Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald - 119: My Old Man With Sarah Chalke

Episode Date: June 11, 2020

On this week's episode, the big three are all visited by their parents, causing a wave of regression among the young doctors. In the real world, the big three are back in action, as Sarah Chalke joins... Zach and Donald for another trip down memory lane. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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. Jon Stewart is back in the host chair at The Daily Show, which means he's also back in our ears on The Daily Show Ears Edition podcast.
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Starting point is 00:01:12 Dr. Dan Belkin, about the secrets behind my skincare. Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup. Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who changed the world. Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I used to have so many men. How this beguiling woman in her 50s. She looked like a million bucks. Scams a bunch of famous athletes out of untold fortunes.
Starting point is 00:01:40 Nearly $10 million was all gone. It's just unbelievable. Hide your money in your old rich man because she is on the prowl. Listen to Queen of the Con, Season 5, The Athlete Whisperer on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I was going to ask you if you think I can pull off a headband. Yeah, but that's not a headband. That's like a wrap.
Starting point is 00:02:07 No, it's a thick. Well, it's not a wrap. I have long hair now. Before you judge, it's not like a do-rag. What are you laughing at? You press record? Yes. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:18 It's not a do-rag. I didn't think it was a do-rag. It looks more like a, like, you know, when young ladies go out, but they haven't got their hair did. Right. They put something over it. Not necessarily a do-rag, but like a, it's something that keeps the hair back tight and everything like that. Yeah. Or what, or what ladies are taking off their makeup and they put this to keep their hair off their face. Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:43 It looks like that. I'm not saying now, I'm not saying it's just made for ladies. I'm sure it was made for working out. But right now your face is pulled so far back that you look like you might have gotten a little Botox in it. That's how long it's pulled. I'll be the first to admit that I'm not sure if I can pull it off. You ever buy something and you're auditioning how you feel about it? No, I don't have the luxury of doing that.
Starting point is 00:03:04 I try that shit on at the store. Well, it's a headband. It probably costs eight bucks. But I'm trying out to see if I, because I have long hair now. I haven't had a haircut in a very long time. My hair is always in my face. Here's the problem. I usually rock a baseball hat.
Starting point is 00:03:17 I'm trying to shake it up. But I don't know that it's working, especially with all this judgment. I don't know if it's going to stay around. Here's the problem with you know getting things in the mail and stuff like that trying things on and you gotta send it back and sending it back takes way more effort than
Starting point is 00:03:34 it would if you just went to the store and you tried it on at the store you gotta go to the freaking post office or the wherever you get wherever you send your stuff out you gotta get a box it has to get weighed there's so many things that come i would prefer if i was going to get something like that to not have to return it so therefore i would have stayed i mean you like it so it's
Starting point is 00:03:58 all good but if you didn't like it it would have been a pain in the ass for you to take that well i hear what you're saying about more expensive things. I wouldn't have returned this tiny piece of cloth. I would have handed it off to my girlfriend and said, use this for your makeup. I don't know. But I'm trying it out. Because listen, I'm working out, as you know. Yeah. And my hair is everywhere.
Starting point is 00:04:18 My hair is very long. So I'm trying to get it out of my way. It looks good. I'm not going to lie to you. You're fucking lying. I feel your judgment. I'm not going to lie to way. It looks good. I'm not going to lie to you. You're fucking lying. I feel your judgment. I'm not going to lie to you. It looks good.
Starting point is 00:04:29 It makes you look so much younger when you put that on. I feel your judgment. So you're saying it's pulling my skin back like Botox? Yeah, absolutely. I feel like when said quarantine is over, you should test that out on the masses. And just wear that out. I don't think people.
Starting point is 00:04:48 At like our next Zoom meeting. My girlfriend already said it's like, it's very bro-y. It's like a bro thing. I didn't like that adjective. Oh, well, you know. Bro-y. Did you know that places like Hoboken, they call it Hoboken? Brohoken?
Starting point is 00:05:07 No, Hoboken. Hoboken? There's lots of bros? There's a lot of bros in Hoboken. Yeah, there's always been a lot of bros. It's like a lot of college kid bro, baseball head backwards type stuff. No, not Brohoken. That's what they call it.
Starting point is 00:05:18 Brohoken. Brohoken. Brohoken. Oh, yeah, because you lived there, right? For like a half a year, I lived in Jersey. And all I heard was, you're going to Bro-boken, dude? Where would you go out when you were going for drinks with friends? Would you go to Bro-boken?
Starting point is 00:05:33 No, I would chill in downtown Jersey City. Oh, and how's Jersey City? I've never had a drink in Jersey City in my life. Well, Jersey City is gentrified. Apparently, Jersey City used to be a very, very different neighborhood than how it is now. And gentrification happened. And it was a bunch of warehouses also. So, like, if you lived in Jersey City, you lived amongst warehouses and factories and stuff.
Starting point is 00:05:56 Anyway, so Broboken. Yes. Best sushi I've ever had in Jersey. Okay. The name of the place is called Saku. Saku. Yeah. In Jersey city.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Or, or, or, or I should say Hoboken. And where was your favorite bar in Jersey city? If people want to go, do you remember the name? Well,
Starting point is 00:06:15 I Saku'd out. I went to, I would go to Saku like all the time. My favorite. Oh boy. My favorite bar to go to, however, in Jersey city was definitely, I would find myself at Hudson Hall quite a bit.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Hudson Hall. All right. Well, if you're in Jersey City, everybody, support Jersey bars and go to Hudson Hall and ask them where Donald Faison sat. And you can rub your cheeks on the stool. Well, you could do that. That's fine. Or you could just go and have a drink. Tell them I sent you.
Starting point is 00:06:47 Sarah, does your audio work now? No, it does not. It does not. Oh, my God. Dan. Dan. You guys, I want you to know that Dan had a private session with Sarah this time to talk her through her audio.
Starting point is 00:07:00 And I don't know what it is, but she's just, I think it's safe to say, not tech savvy. She has to have some skill when it comes to tech. She does voiceover. She had a prior, I know, but the Rick and Morty people don't have to put up with this, Sarah. Okay, now I'm unplugging my headphones. Do you hear me now? Okay, good. Perfect.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Oh, for the love. Okay, Dan, Dan. Now you got to record. Zach, Joel, can you please edit this out? No way. I cannot do it. No way. This is gold.
Starting point is 00:07:29 This is gold. Absolutely. Are you kidding me? No way. As a matter of fact, five in a Canada who love to hate. I said he's got stories that we all should know. So gather round to hear our, gather round to hear our Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald. Good call. I want to do the 5, 6, 7, 8.
Starting point is 00:08:01 Well, you know what? You didn't deserve it. You don't deserve it. I didn't earn it. Well, see how you perform on the show. And if you're good enough, we'll let you do the 5, 6, 7, 8. Well, you know what? You didn't deserve it. You don't deserve it. I didn't earn it. Well, see how you perform on the show and if you're good enough, we'll let you do the end one.
Starting point is 00:08:09 The outro. Oh, God, so much pressure. Okay, is anyone else hearing opera? No. No. Something is playing music. This is incredible.
Starting point is 00:08:18 I think it's your iPad. Okay, I'll deal with it. I think it might be your iPad. Maybe on the iTunes app on your iPad, someone accidentally hit opera. Yeah, but that totally fixed it. That totally fixed it, but it was a Peppa Pig episode.
Starting point is 00:08:33 I didn't know they did opera in Peppa Pig. Oh, okay. Oh, my gosh. Peppa Pig has made a return in our house. I thought we were done with Peppa Pig. I don't understand. Will you tell people that don't have children what the hell Peppa Pig is? Peppa Pig is a British show, cartoon about a pig named Peppa.
Starting point is 00:08:54 And it starts off, hi, I'm Peppa Pig. This is my brother George. This is Mommy Pig. And this is Daddy Pig. And each time she introduces one of the pigs. Right, well, Susie Sheep's her best friend. Every time they introduce one of the pigs, they snort. So, I'm Peppa Pig.
Starting point is 00:09:12 This is my brother George. This is Mommy Pig. And this is Daddy Pig. Okay. And what, do they go on adventures? I'm assuming they go on adventures. No, they go to school. It's like a kid's show for, it's like to help with etiquette and you know like uh how you're supposed to react to helps you
Starting point is 00:09:31 it helps you to react like peppa and her family do to certain things oh because they're like proper they're good they're like no it's not that well i mean i guess you could say british folks are proper that's that's one way well i, like, they have good etiquette. They have good manners, right? They definitely have good manners. Like, you can't jump in muddy puddles unless you wear your boots. Okay. That's one of the main refrains is jumping up and down in muddy puddles.
Starting point is 00:09:57 Muddy puddles. Splish, splash, splish, splash, splish. But also, it's incredibly funny, as most British humor is. And my 14-year-old nephew, who I'll never be as cool as him ever, was watching Peppa Pig with Frankie, who was three at the time. And he was like, yeah, you got to get over here. You got to come watch this. It was like the most, I was doubled over.
Starting point is 00:10:22 I'm sending you guys the link and you're not going to believe the humor in this it's oh i already know the humor in pepper pig oh my god the one about where she can't whistle she's like whistling like this and hangs it right up on suzy sheep i mean it's gold it's amazing i'm sending it okay so my trader joe's yes trader joe's trader joe's they do not have a Trader Joe's here. And people, all of my friends drive over the border to go get Trader Joe's and bring it back. But they also, there's a company that was like some article about a store. That's what I was telling everyone while you were doing this.
Starting point is 00:10:56 There was a store that was like, fuck it. We're just going to make our own store. They went across the border, bought shit, and just sold the shit at their store, right? Yes. What was it called? Trader, I can't remember. I read it a right? Yes. What was it called? Trader. I can't remember. I read it a long time ago.
Starting point is 00:11:08 Trader Jane or something. Totally. Yeah, no, it's a whole thing. Tiny, tiny thing. How long would it take you, wherever you are, to get in the United States, to cross the border? Oh, it's not long. Like two hours.
Starting point is 00:11:23 Oh, okay. So you're not that far. Yeah. Yeah. We miss you, Sarah. It's worth it for those pecan Like two hours. Oh, okay. So you're not that far. Yeah. Yeah. We miss you, Sarah. It's worth it for those pecan. I miss you guys too. We've been talking about how we never see you and we miss your face.
Starting point is 00:11:35 I miss you guys too. We got the band back together on Zoom. Now look at this. The band's back together on Zoom. The band is back together. We can't do our handshake virtually donald and make zach jealous it's all good he doesn't like our handshake i don't think i think he hated it i'm just jealous i never are you whenever people do those like epically long handshakes i i i frown but only
Starting point is 00:11:54 because i i've never been involved with one and i i couldn't possibly remember it so maybe i'm just jealous i have a very long one with sarah chalk and i have a very long one with breck and meyer those are the only two handshakes that I have in my life where I'm like, geez, this is a long ass handshake. Could you and Sarah get right back into it without fault right now, you think? Oh, fuck yeah. Get it, girl!
Starting point is 00:12:18 Running man. You get it. Sarah, we were talking in the last episode about your epic... We were talking about your your epic um i told you so dance and how long it was oh my god uh that's so funny people send me that at different moments in my life over social media that was one of those fun times on scrubs like what a unique job when do you get to do this where bill was just like the line in the script said i told you so and he said instead of saying that just make up like a a song and a dance and i told you so song and dance and especially you know it's not frequent you have to do that
Starting point is 00:12:54 on your job so it's fun um well do you remember getting down into the splits yeah it's hard to get out of them i remember getting down into it and being like, and I'm stuck. I was going to say there's some video, I think, on one of the gag reels that people can watch on YouTube if you're interested, where Sarah just kept going and going and going with her I told you so dance. And they only could put a short piece of it in the show. But it went on for like a full minute, I think. Oh, yeah, they didn't cut. So I just kept going and then brought in some French and German. Like I told you so in German, which is yeah, that's going to have to go back. Because obviously, after being tortured, going to German school twice a week for my entire upbringing,
Starting point is 00:13:43 anytime I can, you know, feel that it's actually it's only been useful in scrubs that's the only time i've ever used my german really yeah when we would go to international up fronts and stuff like that it was always yeah when you do press you must be very popular with the french and german press i would think because of sarah is fully trilingual not anymore i was as a kid french i still uh i i can speak but after my grandmother died we don't really speak german anymore. So I've lost so much of it. But French, I still have because that was, you know, all day, everyday school was in French, like math, science, PE, everything. I'm so jealous of people that can speak multiple languages. I wish I could speak multiple languages, man.
Starting point is 00:14:20 Like I tried to get the Rosetta Stone and I just failed at it you know what i mean but i failed at it no you didn't fail at it you just didn't commit donald that's that that that you know what that's a better way to look at it that's a that's a that's a better way to look at it but you know i probably could have been great at basketball if i dedicated a lot of time to it i mean i'm not saying i would have been like had natural super skills but i always think of it like like you know it's what you dedicate time and focus and energy to you know what you're absolutely right because i know a lot of people who didn't play sports growing up and put a lot of energy into sports when they got older meaning uh like tennis or golf or something like that and now they are very good at those sports.
Starting point is 00:15:06 Right. I just want to clarify for yourself, for your own psyche, that you could easily become bilingual if you cared enough. If you dedicated the hours you dedicate to animation to learning a language. I probably would be fluent in a language right now. What language would you choose? If I could choose a language, that's interesting. I would choose Spanish because here we are living in California,
Starting point is 00:15:31 and it feels like it makes the most sense to be able to speak with so many Spanish speakers that are here. Yeah, Spanish is a good one. Wow. Chinese is probably a good one now uh french is a good one but if i could i would want to choose something that's like out of the ordinary hebrew i would i would love to learn i want to learn hebrew that would be great actually oh my god you speaking hebrew in israel would be one of the one of the most amazing things just do it, please? We'll do it together. We'll do it together.
Starting point is 00:16:06 I'll learn Hebrew. That would be great. I would love that. Well, so Sarah, we were talking about learning sports and stuff like that. Learning sports and stuff. I know you wanted to say something. Go ahead. Oh, no, I just want to say two things.
Starting point is 00:16:22 One that, yes, Donald, pick a language and absolutely master it. In terms of languages, I kind of cheated because I was a kid. And I feel as a kid, it's like, it just insert, it's like a gift into your brain. It's so easy. And as an adult, it's so much harder, but, but sports I'm, I'm living proof that what Zach just said is not true about, uh, you could play basketball and become really good. I devoted so much time in my youth to basketball. It's all I wanted and I wanted it so bad and I tried out for the basketball team in grade five grade six grade seven I was at our neighbor's hoop in the pouring rain in Canada practicing every day and then tryouts for grade seven
Starting point is 00:16:55 basketball came and I was like this is my year the basketball came from across the court hit me square in the face and started a series of like crazy nosebleeds that lasted for months until I got my nose cauterized but anyways um I kept trying out for the team and I kept practicing and I take like camps and I would, I would try so hard. And finally in grade 10, and I was still the shortest kid in the class. I grew when I was like really like 18 or something. So I, uh, I finally made the team and Blake, who you both met, who's my brother-in-law, was two years older and was my coach and makes fun of me till this day. And I made the team, but I spent the whole time on the bench.
Starting point is 00:17:32 But I was like, I didn't care because I had a jersey and I was on the team and I was getting on the bus with all of my buddies to go to the game and that's all I wanted. And we had a really good team and they would put me on a center forward as like a joke when we were beating the other team, like 70 to four. And I'd be like jumping, trying to like, and it was all effort, no skill.
Starting point is 00:17:51 So trying so hard and just, yeah. Well, you know what? You made the team. So all of that practice paid off and you got to run up and down a couple of, for a couple of minutes during every game that year i'm sure i just think a lot of people say and i'm including myself in this like oh i suck at that oh i suck at that oh i can't cook oh i can't drive a motorcycle oh i can't play basketball and it's like no well maybe you're not amazing at it but you never dedicated any fucking time to trying right well there is that there is there is that there is that like
Starting point is 00:18:26 i say all the time i can't write and i'm gonna be honest with you i can imagine so much and i can and i can and i can come up with so many stories you know what i've never done though you know what i've never practiced trying to write it into, trying to write it down. I've always been like, well, I've got this idea. And somebody's like, oh, you should write it down. And I'm like, oh no, I'm not a writer. How would I ever know if I don't sit down and I put the pen to pad?
Starting point is 00:18:56 Of course, just imagine something you love, like in your case would be animation or basketball or golf. Imagine all those hours you had been in a writing class. Right. You know, you'd probably be a fucking amazing writer. Right.
Starting point is 00:19:09 Right. Or, or, or practicing, not just sitting in a class. Well, it's like you said, I would learn how to write.
Starting point is 00:19:16 That doesn't necessarily mean I'd be a great writer. I might not be great at it, but I would be able to understand structure and I would understand, you know, uh, how to tell a story. You would still get way better. You would get way better even if no matter where you're starting it.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Will you become one of the greatest writers of all time? No. But if you but you'd be you. I guarantee you with practice, you'd be you'd be pretty darn good. I feel like, you know, you get you get put in a box as a kid of the things you can and can't do so early. And, you know, for me, that was singing. I was in grade five and Mrs. McKinnon was like chalk girls. you get put in a box as a kid of the things you can and can't do so early. And, you know, for me, that was singing. I was in grade five and Mrs. McKinnon was like,
Starting point is 00:19:53 chalk girls, just mouth the words for this performance to my sister and I when we were singing Christmas carols in a mall for like some school, not a fancy choir, like a school choir. And I feel like it was like that moment where I loved nothing more than musical theater and was doing musical theater after school. And it just completely shut me down and put me in this box of like, oh, that's something that I can't do. So I stopped working at it and learning and trying.
Starting point is 00:20:15 And who knows where you would have gotten if you would have kept going. Yeah, you could have been Adele. Eponine in Les Mis on Broadway. Well, you think it's, you think, I remember a kid I went to school with could not really sing that well. He could barely hold a tune, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:20:30 But he could play the piano really, really well, right? When he graduated, he's gone on now to write songs, he performs all the time, he's an amazing artist, you know what I mean but i remember when he
Starting point is 00:20:47 couldn't sing and he could sing his ass off now you know what i mean so cool my little brother olamide when he was in a band called imagine when he auditioned for the band imagine he uh he sang show tunes because that's all he knew i think his audition was something like you know the song that peter i won't grow up i think that was his audition for the band and they were like well the kid can the kid can hold a tune let's see if we can work with him now my little brother he has music that he works on all the time and he tries to get it out and he's you know he's doing his thing as a musician and he's a very good singer and he sings you know he's doing his thing as a musician and he's a very good singer and he sings if you ask me he sings better than a lot of these motherfuckers out right now but that's just how do we how do we how do we hear his music can you give him a plus
Starting point is 00:21:33 yeah we'll shout him out at yo lami day uh y o uh o l a m i d. I think that's it. To be honest with you, I wasn't expecting to shout him out like that, but I think that's his handle on Instagram. Okay. If it's not, we'll fix it. We'll fix it if it's not. Anyway, he worked really hard to get where he was.
Starting point is 00:22:01 So I understand the premise. That doesn't necessarily mean you're going to be the greatest of all time. I'm just saying an epiphany I had in my own life in my 20s was stop saying you suck at X, Y, and Z. And it's not that you don't, but it's because you haven't dedicated any interest. And it comes at any time. And it comes with interest. So the things that we're all interested in in our own lives, our own hobbies and things outside of being an actor, we'll dedicate countless hours to. For me, one of my hobbies is photography. I will be online looking at cameras and playing with new cameras, you know, for endless hours. Now I could be dedicating that time to something else and get quite good at that
Starting point is 00:22:41 thing. So it's just foolish to say like, oh, I suck at that. You might, but it's not because it's in your bones. It's because you didn't dedicate any commitment to time. That's all I'm blabbering about. I agree with that 100%. And that also goes for learning lines also. Yes, sure. Just putting it out there. Yeah, Donald always used to say and always does say,
Starting point is 00:23:01 oh, I can't learn lines. That's bullshit. You were fucking high watching basketball. And that was honest. That's the honest to goodness truth. And when I stopped doing all of that, I found that learning lines was actually very easy to do when you just, look, if you can't learn it in two hours, there's something wrong. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:23:19 You should really think about finding other exercises to do when it comes to line learning, that is. It's just a matter of practice for me. By the way, we should just – Sarah, before we get into the episode, how is your quarantine going? You're up in Canada still, I assume? Yeah, yeah. I'm up in Canada. And it's like a never-ending roller coaster. We're doing pretty good.
Starting point is 00:23:44 We've had like a little bit – people get sick and then obviously that's not a never ending roller coaster. We're doing pretty good. Um, we've had like a little bit, you know, people get sick. And then obviously that's not a fun time because every, you know, anytime you get any symptom right now, it's terrifying. Um, and, uh, and just trying to find ways to keep the kids positive and occupied. And I feel like it's, you know, it's a constant, um, game, uh, with your own brain to just, you know, keep focused on positive stuff. And are they opening schools back up in Canada yet? They are. They sent out a survey, uh, to say, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:22 would you send your kids back? And I answered back, I would not, could not, in a boat. I would not, could not, with a goat. Right. It's kind of hard to do that right now. That's the one thing that's, you know, that's the one thing that I, I don't know that I could do that. You know, I could, I can't, I know,
Starting point is 00:24:39 I don't say, I shouldn't say I don't know. I know that I wouldn't, I'm not ready for that yet. But they're not doing that this school year, right? The talk, if anything would be the fall. No, some people,
Starting point is 00:24:50 some people are talking about August. Some, some schools are already back. Yeah. It's school. My kids schools are back. And, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:59 I feel like it's, you know, I, part of me wishes the message they were putting out there was there's absolutely a need for some kids to go back to school so please if you can keep your kids home to make more space for the kids who have to go back so that there can be social distancing as opposed to like do you want to send your kids back it should be i think a little more focused on um the goal of keeping the numbers small still for the people that that have to go back because they need to go back or because their parents are working on the front line or whatever it is.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Right. Tara, forgive me for not knowing this, but has Canada been hit? I mean, I know it per capita, obviously, but has it been hit as hard as the United States has been hit with it? I don't think so. You know, the numbers on the West Coast are a lot better than the numbers on the East Coast right now. And I think that, you know, part of that is the West Coast of Canada, their spring break was a little bit sooner. It hit there first. The West Coast had a bit more benefit of time in terms of locking down a bit
Starting point is 00:26:04 earlier in terms of when the virus arrived. And I think it's obviously less densely populated. And so I think part of it is just luck. Part of it's the social distancing. But the numbers have been lower. And the borders aren't open yet, right? Well, you might be able to because you have dual citizenship, right? You can.
Starting point is 00:26:23 But if you don't have dual citizenship, you can't get into the United States, right? No. They're still closed. I don't know what their plans are for that. I miss you. I miss you guys too. And you guys have been keeping me entertained and happy. Are you really listening?
Starting point is 00:26:37 Because we had to prove to Randall. I don't know if you heard the episode with Randall, but he tried to act like he was listening. And then he said, three, two, one, and he got outed. Three, two, one. and he got outed. No, I've been listening. I've, I haven't heard all of them.
Starting point is 00:26:51 I've heard a bunch of them and it's making me so happy and I can't believe how much you guys remember. And it's so fun to just, especially in a time like this, like go back into that, go back into that headspace. And we had, I just, we had so much fun.
Starting point is 00:27:01 We had so many fucking laughs and I, um, yeah, all of it. Like Donald singing Sanford and son the other day. We had so many fucking laughs. And I, yeah, all of it. Like Donald singing Sanford and Son the other day. You know what it is. It's fun to hear Johnny C. You know what it is.
Starting point is 00:27:13 I was hanging out with Paul Rudd and Alicia Silverstone and Breckin Meyer doing a Clueless reunion like a year and a half ago or something like that, right? And Paul said something that was very, very interesting. He was like, we have history together you know what i mean so because we have history together it's so easy to fall back into where we were when we were uh working on scrubs right he was he was saying we're clueless he was like we had such a great time and it was such a big opportunity for all of us and it turned into something so big that when we see each other, you can't help but reminisce
Starting point is 00:27:53 and feel all of those great feelings that you had when shit jumped off, right? Yeah. I think also, you know, when we did the show, we didn't have all these years of knowing just how special it really was. I mean, we've all done plenty of jobs since and continue to work and will till our dying day. But I think when I watch these episodes back and I talk to you guys and it's great seeing everyone
Starting point is 00:28:20 now we're doing the show, we see you, Sarah, we saw Johnny C, we see people that we don't see all the time. It's even bringing back more nostalgia for me because I'm going wow what a what a unique time this was to not only do something for so long but to create this wonderful bond with these with these people and um it's you know a lot of uh jobs as an actor that you do they're fun and everyone's cool and it works or it doesn't but it isn't such a special thing where where you have these lifelong bonds with people. It's so true. It was our 20s, right?
Starting point is 00:28:49 Like it was our 20s. It was such a formative time, I think, too, in our lives. And then for it to be on such a special show. And yeah, like you guys were saying, like now we've realized being adults, like how fucking rare that is. And to have, you know, I mean, we would spend, it was like you guys were talking about with randall it's like we would spend 16 20 hours shooting we would
Starting point is 00:29:10 go over time that people don't never do anymore and then we would go with the whole crew to the money tree you know on a friday night we would have wine and cheese fridays i mean we've literally just spent like over 100 hours together and then know, and then are still hanging out or would hang out on the weekends. And I think. And we really all eat lunch together. I mean, I don't know if you guys nowadays on sets, people are like, all right, later. It's like lunch. I go right to my trailer.
Starting point is 00:29:38 But we used to every single day for nine, for eight years, um, have lunch together. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's so, it's so, um, it's so rare. I was working on a job like a year ago and I just, I was new there and I just grabbed my train, went down and sat with, with the crew and a couple of guys that I'd worked with years and years ago. And somebody said like, Oh, actually you should just go to the trailer. And I was like, Oh, that's not how, that's not how I grew up. That's not what I enjoy. Um,
Starting point is 00:30:02 And I was like, oh, that's not how I grew up. That's not what I enjoy. And it was, yeah, I don't know if you guys remember, but Carrie Bennett, our amazing costume designer who had her own line of fabulous scrubs. I definitely remember Carrie Bennett. Oh, my gosh, she was so great. So she'd say to me, you know, after lunch, she was like, Sarah, I don't want to say this, but we're running out of scrubs in, of your scrubs. And, and we, we, we just need to, we're going to give you this art smock as a giant bib and you've got to wear it to the lunch tent. And I was like, you're kidding me, right? Carrie. She's like, no, no, just like wear it. And then it will protect the scrubs,
Starting point is 00:30:41 these beautiful baby blue scrubs from the chili stain and uh so i did and it was kind of humiliating and i was super proud i i came back from lunch and i'm like carrie and then i had taken a quick uh disco nap in my dressing room and i fell asleep on a sharpie and so these baby blue scrubs that were like pristine on the front had like a sharpie stain the size of a grapefruit on the butt sarah is it okay to tell everyone um that you're not necessarily the tidiest person oh my god i forgot about that your dressing room oh my god how did you find anything in that never you've never seen anything like it, people. Oh my God, that's right. That is so true. Well, I don't know. Do you guys remember I moved dressing rooms because I was between your two dressing rooms at the right end of the hallway. And then in whatever
Starting point is 00:31:36 season that Heather Graham came on, she was coming for eight episodes and they made her a really nice dressing and they brought in like new carpeting and they painted. They brought in this cute little couch, and it was smaller than our dressing room, but it was so pretty. And so when she left, they let me have it. So I ended up switching over to Heather's dressing room, which was amazing. That's so fucked up. They fixed up a dressing room because Heather Graham was coming. And then when she left, you were like, can I have it? And they were like, sure. That's so fucked up that after all this time, you didn't get that dressing room. Well, that's good. You moved across the hall. That's right.
Starting point is 00:32:06 You moved to the other side. Oh, but okay. Yes, I did. And as more proof that I've been listening to your podcast, Johnny C, I was laughing so hard. He was like, remember how we each got $1,500 from Disney every year to improve our dressing rooms? I was like, hell no. We did not all get that. from Disney every year to improve our dressing rooms. I was like, hell no. I remember just going into, I remember, I remember going into, Donald didn't have much decor and he would just like add like whatever, whatever the latest video game system and
Starting point is 00:32:35 the controllers everywhere. And then, and then Sarah looked like a teenager exploded. There was just like shit everywhere. I kind of was a teenager exploded. There was just like shit everywhere. I kind of was a teenager. I mean, when I look back at those episodes, we were babies. Yeah, but you were in your 20s. You weren't a teenager kid.
Starting point is 00:32:52 I know, I know. You were in your 20s. And then Zach, your dressing room looked like fucking, you would walk in and it would smell good. You had freaking art on the wall and shit like that. I fixed it up. I was there my whole life.
Starting point is 00:33:05 I thought it had to be a little bit nice. But I want everyone to realize these are still hospital rooms, okay? These are small hospital rooms that basically just had some Ikea furniture and a fresh coat of paint. But, dude, you changed your shit up a little bit more than just Ikea furniture. Yeah, I think it was like another couch. They were like, Zach, here's your room. And you were like, no, we's your room. And you were like, no, we got to fix it.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Hold on now. Where did you get this? Where'd you get this furniture from? Ikea. No, no, no, no. We're going to have to get pottery barn. Like you. It was not as nice as pottery barn.
Starting point is 00:33:37 I think it was all rental shit. So every year they bring you in like, how about this couch? And you'd be like, no. And then they just go to the rental house and be like, how about this couch? And you'd be like, no. And then they just go to the rental house and be like, how about this one? It was just like some bullshit couch.
Starting point is 00:33:49 I'm learning so much. I, A, never got the 1500 Johnny C style. Neither did I. I never had someone say, how about this couch? I was just,
Starting point is 00:33:56 whatever couch was in there until I took Heather Graham's room. I mean, in my defense, I was there the most hours of the day. So I, I did, I did occasionally like,
Starting point is 00:34:04 I'm going gonna need to nap so i'm gonna i do remember saying i do remember going up to somebody and being like listen i don't want to be a pain in the ass or anything like that but my couch is made out of like uh it's like dandery or whatever this shit is and it's really hard on my face, and it's really hot. Is there a way we could find something that's a little bit more cooler? And not cooler like aesthetically cooler, but cooler like keeps your body cool, cooler. I don't want you to be a pain in the ass, but is there any way this could happen?
Starting point is 00:34:39 And I remember them being like, hmm, well, let me talk to somebody about this. We'll see. You're talking about- Even when Heather Graham leaves, let me talk to somebody about this. We'll see. You're talking about. Even when Heather Graham leaves, you can have her couch. Maybe. Zach's like, they would be like, here's a couch. What do you think of this couch?
Starting point is 00:34:51 No? Okay. What about this? You should have been like, Heather Graham would like me to have a nicer couch. Should we get into the episode, guys? Absolutely. Let's get into the episode. I know you both have children that need tending to, so... Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:35:09 Should we go to break before we get into the episode? Oh, yeah. To eat. Yes, we are going to break. Sarah, would you like to throw to break? Five, six, seven, eight. No, no, no, no, no. You just say we're going to break.
Starting point is 00:35:22 Five, six, seven, eight. Sarah, you do not... You just say we're going to break. Oh, God, Sarah. Guys, we are going to break. No, Sarah, do, no. You just say we're going to break. Five, six, seven, eight. Sarah, you do not. You just say we're going to break. God, Sarah. Guys, we are going to break. No, Sarah, do it again. Go ahead. We're going to break.
Starting point is 00:35:34 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,
Starting point is 00:35:52 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. Hey, my name's Jay Sh your free iHeart app and search the bright side. Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose.
Starting point is 00:36:09 I just had a great conversation with Michael B. Jordan, and you can listen to it right now. Michael is known for his performances in both film and television. His breakout role was in Fruitvale Station, playing Oscar Grant, which earned him widespread praise and numerous award nominations. His portrayal of Killmonger in Marvel's Black Panther, one of my favorites, further solidified his status
Starting point is 00:36:33 as one of Hollywood's leading actors, earning him widespread acclaim for his complex and compelling performance. In our conversation, Michael really opens up. You're gonna love listening to it, and I can't wait for you to check it out. The closest to getting what you want is always the hardest. It's always the feeling when you're getting ready.
Starting point is 00:36:51 You know, people give up right before they get what they always wanted to get. People quit. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. 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.
Starting point is 00:37:21 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.
Starting point is 00:37:40 Intellectually, you'll understand that it's not your fault, but you'll still feel guilty. Old 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
Starting point is 00:38:10 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.
Starting point is 00:38:34 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. Welcome back. We're here with Sarah Chalk, the legendary Canadian. I would say America's favorite Canadian. I used to call her Canada's Britney Spears. Maybe Ryan Reynolds might be slightly more popular than you, but that's it.
Starting point is 00:39:14 Other than him, maybe. Maybe Michael J. Fox. That's it. Maybe, maybe Seth Rogen. Maybe. Oh, he's Canadian, Seth Rogen? Yeah, maybe Ryan Gosling. Stop bringing Sarah down on the list. In my heart, maybe. Oh, he's Canadian, Seth Rogen? Yeah, maybe Ryan Gosling. Mike Myers. Stop bringing Sarah down on the list. In my heart, Sarah. In my heart, Sarah, you're number one Canadian. That means a lot.
Starting point is 00:39:35 All right, let's try it. How about this? You're one of my favorite human beings on the planet. How about that? That's true. I'll take it. And Sarah, when I see your face, I automatically smile. Put it that way. That's the highest compliment I'll take it. And Sarah, when I see your face, I automatically smile. Put it that way.
Starting point is 00:39:45 That's the highest compliment I can give someone. I see your face and I smile. I'll take it. Donald, directed by Adam Bernstein and written by Matt Tarses. That's a power team right there. Those are two all-stars. That's a good – I knew there was a reason why I really liked this episode. That is a power team.
Starting point is 00:40:04 There's a lot of good stuff in it, but for those of you who don't know at home, we've been talking about them, but the Adam Bernstein directed the pilot. Babies Got Back. And also the music video for Babies Got Back, if you want to see some of his finest work, which involves a giant ass.
Starting point is 00:40:21 I mean, the set, Adam's choice, Adam's vision for the Babies Got Back video was to just build an giant ass. I mean, the set, Adam's choice, Adam's vision for the Baby's Got Back video was to just build an enormous ass. If you don't believe me, look it up on YouTube. These dancers dance around a huge ass. Well, you know, I wonder this. Did Adam Bernstein direct Sir Mix-a-Lot's follow-up to Baby Got Back, Put It on a Glass?
Starting point is 00:40:45 Very good question. Joelle, would you mind looking that up? No, Bill won't know, but Joelle can look it up. Joelle, who is the genius auteur behind Put It on the Glass? Was it indeed Adam Bernstein or not? Now, Donald, what are they putting on the glass? Their boobs or their bums? Their boobs.
Starting point is 00:41:04 Oh, they're putting their boobs on the glass. So he went from Baby Got Back to put it on the glass. Can you imagine the meaning? Put it on the glass. Can you imagine like Sir Mix-a-Lot comes in and he's like, Hi, I have a song I want to do about the love for my children. And they're like, ah. No, we were thinking more along the lines of put them on the glass.
Starting point is 00:41:21 Right. I want to follow up Baby Got Back with a song that's really dear to me. It's about my connection to my spirituality and my love of my parents. Right. Mix-a-lot, we were thinking. Sir, do you think they called him Sir?
Starting point is 00:41:38 Sir. Sir Mix-a-lot, we were thinking. Baby's Got Back sold so well. So many records. Yes. And rightly so. It's only right that we follow up with Put Him on the Glass. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:51 Yeah. You're focusing on the tushes. We made millions. What if you did something about putting boobies on windshields? I don't know that Put Him on the Glass was as big as Baby Got Back, though. Now, wait. I have a question, Donald. Was Put Him on the Glass specifically about putting breasts on a windscreen?
Starting point is 00:42:09 Yeah. It was like on a windshield. Yeah. So like, I think- What was Sir Mix-a-Lot asking of the women specifically? I don't know, but all I know is the hook was like, put him on the glass. And I remember being like, yes. What a different era.
Starting point is 00:42:25 What a different era. What a different era. Joella's fact-checking who directed that. And if you don't know what we're talking about, you really need to look up these music videos. I used to PA on music videos back in the day. And it was a different era. I mean, people actually watched music videos back then. Remember?
Starting point is 00:42:42 Yeah, dude. I remember music videos. I remember MTV. What I really remember is the box. And that was when you got to call in and make your video request. Canada had the box for a while. Y'all also had other things. Look, here's what was dope about just shouting out your home country.
Starting point is 00:43:03 Degrassi? Degrassi Junior High? Well. Degrassi Junior High. Well, Degrassi Junior High. Degrassi High. Yo MTV Raps. But there was another one. It was like Music Box or some shit like that. I forget the name of it, but it was like, all right.
Starting point is 00:43:17 So when I was a kid, BET had Rap City. Oh, was that? Yeah, that was BET, I think. Yes. Right? And so Canada also had a Rap City also, and it would be Canadian artists. And that's how I learned about Cardinal Official
Starting point is 00:43:34 and all of these Toronto artists and stuff like that. Anyway, if you had cable when you were a kid, you could get Canadian television. And on Canadian television, they would play Degrassi Junior High, Degrassi High and, uh, Did you watch Degrassi? You can't do that on television. Oh, I remember
Starting point is 00:43:51 you can't do that on television. Moose, uh, Yakustin. Yeah. Peeking out of the lockers. Wasn't Alanis Morissette on that? Yes. And Sarah, wasn't that, um, wasn't that the show where if you said I don't know, they dropped green shit on you? I think so.
Starting point is 00:44:10 I thought that was a Nickelodeon show. Oh, that's Nickelodeon. I thought that was a Nickelodeon show. Anyway, my point is, you guys had some pretty dope television to watch as kids, man. They dealt with some serious shit on Degrassi, man. out with some serious shit on Degrassi, man. It wasn't like the usual, you know, it wasn't Saved by the Bell where Shorty got hooked on freaking caffeine pills. On Degrassi, that motherfucker got hooked on meth, like shit like that, on like straight
Starting point is 00:44:36 up pills, dude. Yeah. And was Drake a leading character on Degrassi? Or like supportive? We were older by the time Drake was on Degrassi. They weren't, you know, some of the original cast had come back and they were like the teachers. They were like screeching, belding type shit. I see.
Starting point is 00:44:51 But when it comes to, when it came to, like there was a girl on the show who got pregnant in junior high school or something like that. And goes into high school. I think her name was Caitlin or something like that. She goes to high school and she got a baby and stuff. I don't remember. Listen, I don't remember it well but i just remember it was like these are more realistic problems that youth are going through right now when i would watch degrassi and stuff like that watching uh compared to watching saved by the bell or you know city high or or you know hang time
Starting point is 00:45:21 y'all had the freaking real deal, holy feel things happen to kids. And also interracial relationships, all types of shit on that shit. You know, I just remember. I remember well. Well, let's drive in. Donald, at 50 seconds, you vacuum Rowdy.
Starting point is 00:45:39 Yeah. I laughed at that. That was the best part of the episode. I have an LOL mark beside that one that was terrible I think that's the only time I think we don't have to ask the Scrubs Wiki guy
Starting point is 00:45:50 I'm pretty sure that's the only time in nine years Rowdy's ever been vacuumed yeah well you know it can get just because it's dead I mean I guess it can't get fleas
Starting point is 00:46:00 can it? I don't know if dead animals can get fleas Joelle I know you're working on the put them on the glass but no i'm just kidding don't don't worry about it okay so let me ask you this yeah i i okay i know both of you do i love my parents yeah i love having them around i love having them around you know what i mean so when watching this and they're like, and, and Turk and, and Elliot and JD are trying to avoid their parents. I was like, I don't necessarily, I don't necessarily
Starting point is 00:46:33 fall in line with this. I don't necessarily, you know, I love my mom. And when my dad are around me, you know what I mean? It's a lot of fun. I know. And I was thinking this, I know you all, you both so well, and I know that you both are very close with your family and your parents. And as you know, I am the same way. And it's funny that the writers will blame Matt Sarsas since he's, you know, credited as the head writer on this episode. You know, there wasn't like a varying point of view. The whole episode was like- It was like a universal truth. Parents suck. there wasn't like a varying point of view. The whole episode was like- It was like a universal truth. Parents suck.
Starting point is 00:47:07 I know. I totally, I got very lucky in the parent department as well. And so, yeah, that moment when, when Katie walks up and Donald and I are so bummed. Yeah,
Starting point is 00:47:17 you're crying. You're literally, you're comforting each other. And then I come in, hug Donald because he's so sad that his mom, now, by the way, Hattie Winston played your mom. Yeah, she did. Let's give a shout out to Hattie Winston.
Starting point is 00:47:29 She was very funny and very lovable. I mean, I guess she's supposed to be that she gives you a lot of shit. But I mean, I didn't buy that she was a pain in the ass. She was lovable and fun. Right. Do you remember Hattie Winston from our youth? No. What was she on?
Starting point is 00:47:43 The Electric Company. Oh. With Morgan Freeman back in the day. Do you remember The Electricie Winston from our youth? No. What was she on? The Electric Company. With Morgan Freeman back in the day. Do you remember The Electric Company? Yes, I do. Do you remember the Bloodhound Gang? Wasn't it, hey you guys? Yeah. I forget this. Come along. No, that's Great Space Coaster I'm thinking of.
Starting point is 00:48:01 Shoot. I remember Great Space Coaster. Anyway, Hattie Winston, Electric Company. Morgan Freeman, Electric Company. It's the Great Space Coaster I'm thinking of. Shoot. Remember Great Space Coaster. Anyway, Hattie Winston, Electric Company. Morgan Freeman, Electric Company. It's the Great Space Coaster. Get on board to the Great Space Coaster. See, notice I'm conspicuously silent anytime you guys start singing because I revert into this little shell. Well, Sarah, in the spirit of this episode, you can't do that anymore. I can't do that.
Starting point is 00:48:22 And I've always made fun of you for singing. But now that I've heard that it's a tender spot in your heart, I never will again. Oh boy. One of my favorite scenes was Hattie Winston and Judy, you know, when they first meet and Judy fucking just lays it all on the table. Oh, I just got the note from Joelle.
Starting point is 00:48:44 Put him on the glass is not Adam Bernstein. Okay. Well, there it is. Sarah, the guests don't usually read the producer's notes. That's usually for the two hosts. But if you watch it, they don't read notes and they don't sing. Sarah, you're the first guest that's had the audacity to read our producer's notes to us.
Starting point is 00:49:03 I'm all right with that. I think that shows my comfort level. I'm all right with it. Don't worry. If you want to read our producers notes to us I'm all right I think that shows my comfort level I'm all right with it don't worry if you want to read more let's do our handshake Donald Sarah if you wouldn't mind closing the chat thing because what if Joelle's like oh my god shut Sarah up and then we
Starting point is 00:49:17 read it Joelle would never say anything like that this just in Sarah needs to stop talking so much note from Joelle Sarah won't shut the fuck up please move on from this topic This just in, Sarah needs to stop talking so much. Note from Joelle. Sarah won't shut the fuck up. Please move on from this topic. Have her shorten her sentence.
Starting point is 00:49:33 Answers, quick, quick. Shorter is better. Shorter is better. God, Joelle. I wish the audience could see. Wait, before you say that, I wish the audience could see how Sarah has framed her iPad. It's as though like, you know when you talk to your grandparents and all you see is like an eyebrow and maybe an ear that's that's the camera
Starting point is 00:49:49 shot we have with sarah okay that's because my laptop's broken so i'm on an ipad so it's precariously balanced on a tower of books and poker chips and a um gift that's wrapped and um balance counterbalance with a hot cup of scalding matcha. How many different types of tea are in front of you on that table? So only one, this cup of matcha. I have a few other beverages around me that is not tea. But as Donald was saying at the beginning that I like salad, I was telling my kids the other day because they were teasing me for how much I keep making soup and they're so
Starting point is 00:50:21 tired of soup and it's this soup and then that soup and then I'm just trying to keep everybody healthy. And so I was explaining to them how my nickname on scrubs, other than second Becky was also soup for breakfast. Cause I would always have soup for breakfast. But also Sarah, the only person I know who would like make a tea and like bring it to the set or to her room and then have a few sips of that. And then be like, I'm going to go make a different flavored tea and then have one in each hand and like just be bouncing between the flavors i never met another human being who does that this is double fisting yeah well do you remember darla our makeup artist used to put post-it notes
Starting point is 00:50:56 on the makeup mirror and be like please tomorrow beat this record and have less scalding beverages than you did today because it would be like 14 and And she'd be like, I'm tired of mopping your sweat from these hot drinks that you're drinking in the middle of summer in this poorly ventilated, air-conditioned hospital. Listen, it's your method. It's how you are. Ain't nobody fault on you for it, girl.
Starting point is 00:51:19 That's how you do. I'm very familiar with how you do. Where did we get that from? All of a sudden, that became something that we talked, we said all the time. I am now familiar with how you do. I'm very familiar with how you do. Where did we get that from? All of a sudden, that became something that we talked, we said all the time. I am now familiar with how you do. Okay, I'm hearing you. It's how I do. I am familiar with how you do.
Starting point is 00:51:34 All right, well, let's talk about at 104, the legendary John Ritter walks in. John Ritter. Oh, John Ritter. We've all spoken about our love for John. I've spoken on the podcast before. And just in short, I loved this man so much. I grew up on Three's Company. It was sort of my introduction to physical comedy. I thought it was hilarious. I told you my embarrassing story about bringing it up at my dinner table. But I just love this man so much. And when he came on to play my dad in
Starting point is 00:52:03 this episode, I was just giddy. I think we all were. Yeah, absolutely. Go ahead, Sarah. I couldn't believe it when I heard he was coming. I had worked with him when I was younger, when I did a series of these Disease of the Week movies that film up in Canada. It was what was filming here when I was growing up at the time. And this one movie of the week that I got to do with John Ritter that I will never forget. He was so kind to me. And I was this young kid. I think I was probably 17 maybe. And, um, there was a power outage where I lived and my alarm didn't go off. And this has only happened to me twice once then and then one time on scrubs that wasn't a power outage but was another uh situation when michael j fox was working with us and so i'm
Starting point is 00:52:51 17 my my alarm doesn't go off with power outage and where we're shooting is an hour and a half away and john ritter is john ritter and so talented and this incredible actor and the lead of this and i'm playing his daughter i have this small part and I couldn't believe it. My phone rang and they're like, where are you? And it's obviously the worst feeling in the world. And I got in my car and I drove out there and he gave me a big hug and he's like, ah, happens to everybody and told me this story and immediately made me okay about it as opposed to all of the other choices that he had and I will never forget that um and then obviously everything you said Zach about like yeah I mean growing up with with Three's Company and being in awe of him and you know Sarah did
Starting point is 00:53:37 you watch that show I mean it's funny because I we're around the same age and I I feel like I I know Donald and I have referenced it a lot but was that something in Canada you were watching okay it was huge it was huge it was one of my sisters and my favorite shows we would we would sit down and watch it and it's like you said too like the physical comedy was so incredible on that show and you know we got a taste and a bit of an opportunity to try some physical comedy on Scrubs that was actually one of my quarantine lessons. We've been, you know, trying to keep the kids busy and occupied during quarantine. And with me and my sister's kids,
Starting point is 00:54:10 we have such a wide variety of ages. So we've been doing different things. And one of my lessons was pratfalls. And my three-year-old was just giving her. I mean, I just like put a stack of books on the ground and I was like, okay, so you're approaching it. And the trick is to like make it look like you don't see it. So you turn away just at the last second.
Starting point is 00:54:23 And I have to send you guys the video i mean frankie just bailed like just gives her and bails did you give her a did you give her a mat for god's sakes we didn't have a mat we had like kind of a rough carpet um so probably that would have been a better you know way to introduce pratfalls with a mat you're a very good physical comedian sarah i think you're very good at pratfalls oh it was one of the funnest things we got to do on scrubs was like, you know, doing all the stunts. And our favorite thing, obviously, was all of us for all of us was to be like, let me try it. Let me try it. Except for the best story, I think, of not wanting to try it was Bill asking Zach and I if we would bungee jump.
Starting point is 00:55:02 Oh, wow. And we both said no because we didn't want to bungee jump oh wow and and we both said no and because we didn't want to bungee jump and our stunt doubles met that day and my stunt doubles her first day ever doing a stunt her first time ever and they met and got fell in love and got married and then for the run of the show was so cute our stunt doubles were married do you think they're still married they are not i was not a happy ending oh no well sarah i love how you were not going to leave the audience with they're not, I was, Oh, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:55:26 Sarah, I love how you were not going to leave the audience with, you were going to leave them on the, on the positive romantic comedy version. What happened? But I, they bungeed again and then they broke up. No, I don't know what happened.
Starting point is 00:55:36 I just was on another job years and years later in new Orleans. And, um, your stunt double was working on it. And I asked him about my stunt double and he said, we're no longer together. I'm telling this terrible story now. No, but by the way, I love it
Starting point is 00:55:52 because it's like, we're all like, oh, and then they fell in love and they got married. Are they still married? Oh no, no, no, no, no. No, this is that. We're now talking after the credits have rolled, man. Everybody, in all the movies, it always is going to end great. You just don't see what happens after the credits have rolled, man. Everybody, in all the movies, it always is going to end great.
Starting point is 00:56:06 You just don't see what happens after the credits. After the credits. They hate each other, you know, a few years later, and they get divorced, and it's freaking ugly. I want to know what broke them up. No, you don't. No, you don't. Oh, they're probably listening.
Starting point is 00:56:18 This is going to be terrible. What if it was another stunt? That's so personal. It was a stunt brought them together, another stunt tore them apart. The movie writes itself. You mock them. You mock them. You mock them. I'm not mocking them.
Starting point is 00:56:28 I'm laughing with them. The best part was Bill then got so mad at Zach and I, remember, because we then go, all of us as a cast, to Brazil and Mexico to do a Scrubs press tour. And we go hang gliding and bill's like you wouldn't do an organized stunt jumping off a bridge together but you'll go to rio and jump off a cliff attached to a kite yeah all right but wait a second you're going too fast i don't i don't i remember being like fuck no i don't want to bungee jump with tied to sarah off a bridge but i also don't think it was fully up to us i think that the the insurance and people were like, no, no, no, you're not doing that. But I don't know.
Starting point is 00:57:07 I'll take the blame. But I do remember in – was it Rio? That we all decided – it's very random. These guys come up to you and they're like, do you want to do hang gliding? No, this wasn't a random guide. One of our guides was like, I have a friend who wants to – We'll take you hang gliding. And hang gliding basically involves trusting a stranger and then running off a cliff with them. And I remember being like, I really hope.
Starting point is 00:57:32 And they kept going like, the wind is not good today for hang gliding. And I remember in my heart being like, thank God. Thank God the wind's not good for hang gliding. And then he finally came and he's like, the wind is now good for hang gliding. And I was like, fuck. I didn't want to go. You felt that too? I felt like that.
Starting point is 00:57:48 Well, we all felt like that because I remember we were all at the pool and they said hang gliding. Chilling at the pool. Chilling at the pool. Having high pit indians. And they said hang gliding. And he was in the pool. He came swimming up to us. And he didn't speak very much English.
Starting point is 00:58:02 But he did say, I really want to take you all hand gliding. And he kept saying that. And we were like, oh, no, no. And he was like, you know what? And at one point, we all got the courage. We were like, all right, fine, we'll go. And he was like, oh, you know what? The wind's not good.
Starting point is 00:58:16 And we all, like all of us were like, whoo! And we were like, well, you know what? If the wind was good, we would have went. The wind's not good. I'm mad at the wind. The wind's not good now in his broken english she kept saying will you be making a hang gliding will you be making and i remember being like i really don't want to make a hang gliding i do not want to make but do you guys remember there was a build it was build up the whole trip like we were in mexico
Starting point is 00:58:42 first then we were in brazil we were in sao paulo and then we were in rio and there was build up the whole trip like are we gonna hang Mexico first, then we were in Brazil, we were in Sao Paulo, and then we were in Rio. And there was build up the whole trip. Like, are we going to hang glide? Are we not going to hang glide? It was this conversation the whole time. And then by the time we got there and we said yes, and then the wind changed back, I remember thinking like, fuck, like I used to sail race my whole growing up. The wind changes on a dime.
Starting point is 00:58:59 So what if it changes to not good when you're jumping off of the cliff? And I don't know if you guys remember what happened, but we sign our lives away on those contracts. We drive up this giant cliff. We get into our, with our, with our instructors who we're going to be jumping with. And I was terrified. And the instructor came up to me and he was like, I've been doing this 25 years. Nothing has ever happened. So he goes ahead of me and I'm with another guide and you guys are all in the air I'm last and I and we're it's gorgeous it's spectacular you're flying over the jungle and then the ocean you land on the beach um when you jump off they say now right away your hang glider is going to drop until it catches wind so there's this like split second where your hang glider just fucking
Starting point is 00:59:40 drops and your stomach goes into your throat and he says to me right before we leave he goes when you run you run you don't change your mind because that can affect and i'm like if that can affect whether this thing catches wind or not this is not an activity participating yeah my go yeah and my guy said to me my guy said to me the only way we can get hurt is if you stop running at the wrong time so when i say say run, you need to fucking run. Right, so we all go running towards this cliff like fucking mad people. Dude, everybody had great landings. All of you had wonderful landings.
Starting point is 01:00:19 I ate shit on my landing. You did? Oh, my gosh. He was like, okay. Well, yeah, because they were like, okay, the most important part part is the landing you don't want to land wrong because you could break Your legs and everything and I'm like oh shit. We didn't go over landing We're coming in and I'm like alright. I'm gonna fucking make this landing I'm gonna make this landing and this I feel like this dude tripped me or some shit like that
Starting point is 01:00:41 Cuz all I know is we landed and my feet were in the ground and then his foot catches mine and now my face and arms are fucking in the fucking sand, dude. I was like, what the? I love that in your mind the hang gliding guy is like, you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to trip this motherfucker. I think he did. I think I wasn't having
Starting point is 01:00:59 enough fun for him. You know, there was a bit of the guy, we were all with it we were all we were all with a guide and the guy who was like will you be making the hang gliding went alone because he wiped out he was all bloody do you remember he snapped his hang glider he so he was ahead of me he lands and i'm like he's just told me nothing could go wrong he fucking lands his hang glider snapped and he broke his ankle and that happened as i'm still in the air about to land and so i'm like are you kidding me right now so he he was okay but he definitely hurt himself and we land and my and everybody's like getting handed their their roll of film
Starting point is 01:01:34 because the whole time they're like look over and there's like a little mini camera triggered by this little thing in their hands so they're taking pictures of us all the time i thought great i'm gonna have proof nobody's gonna believe i did this and we get down onto the beach and he says to me i'm so sorry i forgot to put film in the camera so the whole time we're in the air he's taking all these pictures so i have a picture on the ground before we like on the cliff before we leave and when we land and he's like i'll take you back up again for free because i feel so bad and i was like nope nope i'm good we are not doing this ever again for the rest of my life. I'm so fucked up.
Starting point is 01:02:07 I have my pictures. They're somewhere. I remember seeing them. I have never seen my pictures of me hang gliding, ever. Before we get back into the show, I do remember another thing that happened to us while we were on this trip. It was called Explosivo. It was called Explosivo.
Starting point is 01:02:22 Yeah. And I know you guys remember this because it was the worst thing that's ever happened to me ever in my life. But I missed a whole dinner because I was sitting on the toilet. Exploding. Right. From my butthole. Our listeners might not want to hear about the extent of your diarrhea. I don't care.
Starting point is 01:02:41 You know what saved me though? One of my favorite Donald stories. Do you know what saved me? What? The te my favorite Donald stories. Do you know what saved me? What? The tequila. I'm not going to lie. Oh. So your advice for people with explosive diarrhea is to drink tequila?
Starting point is 01:02:53 No. That is not my advice. As a TV doctor? That is not my advice to people. But because my stomach was so messed up, I was drinking all of these concoctions. Like some of it was white. Some of it was pink. Pepto-Bismol.
Starting point is 01:03:09 Like I was going crazy and nothing was working. And my stomach was always like. Even after I ate. All right. Well, I hope some of our listeners aren't eating their lunch right now. Some people like to. Do you remember what I said, I hope some of our listeners aren't eating their lunch right now. Some people like to eat. Do you remember what I said after I came out of the bathroom? Has anyone ever seen a gallon of shit?
Starting point is 01:03:32 Does anybody know what that looks like? That's what you said? That's what Donald said. That was what I said. We went to Brazilian barbecue and Donald said, I wonder if I can drown it in meat. I wonder if I eat so much meat that maybe this could stop finally. Because it had been 10 days at this point and it had cycled through all of us. And we were like, having lunch was with contest winners. And I would like jump up to run puke.
Starting point is 01:03:57 Like we all were so sick. And the whole thing with hang gliding was, is it going to be possible for us to be in the air for 15 whole minutes? Right. So in the back of our minds was hang gliding was, is it going to be possible for us to be in the air for 15 whole minutes? Right. So in the back of our minds was hang gliding. If we make the hang gliding, are we going to shit our pants?
Starting point is 01:04:10 Yeah, pretty much. It lasted for a really long time with me. I remember being on the plane and pooing on the plane from like Mexico to Brazil. So your protocol
Starting point is 01:04:23 that you gave yourself of meat and tequila didn't work? I'm shocked. We're going to go to a break and we have a caller right after the break. We'll be right back with the legendary Sarah Chalk. Bring a little optimism into your life with The Bright Side,
Starting point is 01:04:38 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.
Starting point is 01:04:58 Listen to The Bright Side on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Open your free iHeart app and search the bright side. Hey, my name's Jay Shetty and I'm the host of On Purpose. I just had a great conversation with Michael B. Jordan and you can listen to it right now. Michael is known for his performances in both film and television. His breakout role was in Fruitvale Station playing Oscar Grant, which earned him widespread praise and numerous award nominations. His portrayal of Killmonger in Marvel's Black Panther,
Starting point is 01:05:30 one of my favorites, further solidified his status as one of Hollywood's leading actors, earning him widespread acclaim for his complex and compelling performance. In our conversation, Michael really opens up. You're going to love listening to it, and I can't wait for you to check it out.
Starting point is 01:05:46 The closest to getting what you want is always the hardest. It's always the feeling when you're getting ready. You know, people give up right before they get what they've always wanted to get. People quit. Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. 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
Starting point is 01:06:11 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, 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.
Starting point is 01:06:29 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.
Starting point is 01:06:49 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
Starting point is 01:07:12 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.
Starting point is 01:07:41 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. Now, Sarah, we have a very special guest today. There he is. That's Trevor. Hi, Trevor. Hi, Zach. Let me tell you guys something about Trevor. Trevor's going to explain it to us all,
Starting point is 01:08:14 but I have been stealing all of my Scrubs trivia from a Scrubs wiki, which I believe Trevor has curated himself. Trevor, have you curated this whole thing on your own? Oh, no, no, no. I, uh, it definitely is a team effort. So, uh, Scrubs Wiki is similar to Wikipedia or Donald may be familiar with Wookieepedia. Okay. Which is the Star Wars Wiki. And so Scrubs Wiki is the Scrubs equivalent. There are about a thousand of us. Oh, wow. Wow.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Yeah. There's a core 30 people really that kind of did the majority of it but i'm here on the podcast today so i guess i uh pulled the right you you did pull the right strings because um sarah because you don't listen to the podcast i'll tell you i i heard this i know this if you put in scrubs uh wiki or scrubs trivia this comes up and it is an amazing curated resource for you fans to check it out. And I've been stealing all sorts of factoids and trivia and all sorts of information. And finally, I was looking in there for last week, and was it you, Trevor, that had written, Zach, thanks for – he put in one of the – in one of like the trivial lines, like, Zach, thanks for enjoying Scrubs Wiki.
Starting point is 01:09:26 Have Joelle email me. I'd love to talk to you guys. So I did, it worked. And, and I want to thank you and the thousand or so people that have curated this thing because it's incredible and, and a great source of fun for I'm sure fans, if you have a question about an episode. Yeah, it's, there's a group of us that to understand something, you need to write it down. And so when we watch an episode of Scrubs or whatever TV show
Starting point is 01:09:52 that you have a favorite wiki for, you watch it and then you write down your favorite quotes, your favorite bits of trivia. And then over time, those thousand people will help kind of correct what you might've gotten wrong. Trevor, how do you prevent someone from, and I, I, I'm sure this happens on Wikipedia as well, but how do you prevent someone from writing something that's nonsense and isn't accurate?
Starting point is 01:10:12 Oh, I guarantee there is some nonsense and some inaccuracies there, especially now after I've just blown it up. I was about to say, cause my Wikipedia, my IMDB says I was in uncle Buck. That's not me and uncle Buck. You weren't?
Starting point is 01:10:24 That's not me and uncle Buck. Oh my't? That's not me in Uncle Buck. Oh my God. Uncle Buck is a fantastic movie. Uncle Buck was a fantastic movie, but I wasn't in it. Trevor, do you do any wikis for any other things that you're a fan of or is this the only one you participate in?
Starting point is 01:10:40 So it's funny. The TV shows Lost and Scrubs kind of brought me out to California and jump-started my career at that website, phantom.com. And so I was telling my partner who we're starting to watch Scrubs together now from the very first episode. Now we just started season two. I tell her that it's because of Scrubs that I got to meet her. Oh, that's so cool. Oh, because it brought you to California. So wait, you did it for Lost as well? You're welcome. You're welcome.
Starting point is 01:11:10 You're welcome, Trevor. Trevor, you do it for Lost as well? Because Lost probably really needs a wiki because it's so confusing. Yeah, Lostpedia was the big wiki where it organized all of the theories and the smoke monster and all of that crazy stuff
Starting point is 01:11:25 is there a theory to what lost what what where they were they ended it right it was it was all it was all purgatory right they never they never explained it being purgatory they never explained anything they left it open-ended so you can make up your own mind that's the crazy shit with loss what they used to do was sorry sorry i guess that that's a spoiler. Well, no, it's not. With Lost, what they would do is, because everybody's watching. If you haven't watched Lost, spoiler alerts. They never solved anything on that show.
Starting point is 01:11:56 They would introduce something, and then at the end of the season, there was no explanation. It was very good, though, for the first few seasons. And I eventually gave up up i have to admit but um i have a friend who's hardcore lost fan and he says up until the last 15 minutes it was one of his favorite series and then he just hated how they just chose to end it which i never saw but was assumed was purgatory but i'm wrong so i didn't spoiler it oh i was gonna segue back to Scrubs because I think Scrubs
Starting point is 01:12:26 season 8 finale, my finale, is probably the greatest finale to any TV. Better than Breaking Bad? So comedy. I'll hedge it. Why did you do that? And then you made him qualify. I've never watched an episode of Breaking Bad. I saw the finale and I
Starting point is 01:12:44 was like, holy shit, that was a great episode. You decided to start Breaking Bad with the finale. I'm just checking that that's true. Absolutely. There's certain shows that I've- I think it's safe to say that you might be the only person on planet Earth who started Breaking Bad with the finale. That's bullshit. Billy Crystal's character in When Harry Met Sally would read the end of the book before he started the book.
Starting point is 01:13:04 Don't even try that shit. I'm not the first person to do it. I just happened to do it on television with television shows. My friend's father, my friend's father, go ahead. Go ahead. My friend's father watches,
Starting point is 01:13:15 um, uh, four weddings and a funeral and skips the funeral part because it makes him too sad. He knows it's coming. He knows it's coming. He knows it's coming. Now, Trevor has agreed to all of you listeners to provide a service for us,
Starting point is 01:13:33 and we'll have to send him a gift basket, Joel. Can you put together a nice gift basket for Trevor? What do you like, Trevor? Well, scrubs and lost. We're going to send him swag. I don't think he wants swag. I think he wants, like like wine, maybe some cheese. Do you drink, Trevor?
Starting point is 01:13:47 I have a handful of vices. Okay. Well, you'll give Joel all your vices. We won't announce them to the world right here. But if you send Joel your vices, we will send you a gift basket as a thank you for the service you're going to provide. Well, we're not drug dealers, so don't be asking for money. Right. And we're not sending you like leather masks.
Starting point is 01:14:04 Right. We're not sending you fucking, masks right we're not sending you fucking you know a bottle of crack cocaine or anything like that we are not drug dealers or like S&M gear we're not sending you like I don't even know where to find that shit let's keep it 100 you know where to find it Donald
Starting point is 01:14:17 I don't know where to find stuff like that what are you talking about the pleasure chest whips lubes oils I don't know where to find that shit. In the West Village, there used to be this sex shop, and in the window was a giant fist. Just a giant fist. And my brother always thought it was so funny.
Starting point is 01:14:37 He'd walk by and be like, what a funny thing to have in the window. And he would bring his friends by and be like, look, it's just a giant forearm and a fist and they would laugh and one day he came by the window and it wasn't in the window and he was there to show his friends so they could laugh at the giant fist and forearm and he went in the shop and he said, hey,
Starting point is 01:14:55 where's the fist? And the shop owner went, the fist is upstairs. Could you come back? I don't know. The fist is upstairs. Could you come back? The fist was upstairs. That's great. Anyway, we're not sending you a fist, Trevor,
Starting point is 01:15:18 but whatever else you want, we'll send you. We're going to make you a big gift basket. Sorry, I digress. Trevor, when we have a question that we can't figure out the answer to, and it's not on Scrubs Wiki, we're going to have a thing like we have with Bill, where we ask Trevor, ask Scrubs Wiki Trevor. Are you down with that? Are you down to do it? I'm happy to help, but the thing is, I wrote it on the Wiki, so I wouldn't have to remember it. Oh, okay. So it sounds like he doesn't want to do it. It sounds like he doesn't want to do it. I will absolutely do it. sounds like he doesn't want to absolutely
Starting point is 01:15:45 cancel the confession yeah it's all right i'm happy to do it uh i can you know we're re-watching the show and so as i've been doing this this is so embarrassing right do you ever see you ever see that do you ever see that firework display where they accidentally shot off like 20 minutes of fireworks at the end at one moment i feel like that's what's happened i i built up my fireworks and they've all exploded in my face because trevor doesn't want to do this no i would absolutely love to and as you re-watch the show you you see new things and i'm adding it to the wiki and so if you have questions i'll try my best to okay well it seems to me you already answered one for us because we we asked you about whether the hungry chicken was the only time that was ever that was the only time right that was the
Starting point is 01:16:31 only time the the three of your characters do other celebratory dances once coming up in the season one finale but it's not exactly hungry chicken okay um sarah do you have a trivia question that you that that you could see just if trevor might know it he might not know it because he just said that he doesn't have it all memorized like something that i know the answer to and i want to i'm testing him or something something you know that the answer to and just see just for fun to try and stump trevor if he might know the answer to it could It could be about your character. It could be about Scrubs. What song did Sam Lloyd sing so beautifully in the Bahamas?
Starting point is 01:17:11 Oh, Hey Ya by Outkast. Yeah, that's very good. Good job. Good job, Sarah. A little bit obvious, but okay. What color Scrubs does J.D. wear? I didn't realize I was going to be judged on my question to Trevor. Donald, do you have a trivia question you want to try and stump Trevor?
Starting point is 01:17:24 I don't. I just want to know if he has questions for us. I think that's how this works. Alright. Well, no. I just thought we could try and stump Trevor. I can't. Do you feel like you could stump Trevor? Trevor? That's a no.
Starting point is 01:17:41 No, I didn't have anything prepared. Alright, Trevor, do you have any questions? Interesting, Zach. Interesting. Fuck off. You No, I didn't have anything prepared. All right, Trevor, do you have any questions? Interesting, Zach. Interesting. Fuck off. You guys, I was really excited about this. We've already had to return the gift basket. Trevor, do you have any questions for Sarah Chalk or Donald Faison? Yes, Sarah, you can have Trevor's basket.
Starting point is 01:17:57 Trevor, do you have any questions for us since we're all together for the first time? I do. I really do. So thanks for having me on. You are talking about the episode My Old Man today, right? Yes, we are. I really do. So thanks for having me on. You are talking about the episode, My Old Man today, right? Yes, we are. Yes, sir.
Starting point is 01:18:09 Yes. Oh, what a classic. John Ritter, Hattie Winston, never seen J.D.'s mom or Turk's dad. In the episode, we do see Elliot's parents,
Starting point is 01:18:19 but we never see any of her siblings. And so I'm just curious if you could do dream casting from any period of history, who would you want to play? Are there a sibling or a parent?
Starting point is 01:18:30 Wow. That's a great question, Trevor. Very good. We had, we had DL Hughley on as my brother, right? Tom Cavanaugh on as Zach's brother.
Starting point is 01:18:41 Hattie Winston played my mom. I think she would be married to some, like Turk's dad would be someone. Hmm. That's a tough one. Just go with Denzel. I would go with Denzel.
Starting point is 01:18:58 When all else fails, go with Denzel. That's not necessarily realistic that Turk's dad would be Denzel Washington. I would think it would be someone. Why not? Well, you know know that's just like ultimate stunt cat that's being stingy with it you know what I mean and being like and being like being obvious and not really doing your if I could have anybody play my dad on Scrubs who would it have been hmm I would say like someone like avery brooks is someone i would have enjoyed playing my dad someone who's i don't know what every book says every brooks played uh hawk on spencer for hire he was also captain cisco on deep space nine he was the first
Starting point is 01:19:40 african-american captain in a Star Trek universe. Anyway, I would have him. Avery Brooks would have been a great one. He was one of my mom's professors at Rutgers University. He was her theater professor, if I remember correctly. And he was on television all throughout me growing up. He could do comedy. He can do drama. He can do drama.
Starting point is 01:20:06 He's very handsome. And so I think he and Hattie Winston could have definitely made Turk. And he's also a bald-headed man, so, you know, it would make sense that Turk matches his dad. Avery Brooks. I just thought of my answer for my mom, Julie Haggerty from Airplane. Do you remember Julie Haggerty from Airplane? Yeah, but why would you – you want to explain?
Starting point is 01:20:28 Well, I was thinking of – well, I was thinking of funny women. Catherine O'Hara is another idea. Really funny women who might be age appropriate. And those were the first two names that came to mind. I think that she's so incredibly funny. And Catherine O'Hara, of course, who's always been a living legend, but is having quite a moment right now with Schitt's Creek. I think she's hilarious. Sarah, who would be your siblings?
Starting point is 01:20:58 I would have to go with my dream, Lisa Kudrow. I have always wanted to work with her and it is still a dream of mine and I'm such a huge fan of everything she's done and I just think the way when you just see her read a line sometimes I just think what that would have looked like on the page and nobody reads it like her she's so
Starting point is 01:21:20 incredibly talented and funny and the comeback is one of my favorite shows ever of all time. Yeah, the first season was incredible. So good. So good. So I feel like the combination of Marky Post. I mean, Marky Post actually was kind of a dream casting for me.
Starting point is 01:21:38 I loved her so much. She was amazing. She was amazing. I was waiting for us to bring her up. She did such a great job. What's the gentleman who played your dad's name? Because he was so good also. And he's in so many things, dude.
Starting point is 01:21:51 And we don't make, we talk about Hattie, we talk about Marky, we talk about John Ritter. We don't talk about that guy. And he's been in so much stuff. Joelle's on it. I can see her furiously typing as we speak. Don't worry, I joined the podcast with the wiki already open. Oh, Trevor!
Starting point is 01:22:11 Can you beat Joelle? Trevor, go. I'd be Lane Davies. Lane Davies. He was so great. Him and Kelso's Him and Kelso in their wrestling suits circling each other. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:26 So good. You know, what we could do is just keep watching the episode or talking about the episode and keep Trevor on because, you know, he might. And Trevor, feel free. Don't be shy. Feel free to weigh in since you know the episode probably better than we do after seeing it all these years later. Is that okay?
Starting point is 01:22:43 Do you guys like that plan? I love it. Let's go. Yeah. I love it because I just figured out how to do gallery views, so now I can see everybody. It's fantastic. Trevor, you'll be the first caller we've ever had hang out
Starting point is 01:22:52 for the going through of the episode, which we've barely done, and we were an hour and 23 minutes into this. It's Sarah. It's Sarah and her tech problems. I mean, it's the bean and cheese quesadilla. How about when John Ritter checks Rowdy's balls
Starting point is 01:23:09 and says, Rouser, Rowdy's a boy dog. I mean, going back, going back to just like minute one when he walks in the door and he says,
Starting point is 01:23:20 get some chips. The look on his face and that like smiley, like nobody can do it like that. He's so good. I wrote that down too, Sarah. I wrote that down. The look on his face as he exits frame when he says, get some chips.
Starting point is 01:23:33 He's like this. He really just – and I remember he's not in that many scenes. Like we said, we had planned that he was going to be a recurring character. And he was supposed to come and do another episode. And he passed the night before he was supposed to come to our set. And as Donald had mentioned in another podcast, they frantically rewrote the episode and had Tom Cavanaugh come and be the guest star and be my brother. So we had planned that he was going to be a recurring character, and was just, you know, making lots of stuff up left and right. And it was I remember just thinking it was so funny. Oh, man, I pooed a little was was I know I'm jumping all the way to the end of the show, but that was something that he came up with on his own.
Starting point is 01:24:18 It was just supposed to be pull my finger and he farts. Yeah. But I remember I remember you getting so excited about that and being like and coming upstairs because we were all working that day and you coming upstairs you were like yo dude i pulled his finger he went i pooed a little i never thought that was gonna be in the show i just thought he was riffing and being silly and it was so funny i mean i know it's a fart joke but it was still hilarious and the face he makes he like, I pooed a little. But then after, after he says that his face gets like, he gets a little disgusted in himself too.
Starting point is 01:24:50 Like, Oh gosh. And when he, in the cafeteria, when he, he, he, he just palms the jello and brings it to the table.
Starting point is 01:24:57 He was just doing shit like that. Just like, just coming up with the weirdest, funniest choices. Yeah. He, and the best thing about that, I pooed a little scene too, was it was also such, coming up with the weirdest funniest choices yeah he um and the best thing about that i poot a
Starting point is 01:25:05 little scene too was it was also such everything about that scene it was such a quick scene and it had everything it was heartbreaking and funny and then funny and then heartbreaking you know it was so you guys were both so great in that scene well it's hard you know it's funny you know again the show's 22 minutes without commercials and you have to service all three of our storylines and, of course, the janitor with Arlie Ermey. And, you know, again, it was like, wow, it's hard. It's tricky to do three and a half stories on all those different people in 22 minutes. But I thought they did a good job with it. on all those different people in 22 minutes,
Starting point is 01:25:43 but I thought they did a good job with it. Yeah, it's really interesting how Bill was able to do that because there is a lot of information that needed to be shoveled out in this. And they found, I mean, not just the parents coming, but also Turk and Elliot winning this award from a couple of episodes ago. You know what I mean? They're studying and they're working together. It's paid off, and now they're about to go present what they've studied to a bunch of people and also jd being pissed off about that you know and and how he was dying to be able to do something like that but wasn't
Starting point is 01:26:16 necessarily given the opportunity because turk and elliot were uh much like the handshake much like the handshake now sarah at 8 23 you have a very impressive piece of medical jargon um yes i mean both neither donald and i could do that as well as you did that but but you uh you really must have worked on that do you remember doing that i mean i feel like in general i remember the medical jargon feeling like a language it because you just, obviously, like I don't know what any of that means. Sometimes I would try and look it up so that I, maybe thinking maybe this will help me memorize it if I have a sort of basic understanding of it.
Starting point is 01:26:53 But I remember little chunks of, like I remember my first piece of medical jargon I ever had to say was superior mesenteric insufficiency. And I don't know what that means. You have to say what? I feel like it always felt like just kind of memorizing a phonetic, almost just, yeah, as if you were just, it was just another language. But I kind of liked it because I saw it as like a weird challenge,
Starting point is 01:27:17 especially when it was something that was that long. I always found that like one trick was writing it out by hand with like a pen and just kind of, you know, putting it on paper a few times. I feel like this is a bit of a visual. I feel like this one you did in one breath, too. You were like, yeah, but that's not hard for me. That's just how I talk. The one breath part, not a problem. The medical jargon.
Starting point is 01:27:43 Yeah, that stuff was hard. At 846, I have to use a payphone to call my dad. Yes. In the middle of the hallway. Yeah. There's a payphone just like in the hallway. Well, there might be, but isn't it funny this many years later seeing someone go, I got to call my dad and reach for a payphone?
Starting point is 01:27:59 I mean, kids today probably don't even know what a payphone is. Yeah, it's pretty crazy. I have a question. kids today probably don't know what a payphone is yeah it's pretty crazy i have a question when we started this show was there were there payphones in the i think so hospital weren't there payphones at the on the bottom floor or something like wooden paper yeah i remember there being wooden payphones or something like i don't know if it was a prop or if it was real but there was definitely it was a payphone era still yeah Yeah. Yeah. They totally still existed. If you remember when we started, you know,
Starting point is 01:28:27 we talked about how we got the BlackBerrys for the first time and how exciting it was. Right. Oh, that was such a huge deal. I mean, there were cell phones, but you had to be like wealthy. They were very, very expensive. You know, it was like a luxury. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:41 Anyway. Going back in time to two minutes 50, when Markie Post says, is there a rule against looking pretty? And that was sort of always a run with when Markie Post came back in future episodes. And I remember Bill had written this one line where I'm talking on the pay phone to Markie Post. And she, I say, yeah, yeah, I know mom's short hair gives me pig face. And Bill would find things with the background and with us that were just kind of like, just true to all of our appearance.
Starting point is 01:29:15 And like, we would- Do you feel like you have pig face when you have bangs? Short hair, short hair definitely gives me pig face. It's not attractive. Like I don't, I grew up like people saying like, please don't, like you actually just can't cut your, you can can't have a bob you can't just like cut your hair off which obviously i sarah i don't think you could ever have pig face i disagree no no no it definitely but don't you guys remember that there'd be things in the script where we they would it would be
Starting point is 01:29:37 actually about our appearance like i have a mirror right here you don't look like gary bucey what are you talking about yeah at first glance you do not look like gary bucey what are you talking about yeah at first glance you do not look like gary bucey by the way and hattie winston doesn't look like morgan freeman for the record right for the record right i have this this mole right here trevor you can see it it has three hairs that grow out of it trevor add that to trevor add that mole to the scrubs wiki don't trevor don't add that to the scrubs wiki but i literally like had to say a line where i was like oh yeah chin hair's back like there were so many do you guys remember things that were like so do you have to trim the hairs in your in your mole regularly oh yeah when when charlie was four he looked at me so seriously like completely deadpan and he was like mama
Starting point is 01:30:20 i have terrible news oh you said what he goes, you're growing a beard. Donald, you have a mole. Do you have to tend to that mole? Or it's covered now with the mustache, right? Well, I got a whole face full of hair right now. I know, but I have a question about your mole. I never have to tend to it. Like, it's been checked out.
Starting point is 01:30:44 No, I'm saying it doesn't grow its own hairs. Of course it grows. It's a mole. All moles grow hair. Oh, so you have to trim your mole hairs. No, never. No. It's allowed.
Starting point is 01:30:55 I feel like it's more acceptable on a male than it is on a female. That's exactly the point. Donald doesn't have to trim his mole hairs. I have to pluck these three mole hairs out of my chin. I feel like moles should not have hairs. I think everybody, no matter what your gender, should trim his mole hairs. I have to pluck these three mole hairs out of my chin. I feel like moles should not have hairs. I think everybody, no matter what your gender, should trim your mole hair. I will say this.
Starting point is 01:31:11 It's a lot sharper than the hair that grows above my lip and around my chin. Like, I could, you know, cut somebody when kissing them, and it's just the mole hair, and there's nothing padding the area, like more facial hair, the mole hair could cut somebody. It's like a needle. Have you ever pierced Casey's face with your mole hair?
Starting point is 01:31:35 No, no. I don't even think Casey knows I have a mole. Ever since I've been with her, I've had this beard and some... She likes the beard and mustache. She might not like it this full. It suits you. But she likes the beard and mustache. She might not like it this full. It suits you. But she likes the beard and mustache. I think it looks really good on you. I can't remember the last time
Starting point is 01:31:50 seeing it this full. I don't think it's ever been this full. Is it a pandemic thing? Are you not going to cut it till the end of the pandemic? I kind of like it. I think I'm going to keep it for as long as I possibly can. Even the hair on my head, even though it's not... Even though I have a receding hairline, I like the way my hair looks on the top of my head.
Starting point is 01:32:06 I think I look like freaking the dad from Good Times. I'm going to keep it 100. Oh, it suits you. I like it. I kind of like it. I kind of like the George Jefferson. My last thought on mole hairs, I was working on a job and it was late and everyone was stressed out. And we just needed to lighten the mood a little.
Starting point is 01:32:27 So the makeup artist put those individual eyelashes out of every freckle and mole on my face and neck. Just like a little kind of group of these little fake eyelashes so that I went to craft service and people thought like, didn't really know what to say. Like kind of wanted to be like, you have a, but just out of every one out of every one of your moles and freckles just like a little grouping of three that's just weird dude that's great like what were you guys thinking that you're like you know it would be funny if you just put hair just here because it was like it was like it'd be a conversation people be like not sure what it like you have a there's just a you've got a um i laughed out loud at 1558 when sarah you say i'm not crazy am i no i don't feel like it's like the first example of elliot starting to lose it and then that opened up like a whole new world for her of crazy i laughed at
Starting point is 01:33:19 bet your powdered bottom you can bet your powdered bottom and i laughed at it because it reminded me of annie the sun will come out tomorrow bet your powder bottom that tomorrow they'll be who says who says bet your powdered bottom i lost that uh john c mcginley says it yeah oh you could johnny has a great moment in 1519 where he's like just just just berating me as per usual, making me feel like shit. And he knows so badly that I'm dying for a father figure leader because my dad isn't exactly that. And then he just, at the end, gives me the most beautiful little, he could have done a much worse job. And it's like, he just gives you just a little seed of a compliment
Starting point is 01:34:02 so that JD could see that he was, you know, just a little bit. He's not going to give too much, you know. And then in the end of the episode, he buys it all back. And that was such a great scene with both of you. And it was mostly done in a one-er, like except for his little chunk at the end to you. It was kind of mostly a one-er down the hallway. It was so great. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:34:19 I want to give a big shout out also to, you know, Hattie Winston's performance coming in and Judy's performance. They pretty much had to mimic each other for the whole episode. Yeah. And it had to be convincing for you to believe at the end for the joke to work where she's like, did you, are you dating me because I'm exactly like your mother? It had to be almost perfect that, you perfect that they did the exact same thing. Also, for Carla to realize, holy shit, I'm his mom. And I thought it was really cool how they did it so well. It was really like they had worked on this for the week
Starting point is 01:35:04 instead of that day when they met. They had worked on it for, you know, the week instead of that day when they met. They had worked on it for at least a week because they, even the way they were talking, it sounded, they sounded alike. And I thought that was amazing. Yeah, and there's some subtle things too. Like at 9.40 when they're in the break room, her top matches Judy Scrubb's. Right, they're the same color. They're wearing the same colors and everything.
Starting point is 01:35:22 They both love the same color. Yeah. And then poor Hattie trying to do that freeze thing they made her do. I don't know why they did that. They should have just frozen the left side of the frame. I know. She did such a good job. She was amazing.
Starting point is 01:35:34 She did as good a job as most people can do, but she's not exactly ready for Washington Square Park being a frozen Statue of Liberty. Right. Well, she did blink. You're absolutely right. She did blink, yes. It's hard. But she was moving around. Trying to she did blink. You're absolutely right. She did blink, yes. It's hard. I mean, but she was like, you know, moving around.
Starting point is 01:35:48 Right. Trying to keep it together. And I really like the joke that I really like the payoff for it where, you know, Carla asks Turk. She's like, you know, are you dating me because I remind you of your mother? And Turk goes, baby, that's exactly why i'm dating donald that was one of my favorite scenes you and judy were both so good in that scene i it's one of my favorite scenes of the episode when you're like you know yeah you're both smart strong and smart and independent and yeah i mean i didn't want judy i wanted to ask you donald like do you i mean i don't't know why Judy was so worried about that.
Starting point is 01:36:27 I mean, would you say that there's qualities in Casey that overlap with your mom? I mean, I think I would. I mean, both great moms, very loving. Absolutely. Well, I think if you're a mom, if you're a mother, most likely you have a lot of love in your heart and you'll do anything for your kids. And so I think all moms or most moms. I don't think that's universally true for the rest of us. You know what?
Starting point is 01:36:49 You're absolutely right. It's not universally true, but you know, everyone with a shitty parent right now is like, come on, but right. It's like, fuck you.
Starting point is 01:36:56 My mom sucked, but, but, but, but, uh, yeah. So Casey and my mom are definitely,
Starting point is 01:37:01 uh, definitely have that in common, but for the most part, they're very different. They're both big personalities. Both Shirley and Casey are like the life of the party and loud. Yeah, but my mom's not a ball buster the way my wife is a ball buster. My wife, you know what I mean? If I do something great, my mom's like, holy shit, that was the best thing i've ever seen in my life or if i you know
Starting point is 01:37:25 if i fuck up uh royally she's like you know what we'll get him next time honey you know what i mean casey both like to have a good time and throw a few back no doubt but well no come on shut the fuck up no all right we can edit that out but i've had a few drinks with Shirley in the day. I was about to say, my mom is a way bigger drinker than Casey is. So my mom is very supportive. Casey, if I do something really dope, it's hard to get a compliment out of her. You know what I mean? I'll do something dope, and she'll be like, well, you're supposed to do that. That's how it's supposed to be.
Starting point is 01:38:02 Don't get all excited because you did that. You're supposed to be able to do that shit. Damn it. You know what I mean? My mom will be like, that was amazing. But don't you think, and I think this is true for a lot of men, and definitely true for Bill Lawrence and might even be true for me, that you like a tough woman who's going to bust your balls
Starting point is 01:38:23 and keep you on your toes. Absolutely. Absolutely. But there comes a time where you want some form of affirmation or some form of, you know, you want some form of love. You know, some form of accolades. Like, I'll do something good, and she's like, you should have been able to do that anyway.
Starting point is 01:38:42 Who gives a shit? Move on. I do something bad, sometimes I want my wife to be like, oh gives it to move on i do something bad you i want my sometimes i want my wife to be like oh it's okay baby don't worry about it we're gonna figure this out she'll be like you fucked up you you know you fucked up well you know why are you even asking me those of you who are who are thinking that this podcast might lead to him and his wife having a conversation you needn't worry because she doesn't listen to the podcast. Still.
Starting point is 01:39:14 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.
Starting point is 01:39:39 Listen to The Bright Side on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Open your free iHeart app and search The Bright Side. Hey, my name's Jay Shetty, and I'm the host of On Purpose. I just had a great conversation with Michael B. Jordan, and you can listen to it right now. Michael is known for his performances in both film and television. His breakout role was in Fruitvale Station, playing Oscar Grant, which earned him widespread praise and numerous award nominations. His portrayal of Killmonger in Marvel's Black Panther, one of my favorites,
Starting point is 01:40:12 further solidified his status as one of Hollywood's leading actors, earning him widespread acclaim for his complex and compelling performance. In our conversation, Michael really opens up. You're going to love listening to it, and I can't wait for you to check it out. The closest to getting what you want is always the hardest. It's always the feeling when you're getting ready. People give up right before they get what they've always wanted to get. People quit.
Starting point is 01:40:37 Listen to On Purpose with Jay Shetty on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. 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. go through it. This is a roadblock. It's going to catch you down the road. Go through it. Deal with it.
Starting point is 01:41:06 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. Old rock icon, Liz Phair. That personal disaster wrote Guyville.
Starting point is 01:41:26 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.
Starting point is 01:41:55 24 partners, 6 finals and 2 mirrorball trophies. She knows all the secrets, the behind the scenes arguments and 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. I love your wife.
Starting point is 01:42:39 She is a ball buster, but she has a saying that she does not censor a single word she says, which I like a lot in people. And she also says, all right, when she's about to say something that she's worried you might like, you know, judge her for, she goes, all right, no judgments. All right, let me tell you. And then she like, it's like, it's like no judgments, question mark. Okay, if there's not gonna be any judgments, I'm gonna lay it out. Then we can have this conversation. It's gonna be judgmental. Then we're not doing this right.
Starting point is 01:43:05 But I like that expression because it's like, you want me to be fully honest with you? Because then you need to pre-sign this document that says you will not judge what I'm about to say. But also, with this whole thing, it doesn't necessarily track with the beginning and how Turk is sad that his mom's coming. Because he should be excited that his mom's coming because if he should be excited that his mom's coming because he's dating a woman that reminds him of his mom and he knows it.
Starting point is 01:43:31 So part of me is like, I don't necessarily get why Turk is so disappointed in his mom showing up, but that's just me. It's an ass bill guys. No, it's not worthy of an ass bill because he's just going to say five, ass bill, guys. No. I don't think we need to ask Bill that. It's not worthy of an ass bill because he's just going to say 5, 6, 7, 8 and get the music going. And he's out of control, that guy.
Starting point is 01:43:52 He can't be reined in. I really love that Elliot comes out to her mom. I know. Mom, that's exactly what I'm saying. But that's funny when Kelsey goes, the guys in, the guys in radiology owe me some money. So funny. I don't know. That was great.
Starting point is 01:44:12 All right. We need to wrap this episode up again. And wait, also one other funny thing too, when Johnny C, um, is, uh,
Starting point is 01:44:18 telling you right at the beginning of the episode, when you'd like to get, bring your dad with you, take a vehicle, take him, secure a vehicle, a balloon, a car, a tricycle, anything and take him with you it's a great life um sarah we're so well first of all trevor thank you for coming on you didn't really have much to say after your after
Starting point is 01:44:36 your segment we didn't ask him anything he's you know the three of us are big personalities yelling into the microphone trevor uh you know he's letting us do our thing. Yeah, as a fan, I don't want, you know, if I were another fan, I wouldn't want me, a fan, talking the whole episode. Absolutely, you have every right to, you have every, this is, listen, as much as this is Zach and my podcast,
Starting point is 01:44:59 everyone who comes on, Joel, Dan, Trevor, everyone who's on here is open to is welcome to have conversation right i wish dan would talk more he never talks he's very shy the only time we got dan to ever talk was when he got really passionate about fucking hating spectrum do you remember that right i do remember that dan like turned off his mute and fucking went on a monologue about spectrum i do this son can we dan can you can you tell everybody about your dad and fucking went on a monologue about Spectrum. I do hate Spectrum, they suck.
Starting point is 01:45:25 Can we, Daniel, can you tell everybody about your dad and how he's a hero? I'd love to hear this. Sure. Yesterday, my father was at the protest at the mayor's house. And he was approached by Fox News. And, you know, my dad is a white dude who lives in a relatively nice neighborhood in Los Angeles. So, and my feeling is that Fox News came up to him looking for some sort of take along the lines of, I don't like what's going on here. What happened was my father, very eloquently,
Starting point is 01:45:58 in my opinion, laid out exactly what the problem is in this country right now, laying down how out exactly what the problem is in this country right now, laying down how we are here in this country on stolen land that was built on the backs of 400 years of slavery. And after years and years of not being listened to, of being pushed down and silenced over and over and over, what do people expect at this point? This is going to keep happening until these three officers are brought to justice for standing by and doing nothing until actual reform is made until our country actually accounts for the sins of its creation. Until we do that, until we actually make that effort, nothing will change. And that is what he laid out on Fox yesterday. And I think that interviewer did not get what she wanted. Did they air it? Did they air it? Not only did they air
Starting point is 01:46:46 it, but I was able to retweet it and it's currently sitting at, you know, 420,000 likes on Twitter. Oh my God. Dan! Will you send me that, Dan? Absolutely, of course. Dan, send it to me too. That was beautifully said and I have to say, I love it.
Starting point is 01:47:02 The running gag that Dan doesn't speak and then when he does, he speaks incredibly articulately and does a long monologue. First about Spectrum, now about Injustice. Dan, please contribute more to the show. Don't hide out in your little tech bubble. You honor me. Thank you. I appreciate that.
Starting point is 01:47:19 Sarah Chalk, we love you. I love you guys, too. Thanks for having me. Trevor, thank you for everything you've done Scrubs-wise, and I'm so happy that we were able to bring you and your partner together. And he's still going to get his basket, even though he's hedging a little bit. He should get his basket. Yeah, but it's going to have the generic shit in it now.
Starting point is 01:47:37 That's okay. We're low on groceries anyway. Put the Trader Joe's pecans, the sweet and salty Trader Joe's pecans in it. Donald, I'm going to call you after this, and we're going to curate an amazing – we could give him some swag. We could sign some stuff for him. That sounds great. I don't have anything, so –
Starting point is 01:47:51 Yeah, some company made air fresheners of us without permission, which I don't mind at all because I'm just happy to have an air freshener myself. I'm not giving that shit away. Donald smells like, quote, black ice, And mine, I think, smells like vanilla. Appletini. Appletini. Appletini. Well, anyway, maybe we can throw Trevor some unlicensed JD and Turk air fresheners.
Starting point is 01:48:14 There are a lot of people that are going to go looking for that. I know. I'm happy to throw the business some business because I think they're funny and I don't really care. What am I going to make? A penny off that? I don't care. Okay. That being said.
Starting point is 01:48:26 Fans, thank you so much for listening. Sarah, we love you so much. Sarah, we're going to let you do the numbers. Remember to hit us up with questions. Joelle will sift through scrubsiheart at gmail.com and Joelle will decide if your question is good enough to come on the air. Get her attention. She said early on, don't just send some BS.
Starting point is 01:48:47 Be creative because Joelle's a busy woman, and she likes to have her eyes captivated by an interesting email. Sarah, stay safe. We love you. We miss you. You may now lead us in song by counting us in. Five, six, 7, 8. Bring a little optimism into, Show with Zach and Donald. 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,
Starting point is 01:49:50 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. Jon Stewart is back in the host chair at The Daily Show, which means he's also back in our ears on The Daily Show, Ears Edition podcast. Join late night legend Jon Stewart and the best news team for today's biggest headlines, exclusive extended interviews, and more. Now this is a second term we can all get behind. Listen to The Daily Show, Ears Edition on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. about the secrets behind my skincare. Encore Jane about creating a billion dollar startup.
Starting point is 01:50:45 Walter Isaacson about the geniuses who changed the world. Listen and subscribe to the Martha Stewart podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I used to have so many men. How this beguiling woman in her 50s. She looked like a million bucks. Scams a bunch of famous athletes out of untold fortunes.
Starting point is 01:51:07 Nearly $10 million was all gone. It's just unbelievable. Hide your money in your old rich man, because she is on the prowl. Listen to Queen of the Con, season five, The Athlete Whisperer, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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