Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald - Real Friends Classic: Richard Kind
Episode Date: December 7, 2021Now that the holidays are here, we're revisiting some of our favorite moments of the series so far. Here's our conversation with Richard Kind, the surprising, hysterical, profoundly deep individual. ...Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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What's up, motherfuckers? Hi. How are you? Hi, friends. How's it going? Donald and I just played tennis.
We did.
I'm hurting right now.
Are you sore?
Yeah, I'm on this real hard workout kick.
You lost weight, by the way.
You look good.
I got to get skinnier.
I got to get down a little bit more.
I know, but I want you to know that I see that you're looking good.
Good work.
I'm putting the work in.
Like, if I miss Peloton, I'm going to the, I go, all right, so look, I go to this gym, Unbreakable Performance.
I got to shout them out because I've been going there for so long and they have an outdoor facility
right now that's really dope. And I've been, you know, putting the work in, lifting weights,
you know, they're, you know, like I said i said they're really safe i've been boxing and
stuff uh you know i can't stay at home and motivate myself enough to work out every day
yeah so the peloton is great cody i love you bro thank you so much he listens yeah i don't know
that cody listens yeah but even if he does even if he doesn't i love you bro thank you so much
like for real man cody's gonna when it's all said and done,
these Peloton instructors are going to be like Peloton famous, man.
That's real talk.
I really want to have it.
I want to hang out with Cody one day.
That'd be great.
I want to be Cody's friend.
I appreciate him, and I appreciate Unbreakable Performance.
Thank you guys for it.
Thanks for helping me, you know, start this journey again.
I joke about it, and I say, you know, start this journey again. I joke about it and I say,
you know, in my next comeback, after this comeback, I'll get really ripped.
Well, you look good. And I know that it's hard and I'm at it. I'm working at it too.
And I got to say that, so Donald is that person. Maybe you listeners have a friend who cannot play
tennis for years and then come back and be doing like trick shots behind his head.
And everyone else that's been taking lessons the whole time is like oh jesus you played really well today man i did most consistent out of everyone i won i won mvp according to chris our teacher
yeah definitely chris crab shout out you definitely were mvp today you won a lot of your games. I'm just in my head. You know, I have a sports tick.
Is that it?
Is that what you call it?
You got the bug?
No.
What do you call it?
I have a mind thing with my forehand.
You saw.
Like, I was running around my forehand to get to my backhand because I'm just, like, in my head about my forehand.
It's fucked up.
So I run around it.
And bizarrely, most people have more trouble with their backhand. My backhand's consistent. You need to work on your forehand it's fucked up but so i run around and i and bizarrely most people have more trouble with their backhand my backhand's consistent you need to work on your forehand but
i know bro i know but i'm telling you that i get into a groove with it right you sound like country
clubs country club snobs you need to focus on your forehand no but dude and then i thought the fans
would appreciate the ball i thought the fans would appreciate the ball i thought the fans
would appreciate that i'm talking about sports for a second i uh you know i just i there's times
where i can hit it fine i'm just in my head about it blah blah you gotta you just gotta work on your
forehand you work on your forehand you're golden dude i know i'm gonna get good that was fun i love
tennis um i gotta hi i gotta start off the show just by telling everyone to watch the billie eilish
documentary uh it's on apple and it was amazing i haven't seen it it's incredible i knew i don't
know anything about billie eilish other than you know her her hit songs and that she won all those
grammys this documentarian follows her rj cutler's his name he name. He's a famous documentarian.
And he followed her for a year,
the key year,
where there's footage of them
recording in her brother's,
Phineas' bedroom,
all the way through to them
winning all the Grammys.
I have a question.
But let me just tell you
that some documentaries,
you feel like,
oh, this is just a fucking PR bullshit.
She really gave, the whole family gave this documentarian such access.
And it just is really special.
I love documentaries and I love music documentaries.
And I'm telling you all to watch this.
And what an incredible family she has.
Her parents are incredible.
Her brother is incredible.
I just – I've been thinking about it all day.
It's one of those.
So I highly recommend it.
How did they know she was going to blow up like that, though?
Like, wouldn't they, like, how would they bet?
This is the crazy thing.
How do you document something like that before you know it's going to be successful?
I think, no, because I'll answer that.
Because there was an album before
that was getting her insane traction.
Not the one that made her a global name
and won 100 Grammys.
But before, she was becoming like everywhere.
And the kids, you know, young kids
were just downloading, streaming her song incessantly.
She had a lot, her Instagram followers
were climbing like this.
And so they obviously knew something was cooking. So, know and you see her you see her she's doing small
venues but they're selling out and and then but she's literally the whole album is made on a
laptop and a piano and a mic in her brother's fucking tiny bedroom she's talented also but he's
you know he's he won producer he won producer of the year that year
think about this was what's crazy about i love these stories dude they're they're just a brother
and sister you know they're just really good friends they love music they've been playing
music their whole lives their parents got them into music they're just sitting in his bedroom
writing songs and then this guy wins producer of the year beating out people in zillion dollar
studios with all the fancy musicians in the
world and this young girl she's 17 years old when this is being shot and her voice i had no idea
i'm sorry i don't know enough about billy eilish but her voice is incredible she's got the skills
and he's the mastermind producer they write it together i don't know i sound like i'm the press
agent for this documentary but i'm telling you and you can watch it if you're listening and you have teenagers, you can watch it with them.
There's not a single, you know, R-rated thing in it. And it's fucking awesome. And I, her parents
are inspirational. Like they're so supportive and it's just, it's great. Speaking of tennis,
Richard Kind is an amazing tennis player in this show. Well, he's only really good at his serve but he's here
should we count in and then bring him in guys we have richard kind let's speed it up all right
don't count us in All right.
We're very thrilled, everybody.
You know, we've been talking about Richard Kind.
Let's bring him in.
We love Richard Kind, and we finally got him.
What are you laughing about, Daniel?
Just the message. What are you laughing about, Daniel? Just the.
What?
I'm sorry.
The message that Joel said.
I'm sorry.
I know you said it to me.
I just I'm sorry.
Richard is concerned his cursor on his computer won't work.
Yeah.
So he switched over to his tablet.
So he should be good.
We can let him in.
I've been on the phone with Richard while you guys were doing your intro.
This is going to be amazing.
I was wondering what all the faces were for.
You were like so nervous, Joel.
Well, I just assumed she was watching Rebels
on the other TV.
Oh, my God.
Should I bring him in?
Yeah, bring him in.
Richard Kind, everybody.
Living fucking legend.
There he is!
Looking good, too! Hi, guys! Hi, Richard Kind. there he is looking good too
hi Richard
that's Joelle and Daniel our producers
how are you all
nice to see you all
good to see you
Richard Kind I gotta tell you we've been doing this podcast
and the mantra of everyone
is like fuck all those
other people forget that Bill Lawrence
bring me richard
kind let me tell you something my friend rick milner and his son jeff yeah you know there's a
podcast about scrubs and you call them and tell them you want to be on i go they'll call. If I call,
that's me needing,
and that's me wanting attention.
I said, don't worry.
They will call.
You're so fucking funny.
Richard, I guess...
First of all, let me tell you, I'm very
happy and thrilled to be on
this, but it's so nice to see
you guys. It's good to see you too.
I love you guys.
I love you too.
We played golf together, Richard and I, for a couple of holes actually.
Yes, we did.
You're a very good golfer.
I am not.
You take your time.
I used to be a very good golfer.
I used to be very smart.
There are lots of things that have dissipated over the years.
But wait, Richard,
are you genuinely good at tennis?
Because in this episode,
your serve is ridiculously on fire.
In what episode?
We are talking about the episode...
Oh, Red Oaks?
Red Oaks?
The episode of Scrubs
that we're talking about.
Did you watch it by any chance?
No, I haven't seen Scrubs.
Look, I haven't seen Scrubs.
I haven't seen Scrubs in years.
It's a great show.
Well, don't worry.
Let's not talk about it. I've heard it's a good show.
Are you on a show right now?
You do a show right now.
Yes?
I am the Costco of acting.
I'm all over the place.
I come in quantity and I come cheap.
And if I'm on a show, you get well paid, right?
Yeah.
But if the guest on a show, oh, we're thrilled to have you.
Oh, you're so good.
You're wonderful.
Here are a couple of quarters.
Like a little monkey with a cup.
Oh, my God.
Well, Richard, what I'm saying is that you were on an episode of you're on multiple but the one we were going to focus on today your your character hurt
his do you remember this your character you think donald fucked up your shoulder and and and but you
have in the episode we cut to you serving and it's so good that you throw it hits johnny c mcginley
and it throws him against the
back wall do you remember that's when he goes left i sort of do i was a good tennis player
but that was high school and uh well i wasn't a good what i had was one shot because i was a fat
kid and the ball would come to me and i would hit a false court shot that was pinpoint in the corner
so that the guy couldn't return it and I wouldn't have to run. I had to win every point that way.
I was good at the net, but if I really had the reach, I wasn't so agile, but I was okay.
Donald does these trick shots. We play, we just played today, actually.
And he does these, he didn't do any today, Donald,
but he does these things where,
I don't even know what kind of spin it is.
He like loops around it like it's a lacrosse stick and the ball, you just, you're not,
you have no fucking chance to touch it.
Yes.
It's topspin.
It is topspin.
And Donald, you hit the ball, the golf ball very far,
just not straight, right?
Just not straight.
You're absolutely right.
That's because you're putting the spin on it.
You hit down to the bottom and you turn it over,
but God only knows where it's going to be.
Because if you come over it, then it'll go like this.
I know where it's going.
If I come over it, I know where it's going,
but I don't want it to go that way because usually that's it.
You don't want it to.
You know that it's going to go into the other fairway.
Right, right, right.
But a long way into the other fairway.
But you're strong.
You have a decent mobility and everything.
But you've gotten better, Donald, haven't you?
Since you played Richard, probably?
I've never played him in golf, but I've played a few holes with him.
Right.
Have you improved since that time?
Do you play now?
I haven't played in a couple of weeks.
I played once.
But are you taking lessons? I was for a while. I haven't played in a couple of weeks. I played once.
But are you taking lessons?
Are you taking lessons?
I was for a while. I was messing with Rondell Barrio, Golf Tech, this dude, David Franks at Calabasas Country Club.
I've gone to a lot of people to work on my swing.
The lowest I've gotten, I shot a 71 at Encino
Balboa. I've shot
a 70 at
all the municipal courses.
Those are easy
courses. Oh, no doubt.
I'm just going to say, Richard, way to
rain on his parade. 71, it doesn't
matter. If you can shoot a 71, 70,
whatever, if you can shoot below
78, you're a good golfer
well i the best i've played at a harder course like rustic canyon i shot a 81 at rustic yeah
yeah oh you'll kill me you'll kill me i had children that'll kill your game
i moved to new york and new york new york kills your game that'll kill your game
those are game i've been in new york for over 10 years and you can't go play but and one of
the reasons i moved from los angeles was because i became addicted to the game and the club that
i play at because you just go there and you sit you play you have a drink or anything like that
and i would get home to my
kids and I'm falling asleep, like trying to play with them. And then, and I would literally,
this is horrible because I, and I love to act, but I would say, if you can't get me the audition
before like 1130, then I can't make it or until after three or four, because that's
when I was playing golf. So I would give up what is in essence jobs. I got news for you. Now that
we're on and everybody's going to hear, you asked me, can we switch this time from one o'clock when
we tape it to two o'clock? Well, if I tape it at 2 o'clock,
that means I get out to the club
very late.
And I want to go play golf after this.
Yeah, you do.
So I said, I'll compromise
and I'll give him $130.
Well, thank you for doing that.
We appreciate that.
I know how important...
I'm kidding.
I'm not kidding.
No, you're not.
No, you're not kidding.
It's fine.
Donald's as addicted. I know how important it is. I know how I'm kidding. I'm not. No, you're not. No, you're not kidding. It's fine. Donald's.
I know how important it is.
I know how important it is.
And I,
yeah.
And it's,
it's still not daylight savings time yet.
If it were,
I'd like to play it on eight,
eight 30.
The sun goes down now at six,
six 15.
All right.
So we'll Richard,
we got to ask you,
cause we always ask people when they come on,
we got to go back to the beginning.
Let's start at the very beginning.
A very, very good place to start.
How did you,
you don't have to go like,
give us the novel version,
but give us the cliff notes.
How did you get started
in being a working successful actor?
Because you've been in nine zillion things.
Very fancy filmmakers
and very fancy showrunners
love you and continue to cast you.
And you have a career
that actors would dream of
because you've had such longevity.
I will tell you,
I'm going to be humble
and bragging at the same time.
Go.
I am the luckiest man in show business
because when I was a kid uh archie bunker
and adam west were two of the biggest stars and heroes of who i wanted to be oh my god
carol o'connor was magnificent not just as uh archie bunker but i knew his stuff before
and he he got pigeonholed into being Archie Bunker.
One of the most magnificent actors, you would never guess it. Adam West certainly was only
Batman. And it was my goal as an actor to not be them or not have their career. I wanted to be in
as many things as I possibly could in everything. I mean,
I know you've done Broadway. I've done lots of shows on Broadway. And I, before the pandemic,
would be in a show a year somewhere. Nobody sees it because it's a limited audience, but it's
theater. So I wanted to be in as many things as I could. And when I was on Spin City, everybody was
going, oh, you're going to be the breakout character
you'll be the breakout character and I didn't
have any publicity I didn't want
I did not want to be known
as Paul Lasseter so I
didn't do a lot of publicity or anything
and
I know this sounds crazy
I have
the career that I wanted
I really do I get to do, I've done opera. I do radio.
I do, I do sitcoms. I do, I'm going to be in, I'm doing a movie coming up in New Mexico
where it is not funny at all. And I'm playing a gangster. It's fantastic i the only thing is is that with more fame comes picking of roles
i can pick and choose roles i'll get offered more roles or at least get to audition for more roles
because being a star makes a project that much more uh easy to finance And I'm not exactly a star.
I mean, people don't say, oh, a Richard Kine movie?
I got to go.
You know, they may say while they're watching it, oh, I like that guy, but they will not
run out of their house to go see.
But you're saying there was a fork in the road and you chose that path.
I wish I could say it was an absolute fork in the road.
It was not.
It was a realization.
Well, no, I mean, just for example, you're on Spin City.
You're saying I chose not to do publicity.
You could have milked the fuck out of that.
I guess I could have.
I would not have been a star.
I might have had more fame.
It's just I did not want to be pigeonholed into that
role. But, but so, so don't, don't think I could, but also look at who you're talking to. I will not
be the lead of anything, of any, of any movie and maybe even TV show. Now I can be a lead in a play
because the economic consequences of a play aren't as strong as a
movie or a TV show, but you got to get a good looking guy. You got to get somebody who is,
I don't want to say middle of the road, but, but somebody who is appealing that you want to turn,
tune into. I'm a satellite character, always proud to be a satellite character. You got to know who
you are. You sound like a producer. And I'm going to be when you, when gotta know who you are you sound like a producer and i'm
gonna be when you when you talk like that but i i'm i tend to agree with you and i tend to agree
with you as of late late in my life as of recently as of actually this morning um i was watching i
was watching wandavision right And everybody knows this about me.
I want to be in Star Wars.
I want to be in Marvel.
I even think Star Wars and Marvel know I want to be in that.
They do.
So I've said, that's right.
I'm pretty sure of it.
So I've aspired, right, in my whole acting career to be in those movies.
Now, here's the thing.
Or in those TV shows.
Now, here's the thing.
What happens if I get it? Then what do I aspire to be after that you know what i mean i got in other words
be careful of what comes true yeah because because then well you're wrong okay you're wrong okay when
i was a kid i had three dreams now most kids want most kids want to be like Mick Jagger or play center field for the Yankees or something.
Mine was I wanted to be in a Stanley Kubrick movie, a Woody Allen movie, and an original Stephen Sondheim, Hal Prince musical.
Stanley Kubrick's dead.
Woody Allen wasn't hiring me.
And I auditioned for a Stephen Sondheim,
Hal Prince musical and got it.
That's great.
And I was the lead.
Wow.
Oh my God.
I was the lead.
It was the dream of a lifetime.
And I sing,
but not well enough to be in a Sondheim musical,
but he likes actors better than singers.
And I sang well enough to do his stuff.
It's unbelievable.
And Sondheim and Prince split in 1982
after Merrily We Roll Along
and Harold Prince didn't direct any of his plays anymore.
They happened to get back together and I did it.
And this was over 10 years ago.
And I continue to work. I work so much that I did a Woody Allen movie, which I'm really proud of. It's not a huge, great part, but I was part of it. I almost was with Zach.
With all due respect to the gentleman who got the role, I was hoping that it was going to be you.
Richard was up for the part in Bullets Over Broadway.
Right.
Because, Richard, I have to say, and I've said this on the podcast many times, I know what you're saying about being a satellite character.
I'm one of those people, when I see your face, and you work a lot, so I see your face all the time, a giant smile comes across my face. If I had, if I was not in this
business at all, and just a fan of acting, I would, I would just be, I would just be a giant
fan of yours. I just think that you are so talented and so funny. I know that you do drama as well,
but when I just see you and you could say in this, inubs you say one sentence and i just start giggling time for rebuttal yeah i'm kidding
there's um i saw you in the show that i i've spoken about here before um called the other
the other two is that are you on that oh yeah you don't even remember you do so many shows you
remember you're uh you're somebody's agent.
Yes.
It was a small show, Richard.
I love the show. I'm sure they're going to make more seasons. I agree with you. I think it'll be back.
It's back, I think, without me.
What the hell is this bullshit?
I was sort of a one-joke conceit
and it had run its course,
so I don't blame you.
My point is, but this morning, when watching
WandaVision, I was like, why am I so worried
about being on all of this?
I'm a working actor.
I have so many credits behind me now.
Maybe just focus on what I'm good at,
and if it comes, it comes.
You know what I mean?
I enjoy being a fan of it, too, you know?
So maybe just enjoy the fandom.
You are right.
But first of all, you're really good or you wouldn't have the career you have.
Right.
The second thing is maybe we're not always great, but we're never bad anymore because
we've been around.
You've done how many episodes of Scrubs
did you do? Over a hundred and something.
If you're not good,
if you're not good by now,
if you don't know how to work a camera,
if you don't know how to get the tone
of a scene or parse
a script and deliver what the
writer wants,
then you're a blah.
What was I doing?
I'm an idiot then, if that's the case.
You are. I'm saying. You're absolutely
right. So you can get
into something and you've got a career
that a backlog of
stuff that people can say, oh, he's
more than just this.
And my friend
Michael Boatman, you know Michael Boatman?
Yeah. He was on Scrum, of course.
He says, we are at the point in our career,
of which you guys are certainly,
that we will always be better than good.
We will always deliver.
There might be some who will be great
and there might, or will be better.
There might be certain roles that we will be great in
and we were not able to achieve greatness.
But we will always deliver because we're good, which is good.
It's not that we were for some people are just blessed.
You know, some people, you know, people with a smoldering lust and sexuality.
I disagree. I disagree.
However, but those are gifts somehow, but we have amassed a talent and a credibility and a facility of how to do our job. And we'll just be fine.
Do you still have the hunger, Richard? When when you when you when someone says we want you to read and you get and you get the script and it's a really good part.
Do you do you find yourself going, oh, shit, I want to work on this one.
I really want this.
All right. I got a couple answers for you.
Yes, I do.
And it's the silliest thing that makes me jump up and down because I because I was actually of of as of this time I was offered something yesterday
that was more money than I've ever made in my life wow congratulations more money than ever
I don't make that much but this was more money and I turned it down
because two weeks in a in quarantine and then being on the set of a very good
script.
But I was parsley.
I was the,
the overpaid extra.
I had one decent scene that was maybe a page and a half,
two pages.
Otherwise I'm just part of a dinner family where I have one line.
And you got to be away from your family for that.
And I would kill myself.
That would really make me unhappy.
It would have made me unhappy,
forgive me, in Bullets Over Broadway
because I didn't have a song
and the part was
really chopped down from what it was
in the movie.
Although I happen to love the production.
Well, didn't they give him the song at the end, the banana song?
No, that banana song was started by somebody else.
But, and also the thing with that contract was, I didn't know if you were.
It was a year.
You would have been, no, it was a year.
Everyone, no matter who you were, you had to sign up for a year.
And I was like, what, a year?
And I was going to pass on it because I was, but And I was like, what? A year? And I was going to pass on it.
But my friend was like, bro, what are you talking about?
You're not going to pass on starring in a Woody Allen Broadway musical.
And a Strowman musical.
And Susan Strowman, yeah.
And you were challenged every night.
Yeah, it was very hard.
Truly, truly challenged every night.
You know, I was thinking about this last night.
This is, I guess, a bit of a non sequitur,
but I was thinking about,
just in terms of the theater,
and I was thinking, you know,
most of our listeners aren't in the entertainment industry,
Richard, so I sometimes just explain that
in the theater world, in the New York theater world,
that really, whether the show is successful or not,
it comes down to the review of the New York Times. It used really, whether the show is successful or not,
comes down to the review of the New York Times. It used to. It doesn't anymore, but it used to.
Okay. Well, all I'll tell you is- For Bullets Over Broadway, it did.
I got to tell you that Bullets Over Broadway was supposed to run, my contract was for a year.
And Richard, I'm sure you've been through this and Donald's done theater too, but you're playing to preview houses, meaning the
critics aren't allowed to come yet. You're working out the kinks. We're playing to sold out houses
in a giant theater. It was like a 2,700 seat theater, sold out that we have to stop the show
because they're laughing so hard. We have to, there was one moment they would give it for Nick,
for the late great Nick Cordero, they would give a standing ovation in the middle of the show for a dance number.
We were on fire.
We opened that night.
The night you open it, like midnight,
the reviews come out.
The Times didn't destroy it, but it was meh.
And the next night, it was like golfer's claps.
Yeah.
Everyone, everyone,
this is what's so fucked up about it.
Everyone coming into that theater now went oh this isn't that good because brent brantley didn't love it and now we're gonna
watch it differently and you can if you're in the play you're like what the fuck happened
we haven't changed anything you're right but they had just been conditioned that this is not good
yeah it's horrible in fact what it is what it really is, is a review could make or break the success of a play, but now a review can make or break the audience's attitude towards a play.
Yes.
And that's horrible.
It's horrible.
Because I love the theater.
It's my favorite thing in the world, And I get so much joy out of it.
I never read a review before I go.
Because I want to experience the play anew.
Of course, if you're into the theater community, you hear the buzz of, oh, everyone's talking about this show.
But the last thing I want is someone telling me, oh, this scene sucks.
It's funny.
There was one big number.
There was a hot dog number, if you recall.
And it was so silly. There were dancing hot dogs. dogs it was all about it was just a giant dick joke for but it was hilarious and the audience would be you could look and you'd see them holding
their bellies and that next and that next night it was like that's just terrible it's terrible
well they certainly had it out for woody yeah but what's unusual is they had it out for Woody, but what's unusual is they had it out for Stro.
And that's,
she doesn't deserve that.
Yeah.
I think that Susan Stroman,
you know,
for those of you not in the know is,
is very,
very A-list,
a huge musical theater director in,
in New York.
And she,
her first giant hit,
I believe Richard was the producers,
right?
It was the producersducers, yeah.
Yeah.
And it almost felt like there was animosity towards her.
Like, how dare you be that successful?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And she works the hardest.
You've never met anybody so loyal.
She does everything from ballet to opera to the musicals.
She's great.
She even did the movie of The Producers, which did deserve the dreadful reviews it got.
However, she is great.
You did the producers, didn't you?
I did, on Broadway and at the Hollywood Bowl.
Wow.
I have a question.
Go ahead.
What is this rule, though?
Now, I don't like, this is the one thing I do not like about Broadway.
How dare you?
How dare you?
Broadway you're talking about.
Yes.
These people need our support right now, not any criticism.
This is the only thing.
When it comes to Tony Awards, how come somebody like, let's say, let's say Zach did Bullets Over Broadway and he wins the Tony for Bullets Over Broadway, then leaves. Then somebody else comes in and does Bullets Over Broadway, and he wins the Tony for Bullets Over Broadway,
then leaves.
Then somebody else comes in and does Bullets Over Broadway.
That's a good question.
Why can't that person win?
Yeah.
Why can't that person win?
And so what if they...
Zach won.
His ego isn't going to be hurt if that person wins, if that person gets nominated.
Sometimes the replacement is even better.
Yeah, and there is talk.
Sometimes it is that.
There is talk, Richard, I at least heard, but you might know, of them creating a category for best replacement, right?
I believe that should be done.
However, every once in a while, there is simply a role that you just can't beat.
Right.
Like if Fiddler on the Roof is going to go on, Tevye is always going to win.
Or Max Bialystock and the producers
they're always going to win because it's the role right oh i know so i'll say sometimes richard what
you're saying is true that in and with no disrespect to the person that originated the
role someone might come in and be like revelatory right. I was talking about this the other day.
Somebody said his most exciting theater experiences was seeing Richard Burton do the original cast of Equus.
I said Richard Burton did not create the role, but he did go into it.
And my guess is he was better than the original guy because he was Richard Burton.
Yeah.
So, yeah, but Donald, I think you So, so yeah, but I don't,
I think you are correct.
I think,
I don't think it's a bad thing.
You shouldn't take away from the five original nominees because putting up a
show,
sometimes what they do helps create the character as so good.
But once the character is established,
you are right.
A, but you can win it for a revival that's the only that's the only way it can happen though yeah but then it has to let's
talk about tv okay but i just gotta say i like the revival also because it still has to go through
the same work that the original did you got to start a small theater then it has to get to a
bigger theater then that's it i like that i do like yeah i could talk by the way we've decided this this episode is called
the conversation with richard kind because that's what it is everybody and i could talk to you about
so many things you're so knowledgeable about a lot of things but i know you have to go you
what wait one thing that i want to get to wait wait this is called wait richard pause this is
called a tease we're going to be right back after this break.
But I have something to say.
I know, but I'm teasing the audience.
I'm doing a drive-by of their proverbial genitalia and we'll be right back.
When you find that bright spot to help you get through your day, it's powerful.
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A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that's bringing you a daily dose of joy. I'm Danielle Robay. And I'm Simone Boyce. Listen,
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Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine every weekday on the iHeartRadio app,
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your money in your old rich man because she is on the prowl listen to queen of the con season five
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Hey, everybody. Welcome to Across Generations, where the voices of Black women unite in
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But even with a child, there's no such thing as the wrong thing if you love them.
Myself, as the middle generation.
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I'm very jealous of your generation that didn't have to deal with Instagram and Tinder.
This is Across Generations, where Black women's voices unite and together,
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Listen to a Cross Generations podcast on the iHeartRadio app,
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And we're back.
Richard Kind.
Go ahead.
What were you saying, Richard Kind?
Well, I'm full because I just had a huge meal.
And now after that break, geez louise.
I hope that you remember what you were going to say.
Okay. What I wanted to say, I mean, you talked about,
do I get excited about a script or excited about a part? Yes, I do.
I certainly do. Or you pray that you have an opportunity to play that part i'm going to say something that that might be interesting to you guys or i'm one of the idiots that likes
auditioning really why what a couple of reasons number one as an, I like to play all different kinds of roles.
I may not be I may not be hired, but for 10 minutes, I got to play that role.
And I can't do it alone in the bathroom.
I'm not going to invite friends over and go, hey, listen to me do this.
Listen to me do Willie Loman.
Because, you know, just here, here, I'll give you a sandwich.
Although I would come to see you do Willie Loman in your living room.
Someday I'd love to do it.
But the thing is, an actor needs an audience.
And even if it's a kid with a camera, you're still performing.
So I happen to appreciate it.
The other thing is, I like being nervous.
I like the jitters of like an opening night.
That's fun for me.
I know I'm not going to die.
I know that my life is not on the line.
I know nothing's going to happen to my kids, but I get nervous.
Like being on a roller coaster can be fun.
And so you're going in front of important people. Like being on a roller coaster can be fun. And so
you're going in front of important people.
You may get a job. This could be the
job that makes you
a huge amount of money,
brings you fame, and you might be
Matt Perry in Friends. You don't
know. So who knows what
this audition is going to bring? Or that
the person that you're auditioning for
may become a good friend. Whatever it is, but you're nervous nervous things are on the line yeah it's a good way to live
i i never heard it put like that but i've heard the nerve i heard the nervous part put like that
i've never heard the actors need to perform look at it as a room to perform i do oh it's an
opportunity such an amazing and that's that's such such an amazing. That's such a golf analogy too.
That's such a golf analogy, dude.
It's an opportunity.
Here's another crazy thing that if I'm teaching,
which I don't do a lot of, but I have.
When you go in for an audition,
you are going, oh, dear God, let me get this role.
Please let me be good.
Please let me be great.
I don't go in that way.
I go in and I see six people who all want to make Larry David money.
They all want the success of Seinfeld.
They all want the success of Curb Your Enthusiasm.
That's what they want.
They want money.
They want success.
They don't care whether I get the role.
They want money.
And I go in saying
and you have to believe this
you have to believe you're the right actor for the role
but if I believe that
which a lot of times I do
I can do this
I go in with the mindset of
guys
I'm going to help you make
a lot of money
that's true when you cast me I'm going to help you make a lot of money.
You better,
if when you cast me,
you better cast around me as good as me,
because I'll help you make money.
I'm going to help make this thing great.
Wow.
Don't worry.
I got your back.
It's a pep talk, but most people go in going,
Oh,
I got to get this. Oh, I got to get this rolling. If people go in going oh i gotta get this oh i gotta get
this role if you go in with the with the feeling of i'm going to help you yeah make the success
that takes all the pressure off of you yeah richard i love that and i i have to say from
when i'm directing i learned a lot about auditioning when i was directing because
you sit you think that being on the other side of the table is fun it's fun for about 35 minutes and then it's really grueling and stressful because all you're thinking is
fuck we're not going to find this guy or this gal so what i always say to actors is you you need to
i mean yours is brilliant and i'm going to steal it but i also say they're you don't know this
they're rooting for you they want they're dying for you to be good if you're great they're you don't know this they're rooting for you they want they're dying for you to be
good if you're great they're done great if you're great they're gonna make money if you're good and
all you want to do is be good for yourself don't yes they're they're saying dear god give me
somebody who's good i agree with you now i'm going to bring up something that you're going to hate
but you know that i'm going to bring it up go when you were doing uh going my way or go go going in style i auditioned
for the banker at the beginning and i did not and i only went on tape and i did not have
i remember not being not feeling good about it i remember it it. Of course you care
whether or not you get a part. I think I requested you
come in for it. Okay, could be.
What I wanted to do
was not get the role.
I wanted to impress
Zach. Oh my god.
That's what I wanted to do.
Now, the guy you hired
happened to be a friend of mine.
And he's great yeah he's wonderful uh and i
do you mind not getting a role yeah it happens uh but that that was my mindset and it could have
gotten in my way of doing a good job well i gotta say that what i think as i recall i asked you to
come in because i literally when i when i'm casting something, and it's particularly a funny part, I'm like, well, who are the funny people that I like working with?
I agree.
And you're at the top of that list.
But yeah, I really like, and I'm sure there's a lot of actors listening who this is really useful advice.
The audition process, we've all been groomed our whole lives to be like, and we do it.
Oh, shit, I'm nervous.
Oh, shit, come on, please.
Come on, God.
Come on, universe.
Give this to me.
But it really comes down to not walking in that room terrified, walking in that room with your shoulders back going, guys, let me help you.
I'm here.
Let me help you.
But not necessarily saying that you can't say
that no no performance let's just be clear no it's through the performance yes yes actors please
don't walk in the room and say you're lucky i'm here right you don't say it out loud you go you
don't say hey fuckers you better cast as well as me this is a good segue into can you tell us about uh spin your audition for spin city and and and
bill and how all that went i got a great story this is this will take about five minutes great
story you could you can take an hour go ahead well he has a tea time he's got a tea time but
take five minutes take time yes but we're talking about me, so I guess I have a lot of time.
I'll only play eight holes.
If I can keep talking about me, you can tell me how good I am.
Richard only has a tea time if we talk about things unrelated to him.
All right.
So Gary David Goldberg had a show called Champs.
It was about it was sort of like that championship season. It was it was sort of based on his life.
It was one coach and five guys who were best friends of which Gary does have that life.
He he had his best friends who were a basketball team from when he was in high school.
So he made a sitcom about that called Champs,
and I wanted to read for him.
And Gary said, he's not right.
He goes, I know Richard Kind.
I know him from Mad About You.
He's not right for it.
And I'm going, just let me read.
He would not see me.
That show went the way of most shows, like one season.
Then he had Spin City.
And he didn't want to see me.
And we called the casting director, and the casting director spoke to Bill Lawrence, and Bill wanted to see me.
spoke to Bill Lawrence and Bill wanted to see me. And I said, let me go in and see the casting director first so that I can practice and see it because Gary doesn't want to see me. And Gary
says, oh, I know, I know Richard Kind from Man About You. And he's great. He's great. He's not
right for the role. Gary didn't want to see me. Bill did. I had a handle on this part. The only
thing that would have not gotten it for me
is because I was too tall for Michael J. Fox
or I might've been too Jewish, ethnic New York City
for whatever, but otherwise, if they called me back,
the role is mine.
So I wanted to go into the casting director
and then I went into the, to read for Bill and for Gary.
And indeed, I was called back.
And I literally said to myself, if they called me back, this role is mine.
Okay.
I have to go in to meet with Michael.
Cut back years before when I was at Second City michael j fox came to uh to second city was doing
the movie satisfaction let me just pause for those that don't for those that don't know second city
is an improv uh group go ahead right and uh uh and i was part of the company and whenever somebody
famous was in the audience we would invite them to improvise with us, which we did with Michael. So Michael and Robin Duke are doing a scene. It was obviously, he was the son, she was the mother.
It's obvious if I open the door and I say, honey, I'm home, I'm the father and I belong there.
So I come into the scene with, honey, I'm home. And Michael bounded one, two, three, and jumped into my arms like this.
I mean, off the floor and into my arms.
Now, a couple of things.
I'm strong, but I'm not that strong.
I'm strong, but I'm not that strong.
But Michael J. Fox is so light that anybody's strong to lift him.
And he clomped onto me like David Letterman did with Velcro.
Velcro.
You remember when he did that?
Yeah.
And Michael did that, and he hung on like that. When I tell you, and you've got to understand how long time is, there was a 45 second laugh.
It wasn't that it was that it was Michael was so athletic and agile and knew the laugh.
And he just hung on and i walked around with him
i'm telling you like a monkey like a monkey yeah they were dying it is a laugh i will always
remember it in my head it's like a movie i can see what it looks like right memorable
before i went into the audition cut to to today, okay, to the audition for Spin City.
And sometimes, I don't have a therapist anymore, but at the time I had a therapist.
And it was a good luck thing that I'd go and see my therapist sometime before I had the audition.
And it would loosen me up.
It would make me feel alive or whatever.
Yeah.
So I go in and I say, I tell him the story.
And I say, should I bring it up?
And my therapist goes, absolutely.
If it was that memorable, absolutely bring it up.
I go in.
I meet Michael.
And I say, I've got to tell you, you may not.
We've met before.
I was on stage at Second City.
And we did this.
And this is what Michael said.
And he's given me permission to tell the story.
He goes, I'm sorry.
I don't remember it because I was so drunk and high during that point in my life.
I don't even remember doing satisfaction.
Oh, my God.
He did not remember being at second city he didn't remember
being in chicago he had no memory of really doing the movie isn't that amazing oh my god i know
isn't that isn't that something one of the biggest it's crazy that one of the biggest moments in your
life one of the moments that yes a memorable laugh yeah he has no no clue
no clue he has no memory of leaping on to leaping on to one of the improv comedians uh he has no
memory of leaping on and holding on for 40 seconds however this is something i then remember about
the audition this is something i clearly remember is i had a they wrote bill lawrence as you know
as everybody who's listening bill lawrence is a fucking genius yeah he is he works very hard
at being a genius and sometimes he works to the last minute at being a genius, but nonetheless, he is a genius at what he has chosen to do.
He makes things accessible, funny, weird. And let me get to that a little later. But
I remember doing the scene and he wrote such a brilliant, funny line because he was a great
writer. Gary was a great showrunner, not necessarily, he was a great writer. Gary was a great showrunner, not necessarily,
he was a great captain. He was not necessarily as great a writer as some of the product that
he put out. But when you have a genius like Bill Lawrence, you can get it. And Gary was able to
teach things to Bill and generate things that Bill not only learned, but cultivated and made blossom even more.
But I had one hilariously funny line that I read. And Michael J. Fox took, I wonder if I can do it.
I don't think I'm that late anymore. And this chair is going to roll. He jumped in the air
like this and just landed. He jumped in the air with laughter and landed on the chair. He laughed that hard
at my delivery. And I have to admit, I walked out of there going, the part is mine. The part is mine.
You knew right through the news.
It's mine.
Donald and I have spoken about his timing, Michael J. Fox. I mean, I grew up watching
Family Ties and I didn't know how to analyze
comedy or anything about it at a young age, but I just knew that he was doing something unique
with his timing that was so special. And Bill has said to us that no one could hold
the pause and wait for the laugh better than Mike Fox.
He just knew.
It's like you watch those teenage girls playing double Dutch and how they know just when to go in.
Like Michael J. Fox was just so skilled at just the right amount of pause, right?
He was.
I'm going to tell you.
I'll tell you two things.
Number one, I heard Carl Reiner interviewed by Bob Costas.
heard Carl Reiner interviewed by Bob Costas
and Carl Reiner said
sitcoms
were written by Jews
to be acted by
non-Jews.
And Michael J. Fox has
the rhythm of a
Borscht Belt comedian.
Michael J. Fox.
That's great.
That is his great, great talent.
He has that rhythm.
And now I'm going to tell you something else.
This is sour grapes a little bit.
Michael could hold for that.
He could take a line and make it three lines.
Yeah.
And the camera would always be on him because he's Michael J.
Fox and he's the star of the show.
If we tried to do it,
Gary would edit it and it would all be compressed.
Right.
Right.
Because we're not the star.
And you just got to understand you're not the star,
but I would,
or maybe I couldn't do what he did because quite honestly, what he did.
I've done this with Michael and I've done this with Christopher Walken.
I have acted with them.
And as they're talking in my head, I'm going, really?
That's how you're going to deliver the line?
Really?
That's your choice. That's what you want to say and how you want to say it
all right that's if it's going on in my head right and i would do that with michael and i was lucky
enough to act with christopher walken and i see them on screen and it takes your breath away yeah
they they know what they're doing yeah yeah they they're magnificent and michael okay
here's something different i was also lucky enough to do a series with carol burnett
there was a difference between the expertise of carol burnett and michael j fox who are of course
the greatest who have ever taken the screen on TV.
Michael J. Fox played for the camera,
but needed the audience to get his timing,
to get the whole milieu of the comedy.
Otherwise, it's a straight-out drama.
You deliver it seriously, but he was able to play that laugh.
Carol Burnett played to the back of the house,
but knew that the camera was capturing her.
She needed the audience.
That's who she really played to, and the camera caught her.
And that was the difference.
I, as an actor, am more like Michael J. Fox. I have a hard time with,
and it's worked for me and it's worked against me.
It's worked against me to the point
where I've been fired before
because I was playing for,
I needed the audience
and I needed the timing for it to work.
But then I've also been on shows.
I've also, I've been on a sitcom
that lasted for five seasons.
And I had an actress tell me one day,
she was like,
you know,
I thought you were going to blow it until the audience got in.
And then you turned it into something different.
I can't do it without the audience.
If you're not going to laugh,
if you're not going to give me the rhythm.
And I think that's,
what's great about bill because bill at the audition for Scrubs would give you the laugh.
He helped you create the rhythm in the audition.
You know what I mean?
And so I know exactly what you're talking about.
I have a hard time.
I appreciate people that are more like Bill because of that.
Bill and Mike are perfect for each other.
Yes, they are.
I call it you ride the lift. yeah right it gives you a breath it gives you a way to get to the next sentence or or
though and as michael could do he could either hold it or in my situation you make a face you
know you're riding the laugh you know i feel like you gotta say something but uh but you're holding
for the laugh yeah i feel like michael j Fox would do this thing where he would almost start to, like, nod.
Like he was nodding along with the laugh, and the audience was him.
They were in his head going.
And I forgot what the example Bill told us was.
It was something like shaving a haircut two bits or whatever it was.
But the audience knew what the two bits of it all was.
Oh, absolutely.
That's the easiest thing.
And then Michael Fox would just kind of nod with them,
let them laugh, let them get ahead of it.
Then just pause even longer.
So they're like, when is he going to do it?
When is he going to do it?
And then he would just say it, and they would guffaw.
Absolutely.
And that is a comforting thing.
And the audience is relieved
that they were delivered
by such a waiter.
Yeah.
It is the greatest.
Do you love,
do you love-
Hold on.
I've got to tell you one other thing.
A lot of times,
because of Michael's impairment,
which we didn't even know about until the last year,
but Michael couldn't have a long evening on Friday nights
taping in front of the audience.
So in order to make it shorter, all of the extraneous,
that's the wrong word, all of the supporting cast,
they had scenes, we would do their scenes and they
were in swing sets in the back so they were not in front of the audience they would have just been
shown on tv just pause there for the audience swing sets or sets that if you're doing a sitcom
aren't right in front of the audience there they might be out of out of the audience's view right
right the audience is seeing it live but not with their with their seeing it
live on a screen but but not a friend most of michael's stuff was done in front of an audience
even if it was on a swing set because that's what michael wanted so in order to get and and i was in
either the b or sometimes i was usually a c story that was all about me, but just took a few pages,
but I did not get the audience. So I didn't hear that laugh and I couldn't ride it. But when I was
in front of an audience, I of course was much better as, but those are some of the things
that the people don't know, but it's absolutely fair. Over the years, and you're going to say,
oh, no, no, Richard, no.
I can't do four-camera sitcom nearly as well.
I'm a much better actor now,
and therefore to be big on four-camera,
which you really have to do.
It's the greatest amount of theater and TV.
I'm not nearly as good.
So do you not-
By choice or by...
I can't do it anymore. It's not by choice.
I am a better actor on single
camera. I prefer single camera,
meaning not four cameras going at
once. You do almost...
For the audience, it's one
camera. They've lit it all up, which
is how
Scrubs is done.
For those who want to know, when you watch They've lit it all up, which is how Scrubs is done. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
For those who want to know, when you watch All in the Family, you watch Roseanne, there is a different look of those shows versus when you watch Scrubs.
You can feel that difference of videotape and the audience.
So that is the difference.
But you're very good at that. So you wouldn't, you know, if a sitcom came up in New York City, you would pass on it?
If a sitcom came up in L.A., dude, that's all the golf in the world. Well, he's all settled in.
Right.
I'm just saying I am not nearly as, well, I want to say adept.
I can't be as, I suppose I can't.
You want to know something?
I'm wrong.
Because I'm lately doing the Goldbergs.
I'm huge on the Goldbergs.
And that's single camera.
That's single, yeah.
I'm huge.
But the premise, the character is written huge.
It's all heightened.
I'll serve it.
Absolutely.
Tim Hobart, though.
Timmy!
Is Tim Hobart running the Goldbergs?
What?
Is Tim Hobart working on the Goldbergs or running the Goldbergs?
No, no, no.
Tim Hobart did that wonderful show, The Middle.
Yeah.
He ran The Middle.
And I came on as a guest.
And Lee Salitzemel, who I adore, came on and wanted my character to be a little larger.
And I went, Lee, I don't do that anymore.
And she sort of said, I know, but do it.
And so I had I became larger for a single camera and it didn't feel comfortable.
The person I was acting opposite was should be big
i should be small so that she could be big yeah now we were both big not my cup of tea but i
i know the genre i know what it had to be i didn't want to do it i agree with you you can't
the second if you if you watch scrubs of course there's times when we're for example dial nine
are both big but usually we're riding a line where one person
has the license to be the broader of the two.
Because you can't, because if you're both on that level,
then it doesn't feel as funny.
And John, of course, was written to be ridiculously outsized.
You know, John McGinley.
He was huge.
Even if he was small,
he was that huge.
You know, he was the medic.
And there are larger characters on the show
which made your show so wonderful.
And there are enormous situations
where if you treat it realistically,
they are that much funnier.
So sometimes you're acting with the script.
But I always thought that the audience
was the third member of the scene.
And you do that in theater
and you do that in sitcoms, in for camera, but you don't do it on scrubs.
I've never I've never I've done guest spots on sitcoms.
I did Donald's and I and we did we did a spoof of one on the show Scrubs, but I I've never done it.
I think that I would my theater guy in me would would probably have a lot of fun doing it.
It's a lot. It's a lot of fun. probably have a lot of fun doing it. You would.
It's a lot of fun.
It's a lot of fun.
This is my experience with it.
It's a lot of fun on show night.
I can't sleep after a show.
I'm so charged.
I'm so charged. Well, that's what theater is.
Right.
Every actor goes out and has a drink or two after.
Because who goes home from work after having all of this energy?
You just don't go, hey, you know what?
It's 1030.
I'll go home and go to sleep.
You don't.
You go out and you have to let off steam after a day's work.
Even after the drink and I got home, I was still like, there's no way.
There's no way.
I got home. I was still like, there's no way. But the thing about theater is it is a person's life compressed into two and a half hours. I call it a little piece of shampoo. It's this much,
it's two and a half hours, but you rub it and all of a sudden it's just all of this lather. It's
huge all in this little dot. And it takes a lot to come down.
And when you do a show, you are on inordinate energy.
I got to ask you this, man.
When you do plays and stuff like that,
don't you find that more gratifying than doing,
fulfilling, I should say, than doing movies and TV
and stuff like that?
Like, I cry at the end.
When I'm done with a play,
for some reason, I'm crying at the end of it.
I don't feel that way necessarily
when I'm doing TV shows
or when I'm doing movies and stuff like that.
But at the end of a play,
it just feels like, holy cow, what a release.
Bill Lawrence got very insulted.
Properly.
About the story that I'm about to tell.
And I didn't mean it this way. But I used to call TV properly about the story that I'm about to tell.
And I didn't mean it this way,
but I used to call TV was my waiter's job so that I could afford to do a play.
Yeah.
TV gave me the wherewithal,
the money to raise children,
have a house,
eat so that I could go and starve because no matter what play you're doing,
even if you're the highest paid person on stage,
you're not making the money that TV and movie pays.
And so I said,
it's my waiter's job.
And he took it like TV is a second rate job.
It's not.
If you are lucky enough to be doing first rate material.
Yeah,
of course.
However,
however, i get more
satisfaction doing plays i am i'm thrilled in the rehearsal in fact just doing i don't have to do a
play for longer than a month i like rehearsing better than doing the play i agree when i did
when i did my six month run on broadway i it ended, it was very sad. But I remember collapsing on the ground being like six months was plenty.
Yes, I'm fine.
I'm fine.
Look, it's not the salt mines.
And it's also like going to the gym.
You know, getting to the gym, oh, my God, oh, my God.
But after the workout, you're happy you did it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And getting to the theater is oh christ
this guy again this life again this show again but then you do it and the show is over and you're
happy and the camaraderie nothing nothing i think donald one of the reasons you're crying is that
nothing even nothing in film and tv matches the camaraderie of of doing a play with a group of
people absolutely absolutely because you're on you're on the line together, man. You're on it together.
Together.
If one person falls,
somebody has to pull that person back
or the play's going to fall apart.
It'll fall apart.
And when I did Summerstock when I was a kid
and we did like 14 shows in 15 weeks,
it was huge.
And with the same cast,
it was all a repertory company.
And we were so close.
And for a year or two, we were so close.
I don't keep in touch with one of them, but I'm telling you,
I said, these people will be my friends for the rest of my life.
And then they don't.
Well, sometimes they do.
I take that back.
I don't know about the last. I did a play at the Old Globe in San Diego.
Sure.
Picasso at the La Panajil.
It's a Steve Martin play.
It's a one act.
Oh, sure.
With Joey.
Joey Segal, huh?
No, I did it with Justin Long.
With Justin Long.
Was Dan Castellaneta in it?
No, none of these people were in it.
Well, then I know nothing of what you're speaking about.
It was. It was. But it was was anyway, so we did a play there.
And I just remember thinking, wow, I really like these guys.
I hope we hang out after this.
And we do.
I still talk to these guys.
You know what I mean?
I still, Justin and I, we FaceTime every now and then.
How dare you, sir?
I know, I know.
I knew if I brought this up, you would get upset.
I want to hear about your relationship with Justin Long. FaceTime every now and then. How dare you, sir? I know, I know. I knew if I brought this up, you would get upset. How dare you?
I want to hear about your relationship with Justin Long.
I'm still close with all the guys from Spin City,
and you are obviously close with all the guys from Scrubs.
No, of course.
Oh, absolutely.
Of course.
And I, you know, there's people from the Bullets show and other shows that I,
you know, we don't see them that much, but we text.
When you find that bright spot to help you get through your day,
it's powerful.
That's where The Bright Side comes in.
A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine
that's bringing you a daily dose of joy.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
Listen, both Danielle and I are reporters.
We've covered the news
and we know the world can feel heavy.
But The Bright Side
podcast is a space to have a little fun, to learn something new and get into some friendly debates.
That's right. Join us five days a week to see how life can look from the bright side. We'll hear
from celebrities, authors, experts, and listeners like you. Whether it's relationships, friend advice,
or figuring out how to navigate life's transitions,
we'll talk through it all together.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
every weekday on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If you've been following the news,
you know that from healthcare access to safe schools,
LGBTQ plus rights are under attack.
And it's about time queer and trans youth get the microphone and tell their stories in their own words.
I'm Raquel Willis. Join me on my new podcast, Queer Chronicles, a show where LGBTQ plus folks tell their own stories
in their own words.
This season, teens will share all about growing up
in political battleground states.
I wish I could feel more comfortable in my own body here,
but that's just not the case.
And follow along as they discover
what queer and trans liberation means to them.
This isn't running away from yourself.
It's running into who you want to grow into.
Listen to Queer Chronicles on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your most fabulous shows.
I used to have so many men.
How this beguiling woman in her 50s.
She looked like a million bucks.
With zero qualifications.
She had a Harvard plaque.
Tricks her way past a wall of lawyers and agents.
She's got all of these Maseratis and Bentleys all in the driveway.
Is it like a mansion?
Yes, it's a mansion.
Is it like a mansion?
Yes, it's a mansion.
That this queen of the con uses to scam some of the biggest names in professional sports out of untold fortunes.
About six million.
Approximately 11 million dollars.
Nearly 10 million dollars was all gone.
Employing whatever means necessary to bleed her victims dry.
She would probably have sex with one of her clients.
Hide your money in your old Richmond 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.
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.
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.
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.
Look, I know you have a tea time, so we want
to let you go. We're going to let you go, but
hold on, I will say, and
I said this to you in
a text or email, but
Zach, you are
a great man. You're great at what you do,
but I know the history
that you had with your co-star,
and you are great.
You were a good man. I'm talking about your co-star and you are great. You were a good, good man.
I'm talking about your co-star in Bullets.
Nick Cordero, yeah, thank you.
I'm well aware of your goodness and your kindness
and anybody wants to look it up.
We won't talk because it's so serious,
but you are a great man.
Well, thank you, sir.
All I've done is stand by my friends,
which I hope that we all would do.
We all should.
If someone we love is in need,
that I think we all aspire to be the person that will show up.
But listen, I want to thank you, sir.
It is no smoke to say that we genuinely admire you
and look up to you and quote you all the time.
I mean, Donald and Bill and I will be together
and we'll just all of a sudden be like, I have Yaba. Waiting for that word. I was like, I always forget it. Yeah, we know.
And then you go, you go, you go, you go, you go, I have, I have Yaba. And Cox goes,
oh, really? Have you been around this, this rare type of monkey? That's the only person
to give that to you
in Africa? And you go,
I have been to the zoo. Continue.
Now, first of all,
that is also the genius of Bill
who can
write for me, who wrote
brilliantly for me, and to
choose the vowels
that I can make a meal with.
A lot of people do an impression of me.
I can't do an impression of me except that I used to be a recurring character on a show
called The Commish.
Oh, my gosh.
And somebody, I was at a poker game and they said, are you going to be here next week?
And I go, I can't.
I'm doing a commish.
That's the only impression I can do of me.
I can't do me.
But when I say the words, I have yabba, that is, those are the vowels that are just, if you want the essence.
Also your timing.
that are just if you want the essence. Also, your timing.
There was an episode last week we did
where the janitor's trying to get you to conspire with him,
and he's like, hey, if you do X, Y, Z, I can help you.
And you kind of look up, and there's a long pause,
and you go, go on.
It's just two fucking syllables, and it's funny.
And the one that's really great is when he walks into the room,
and he's complaining about everything,
and they close the curtain on him,
and Cox says to him,
you know this is going to cost you.
Your insurance isn't going to pay for this.
And you immediately open the curtain,
and you're fully dressed.
I remember that.
That I do remember.
How did you do that?
Was that a cowboy switch? How did they do that? Was that a cowboy switch?
How did they do that?
Because it's done so well
There's no cut
There must have been people back there
Helping you
Because it's literally like
It's like a four second change
And it's hilarious
Isn't that crazy?
Yeah, yeah
Oh, here's what I wanted to say about Bill
And I mean this
He started
With Spin City,
took it to a greater
extreme with you
guys.
Two-page,
three-page scenes
that add
up to a story.
That
was never done before. And when you get things like 30 rock and and
successive shows it started with bill yeah and it started on spin city a little bit but it really
continued with you guys he is the creator he is the mind behind the new thing because he was young and attention spans cameras.
That's what he did. He was he created that. And it's astounding what he did.
And I don't think anybody credits him. They all credit him with being great and, you know, and super successful and commercial.
But he did that with you guys.
I agree with you.
I don't think Bill gets the credit he deserves.
I mean, he's respected.
No, not at all.
Maybe now with Ted Lasso, because guess what?
On Sunday, he might win the Golden Globe.
Oh, that'd be great.
I love Ted Lasso.
It's wonderful.
Episode two was your favorite, wasn't it?
Because that's the one I directed.
It was.
I did like it.
I do know that
that you directed and i actually do um no i have a feeling you two are going to work together soon
i have a feeling i some way are you kidding me i there's not if someone if i'm directing something
and there's something he's right for i i literally request him i say you have to ask richard if he's
available and i'll save i will save all, we'll let you go, sir,
with your tea time.
But thank you so much.
I love you both.
I don't know if you're for Chanel,
but great to see you guys.
I'm very, very happy.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen,
give it up for Richard Coyne!
Bye, buddy.
Take care, Richard.
Let's take a break.
We'll be right back
after these fine words
oh my god
I can't stop laughing you guys
Daniel and I were messaging
while we were listening and I was like it's so
rare you just get to sit back and listen
and like love a podcast while you're recording
it that was the best so fucking
good so far you guys he had like 9 000 more stories to tell but i was like we promised we'd
get him up for his tea time i'm like shake we have to see if we can come back and tell us more
stories that was amazing by the way he's got he's got so many stories uh you know because he's just
a journeyman actor who's been in a zillion things. But I really want everybody out there who is an actor and who is coming up and everything.
Just listen.
If this podcast did anything for you today, rewind to when he's talking about auditions.
Those are jewels.
Those are gems given to you from richard kine and i'm telling you right
now i'm gonna i'm gonna use them i'm gonna steal a lot of the stuff he said today me too and by the
way you don't even have to be an actor it's about if you're going into a job interview if you're
going into a big meeting it's about like the just mind you're gonna mind fuck yourself one way or
the other why not mind fuck yourself into like i'm a badass and you guys are going to be fucking lucky to have me.
By the way, you're saying this in your mind, not out loud.
Not out loud.
We don't want you writing us being like, I said it out loud.
Like you said, I walked right into the audition.
Give me this part because you know, I'm the one who's going to make you the most money.
Doesn't work out of your mouth.
All right.
Well, listen.
Obviously, because Richard hadn't seen the episode, which was an ultimate blessing in disguise because we got to talk about so much more, we'll do this episode next time.
Right, Joelle?
Yeah.
And we'll just call this conversation with Richard Kind.
Daniel, this gives us a chance to do a wrap
if you want to do one.
Okay. We'll try.
I'll see what I can do. Please. This episode was very
funny, by the way. Yeah, it had some great moments.
I laughed out loud a bunch, Donald. I just have to say
when you say...
Let's not get into it. Let's not get into it.
Let me just say one thing. When you're with the heavyset
gal and you're pushed into the mattress...
I do like BBW.
And it's not a fantasy.
She has, in real life, pushed you down into the mattress.
That was funny.
I'm going to tell you something right now.
I love the fact that Turk likes BBW.
That's a beautiful thing, baby.
Yeah.
Well, I like BBW, too.
Listen, Donald, we have to tell everyone our big news.
Should we tell everyone our big news? We're doing Family Fe family feud y'all we're doing family so i thought i was going
to be the get to one to tell oh my bad do it do it do it no you're fine no no no leave it daniel
um listen it is one of my childhood dreams i never thought in my life that i would get to be
on family feud and i'm talking i used to watch back in the day when Richard Dawson was like groping people.
But now Steve Harvey, one of my life goals is to say something on Family Feud that will make Steve Harvey do his classic deadpan look away.
And we have been contacted.
I don't know how many podcasts have been on Family Feud before. I heard that Office Ladies, but I don't know how many podcasts have been on Family Feud before.
I heard that Office Ladies, but I don't know how many others.
But the four of us and Bill, because it's five players,
are going to represent Fake Doctors Real Friends on Family Feud.
Amazing.
I'm so excited.
Thunders applause, Dan.
Dan, a thunders applause.
Thunders applause.
Dan, I know you're particularly geeked about this.
Can you tell us what you're feeling?
Don't do that on Family Feud, dude.
Don't do that on Family Feud.
Look, I'll tell you this.
In my head, there are moments when I'm about to encounter someone that I admire or that I'm a really big fan of.
And I take a second and I think about what I'm going to say before I get there.
And I take a second and I think about what I'm going to say before I get there.
And you know that for however long until we get on Family Feud, I'm going to be running through everything that I'm going to be saying to Steve Harvey before we step on that stage.
Because I am truly beyond geek.
There's such a huge fan of game shows and watching Family Feud and all of that. I mean, like, you know, a story from the tour bus. When me and my best friend were on tour
as Gladiator, that was what we would
watch on the tour bus. We would watch
Family Feud with everybody, just back to back
to back to back. It was our favorite
thing. And this is like, I mean,
I'm so thankful. I really can't even express it enough.
We gotta win, guys. And you know,
when we come out of the huddle, we gotta be clapping
and you know to say, you know, you guys
say, good answer, good answer, good answer.
Good answer.
Yeah, Donald, you got to practice your good answer.
Okay.
Because I've watched Family Feud before when somebody said something, and everybody was supportive saying, good answer, good answer.
And I wanted to be like, that's not a good answer.
No, but you got to be supportive, bro.
I want to be able to say, that's not a good answer.
Just one time. If somebody says something dumb, even if it's me, want to be able to say that's not a good answer. Just one time.
If somebody says something dumb, even if it's me, I want to be like, that's not a good answer.
I got to say, I'm so excited, you guys.
When I found out this news, I was like, this is a little piece of, you know, in this pandemic, a little jewel of something that is so exciting to me.
We got to figure out who we're going to be up against.
That's up. I mean. i mean well no they pitch i don't want to tell who but they pitched a couple people that are already in the
slots and or they said if you have a team that that you guys want to pitch to go up against where
our ears are open so i don't know i mean look i think the obvious choice is we go up against
something that's very similar to Scrubs.
I know Office Ladies would have been perfect, but they've already done it.
Apparently, one of my Instagram followers told me that Office Ladies was up against Scott Foley's actual family.
They were.
I watched that episode.
Yeah.
Maybe we should go up against Scott Foley's family.
Scott Foley's actual family is a bunch of famous people.
Scott Foley's family.
Scott Foley's actual family is a bunch of famous people.
Him, his wife, his sister-in-law, his brother-in-law.
Yeah.
They're all very good.
Well, we want to go up against people that will be funny because that's what will make the whole show funny.
They're funny too.
We don't want a dud.
No, no.
I'm not saying Foley. I'm saying we want the other team to be funny because, you know, most importantly, we want our episode to be hilarious.
Right.
Absolutely.
We want the funniest family feud.
So everybody says.
Right.
Oh, my God.
I'm going to.
Do you think Steve Harvey will let me touch his mustache?
No.
No.
Not in COVID times, huh?
What if I put on a glove?
Oh, my God.
I do not think that's a good idea.
If you want a deadpan stare, though, that's how you get it.
That is how you get it. You touch his mustache.
Daniel, you probably watch more episodes
than any of us. Do you know the best way to
You just say something outrageous to get the deadpan
stare. Usually sexual.
Usually with a sexual innuendo. Bingo.
There you go. Look, I'm going to do my
impression of it for you guys.
It's spot on.
It's there. The eyes following the face. You got to do the open mouth one, too. It's spot on. It's there.
The eyes following the face.
You got to do the open mouth one too,
the open mouth one.
I sent,
when we found out,
you guys listening,
when we found out,
I sent all these guys
all my favorite Steve Harvey gifts.
Incredible.
Oh, I'm so excited.
By the way,
there's a Scrubs tie-in
because on like episode,
whatever,
is it four or something?
We cut to, when Louis Anderson was hosting.
We cut to that.
We were on the show for boobs.
For boobs.
I'm going to go with boobs, Louis.
I wasn't on that episode.
You weren't in that fantasy.
I was very upset about it.
I even spoke about it on the podcast.
All right.
So look, next week, I guess Thursday for you guys, because this is for Tuesday.
Thursday, we will dive into the episode that we were supposed to dive into today.
All right.
Other news, don't forget to mark your calendars for March 26th.
Live show.
We're going to do a live show.
That's going to be amazing.
I had a really good idea for a musical guest that I'll tell you guys secretly.
Tickets go on sale Friday.
If you're listening to it on Tuesday, Friday, tickets
for the live event will be going on sale
Friday, March 5th. Oh, that's exciting.
Yeah. Now, are we going to cap
the audience? This is something we haven't talked about.
Why would we cap them?
Well, I mean... Special event, man.
I mean, there's two schools
of thought. One is just like, let anyone in the world who wants to come in, who wants to buy a ticket, I mean. Special event, man. I mean, there's two schools of thought.
One is just like let anyone in the world who wants to come in, who wants to buy a ticket come in.
And then the other school of thought is like, no, let's make it special and limit the amount of people in the quote unquote theater like you would if you were touring.
I think the great thing about a virtual tour is that everybody can join in.
All right.
So just infinite.
We talked about O2 and all of that stuff.
There's no way we can do O2 numbers if we can't.
But what about the supreme model of selling clothing where it's like, sorry, guys, we only had 1,000 seats?
Listen, our first live show.
Yeah, but the last thing I want to do. Small intimate theater.
Yeah, the first real live show, small intimate theater.
Okay.
So maybe as we go forward, we do bespoke ones.
Yeah, I think this is for everybody.
All our listeners want this, and so we should give them the opportunity.
And, you know, if you don't want this, I would implore you to change your mind.
Things are going to happen.
First of all, things are going to happen that don't happen on the show.
Oh yeah.
You think?
Oh yeah.
We're going to have a musical guest at least.
Right.
We're going to interact with our fans.
Okay.
You're going to,
they're going to be able to look at our faces.
Donald will show his melted Hershey's kisses.
That's true.
By March 26th,
which is one month from today,
I'm hoping to have abs.
So maybe I'll show you them.
Maybe.
Listen, if I drop a few more pounds, I will show Melted Hershey's Kisses.
Oh, okay.
You guys can hear about what it's all about.
You know what else we could do as a pitch?
I'll tell the audience this pitch that I think you might like.
Shafter Balls.
No.
By the way, speaking of Shafter Balls. No. No Shafter Balls.
By the way, speaking of Shafter Balls, this is kind of like our OnlyFans.
We're doing an OnlyFans event.
Yeah, but it's like Shafter Balls. Except we're not going to show, you know, balloon nut.
I wanted to say that maybe we sing Guy Love.
No.
Why not?
No.
No.
Why not?
Because we.
You scared?
You scared?
You scared?
You think I'm scared to sing. You scared? You scared? You scared? You think I'm scared to sing?
You scared?
You can sing guy love right now.
It's not a big deal.
That's for the special event, dick neck.
Dick neck?
It's not a big deal.
You rub your neck.
I'm a dick neck?
So that means my face is the what?
The head.
The tip.
And you rub your neck and you look like a giraffe when that shit grows.
Oh, boy.
Oh, gosh. My goodness. Oh, boy. Oh, gosh.
My goodness.
Oh, my word.
Fucking look like E.T. when it grows.
Is that what you're saying?
Yes, E.T. when he's fucking like.
Oh, God.
I hope it's a little girthier than E.T.'s neck.
Yeah, yeah.
Your dick neck has a lot more girth than E.T.'s dick neck.
Oh, boy. There go neck has a lot more girth than E.T.'s dick neck. Oh, boy.
There go all our sponsors.
All right.
Listen, let's get out of here while we're ahead.
Joelle, you all right?
I'm dying.
Don't worry, Joelle.
You can unpause Rebels any moment.
Listen, guys.
Did you watch WandaVision?
No, I'm not caught up.
Don't say a word.
Did you watch it? I watched last week's. I't say a word. Did you watch it?
I watched it last week.
I watched it last week.
I haven't watched it last night.
No, Donald's the kind of guy that gets up in the morning and watches.
My wife and I watched it this morning because the kids were at school and we had a little bit of time before the podcast.
Woo!
Sorry, I didn't mean to unlatch.
That's all.
Yeah, that's all. Leave it at that. We'll get there. Leave it at that. Get your baby back on the nipple. I'll do it to un-slash. That's all.
Leave it at that.
Get your baby back on the nipple.
I'll do it.
Easy.
Easy.
There it is.
There's going to be a kid that hears that one day
and is going to be like,
I'm so troubled.
It just reminds me of my mom's teat.
I don't know what it is about Zach's voice,
but it reminds me of suckling on my mom's teat.
Oy, oy, oy, oy, oy.
All right, let's end this.
That was awesome.
That was such a surprise.
And it's such a great example of how, like,
the second he said he hadn't seen the episode,
I was like, rut, rut.
And then that was one of the most entertaining guests we've had.
Yeah, he has so many stories, man.
Next time we got to ask about the Clooney,
all his Clooney anecdotes.
Yes, no doubt.
He's Clooney's best friend,
and Clooney was best man at his wedding,
and I'm sure they have a lot of adventures
that we'll get Richard to tell.
I cannot stress this enough.
The jewels that he left were sacred.
And so please, if you are in business and you have fear of walking into rooms and being
in front of people, or if you need a new anecdote because the old one's not working anymore,
rewind this episode.
Great talk with Richard Kind, guys.
Yes.
All right. We love you all. And we'll see you next time. 5, with Richard Kind, guys. Yes. All right. We love you all
and we'll see you next time.
I'm Steve Giavinese.
So gather round to hear our
gather round to hear our Scrubs Rewatch Show When you find that bright spot to help you get through your day, it's powerful.
That's where The Bright Side comes in.
A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that's bringing you a daily dose of joy.
I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
Listen, both Danielle and I are reporters.
We've covered the news and we know the world can feel heavy.
But the Bright Side podcast is a space to have a little fun,
to learn something new and get into some friendly debates.
That's right.
Join us five days a week to see how life can look from the bright side.
We'll hear from celebrities, authors, experts,
and listeners like you.
Whether it's relationships, friend advice,
or figuring out how to navigate life's transitions,
we'll talk through it all together.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
every weekday on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If you've been following the news,
you know that from healthcare access to safe schools,
LGBTQ plus rights are under attack.
And it's about time queer and trans youth
get the microphone and tell their stories in their own words.
I'm Raquel Willis.
Join me on my new podcast, Queer Chronicles,
a show where LGBTQ plus folks tell their own stories in their own words.
This season, teens will share all about growing up in political battleground states.
I wish I could feel more comfortable in my own body here, but that's just not the case.
And follow along as they discover what queer and trans liberation means to them.
This isn't running away from yourself. It's running into who you want to grow into.
Listen to Queer Chronicles on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your most fabulous shows.
I used to have so many men.
How this beguiling woman in her 50s
She looked like a million bucks.
with zero qualifications
She had a Harvard plaque.
tricks her way past a wall of lawyers and agents. She's got all of these Maseratis and Bentleys She had a Harvard plaque.
She's got all of these Maseratis and Bentleys all in the driveway.
Is it like a mansion?
Yes, it's a mansion.
That this queen of the con uses to scam some of the biggest names in professional sports out of untold fortunes.
About six million.
Approximately 11 million dollars.
Nearly 10 million dollars was all gone.
Employing whatever
means necessary to bleed
her victims dry.
She would probably have sex with one of her
clients. 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.
Hey, everybody.
Welcome to Across Generations,
where the voices of Black women unite in powerful conversations.
I'm your host, Tiffany Cross.
Tiffany Cross.
I want you all to join me and be a part of sisterhood, friendship, wisdom, and laughter.
In every episode, we gather a seasoned elder.
But even with a child, there's no such thing as the wrong thing if you love them.
Myself, as the middle generation.
I don't feel like I have to get married at this big age in life, but it is a desire I have and something that I've navigated in dating.
And a vibrant young soul
for engaging intergenerational conversations.
I'm very jealous of your generation
that didn't have to deal with Instagram and Tinder.
This is Across Generations,
where Black women's voices unite
and together, you know how we do,
we create magic.
Listen to Across Generations podcast
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever light up your day. Every weekday, we're bringing you conversations about culture,
the latest trends, inspiration, and so much more.
We'll hear from celebrities, authors, experts, and listeners like you.
Whether it's relationships, friend advice,
or figuring out how to navigate life's transitions, big and small,
we'll talk through it together.
Listen to The Bright Side from Hello Sunshine
every weekday on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Raquel Willis.
Join me on my new podcast, Queer Chronicles,
a show where LGBTQ plus folks tell their own stories in their own words.
This season, teens will share all about growing up in political battleground states.
We will always exist and we will definitely not let them take away our joy, no matter how hard they try.
Listen to Queer Chronicles on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your most fabulous shows.
Hi, this is Shannon Doherty, host of the new podcast, Let's Be Clear with Shannon Doherty.
So in this podcast, I'm going to be talking about marriage, divorce, my family, my career.
I'm also going to be talking a lot about cancer, the ups and the downs, everything that I've
learned from it. It's going to be a wild ride. So listen to Let's Be Clear with Shannon Doherty
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hey, it's Alec Baldwin.
This past season on my podcast, Here's the Thing,
I spoke with more actors, musicians, policymakers,
and so many other fascinating people,
like jazz bassist Christian McBride.
Jazz is based on improvisation,
but there's very much a form to it.
You have a conversation based on that melody
and those chord changes.
So it's kind of like giving someone a topic
and say, okay, talk about this.
Listen to the new season of Here's the Thing
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.