Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out - 24. Natasha Lyonne: No F**kin’ Around
Episode Date: December 7, 2020Mike welcomes the great Natasha Lyonne, co-creator and star of the hit Netflix series Russian Doll. Natasha opens up about her own process as well as the best advice she’s received. Natasha holds Mi...ke’s feet the fire about his new material—so he scraps his prepared jokes for some personal stories he wasn’t planning to tell. This episode is like planning your own funeral, which is also discussed. Don’t miss it. Please consider donating to: https://www.wpaonline.org/ https://www.girlsclub.org/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm having that thing right now where I just...
So I watched Russian Doll when it came out,
but I didn't finish it because I'm bad at finishing series.
And then I watched the rest of it tonight,
and I'm just like really emotional about it.
And it's so... It's a lot it's gonna be okay um you're gonna be okay
hey it's mike and we're back with another episode of working it out this time with Natasha Lyonne. She's the writer, director, co-creator, and star of Russian Doll, which is one of the
best things I've ever seen on TV.
It was nominated for 13 Emmys.
It won three Emmys.
I mean, it's extraordinary.
I couldn't recommend it more highly.
She also recently directed another Working It Out guest, Sarah Cooper, did a special on Netflix called Everything's Fine.
Natasha directed and produced it.
It is off the wall.
It is hilarious.
It's bizarre.
I couldn't recommend it more highly.
more highly.
I really wanted to have Natasha on today to talk about Russian Doll
and its relation in some ways
to the YMCA pool show that I'm developing,
which is all about death,
and Russian Doll is all about death.
And we had a great talk,
and I learned so much from talking to her.
Oh, one note is when she's talking about Fred,
she's talking about her significant other,
the great Fred Armisen from Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, etc.
She calls him Freddy.
Enjoy my chat with Natasha Lyonne.
We're working it.
Well, first of all, we're allowed to say you're writing the second season, right?
Yes.
Okay.
Okay.
There's a lot to unpack here.
So when you and Fred, am I allowed to say your boyfriend Fred?
Yeah, you're at Public Stuff together?
You know, I feel like it's, it is official. So you and Fred came to see my
Broadway show, the new one, and then we went out to dinner afterwards and you, Jen just reminded me
of this. You really sort of just said like, yeah, this thing Russian Doll and you know it's weird
and but you know I don't know if people
are going to like you know like it was you really
had
you downplayed it so much
and then I'm watching it and I'm like
I
you know I'm
crying and I'm like this is
one of the best things I've ever seen
thank you yeah you know I'm crying and I'm like, this is one of the best things I've ever seen.
Thank you.
Yeah, you know, I don't fuck around.
So, you know, kind of my M.O., no fucking around.
Yeah, sure, sure.
But I loved your play.
That was a great night we had.
That was a great night we had it was uh that was a great new york night and you you said something to me when you came backstage that i take with me to this very day because i think
you're in addition to being a hilarious person you're a very wise person and a very generous person. You said to me, you go,
look,
I'll affect your voice a little bit,
but other people do it much better.
Melissa Villasenor, I think,
does it. I think Chloe Fineman does it.
Do you like when people impersonate you or not?
I like it so much that I asked Fred
for my funeral to just put together
because, you know I I was
close with Nora Ephron I'm dropping that name as a big deal why not I I like to think that Nora
Ephron was my mom and Lou Reed was my dad um and I really I really man did I cry when those people
died like I did not cry for my own parents and um I really love them both. And I knew them both, Nora much more.
But her funeral, you know, was famously organized in advance.
So I always think that it's, you know, I got to get ahead of that.
But I'm not as organized clearly as, you know, one of the all-time human beings.
But I have pre-organized with Fred that I want people to do their because, you know, it's like just over the Maya and Amy and Fred and Kevin Corrigan and Chloe Melissa, like you said, you know, there's just like it really it brings me great joy but also I recently found Micah Gardner
who was the editor of this Sarah Cooper thing
I just did he showed me
this YouTube
of Angelo Badalamonte
sort of recreating
alone what it was like
to create the score for
Twin Peaks with David Lynch
but David Lynch was not in the YouTube video.
So now I've also added that I want them to play that YouTube.
It's a lot of like Angelo moaning.
That sounds great.
It's a hell of a YouTube.
A hell of a YouTube.
It's a hell of a YouTube.
So you came back at the Court Theater on Broadway and you go, Mike, if I made a show like that,
I wouldn't feel like I would have to do anything for 10 years.
And I swear to God, like, I don't know if you feel it.
I feel so much pressure to create all the time.
It's like you can't keep up with the pace at which people consume things.
And so you, someone I respect so much, saying, like, don't worry
about the next 10 years, like you just did that.
It just made me, it took a load off.
It's true, though, right? I mean,
I always think about
Carrie Fisher as like a template.
I'm like, alright, you know, you do some,
you gotta figure out your Star Wars, I guess
at some point to kick it off.
Still working on that.
You get your postcards from the edge.
You know, you write some memoirs.
You do your wishful drinking.
Yeah.
You know, you work it.
And then you take it to Broadway.
You film it as a special and you keep it moving.
You know what I mean?
Like, how many things do we really need to say this is my shtick?
But, so, you know, yeah, I really felt that way about your show.
Like this is a big, this is a big one.
This is a big wishful drinking you did.
You know, it's kind of like.
Wow.
Jesus.
But I always think of that.
The Elaine Stritch at Liberty or whatever, the Spalding Gray.
I mean, like those are big kahunas and they shouldn't be.
I mean, those people are motherfuckers and so are you that they
can you know you guys can keep making them um but one should be sufficient is my point
yeah i mean how much does any one person really have to say like i often think about that and i
think about that a lot with young people i'm like you know go get some fucking life experience i mean jesus walked
you know muhammad walked buddha walked like get a little bit of fucking life in you if uh you want
to have a round two and a second big speech to make right and that's sort of like the the big
existential stuff that russian doll i
think does so well and like that i'm i'm really trying to crack in my next show that i'm working
on i'll i'll work out some material with you later on the show today but like the the next show i'm
working on is called ymca pool and it's all about hitting middle age and being like, oh, I, you know, natural causes are coming.
Like, you can just sort of see it
for the first time.
It's fucking weird.
You know, what the fuck?
Like, actually,
we're just these rotting, you know, masses?
I mean, that is dark.
That is creepy as hell.
And this COVID shit is like the lockdown.
I'm literally, I think I'm 300 years old.
I mean, I am just melting.
And periodically, like I have to pull it together to do a Zoom.
And I'm like, oh, do I still look like that?
Or am I this fucking monster that I see in like the upside down camera and the fucking black mirror that is this fucking
cell phone like because that mother that motherfucker is is not a pretty picture and
um yeah it's just you know it comes for all of us uh there was there was a there was an article
this week a science article that was like covid may be you know aging all of us by, you know, more years. And it's like, yeah, we know.
Like, you don't have to give us the science article.
I really, I, you know, I, whatever, you know, my version of a joke, which is just nothing.
But, you know, I really talk about a lot like that.
Because I am dead serious about wanting these fucking AI organs.
I feel like we are so close to the future.
I mean, it is 2020.
Like movies that were set in the future a long, long past.
Like 2001 fucking Space Odyssey.
We're 19 years past that.
They could not imagine that the greatest minds of all time could not conceive of
a year past 2001 you know 1999 prince like you know yeah and here we are i'm like surely they
are gonna come up with something and i can step into a pod and come out yep fully like there's
two things i think about i like that futurama where they got to just the brains in a bubble.
I like that.
And there's like an old Kurt Vonnegut from Welcome to the Monkey House.
And they're kind of, you know, going through,
it seems like a rack of clothes for the night.
Do you want to be Danny DeVito?
You want to be Grace Jones?
What's the look for tonight is what you realize they're doing.
They're just like two souls who are about to zip on full exterior outfits.
And I'm like, that would be great.
See, I could really get into that.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I could get into that.
That's actually one of the ideas I've kicked around for YMCA Pool is this idea that like,
what if we are the last generation right before they figure out how to live forever?
Oh, that would be fucked up.
There's something about that that's crushing.
But at least now, you know, you have a kid, so, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
But, oh, so we're talking about, like, championing other people,
and it's like, you did that recently.
You directed and produced Sarahah cooper's special everything's
fine which is so good and that's how we started talking actually when that came out i was just
like i just had to talk to you about it because it's so like she became famous during the pandemic
for these tiktok videos where she's just like lip-s Trump and they just became like a sensation.
I mean, really like a sensation,
like they're wildly popular,
but they're very mainstream.
But then you made this special with Sarah
called Everything's Fine,
where she plays like a morning TV anchor
who is kind of slowly losing her mind in,
in kind of like a,
a network kind of way.
And it's beautiful.
I mean,
it really is.
It's out.
It's,
it's,
it's absurdist and it's funny and it's,
but it's dark,
like really dark.
And I was just,
I was just like,
whoa.
And I was like, I was like, I was just like, whoa. And I was like,
I was like,
I can't believe they did.
They like,
they even got to do this.
Yeah.
I mean,
she's,
she's extraordinary.
And I,
I think like,
you know,
Maya and I were so excited and,
and Paula Pell like to discover that,
you know,
she was so weird. You know what I mean? Like, like, to discover that, you know, she was so weird.
You know what I mean?
Like, because you're seeing something, but, you know, like, you know,
many brilliant original people, they have a really specific
and cracked point of view.
Yeah.
And that's what makes them, like, special and makes them, you know, pop.
So it was very fun to see. And that's what makes them like special and makes them, you know, pop.
So it was very fun to see.
Obviously, like it was a really specific, you know, I mean, we did the whole thing in, you know, weeks.
Yeah. It was so extreme, the kind of turnaround for getting it out before the election.
And I mean, we only met Sarah on Zoom.
We didn't meet her in person until like, you mean, we only met Sarah on zoom. I, we didn't meet her
in person until like, you know, the day before we were shooting, it was really wild. And so
you're kind of just like getting people's like, you know, raw brains and like what they're into.
And, uh, I do, I think now I'm also like crashing a bit because the sort of pace of it was so, you know, it was like we're in pre-production on Russian Doll.
And then like everybody else, of course, like the whole world, you know, shut down.
And then, you know, it was like sort of like six months in the house.
I got really good at Zelda.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah.
It's something.
But you know what's a funny peak? You know what's a. Oh my gosh. Yeah. It's something. But you know what's a funny...
Oh, wait.
Oh, that was a mistake. I wasn't trying to FaceTime you.
I just couldn't get
enough. It wasn't enough that you were on my
computer or my phone. I was like,
fuck it, I'm going to FaceTime him
too.
I was like,
can I put him on my TV?
Just so the listeners understand, all of a sudden we're talking on the phone,
and then it's Natasha Leone is FaceTiming you.
Like, huh, well, we are recording on both of our computers
and talking on the phone.
I'm actually going to put the phone and the computer in the microwave
just to see what happens.
You know, we could FaceTime. I mean, you know, you know,
we could FaceTime.
I mean,
I guess,
sure.
I mean,
I have to,
I mean,
what's a face?
What's a face?
Uh,
mine's 20 years older than it was six months ago.
So,
uh,
the,
Oh,
so just give people a peek behind the curtain.
Like the,
I actually called you.
I was like,
you know,
we should have on this podcast we should have
you and fred come on because you two together i was like i was literally thinking of the dinner
we had in new york and i was like oh we should recreate that just on uh right on the podcast
um and and you made this point about fred which i thought was so astute but all but uh you know
you were just like you were like no, no, no, he does bits.
You're like, I don't do bits.
You know, he's the bits guy.
You know, have him on a separate episode.
You have me on one.
And then you go, this is the best part of all.
You go, you make a movie with me and Fred.
He goes, you put us in, you know, we play a couple.
You write the movie.
You direct the movie.
We make a little movie, you know.
Well, because I'm really like a very game.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, sure.
I know, I know.
What else am I doing?
I mean, I don't have kids.
So I'm like, you call me on the phone.
You want to spend time with me and Fred.
Go make a movie.
That's what you do.
You're a filmmaker, right?
So like, whatever.
I'm convinced we're going to make a movie together.
When I watch Russian Doll and I watch the way you're performing,
I think to myself,
that's the way when I work with actors,
that's the way,
that's what I want them to do,
which is that you're,
you're giving in whatever you're doing.
You're just giving into the scene.
And it's actually transporting me in a way that this completely alt reality,
which is what Russian
doll is, feels like it is my reality when I'm watching it. Yeah, thanks. You know, it's,
that's a wild one. I mean, first of all, so I mean, like Leslie Hedlund and Jamie Babbitt,
who are the two other directors on the show are just incredible. And also like,
I know them well, you know what I mean? So it's that thing of, you know,
like Leslie and I are very tight in real life
long before making that show together.
And Jamie Babbitt, obviously,
I've been working with since, but I'm a cheerleader,
which is like somehow 20 years ago.
And then of course, like I have this, you know,
lived experience that I'm bringing to the table
and sort of putting on the page.
And I found it immensely helpful to be writing, you know, my own material and also like, you know, there with, you know, with Leslie, with Jamie, you know. But really like that it was ours and not that I was kind of like performing
for somebody in a way. I think there was like a real comfort in that. Also, I just think, yeah,
like so often I think I've been like afraid of being weird or other or like not whatever this
Aryan dream boat that's supposed to be the ideal. And, you know, like that typology is so
far removed from something I was able to attain. I don't even think I really identified with it.
Like, you know, even when I would see sort of like Jenna Rollins, I'd be like, ah, but Peter
Falk, I could do, you know? And I, so just the idea that the setup for that was sort of like
asking to bring that as opposed to bury it um was
very comforting you know what i mean like that we were building a character around that and that is
also even just to like even just from an acting level to know what sort of you know a lot of
times like you'll get a script and you're on set and i've been doing this for what, uh, 35 years. Right. Um, and you
get to set and like, historically I used to think like, Oh, surely like the writer, like every
ellipses here really means something and come to discover once you're actually, you know, writing
it that oftentimes things are even like an omit because they, you couldn't get access to the deli.
So you had to move the scene to being inside a car.
That's right.
And that's why it feels like there's this invisible jump that the character is supposed
to make from, how did I go from the apartment to the car?
Like, it just doesn't make sense.
But you, you're trying to kind of infuse it with this, you know, you're giving other people
this magic power of surely they know. And just to even
know that there were those injuries in the scripts, but I knew how they got there. It was like, I was
able to sort of fold that into the performance, make those leaps and those connections much
easier because I knew where they were coming from, like what used to be there. So I always knew what
I was actually playing or what our intention had been. Yes. You know, I get that.
I get that when I'm watching it in a big,
big fucking way.
Makes a big difference.
Yeah,
it does.
It does.
I mean,
just to jump around a second,
I want to point out,
I'd be remiss.
I,
and I,
this may not go anywhere,
but the,
you know,
the show deals with like timelines and space and time continuum and a lot of
stuff like that.
You and I were on each other's timeline, whether you realized it or not, because when I moved to New York in the early 2000s, I had an improv group of my best friends called Little Man.
And we performed at UCB Theater.
And afterwards, we'd go to McManus Bar, which I'm sure you've spent time at McManus Bar, right?
A lot of time. Horatio and Jake, a lot of time.
Yeah. And so to me, in my Mike Birbiglia timeline, you, Natasha Lyonne, and Horatio Sands were the cool celebrities at the same bar as our little stupid improv group.
And we were like, we're cool because they're here.
Ah, old New York.
Old New York.
You know, yeah.
Man, we spent a lot of time in there.
A lot of time.
Same, same.
So much time at McManus.
And yeah, I really, i do i do miss all that so
i have such a you know weird relationship with um like i just always been surrounded by funny
people and like i was always just trying to be like fucking de niro or scorsese you know what
i mean like yeah no i guess i look back and it was like I guess Pee Wee Herman
I guess Mike Nichols and Nora Ephron are my first job then Pee Wee Herman then Woody Allen people
who's very popular now and then Slums of Beverly Hills was like Alan Arkin and Carl Reiner you know
so I'm like oh I guess I've sort of you know maybe I was funny or something and maybe I, cause I was always around
everybody and like never quite, you know, I think I always just love funny people so much. Cause
they're so close to music in a way to me. Like, you know, there's, there's something about like
when you're laughing hysterically, there's like something happens to the air in the room where
you're no longer present. And I think as somebody who just, you know, whether it's a, the surrealist in me,
or just like somebody who enjoys, um, alternate states or something, you, you can access it so
easily and freely when people are hysterically funny. Um, and so, you know, it's like a freebie.
It's like, you know, it's, it's, it's like a freebie. It's like, you know, it's very much like music.
Stepping away from my chat with Natasha Lyonne
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And now back to the show.
I have this thing on the show
that's called the slow round.
And it's just sort of like prompts,
memories, things like that.
Do you remember
a smell from your childhood?
I don't know. I would
say, look, I mean, I have obviously
a lot. For some reason, the first thing that popped in my mind
was tinfoil, but I have no idea why. I think that might
be my own life.
The smell of burning tinfoil, and I'm
pretty sure that's my own
time spent alone.
What do you mean it's your own time spent alone?
Listen, you might think you're having a midlife crisis, but you're not grown up enough to
understand what I'm talking about. And then I was like, maybe that's connected to during Passover,
you have to wrap the chametz know, the, the chametz
in the tinfoil. And I kind of went there. I don't know why that was my first thought.
And then it was quickly followed by, you know, like, you know, we lived in Israel for two years
when I was a kid from the ages of eight to 10. So I was like in New York, they moved to Israel
for tax evasion. And then I moved back to New York when I'm 10 years old. So until eight, I'm in New York, eight to 10, I'm in Israel. And then 10 to 300, I'm back
in New York. And so, but I definitely remember like, just that, like the, the balmy difference
of that air of like landing off that that like LL flight and being like,
where the fuck am I? Like, I am not in New York anymore. Cause it was like, sort of like this
desert breeze that was totally like unfamiliar to my DNA of like palm trees and like flat roads and
just like emptiness. Um, and so I have a lot of memories of that.
Are you saying that was in Israel?
Yeah.
And like, so I can really remember sort of like,
I think that's the most sort of like specific set of memories
I have in a weird way of just almost like,
what was that time?
I'm sure a lot of kids who kind of like lived
in a different country for a couple of years when they're like, you know it's it's all so foreign and it was just like
oh these are like greek aqueducts and the ocean and like you know I mean like I remember prior
to that like my parents had like split up for a summer and I was like living in some weird like
sofa one bit you know fucking studio apartment with my mom in the city like you know it was so different than my life and
so i think i've and i have a lot of memories of um you know like my parents always had like
rottweilers and german shepherds and i can really remember like the dogs around and stuff and yeah
so many of them i mean i wouldn't even know uh where to begin. But I also really have a lot of like very like city kid,
Times Square, like audition memories.
You know what I mean?
That are super weird.
It's almost like taxi driver memories of an old New York
that's no longer there.
And like going into weird office buildings and like go sees you know
i was also like a kid model you'd like go to these weird rooms and stuff oh my gosh yeah there's a
whole bunch i mean i'm sure everybody you know must have countless ones um when you were i think
when i i think the first time i saw you in something was in woody allen's movie everyone
says i love you i think that's when i first saw you i see was in Woody Allen's movie Everyone Says I Love You
I think that's when I first saw you I see we do about an hour on Woody Allen I know I know I know
I think that that would be good for both of us I mean uh listen that movie was I like you know
it was unbelievable I mean I was so I mean talk about also like scared. It really is, you know, I guess it doesn't seem likely
that I'll be going back and working with him anytime soon.
But it was like, it was so, you know, I was so young.
I was like 15, 16 and playing his daughter
and Goldie Hawn's daughter.
And like everybody and their mother was in that movie.
Yeah, yeah. I was in that movie. Yeah, yeah.
I actually love that movie.
Yeah, I'll never forget, though,
my mom leaning over to me at the end of the movie,
at the end of the premiere,
she leaned over and she said,
not his best, huh?
Oh, my God.
That's honestly the only review I remember.
Every time the movie comes up,
I'm instantly ashamed
because I can just remember my mother saying, not his best. So I'm like, I guess it was, I remember the movie. Every time the movie comes up, I'm instantly ashamed because I can just remember my mother saying not his best. So I'm like, I guess it was, I ruined the movie.
Like that was, I think.
What's the best piece of advice that anyone's ever given you that, that sort of worked?
You know, Dan Pasternak was like a, you know,
so he once told me something like I'd taken
like some general with him,
like right in my sort of like round two post drugs
coming back and he was like, this is great.
Sounds like you've really developed the talent
to back up the talent.
And that's what it's about, you know?
Oh, interesting.
Wow.
The talent to back up the
talent. Yeah. And I really, you know, I still think about that. That's like a, a big one for
me. Cause it's kind of like, it's one thing to, you know, have goods. It's another thing to actually
have the, uh, you know, ability to have the goods and, um, you know, meaning you really got to have the talent.
That is really brilliant. Like, I'm just trying to unpack that. Like, like there's a lot of people
who are talented and then it's almost like you're the guardian of the talent in a certain way. And,
and being a guardian of the talent is a challenging thing to do.
in a certain way. And,
and being a guardian of the talent is a challenging thing to do.
Yeah.
I mean,
because there's,
you know,
head trips abound.
I mean,
and that goes for every single person on the planet,
you know,
it's like,
uh,
the Elaine stretch or whatever,
like everybody has a bag of rocks,
you know,
like that is not,
what's that?
I don't know that. Talent specific.
It's in the documentary about her.
It's like her husband says to her at some point,
like, Elaine, everybody has a bag of rocks.
And, you know, it's kind of like,
do those rocks bury you?
Or do you figure out how to kind of like-
Oh, wow.
Carry your load.
Wow.
And that's not just obviously in the arts, that's a full blown, you know,
in this life thing for absolutely everyone.
And, you know, obviously, you know,
we're talking about like talent, like it's special to, to, to,
you know, something, but it's obviously it's, I mean, specific to everything. I mean, you gotta have like the talent to back up special to to to you know something but it's obviously it's i mean specific
to everything i mean you got to have like the talent to back up the talent to like you know
persevere through another fucking 24-hour shift at the hospital and you're a nurse and people are
dying do you have the talent to back up the talent yeah you know like yeah you know if you have this
gift of like being able to like live a life in service of others how are you taking care of
that gift um so meaning like you know I don't think that it's specific um to you know writing
and acting or some shit I think that it's much bigger than that as an idea um you know like do
you have the talent to back up the talent of like you're a good loving parent but like you know
you're putting the fucking whatever um air mask on yourself first you know
what i mean like it's based that whole basic idea um i i feel like you like almost as much as anyone
i could think of in the arts or entertainment i feel like you have probably more wisdom and, and just like fortitude
to like bounce back from stuff like you, like, I mean, I don't know what stuff you talk about
publicly or not talk about, but like you had, you know, drugs and recovery issues and all these
things that were really serious
and, like, could have killed you.
And obviously there's, like, themes of that in Russian Doll.
But, like, not only did you bounce back,
but you became, like, significantly stronger.
You became, like, a better actor and a creator and a director.
I mean, like, it's's actually it's pretty extraordinary thanks mike
like it's just i don't know i mean like i like if like do you do you ever find yourself giving
advice to people who uh are struggling with what you struggled with like 10 years ago? Yeah. And I mean, like not only, I mean, it's,
it's a funny thing advice. Cause I don't think I know,
I don't know that I necessarily believe in advice so much as like, you know,
the power that exists between two people helping each other out. Like,
I think it's a little bit more it's a dialogue. Like,
in other words, whatever.
This conversation, otherwise I would be playing Zelda sort of like, you know, in my own head, thinking about like, is there a coup?
Is there not a coup?
What the fuck is wrong with Jon Voight?
He was so great in Midnight Cowboy.
How the fuck did this guy get so crazy?
Poor Angelina Jolie.
She must be so ashamed. Oh my God, are they fuck did this guy get so crazy? Poor Angelina Jolie, she must be so ashamed.
Oh my God, are they great?
What's Pompeo doing?
And like playing Zelda, just like living in my own head,
being like, and I think I'm going to do it. And I guess we'll go back and we'll make that season.
Should we even be making it?
Is that a risk?
What are we doing here?
You know what I mean?
Like I'd be having my own looping thoughts.
You're stressing me out right now and it's your life.
But you know what I mean?
Like it's,
you know, and what does it all mean? That's all I think. And so maybe, so I guess I'm really not having children. I guess I really made that decision because that ship is sailing kid. Like,
you know, well, and guess who didn't know sit-ups today? Um, like, you know, so I would be like on
some, so guess who did no sit-ups today?
I'm going to make it into a screen print.
Yeah, like fucking, you know.
So it's not really until like that sort of, you know,
I mean, definitely one of the great lessons I learned is like,
don't buy the lie of the mind.
Like that was another big one.
I mean, I think that might even be like a Sam Shepard play or something buy the lie of the mind. Like that was another big one. I mean, I think that might even be a Sam Shepard play or something, the lie of the mind.
The lie of the mind.
Yeah. And like, don't buy the lie of the mind. Like who I think I am in what I think is my
innermost self, like is actually just like somebody enjoying a state of isolation that
is not necessarily a true reflection of my real nature. It's quite
possible that it's a truer version of me when I'm sort of like interfacing with you, kind of like,
you know, kicking the ball around being like, oh, maybe that's the thing I actually believe in,
you know? That's the thing that I, that's the thing I've been doing lately. Cause I've had
struggled with some mental health issues in the pandemic as many have and
I've been doing the cognitive therapy where I think it's this it's this book from this book
called love what is and it's and and and and basically she asks you to if you're having a
extreme feeling to ask yourself is it true and the second question is is it definitely true
and then it's like the third thing is i think like what if the reverse was true
and then like in the fourth i think is just like what if it weren't like what how would you feel
if it weren't true you know and it's that's similar to the lie of the mind thing that you're talking about
which is like yeah your your brain the same thing that makes you create russian doll uh
is a thing that can really get carried away yeah and take you to places that just aren't true just
simply are not true yeah it's a wild, wild thing, you know?
So it really, I mean, listen,
that's what that whole show is about ultimately, right?
It's like, you know, it's a character
who moves from being disconnected to being connected.
Like that is the journey of season one of Rush and All.
You know, in many ways, like the journey of,
you know, spoiler alert, of season two is like,
and then what?
You know what I mean? Like what comes, you know, spoiler alert of season two is like, and then what, you know what I mean?
Like what, what comes, you know, after you've made the decision to live and, you know, you're still
the same person, you know, then where are you? And, um, you know, so, and why are you, you know,
like, you know, why are we like, um, you know, like we have this like a topographical
map of, you know, like an epigenetic footprint on all of us, you know, that is sort of like
the weight of, you know, grief and joy and hope and all these things that we all carry.
And like, you know, so there's, it's just, I just to say that those are all, you know,
like deeply universal experiences that I think I'm really curious about.
Like my, you know, it's sometimes I have to like, you know, remember that I'm like,
oh, right.
Like this is, you're just fucking this person and that's just your problem, kid.
Like, because like my diary entries, like I never knew how to keep a journal because
I would write them as sort of like, like little like philosophy zines.
And it would sort of be like, like little like philosophy zines. And it
would sort of be like, yeah, you know, man entered school today. Like, I really enjoyed this idea of
like, you know, existential thought life around like, what is like, what is meaning? I mean,
like the big, you know, like the book that I brought into um season one was like victor frankel man's search
for meaning like that is yeah my big question and that's really you know what he says is like
the secret to sort of survival is like you know to find something that you want to you know do
here and uh yeah and anyway it's just it's often really hard like i personally have a mind that
tells me i want to do it all alone you know what i mean like in the dark yeah and it's often really hard. Like I personally have a mind that tells me I want to do it all alone. You know what I mean?
Like in the dark and it's not until,
I mean,
that's like been the,
you know,
like,
I mean my real life partners now are like,
you know,
Maya with this company and Amy with this show and Fred in my life.
And it's like,
I think it's no coincidence that like,
you know,
someone as dark as me needs people that shining lights of like that level of fucking heavy hitter all time people to really, you know, feel activated into like, no, like, you know, the meaning of life is actually joy.
Like, you know, because I very happily would like hang out with like, you know, Johnny Thunders and Nietzsche instead.
Sure.
Well, you said this thing when we went out to dinner that night after the
broadway show and i go like what i was talking to you and fred about do you think you might have
kids you're like no and you get married like we we really like asked a lot of the questions you
know we went deep on the questions and it was one of those nights like we just were asking all the questions and and i go what do you think
what do you think keeps you together and you just said like fred won't like let me leave
and it's like he like he like you'll be like you'll be like, now this isn't working. I'm leaving, you know.
And he'll just be like, no, no, it's okay.
You can go and then you can come back and then, well, that'll be that.
You know, like, he's so positive and matter of fact that it actually sort of defeated your defenses.
Yeah, like, he really, that motherfucker really loves me. I got to tell you.
And I mean, I would say in general, like I really have friends that just like won't let me die.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And.
Which is so much what the show is.
Which is so much what the show is about. Yeah.
I mean, it's exactly what the show is about ultimately.
Because I mean, obviously I'm somebody, I mean, the friends become so key and so primary when you have no family.
Right. I mean the friends become so key and so primary when you have no family right so it's like I really am this kind of uh you know um like many people you know like a sort of orphan character
I just don't have that so those relationships really become like you know my whole deal and
and um but yeah Fred's very I mean like yeah we can't get married because he has too many ex-wives. So, you know. Oh, my God.
Wait, that's why?
There's too many of them.
You know what I mean?
And it's like, you know, I feel like that's the thing he's really done to death.
I mean, the thing he's never done is like a real relationship.
So I think this is all very exciting for him.
Oh, my God.
But, yeah, I mean, he just won't let me leave.
Like, I've never, I mean, he's just like so sure.
Is he married more, he's married for real more than once?
He's married to Liz Moss.
Yeah, and he's been married to somebody else.
There's like a punk rocker he was married to also.
Oh, okay.
He's been married twice.
I think so.
His third wife, right.
Okay, got it.
I think he's like scared he'll jinx it.
And, you know, but like I've heard it said that basically like relationships are like,
you know, two people and, you know, I'm holding two fingers up and sort of like, you know,
one person pulls back a little bit and then the other finger has to come closer to that
finger and say like, no, don't go.
And then the other finger pulls back and the other person has to go and say, no, like, no, don't go. And then the other finger pulls back
and the other person has to go and say, no, no, no, don't go.
Oh my gosh.
And then you know that the relationship is over
when like one person, one finger pulls away
and then the other finger doesn't go closer.
It actually pulls in the opposite direction too.
And both people are kind of like, all right, peace out, fuck you too.
And I think with Fred, every time i sort of like
pull away he just kind of comes closer i pull away further he just kind of comes again
you know he won't leave he won't leave like i'm like i'm trying to get some space here
and but he also um it is really like i i've never i don't think i've ever uh
felt you know i mean i just love him so much much as like a person and like respect him so much that it's like it's hard for me to even like, you know, just like think about like losing that kind of a giant, you know, to have like a shared space with.
Like even when I, you know, I can't stand him.
It's like I always fucking have so much respect for him, you know.
and have so much respect for him, you know?
Stepping away from my conversation with Natasha Lyonne to send a shout out to our sponsor, Patreon.
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And now back to the show.
So the material that I was going to run by you that I'm working on for my show is all about death because your show is...
Is it a spoiler to say it's all about death?
Is it a spoiler?
Russian Doll has been out for like 19 years.
I know, I know.
It's been out, it's been out.
So here's, I got some things.
And also like, these are like, you know,
we can run with these.
We can have it bounce into another topic.
We can free associate.
We can sort of do anything.
Like, it's just like, this is just a jumping off point. But I wrote this, this week, I had a surge
of energy. So I free wrote on a line that I'd written like literally like three, four years ago,
which is I grew up next to a cemetery. My friend Leslie and I would play in the cemetery like it was a park. And it really hammered home the idea
that death is around us at all times and that gravestones make really great soccer goals.
Like anything past the crying angels is out of bounds. And if it hits Donald Wilson,
it is not a goal. It has to go between Donald Wilson and Whitney Bonaduce.
it has to go between donald wilson and whitney bonaduce and uh so that's the first one and um and then uh this is mike mike tell me some things first of all i just want to say
i got a little emotional i want to say thank you for being so nice to me it's really really sweet
and you're just a stellar human being, and thank you.
So I just want to say that. Now what I
want is for you to explain to me
what's happening.
So tell me what you want me...
So on the show...
Yes, tell me.
You want me to tell you about the soccer goals or something?
No, no, basically
it's like
we talk out... I'm working on these bits
and it's sort of like it's really funny um tell me about the soccer goals um
it is it's it's sort of like it's sort of like it's sort of like honest feedback about like
which i which by the way you're great at being just candid and honest and sort of like
yeah you you could literally be like yeah it doesn't that doesn't grab me but maybe this other
thing might grab me like and and like like for example like i just said the soccer goals thing
it didn't seem to sort of get you and so i was looking around going huh maybe i'll mention this
thing which is about a different topic you, but within the same universe of death.
Does that make sense?
That's if you're curious, that's not the thought that I was having.
OK, the thought I was having was I was remembering that other show with was a sleepwalk with me.
And I was like, oh, right.
I was like, Mike's about to pull out some Boghossian shit and so
that's actually oh like a longer story
yeah yeah and so I was like oh that's
what Eric Boghossian is so great at and what I was
so struck by when I saw your first show
sure at that smaller theater that time
in the village
so I was like oh he's gonna
he's gonna hit it up all right so I'm ready
I'm all ears I'll tell you a story actually
I wasn't planning to tell you this,
but since you're sort of asking me to tell you something
a little potentially more substantive,
I'll tell you this story,
and I'll just give this person a fake name.
Dolly Parton.
Dolly Parton.
His name was, let's say his name was Dolly Parton. His name was Anthony. Let's say his name was Dally Parton.
His name was Anthony.
His name was Anthony.
It was like he was a close friend of the family.
And he was just like one of these people who they would come over for Christmas, holidays.
And he was just like a life of the party kind of guy.
Like he would always give us like these gifts,
like the kind of person like at Christmas
who would like give you like a Swiss army knife.
Like you shouldn't give a kid a Swiss army knife.
But he'd like give us like these awesome,
extravagant sort of like gifts.
And he was sort of like rich.
When you'd ring his doorbell,
it would be like bing bong, bing bong.
You know, like we had never, it should just go like, ding, ding.
And then when I was in college, he passed away.
And I came home from college and I went to the funeral.
And afterwards, we went to like my godfather's house.
And everyone started drinking.
We were in the back in like one of these like
behind someone's house it was like a shed that they turned into like a game room kind of thing
with like a pool table and everyone starts drinking and then like a few hours later they're
like everyone's still drinking and then like a couple hours out, everyone is still drinking. And it's like people are drunk, like really drunk, like teenagers.
And it was the first time in my whole life where it hit me that no one can handle death.
It makes me very happy.
I really like that you're thinking about all this i mean it's so
weird death is so so weird yeah it's like so weird that you're supposed to just keep chugging along
and you know that you're gonna die and then you have all these things that you think you're
supposed to do but you know you're gonna die the whole time it's so so weird uh you know fred uh uh for his birthday for for his
maybe it was his 50th birthday we all pitched in and we bought him a a plot you know at the
house oh my gosh really yeah oh my gosh and then we got in this uh this fight because i was like you know i'm out of here
what are you talking about well where's my plot you obviously don't want to spend eternity with
me i gotta oh my gosh all your friends together we bought you a plot where's my plot oh my god
i'm such a bad person i forgot that he actually bought me a plot for my birthday. I got into the same fight with him again.
Are your plots side by side?
I don't know.
I think so.
I think I just wanted the fight, not the plot itself.
I don't know the answer.
You'd have to ask Fred.
I think so.
so I'm gonna tell you a different story uh based on what you're saying also um which is like that what you're locking into about my stuff is the stories and so I'll tell you another sort of
again it's sort of a half-baked story but it it is about death. I'll give you a wider sense of what I'm attempting to do with the next show.
And it's not dissimilar from Russian Doll.
I'm attempting to create a show that's like 90 minutes of hard, hard laughs,
but all about death and the darkest topics one could write about. And so I feel like it could
be like a cathartic thing for people to laugh about it. But anyway, this is, but interspersed
are the things like the story I just told you about being drunk at that funeral and like how
no one can face death.
And then I have this story, which is in eighth grade, I went to leadership camp.
That's how nerdy I was as a kid.
And I met this girl at leadership camp and we became really close and we stayed in touch
over the years.
And she always said that there was something that she didn't want to talk
about and her made made her like deeply sad and we would talk about like really really really
candid stuff but but whenever she would think of this thing it was like it was almost like a heavy
blanket and and one night i said to her i i you know, you can tell me like whatever it is.
Like she was really upset.
Like whatever it is, you can tell me.
And through tears, she said, my dad tried to commit suicide.
And I said, that has nothing to do with you. And I hugged her and I felt terrible because she said it like her dad had killed someone.
And in a way, it was like he had
because he tried to kill her dad.
That's very heavy.
I've never thought of it that way.
Has anybody ever put it that way? I don't know. I mean, I's very heavy. I've never thought of it that way. Has anybody ever put it that way?
I don't know.
I mean, I wrote it down.
I feel like that's the first time I've ever heard that.
I was saying earlier, like, what's a memory you have on a loop?
And that's like an exercise that I do with my writing.
And like that's a story that I can never shake,
is this idea of my friend when I was a kid saying like, her dad tried to commit suicide.
Like nothing happened. I'm still here.
Okay, great.
But that's a memory on a loop that i have but like that's so
heavy that like she he tried to kill her dad i know because it really also i mean that's that's
a big idea because it really speaks to just that experience of like also like how much her dad
must have hated himself in that moment.
And he totally lost sight of the fact that like, to her, he was a totally different person.
It really speaks to the duality of the human experience, you know, that to himself, he was nothing.
And to her, he was everything.
I'll end on this one last these are two quick jokes that are
much less heavy just to end
on a lighter note but
one is
a few years ago
in 2012
an American man died
in a cockroach
eating competition does anyone an American man died in a cockroach-eating competition.
Does anyone want to guess which part of Florida he was from?
It was Deerfield Beach, Florida,
and the event was put on by a local reptile shop.
And by the way, on some of these death certificates,
I feel like they could
just write other
so that's one
that's one
that's real
true story
true story
see I found it on CNN
I found it on CNN
you know a lot of it is
and you know
a lot of it was this week
I was just sort of like
free associating
because it shows
thematically about death
so I was just googling
like strange ways that people die.
And so I found like a story of like someone who died laughing,
literally, you know, in Britain in 1975,
a guy went into cardiac arrest watching a BBC sketch comedy show.
And the best punchline I could come up with is,
which really goes to show you,
they're just making better comedies in Britain.
But I don't think we'll make it in the show,
but I think it's a fun throwaway.
And then, yeah, so I, and then, you know,
I found one, it's like a thousand people
in the US die each year
from contact with a powered lawnmower,
which is a eulogy that writes itself,
like Frank loved mulch,
and now Frank is mulch.
I like that one.
Yeah, we'll end on that.
That was fun.
Now Frank is...
Frank is mulch.
Frank is mulch.
That's a good name for the show. Frank is mulch. Frank is mulch Frank is mulch that's a good name for the show Frank is mulch
Frank is mulch
that is good
I like that
that's a solid title
Frank is mulch
I mean you know
certainly it's a t-shirt
I mean if that line
makes it into the show
Frank is mulch
is like a good sort of like
you're in the club
if you know what this line means
kind of thing
yeah sort of like you're in the club if you know what this line means kind of thing. Yeah.
Stepping away from my chat with Natasha Lyonne to send a shout out to Bicycle Coffee.
I think it's really important
that we support local businesses right now.
I think that's a huge thing.
I've been tweeting about it
and posting on Instagram about it.
Bicycle Coffee reached out
because they're a company that is in Oakland.
It's a family business that started in 2009.
They have amazing coffee.
And since the pandemic, they started shipping.
So now they do fast and free shipping on all orders.
BicycleCoffeeCo.com. They have light roast, medium roast, dark roast, espresso blend,
decaf. They have subscriptions. I have a coffee subscription for the first time in my life.
I think you'll love it. Save 15% on your next order when you use discount code
Burbix. And now back to the show.
Okay, so the final thing is a non-profit.
Is there a non-profit
that you know of
or you didn't donate to
in the past
that you like,
that you think
they're doing good work
and then I will
donate to them
this week?
Love it.
The two places I'm very hot for
are the Women's Prison Association
because of, you know, Orange, you know,
so they really, like,
help female prisoners get back out into life.
And it's like Piper Kerman is very involved with them.
And then I also love the Lower East Side Girls Club
because it's my home state.
Yes, my sister Gina volunteered for them
for many years when she lived in Brooklyn.
Such a special place.
That's a great organization.
Such a special place.
I will be thrilled to donate to both of those.
The only planetarium
on the Lower East Side
is in that
Lower East Side Girls Club.
I did not know that.
Yeah.
Well, this has been great.
This has been great.
See?
This is why I don't need therapy, honey.
I got you.
Working it out
because it's not done.
Working it out because there's's not done. Working it out, because there's no hope.
That was another episode of Working It Out.
How about that, Natasha Lyonne?
That is a completely brilliant and fascinating person.
If you haven't seen Russian Doll, watch it.
Look out for season two.
If you haven't seen the Sarah Cooper special, everything's fine. Watch it. Those are all on Netflix. Our producers of Working It Out
are myself, along with Peter Salamone and Joseph Birbiglia, consulting producer Seth Barish,
sound mix by Kate Balinski, assistant editor Mabel Lewis. Thanks to my consigliere, Mike Berkowitz, as well
as Marissa Hurwitz. Special thanks
to Jack Antonoff for his music.
And by the way, congratulations
for his multiple
Grammy nominations.
That guy, when he is
not writing the music for
Working It Out, he is keeping
busy with people like Taylor Swift.
As always, a very special
thanks to my wife, the poet J. Hope Stein. Our book, The New One, is at your local bookstore.
Support your local bookstores. And always a special thanks to my daughter, Una, who created
Radio Fort. We just announced more virtual Working It Out shows at the end of December, the day after Christmas. Get your tickets at burbigs.com.
Thanks most of all to you who have listened.
Tell your friends.
Tell your enemies on all of those enemy websites.
We're working it out.
See you next time, everybody.