Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald - 415.5: A Conversation with Shirley Faison
Episode Date: April 6, 2021In the real world, we speak with Donald's mom, Shirley Faison about what it was like to run a theater and recognizing talent in her child.Find Shirley's book "7 Rules To Thrive As A Performer" here: h...ttps://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/7-rules-to-thrive-as-a-performer-a-workshop-eperience Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Look how fucking skinny
you are.
This is what I hate about you.
I love you,
but I hate how you can diet for 10 days
and look this skinny.
I also quit smoking weed and drinking booze too.
I know, you threw a lot at it,
but dude, you look great.
Yeah, you look great, man.
Feeling good.
Hell yeah.
This is a lot of fun, man.
I had no idea that I would get this much love for being in a Powerpuff Girls reboot, man.
Well, everybody's, you got so much chatter.
People are so happy for you.
I don't know anything about the Powerpuff Girls.
I know it's very popular, but I was, I missed it.
So tell us about it.
So the Powerpuff Girls are, they're three superhero little girls that were created by Professor Utonium.
And, you know, in the cartoon, I'm going to be honest with you.
I've seen the cartoon a few times.
Not a lot.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
Oh, my goodness.
Donald.
So my research is beginning with watching the cartoon.
Like, I was watching it with Rocko, because Rocko was a huge fan of the Powerpuff Girls, the remake of the Powerpuff Girls.
They did one when Joelle was a baby, I guess.
That is true.
And then they just remade the Powerpuff Girls also.
So Rocko was a big fan of Teen Titans Go and Powerpuff Girls.
Was it always aimed at little kids or was it a grown-up thing as well?
Powerpuff Girls. Was it always aimed at little kids or was it a grown-up thing as well?
It's like if you've ever watched Teen Titans Go, it's aimed for – or SpongeBob, it's aimed at kids.
But there are some jokes in there.
There are a lot of jokes in every episode that parents will laugh at while watching with their kids.
Right.
I got to tell you, man, I'm really excited that people enjoyed the fact that I'm going to be in this.
I'm so geeked about it.
You know, I'm really, you know, I've tried to stay off of, you know, the message boards and stuff like that where, you know, some of the hate can dwell.
Why would you go do that?
Don't do that.
Yeah, I refuse to do it.
I refuse to let the haters bring me down.
I refuse to do it.
I refuse to let the haters bring me down.
But I imagine there are some people that aren't excited about me playing Professor Drake Uttonium.
And that's cool.
You can eat a dick.
There you go.
Are you in rehearsals at this point or what's happening?
Yeah, so we're doing a bunch of rehearsals. We're doing camera tests and wardrobe fittings.
And you start tomorrow?
No.
More rehearsal tomorrow.
More camera shoots, photo shoots.
We don't start shooting actually until, well, I can't tell you, but we start shooting soon.
Okay, good.
Well, dude, I'm so happy for you.
And as someone who loves you, I was so happy about all the love you were getting on on the interweb i saw you were getting lots of adoration all year i love that i love that
dude how's work going man i shot three days of cheaper by the dozen and it's the dreamiest job
ever i love gab union she has our exact sense of humor she should come on the podcast one day she's
fucking hilarious and cool.
And the kids couldn't be sweeter.
I mean, knock wood, it's too good to be true.
I love my director.
I love, you know, the hours.
Because of the children, we can only do 10-hour days.
So that's kind of dreamy, too. That's great.
You can't be normal.
You have, like, a normal life.
Yeah.
And I don't know, man.
It's just so fun.
I think the script, Kenya barris wrote such a funny script
i you know sometimes you start a project and go okay well we'll make the script better as we go
and this is just really great i just it's just going to be such a perfect family movie and but
you know and as well as having kenya's signature discussions of of race done in such an elegant way
because of course if you're going to have a
biracial family
you can't deny the things that will come up
and he doesn't and so
I'm just really stoked to be a part of it. I'm really
happy. That's great
man. By the way
we're recording this on Sunday but this airs
on Tuesday so guess what? It's my birthday.
Yay! Happy birthday!
Happy birthday!
Happy birthday. Happy birthday. Happy birthday.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday to you.
Thank you. The morning sun is saying.
I feel really good.
I'm happy.
Holy cow, I'm in a day.
I'm very happy it's my birthday. I feel really good. I'm very happy it's my birthday.
I feel really good.
I'm on this awesome health kick, which is really, I must say, those of you listening who know,
when you go on a health kick, obviously your body gets in shape,
but I just feel better in my mind and brain and just happier overall.
This year kicked so many of our asses.
and brain and just happier overall this year kicked so many of our asses and as we come out of it um a little bit i i'm so excited i you know i use the excuse of the movie to get in shape i
jokingly said i want to look dude i'm gonna tell you right now man i saw pictures holy shit zach
you got don't don't build it up too much you're pretty close
to Brad Fitt
Fight Club
oh shut up
shut up
no no
y'all think I'm joking
Zach throw up the picture
so the people can see it
they won't
I'm not lying
where's the lie bud
it's not ready
for a reveal yet
but I do have to say
turning 46
when I
when I had a couple
people over
including Casey
yesterday for just to toast me.
Well, actually, my girlfriend surprised me.
But, yeah, it was nice to hear a handful of people being like, oh, shit.
And I was like, yeah.
Dude, you don't even have love handles anymore, man.
What the fuck is going on with you?
No, well, I've never done, you know.
Listen, I can give everyone the tricks.
The tricks are just diet and fucking giving up booze.
Yeah.
And, of course, exercise.
Is this the best shape you've ever been in in your life?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
And it took seven weeks, by the way, and I'm still going.
Like, it's like, you know, it's like anything.
It's a hobby that if you get into, if you find a way.
Here's my trick that I've done, for those of you listening who were like, are dreading getting in any kind of shape. I just said,
what if I try and find a way to make it fun this time, build it around things I like doing.
Okay. I like, well, I like spinning. Like we, you know, spinning is, you know, if you can't
afford a Peloton bike, you know, get on a bicycle or, or, or find something that, or, or in Donald's
case, he used to play basketball, you know, find it. I love when I can play tennis, find something that, or in Donald's case, he used to play basketball. You know, find it.
I love when I can play tennis.
Find something that's fun to do and then build around that.
So I genuinely enjoy Peloton.
I think it's fun.
I come off feeling high.
So I just made that a regular part of my,
and then I started researching healthy foods
that I think taste good.
So you can find a protein shake that tastes awesome.
It's the best thing I eat all day.
I look forward to it.
And guess what?
It's amazing for you.
So I don't know.
Have you cut a bunch of foods that you were eating before out of your diet?
Like you had talked about how you're no longer eating red meat.
Well, here's the thing.
This is going to branch off into a whole other thing.
And I promise to do the short version because we got your mom coming on.
My mom's on this piece.
So wait, let me hear it.
Before we get to her.
Well, I really am thinking about seriously changing my diet
because of the documentary I watched, Seaspiracy,
which I recommended last time, which I really encourage you to watch.
I'm not telling you to change your diet at all, listener,
but I do think it's important to learn about the food industry. And I'm embarrassed to admit that I
made it 46 years knowing nothing about how our food is made. And it was a combination of three
documentaries, Game Changers, Seaspiracy, and Eating Animals, which I just watched last night,
which Natalie Portman narrates because she's very into health.
And I just didn't know about factory farming.
I didn't really – like everyone, you see the pictures of the farmers
in the grocery store and you go, that's where our food and livestock comes from.
And I was just in denial about it.
And the fishing, oh, I'll be pescatarian.
Fish are great.
Everything is so healthy.
And then you can watch three documentaries in six hours
and go, holy shit, I didn't know any of that. And so it's inspired me, especially being on a
health kick to be like, well, I'm changing. We're coming out of this pandemic. We're coming out of
this insane year long hibernation. Why not try some new ways of being? And that's what I'm
taking on. Amen. I love that. I love that. And I will say,
even though this is very hard for a lot of people, and I get it, one of the most powerful things I've done is take this alcohol break. It increases my mood over time even, because I think
of like alcohol as a depressant, right? So if you drink a ton, a lot of alcohol regularly,
every day, every other day, whatever you do,
I feel like you are, think of it like instead of people taking an antidepressant, you're taking a depressant regularly.
Right.
And it's sort of putting a cloud, a little bit of a cloud over your life.
Well, same thing with weed.
Right.
But let me just finish the point.
And the point is that you might stop for a week and go, okay, I did it.
I made it a week.
But you're not really seeing the effects because just like if you start taking an a week and go, okay, I did it. I made a week, but you're not really seeing
the effects because just like if you take an, if you start taking antidepressants, it's going to
take about a month for you to feel the effects. If you stop taking a depressant, I find that a
month in six weeks in seven weeks in, you really start to go, wow, I'm, I'm genuinely overall in
a better mood. So that's my speech. That's my soapbox. Yeah yeah it's all good man you know i'm on the same kick
right now and you know power i'm using power puff as a jump off for it but i like the way i feel
right now like i was smoking way too much weed like way too much weed so much weed that i had
really bad uh withdrawals from it.
And, you know, people act like that doesn't exist,
but it really does.
And my wife went down the rabbit hole and found all of these natural remedies
to combat my withdrawal.
So within three days, I was good to go.
Oh, what are those natural remedies?
Well, like you want to put potassium back in your system
because at night you sweat like a banshee.
You know what I mean? Drink a lot of water. You want to put potassium back into your system because at night you sweat like a banshee. You know what I mean?
Drink a lot of water.
You want to hydrate.
Yeah.
I see you got that thing I have with all the inspirational words on it.
Dude, this is my second day doing it.
I'm already at – I'm almost done with this bad boy.
Oh, good for you.
By 9 o'clock tonight, this shit is gone.
I know.
When you get one of those – if you guys were talking about those, like, two-liter things you can get on the Internet,
and they have, like, drink it by this time.
You know, they have the times, and then it says, like, you got this.
Keep going.
Yeah.
You know?
And it's so silly because it's like doing it for a kid, but it makes it a bit of a game.
Like, can I get there by five?
Can I get there by six?
You know?
Oh, you know what I do?
This is the easiest way to do it.
So I wake up in the morning, and I drink to 7, right?
That's the first thing.
Now, if I wake up after 7, I'll drink to 9, right?
And so at 9 o'clock, I'll drink again, and I'll drink all the way down to 11.
And then at 11 o'clock, I'll drink again, and I'll drink all the way down to 1.
So by the time I get to 7 p.m. at night, I'm finished with the bottle before 9 o'clock.
That's good.
Then you can pee it all out so you don't have to get up.
So I don't have to get up.
You do have to get used to having a new relationship with urinating
because it's kind of always on your mind.
But it's a small price to pay.
Yes.
But you know what?
My goal now is to make it to the bathroom and stay asleep and still be able to pee in the toilet without getting it all over the bathroom.
I've succeeded a couple of times.
There have been times where I woke up in the morning to go to the bathroom.
I was like, God damn, I just missed everything.
Anyway.
Hey, did you see the new Black Widow trailer any of you
oh it looks amazing
oh hell yes
I watched it like
four times
but you guys
don't worry about it
you guys don't worry about it
because you're gonna go see
In Da Height
oh my god
double feature
I think we just
decided
I really gotta say
I know I'm biased
but I thought that trailer
was fucking awesome
it looked amazing
dude it looks amazing
are you kidding me?
That moment where she's free-falling out of the plane?
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
I like how she's just holding the parachute with her hand.
I know I'm going to need this.
I'm not even going to put it on.
I know I'm going to need it later.
That's awesome.
So fly.
Yeah, it looks amazing.
We should probably get my mom in here.
Let's start the show, right?
Yeah, do it.
First of all, before we do that, DJ Daniel, Joelle Monique, what is good with y'all?
How's it been this whole week?
Listen, I'm just excited to talk to your mom.
I want to get all the good backstories.
I want to know what you were like as a kid.
How did this happen?
I want to know about her career.
She has an incredible career.
Yeah, her career is what's really exciting for me.
All right, let's count it and bring her in.
All right, here we go.
Five, six, seven, eight.
I said stories about a show we made
About a bunch of docs and nurses
And a janitor who loved to hate
I said here's our stories
That we all should know
So gather round to hear our
Gather round to hear our Gather round to hear our
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald
Ladies and gentlemen, give it up for my mom,
the one and only Shirley Faison!
Shirley Faison!
Where is she?
Mom? Yeah, let me just put my video on. Where is she? Hello.
Mom?
Yeah, let me just put my video on.
Thank you.
There she is.
Hey, Mama.
Hello, Shirley Faison.
How are you, Mama?
I'm good.
How are you?
I'm good.
I spoke to you yesterday, but still.
Hey.
Hey.
That picture behind you, is that me in junior high school?
I think so, right?
There's way too much hair.
It's junior high school.
Junior high school, right there.
Hi, Shirley.
Hey, Zach Braff.
How are you?
It's good to see you, beautiful.
It's been far too long.
Oh, I know.
Mom, that's Joelle, and that is Daniel. Hi, Daniel. Hi, Joelle.
Thank you so much for coming on. We had my mom on and we just wanted to have you on because
not only do we want to talk to you about a young Donald Faison and tell us all the good stories,
but also, you know, my mom is a psychologist, so we asked her some psychology questions.
And we have so many people that talk to us
about getting into the business as actors,
and we thought we could pick your brain
for people that watch and listen to this
about what it's like being an agent in the business.
So, Mom, have you ever listened to the podcast?
Yes, have you ever listened?
Yes, I have.
How many times have you listened to this podcast, Mom? Would you like for me to be honest? Yes, have you ever listened? Yes, I have. How many times have you listened to this podcast?
Would you like for me to be honest?
Yes, I would. Absolutely.
Three.
You can every
listen. Thank you for all
three times. But Shirley,
did you laugh at least?
Yes, I did.
All right, good. Yes, I did.
I did. Okay, I think we should start from the very
As Zach always says
Start at the very beginning
A very good place to start
When you sing you begin with
Do, re, mi
Oh no but it's not when you sing
It's when you
When you read you begin
When you read you begin with
A, B, C And when you sing you begin with A, B, C.
And when you sing, you begin with do, re, mi.
All right, so Donald, what beginning do you want to start at?
Let's talk about how young Donald.
Donald always talks about the theater you and your ex-husband ran.
Can you tell us how that came about and what it was like Donald hanging
out in the young theater? Cause that's clear.
He mentions that all the time as being very impactful about what got him
interested in the arts.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, I became a part of the theater when I was,
for all of the people that are out there that don't know what the theater is,
it's the national black theater in Harlem.
Harlem. Yes. So I became a part of the national black theater.
After they performed at my college.
I was at Rutgers University
and they
performed on my
college campus and that's how
I was introduced to them. And then
I
came to New York and I became a part of
National Black Theater. When I
had, well, I called Donald
Shune. It's all right they know that
okay oh they know they've been told they know how they know they even know how to spell it correctly
mom okay all right so so when i had shoon um shoon would come to all the rehearsals i was a performer
back then and she would come to all the rehearsals and he would sit in the front row of all the
performances and actually he almost got beat up by one of the actors because he would sit in the front row of all the performances and actually he almost got
beat up by one of the actors because he would say their lines before they did
and so yeah and so so he would be in the front row saying the lines before the actors would say them. And the actors would get very angry with him because he was saying their lines before they could even say them.
Right.
But let me ask you a question, Mom.
At what point were you like, I got to get him out of the front row and onto the stage?
That's a good question.
When did you start realizing that he might want to, I mean, obviously, if he's sitting in the front row
and mouthing along, you might have a sense
that he's into this.
But when did you push him on stage?
No, but when he was a baby
and he would be in the stroller,
well, the strollers then, they were like,
I want to say like little cages, I guess.
Long thing in a cage?
No, no, no, no, no.
They had these feet things
where the feet would
rest on a part
of the stroller.
When you would push him in the stroller,
he would raise his hand like he was in a chariot
and like there was a horse in front
of him.
So you always
knew that, I always knew that
he liked to improvise and he liked to imagine.
So, so as part of the theater, we created a children's school. It was called the children's
school of the development of intuitive and God conscious art. And, and all the kids, what they
did was they performed and they created plays and so he uh oh i wish i had
i wish i had the um video i'm sure we could find it if you do send it to me and i'll post it oh
yeah we'll post it on our instagram right and um he um and he would perform he he was so into it
like all the other kids would be singing and dancing but he would be really into it he would perform. He was so into it. Like all the other kids would be singing and dancing,
but he would be really into it.
He would like put 199% into his performances.
And so we knew then that he was destined,
that he wanted to do it.
And then Shirley, when did you start submitting him
for auditions as a child?
How old was he?
Oh, no, he didn't.
He didn't start doing that until he was 12 years old.
Boy, you got that one commercial that I always joke about.
He was 12.
He was 12.
Yeah.
You have been away a long time.
I've got his line memorized for decades now.
But you have been away a long time.
But you know what, though?
He went and got, okay, we had a neighbor that lived on the floor above us who was a photographer.
And her son was a big-time actor.
Actor, right.
And so she took his photograph.
He had two, like the two proofs.
He took one of the proofs, and he went to Abrams Artists.
That's where I was.
He went to Abrams Artists.
He was 12 years old.
They sent him on an audition.
He had his bus pass.
He went to the audition with his bus pass.
He got a call back.
He went to the call back.
He booked it.
He said, Ma, they told me I need to bring a guardian now.
You don't have to bring a guardian to the audition, but if you get the job, you got to bring a guardian.
You get the job.
So he booked his first audition.
It was Oatmeal Raisin Crisp.
Look what they've done to my
oatmeal. Yes. I didn't know you'd
gotten, I just always assumed you only got one
commercial, you got multiple. No, the first audition
I ever went out for was this new
cereal that was coming out called Oatmeal Raisin
Crisp. And I remember
I was just like, I'm just gonna sing.
I'd never heard the song. It was like,
look what they've done. It's an old
song, and I was like, I'm just going to sing.
And I remember singing it and them being like, oh, he's so adorable.
And then what I did on the audition wasn't exactly what I had to do in the commercial.
Like in the commercial, I had to be like, look what they've done to oatmeal.
And in the audition, I remember in the audition, I was like, Look what they've done to my meal.
Look what they've done to old me.
Now for goodness sake, they got them crispy flakes
with a whole new taste appeal.
Yeah.
Look what they've done to O'Meal.
Right.
And so that's what I did.
I pretty much went on the audition and was like trying to Christina Aguilera the part.
But it worked.
You got it.
And I got it.
And then when I got to the audition, I mean, to the actual shoot, I tried to do that.
And they were like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Your line is, look what they've done to O'Meal.
Stop singing.
Stop singing.
They're like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Your line is, look what they've done to Oatmeal.
Stop singing.
Stop singing.
So I was like, and you have to do it in like, and you have to do it in five seconds or three seconds.
And I was like, oh, shucks.
So the commercial comes out and, you know, it's the quickest thing ever at the end of
every one of them too.
And it played everywhere for such a long time.
Look what they've done to Oatmeal.
And that was it.
Oh, I got to look that one up on YouTube.
You can find it, I'm sure.
And then after that was TurboGrafx-16, right?
I don't remember.
It was that TurboGrafx-16,
which was like right around the time Sega came out
and all of that stuff.
And then came the Folgers coffee commercial.
Oh, no, wait.
Folgers came before Toy World Graphics
that's right I take that back so Shirley what was it like as a mom you know this business is so
close to impossible and then here's your 12 year old booking commercials that must have been
exciting well well I was running a theater and so I couldn't take him. So I would hire the actors to take him to his shoots because I couldn't go.
So, yeah.
So you really never got to experience it other than watching it, huh?
Except for when we did the Folgers commercial.
You did come with me to that.
Yeah, I did.
I did go to the Folgers commercial.
And I went to Washington, D.C. when you shot the Polaroid commercial that never aired. That never aired, right. Right, yeah. I remember that, too. So I did go to the Folgers commercial and I went to Washington, D.C. when you shot the Polaroid commercial that never aired.
That never aired. Right. Right. Yeah. So I did go to that one.
But I never I never like one time he would go to California and test.
I'd never went. Yeah, I went once. I went once. I went once.
That was when Tevin Campbell blew me out the water. No, grandma was with me when that happened.
Yeah. What happened? So I went on an audition back in the day
for this Quincy Jones pilot, right?
And it was about the dude who got the star of the show
was Skippy from Family Ties.
Remember Skippy, Alex's best friend?
Yeah.
So he's the lead on the show.
And he plays this record producer or something like that.
And out of New York, I was the one that made it out of New York.
But I had to go to LA.
I get to LA.
Wait, how old are you at this point?
I'm not even in high school yet.
You know what I mean?
So you had to have a guardian to fly with you?
Yes.
His grandmother went.
My grandmother went with me, right?
And, you know, we get there and I'm feeling good.
I'm singing in the audition.
I come out to Tina Arnold's there and she's like, wow, that was really good.
Now, I had seen her in Little Shop already.
She was in Little Shop of Horror already and she was in all of these other things.
And I was like, holy cow, a bona fide celebrity, a bona fide star told me I did a good job on this audition.
So I'm like, I think I got this.
I go to L.A. with my grandmother. We walk in, Tisha Campbell's at the audition. Like now it's like big leagues. Now it's like, holy cow, everybody is here. And there's these two kids
there that are auditioning for my part, but I had never heard of them. One's name was Rahsaan Patterson, and the other kid's
name was Tevin Campbell. And I'm like, there's no way these two suckers is going to be me for this
part. I can't wait to go in. So Rahsaan Patterson goes in first, crushes. I'm like, he was good.
You can hear him through the walls?
Yes. But I'm like, I got this. Tevin Campbell goes in next.
I don't know if you people out there know who Tevin Campbell is.
Tevin Campbell's the one that sang that song.
Can we talk for a minute?
Not just that, but at the time.
I guess tomorrow we'll bring a better you, a better me.
And know that we'll show this world.
Right?
Whatever that song was.
And then after that, he's had songs like,
Can we talk for a minute?
Girl, I want to know your name.
Right?
He's had several hits.
J. Will's going to light a lighter pretty soon.
Several hits since then.
He goes in and fucking slays.
And you have to go after him yes now i go in the piano
player is not in my key and he's singing that he's playing the shit real high so now i'm like
you and i must make a pat and i'm like i fucking don't get i'm not gonna get this part
i was like at least when when they have me, I know I'll take these guys out because I
know I can read, right?
I know these guys are singers, but I'm the actor in the bunch.
They had me read.
No, they didn't even get, I didn't even get to the read.
They were like, after I finished, I came out, I sat down and I could tell people in the
audience were like, I mean, in the audition, like, it didn't go that well.
They're like, oh, and I'm sitting there.
My grandmother's like, you did all right, baby.
Don't worry about it.
And they come on, they go, Donald, you can leave now.
Thank you.
And I was like, oof.
And like, I had my suitcase.
Like, we had just got off the plane.
Like, all of that shit.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, it hurts.
And then that night, we hung out with the other girl who didn't get the part also we went bowling and all of that stuff
but i just remember walking as soon as i was done singing they were like thank you donald
and all because the pianist wasn't playing it in your key no all because tevin campbell got in my
freaking soul and destroyed all my comments.
It always sucks when you can, you know, sometimes
for those of you who don't know, when you're in an
audition room, you can hear, it's like
you're just outside the door, and so
you can hear other people going,
and that just can be such a mindfuck.
It can be a boost
if the person sucks, and you're like, oh, I got
the... I remember sitting in waiting rooms when I first got
out to Hollywood, and I'd look around the waiting room, and I'd just be so insecure, and all these guys were so good-looking, and I'd're like, oh, I got that. I remember sitting in waiting rooms when I first got out to Hollywood and I'd look around the waiting room and I'd just be so insecure.
And all these guys were so good looking.
And I'd be like, I'm never going to.
What the fuck am I doing?
These guys are like models.
And then I'd hear them go and I'd be like, oh, well, I can act.
I've got a shot.
Remember when Sean Wayne sent you to the bathroom?
Yeah, so, no, not Sean, Marlon.
Marlon.
So I grew up with Marlon Wayans, Omar Epps.
They went to LaGuardia.
And my brother, my friend Mitch, and the three of them, they're like best friends.
They're like the three of them, they're like best friends. They're like the three amigos. But I used to ride the bus from my school all the way up to 125th Street, where the National Black Theater was, pretty much every day.
And they would ride all the way uptown, too.
So I was always with them.
And, you know, I got to know them.
And we would laugh and shoot the shit all the time and, you know, sometimes hang out after school.
Like, you know, it was it was they were friends of mine.
And one I didn't know Marlon was an actor.
And one time I went on an audition and he was there and I was like, hey, man, what are you doing here?
It's like I'm auditioning. He's like, what are you doing? I said, I'm auditioning.
I was like, where where where's the room at? Oh, he goes, he says, it's down the hall.
It's that way.
Go through that door, through that door, and then around the corner.
And then it's like the last door all the way down the corridor.
And I was like, thanks, man.
I was like, break a leg.
He was like, you too.
It looked like he was getting on the elevator.
I walk all the way down there.
No. After signing there. No.
After signing in.
No.
I walk all the way down there
and it turns out
to be the bathroom.
And I'm like,
what the fuck?
So I come all the way back
and where the sign-in sheet was
was the door to go
into the audition.
So I opened the door
to go into audition
and he's sitting in the room
smiling at me like hey man
and he totally mind fucked me
I didn't get that part either man
there's so many tricks that people do
as actors in the waiting room
there's the guy
who tries to keep you talking
talking the whole time
so you're not getting in your head about
getting in your head space to go in and kill it
did I tell you guys about the guy who used to come out of every audition crying?
I forgot about the sister.
I did.
In case you missed that, the short version is he'd come out and he'd be crying.
And we would all be looking at the pages like, where the fuck is the crying scene?
And he would just throw it in because he could cry on cue like that.
And he'd be like swiping his tears.
He'd come out like, good luck, everybody. Break everybody break a leg and we're like what's going on and then i once finally
asked him i was like dude why are you crying in a re-audition he's like oh people love it when you
can cry like that they don't care if it's even in the scene they just they think you're a good actor
i'm like well how do you do that he goes i just think of anyone doing anything mean to animals
and i was like and i'm sitting there like thinking of people doing mean things to animals
and no tears are coming i'm like fuck that guy dude i hate that man i mean i love it it's a it's
a great skill to have but you know crying doesn't make you a good actor no i know i'm just talking
about mine i'm just talking about going off of what you said about all the shenanigans that
happen in in casting waiting rooms people trying to mindfuck each other.
Yeah.
And it still happens.
Like, I'll go on auditions now.
Like, I auditioned for a television show two years ago when everybody was auditioning and you could still go on.
And this one person in the waiting room just kept talking to me.
And I was like, dude, I know what you're doing.
Please stop. And it's okay. you don't have to do this we're all gonna get our shot better than this
don't have to do this man yeah he just kept doing it and i was like you know what i'm gonna just
step outside yeah since i've been an agent um we should get into that story before we
well we can we can do them simultaneously.
But yeah, Shirley, tell us about what you're about to say, and then I want to ask you a question about aging.
Right.
Well, since I've been an agent, there was a mother that would take her child to the audition, and they would bring their boa constrictor with them.
So if you could imagine a bunch of kids in an audition and somebody walks in with
a boa constrictor. Right. All the kids are going crazy for the snake. Pet the snake and hold the
snake and not really concentrate. Or be afraid of the snake or whatever it is. It can be such a,
you know, you can work a week on an audition. It's like, you know, it's the analogy I often
think of as the Olympics in that it doesn't matter how long you train.
It doesn't matter how great you were in your home gym or in your living room.
All that matters is what you do when you walk in that room and, and you can get so easily,
well, it's easy to get mind fucked by what's happening outside the room and what's going
on in your head that day.
Yeah.
It's, it's. The distraction is real.
And you only get one shot when you go on an audition, too. That's the thing that they don't, you know, that's the thing that they don't train you for.
You can rehearse and rehearse and rehearse and rehearse.
One slip up and, you know, casting most likely is moving on, you know.
most likely is moving on.
For the most part, if you can walk in and give perfection when you audition, you're most likely going to get the part.
If you have the look, that's a bonus.
But if you can deliver that one time, right now, deliver,
they're going to hire you.
And in an interesting way that's unique
and different
different from
everybody else
but wait Shirley
I want to go back
to just like
keeping in Donald's career
so then what
what was the next
big thing Donald
was it Clueless
or Titans
no I didn't
I did a bunch
of really small
indie movies
that turned out
to be really big
before that
before I did Clueless and before
I did Remember the Titans. Like I did this movie Sugar Hill. Well, I did a bunch of television,
like little parts here on TV. And we met Wesley Snipes. And I remember I auditioned
for Sugar Hill and got the part. And I had worked. Wesley Snipes walked me and my mom
home to the subway. Was it to the subway or was it, what was it?
Oh, I don't remember that.
Okay, so when I got a small part where I was, where New York was, the name of the show was called Help.
Oh, yeah.
And New York was overrun by rats in one of the episodes.
overrun by rats in one of the episodes. And I had one line and they made me dress up like I was a street thug. And the news is on me and I'm rapping to the camera and I go, hey, New York,
don't worry about nothing. We here to do some serious rap busting. And I got a bat in my hand,
right? And Wesley Snipes plays like a cop on the show.
And after I did that scene, he walked with me and my mom to the subway station.
He walked us to the subway station.
He gave us his whole spiel on Noah, who he was and what he had, you know, what he was
up to.
About four years later, I guess it was my senior year and it wasn't my senior, junior or senior year in high school, I got a part.
I started getting small parts in movies.
Juice was first, and then Sugar Hill.
And Wesley Snipes was in Sugar Hill.
And I remember we're doing a bunch of scenes and stuff, and I was like, you don't remember where you met me, do you?
Like, of course I do, man.
We met on Help 911 know a few years ago i'm you know i'm i'm really happy
you're here right now and i was like holy shit wesley snipes remembers me this big this big
huge star remembers me but then there were small roles in small movies that turned out to be like
either a hood classic like juice and and uh sugar hill are straight hood classics
man michael uh michael wright's in one is in sugar hill like it's it's it's i was very lucky
to be around a lot of the people i grew up with in the building that my mom lives in now so like
uh wesley snipes michael wright all of these actors would come and frequent Manhattan Plaza.
Yeah, what was it, Shirley, about that building
that attracted so many actors?
Well, what happened was that
Manhattan Plaza was supposed to be a luxury building
because the convention center was supposed to be built
where it is now, but years before, the convention center didn't happen then.
And so the Actors' Equity and SAG lobbied for the building to be a residence for artists.
residents for artists.
Who was the person who spearheaded
that? Punjab
from Annie, right? The guy who played...
Yes.
Geoffrey Holder.
Geoffrey Holder was one of the
people... Wasn't he the
7-Up guy? Yeah.
Ha ha ha.
Sebastian from Little Mermaid, too. performing artists or artist personnel. So screenwriters like Angela Lansbury lived here.
Tennessee Williams lived here.
Nell Carter.
Nell Carter.
And Alicia Keys grew up with Shun here.
And it was a building.
It is still a building for performing artists.
Wow.
It's still that way.
They still have that.
Wow.
Yes, yes.
I mean, and it's so amazing
because I'm on the Tenants Association here.
I'm one of the VPs.
And we try to make sure
that we have things in the building
that support artists and support.
So like during COVID,
we did concerts on the plaza, where people could actually sit on their balconies and listen to the music.
That's so cool. which is another part we'd have string orchestras out there. And so,
so that people that lived in that area would be able to,
to view it.
When I think about it,
mom,
you set me up to be what I am right now because of,
you know,
your,
your tenacity to get into the building.
First of all,
like you were like,
I'm going to get us into this building.
And you did that.
And so then now I'm surrounded by all of these actors and musicians and entertainers and writers and like Larry Davids from Manhatta.
Seinfeld is based on Manhattan Plaza.
You know what I mean?
Larry Davids neighbor.
Right.
He's no, he wasn't.
No.
Kramer.
The actual Kenny Kramer.
I grew up with his daughter. You know what I mean? And so,
and so like I was always around actors.
So it was always a possibility in my mind. I can do it. I've seen,
I've seen my neighbor do it. My next door neighbors on freaking Broadway.
You know what I mean? So I always thought.
And you're right in the middle of it. I mean, you're, you're,
you're a block from time Square where it's all happening.
But not just that.
But then I would go uptown to Harlem, and my mom's directing plays.
And you know what I mean?
So I'm like, I can do this.
I know I can do this.
I'm seeing my mom do it.
I know I can do it.
And so I knew at a very young age I was going to be an actor. And it's really because of you, Mom, because you kind of set me up to be where I'm at right now.
You know, people talk about momagers and everything like that.
My mom wasn't a momager or anything like that.
But I missed out on quite a few things.
Like I was a pretty good athlete.
I missed out on basketball.
I missed out on baseball.
Like real big games and stuff.
My mom would be like, you have an audition.
And I would never get those parts.
But she was setting me up for, you know, success.
And I appreciate that so much. Oh, thank you. Thank you.
Let's take a break. We'll be right back after these fine words.
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Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
Shirley, tell us about, like, what was a big,
like, he was getting these smaller parts,
and then what did you feel?
And I don't know the chronology, if it was Clueless or Titans.
But what was like a oh shit next step for Donald's career?
Hmm.
How about this, Mom?
When were you like, oh shit, he's going to do it.
He's really going to do it.
No, I knew I knew he was going to do it from the very beginning.
And it wasn't, you know, you know, there's sometimes when there are kids that there's a
point in their life where they do a whole bunch of stuff and then they don't do anything else.
Yeah. He had a steady, constant career. So maybe he might do one thing a year or two things a year,
but he would always do something. So I knew that it was,
it was something that was constant. It wasn't something that was just, oh, he's cute right now.
And so he's going to work right now. I was really clear that he was going to, there was going to be
longevity in, in his career. And, and so we supported him in, in him in doing that.
And I remember one year, we went to the movies to see something.
I don't remember what it was. But the preview for upcoming attractions came on.
And there he was.
And it was New Year's Eve, I think, that we had gone to the movies.
And it was like, oh, my God.
His scene was in the coming
attraction and i was i was like oh my goodness this is amazing you know what movie was that
probably remember the titans no it was before remember the titans oh yeah i don't think I... Okay, sure. I remember when I knew that it was...
I knew that I had reached a level when I was...
Disney rented out a movie theater for my mom and all of her friends and myself to go watch Remember the Titan.
Wow.
Before it came out.
Wow.
And that was when I was like, holy shit.
You know, I had done Clueless already. I had done Waiting to Exhale already. But that's when I was like, holy shit. I had done Clueless already. I had done
Waiting to Exhale already. But that's when I was like, holy shit. There's a scene in Notorious
where Biggie's sitting down and he's listening to Sky's the Limit. He's like, holy shit, I did it.
I did it. I'm the best rapper alive. I did it. I did it. And I didn't think I was the best actor alive, but I was like, holy shit, I did it.
In a movie with an actor, my mom has always talked about my whole life.
Ever since I can remember, Denzel, like this, like I used to make a joke.
There's three pictures in the house growing up.
There was a picture of jesus a picture of dr
martin luther king and then a picture of denzel washington yeah right and so and so my i remember
doing being there and seeing my mom my friends everybody like caught up in this movie and not
really thinking about me in the movie
just being caught up in the moment
you know what I mean, in the magic
and saying holy shit I did it
I finally, I did it
I did it, I know
I knew walking out of that theater
my mom was on cloud nine
because of it, even if
I don't know if she liked Clueless, I don't know if you liked
I'm sure you liked Waiting to Exhale. But I knew
you were on cloud
nine when you walked out of the theater
after watching Remember the Titans.
Because everybody else was. You know what I mean?
Yeah. The thing about Remember the Titans
also that I loved was the historical
element
about it.
And I remember
watching it and
there was a moment where everybody,
all my friends, we all just stood
up. I mean, it was just so
emotional.
And it holds up. I mean, I just recently
saw it for the first time,
which Donald
loves to talk about.
But it
holds up today. I was on the bridge of standing up and applauding when. But it holds up today.
I was on the verge of standing up and applauding
when I watched it in my house.
It's one of the, yeah.
I knew after that, I was like,
whatever happens after this is gravy.
I had no idea that Scrubs would be next.
It went from, my 20s were fucking awesome
because of the work that I got to do clueless
remember the titans wait and exhale scrubs like all of those things came into play in my 20s
surely do you remember um just now that he brought up scrubs do you remember like that like finding
out that he got it like knowing that he had that he was a serious contender for it and then all of
a sudden he got this primetime show.
She didn't know nothing about it until we came to upfronts and I took it.
Yeah.
Oh really? What's that story? You just, you didn't, cause you didn't want to,
you didn't want to like have her be.
Well, I had been on a television. I had been on a television.
I had been on several television shows before scrubs that.
Yeah. He had done clueless and felicity.
Right. Right. That were struggling to stay on the
air you know what i mean right like really struggling so then what did you tell her at
the upfronts like how did that go down i was like hey i got a show do you uh why don't you come with
me to up front that's the year that you they were like donald you didn't get the memo it was that
year oh that's so yeah we went was that year one yeah we all went to our first big event, and we were all dressed up, and Donald's, like, in sweatpants.
And I remember, like, some photographer was like,
what's the matter, Donald?
Didn't get the memo?
Right.
But anyway, my mom, for the first time, saw it,
because, you know, they would play a sizzle reel of the show at the upfronts.
And she saw it for the first time.
She was like, it's really good.
Oh, my God, it's so good.
I can't believe this is so good. And I was like, yeah really good oh my god it's so good i can't believe this is so
good and i was like yeah we'll see how it goes we'll see how it goes and that night i gave jeff
zucker a noogie yeah good times yeah um mom i want to talk about one thing so um let's talk about how
you became an agent yeah that was really interesting to me I remember you just always
being like I'm going to be involved in your career and I remember me always fighting you
saying there's no way I'm ever going to let you be a part of all of this and then the next thing
I know you were working at my agent's office yeah well well okay so I became it was a life change a
career change um because I had been working in theater. I had been a development
officer. I'd been a director. I'd been a producer. I'd been executive director. And at some point,
I got burnout. And also, me and Donald's father broke up. And I worked with him. And so I wanted to do something different. And Shun was working at the agency as an assistant and he was going to go
to do something. It wasn't clueless because I was there when he got clueless. It was something else
he was going to test for something. And I asked you to cover for me. Yeah, you did. You asked me
to cover for you. Well, because i wanted to shift what i was doing
and so i covered for him and when he got back he didn't have a job
by the way this sounds like the funniest movie i would so watch this movie a guy has a job and
he's like mom i need a favor cover for me i came back they were like you can't work here no more
i was like wait what are you talking about?
Your mom's running the place.
They're like, well, yeah.
I mean, now it's to the point where she's a partner.
No, I'm saying, of course, I want to hear that.
But I think it's funny that your mom was doing your job so well that they were like, no, bro, sorry.
You're gone.
Well, I was horrible at the job.
Like, I sucked at it.
I was really bad.
It has a lot to – there was a lot of typing and spelling and reading involved.
And Zach, you know me, I'm not strong in any of those categories.
So I had to, I had to, I had to relinquish that job.
And that was, that was before word processing.
So it was a typewriter.
Right.
So it was a typewriter. Right. I went and I and I covered for him and I communicated that I wanted to become an agent.
And so after about six months of being, quote unquote, an assistant, I got my sub franchise.
And I and so Carson Adler was known as a children's agency.
And Nancy asked me what I wanted to do. And I it's hard working with parents. It really is. And so I said I wanted to focus more on young adults and adults.
So I started the the young adult adult vision of the division of the agency. It's become quite successful. Let's talk about some of the people that you represented
or some of the people that have come through that agency
that are now big time in Hollywood.
Well, one of my clients was Constance Wu.
I represented her right out of college.
I represented Laz Alonso.
I've represented B.B. Winans, Stephanie Mills, Robin Givens.
Let's talk about some of the kids that you used to take to their auditions.
Is it true you used to take Kristen Bell to her auditions?
Yes, I did.
I did, because she would fly in from Chicago.
And Nancy would pick her up from the airport
and bring her to the agency.
And then I would take her to her auditions
and then Nancy would take her back to the airport
and she would fly back to Chicago at the end of the day.
I ran into Leah Michelle.
Is that her name?
Yeah.
And same thing with her, right?
Yeah.
Well, Leah lived in New York.
Right.
And so she actually would go on her own auditions,
but she would come in the office a lot.
And Bethany Joy Lenz, David Krumholz.
Krumholz.
I remember Krumholz back in the day Yeah, I was a kid actor
at a place called Fox Albert
You remember them?
Oh yes, I do, I remember Fox Albert
So that's where I was
It was a similar situation to you
I'd come in and I was too young sometimes
I was too young in the beginning
and I'd have a guardian or someone with me
and sometimes someone from the agency would take me around
because I was so young and wide-eyed
and didn't know New York.
Yeah.
It's really interesting how many people come up to me
in Hollywood.
You know, it used to be everybody who was African-American.
Like, your mom was my agent in New York City.
It happens to me, too.
By the way, when I walk around Manhattan
or the theater district,
people know that I know you obviously and they they use shirley as a way to start
talking to me they're like i know shirley faze on and i'm like okay everybody knows shirley faze on
we're in the theater district calm down but that's something that you really like that's where you
thrive also like you have you've had you have people that turned into movie stars and stuff like that.
But you thrive on Broadway and off-Broadway, right?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Well, before the pandemic, because Broadway's not happening right now.
But Hamilton, Lion King, name a show.
What was the one that Zach and I love so much?
You'll have to be more specific the one the one with the josh gad that josh gad was in oh a book of mormon oh yes i've
had i've had people in book of mormon yes um surely this is a question i get all the time and i never
know the answer to it because i was a kid actor and, uh, and, and I had a, and I had a weird kind of way into the business, but for those people listening
who either they, or they have a child that aspires, like, how do you even begin to get an
agent in, in 2021? Like, I don't even, I don't even know what to tell people how to, how to do it.
Um, there's several ways. Um, as an agent, I go to showcases.
So and if there's a reputable school that you go to and they do a showcase, I'll go to the showcase if they hold a showcase.
And I will see who I like and speak to the person who teaches the classes about that particular person.
Or a teacher might say, you know,
I have an incredible student that I would like for you to see.
Also, I go to shows, off-Broadway, little theaters. And if there's someone that I like, I will speak to whomever to get in touch with them.
Sometimes I might see a YouTube video and,
and, and it's like, Oh my God, that person's amazing.
And I might try to reach out to them. That's a little, you know,
if a person has a whole lot of followers,
then, you know, a larger agency is going to try to scoop them,
grab them before I can get to them.
But they're tough.
The most important thing, it seems like,
is to find a way to not only be in something,
but then get talent agents to come to the thing.
I mean, that's the most important thing,
is to have them see you do something.
Right. Yes, exactly.
You guys don't do open calls anymore?
Like have people come in and just...
Well, I have to do that with Screen Actors Guild
and with Actors' Equity Association.
But as far as people just coming into the office
and doing an open call that way,
no, I make appointments.
And now during
COVID, I do Zoom appointments. When I was at my last year at Northwestern, we had a showcase.
And that was really helpful. They invite casting directors and agents and managers, and you do
like a dramatic monologue. No, sorry. I did a dramatic scene and a comedic scene. And
I don't think anything
really fully materialized from it but it was like a good it was good experience and i got some some
nibbles and i remember one of them was from blue man group because they were just they were just
looking for anyone that was six feet tall willing to put on that blue makeup yeah that was like
basically their attitude was like we can teach you everything we can teach you to drum we can teach you to drum. We can teach you to whatever you need to do.
But you need to be six foot tall and willing to shave your head and turn blue.
And I was like, no, I'm good.
Thanks, Blue Man Group.
And then fast forward to Blue Man Group on Scrubs.
Right.
And then we had them on Scrubs.
There you go.
We have a caller, Mom.
Yes.
Your mom might not even know that we take callers.
We take callers on this show for, you show for the three times that you've listened.
I'm sure you probably...
We don't know if you've made it to the caller section.
Yes, I have.
Yes, I have.
I have.
I have.
Okay.
We're going to invite a caller in, and they're going to ask two questions, right, Joel?
And then we do a segment called Fix Their Life, where we're going to enlist you to help us fix their life.
Okay.
We become pop psychologists for 10 minutes.
Okay.
Before we do that, we'll go to break, though, right?
Okay.
We're going to take a commercial break, and we'll be right back.
Bring a little optimism into your life with The Bright Side, a new kind of daily podcast from Hello Sunshine.
Hosted by me, Danielle Robay.
And me, Simone Boyce.
Every weekday, we're bringing you conversations about culture,
the latest trends, inspiration, and so much more.
I am so excited about this podcast, The Bright Side.
You guys are giving people a chance to shine a light on their lives,
shine a light on a little advice that they want to share.
Listen to The Bright Side on America's number one podcast network, iHeart.
Open your free iHeart app and search The Bright Side on America's number one podcast network, iHeart. Open your free iHeart app and search The Bright Side.
All that sitting and swiping, our backs hurt, our eyeballs sting.
That's our bodies adapting to our technology.
But we can do something about it.
We saw amazing effects.
I really felt like the cloud in my brain kind of dissipated.
There's no turning back for me.
Make 2024 the year you put your health before your inbox and take the Body Electric Challenge.
Listen to Body Electric from NPR on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, good people.
This is Laia.
Now, for years, we have celebrated Women's History Month at QLS with a
month of very special programming. This year we have three Grammy award-winning ladies, Brittany
Howard, Corinne Bailey Ray, and Letticey. All three of these artists make music and write songs that
fit many genres and each will be discussing new songs and albums. We also have the incomparable, incredible queen of dance, Fatima Robinson,
who has won NAACP Image Awards, choreographed the Oscars, the Grammys,
your favorite Gap ad, and Super Bowls.
You know her from her work with Beyonce, Mary J. Blige, and of course, Aaliyah,
and most recently, the color purple.
Celebrate women's history with us at Questlove Supreme every week in March.
Listen to QLS on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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.
The Daily Show podcast has everything you need
to stay on top of today's news and pop culture.
You get hilarious satirical takes on entertainment,
politics, sports, and more from John
and the team of correspondents and contributors.
The podcast also has content you can't get anywhere else,
like extended interviews and a roundup of the weekly headlines.
Listen to The Daily Show Ears Edition on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
And we're back!
And we're back!
Ah!
All right, so Joelle, Daniel, bring in the guest,
and let's wow them on a Sunday.
Or a Tuesday, my birthday, when you're listening to this.
Here comes Teddy Shapiro.
Teddy Shapiro.
All right.
Give it up for Theodore Shapiro!
There he is. There he is.
Thunderous applause, Dan.
Hi, Teddy Shapiro.
Thunderous applause.
Oh, my God.
There you are.
How are you, Teddy Shapiro?
How are you, Theodore?
How are you, Theodore?
I am great.
Thank you, Donald.
How are you?
I am well, thank you for asking.
We have my lovely mother, Shirley Faison with us.
Mrs. Faison, how are you?
I'm good. How are you, Ted?
I'm good, thank you. And that's of course
legendary Daniel and legendary Joelle.
Pleasure. Welcome.
And that right there is the one and only Zach Braff.
Yes, I have on my terrycloth
shirt for you today because it's a gorgeous
day in Los Angeles. Beautiful day
in Chicago. I didn't want you to see me naked, so I put my Terry Cloth shirt on. Thank you.
Welcome to the program. We're so happy you're here. You have the added advantage of having
the legendary Shirley Faison on the program. Do you have a question for us that we can answer?
I do. I do. My first question is for Donald and Zach is, you know,
I know you guys are best friends,
but when did you guys first feel like that connection?
And when did you guys first realize like, oh,
this is going to be my man and my man for like ever?
Instantaneously.
Yeah, it was. I mean.
Well, Donald has a different answer.
Instantaneously.
He had me at first hip hop hug.
It wasn't a hip hop hug. It was a hip hip-hop hug. It wasn't a hip-hop
hug, Dick Nye. It was a hip-hop hug, Donald.
It wasn't, Dick Nye. Are you implying we
went groin to groin in Bill's living room?
I don't think so. I'm pretty sure we went groin to
groin in Bill's living room. No, I think there was the arm barrier.
There was no
barrier. There was no barrier.
It was a
hey, hey, hey!
And then a big hug
I've said this before but I was nervous because I
I knew who he was
obviously he was a famous actor
and I was kind of like what's this going to be like
he's going to play my best friend will he be cool
will he be arrogant what's the vibe going to be
and we were in Bill's and Krista's
living room and he was at the bar
there was a little bar area
and he turned around and he went and he was at the bar. There was a, you know, a little bar area and he turned around
and he went,
hey!
And I was like,
oh,
I already love this guy.
And then we had a big hug
which may or not
been growing to growing,
I don't recall.
And,
and we never looked back.
Donald,
when did you think
that you realized
that you loved me?
I knew we were best friends
when we were living in New York
one year after the first season
of Scrubs.
We were living in New York
and we were in our underwear playing ping pong yes and I was like that's my best friend
it's legendary I had to break it to Donald that um his room was the laundry room because I'd gotten
there first and he was like I'm not Benson I'm not Benson so I wound up staying like on a cot
right outside of his.
No, it wasn't a cot.
It was a bed.
It was very intimate.
We basically shared a room.
Yes.
Oh, look at the martini coming out of Teddy.
All right, Teddy.
Teddy, it's early.
Look at you.
Oh, it's not early Chicago.
You're in Chicago.
It's seven or six?
Six.
Six.
Nice.
All right.
Go for yours.
All right, Teddy, next question.
Go.
All right. Go for yours. All right, Teddy. Next question. Go.
And then just what kind of what actor, producer, writer, director kind of had the most profound impact on yours and Donald's career from, you know, going forward?
Well, I'm going to give a controversial answer, but it's not, it's the answer. I'm going to give you the true answer, which is Woody Allen. And I know that that's extraordinarily because of all the stuff we're
learning now. But when I was growing up, he was a Godhead to my family.
It was my parents' favorite. It's all, you know, if we,
if the humor was what we grew up on, it was, you know,
that sort of East coast neurotic Jewish guy.
And I think it did, it did inform a lot of my comedic timing.
He wasn't the only one.
There were others like Neil Simon and Mel Brooks.
But definitely my mother and father's love of his movies was sort of ingrained upon us.
That's what was funny.
That comedic timing and his style of storytelling was definitely very impactful.
And I think impactful on the films that I make as well.
So I'm a huge fan of Star Wars.
So Harrison Ford and Billy Dee Williams are, you know,
like when I was a kid, that was what was cool to me.
When I got to high school
though, Kadeem Hardison
was my...
I idolized Kadeem
Hardison. I even had the glasses that flipped up.
You know what I mean? He played
Dwayne Wayne
on A Different World,
which was a spinoff from The Cosby Show.
And I
thought he was everything. I even from The Cosby Show. And I thought he was, you know, everything.
Like, I even tried to dress like him.
Any movie that he was in, from, like, School Days to Vampire in Brooklyn,
I had to see it, you know?
And White Men Can't Jump.
And he's also the one that kind of, when I was at a point where I needed to,
okay, what am
I going to do?
How am I going to do this?
I performed in front of him once and he came up.
It was a bunch of us performing, but I had a monologue.
And after the show was over, he came to me and hugged me and squeezed me tight.
He was like, yo man, that was amazing.
And he kind of set me on the adult
path of, yo, if Kadeem
Hardison says I can do it, if the dude that I
tried to be like came here and told me I
was amazing, I'm going for
this.
And then also Denzel Washington.
Yeah.
Does Kadeem,
does he still work?
Oh, absolutely. I haven't seen him that much but he was so good
I saw him in something recently
I saw him in something recently
it was a short lived TV series
no he was on a long lived TV series
with Zendaya
they did a television show together
on Disney I think
and I think he might be working right now on something.
He was so...
There was a point in our childhoods
when that show was at its height of popularity
and everybody looked up to that guy.
He was like the ultimate...
He was kind of like a Ferris Bueller type character.
Yeah, he was...
I hate to compare it like that, but yeah, he was like the black Ferris Bueller.
Like he was the dude that was kind of a geek, but somehow got the hot girl.
Yeah.
Yeah, he was on Casey Undercover.
That's what it was.
He used his charms to win over the ladies.
Yeah, Jasmine Guy and Lisa Bonet were the two ladies that he used his charm to win over.
You know what happens when you say the word Lisa Bonet to me?
I hear this.
Mm-hmm.
I heard that.
I heard that.
Whoo!
Zoe too, man.
Zoe fine too.
Don't get it twisted.
She looked just like her mom.
Daniel, I need this put in the sound pad.
Whoo!
Gotcha.
I'm setting it on over.
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. All that sitting and swiping, our backs hurt, our eyeballs sting.
That's our bodies adapting to our technology.
But we can do something about it.
We saw amazing effects.
I really felt like the cloud in my brain kind of dissipated.
There's no turning back for me.
Make 2024 the year you put your health before your inbox.
And take the Body Electric Challenge.
Listen to Body Electric from NPR on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, good people. This is Laia.
Now, for years, we have celebrated Women's History Month at QLS with a month of very special programming.
This year, we have three Grammy Award winning ladies,
Brittany Howard, Corinne Bailey Ray,
and Lettucey.
All three of these artists make music
and write songs that fit many
genres, and each will be discussing
new songs and albums.
We also have the incomparable,
incredible Queen of Dance,
Fatima Robinson, who has won
NAACP Image Awards,
choreographed the Oscars, the Grammys,
your favorite Gap ad, and Super Bowls.
You know her from her work with Beyonce,
Mary J. Blige, and of course, Aaliyah,
and most recently, the color purple.
Celebrate women's history with us
at Questlove Supreme every week in March.
Listen to QLS on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
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.
The Daily Show podcast has everything you need to stay on top of today's news and pop culture.
You get hilarious satirical takes on entertainment, politics, sports,
and more from John and the team of correspondents and contributors.
The podcast also has content you can't get anywhere else,
like extended interviews and a roundup of the weekly headlines.
Listen to The Daily Show, ears edition on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
Oh, no, she's still a knockout, man.
She's prettier than ever.
Yeah.
Her daughter is like an amazing actress, too.
Yeah. All right. It's is like an amazing actress too. Yeah.
All right.
It's time for Chicago's
favorite segment.
Shirley, this is when we
Fix Your Life!
All right, sir.
We are here
and we have a very brilliant mind,
Shirley Faison,
who's a great mom
and a great agent
she can help too.
What is your question?
So I'm 24, you know, just out of college and I'm still trying to find my passion. I'm in a job
that, you know, I like where I do, but I don't necessarily see myself doing it long-term.
And I'm just trying to figure out, you know, you've all clearly found your passion and
what you want to do in your life. And I'm just trying to figure it out. How do I do that with
mine? What do you love more than anything? That's a hard just trying to figure out how do I do that with mine?
What do you love more than anything?
That's a hard question.
I mean, what do you do?
What like when you when you forget anything that is a job related thing,
like take money out of the equation.
When you what do you what's happening
in your life that you're looking forward to
that you go, oh, my God, I can't wait for that.
I mean, it could be camping.
It could be traveling.
It could be anything and everything that lights you up, makes you go yes xyz is happening what is that
well i don't know if joelle told you but um i actually am a cancer survivor i'm a pediatric
cancer survivor so something that i do find a lot of joy and passion in is working with you know
kids who are in that kind of community and, you know, helping with that.
Well, bro, that's a pretty amazing place to start.
That sounds that, I mean, if you're not doing that now, I would suggest,
I mean, getting into that, especially if it makes you happy.
At the foundation of everything, you have to be happy, right?
At the foundation of everything, you have to be happy, right?
We all get into jobs, and at some point, we realize this isn't for me.
For me, it was being an assistant at an agent's office.
I knew I didn't want to do that after a few days of doing it, even though I was getting paid.
What made me happy was being an actor.
And so my whole life I pursued that.
My mom was in theater.
You could tell them.
You could tell them if you want to.
But she was in theater.
And halfway through her, well, you know, I don't know what it's, how old were you when you decided to switch, mom?
You never asked a woman her age, Donald.
I was 40.
So you were 40 years old. She was 25.
Right. You were 40 years old. She was 25. Right.
You were 40 years old.
So at 40, she was looking for something that would make her happy.
And she became an agent.
You know, if that makes you happy, why not do it?
Teddy, I just want to point something out to you.
You were kind of like shoulders over a little bit, kind of soft-spoken.
And then as you started talking about being a pediatric cancer
survivor and helping some of your shoulders went back your face lit up you your whole posture
changed it's like it's there's something in you that that lights up giving back the fact that the
fact that those people who obviously i'm sure made a difference in your life when you were a child
battling cancer and i mean that just goes to show you like that's when donald and i talk about
performing or entertaining um that's what that directing writing with that that's what happens
to us we lean forward we get passionate we start just gesticulating all over the place
and i think for you that's a good place to look now i don't know you wouldn't know better than
us about what that looks like if you're not going to go to medical school.
But I'm sure there's lots of different people that made a difference in your life that you that you could take on a similar role for for other children. Right.
Definitely. Right on. I guess.
What was your major in college?
Not yet. Not yet.
What was your major in college? Not yet, y'all. Not yet. Not yet. What was your major in college?
I majored in management and minored in general business and finance.
And what are you doing now?
I'm working as an audit and an accounting at a Fortune 500 company.
So you're doing what you went to school for, pretty much.
More or less, yeah.
Right.
I'm just, yeah, doing numbers.
And you're ready to shift?
much more or less yeah right i'm just yeah doing numbers and you're ready to shift i think i mean at a certain point i think i am because this is i'm not driven by what i'm currently doing you know
yeah now what could you do to set you on the course to to to something that that is that's
in the spirit of what we're talking about i mean something i mean i want to parlay to be able, if I could be able to like work in this industry and be able to provide for, let's say my
future family and beyond, that's something I want to take an interest in because, you know, having
that, you know, support, having, you know, monetary gain is semi-important to me as well. Not just,
not just, you know, but yeah. So it's just kind of trying to find something where I can marry,
like having a job that I'm comfortable in, as well as doing something that like I can able,
I'm able to help, you know, someone in my position or someone like that. And it's just kind of,
it's not an easy medium to find is what I've been looking into.
Yeah. The good thing about 24 is you don't you don't have a family yet and, you know,
obviously you have to pay for your rent and your food and your, your survival, but, um, but you,
but now while you're young and wide eyed, it's a great time to be trying and exploring these
things out. You know, the second you start getting, you know, having people that are reliant on you, you have a lot less freedom and
can be way less nimble. You're in a 24 is like, let me try different things. I mean, obviously,
I'm not an idiot. I know you need to make enough money to pay for your life. But it's a great time
to try out different things and, you know, get exposed to new things.
I agree.
Joelle, Daniel, do you have any thoughts on the matter?
Yeah, it doesn't last forever.
As soon as I turned 30, suddenly it was like, oh, crap,
there's so many things and people to take care of. And, yeah, I would say if you're going to do the switch, do it now
and, like, just fully embrace it.
I have a lot of friends who switch their careers around the same
age as you are now and like it's a it's a hustle but once you get there oh man what a joy to do
the thing that you love like it's still work don't let anyone tell you it's not work it's still work
but it is uh it's better work yeah and also you know your skills apply to so many different things. Like even if you're not, you know, specifically reaching out to people and talking about your experience, story of what that organization does,
it's a way to start that transition into a new career
without having to completely change your life.
Oh, my God.
That's great, Daniel.
That was great.
I'm going to say, come through.
Daniel.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Fantastic.
Daniel, only one phrase comes to mind.
You honor me.
You honor me.
You honor me. No, only one phrase comes to mind. You honor me. You honor me.
You honor me.
No, listen, by the way, Teddy, that was really, that was better advice than I gave.
I'm going to piggyback on that.
I'm going to say whatever Daniel said, that works for me. No, because it's smart.
He's smart.
What he's saying is take your skill set, bring it to an organization that, I'm just making it up, that specifically caters to and helps families dealing with pediatric cancer and say, hey, not only can I help with the face-to-face stuff, I'm interested in that.
I'm a survivor myself.
No one has more empathy than me.
But I can also bring my accounting skill set.
Do you guys need that in your organization?
I mean, you're a home-run candidate for someone who could be working for an organization like that.
That's great, Daniel.
And let's also be real.
In the sector of helping people, it's the area that has the least in terms of people who are able to crunch numbers and people who know money and people who know business.
It's like so often those kinds of people, and this is not a dig at those kind of people at all or those kinds of work.
in those kinds of people. And this is not a dig at those kind of people at all, or those kinds of work. But so often those people look for and move into huge companies, big money positions and stuff
like that. And you know, certain organizations that need money or people that are good with money
sometimes flounder in those scenarios, because people who want to help people have the compassion,
but don't necessarily always have the business mind or the skill set. So I think you could be
a huge asset to those companies. And also think about it. If you're a parent or a child going through cancer and the
young man counseling you is 24 years old, super articulate, has the empathy, and he went through
it and survived, think of the connection the young person would feel as opposed to some older
senior citizen or someone they might not be able to relate to that kid's going to be like,
Oh my God, look at Teddy. He's,
he survived and he's great and he's thriving and you'd be such a motivation to
a young person. I think.
Wow. I'm fired up, Teddy.
All right.
The good news is because you're an inspiration and because we like you extra a special amount.
Oh, thank you.
And in honor of Shirley Faison's visit,
we are going to send you a case of GT's kombucha.
Yay!
Thank you.
Do you like GT's kombucha already, Teddy?
There is a tap at work of kombucha.
I have not tried GT's, but I'm excited to try GT's.
Well, buddy, I see a fridge behind you,
and what I like to do is stack mine up like I'm in a supermarket,
so it looks all neat and aligned.
It might be my OCD.
You read my mind.
I like all my bottles stacked up neatly and with the labels facing out.
You are getting a – do we know what –
he's probably getting an array of flavors, right, Joelle?
A little bit of everything.
A sample case.
Thank you to the folks at GT's
for that. And what can we say?
What we say is you're welcome, Teddy.
You're welcome. Thank you.
I have no
doubt that you're going to make a difference
in people's lives. Donald and I go out
and hopefully make people laugh a little bit
and hopefully take their mind off some shit.
But you're someone who's going to really have
a noticeable impact on people's lives.
Yes.
Amen.
I appreciate that.
Amen.
I appreciate you, man.
Yes.
Ma, don't be shy.
You can talk.
It's okay.
Oh, no, no, no.
I'm not being shy.
I think Teddy's going to make
a tremendous contribution to,
there's so many organizations, you know, that do such great work.
They send me letters every month to give contributions.
And if Teddy changes his mind again and wants to audition
for the National Black Theater in Harlem,
would there be any opportunity for him there?
I'm sure there would be.
Hold on now.
Don't get all crazy.
They let white people do...
All you got to do is live in Harlem.
Oh, I thought it was an African-American company.
You're saying you can be white and be in the company.
You can be white and be in the company.
They do plays.
Teddy, there's hope for you.
Thank you.
You know, yeah. She's like, you can be you. You know, yeah.
She's like, you can be wide and be in the company.
We need bad guys.
I want more.
We all need bad guys.
Zach, Zach, Zach, Zach.
Oh, my God.
What the hell?
Wow.
But Teddy, it's true.
It's true.
They do need that.
I'm just kidding.
Just kidding.
Just kidding.
Or the great white hope.
Okay.
There you go.
There you go.
All right.
What else do you got to say?
On that note.
No, wait. We'll wrap it wrap it up joelle what are we missing
what do we gotta tell people um not much really i mean we should we should thank everybody for
that live show yeah thanks for coming live show holy cow man like we kept it up for a week and
the response was amazing and so thank you so much for it. Thank you so much for watching.
We had a lot of fun.
We're talking about doing one in the summer again, right?
Yes, summer jam.
I'm ready.
And I think we should have Sarah and Johnny C on the next one.
We've gotten a lot of requests for those two to make appearances again.
I definitely think we should do one with Sarah and Johnny C.
So look for that information coming to you this summer.
We should shout out all the people that are on the front lines.
You know, people that we don't talk about.
Somebody hit me up on the internet and was like, you know,
you guys always talk about the people that work in the hospital and stuff.
But there are other people on the front line that are doing this.
I think we got this.
Our trash collectors who are still out here.
Thank you.
Yes.
Where would the world be without you?
People who work at a grocery store,
my God, saviors.
Thank you for keeping us stocked and fed.
We appreciate you.
Our teachers and cross guards,
everyone who's working in school systems
helping keep children educated
when it's really scary to go outside of your house.
Bless you.
Thank you.
Who am I missing?
There's so many more.
There's so many more. There's so
many more. I just want you to know that if you're out there and you're fighting and you're helping
us fight against COVID and keeping America or the world safe, we appreciate you to the max.
Like, I can't tell you enough. I can't tell you enough. Your contribution is definitely appreciated.
So thank you very much.
I want to say, yes, thank you for that.
And I want to say that the DGA Awards,
Shirley, I'm nominated for a DGA Award.
Can you believe that?
Oh, that's amazing.
This cat's amazing.
They're April 10th.
And I don't think we're going to record another show before then, right?
No.
So next Sunday.
Sorry, next Saturday.
Next Saturday is the awards we record next Sunday.
Okay, so we won't.
We're doing one a week for now, guys, because as you know,
Donald and I are both working,
and we'll come back with an episode rewatch for you next weekend.
So anyway, I've been working on my face
because you know what the award shows,
the camera's on you.
It's going to be a Zoom camera,
but they're going to,
and you're supposed to,
if you don't win,
you have to be happy for the other people.
So I've been practicing that in case I,
do you want to see what it looks like?
Yes.
All right, so Donald, you just say,
and the winner is.
And the winner is not Zach Braff.
Wait, but
can I ask you a question?
Was that good?
Who are you looking at
when you're in your room?
Well, it's funny
because normally
when you're in an audience
at an award show,
you look around
at your people around you
and go, oh, he deserves it.
Yeah, but you're in a room
by yourself right now.
I know, but my natural instinct
as an actor
was to act like
I was looking around
at my fellow audience members
that he deserves
more than I do.
You know what I think?
I combined that with a smile and a head nod.
No?
This is what I think.
If you're going to do that, you need to make it so the camera is square up on your face like it is with me right now.
So when you look to the side, it's like a Brady Bunch situation.
You can even look down probably and up and applaud too.
Okay, because you mean the Zoom window will be all of us like this.
Absolutely.
That's funny.
Okay.
Good call.
Let me try it one more time.
Okay, here we go.
And the winner is Rebel Wilson.
Rebel Wilson.
Perfect. Justice. I think it would be better if you look disappointed.
Okay, let me do a disappointed version.
I'll check it out.
Okay, let me do a disappointed version.
Donald.
Check it out.
And the winner is Diablo Cody.
He's so disappointed. You know what would be funny?
Like, everyone always does the, oh, they deserve to win.
I'm happy for them.
What if I just did it the other way?
Like, this is fucking bullshit.
And you would become an instant Twitter meme.
And I threw something?
Like, threw shit?
I dare you.
Flip my table?
What if I flip my table?
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
Speaking of Diablo Cody, she wrote Power Puff.
And so I'm working with her right now.
Oh, she's a good writer.
Stop it.
I did not know that.
Oh, my God.
I'm so excited.
This job is so cool, Donald.
I'm so happy for you.
So I'm really excited about that.
Anyway.
We love you.
Please watch Seaspiracy.
You want to say something, Teddy?
Teddy, you want to say something?
I mean, yeah.
When I was going through chemo, it was over nine months.
And it was back in 2015, so that was when it was over.
But having that rewatch and having that, you know, I know you guys say how everyone's so thankful for it now.
But I was so thankful for the show as it was going on and having that through, you know, my nine months, a year of chemotherapy and surgery and all that.
It was just such a helpful
thing for me. It helped me connect with my doctors and nurses around me. So I just think,
I just thank you guys for what you guys did and what you guys continue to do today.
Thank you. Thank you, man. That means a lot to us. I hope you know how much that means to us.
It really does mean a lot and it makes it all worth it. It makes, you know, we just do it to
a camera and we don't have any idea. So to hear an anecdote like that from you means a great deal to us. So thank you so much.
Absolutely.
And Shirley, you are an awesome guest. I hope you'll come back and visit us again.
You want to talk about your book, mom? Is there anything you want to plug?
Oh, yes. So I wrote a workbook for actors. It's called Seven Rules to Thrive as a Performer.
Actors. It's called Seven Rules to Thrive as a Performer. And you can get it on Amazon. It's a workbook. So it's interactive. So you have to write things down. Yeah.
Seven Rules to Thrive as a Performer?
Yes, yes. link in our show notes and Donald and I will put a link in our bios and we will, if you're an actor, this could be helpful. And it's a workbook, so
it's an interactive thing you have to participate in.
So don't be lazy. You've got to do the work.
Yes, yes.
On that note,
we love you all. Have a great week.
We'll see you next time.
5, 6, nurses, and a janitor who loved me
I said here's a story that you all should know
So gather round to hear our
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As important as choosing
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Gene! Gene Fodor! Gene!
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Freeze, Americano!
Gene, run!
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