Fake Doctors, Real Friends with Zach and Donald - Real Friends Classic: The Pilot My First Day
Episode Date: March 12, 2024With the conclusion of season eight, we decided to turn the clock back to the very first episode. Enjoy this most classic of classic episodes. We'll return with season 9 next week. See omnystudio.c...om/listener for privacy information.
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Donald, if you're not recording, I am going to squeeze your balls.
Well, I've been recording since, for like three minutes
and 17 seconds, so there will be
no ball squeezing necessary. Here we go.
Hello, everyone. You can't even get to me.
Hello, everyone. Three, wait, three,
two. a bunch of docs and nurses and a janitor who loved the hay. I said he's got stories
that we all should know. So gather round to hear our, gather round to hear our Scrubs Rewatch show
with Zach and Donald. Hello, everyone. My name is Zach Braff. Hi, I'm Donald Faison. And I can't
believe it. But guess what, guys? We're going to do a Scrubs rewatch podcast. Yeah, that's exactly what we're doing. Dude, your voice changed
completely all of a sudden. We were all talking normal, and then the podcast started, and you're
like, hey, everyone, it is I. I got nervous, and I felt like I should sound like a radio broadcaster,
but no, okay, I'm back to me. There we go. This is pretty exciting.
I'm excited about this.
I got to tell you, I'm very excited.
We've been talking about this for a long time.
We've been trying to figure it out.
I've been teasing social media, as have you been.
Well, you've been teasing social media a little bit more than I have.
I know, because I wanted to get people titillated, Donald.
I wanted to titillate the masses.
Well, let's thank iHeartRadio, first of all,
for putting this, helping us put this all together.
We had to figure out who to do it,
and we found a perfect partner with iHeart,
and we want to thank them.
And also we want to thank the fans across the universe
because I just think it would be crazy for us
not to start with saying we wouldn't be doing this
if it weren't for the just incredibly loyal,
amazing fan base
we have around the earth. Right, Donald? Yes. Thank you very much. All of you who
watched the show and who are listening to this podcast right now, wow, we appreciate you so much.
Thank you so much. Yeah, thank you. I mean, this has been so many years of love for this show.
And it's funny, I'm sure, Donald, you have this experience too, where people come up to the street
like, I'm sure this is so annoying, but I just want to say,
I love the show.
And I'm like, I'm always like,
it's not annoying.
Are you kidding me?
That's like the best comment you can give us.
well,
it's annoying when you're eating food.
Yeah.
Maybe when you're eating food and somebody comes up to you and they're like,
sorry to bother you.
You know,
the first,
why are you saying sorry to bother you?
You're not sorry to bother me.
You're meant to bother me at that moment.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Well just guys,
if you're going to see Donald in public,
don't do it while he's eating.
Or with my kids.
I don't play that.
Oh, yeah, all right.
Well, just wait outside
the restaurant for him
in a dark alley.
That's how I prefer
people to approach me,
in a dark alley.
I also, my only request
is not online at the pharmacy
because I'm usually sick
and I don't want to... I once had a guy ask me to sign his box of condoms at the pharmacy because I'm usually sick and I don't want to. I once had a guy ask
me to sign his box of condoms at a pharmacy. Did you?
No. I was like, dude, this is weird. I don't want to sign your condoms.
Anyway, we've already digressed. We love our fans and we're so glad you're listening.
So the rough plan is that we're just going to talk through episodes of Scrubs. We're
going to start with season one, obviously. Today, we're going to talk about the pilot,
and we're going to just kind of tell stories and go through it scene by scene and just kind of
tell anecdotes and stuff. And then eventually, we want to have guests on. Today, we're going to take
a very first fan question, which is thrilling. Joelle figured out how to do that. She's amazing.
We're really excited about this. We should start.
Do you remember the name of the pilot?
What the first episode was?
No.
Wait, I just want to tell them one more thing.
So we were going to do this in person, but then, of course, because of this COVID insanity,
the good people of iHeart have figured out a way for Adal and us to do it remotely.
So we're looking at each other over Zoom, and he's in his closet, which is frigging hilarious, because I guess that's the only
place you could hide from your kids. Yeah, well, yeah, they're downstairs. We put on Captain
Underpants so they'll be quiet for a bit. But if you hear someone yelling or screaming, it's
probably going to be my son Rocco or my daughter Wilder. I'm going to take a picture of this to
post on the interwebs because it's very adorable. well let me get my let me get a fresh pose then oh my god you're so cute all right so donald um
has children and um and a wife and uh everyone's in quarantine so he's in his closet recording
and uh we're looking at each other so so we're going to do it like this um and for the foreseeable
future um every week we'll be coming to you talking about the next episode of the show.
And we'll hope that you'll watch it along with us
because that's kind of the idea.
If you watch that episode
and then we'll shoot the shit about that episode.
I just watched it.
I got very nostalgic.
Did you feel nostalgia?
Well, yeah.
Just how young we were, first of all.
We were so young.
You were so young. I didn't remember how young I was.
I was 26 at the time, and I'm 45 turning 46 this year, and that was 20 years ago.
So watching the pilot for the first time really felt like it was brand new.
I remembered some things, but other things, I i was like i don't remember any of this
uh you know i remember certain poses that john c mcginley made like when he put his hand on the
back of his head and stuff like that i remember being like wow that's interesting that he chose
to do that right now and as the show goes on it became his dr cox stuff but while we while watching
it for the first time i was like oh God, this is where it all originated.
This is where this came from.
There were so many moments I had while watching it too
where I was like thinking, first of all,
we can't start off even five minutes of this
without talking about Bill Lawrence,
who is the creator of the show,
the reason we're all here talking.
And I was just amazed watching it,
how much Bill got.
It's like 23 minutes long
and how much he was able,
how much storytelling and character introduction.
Pilots are always hard
because the showrunner creator
has such a hard job to introduce so many characters
and do it in 23 minutes.
And it's just amazing how much,
how many characters are introduced,
how many storylines
and like love interests are introduced, how much is packed into one episode yeah that's some of those
i have questions for you as a matter of fact just on you know how the whole pilot came together and
everything well wait let's start with that wait sorry i didn't mean to interrupt you but let's
start with cat i feel like we should tell our stories about auditioning because that's well
yeah that was my first question for you.
So when we first started the pilot, I had already done quite a few things. Like I was in Clueless.
I had done Remember the Titans already, Wait and Exhale.
I was guest starring on Felicity at the time.
And this was a pilot that came up for me.
And I was like, yeah, sure, I'll go out for it.
I'd love to go out for it.
Anybody wants to be on a show.
And it wasn't until after I auditioned for it and got it that everybody was like, all my, I remember all of my agents being like, this is like the number one pilot of the season.
Everyone wanted to be a part of this.
And you booked it.
And I remember being like, holy cow.
I was just looking at it as, let me get another job because I got kids to feed.
You know what I mean?
You were completely different.
You were like, I mean, I know you had been in some things and stuff like that, but you
hadn't even really popped yet.
Yeah, I'd done little things.
You know, I'd been in an indie.
I was in an indie, a couple indies, one called The Broken Hearts Club that went to Sundance.
But I was still waiting tables.
Who directed that, by the way?
A now superstar famous person named Greg Berlanti.
It was his very first film.
And he gave me one of my first early big breaks being in that movie. And I was a waiter
at a French Vietnamese restaurant in Beverly Hills. That's an interesting combination.
And people who, if you saw Garden State, my film, I'm kind of spoofing that in the beginning when
I'm working with a tunic on and waiting on horrible people. But anyway, I was a waiter
there and people would come from having... Broken Cards Club was in the theater and people would come from the theater and they'd say for dessert to the
restaurant. And they'd be like, we just saw your movie. And I'd be like, oh, cool. Thank you. Thank
you for going. And they'd be like, you were great. And I go, oh, thank you. Thank you so much.
Let me tell you about our specials. And it was like only in Hollywood can you go see a movie
and then have the star of the movie wait on you for dessert.
How did you feel about that?
Were you ever embarrassed by it?
Oh, I was so embarrassed.
I remember I would go to a general meeting.
In Hollywood, they have these things called general meetings
where you kind of go, and you're bragging that,
oh, my career's going so well, and we should really work together,
and you're just kind of schmoozing.
And I remember I did one of those, and it really went well,
and I came out feeling so good.
And then that night, I looked down at one of my tables and the guy was at the table.
Oh, that's awesome.
And I didn't, I had left out the part how I was still, you know, hustling and waiting tables.
But so, you know, I got the audition. I was waiting tables. I got the audition.
Now, my story is a little funny because I went out first for it in New York. I happened to be in New York and I didn't prepare.
It went so poorly.
I hadn't read the script.
You know, not every audition do you go in killing it.
And I didn't do a good job.
And when I got back to LA, my agent said, look, they still can't find this guy for the show.
And it's really like you said, everyone's talking about it.
This is like one of the hot new shows of the season.
I think you could just go back
in. They wouldn't even know. Your audition,
they were like, I don't even know if your
tape made it from New York,
because no one even responded to
whatever the fuck you did.
This time, I took it seriously. I memorized
it. I worked on it. I practiced a lot.
Then when I went in,
I remember the cast director,
Brett, right? That was his right? He looked up at me
like, oh, okay, like with a smile. And then it was off to the races. Then I met Bill and I worked
with Bill. And then I literally auditioned six times before I got it. And then finally, my final
audition was for the network and it was down between four of us. And I, I read with Sarah and I, you know, I had given in six times. I wore the
exact same outfit every single time because I was so superstitious and, and I could really tell that
Bill was rooting for me. He, he, he made it known to me that, that, that he wanted me to get it.
But there were a lot of, you know, people that were more famous than me that were, that were,
I mean, that were famous, that were up for it.
So I couldn't believe I got it.
But anyway, so tell me about your audition process.
So I auditioned for it.
The first time I auditioned for it,
I don't know who was in the room, to be honest with you.
I just auditioned and they were like,
they want to bring you back.
And then I came back and I auditioned again.
And this time Bill was there.
And I remember being like, okay.
You know, at this point in my career it was like I'm just going to audition for things as many times as I can until
they say yes you know what I mean or until they say no and I remember they were like all right
look you're going to test for this but they want you to go in for one more audition before that
just to run lines with Bill and work on the jokes and stuff. And I was like, yeah, absolutely.
The one thing I remembered to this day, he's still like this.
If Bill wants the joke to work, he'll laugh.
Even if it fell flat, he'll still laugh to give you the confidence of,
yo, dude, that's the joke.
That's where the joke lands, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so we went into the room and we're working on it
and he's laughing at everything. And I'm like, oh, I'm And so we went into the room, and we're working on it,
and he's laughing at everything.
And I'm like, oh, I'm crushing it.
And then after every take, he'd be like, all right,
now let's work on this beat. And I remember it was him and Danny Rose at the time.
Yeah.
Danny Rose is another one of-
At the time, he was Bill's assistant,
but then he rose up in the ranks and became a producer on the show.
Right.
And so we did it.
And then he was like, all right, good luck tomorrow.
And I was like, all right, bet.
And so I went on the audition and I saw a bunch of friends of mine auditioning.
And Sarah was there.
And, you know, we were there for about an hour and a half, all of us testing in front of the network.
And I remember at one point, you know,
we're all sitting out there for a while
and they hadn't come out in a bit.
And Bill comes out and is like,
Donald, I need to talk to you real quick.
And I was like, oh, well,
I guess I'm the first person to go home.
And he says, so look, your audition,
you probably could tell already,
but you kind of fucked it up.
Oh my God, you must have been dying and so
you know i want to give you another shot because i the things that i've seen you do
uh you just didn't do that time in the room and so if you could just bring it down a little bit
and did you agree with him did you think did you did you agree with him and think like oh
shit i was so nervous and he's right no i thought i was crushing it i was doing everything that we i thought i was doing everything that we had done in the rehearsal right so finally i go
in there and i remember toning everything down and him being like perfect and then leaving and
he sent everybody home except for sarah myself and one other person and that night i found out i got the job wow you know what i mean
and you know when i went in on the audition i expected to see the guy that he had kept you
know it was me sarah and this one guy and we were like holy cow i i guess we got it right and uh
i expected to see the guy at the table read and and you walked in. I was like, that's not the same dude.
Wait, so I knew who you were, obviously, because I loved Clueless. I had not seen anything you were in, no.
No, you wouldn't.
I didn't mean to say that you'd seen my two little indies.
I just mean, like, I guess I don't know what my question is.
I mean, like, have you even seen a picture of me?
You didn't even know anything about me.
I knew nothing about you.
You knew an unknown guy got the part at least, right?
I feel like I remember what you wore to the table read, though.
I feel like you wore corduroy brown pants.
I could be wrong.
I can't believe that you would remember this.
And a t-shirt.
And we met at the bar while I was getting a drink.
Yeah, I remember this.
I was writing this down in my notes.
First of all, it was at Krista Miller's and Bill's old house.
And Charlotte Lawrence had just been born.
Charlotte Lawrence was a baby.
And we walked into, I remember it was a sunken living room.
And there was a bar in the corner.
And then you turned around and gave me this big smile.
And you were like, yeah, buddy.
And I was like, it literally was love at first sight
right i i just felt i was so nervous you have to understand i mean i knew you were obviously i knew
john mcginley was i had met sarah at my audition but like i was you can imagine i mean we're all
nervous no matter who you are but i was because because also people do get fired after table
reads so right you know you're like you're like i i mostly have it but i really got to make sure
i keep it and uh and then i saw you and you you were so warm, and I think we hugged.
I think the first time—
Yeah, no, we did hug.
Yeah.
The first time we met, we hugged.
Well, that was the craziest thing was I remember not knowing who you were and being like, all right.
And Bill was like, let's start the table read.
And I remember being nervous for myself.
And then you started reading.
And all of a sudden, the jokes that I didn't see in the script when I read it, all of a sudden started to appear because you were knocking it out of the park.
And everybody was laughing and, you know, really excited.
So when it was my time to come in, I was like, yeah!
The energy was there.
And you know what I mean?
I just remember being like, holy cow, this kid is amazing.
I remember being like, this could actually turn into something.
This is at the table, Reed.
I remember being like, this could be something special.
My agents weren't lying when they told me this was the one.
Yeah.
Yeah, man.
I remember that special feeling too.
I also wanted to say that when I drove home from my test,
I had a StarTech.
I had the Motorola StarTech.
You remember that?
Yeah, the two ways.
No, no.
The StarTech was the little flip phone,
the little black flip phone back in the day.
Oh, I don't know.
Anyways, I had my little flip phone,
and I put it on the passenger seat as I was driving
home from the network test.
And I was just waiting to see if it was going to ring.
And like, is my life about to change substantially or not?
And the phone rang.
It was Bill.
He told me I got the part.
And I was just flipping out.
I mean, I had no money.
I didn't have a dollar to my name.
I was living-
Oh, dude.
Who are you telling, man? I had no money. I didn't have a dollar in my name. I was living- Rob Markman Oh, dude. Who are you telling, man?
I had kids.
I bought a house with all of this clueless money that I had.
And you know what I mean?
I thought I was going to be a baller.
And I remember having to call home and beg my mom for money so I could get gas to go
on these auditions.
Rob Markman Oh, really?
Rob Markman You know what I mean?
Because I was broke.
Rob Markman My parents loaned me $5,000 to buy a car
out in LA. So I bought a car. I bought a Nissan 240SX. Rob Markman I was broke. My parents loaned me $5,000 to buy a car out in LA.
So I bought a car.
I bought a Nissan 240SX.
I remember that.
Which did me really, really well.
And then I was just living off my waiter's salary.
But I got the call from Bill.
I freak out.
I call my mom.
I call my dad.
And then I call the manager of the restaurant, who was amazingly supportive of me.
And she was an actress herself.
And she was like, I'm so happy for you. Congratulations. And I was like, was an actress herself. And she was like, I'm so happy for you.
Congratulations.
And I was like, well, I quit.
And she was like, wait, wait, wait.
She was like, wait, wait.
I'll never forget that.
She was like, you have to work tonight.
I was like, what now?
She's like, you have to work tonight.
And I was like, I do?
She's like, babe, you can't leave me hanging like that.
You got to work tonight.
I was like, I was like, oh, I'll work tonight.
And I just got, I like, I got hammered. People were like waiting on me. Like, you know't leave me hanging like that. You got to work tonight. I was like, oh, I'll work tonight. And I just got, I had hammered.
People were like waiting on me, like, you know,
because it was one of those restaurants where people were like really douchey
and like, sir.
And I'd be like, just wait your turn.
Everybody, everybody calm down.
All right.
Your French Vietnamese food is coming.
Right on.
I remember after we shot the pilot,
just to jump ahead and having to wait for so long
for the show to get picked up, right?
And running into you at a club and you being out of your mind blitzed.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's probably what happened.
I could never get into the club.
Like, I went, like, in the classic thing with, like, the red velvet ropes and, like, I can
even picture, like, me being online at the club being like, all right, I'm going out to a nightclub tonight because I got some money in my pocket.
And it's like I picture it.
I see like Donald going in like the guys like the bouncers like part the red velvet ropes is Donald and his posse gets led into the club.
And then I get in and I saw you.
I remember the first night I saw you like out in the real world and I like screamed because I was like.
Dude, you were so loud and you were so drunk. It was so funny. Well, I had to celebrate. I remember the first night I saw you out in the real world, and I screamed because I was like, ah!
Dude, you were so loud, and you were so drunk.
It was so funny.
Well, I had to fucking celebrate.
So let's get back to the pilot. Let's talk about the pilot.
Now, the first thing I want to say about the pilot,
the first thing I noticed is that that's not the hospital.
Right.
The pilot for Scrubs was filmed.
We filmed technically in three spots.
The pilot was filmed in a Burbank hospital.
And this one that they show in the exterior is actually not even that.
It's just a different hospital.
But then we shot the bulk of the series at a hospital in Valley Village, which is now
apartments.
And then season nine, which we'll have plenty of jokes about, was shot actually on a back lot on stages.
But the bulk of the show, the one that you all know and love, was shot all inside a real hospital.
I'm sure not everybody knows that.
It was a real hospital.
I remember the sound man saying something about, you know, I think when we did the pilot,
I'm not sure if it was the pilot or the
actual series but i think it was the pilot saying you know what i'm gonna set up in this room
because this is the room that my father died in or something really yeah that's so dark our
dressing rooms you know you know you've seen a lot of times on sets they people have trailers
that are their dressing rooms well our dressing rooms were hospital rooms for, for eight and a half years that we worked at this hospital, we lived and did everything inside this hospital. I mean,
our dressing rooms were in the hospital, the makeup rooms in the hospital, the offices were
in this hospital, the editing, the writer's room, everything, all the other sets, like, you know,
whether it was the inside of a bar or our apartment, all those were built into this really disgusting,
ancient hospital.
Okay.
So I want to talk about the first scene where you wake up and it's time to,
that was that a reshoot?
No,
it was not a reshoot.
I think it was done like after the fact.
I think it's probably one of the last things we did.
I do remember thinking that I didn't think this was funny.
This,
this whole shaving cream thing.
It turned out to be really funny.
Well, Bill turned it into something.
I remember thinking, like, what?
Why would I be doing this?
Why would I, on my first day, so nervous,
be making a shaving cream bra?
Or being like a warrior.
And then doing the scream.
Look how young I am.
I'm just scrolling through because I like to just reference it.
But anyway, I didn't think it was funny at the time, but then I saw it,
and I remember thinking, yeah, that was clever.
Okay, and then the scene where you walk into the hospital,
and the lady gives you all of this energy about what's going to happen today,
et cetera, et cetera, and then you not really knowing where to go.
Yeah. I mean, this was one thing you'll hear me say over and over again was,
and Bill always said this was like,
there's no person better to play someone young and in over their head than me
because here I was, I didn't know anything about, I mean,
it was all method acting. I didn't know anything about starring in a TV show.
I didn't know anything about like, I mean, I knew I had some experience, but every time
I was playing the wide eyed guy walking around, I was just being me because I couldn't believe
that this was happening to me.
You know, it was the exact same life that I was living.
You know what?
Speaking of wide eyed, before we started the pilot, they wanted us to all go on rounds
with doctors and stuff like that.
Right.
I did that.
Right.
I did not.
I opted out.
I was like, get the fuck out of here.
I'm not doing that shit.
I don't want to see any of this.
But meanwhile, I'm like the diligent student who's like, all right, send me out.
Right.
I remember getting on the phone with the young lady who was my contact that was going to
take me around on rounds and her being like, so you're coming down tonight?
And me being like, yeah, about that.
No, I don't see myself ever doing this.
If you could just tell me some anecdotes, that would be great.
Yeah, I was the exact.
I was like the good student.
I was like, where are we going?
Did you see anything crazy?
No, but I remember thinking it was really inappropriate, actually,
that she was having me go around to visit patients with her.
She put a stethoscope around my neck so I would look legit.
I know it's kind of fucked up in hindsight like i should not have been doing that but did she ever refer to
you like no no because she she was just treating me like i was a like i was a medical student and
she wasn't doing what she should have done which is being like hey is it okay there's someone who's
an actor researching a part she wasn't doing. I was just going in and being like,
hey, how's the guys doing?
And she'd kind of like,
and the people would be like looking at her and then they'd like, they'd nod to me.
And I'm like, I would just be nodding.
I remember I was just,
I was just kind of had like a serious nod on my face.
Like I was listening and understanding what's going on.
Right on.
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That's where The Bright Side comes in.
A new daily podcast from Hello Sunshine that's bringing you a daily dose of joy.
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If you've been following the news, you know that from health care 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
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Join me on my new podcast,
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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.
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 you get your podcasts.
I want to talk about the title sequence because that's the next thing that comes up.
I was going to ask you about that too, man.
Dude, how much did you hate that until you saw it?
That's one of those things where I was like, this sucks, man. For those of you who don't know, it's a motion control camera.
And it really took a long time to do that.
And at the time, we didn't know how cool it would look.
So it took like a full day to do it. And I remember we were't know how cool it would look so it was like it took like a full
day to do it and i remember um we were all kind of really over it by the end then it came out and
it was really fucking cool and then uh we've heard this for many times uh our whole uh scrubs
existence but the the x-ray at the end is backwards and every every doctor wanted to point that out
and and we used to be like oh yeah yeah that's on purpose get it
because they're like med students comedy right yeah and they're med students they don't fully
get it but people were like no it wasn't the fucking prop guy fucked up the shit backwards
we did and but we got lucky with that too because that kind of set the tone for this offbeat wacky
show of ours you know i know i know but early on in like in like commentary i remember everyone
being like the x-rays backwards. And we were like,
yeah,
we meant to do it and to do it again.
When we do the next time.
Do you remember when we,
um,
a few years in,
they tried to redo this sequence with Neil.
They wanted to add Neil.
Yeah.
They wanted to add Neil and Neil,
the janitor.
Who played the janitor.
Yeah.
And,
and then,
so they aired it a few times and the fan base was like,
what the fuck is that opening? Right. No, they weren't having it. They times, and the fan base was like, what the fuck is that opening?
Right, no, they weren't having it.
They were not having it.
They were like, put it back.
Sort of like season nine, how they weren't having season nine either.
Right.
But anyway, all right, we digress.
We have 180 episodes to get to before that.
We digress, we digress.
But wait, and then I want to say that the song was a song I found from a band called Laszlo Bain that I was friends with.
Because originally we wanted Five for Fighting.
For the theme song?
Yeah, that was the original theme song.
It was something like,
I'm more than a bird.
We can never use this.
I'm more than a plane.
I think you're allowed to sing a few lines on the podcast.
I'm more than some Superman beside a train.
However it goes.
Anyway, so this song.
I can't stand to fly.
My friend.
I'm not that naive. All, so this song. I can't stand a fly. My friend. I'm not that naive.
All right.
All right.
My friend, Chad Fisher, was in this band,
and I thought the lyrics were perfect,
because not only was it a great song,
but it's like what the show's about, you know?
I'm no Superman, Donald.
Get it?
Well, that's the same thing the Fight for Fighting song was about.
You just found somebody who wrote something kind of similar to it.
I can't do it all.
Donald, I couldn't do it all on my own. I needed my friend.
I'm more than a bird.
Oh my God.
You have such a pretty voice though.
I just remember how perfect the song was when they sang it. And we didn't really
necessarily know that it was going to be the theme song until... I remember you playing it
for me and being like, dude, and being like, oh yeah, that's cool. But I didn't that it was going to be the theme song until i remember you playing it for me and being like dude and i'm being like oh yeah that's cool but i didn't realize it was going to really
be the theme song until we had that first cookout before we started shooting the show and he sang it
with yeah with the with the bullhorn and his boy playing the guitar next to him being like oh that's
really cool this is gonna work and then we made a music video. If any of you never saw it, it's kind of cool.
I shot a music video for the song
and I shot all this kind of cool footage
of us. I'm sure it's on YouTube.
Alright. Okay, so let's talk about
the first scene with you and I.
I'm gathering my notes because I did a lot of
prep. I want the fans to know I did a lot of
prep for this. Right on. So, the
first scene with you and I where we're talking
and Ted ted the lawyer
is explaining to us you know legal procedure in the hospital yeah i remember him making up the
line and if you're paid if your patient's dead and and you're sure and you're sure
and uh i remember that was when i realized oh wow bill wow, Bill's going to let us improv a little bit.
Yeah.
We're going to have opportunities to be funny.
Yeah.
I think that's one of the things that made Scrubs really special is that Bill really let everyone kind of make it their own.
I mean, his running rule through the whole series was, you know, please get it the way that it's written first.
Make sure we've got it good.
And then you guys can play around and improvise. And if you have some wacky idea, you can do it. And that was from
the get-go. And then he hired all these amazing people like Sam Lloyd, who plays the lawyer.
Who played Ted the lawyer.
And a little trivia, who's Christopher Lloyd's nephew. Just hilarious character actors like that
that would just bring all their
own and no matter what the size of the part you know it's from from from our size part all the
way down to people who had you know would have one line an episode um there was so much freedom
to just kind of riff around and make it funny yeah and we should give a shout out to adam
bernstein who directed the pilot a pilot director yeah a pilot director um for those of you don't
know really
sets the look of the show and the style you know scrubs has a very specific style with the whip
pans and the flashing the flashbacks and and fantasies and even the color of the show to make
how it looks so much like a hospital and isn't uh overly saturated like a lot of TV shows that deal with hospital life. They want their actors to pop on screen
so the blues are bluer and the eyes and the,
you know what I mean?
Scrubs, it looked dingy and dirty in the hospital
in that first episode.
I noticed a lot.
I noticed that.
It was clearly a thing.
I noticed the whole idea was that it was a hospital
that had very little money.
And I noticed there's a lot of stuff.
I haven't watched this pilot in how many years?
20 years.
But I remember I was looking at the ceiling tiles.
There's all these missing ceiling tiles.
And Bill and Adam really made it feel like a dingy,
it was not supposed to be a nice hospital.
Also, the show was shot on film, which a lot of people probably don't know.
The entire series was shot on 16 millimeter film. That's why there's no Blu-ray and there's no, if you look at it normally,
how it's meant to be seen, it's a square because it was before high def video and 16 by nine
televisions and no one ever like up-resed it. So this is all we got. I watched the iTunes version,
which has the original music. Do you want to explain to them about the music thing?
Hulu doesn't have the original music?
Well, just because it's a question we get from a lot of fans at times on social media.
All this music that was put on Scrubs and a lot of people love was licensed before streaming.
So these days, a lot of times, if you watch it on Hulu, where it's currently playing,
or wherever you're watching it, it might have some of those songs that you love replaced because they weren't licensed for
streaming rights. iTunes is the only place, or owning the DVDs, obviously, is the only place
where all of the original music would be there. Let's talk about your teeth for a second,
because I don't think we can just let this go. I had baby teeth when we started shooting the
show. I don't have baby teeth anymore.
I spent a lot of money on new teeth.
There it is.
That's the story.
If you freeze frame, there was a saga of Donald's teeth
because he had fake braces, famously, in Clueless.
Yes, because they were trying to hide my small teeth.
Go on.
Oh, is that really why?
Absolutely.
Oh, we're getting an exclusive here.
So you're saying you're famous.
They shaved my head in Clueless because my hairline was receding at 18.
You know what I mean?
By the time I was 21, I had this hairline right here that you,
well, you guys can't see it, but I had this.
I never knew.
By the way, I feel like we're breaking news.
Your famous braces were because.
When I was a kid, they called me George Jefferson, okay?
Why?
Because of my hairline.
Are you happy?
Are you happy?
But I never knew that the clueless braces were because of your fucked up chiclet teeth.
Yes.
And then the hats that I wore in clueless was because of my hairline.
Oh my God.
Like I have a baby face.
I have a baby face. It's a baby, God. Like I have a baby face. I have a baby face.
It's a baby, right?
Like I have a baby face.
Yeah.
But I don't have a baby's hairline.
Right.
I had baby teeth.
I had baby teeth.
Who called you George Jefferson?
Your parents?
No, some like dickhead that I grew up with my parents.
You're an asshole.
That'd be hilarious.
George!
All right.
Let's go forward with your chick teeth.
Oh, and then, oh, and then, by the way, funny story.
So then one season, Donald shows up.
He decided on his own.
We could talk about this some other time.
We don't need to talk about this now.
Well, can I just tease it for later?
It tracks.
It'll track.
All right.
Donald showed up with braces on the inside of his teeth and had a lisp.
And Bill was like, take your fucking braces off.
What the hell are you thinking?
All right.
Let's move on.
But there's like six episodes where I'm talking like this the whole and donald shows up and he's
like i don't build i don't think anyone's gonna notice and bill's like no one's gonna notice what
the fuck are you doing what'd you do and donald's like well i just got braces but you can't see them
because they're on the inside of my mouth okay all. All right. I don't even think that's a funny story, dude.
I think it's hilarious.
All right.
Let's talk about Sarah Chalk's entrance into the lounge room.
Absolutely.
Dun, dun, dun.
The brilliant and beautiful Sarah Chalk.
So I remember at the audition seeing Sarah and being like, that's the girl from Roseanne.
Holy cow.
Yeah.
Second Becky.
the girl from Roseanne, holy cow.
Yeah, second Becky.
And thinking, she's definitely going to get this part because that was the girl from Roseanne.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I didn't know.
I knew she was second Becky, as she jokingly called herself
and people called her because she had replaced the original Becky.
But it wasn't until I read with her in front of Bill
and then I read with her at my final studio network test that I got to meet her and I was just smitten I just thought she was so funny
and so beautiful and that was one of my notes actually you guys had such great chemistry
in the pilot and it showed on screen that you you know I think that worked for the remainder of the show because of, you know, it's hard to
tell a will they, won't they early on in a pilot. You know what I mean? Like you can say one person
has a crush, but you both kind of had a chemistry for each other in the pilots and it was undeniable.
You know what I mean? So like like right away you knew that at some
point you guys had to get together you know what i mean even if it didn't work you knew it you guys
had to get together and then there was that scene where i'm in the staircase and i'm supposed to be
looking at her butt going up uh and saying it looks i never understood why two pringles which
is what i say her but your butt looks like twoingles hugging. I never knew why that was.
Because they curve.
Because it's a little.
Okay, so a Pringle isn't a flagship.
I don't know if it's a compliment for a butt, though, is it?
My dude.
Are you trying to tell me you don't appreciate a round booty?
No, I love a round booty, but I just don't.
So then what the hell are you talking about?
But, bro, you think, I would say, like, oh, it looks like a juicy peach.
I wouldn't say it looks like
two pringles that are like sharp and breakable okay let me ask you a question how would you
decide how would you describe a nice bottom like to a piece of food you would choose pringles well
i mean i'm gonna okay do we need to get into this? We're going to get into this. You can say it in a nice, politically correct way.
So for a really long time, people of Caucasian colors didn't necessarily like to have big, round booties.
And so a Pringle, being a tiny, curved chip, if you put them together,
they look like a little tiny booty.
I got it. So you're saying because she had a tiny white girl booty,
it was Pringley.
Right.
Nowadays,
because of certain actresses
and Instagram models
or whatever it may have been.
Influencers.
Sure.
Yes.
Everyone and they mama likes a round
booty now, a big round booty now. I see.
So much so that they're starting to
put fake booties,
they're starting to put fake stuff
in the buttocks area to make the
booty rounder. Now I've heard this. Some women
had really round booties already
and decided, yo, you know what?
It ain't round enough. And took
more to make it bigger.
I have a question for you about this. Yes. Now, is your theory that certain famous influencers
have influenced women to add, not just exercise- Not just women, men too, men too.
Now they exercise it. You can choose to exercise and build up your booty, but you're saying that people really do put fake implants into their bottoms.
They not only put it into their bottoms, they put it into their chest area.
They put it into their abs.
They put it into their arms.
Wow.
There are so many people out there where you're like,
wow, that dude works out, or wow, she must really work out,
and it's all enhancements.
Do you think men get ass implants
absolutely do you have a number for a doctor who does this that's true because you got a little
two by four behind that's for sure i know it's small it's it's very small i was thinking the
other day that was the other thing that i noticed about you that for the when the first time i met
you i was like my butt was a really small booty, you noticed that at the table read. Absolutely.
When you walked away.
Anyway, go on.
I just wrote down because there's a shot of her butt, which I thought looked beautiful.
And then I kind of thought about the line Pringles and I didn't fully understand it.
All right, let's move on from Sarah and her glorious touch.
Let's talk about John C. McGinley.
Yes, let's.
Dr. Cox.
Wait, before we get to Cox, I want to talk about, I think Matt Winston is first.
So Matt Winston is the guy who's saying, I'm a tool, I'm a tool, I'm a tool.
And I always thought he was so frigging funny.
In fact, I put him in my film, Wish I Was Here, and a little bit of trivia for the trivia
buffs out there.
He's Stan Winston's son, the late, great Stan Winston.
Oh, that is awesome.
Did you know that, Donald?
I did not know that.
Yeah. Wow, huge fan of his Stan Winston. Oh, that is awesome. Did you know that, Donald? I did not know that. Yeah.
Wow, huge fan of his dad.
He wasn't used a ton.
Bill sort of phased him out, although he did have a hilarious line where he goes,
it's like a baguette.
Yeah, that's later on.
I think when he was talking about Kelso's penis.
All right.
So Johnny C. McGinley.
I mean, where do we begin?
The legend.
The legend.
I remember when we, after the table read, when I saw him at the table read, I was
like, I'm going to stay clear of that guy. He's a little intimidating. Yeah. He's a little scary.
And then we did the rehearsals at the hospital. And I remember watching him and I was like,
and I remember telling myself, focus on him right now, because we're all, you know,
kind of wide eyed and don't necessarily know what it is
we want to do he came into the game already with cocks like he was like this is how i'm going to
play him this is how he's going to be you know what i mean he knew right away what he was doing
and i remember i was like focus on that guy because he seems to be already out the gate you
know what i mean he seems to be running already where we're, you know,
getting a slow start.
He's already off and running.
So focus on him and try and match that energy
that he has.
And nobody works harder.
I mean, Johnny,
throughout the course of the season,
had those endless,
really hard to do monologues.
And he would sometimes
get them the night before.
And he would work so hard.
I mean, this is not a guy
who ever phoned in.
I don't think Johnny
ever flubbed a line in nine years. No, that's not true. He flubbed lines.
Well, I'm saying most rare, the least often of any of us. And he was just so on it and he so
made it his. There's a thing in acting where you say like, oh, I don't want to just do it a generic
way that anyone would do it. I want to make it specific to me and make it mine. And a lot of actors, I think, force that. And so they put all this shit onto it. It isn't necessary.
They're just trying to be different. Whereas some actors just do that and it's natural. It feels
right. And I think Johnny's the ultimate example of that. He's someone who all these characteristics
and all the things, the gestures, the hands on the back of his head, the touch in his nose,
like that's all just Johnny. That's all stuff that's so specifically him that he brought to that part you know absolutely and he stayed consistent with it
the whole time everything he did he was consistent like we all evolved into uh different characters
as the show went on if you watched the show we're very you know uh you and i when it were you know
it's not as broad as the show goes on.
Johnny stayed consistent from the beginning.
He was the same level the whole time.
Right.
And you really see it in that first scene
where he comes into the break room
and is doing his thing.
You know what I mean?
It's really interesting, you know,
to go back and watch now,
because when making it, you know, I paid attention to him specifically because of who he was.
But to see how I evolved, to see how you evolved, to see how Sarah evolved, to see how Judy evolved.
Yeah.
It really, and all from this pilot, you know what I mean?
It's like the pilot is a tame version of what Scrubs became.
You know what I mean?
Although there's things about it, you know, I don't know if you noticed,
but there's things that are in the pilot that you can see both Bill and Adam Bernstein,
the director, are figuring out, like, that we eventually phased out.
Like, all the whoosh, whoosh, whoosh.
I mean, like, there's, like, whip noises when Johnny turns his head.
And there's, like, there's little, there's, like, way more, uh, early on, I think in the show that they eventually toned down.
But I mean, that's a digression from Johnny.
So Johnny's just amazing.
And people always ask what he's like.
And I say, he literally is this intense, but he's just the most nice person you've ever
met.
It's just like, he's like picture that intensity of a human being, but he's a super sweet,
nice person.
Nothing but love though. That Which is nothing but love, though.
That intensity
with nothing but love.
And when he shakes your hand,
he puts out his hand
and goes,
there's five good ones for you.
Meaning his fingers.
Five good fingers.
Yeah, there's five good ones for you.
Grab it and squeeze.
Yeah, he's got all sorts of sayings,
but I'll never forget
there's five good ones for you.
Yeah, that one
and there's some ammo in that.
Oh, yeah.
We'd finish a scene and one of our editors' names was jean-michel and he'd go
i think we gave jean-michel some ammo
all right so let's go the next thing i wrote down i don't know if you have anything before this but
uh was the sitcom fantasy i have where i where i I, with Sarah on this. You da man.
You da man.
So I don't even know what, this was a sitcom,
must've been on, on NBC or something, or maybe ABC.
Cause, but I don't remember.
We borrowed some, actually people out there might,
who know the sitcom might recognize who said it is,
but we just went to an actual set and shot the scene there.
Cause we didn't, you know, it was the pilot.
Was it like good morning Miami or something like that?
That could have been it.
I don't know.
It probably was a pilot of the same season or something.
And I remember this was just surreal.
We were on a real sitcom stage.
And granted, I have a huge crush on Sarah, and I'm doing my best to hold it together.
And then all of a sudden, we're doing a scene where she rips off
her top and mounts me and we make out yeah you know what back in the day i was like wow she ripped
off her top that's cutting edge now i look at it and i'm like oh well did she have to rip off her
top well i mean i think the show you have to look at it in the context of the year i mean everybody
forgets now because we have all this, everything streaming and cable
and everything's so much more risque and you go to, you seek out whatever you watch. I mean,
from the show Girls, the crazy show they would do on there to everything and anything that's on
Netflix now. But back in the day, I think Bill was trying to push the envelope. The show was on
at nine or 9.30. He was trying to push the envelope
what you could do on network television.
Right.
So both with being politically incorrect at times,
both with sex, with language.
I mean, he was trying to say like,
hey, network, you can compete and be a little bit,
you know.
Risqué.
Risqué.
And so this for the time was pretty risqué.
I mean.
It was very risqué.
There was a lot of sex in the show.
You know, it's funny.
I'm sure you do.
You have people who go, hey, I'm showing my kids Scrubs,
and I can't even be in the same room.
It's so awkward because there was a lot of sex in the show.
No, I don't let my kids watch Scrubs.
Well, your kids are too young.
But I'm saying like—
I got a six-year-old and a four-year-old.
They ain't watching Scrubs anytime soon.
I didn't mean your kids.
I mean like Matt Tarsus,
who was one of the writers,
he told me that his son,
who was a teenager,
was watching the show
and he's like,
I had to walk out of the room.
I was like,
watching like you and Sarah
have these sex scenes,
like that episode
where we're eating pizza
and we're like
banging all over the place.
Okay.
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This season, teens will share all about growing up in political battleground states.
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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,
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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 you get your podcasts.
You know, that is true.
Sarah did have to take her top off, but I'm going to be honest with you.
I think the guys on the show were way more naked than the females were on the show.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, you were naked a lot.
I was naked so much.
Your body looks fierce.
Thank you.
Like Taye Diggs, baby.
Like Taye Diggs.
Taye Diggs, baby.
You know, funny bit of trivia.
Rob Macchio, who was often only in his banana hammock
and worked very hard to maintain that physique.
He would do all sorts of push-ups and stuff.
When the show moved from whatever season,
from NBC to ABC, which is owned by Disney,
they made a rule that we could no longer film him
from the waist down when he was in his banana hammock.
Did you know that bit of trivia?
I did know that bit of trivia.
I also, I remember, and we'll discuss this later on, but there were times where we were
actually really naked because it had to be that way for the camera.
Wait, you didn't have like a sock on your penis?
I did one time.
I did have a sock on my penis.
And I remember having to walk in a parking lot with a bunch of people with a sock on
my penis.
Yeah, I remember that.
Not only that, I had also a very big leaf.
Very big leaf.
It was a big leaf, first of all.
A large, like an oak leaf.
It was like a maple leaf, like a huge maple leaf.
It wasn't like one of those thin, like bamboo leaves.
No, no, no.
It wasn't like a eucalyptus leaf.
It was like a maple leaf to cover my junk.
No one has ever bragged about their sexual prowess through leaf size,
so that's a first for our podcast.
I do want to say that there's a scene where I was dancing in front of Tara
Reed, and I was supposed to be naked.
And they were shooting me from behind, and so I packed everything I had
into a sock, and I was doing the dance in front of Tara Reed.
Remember that?
And then, and then the sock came off and then I was like, what is the real experience?
Here's Tara Reed just staring at my junk.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
Oh.
I mean, what am I going to do?
I apologize.
And, and, and.
All right.
So we got a caller on.
Wait, why are you interrupting?
I just want to say that it was a tube sock, much like your leaf analogy.
It was not one of those little.
It wasn't a dress sock.
It was a tube sock.
No, you know those little socks people now wear that are just like go for the sneakers?
It wasn't an ankle sock.
It was a tube sock.
What do they call those things that just go in your shoes?
Ankle socks.
Yeah, it wasn't an ankle sock.
It was a tube sock.
It was a tube sock.
Got to say, we're basing you, boys.
It was a tube sock.
It was a tube sock, man. A long one. So we got a collar. It was a woman's. It was a tube sock. Gotta say it with bass in your voice. It was a tube sock. It was a tube sock, man.
A long one.
So we got a caller.
It was a woman's thigh high.
Okay.
Okay.
So I don't mean to interrupt you, Zach, but we got a caller on the line.
This is exciting because I daydreamed when we said we were going to do this that we should
take fan questions from all around the world, and it's really happening. So go ahead, Donald. So I'd like to introduce Chris to the
podcast. Chris, how are you? Hi, Chris. How's it going, guys? I'm doing well. Thank you for having
me on. Thank you for being on, man. You're our very first guest. So we really want to nail this.
We want to give you the best answer to your question. That's that's ever been given to any question throughout the history.
Okay.
Gotcha.
Um,
let's hear that.
No pressure.
Exactly.
Um,
all right.
I guess the question I'll ask you all,
this one comes from a buddy of mine named Andrew.
I have a question about the soundtrack.
I think that's something that was such like an iconic part of the show.
Um,
just across all the seasons,
you introduced so many people to so many awesome artists over the years.
Was that something, was there someone that spearheaded that?
Did you guys just have great taste? Like,
how did you come up with this soundtrack?
It was all me. It was all me.
Donald had nothing to do with it. Let me just start with that.
I literally had nothing to do with it.
Yeah.
Cause at that time I was listening to.
In nine years, did you ever get a song on ever?
No. Cause I was listening to songs like Jodeci.
I was listening to songs by Wu-Tang Clan.
You know what I mean?
They weren't very scrubsy.
The show was great.
Donald didn't pick the music.
Matter of fact, a lot of the artists that were on the show,
I was introduced to for the first time while watching the show. So who did
we have on the show? Keen, all these people. I had no idea who they were. You know what I mean?
And some artists that were well-known. I just didn't listen to that type of music at the time.
It wasn't until Scrubs that I all of a sudden started listening to Indian folk rock. You know
what I mean? Yeah. I think that, you know, first of all, it was a lot of people. It was definitely
Bill Lawrence, obviously, who created the show, and his wife, Krista Miller, who played Jordan, and myself.
I think we were the three, probably, the main people, but also a lot of the writers in the writer's room.
A lot of times when it was their script, they'd go.
It was a lot of people.
And, of course, the editors who would, you know, the editors would get, like, 10 ideas ideas and they'd be the ones to try and shape it
to see what would work the best.
So there was a bunch of us,
but Krista Miller definitely did a lot of song choosing
and I got a bunch on myself that I'm excited about.
Our best friend, Joshua Radin.
Got his start, really.
Before Scrubs, what was Josh doing?
He was sleeping on my couch.
Was he really? Yeah, I mean, he didn't even have a job and he had written the song winter which we played um in the episode
where brendan frazier's character dies spoiler and uh and they killed brendan frazier yeah when
winter was so popular that that it launched a career for josh and he was everyone was like
what other songs do you have and he's like that's the only song I've ever written.
And so he had to frantically make an album.
Yeah.
I remember going to watch him at two concerts with me, Zach,
my girlfriend at the time, Zach's girlfriend at the time,
and that was it.
Yeah.
And now he sells out.
He does really, really well.
So that's it.
It was a lot of fun.
You know, I think Bill was early on in putting music at the, you know, now it's become very popular and very common to sort of end your episode of TV with an emotional piece of music and then cut around in a montage and watch how everyone, you know, what they learned from the episode.
And I think Bill was at the forefront of doing that, definitely, because, you know, now it's
pretty commonplace, but I think Scrubs was kind of one of the first shows to do that.
You know, I like to think The Wonder Years was a early version of what single camera comedy i mean mash obviously but the wonder years really
took it's the the time that it was in and used the music of that time to help tell the story
and scrubs i feel like is the next thing to do that and then yeah and ali mcbeal also ali mcbeal
i think bill would say that if remember the show ali mcbeal how they would cut away the cut away to wacky shit i mean i think scrubs meets scrubs is sort
of ali mcbeal meets mash meets wonder years right all right did we answer your question
you did that was awesome thank you so much do you have another one we'll give you another one
yeah we'll give you another question all right i've got a two-part question it's kind of common
knowledge now that the janitor wasn't supposed to make it past season one. He was supposed to be a figment of JD's imagination. So two-parter here. One, how was
that supposed to be written in? How was it going to come to be known that the janitor was just a
figment of the imagination? And then the second part of that is, is there any plot line that
didn't come to fruition that you really wish did? Yeah, I know that. But wait, I just want to say,
we're going to have Bill on for everyone. Bill will probably be our first guest because he can
answer all sorts of questions about what his plan was for the writing and such. But I do remember
that Neil Flynn... First of all, I was going to talk about this when we got to Neil in the pilot,
but Neil was supposed to just have a small part. Bill wasn't even intending that he was going to
be in the show beyond the pilot or maybe a few episodes, but he was so hilarious that Bill just kept adding him and adding him and adding him.
And to the point where he was one, became one of the stars of the show. And Neil is a hilarious
improvisational actor. Um, and so a lot of times he would just make up his own line throughout the
whole run of the show. And in fact, it got to a point where, and sometimes in a script, it would
just say like, and then Neil makes up something funny. Like it wouldn't even
have a line for him because Neil was just so gifted and hilarious.
Well, that whole scene, was that whole scene improbed with you and him with the penny in the
door?
No, the penny in the door was all written, but I'm saying like right off the bat, everybody could
tell like this guy, Neil Flynn is really funny and he's got to be more in the show.
Bill would kind of try people out, and when they killed it, he'd keep using them. Just like all the people that fans grew to love, like Phil Lewis, Hooch.
We all thought he was so frigging hilarious.
We just kept putting him in the show whenever we could.
Anyway, long story short, I think throughout season one, the janitor only addresses me if I'm not mistaken.
No,
that's true.
So,
so,
so Bill kind of had the idea like,
Oh my God,
if this doesn't go too long,
it might be funny to do a big reveal that the janitor is totally in,
in,
uh,
in JD's imagination.
But then how crazy would that have made JD though?
You would have been like a freaking psycho dude.
You would have been.
Look at my been look at
my look at nine years of wacky fantasies remember when you were a goat yeah dude but it was a
fantasy these were fantasies goat turd if if you actually had somebody that you an imaginary friend
that you talked to and would talk back to you and you're a doctor I know I think it could have been
cool but but anyway the point was that the show kept going
and Bill I remember Bill I heard Bill say like I had to I had to have this guy interact with other
people because it was like you know and then it became you know you wanted I think fans also
wanted to see the the character of the janitor interact with people although you never knew his
name or did you name his janitor or was it Glenns? Did we answer the second part of the question? Oh, storylines.
We did a medicinal marijuana long before its time.
We did a medicinal marijuana plot line and started shooting it.
And then the studio told Bill to shut it down.
That ain't happening.
Yeah.
It's funny because, of course, now marijuana is legal in California and so many other places.
Well, I remember it had just i remember
it had just started becoming legal at the time uh when we were medicinal for medicinal yeah i
remember i do remember that because there were a lot of people that were smoking weed well we
probably shouldn't bring that up in the in the first episode of this let's get to how high
everybody was in future episodes we have to tease something i'm just saying that was a tease okay in future episodes donald will out people for who was baked when all right
thank you chris we're gonna thank you chris thank you guys thank you chris thanks for being our
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your podcasts that would be so funny that would be so funny if that's how we did it. In that scene, he's high.
I think you need to come clean when we get to scenes where you were baked.
That'll be like the whole series run.
Okay, great.
How long into the series did you stop memorizing your lines?
Mert?
We'll talk about that in future episodes to come as well.
Oh, I wanted to say, um, the scene with Johnny in the, in the, in the lounge, um, with the,
with the woman that, uh, that was my audition scene where Johnny comes in with the woman
he says is dead.
And he's telling me to throw Tylenol at her face.
That was one of the main, uh, I think one of the three scenes that I auditioned with.
What was your audition scenes? Do you remember? Uh uh my audition scene was i'm really scared uh i'm so
happy that i get to wear a surgical mask a mask because if i didn't have it on my face would look
like this and then i make the scared face yeah uh that was one of my audition scenes and then
and did you improv i love you or is that in the script no we improv that bill came up
to me it was like tell him you love him at the end that was funny and i was like what he was like
just say it and then laugh when you walk and then lani by the way everyone that's lani who's playing
yeah lani's playing the pizza delivery guy i had no idea that was him until watching the pilot
so lani lani exists it's one is one of the few people that exists as two different characters
in the scrubs universe.
I feel like it's three different characters, but yeah, okay.
Why? There's Lonnie, there's pizza delivery guy.
And was Lonnie also the guy that played basketball?
I don't remember.
Okay, anyway.
Scrubs fans will answer for us.
But yeah, that was very funny.
I love that when you say I love you, we both look at you like, what?
Now I say it to you all the time.
In this scene also, the woman was supposed to be really dead.
And I remember the network pushed back against Bill and said, no, you can't have her really
genuinely pushing around a dead woman.
You have to have her at the end go, I'm not really dead.
So that was a rewrite forced by the network because Bill thought it was funny if he really was just pushing around a corpse.
Very funny, too.
I want to talk about Ken Jenkins for a second.
Yes.
Because I feel like he was the MVP of our show.
You know what I mean?
Yeah. difficult to be on a show with a such a huge ensemble cast where everyone is likable from
the lead all the way down to the guest stars everyone's likable i think the hardest part
the hardest person to play in all of that would be the bad guy you know what i mean and he made
it so that the bad guy you didn't't like him, but you still loved him.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, that's an interesting way to put it.
And I felt like he was literally the MVP.
Him and Judy Reyes, actually, were the MVPs of the show
because Judy had to tackle all of the dramatic stuff.
You know what I mean?
Her character felt everything.
She was the nurse.
She was the mother of the hospital.
And Ken Jenkins, his character was the evil dad, was the mother of the hospital. And Ken Jenkins,
his character was the evil dad or the, you know what I mean? The grandpa who was just over it all
and was like, I just, you know, I want this hospital to make money. We're broke. And all
that matters is if their insurance is going to pay for it if it's if they're not get them out of here because we're we're broke we got no dough and i thought to make those two to make that character lovable
is a really really really hard thing to do and he did it effortlessly it seemed like in my eyes
and uh and same thing with judy you know what i mean? Judy played a role that was definitely needed in this band of misfits.
She played this character that was just motherly and took care of –
Bambi came from – that stuck throughout the whole show, you being called Bambi.
Yeah, I noticed that her very first line that comes out of her mouth is calling me Bambi.
I didn't know that. I didn't know that.
I didn't remember that,
but that stuck for the whole run of the show.
And of course, people still call me that on the street
when I'm past them.
But her very first line is calling me Bambi.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
And it was just, we knew what we were there to do.
We're here to be funny
and we're here to make everybody laugh.
And at times we're gonna get dramatic and everything like that.
But Judy and Ken had the tough roles, in my opinion.
You knew Judy was supposed to make everybody feel safe.
Ken was supposed to make everybody feel anger.
You know what I mean?
In this crazy world.
And they did it so perfectly.
And Ken had a lot of the social commentary that
Bill was trying to get in there about how fucked up the healthcare system is and how fucked up it
is that hospitals are like, no insurance, get them out of here. Right away in the pilot,
of course, these issues are so relevant today more than ever, but right away in the pilot,
you have them going, look, I don't care that you know nothing. Let me tell you a couple of things.
If they don't have insurance, get them out of here.
And Bill geniusly found a way to make that.
And of course, Ken Jenkins is an actor.
Together, they found a way to make that character so lovable, even though he was the antagonist.
Yeah.
I want to talk about 13 minutes and 38 seconds.
I'm looking at a still of you
making out with judy reyes right on um and and todd in the frame i have up todd is watching
because it's part of the fantasy who wants to high five you so what was it like you know i think
people who aren't actors are always curious what it's like when you meet someone hey nice to meet
you and then all of a sudden you have to just go do a fake makeout scene with them i feel like that
was the first day i met judy too and them. I feel like that was the first day I met Judy, too. Really?
Yeah, I feel like that was our first scene together.
And I hadn't, you know, I remember me.
I don't remember Neil at the table read.
I don't remember Judy.
I don't remember Ken at the table read.
I remember me, you, Johnny, and Sarah for some reason.
And so when we did the make-out scene,
I feel like that was my...
I know it's not the first day I met her,
but that's my first real memory of Judy.
You know what I mean?
And I remember she smoked cigarettes
right before the scene,
and I was like, ah!
That's a power move.
That's a power move.
That's how you do...
But I realize that's how you do it.
If you're going to make out with somebody, make it so they got to work and not make it so it's them having a great time making out.
No, this is a job, dude.
This isn't you getting your rocks off while we're doing this scene.
It's funny to think about someone smoking.
Like, I mean, I don't – do you know any – I mean, it's rare to see anyone smoking cigarettes at all anymore oh no they there are a lot of people that still smoke cigarettes now
really vaping has turned into the worst thing ever for your body vaping of course but just the idea
that judy was i guess a smoker when we started right is that what you're saying i was a smoker
when we started i smoked cigarettes when we started and neil was always a smokeroker when we started. I smoked cigarettes when we started. And Neil was always a smoker. Yeah.
When we started doing the show, I think a lot of us smoked cigarettes.
I mean, in the cast.
Maybe you, Sarah, and Johnny, and Ken didn't.
But everyone else did.
Yeah.
I didn't remember that.
And then us doing the kissing stuff and then watching the episode.
And none of that made the show, really.
All it is is me.
We're kind of cuddled up together. we're kind of cuddled up together.
We're kind of cuddled up together and,
uh,
and Rob's over us watching.
But I remember doing the scene,
if feeling way more intimate than that,
you know what I mean?
Way more,
you know what I mean?
And then watching it being like,
oh, they didn't use any other,
other good stuff.
Right.
Well,
it's a really quick moment.
And I love that she's,
I love that you're naked and she's like, all right i'm out i thought that was a cool like introduction of her
character she was like and i also and i also like that your imagination was me scoring right in
reality the real what really happened was i got played and it got turned into uh you know i got
you know i stripped down for someone right and she was like she got you
know she just wanted to make out with someone and be like later and she like she was like she kind
of like used you whereas in my imagination you were using her where i right yeah that was clever
yeah um i wanted to quickly talk about that it's going backwards but that deer and headlight thing
i i still have the foam antlers uh um i'm staring at them right now um from that fantasy
where i'm imagine i'm a deer in headlights and and what we had to do was they backed the mac up
the big semi right up to my face and the idea was for the that the truck would floor it in reverse
and and then we'd play it would be scary and then we'd play it backwards right so it looked like it
was and then of course it hit a mannequin too but for this one shot and i remember standing
there with my face against the grill of a of a mac truck and being like leaning out to the driver
being like you're sure it's in reverse right like like there had to be some osha rule against that
but i but i was like standing there going if this dude like i don't want to cause any waves or
anything but i just want to double check you're in reverse.
We have me finally saving a life.
Oh, we have a Loma.
We should talk about a Loma Wright, the beautiful and talented Loma Wright who played Nurse
Roberts.
Nurse Roberts, whose introduction in the show is, you know, amazing.
Can you just call him so I can go home, please?
Yeah.
Can you just call him so I can go home?
She's so good and and loma was one of the again another example of someone who bill just loved and thought was so talented and she you know ended up being in the whole the whole show
until he eventually killed her off felt bad and brought her back as her twin sister which we'll
get to that in later episodes laverne again podcast laverne again i'm gonna call you lavern again so we were thinking of like trying to
summarize what the lesson of the episode was but i mean i think the episode the lesson of the of
the pilot uh was basically the theme song which is i can't do this all on my own right i mean
right it's the introduction of how difficult it is to be a doctor in a hospital
and how the medical staff at a hospital
really depends on each other to work.
Yeah, and I think, I mean,
I don't think it's a big leap to say
that a lot of people related to the show
because they could see that in their own lives
and how you turn to your friends and your family.
I mean, I think the show can be, as we all know,
can be very, very heartwarming.
And that was what Bill did so geniusly,
was how it'd be so funny and crazy and silly
and fantasies and everything.
And then all of a sudden you can turn a corner
and you're losing a patient like I did at the end,
or you see that our friendship is so pure.
It's still solid.
Also, conquering fear.
You know what I mean?
JD was so afraid to do everything. As a matter of fact, him and Elliot hide in a closet at one point. And Dr. Cox catches them doing it and understands why they're afraid. still gives JD the confidence to perform whatever it is you did with the tube
and the blood and all of that stuff.
Something that,
you know,
JD was very afraid of and made him feel like he was going to be okay.
And he was,
and he had a support group around him.
Yeah.
And I think that's it.
That's,
that's the pilot.
I think we just, we just did it. We did our first podcast. I love you. And I think that's it. That's the pilot. I think we just did it.
We did our first podcast.
I love you.
I love you so much, man.
Hey, listen, if you're a fan and you made it to the end, thank you.
We're going to keep doing this.
We want you to watch the show with us.
We're going to do this every week.
And you can just join us.
Tell your friends.
And every week we're going to go through another episode.
And we're going to take a fan question.
If you have a fan question, Donald, we have set up a Gmail account.
The iHeart people have.
Right.
And that account is?
That account is scrubsiheart at gmail.com.
So scrubs and then i heart at gmail.com.
And so,
well said,
thank you.
We want you to submit questions and then our,
our beautiful producers here.
We'll we'll work out all the logistics and,
and we'll have you on.
We're going to take a question.
Each podcast,
we're going to have guests on.
We're going to start having fellow cast members.
We're obviously going to have our creator of the show,
Bill Lawrence on who else we're going to have on Donald. Some of the, Oh my goodness. We're going to have guests on. We're going to start having fellow cast members. We're obviously going to have our creator of the show, Bill Lawrence on. Who else are we going to have
on, Donald? Some of the crew members? Oh my goodness. We're going after even some of the
people that you remember, but don't know, like Snoop Dogg intern. We're going to reach out to
him. We're reaching out to Dr. Mickhead. They already slid into my DMs.
Did he already? Snoop Dogg intern already slid into my DMs.
Mickhead already said he's down. We're going to have the stand-ins on the show who did a lot of the work that you see
before we went in and did it.
Set up the shots.
So it's going to be a bunch of people.
Writers, we're going to have directors, everything.
Hopefully we can get some big names too.
I'm sure Scott Foley would come on
and we could just say,
nobody cares, Sean, over and over again.
Nobody cares, Sean.
Nobody cares.
So follow Donald and I on Instagram and Twitter.
And please tell your friends because we hope this is a big success because for us, this was – I don't know about you, Donald, but this was a lot of fun.
I kind of don't want to stop talking, but I feel like we should.
Oh, absolutely. This was actually the, you know, I talk about Clueless as the jump off point in my life where I was introduced to the industry and I
learned a lot of things, but Scrubs was really like the, you know, that was the thing that took
it over the top for me as an actor, where I had an actual job where I was able to, you know,
pay my rent and I built a family because I was able to be a part of this wonderful show.
So I owe a lot to you, Zach. I owe a lot to Bill Lawrence. I owe a lot to the cast and the crew of
Scrubs. So I'm really excited to talk about it with fans who enjoyed the experiences that we had.
Yeah. And as always, I agree with everything you said. And as always,
thank you for being our fans and thank you for supporting the show.
It was a joy to,
to make it for you.
And Donald,
I hate this quarantining.
I just want to be with you all the time.
I want to be with you.
There will be a day again.
Hopefully there will be a day again where you and I can Eagle.
I can't wait to ride you.
I can't.
I feel like that's how we should end. Should we end with that?
No, let's end with that. Don't speak.
Don't speak. Let's just end with that.
Goodbye, everybody.
Here's some stories
about a show we made
about a bunch
of docs and nurses and a
janitor who loved to hate.
I said he's got stories
that we all should know.
So gather round to hear our
gather round to hear our
Scrubs Rewatch Show with Zach and Donald.
Hi friends, I'm Danielle Robay.
And I'm Simone Boyce.
And we're here to introduce you to The Bright Side, a new kind of daily podcast that's guaranteed to 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,
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Now, for years, we have humbly celebrated
Women's History Month at QLS
with a full month of fantastic female guests.
This year, we say with pride that we have four multi-talented, award-winning ladies who kicked down barriers.
I'm talking Brittany Howard, Corinne Bailey Ray, and the incredible choreographer Fatima Robinson.
And as well as Lettucey.
for Tima Robinson, and as well as Lettucey.
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.
Join late night legend Jon Stewart and the best news team
for today's biggest headlines, exclusive extended interviews, and more.
Now this is a second term we can all get behind.
Listen to The Daily Show, ears edition on the iHeartRadio app,
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