, you know, to tell him.
Flash cut to Danny DeVito doing a Q&A after the movie.
And he was like, does anyone have notes?
One hand shoots up.
One beautiful brown hand.
And then what happened was this.
So then Donald goes off on his notes.
And I'm looking at him like, dude, not fucking now.
Like, tell me these.
Like, Danny DeVito was my producer.
Why are you listening to Spiller?
Danny DeVito was my producer.
I was like, dude, tell me privately.
What the fuck are you doing?
And then, so then Danny's like doing it.
Well, I just wanted to be heard.
I wanted to be heard.
I didn't want to be heard because I wasn't allowed to be in the movie because I gave the parts of Method Man.
Now, listen.
Danny DeVito, you know, at the time the movie had had too many endings it was
like it was it was going on a few beats too long and we all knew that but i was in denial about it
and and danny devito said how many of you felt like the film had too many endings donald's hand
shoots up i'm like fucking donald put your fucking hand down You're supposed to be my man on the inside.
But you changed it.
You changed it.
We did. Hey, you know what? This many years later,
I'm glad that you're never a yes man.
You always tell it like it is.
I just remember that.
I remember Spiller being like,
yeah, you know,
I'm sure we all have
notes, but I would wait for my own moment.
So you didn't, the lesson of this story
is that you should have listened to Spiller.
Yes.
It's usually, that's the end of most stories, actually.
So I want to say at 4.15, I don't remember the episode,
so I thought that it was you who couldn't,
who had lost your erection,
and it was a very good misdirect by both Spiller and Bill, because it was Judy.
I don't think I've ever seen a story of a woman.
Wait, wait, wait.
Yeah, right.
I remember that.
But I knew right away.
I remember this episode.
And I remember this episode because Rob's line in this show, so when I saw you in the
hall today, and I asked you how's your penis
and you didn't
want to talk about it.
Yeah.
But it still tracks.
It's all part of the mislead.
I was proud of that.
I don't think that was in
the script specifically
as she's holding a piece of bacon in a really odd
upright manner that nobody would ever do right but i thought okay this would be a fun visual
transition and it does it does lead you to believe it's more evidence as a viewer that yes donald is
the one who's had the problem the classic situation yeah you misled oh i just wanted to do one little
director thing that spiller kind of introduced,
I believe, to the show.
I don't know that we were doing this
too much beforehand,
but at 4.12,
sorry, it's a little bit before that,
so they have sex
and then the camera pans
and goes into the back of the TV
and we use that as a transition,
you know, a transition.
A little time passage.
A little time passage.
And then we come back
to see the bra on Rowdy's head
and then we cut to liz bogish
holding a bacon in sort of an erect way spiller you naughty naughty boy sometimes bacon is just
bacon yeah sometimes bacon's just bacon but um yeah so i i was i was tricked the whole episode
because i generally until until obviously she says it it's funny's funny, Judy... Oh, wait, I'm jumping ahead.
There's a waste of... Oh, there's a waste of a gift certificate?
Oh, yeah, there's a waste of a gift certificate.
Cancel the cobbler.
Now, that's 1128.
I think Neil Improv'd cancel the cobbler,
definitely, right, Spiller?
I think so, but I mean,
the only draft of the script that I could find,
although it has notes and diagrams all over,
it says it's like a pre-table
draft of the script and i have almost all my scrub scripts i i couldn't find anyway
yeah that that whole bit wasn't in the version i had but i mean i i loved the bit with neil that
starts that runner you know where you we reveal him next to you can't you know someone walks away
and just happen to look at him.
Right.
And he's like, what have I told you about it?
You know, look at me when I'm eating.
I don't like it.
Okay.
What am I doing?
Eating.
And what are you doing?
Staring.
I mean, I would listen to a whole podcast.
I would listen to a whole podcast that's called Michael Spiller acts out all the parts of Scrubs.
I would totally listen to it.
It's coming to Spotify. I out all the parts of Scrubs. I would totally listen to it. It's coming to Spotify.
I'll use that as an endorsement.
What about Carrot Top?
Should we get into Carrot Top?
Yeah, we got to talk about Carrot Top.
Okay, first of all.
I remember this story.
Shut up.
Go ahead.
You should tell it then.
No, I don't want to take it.
You got it.
No, you got it.
I'm just worried you're going to fuck up the story because it's a great story.
I'm not going to fuck up the story.
So what's Carrot Top's real name?
Joelle, can you look up whatever?
Scott Thompson.
Scott Thompson.
Joel, never mind.
Scott Thompson came on the show, and I always found Scott Thompson very funny.
I know that this is sort of like making fun of Carrot Top, but I always thought he was a funny guy.
And the only thing we had heard about Scott Thompson just thompson uh just by you know sometimes when you
have a guest star there'd be a couple things like hey don't you know sometimes like i remember
someone was allergic to nuts and they were like don't eat nuts around them but with scott it was
like hey guys don't call him carrot top he prefers that you call him scott like don't
don't call him carrot top and so the crew was told that the cast was told that and we had this old
prop man at the time who walks right up to him and was like,
Hey, how you doing, carrot head?
And I remember Donald and me all flinching like, don't call him carrot.
You're not even supposed to call him carrot top, let alone carrot head.
Hey, how you doing, carrot head?
Hey, how you doing, carrot head?
Now, is this the same guy that allegedly hit Rowdy or no?
Yes, same guy.
Same dude.
So another strike.
Yeah.
The case was building.
His first strike was calling Scott Carrot Head.
Yeah.
Bring a little optimism into your life with The Bright Side,
a new kind of daily podcast from Hello Sunshine. Hosted by me, Danielle Robay, and me, Simone Boyce. Every weekday, we're bringing you
conversations about culture, the latest trends, inspiration, and so much more. I am so excited
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America's number one podcast network, iHeart.
Open your free iHeart app and search The Bright Side.
Imagine you ask two people the same exact set of seven questions.
I'm Minnie Driver, and this was the idea I set out to explore in my podcast, Minnie Questions.
This year, we bring a whole new group of guests to answer the same seven questions,
including actress and star of the mega hit sitcom Friends,
Courtney Cox.
You can't go around it, so you just go through it.
This is a roadblock.
It's going to catch you down the road.
Go through it.
Deal with it.
Comedian, writer, and star of the series Catastrophe, Rob Delaney.
I shouldn't feel guilty about my son's death.
He died of a brain tumor.
It's part of what happens when your kid dies.
Intellectually, you'll understand that it's not your fault,
but you'll still feel guilty.
Alt-rock icon, Liz Phair.
That personal disaster wrote Guyville.
So everything comes out of a dead end.
And many, many more.
Join me on season three of Many Questions
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your favorite podcasts.
Seven questions, limitless answers.
Professional dancer Cheryl Burke
has been part of Dancing with the Stars
since the very beginning.
26 seasons of the samba, the rumba, and the cha-cha.
24 partners, six finals, and two mirrorball trophies. She knows all the secrets, the behind the scenes arguments and the affairs,
the flings, the flirting and the fighting. It's time to tell it all on her new podcast,
Sex, Lies and Spray Tans. We'll take you all the way back to season one and up through today for the dance floor drama
like you wouldn't believe.
Former partners, co-stars, friends, and frenemies
will join Cheryl each week.
Listen to Sex, Lies, and Spray Tans
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Chelsea Handler, and if you listen to my podcast,
Dear Chelsea,
you know that I love making space for women to share their stories. And that is why I'm excited
to be part of Women Take the Mic, iHeartRadio's celebration of women who make music, influence,
change, and create culture. All month long, your favorite voices from talk radio, music,
and podcasting will highlight the remarkable achievements made by women and
discuss the most significant issues facing us today search women take the mic to listen to a
collection of international women's day episodes from iheart's top podcasts including angela yee's
lip service the psychology of your 20s and dear chelsea it is a great way to support women and
discover your new favorite show.
Listen to Women Take the Mic on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
But I thought it was funny.
I thought Scott did a very funny job.
And I laughed at every single one of his jokes.
So, fuck off if you don't like Carrot Top.
Right on.
I've worked with Scott since then.
You have?
Yeah, we did a...
He's ripped, right?
That's one thing I know about him.
Now, we play basketball together,
all types of things,
in the celebrity circuit.
He is ripped.
And he's ripped like...
He's ripped like Diesel ripped,
like rock ripped.
You know what I mean?
He's not just slim. He's not as tall as the rock, but he's ripped like diesel ripped, like rock ripped. You know what I mean? He's not just slim.
He's not as tall as the rock, but he's ripped like, you know,
at least back then, at least 10 years ago, the last time I saw him,
he was freaking diesel, dude.
You know, as you get older, you try to figure out ways to stay young.
Yeah, well, I'm trying to stay in shape, but I don't have muscles like that.
But I guess I could take it more seriously and eat a lot of calories does he have muscles
like uh johnny's action figure did i give you that john c i think you did i went on so he's
holding up guys there's a there's a johnny c who played red in platoon there's an there's a there's
a beautiful uh doll i don't know what in Platoon. There's a beautiful doll.
I don't know what you call that.
It's like a Ken doll.
It's like an action figure thing.
But it's Ken doll size.
It's big.
Yeah, it's Ken doll size.
Yeah, it's a 12-inch.
And when I saw them, I...
It's one-sixth scale.
By the way, its accessory is a cigarette,
which I always thought was funny.
And I...
Yeah, when those came out, I bought one for Johnny and for... I guess i bought one for you spiller god i must have really loved you you did
those are the days yo uh so i love you definitely changes everything it does yeah well and when you
say it apparently in this story when you say i love you shit gets weird for a little bit. Yeah. Yes, for Judy. At least with Turk and Carla.
I think it's weird for both of you.
I don't think either of you has ever really said it before.
Right.
I mean, I've said it a couple of times in my life,
but I don't know that it's changed.
I mean, you know, I guess it just makes the breakup harder.
I don't know that it's changed. I mean, you know, I guess it just makes the breakup harder. I don't know.
I just found that as an interesting story for these guys that I Love You made them have cold feet in the bedroom.
Well, she did, right?
You didn't have cold feet.
Well, he had cold feet.
He did, too.
It was a blow to his ego also.
Right.
It got in his head.
He got in his head. Right, but
and the fact that Turk is like, you know,
it's never happened that
I've always been able to pleasure
a woman to the point of orgasm. Yeah, that's what
Turk thinks. I found that very odd. I was like, right.
I was like, yeah, whatever. Yeah, I don't
think so. The stakes are high. The stakes are high.
That's a weird plot line for
me. I love you
and because of that, you can't come now
well I don't know if you're supposed to say the
C-U-M word I mean we can say orgasm
comes a little aggressive for a family
podcast you know are we a family podcast
I didn't know we had established rules
I didn't know we had no
we're explicit but we stay away
we had established rules on what type of podcast
no no we're definitely explicit
but you could have said ejaculate.
I wasn't PC enough.
You don't have to say cum.
It's so graphic.
Right, Joelle?
Joelle's cracking up at you right now.
She cut a climax.
She couldn't climax.
Joelle, as our producer, should we be using the C-M word?
I don't know.
Talk to iHeart.
Call iHeart on the red phone.
I don't think it'll matter much, guys, whatever you're comfortable with.
I don't know.
Donald said it, and my heart skipped a beat.
Might not be the episode.
I know.
It's staying.
It's fucking staying.
It's staying.
Listen.
You know, listen.
To that point, I noticed, see, Judy didn't say orgasm
in the first scene that it comes up.
And I was like, oh, it must be like a TV thing, NBC.
We had to tiptoe around the word. And then everyone starts saying it. You and i was like oh it must be like a tv thing nbc we had to tiptoe
around the word and then everyone starts saying it you say it sarah says it i'm like oh it's just a
judy's character uh uh carla is like uncomfortable saying the word in in public which is odd to me
because as you saw i just said a different word and all of you guys got oh now you're ashamed now
you're now you guys kind of shamed me.
That was no,
we're not shaming you.
There's no judgment.
There was a little bit of judgment.
I'm going to keep it.
No way.
No,
there's no judgment.
And anybody out there listening,
I felt your judgment too.
No,
they weren't judging your judgment too.
I think we were all just a little taken aback that you came at us aggressively.
No pun intended.
I'm going to keep us on topic,
but maybe get us out of this.
Oh,
are you gonna direct
us spiller direct us i'm just gonna say that you guys this is what a director does it's a little
redirect here that that moment at 11 55 where carla catches herself after elliot's made her
confession that she's never been able to climax ever even by herself that that moment after she says it and judy's like oh i'm sorry i i should be more surprised
it's like the the pause and her like her realization it's it's a silent beat it's so
funny and so deftly executed and yeah and that's something that i have no can take no credit for
of course that's all the actor elliot is so self-deprecating in this episode it's so funny
every scene sarah's, she's like,
she's just like taking digs at herself
over and over and over again.
Let's talk about the legendary Sam Lloyd at 1530
saying, walk off, bitch.
I laughed out loud at that.
Yes, walk off, bitch.
Now, Spiller, I noticed he's not sweating.
I don't know if you recall,
because it was so long ago,
but I wondered if there was a conscious decision,
like, no, you found your courage.
You're not going to be flop sweating in this scene.
Yeah, I don't remember actually saying the words, but I'd like to think that that is why, you know, with his newfound, you know, since Kelso's lost his mojo, Ted has this newfound confidence that he wasn't sweating.
Yeah.
And then he goes, you are that he wasn't sweating. Yeah.
And then he goes, you are a wonderful person.
I love you.
I love you.
Don't you know what you did?
Yeah.
So good.
Spiller, do you want to share any Sammy thoughts?
I thought just, you know, because you worked with him a bunch of times.
And, you know, Donald and I shared some thoughts.
But I thought you might want to say anything that you remember about him.
Yeah. I mean, gosh, it's taken too soon. I mean, such a great guy, such a, an amazing talent. Um,
I'm so pleased to have worked with him a bunch and, and gotten to know him a little bit and but i often i mean when i heard
the news i kept thinking back to one episode that i haven't seen in a while but this moment
has always stuck with me where ted the lawyer winds up falling off the roof yeah and i mean we
shot like a pretty elaborate sequence for it and you know see him falling away and he says oh sweet relief yeah you know
like he's finally you know gonna be out of this torturous life and you know years ago i just would
think about that moment because it was so funny and so on character and you know the past couple
of weeks i've just been thinking about it's like's like, well, I hope that he has found peace and is not in pain
and it's just heartbreaking.
What an amazing guy.
Yeah, he really was.
I've been thinking about him a lot lately and I know
all the fans of the show have.
And now, of course, when he comes up in
an episode, I'm like extra leaning forward
because I just know it's going to be funny.
And I have this thing where I write my
notes down for the episode. I write LOL just to remind myself to say that that's something that made me
laugh out loud.
And Sammy has like two lines in this episode.
I laughed out loud at both of them.
Um,
I was just him just delivered always.
Yeah.
He definitely delivered.
Uh,
Johnny C at 1927,
uh,
puts in his own five good ones,
you know,
that's what,
yeah,
I noticed that. What's up with that? Well ones you know that's what yeah i noticed that what's up
with that well you know that was that that was his expression i think he i don't know if the
writers put it in the script uh or not good ones right here for you bob i like that whole storyline
too that was very funny uh of kelso losing his mojo and the way ken played it was great like a
wounded little like a wounded little puppy
ken was so funny right when you ever see kelso play that like humbled puppy that was so funny
and and even and uh and and john and you know and him realizing wait a second
how did i lose my mojo and john c rolling by yeah on the wheelchair waving at him hilarious dude
that's a that's a shot i've seen seen in every Scrubs clip reel that's ever shown
or GIFs and stuff.
It's one of those shots you always see Johnny on the wheelchair
rolling by waving like that.
Yeah, I think I'm owed some residuals or something.
Yeah, those GIF residuals are amazing.
Oh, yeah.
They don't pay.
They don't pay.
Yeah, I wrote down
the same thing, Donald. Ken is so good
being humbled. It's not something
you ever really saw in Scrubs, but he was like
he played it so well. That guy
has such amazing range.
And then also
his comeback was great.
And the way Cox tricks
him or revives him by saying,
you know what, guys, from here on out, you just ask me the question
and I'll answer everything for you.
And you realize, oh, wait a second, you realize right then and there,
Kelso is trying to teach.
He gets a kick out of being the most evil person on the planet,
but he is the chief of medicine at a
teaching hospital and he fulfills his job in every episode regardless of how evil he might be or how
angry he might seem you know i talked about this earlier he uh uh in older in earlier podcasts he
uh he's always teaching he's always he's always a part of the solution and not necessarily the problem.
Even if it's like, well, look, here, this is how we run things.
The lessons always somehow revolve around how mean he is.
But he's freaking so – he's always teaching the kids.
He's always teaching – or the students or the –
And when it was taken away from him this time, he's totally lost his mojo.
Well, not only has he lost his mojo, he's lost his purpose in the hospital also.
What do I do here?
I can't freaking get Ted to do his job.
I can't get the med students or the interns to do their job.
What is my
purpose here and it's only until it's only until uh cox says you know you guys ask me the question
where he's like wait a second that's not how we run things and it's all right if i scare the shit
out of them that's a fine way to teach people fear we're in a hospital if this shit hits code red
these people need to be ready to you know push their nerves aside and answer questions and save lives and everything
like that and you get another glimpse of you know inside dr c that you know there's more than meets
the eye there he's not just you know a scary intimidating figure in the hospital it's like
no he's got heart he's got compassion and you know understands how
things work here and he he's the one who's instrumental in restoring the order yeah yeah
and i thought that was really nice um just moment into dr cox's mind uh seeing that he's a lonesome
guy who's who's dedicated his life to this uh and and i thought you know i just thought that was a
nice sort of reveal as we get
to know the character more in episode 13 of the whole series that, you know, how dedicated he is
to being a doctor, even in sacrificing relationships with people. And, you know,
Joelle brought up a good point that, you know, when you do a TV show, granted, we're not doing something
noble like saving lives, but you know, when you, we had something analogous going on in that we
were just at this hospital 16 hours a day. Um, and it definitely hurt relationships with, with
family and friends and, you know, Donald had children and, and, and, and was gone. And I lost
touch with a lot of old friends. And it was a bit analogous
to what was happening in our lives. You know, it's interesting. When Scrubs ended, I had this
feeling that I was delayed in a sense in that I hadn't had nine years of building friendships
outside of the hospital. I had built the best friendships of my life, you especially, and Spiller. Thank you.
Spiller, you're a close like 10 down. But no, I had built some great friendships.
And actually, that's one of the reasons so many of these wonderful people, including Bill and others, are so in my life.
And of course, I fostered other relationships.
other relationships. But, but, you know, we didn't have much time over those nine years to, to, to, to build and develop other relationships. And I, I don't know, I don't know if you,
if you noticed that, Don, when we were, when we were finally done and kind of had our normal
lives back, I felt that I was like, I don't, I have small circles of friends that I love so much,
but I'm not one of these people that, that really knew a ton of people outside of my job.
Right.
And because of that, it's a little awkward now when I do, well, we're on lockdown, but when I do meet people, I'm a little awkward about, you know, when you make a bunch of really good friends and it all ends and you only see them occasionally,
well, you and I are a bit different.
It's like, well, you know, I spent 10 years getting to know a lot of people.
And as much as I respect and cherish all the time that we spent together,
it's weird not having these people in my life.
It's weird not seeing Chris or Ethan or
Calvin or
Patrick Bolton. It's weird
not seeing that. Sylvain, it's weird not
seeing these people. One thing you could
do, it would be to ask Spiller to come put
a doorknob on your house.
That's one trick that I've sometimes used.
I don't want Spiller anywhere near
my house. We're in quarantine.
He could mask up and come put a doorknob on. I totally understand I don't want Spiller anywhere near my house. We're in quarantine right now.
He could mask up and come put a doorknob on. I totally understand that.
Full PPE.
I totally understand that, but I'm trying to.
Listen, he was 35 an hour.
It was worth every penny.
Now the rates have changed, Zach.
Yeah, the rates have all changed.
It's DGA scale plus fringes.
Yeah.
But, you know.
Let's talk for a second about New Slang, which is the song that
ends the show. Rumor has it
it was chosen by Neil Goldman, who
unfortunately, he keeps getting mentioned because
he loves getting mentioned on this podcast.
But he was a writer...
He was a contributor.
He was a... What are you saying?
I said he was a contributor. He contributed
big time to the show. I think he was a PA
on the show. Because of that on this show, because of that, he contributed big time to the show. I think he was a PA on the show.
Because of that, on this show, because of that, he gets spoken of all the time.
Neil Goldman, I didn't know that Neil Goldman picked this song.
Neil Goldman, well, let me tell you something.
Neil Goldman is very into music, was and is very into music, and he picked this song.
Now, this song, I so fell in love with.
Yeah, I know.
You used to sing this shit all the time.
Gold teeth and a curse in my mouth.
And a curse for this town.
And I put it into Garden State. I thought it was a curse in my mouth.
All in this town.
Do you know that it's in Garden State?
It is?
It's the song that when I say to Natalie.
There ain't no black people in Garden State.
I've never seen Garden State.
Well, when we do the Wiz version, maybe you'll check it out.
That's fucked up.
What do you mean?
Are you going to do the Wiz version?
Yeah, we're going to do the Wiz version.
And if you are doing the Wiz version, who's going to play your character?
Who's playing Mars?
You are, of course.
It better be me.
That's all I know.
Because when people say your name, they better say my name next.
That's all I motherfucking know, goddamn it.
You didn't know that we've already started casting the whiz version of Garden State and you're the star?
I love it.
Except when you say, you tell me now, instead of new slang, when the Natalie character says you got to hear this song, it'll change your life.
In the whiz version that you're in, what's the song going to be?
It goes right foot up, left foot slide.
Left foot up, right foot slide. Left foot up, right foot slide.
Every way we're driving, we're about to slide.
All we do is slide, slide.
What is that song?
That's Drake.
I can dress like Michael Jackson.
I can give you the passion.
Aren't the lyrics like, yeah, I saw it briefly on somebody's video,
but isn't it like, left anything you're gonna do it's like that's right
that would be a dope moment and then i think we should listen i'm not gonna knock the idea
of doing an all-black garden state listen, I will license. I will license you.
It'll be a different story.
I mean,
it's the same story,
but it's a different,
it's a different,
it's a different movie though.
Listen,
I will give you the license.
You and,
you and,
you and,
um,
someone.
And instead of going to method,
man,
and not,
I'm not going to choose you to play motherfucking the character at the hotel.
I'm going to choose.
I'm going to choose Dax Shepard.
Dax Shepard.
Dax Shepard or Ray Romano.
I'm going to have Ray Romano.
This is so fucked up.
My feelings are hurt.
Hey, everybody.
While Donald cools down and writes his whiz musical version of Garden State,
we're going to take a break.
It's not a musical.
It is.
The whiz was a musical.
So was The Wizard of Oz, though.
Okay, stop yelling.
I'm not yelling.
Listen, I'm calm.
I'm so calm.
Okay, well, we'll be right back.
Bring a little optimism into your life with The Bright Side,
a new kind of daily podcast from Hello Sunshine.
Hosted by me, Danielle Robay.
And me, Simone Boyce.
Every weekday, we're bringing you conversations
about culture, the latest trends,
inspiration, and so much more.
I am so excited about this podcast,
The Bright Side. You guys are giving people
a chance to shine a light on their lives,
shine a light on a little advice that they want to share.
Listen to The Bright Side on
America's number one podcast network,
iHeart. Open your free iHeart app
and search The Bright Side. Imagine you ask iHeart app and search the bright side.
Imagine you ask two people the same exact set of seven questions.
I'm Minnie Driver, and this was the idea I set out to explore in my podcast, Minnie Questions.
This year, we bring a whole new group of guests to answer the same seven questions,
including actress and star of the mega hit sitcom Friends, Courtney Cox.
You can't go around it, so you just go through it.
This is a roadblock.
It's going to catch you down the road.
Go through it.
Deal with it.
Comedian, writer, and star of the series Catastrophe,
Rob Delaney.
I shouldn't feel guilty about my son's death.
He died of a brain tumor.
It's part of what happens when your kid dies.
Intellectually, you'll understand that it's not your fault,
but you'll still feel guilty.
Alt-rock icon, Liz Phair.
That personal disaster wrote Guyville.
So everything comes out of a dead end.
And many, many more.
Join me on season three of Many Questions on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your favorite podcasts.
Seven questions, limitless answers.
Professional dancer Cheryl Burke
has been part of Dancing With The Stars
since the very beginning.
26 seasons of the samba, the rumba, and the cha-cha.
24 partners, six finals, and two mirrorball trophies.
She knows all the secrets,
the behind the scenes arguments, and the affairs, the flings, the flirting, and the fighting.
It's time to tell it all on her new podcast, Sex, Lies, and Spray Tans. We'll take you all the way back to season one and up through today for the dance floor drama like you wouldn't believe.
Former partners, co-stars, friends, and frenemies
will join Cheryl each week.
Listen to Sex, Lies, and Spray Tans
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Chelsea Handler, and if you listen to my podcast,
Dear Chelsea, you know that I love making space
for women to share their stories.
And that is why I'm excited to be part of Women Take the Mic, iHeartRadio's celebration
of women who make music, influence change and create culture.
All month long, your favorite voices from talk radio, music and podcasting will highlight
the remarkable achievements made by women and discuss the most significant issues facing
us today.
Search Women Take the Mic to listen to a collection of International Women's Day episodes
from iHeart's top podcasts, including Angela Yee's Lip Service, The Psychology of Your
20s, and Dear Chelsea.
It is a great way to support women and discover your new favorite show.
Listen to Women Take the Mic on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
And we're back.
And we're back.
We have Michael Spiller with us.
We have director Michael Spiller, Emmy Award winning director Michael Spiller, who not only is a fantastic filmmaker,
but also can throw a doorknob on a door in 30 minutes flat.
Joelle, introduce us to Whitney and Dustin.
Whitney and Dustin!
Hi, guys.
Thanks so much for coming on this show and for being a little TV with you.
Oh, thank you for having us.
Hey, guys.
Y'all got a baby.
And a baby.
Yes.
We brought the baby along
because we wanted to introduce you guys
to Atticus Dorian.
Oh, wow.
Totally named after JD.
That is so sweet. I thought you were gonna say
Atticus Turk. I thought you were gonna say that.
Atticus Dorian's a
beautiful name. Thank you. He does
have on his baby bear shirt.
Okay, there he is. He's so cute. He's such a his baby bear shirt okay there he is he's so cute
he's such a cute we figured since he was gonna meet vanilla and chocolate bear he needed to
rock the baby bear shirt today where you guys call where you guys we are from leeton alabama
it's a tiny little town in the sort of like in the shoals area. I don't know. It's probably something you've never heard of.
I've been to Alabama, but not in that area.
I've been to Birmingham, Alabama.
Yeah, we're a little bit north of Birmingham.
Okay.
Well, we're so glad you guys are here.
And we're joined not only by, is it me and Donald,
but Michael Spiller, who was one of the best directors of Scrubs.
Directed several episodes of Scrubs.
20 episodes. He directed some other shows too, but we don't the best directors of Scrubs. Directed several episodes of Scrubs. 20 episodes.
He directed some other shows too, but we don't
care about them on this podcast.
They might care though. He directed
a little show called Sex and the City.
He directed a little show called
Modern Family. Do you guys
have a question? Go ahead. We had a couple.
Okay, let's get into it.
It was one extra, or I guess
it was an extra background it was a background character.
It was a Bond doctor in the episode where Janitor got married.
She was Milk Doctor.
She seems to be in almost every episode.
She's in the background on just about every episode.
We've noticed her on these rewatches we've watched over and over again.
Every time she's in the background, we say, there she is. She's in like every episode.
What does she look like?
She's blonde. She's probably close to like, you know, would have been like Dr. Cox's age. She wasn't one of the younger interns or anything. But, you know, when we've looked before, you know, if you try to search for Scrubs MILF doctor, you get a lot of really racy results.
It's a different – yeah, it's different.
I'll bet.
I'll bet.
It probably has nothing to do with the show.
Not at all.
Not at all.
Well, I will tell you this.
I will tell you this, that what we tried to do is have the same – to have it feel like the same people work there.
There would be the same group of like
30 to 40 background people that would all sort of rotate in and out uh and then each day there'd
be some people we'd never seen before but she must have been i can't think of who it is um
give me a second but maybe joelle can do some recon give me a second i think i got it i think
i got it hold on do you remember what was the episode you said? Arlene Grace.
I think that's who they're talking about.
Is this her?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Arlene Grace.
Arlene.
Arlene was one of our regular background folks.
And so that's why you see her all the time.
She was probably there every day, right, Donald?
Yeah.
She was there every day.
Her, Snoop Dogg, Mickhead. I haven't seen Mickhead
yet. I guess he came a lot later.
Snoop has a lot of
screen time in the episode
that we're talking about today.
Spiller, you had Kelso
bangs a pot right in Snoop's face in this episode.
Yeah, and he held it
perfectly. Didn't even flinch.
I can't remember if he put earplugs in or anything.
That's crazy that you guys recognized Arlene.
She was on the show from pretty much the beginning all the way till the end.
I don't know if everybody did season nine.
And you do refer to her when you talk to all of the other background.
I do?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Wow. How did you find that so quickly, by the way?
I'm very impressed with you right now. Because I remember her. I remember I knew exactly yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Wow. How did you find that so quickly, by the way? I'm very impressed with you right now.
Because I remember her.
I remember I knew exactly who they were talking about.
And, you know, Facebook is one of those things where everybody still keeps in touch.
So once they said that, I was like, I wonder if they're talking about her.
Are you still using Facebook, Donald?
So you're friends with her on Facebook?
Yeah.
Or you just need to look her page up?
No, no.
I'm friends with her on Facebook.
I'm friends with everybody.
That is so cool.
I'm friends with everybody that we work with on Facebook.
I don't even go on Facebook anymore.
But Donald, you're still on there getting in arguments with everybody.
No, I try to stay away from all of the political shit.
That's why when I turn on Facebook these days and see everyone battling each other, I'm like, I'm out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's it.
Good night.
Yeah, imagine Facebook in the South with all your conservative friends and stuff that's on there. That's a whole different, you know.
I'll bet that's tricky. Yeah, I'm in L.A., the most liberal place in the world. And I'm like, nope, I'm out.
All right, guys, you have another question?
and we were kind of both racking our brains like we really wanted to come up with some profound,
deep question to ask.
But really all I could think of to ask would be,
obviously Scrubs is one of our favorite shows,
but what do you guys consider to be your favorite TV shows of all time?
That's a great question.
Wow.
Let's make Spiller start since he's the guest.
Yeah, Spiller, you go first.
Mike is a very, very fancy director.
Let's see what are his TV shows favorites.
Spiller, and you can't say anything you've directed because we know Scrubs is number one.
That's correct.
Well, slightly different genre.
The Wire.
Yeah, a lot of people.
Absolutely.
I've watched that all the way through twice.
Also, Narcos. I've watched that all the way through twice uh also uh narcos i've watched that all the way through twice really i just watched narcos mexico which was really well done
but i didn't watch the original narcos spiller i'm making i'm writing down this list by the way
because uh you know the wire sure but i haven't watched narcos the first one narcos is great i
love currently i love ozark okay like when current season ended
what ended for me when i got through it i was really really bummed out just wanted more he
hasn't watched yet yeah no spoilers don't worry i won't say anything
now wait you're covering now i'm really trying to protect him.
He's a lip reader.
Now you're covering his eyes and ears,
but do you guys not watch shows together?
Because I find if my girlfriend and I get off of sync
in watching a show together,
all hell breaks loose.
In fact, I'm currently re-watching a show I've already seen
because I want it dead to me, which is really good.
And we want to watch season two, but now in order to watch that,
I have to rewatch all of season one with her.
With the newborn baby and her own maternity leave.
She watches a lot more TV during the day while I'm at work. So sometimes I try
to catch up, but I haven't had time to catch up on Ozark.
I really want him to go back and watch it.
I would totally not mind going back and watching it again with him because it
is so good.
But normally,
yeah,
when we actually,
it's pretty good for us because we have very similar taste in television
shows.
So yeah,
works out.
So what's your TV shows,
Zach?
Well,
I'm going to recommend one that,
that I can't believe is this underrated because I never hear anyone talk
about it.
And it's called Patriot.
It's on Amazon and there's a few seasons.
Spiller, you ever watch that?
No, I haven't.
It's amazing. You're going to love it.
Steve Conrad is the showrunner
and
really, really amazingly done. That's like the best
last show I saw.
I really, really love that.
What about you, Donald? I'm embarrassed because my shows are
Nothing like the shows you're into
Don't be embarrassed
So my favorite shows are
Shows like
The Clone Wars
And
Star Wars Rebels
And recently
The Mandalorian
Yeah I like Mandalorian a lot.
That, I don't know, those are the type of shows that I enjoy watching.
I don't watch a lot of television, but when I do watch television, I prefer to watch...
Star Wars-related things.
Star Wars-related documentaries.
Do you find that now that sports isn't on, Donald, that you have a lot more time on your
hands because you normally like to watch a lot of sports?
So I've been doing a lot of animating as of late because sports isn't on.
I'm a stop motion animator by hobby.
isn't on and I'm not sitting in front of the TV at night after the kids go down, I find myself in my animation room animating.
So it's making you more productive, actually.
Well, I don't know if it's productive.
I mean, it's a hobby.
It's not like I'm making things that are going to get put on television and are going to
be...
Well, you never know.
You could do a robot chicken type thing and make
your own TV show. Absolutely.
We mentioned Seth Green earlier and how Spiller
worked with Seth Green.
If it wasn't for Seth Green, I wouldn't be animating.
I was looking
for an outlet like most actors do
when they move to Hollywood
that isn't just
acting. I realized I didn't
want to be a director. No offense, Mike.
And I realized, you know, I don't necessarily like hanging out on set all the time,
which directors do.
You know, they arrive before actors and, you know, they leave after all the actors.
I realized, okay, that's not for me.
Way more stress with way less money.
Makes no sense.
Yeah.
I realized I need something to do, though,
that's going to fulfill my creative itch other than acting.
And I remember taking a stop-motion class when I was a kid,
and my buddy, Seth Green, had me do voiceover work
for this little project he was doing called Sweet J.
And it was stop motion animation.
I was like, dude, I'm totally into this.
I'd love to come and check out where you filmed this.
And he brought me down to the studio and introduced me to a bunch of animators.
And the rest is history.
And now I do stop motion animation as a hobby now that my television at night if there ain't no mandalorian
and you're getting star wars and you're getting really good at it and you're i've seen him on
instagram yeah i'm working at it check out donald's instagram uh you can see his progress
or go on youtube and watch his old lego ones called black stormtrooper but i think you've
gotten a lot i think you've gotten a lot better since Black Stormtrooper.
Yeah, oh yeah, absolutely.
But,
yeah, that's,
that's,
so my favorite,
my favorite television
has always been like cartoons
and stuff like that.
I enjoy animation very much.
So,
the Clone Wars,
Rebels.
Yeah.
Just to bring it closer.
There you go.
I will be checking out
your Instagram, Donald.
Yes. Not now, after the show. Give me a follow back though. just to bring a full circle. I will be checking out your Instagram, Donald.
Not now, after the show.
Give me a follow back, though.
I think I do follow you, bud.
Damn.
Give me a shout out or something.
All right, Whitney and Dustin,
thank you guys so much.
Good luck with the new baby, with the beautiful baby. Thank you.
Nice meeting you guys.
We really appreciate you
joining us
and stay safe
stay inside
stay safe
absolutely
y'all too
what do you have
we're getting to the end
I just wanted to say
that yeah
so I heard this song
New Slang
and then I just loved it
so much that I
years later
put it into
Garden State
and I want to credit Neil Goldman
for being the first person to introduce me to that song.
Amazing.
Finally, he's getting his props.
Finally.
And Spiller, you, I think, were the very first
to do a very cool crane shot out of the window.
That was a really cool shot you did
where you started inside the window
and then craned out.
I thought that was clever.
Thank you.
Signature move of mine. We ended up using that a bunch, started inside the window and then craned out i thought that was clever thank you signature move
of mine we ended up using that a bunch but you uh you brought that to the you brought that to the
table well the table the table was ready for it well that's that's a question that i uh that i
have for you zach because i know that you used crane shots in your stuff yeah if spiller's the
first one to do it that made it so that other
directors when they came on they were like so i saw the crane shot in episode 113 what are the
chances that i get to use a crane on this yeah i think you know the crane was always um uh uh
pricey thing and and both time you know obviously the rental of the crane but also the labor of of
of sending it up and practicing and rehearsing it so you know i obviously the rental of the crane, but also the labor of, of, of sending it up and
practicing and rehearsing it. So, you know, I think within an episode, usually you could say,
Hey, to the line producer, you'd say, Hey, can I get a, I'd like to use a crane for this scene.
And, you know, I don't think it was very rare that they ever said no, particularly to the directors
they liked. Um, but yeah, I think that, you know, crane shots are really cool and they give the show scope and
scale and, um, and can be really beautiful. And in that end montage that, that, that Michael
created here, which was beautifully done, it was sort of the beautiful, it was like the most
perfect way to end it coming out. And I believe you had to mount that, uh, build that crane on
the rooftop in order to get it. There was a lower roof and then he came out through the window and
then tilted up to the sky.
And so, yeah, I mean, I think cranes were introduced as part of the sort of the language
of the show.
By Spiller.
He said it was his signature move.
Well, what I was saying specifically, I don't know, this isn't the first crane shot on the
show, but the idea of the camera was within the room and then came out the window and then went up to the sky.
And I think Spiller was the first person to do that.
And, you know, I think we copied that many, many times more.
Have you gone on to use that on other shows?
Yes, I've done versions of that shot on other shows, too.
Is that what it is?
It's always cool.
You sort of like, you know, especially we didn't have a techno crane or anything i don't believe but there's a type of crane where
you know the arm itself extends it's like a telescope from the base yeah so i mean you can
really like you know it can actually physically be inside the window i think we probably hit a zoom
in the shot as well to sort of make it appear as if we
were in there in a close-up so you can do shots that that appear to actually travel through the
glass somehow and nowadays in fact later i did a really cool shot in going in style where you can
camera or pull back through the window and then in post now add we added a taxi cab door i had
this shot of michael cain where he's in the cab and the camera's in the cab with him and then in post now add, we added a taxi cab door. I had this shot of Michael Caine where
he's in the cab and the camera's in the cab with him. And then, and we took the back door off the
cab and we, we, we pull out and then out of the cab and the cab drives off. And then in post,
we added the cab door and it looks so cool. And, um, most people who aren't filmmakers wouldn't
even know how hard that was to do. Exactly.
And I think like with any of the sort of bells and whistles that we pull out and the tricks that we use, I mean, it's part of the fun of being a director.
It's part of the fun of telling the story.
But sometimes, and this is often true with directors who are former cinematographers, you can get caught up in the gadgetry and the toy of it all and forget that you're telling the story. So first and foremost, it's like, yeah, cranes are great. All these
devices are great. If they're supporting the story or if they're underlying the comedy or
they're making a dramatic moment more dramatic or whatever, because they do take a lot of time,
take a lot of money and often can be misapplied.
Yeah. And I think the job as a director is to go, when am I going to spend,
when can I afford to spend time and money during these five days? So you,
the way I would shoot scrubs when I directed it was you'd go, okay,
in order to save time to do that elaborate shot I want to do,
I need to really get through this dialogue scene quickly.
Now, I don't want to rush it because it's important.
But if I just shoot this one really simply, then I'm banking time for later I can do that elaborate one or later I can do that tricky crane shot.
But you have to pick and choose because you have to fit it into 12 hours.
They used to let us go longer. But nowadays, I don't know if you find this on your other show, Spiller, no you have to fit it into 12 hours. They used to let us go longer.
But nowadays, I don't know if you find this on your other shows, Spiller, no one wants you to go over 12 hours.
And frankly, I don't want to either.
I mean, Scrubs was unique.
I'm Sex and the City was the same way.
Our hours were really, really long.
But it was a similar energy on set where it's like everyone just enjoyed each other so much.
You never laughed as much.
The work was, was high quality and, you know,
and no one was telling you to stop spending money.
So, you know, you just kept going till you, you got it, but it's, you know,
frankly it's, it's unsafe these days.
I feel maybe cause I'm a tiny bit older that, uh, you know,
my work doesn't tend to improve after 12 hours.
Yeah.
And everyone gets cranky and it is unsafe.
You know, there's been plenty of instances of crew members who have to be there longer
hours, whether it's teamsters or transport guys or camera ACs and who've gotten in accidents
or even died from just being in preposterous hours.
So it is a safety thing.
But we used to go.
I mean, we'd have 16, 17-hour days on Scrubs.
When you guys on one of the earlier shows were talking about, like,
favorite cameos and all that sort of stuff and, like, the sort of fantasy cameos.
Rerun, I got a picture of you.
I know.
There's the rerun one, which I love that photo.
But there's also Dick Van Dyke.
Yeah.
Did you direct that episode?
Yes.
And I mean, when you sung with him in that moment when we were all just hanging out,
I mean, it's like I get choked up thinking about it.
Give us a little of that magic.
Ain't it a glorious day?
Bright as the morning in May.
I feel like I could fly
Have you ever seen
It's not have, it's have you ever seen
The grass so green
Or a bluer sky
That's beautiful.
It's a jolly holiday.
Yeah, Dick Van Dyke was on the show
and I got to sing jolly holiday
well i didn't sing he sang it and i played the guitar while he sang it uh there's a tape there's
there's a recording of it out there somewhere i don't know where i i know i shot it yeah i'm on
something but i was like did phones have video cameras then i mean i can't remember but i know
i shot it it's out there somewhere.
Somewhere, somehow,
it could be found.
I don't know who has it,
but yeah, yeah.
Well, Spiller,
you've been a fantastic guest.
This is the longest
we've ever had a guest on the show.
We're going to have to cut
this fucking way down.
We've got to cut this down.
No one wants to listen to 147.
No, I want to be sincere for a second and say,
not only are you a fantastic guy,
but I, as a filmmaker, learned a lot from watching you
because you are talented
and you not only direct a beautiful episode,
but you're so charming and everybody loves you on set
and you're a great leader.
And I'm not surprised that you are successful and have an Emmy. And,
and I hope I get to work with you again soon.
Oh, thank you, Zach. That's so kind.
I hope I'm one of those actors that you're like, you know what?
I got a guy. Don't worry about it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I really enjoyed our time together.
You know, it shows,
it shows by how long this podcast episode was too.
Very long.
Hey, just keep going because I directed the next episode too.
It could be like a twofer.
You'll be on the schedule.
I didn't watch the next episode.
Yeah.
Yeah, he will.
We promise.
Well, I'm available if you ever want to bring me back.
We're going to have you back.
You've already gotten the call back.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much for tuning in to Fake Doctors, Real Friends.
I'm your co-host, Zach Braff, with what's your name again?
Black Scrubs, Donald Faison.
A.K.A. Tay Diggs.
We love him so much.
A.K.A. Brown Bear.
A.K.A. Turk.
Turkelton.
A.K.A. 5,6-7-8. Here's some stories about a show we made.
About a bunch of docs and nurses and a janitor who loved to hate.
I said here's the stories that we all should know.
So gather round to hear our, gather round to hear our
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
Mm-hmm.
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