Mike Birbiglia's Working It Out - 94. Jorma Taccone: The Lonely Island’s Comedy Revolution
Episode Date: March 13, 2023Mike and Jorma Taccone are old friends and former next door neighbors. Jorma also just so happens to be an acclaimed screenwriter, director, actor, and member of the legendary comedy team “The Lonel...y Island” with Andy Samberg and Akiva Schaffer. The Lonely Island made the Saturday Night Live classic digital shorts D*ck in a Box, Natalie Portman’s rap, Laser Cats, and literally a hundred others. One time Jorma even made Mike wear a wig to play a TMZ-type reporter in his film “Popstar." Jorma goes deep on the scrappy, DIY nature of the early Lonely Island SNL short films and how sometimes it’s better to show someone your absurd idea than to explain it to them.Please consider donating to Food Bank for New York City
Transcript
Discussion (0)
your song, I Just Had Sex, has 338 million views on YouTube.
How many of those do you think have had sex?
It's become more of a thing on TikTok.
People play it in their cars as their friend leaves somebody's house
on the walk of shame.
Oh, really?
So I think a lot of people do.
A lot of people probably have just had sex.
But I don't agree with that, okay?
Celibacy until marriage.
Guys, let's keep it locked.
That is the voice of the great Yorma Takone,
of course, from Lonely Island.
They wrote sketches and performed sketches on SNL for years.
They sort of invented a form.
They were pioneers of a certain type of form
of short film that became massive.
I mean, these videos they made
have hundreds of millions of views on YouTube.
I Just Had Sex, which was just referenced.
Jack Sparrow, Threw It on the Ground.
Lazy Sunday.
I'm on a boat. The Natalie
Portman rap song, which is super
famous and hilarious.
These three guys came from the Bay Area.
They started making these sketches on their own
and then they went to SNL and it
blew up and then they went on.
Yorma directed the movie MacGruber
and the series that sprouted from
that. Peacock. They made the movie Hot Rod. They made the movie MacGruber and the series that sprouted from that, Peacock.
They made the movie Hot Rod.
They made the movie Popstar, which I love.
By the way, if you haven't seen Popstar, it's so good.
And I'm not just saying that because I have a small part in it.
I have like a little thing, ridiculous part where I wear a wig in it.
We talk about it today.
But it's a super, super funny movie.
Yorma also used to be my neighbor. We lived next to each other in it. We talk about it today. But it's a super, super funny movie. Jorma also used to be my neighbor. We lived
next to each other in Brooklyn.
We've been friends for a long time. We have such a
good chat today. Before we get
started, I just want one final
reminder. I'll be in Mesa, Arizona
this week. There's like 20
tickets left. Salt Lake City,
there's only a few tickets left.
And if you want to stay tuned
about more tour dates that are upcoming,
subscribe to the mailing list at
burbigs.com, B-I-R-B-I-G-S
dot com.
Oh, and I'm coming
to D.C., but that's
sold out right away. Same with Madison.
There are a few tickets
left in Indianapolis.
I'm going to be at the Helium Club
comedy club in
May with all new material
I'm always psyched to go
to Indianapolis and
this is one of my favorite episodes we've ever
done if you've ever
wanted to be
a creative person or wanted to
create something from scratch we talk a lot
about the idea of
creating something and showing people what you've created versus explaining the creative idea,
which is something I heard Rick Rubin say recently in an interview, which I think is super smart.
And I think Lonely Island and Yorma Takone are kind of the epitome of that idea.
Enjoy my chat with the great Yorma Takone are kind of the epitome of that idea. Enjoy my chat with the great Yorma Takone.
We're working it.
I always point to the three of you guys,
you and Andy Sandberg and Akiva Schaefer,
as an example for creatives of what to do.
And the reason I say that is I think it's always better to do instead of to explain.
I saw an interview with Rick Rubin recently, the great music producer, legendary producer,
where he goes like a lot of times in the studio it's better to just play something
than to explain what you mean because everybody takes in how they hear an explanation differently
and comedy and music i think are similar in in that of like trying to explain something funny
rather than just making it uh even so far as writing it on a page and
reading it, it's still not the same thing as actually seeing
it executed.
Not even close, especially with your stuff.
But it's very similar in that
way.
In that almost
all of our stuff, because in the
beginning we were just, we weren't
really asking for permission, we were just sort of like
we were getting approval to go out and make
something.
We were literally borrowing a video camera from Maggie Carey,
who at the time was Bill Hader's wife Maggie.
She was working at a film school,
and we would literally ask her to borrow a video camera.
This was before SNL knew what we were doing.
She would go to the lockup, get us a video camera.
That's how Lazy Sunday was done.
So you just did it on your own?
Yeah.
Like on the weekend, like on Sunday after you wrapped?
No, no.
For instance, we did two little shorts before Lazy Sunday, but Lazy Sunday was our third short, the Christmas episode of our first year.
And so, like, so as an example, we were using the computers
that had just gotten fast enough
that you could kind of do this thing.
But we were recording in our offices
with the Macs that they had in there
that were used for writing,
but we were using them to,
we would put sound programs on there.
I made the beat for Lazy Sunday,
and then we recorded it in our office.
We had a mic that we had all pulled money for,
so I think that we had brought out from LA
the three of us and we recorded
I guess you were a sketch group before you came on to SNL
so we recorded with Chris Parnell
we were a fan of his raps that he had done
like very violent raps that he would
do on SNL about like Britney Spears or whatever
and so like so we were like well let's do something with him
and we had kind of had a similar
song that we had like made
before and we kind of were like
oh let's do like a mundane like a super
hardcore like rap about like something mundane
like going to see the Chronicles of Irony
but we make this song in the office
and then we get approval enough to be like hey on Thursday
we're going to go actually record this sort of thing
like do you guys mind like and they were like yeah you get a couple hours
like we were out of the building
and I don't think we got anything on that week
and we like recorded everything like ourselves,
bought tapes for this borrowed video camera,
illegally borrowed video camera,
shooting on, I don't even know, mini DV or something like that.
Yes, that makes sense.
And then we recorded it,
me holding onto Akiva's backpack,
as we're like, I'm leading him down the street,
and I'm playing the song
so that they can do it to track.
So I'm doing like playback
on like a Radio Shack speaker that we,
so we like literally just like
got it out of the building,
did it ourselves
and then presented it to the show.
And this kind of became how we did things,
which was that like,
so we presented the show.
Everybody actually sees it
for the first time at dress rehearsal. Oh, wow. For this christmas episode so we're about to go in like three weeks
break lauren sees it for the first time like uh that in that dress rehearsal i think we maybe
made a few little tweaks between just an air and then it airs and then but like but but that way
of doing things of just kind of presenting them to the show
after we had executed them,
it kind of helped us a ton
because our humor was a little weird.
It was a little...
Like with anybody who's in a group of writers,
a lot of our stuff was a little hive-minded
in that one person has an idea,
the other person piggybacks on that idea,
makes it weirder,
or the third guy does the same thing.
And like, and we kind of collectively
create our stuff like that.
And so it's hard to sort of explain
why this is going to be funny.
And so we, but we like,
but it helped us a ton at the show
because when that first thing hit
and people were like, what is this?
And granted we had the,
it's a huge advantage to be at the show
and present something that's very other from the show.
Like it was our first year was the first year that SNL went HD.
So the show looked better than it ever had to.
And then when you cut to like this like podunk,
kids making stuff with a video camera,
it gave it this tremendous contrast too.
But it was really helpful for us because
that thing that you're talking about of
not having to explain it and just execute it
became a thing because
nobody quite understood how
this first success had happened.
It was like, whoa, these guys came out of nowhere
and we made this thing,
like Lazy Sunday as a thing.
And then it kind of helped us because
we never really presented anything to the show.
We just were able to,
everybody saw it at dress rehearsal
and was like, what the fuck is this?
Yeah, I mean, I have to say,
when I'm watching these shorts,
I'm thinking to myself,
if I was in the writer's room,
I hate to admit it,
but if this was pitched verbally,
I don't know if I would be on board like if you came into
a writer's room we're like okay so the premise is it's kind of like these guys and they're rappers
but they're kind of like color me bad they're kind of like this like lame rap group and then
they're singing about like they're digging a box and it's like it's like a gift box and they're
like look and it's like or even like it's like it's Lover, and it's like, I fuck your mother, you fuck my mother.
I'd be like, yeah.
You know what I mean?
I love that there's, and now, years later,
there's a show called MILF Mansion,
which is basically the premise of Mother Lover.
You're like, great, so we've come a long way.
A long descent.
But if you pitched me Mother Lover,
if you were like, so, I fuck your mother, you fuck my mother.
I'd be like, yeah, Yorm, I don't know.
It feels a little blue.
It feels a little dirty for the sake of.
But then when you see it immediately, you're like, yes.
Well, here's the advantage that we always had, which is that the three of us grew up together.
Me and Akiva grew up in Berkeley.
I met Akiva seventh grade. We all went to Willard Junior High and us grew up together. Me and Akiva grew up in Berkeley. I met Akiva seventh grade.
We all went to Willard Junior High
and then Berkeley High together.
So our collective sort of touchstones for everything,
both comedy and just like pop culture
and all that sort of stuff,
like Color Me Bad,
you're like all of that.
I mean, we grew up listening to like H-Town,
New Edition,
all came from like hip hop, R&B,
like dance hall, reggae.
So what we liked was already like,
so in trying to explain something like that, even the costumes,
we're all like, oh, it has to look like this.
So it just helped because, and I always almost feel like
this is like a little bit of a cheat in terms of people
being able to make stuff together, is that you get,
you're kind of insulated with that group because we think it's funny already.
Right.
You know what I mean?
So like, so that, that fear that you have as a solo, if it were you, if you were just
solo trying to explain that to somebody would probably get beaten out of you a little bit.
For sure.
But because there's like three of you, us three weirdos in our, in our little hovel
of an office just being like, ah, we think it's funny.
It helped a ton.
And then obviously, like, we were lucky enough
to have some successes at the show, too, in the beginning.
And we were just, so it kind of was like,
oh, let them do their thing and don't get involved too much,
which is great.
I mean, the advantage of the show, too,
is like it's always been a show for writers
and always been incredible in terms of like,
as a young writer you know like some people
are 20 like we met a ton of like simon rich like when i first met him he's like fresh out of college
yeah and they're like so there's kids like running that show which is like the it's why the show is
good because it has this like energy of like yeah like you just got out of like you know whatever
you've been doing and this is your first real job. Yeah. And then the show gives you this responsibility of,
if you get your show, your sketch picked,
the show's moving too fast.
So you're basically in charge of kind of directing
whatever sketch it is that you...
Right.
So these kids are, like, getting to, like,
go pick props and da-da-da.
Right.
But they're emboldened to be like,
yeah, this is what's funny.
Like, this is, like, I have to protect this.
And if you don't protect it, you learn very quickly that like your sketch is fucked.
Yeah.
So like, so, and then we have the additional advantage of being like,
like we're protecting it because we're editing it.
We're making music.
We're doing all the parts of it.
So it's, in addition to being lucky that like the show was encouraging of us doing stuff,
it's also like we're in control of whether it's funny or not.
I feel like in some ways you were able to,
I was watching all of your shorts in sequence,
and I was like, the more you were able to do,
the more you were able to do, it feels like.
So for example, it seemed like,
I remember seeing the Natalie Portman rapping and just being like,
how did they get her to say this?
Like, it's Natalie Portman being like, I'm going to kill your talk.
It's like, how did this happen?
And then did that create the opportunity to do it more with more people?
You'd have to, well, yes, for sure.
Like the fact that we were able to have like Natalie.
Yeah.
One of our first big like, oh, she's wildly famous.
She's been in like all that stuff.
She was promoting V for Vendetta.
She's like a big time star.
Yeah.
But also like a cool young person too.
And she came in and she was like, I want to do a rap.
And we were all like, oh, no.
Like we don't, it's a a very uh you know what we do as it's bizarre
that what we do is like kind of for us one of the most hateful things you can do like fake rap
i can't think of anything worse than fake rap oh yeah and we're very quick to be like it is not
rap music this is we're frappers these are not this is not real
rap music sort of thing i've seen real rappers and real rappers are incredible like you know like
we we sit there and do like a line like you know a ton of times and double it up and yeah a rapper
can go in and like spit 16 bars like off like yeah straight through and it's great yeah that's not us
so i think so so, but to the point,
like having like another white person come in
and be like, I want to do a rap.
You're like, oh boy, do you really?
But then she immediately starts spitting
all these like Lil' Kim lyrics that she had
that are filthy, like fucking filthy lyrics.
Oh, wow.
That she just knew.
And she's doing it hard.
Yeah.
Like to us in our little hovel of right,
like, you know, our little office.
That was just her taste in music.
Oh, yeah.
She just fucking loved it.
So she was like, and you were like,
jeez, like, oh, my God.
Like, all right, yeah, like, good.
And she was like, you know,
this basically is that filthy enough for you?
And we're like, yes, that's exactly what we want.
Oh, my gosh.
So you were like, what kind of thing are you thinking of?
And then she was like, I like this, this, and this.
Well, I think we had said that.
When she said, I want to do a rap song,
we were like, it's got to be kind of hardcore.
And then she doubled down and was like,
well, how about this level of hardcore?
And we were like, yeah, that's exactly how hardcore you need to be.
It's pretty extraordinary.
It's like this Oscar level of acting combined with this completely ridiculous concept.
I'm always amazed.
And I'm assuming through this show,
you probably get a lot of that too,
of what some person that you've always thought of,
I think of them in this lane,
and then what it is that they like.
It's like Daniel Radcliffe.
Just watching him, he did Gifted Gab lyrics.
He's a rapper from the Bay Area who sadly passed,
but who's fantastic.
And it's a really complicated rhyme structure stuff that he does.
And having him on that Snite show doing Gifted Gab things,
where you're like, oh, I would have no idea
that Daniel Radcliffe likes Blackalicious or whatever.
When you were writing Lonely Island sketches, are you thinking, what's the turn?
There has to be a turn?
No, I think that they occurred naturally.
So I think that we're all assuming there will be, but it's not like a conscious thing of when that's...
We're not thinking along those lines.
It's not like two plus two is comedy kind of thing for us necessarily.
along those lines.
It's not like two plus two is comedy kind of thing
for us necessarily.
But who we are
and our level of
either boredom
with our own ideas.
Right.
Or not.
I was going to say,
is it boredom?
Or not wanting to
repeat ourselves.
Because that was
the other advantage
slash disadvantage
of the show
was being like,
we did something like that
last week.
So it did help
that there were three of us
and there's always sort of democracy.
Like if two of us understood the idea
and the third guy was like,
I don't understand why this is funny to you guys,
that guy leaves the room.
The other two work on it
and then the other guy comes back in
and will say like the ABC of like
what their problem with the idea is.
Usually like, so one that would help us
in terms of like if one of us had a
problem with idea then we would work on it until that third guy's satiated you bring them over and
like and either the logic is tighter because of that or the joke is funnier because of that or
or we get to the kernel of like why why it's better now with the the three of us thinking
through something but the the other advantage is that that piggybacking thing that i'm talking
about of just like when one of us
is bored with the fucking idea, we're moving on.
We always had a, at least I always think about this
with editing, of like the dumber the joke,
the faster you tell it, for us at least.
Or you don't tell it at all if it's too fucking stupid.
What do you explain?
I just mean like, it's like we never wanted
the audience to get ahead of us.
Right. So I think that that led to turns of just mean like, it's like we never wanted the audience to get ahead of us. Right.
So I think that that led to turns of just being like,
either we've done it before, like last week,
or something we did like two years previous, or whatever it is.
And so we just always wanted to challenge ourselves
to do something different sort of thing.
And having the three of us, or honestly like some of the people
who we worked with, like Justin Timberlake, like working with him,
he's a funny dude. So it's
not like in those later
shorts, he would actually spend time with us
and he's actually like adding to the
mix as well. So just having... Who's Justin
Timberlake? He's an
American recording artist. Did you discover
him, Justin Timberlake? No,
but what's funny about Justin is
that I think the three of us,
me and Andy Cave, were always much more self-deprecating.
And Justin is a man who is both handsome, wildly talented.
He's got a lot going for him.
And clearly always has been.
So I think that is not my life.
Mickey Mouse Club, like age nine, I think.
Yeah, exactly. So I don't think he's had many failures in his life so like so the fact that
we could write something to your point about like like how would you know this is good we feel like
we know like everyone's gonna love fucking dick in a box justin comes in we we're messing around
with that the minute we're done he's like is it is a hit really hit and we're done, he's like, is it? Is it a hit? Really? This is a hit. And we're like, what are you talking about?
Wow.
Guys who are going to get arrested for putting their penises in boxes at the end of this video.
This is a hit.
I mean, that's like a perfect example of like on paper, if you pitched in Blazer Cats to me, I would just go like, yeah, maybe.
I think that what makes LaserCats work,
and maybe I'm completely wrong,
and you can explain to me the logic of it,
is that you really want,
your characters really want to convince Lauren that it's good.
I think that that was one of the things that I actually learned at SNL.
Not actually, we learned a lot of things at SNL.
But was that without the context of,
Laser Cats is basically like two 12-year-olds
making their own film and bringing it to Laura Michaels.
So it's like Annie and Bill Hader
have made a short film called Laser Cats
where there's been a nuclear war
and now cats have the ability to shoot lasers out of their mouths.
So everyone's using them as
weapons and some so sometimes they're real cats and sometimes they're fake cats and part of it
came from me cocking my own cat as a gun and pretending to shoot my wife with it with it
yeah you're just going amazing that we're still together.
But without the context,
and it may have been Akiva that pointed this out,
but he was like, you need the audience,
and this is often the case with any SNL sketch,
to look for what the joke is.
And if it was just two 12-year-olds making a short,
you'd be like, I don't want to watch this. But having the judgment of them presenting it
to an adult man who's seen everything
and is over everything and knows this is fucking horrible.
And then we would always, so they pitch it to Lauren.
He says, this sounds like a bad idea.
And they say, wait, let's watch it before you judge anything.
And then it is bad.
And then we would choose the worst, most embarrassing moment in it.
And then be like, no, you cut back to Lauren just being like, yeah, I Just Had Sex, has 338 million views on YouTube.
How many of those do you think have had sex?
It's become more of a thing on TikTok.
People play it in their cars as their friend leaves somebody's house
on the walk of shame.
Oh, really?
So I think a lot of people do.
Yeah.
A lot of people probably have just had sex.
I wonder.
But I don't agree with that, okay?
Celibacy until marriage.
Guys, let's keep it locked.
Let's keep it locked.
Yeah, yeah.
If you get anything out of this interview,
it's don't have sex until marriage.
Yeah, no, that's the key.
I think that's the message of Lonely Island generally.
Always, always.
In a general sense, yeah.
So there's a deep undercurrent.
No sex before marriage.
I don't remember that song, though.
No, yeah, yeah.
Well, you got to read Between the Lines.
I mean, maybe this is neither here nor there.
The people who love your music,
some of them are the people who the three of you nerds
would not like probably so much.
Yes, there was a little bit of a thing that we had with that
in terms of the expansive...
I mean, obviously, you make anything,
and then you don't know where it goes or how it's going to be.
I mean, they seem...
To be clear, you're nerds.
Yes, we're total nerds.
I'm not going to disagree with that.
I don't think anyone's going to disagree with that.
You're losers.
But you make something like I'm on a boat
and then like you see it being played at like Lake Havasu or whatever
and you're like, oh, well, I didn't expect you to go there.
What's that?
It's like frat culture, like spring break level, you know.
The January 6th riots they played in.
Oh, my God, it was huge with that crowd.
But you know what?
Insertionists buy sneakers too, as Michael Jordan would say.
Oh my God.
I don't know if he would say that now.
I bet he wouldn't say that now.
You and I just had sex.
You have John McEnroe singing,
I just had sex and I'll never go back.
John McEnroe, one of the greatest tennis players of all time.
You directed him to say, I just had sex and I'll never go back.
Did you ever feel self-conscious directing someone like that?
I can't even remember how that happened.
That's the miracle of SNL
because there's so many people that come through.
I mean, like going to the show.
Like for instance, I met, the first time I met Paul McCartney was just coming out of a doorway.
I'm sorry, can you repeat that sentence?
The first time I met Paul McCartney, I didn't have, by the way.
We're going to just do a pickup on that again.
You're like, he's coming out of Lawrence's office and you're just like, hey, this guy
is like meant the world to all of our parents.
I'm sorry, we didn't get sound on that.
Go ahead again
start up with
the first time
I met Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney
yeah
you become
Shy Ronnie
Shy Ronnie
Paul McCartney
yeah
the older I get
the bigger
of a dick
I think I
sound like
but you're like
or like
in the hallways
like Barack Obama
Senator
at the time
Senator I'm sorry we didn't have sound on that go ahead again so but you're like, or like in the hallways, like Barack Obama, senator at the time, senator.
I'm sorry, we didn't have sound on that.
Go ahead again.
But you're like, you're literally shaking hands with people.
But like, to your point, I don't know how the McEnroe thing happened.
Like it was like, maybe he was in the building?
Right, right, right, right.
You know, like why is he in it?
When you go, so you guys were in the Bay Area.
You grew up together.
Yeah.
And then you didn't all audition for the show, right?
Just Andy did? No, me and Andy both auditioned for the show.
Oh, you and Andy both did, but Akiva didn't.
Yes.
Okay.
And again, we had a different, like our lives in LA
and how we got to the show
were slightly different than most people.
Because most people are like,
either they're doing like standup relentlessly,
which Andy did a ton of,
or they're doing live sketch stuff
on like ImprovOlympic or UCB
or like wherever they've come from.
But they've honed characters and sketches
and things that they are good at and know work on stage.
So the fact that Andy did as well as he did,
I mean, Andy auditioned, I think he had two auditions.
I had one, because I think they knew.
But it's like the most nerve-wracking thing I've ever done.
Like, I vomited twice before my audition.
Were you on stage at 30 Rock?
Yeah, so we met a lot of SNL folks
our second year of writing for the MTV Movie Awards.
We specifically worked for the MTV Movie Awards
because we get to write for famous people.
Kind of what SNL is,
of just being able to make famous people do crazy shit.
And have a budget to do it.
Who was hosting?
Our first year that we wrote for him was Lindsay Lohan.
The second year was Jimmy Fallon.
Okay.
So when Jimmy was on the show, like Steve Higgins,
who's now Jimmy's guy and like a big producer on SNL still.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
And so like Higgins was there and a bunch of SNL writers.
So we got to hang out with those guys and kind of not endear ourselves.
But when it came time to
go to bat for
who gets even auditioned
it's hard to even get an audition
Andy had kind of proven himself
just worthy of auditioning
so Andy got to do it
and then I think because we were a trio
they were like do you guys want to audition too
and I was like yes I was more of a performer
but I would say i sort of leaned more almost uh more drama even than but like but but equally to
andy like i didn't have i didn't even have a stand-up experience or anything so like so i just
you have to do like what is it's like five it's like five uh characters and or like it's four
characters and three impressions or whatever.
It's some, you have to do this many.
But we were making it up like days before we went on. So I think so.
And I was just glad that I got one good laugh out of Tina.
I could tell it was her.
Like just in the dark.
You just go up and you're on camera.
It's being beamed to Los Angeles too. So I think it it was her. Like, just in the dark. You just go up and you're on camera. It's being beamed to Los Angeles, too.
So, it's fucking terrifying.
But I did an impression of a 13-year-old at a bar mitzvah,
like, who wants to dance but can't.
So, it was a lot of, like, just, like, nervously,
like, picking up his pockets.
Oh, I like this song.
Like, not saying anything.
It was no words.
Oh, my gosh.
But, like, I got a solid laugh out of Tina.
So you know what?
That was almost more worth it than getting the show.
I'm just kidding.
When Andy got offered it,
did you talk among the group of like...
Yes, there was a period in which we knew Andy was hired
and there was about a week or so,
or however many days it was where they weren't letting
us know whether we were going to be hired as writers
as well. And me and Keeve,
Keeve had actually gone
in and had a writer
meeting with Lorne.
And so the
fact that I didn't have that
meeting and I wasn't going to get picked for the
show, I mean, the people that got in that year were like hater of Andy.
I'm just making excuses now of why I didn't get it.
But they're fucking hitters.
Well, that cast was crazy.
Sudeikis was in that in those years.
Incredible people sort of thing.
It wasn't too surprising.
I think mine was a little bit more run-of-the-mill.
Forte might have been in there. Wig might have been in there. Wig got hired that year. So it wasn't too surprising that my, I think mine was like a little bit more run of the mill, kind of like, oh, he's solid, but not like.
Forte might have been in there.
Wig might have been in there.
Forte was already there.
Wig got hired that year.
I mean, it was, our class was,
I don't know if you'd describe it like that, but like.
Power group.
Incredible.
Yeah.
And all really sweet, very encouraging,
like it almost felt like a different kind of,
because I remember like we watched like documentaries
before we got to SNL that were all like,
it's cutthroat, nobody laughs at their shit,
because nobody wants to have their shit
get passed over in YouTube because they laughed at it.
And it was not like that for us.
At least our class was very encouraging.
And maybe it was because we had our little insular group
that maybe I didn't experience any of that kind of feeling
of just competitiveness in that way. But it was also that people were doing really well too
you gave me this amazing note because I did a series of readings for don't think twice
at our apartment which you and I were next door neighbors for like a period of years
and so you and your wife Mari would come over and help give notes and read parts and don't
think twice you gave a note that's like a pretty seminal part of the film which is you were like you were like when keegan's character gets
snl you were like uh it's not snl by the way it's a different show weekend live yeah weekend life
it's a totally different show you you can't retroactively sue anyone but you said you said, like, when you started working at SNL,
you were like, just when you walk in,
there's an awe that you have when you walk through the halls of irreverence.
You're just like, I can't believe I'm in these halls and I'm supposed to be here.
And you said to me as a filmmaking friend, you know,
you were like, you should really give Keegan's character
a moment to take it in. And we put that in. And I think it's one of the most important parts of
the whole movie. It's just a silent moment where he's looking up at the portraits on the walls.
It's funny that it actually gives me the feeling of like the hair standing on the back of my neck,
remembering how that felt for me multiple times too.'s not just like once there's there's so many moments because you're sleeping there i slept there twice a week
usually on shitty couches and uh and you're like granted they're probably not the same couches as
fucking belushi's like but you're like but you're like the people that have come through here and
the legend and even it's even like people who are only on for a season like larry david's on the
wall fucking like you know it's like sarah so all these people that you don't even think of yeah
as like like oh like yeah like where you're like holy shit the people who have come through here
and the fact that like not only are you allowed to be there but to have any success
there whatsoever is like is is mine is mind-blowing.
This is called the slow round.
So do you remember growing up like an inauthentic version of yourself?
Like where you cringe looking back on yourself
like growing up?
I don't know if this is inauthentic, but I got into, I was like goth-ish for about,
like in high school, I was going, so we all went to Berkeley High.
And then I went to, for two years, I went to, I left Berkeley High.
I went to a Catholic all-boys school.
And I was in, my friend wanted me to be in a punk band called Rive.
I didn't play, he was like,
you just play power chords.
And so during this time,
I bought like cargo shorts and like a wallet chain.
I mean, there were people who did this probably successfully,
but not me.
And like Doc Martens.
And then I met on a BART train,
I met a girl who went to Cal.
I was like my junior year of high school, I met a girl who went to Cal. I was like my junior year of high school.
I met a girl who went to Cal
and because I was like a Berkeley kid,
I think I was probably just more,
like we were all drinking at like 14
and don't drink while you're 14.
Don't drink or have sex.
Those are the two.
Absolutely do not do that.
Those are, he didn't make songs about them,
but don't do them.
No, but like, but so i met this
girl from cal cal berkeley was just college and she was a freshman and so i ended up dating this
girl and i was very impressed with myself because i'm like i'm dating a college girl who was like a
goth so she like dressed me in like um black flowing skirts and like we went to like uh like
goth clubs in like a gil, which is a pretty big punk club.
Wow.
It's like where Green Day and Operation Ivy
and a lot of those kind of early Bay Area,
the ones that popped off.
But yeah, I would say that was...
Operation Ivy, that's a throwback.
Inauthentic.
Isn't it?
An inauthentic version of myself, yeah.
Can you think of a moment in your life
that you realize now changed your life,
but you didn't realize it at the time?
No, because it was us now.
But if I really go back, it would be meeting Akiva.
Meeting Akiva and Andy, yeah.
Andy was like, we were always sort of,
because Andy's two years younger than me,
a year younger in terms of classes.
But meeting Akiva, I think, changed my life,
me and Andy's life in particular.
Because Akiva was always the most motivated dude I've ever...
Is he the nerdiest of the group?
Yes, in terms of technical savvy, for sure.
Yeah, I learned
editing from Akiva.
But he's just,
he was always, it's interesting that
going back to the confidence thing,
he was going into credit card debt
when me and Andy were so paranoid
early days,
post-graduating from college.
And me and Andy were like,
we would all take shitty temp jobs occasionally
through a temp agency.
But Akiva was always just like, yeah, fuck that.
I'm just going to go into credit card debt.
And then he paid it off his first week at SNL.
But he was always just very confident
that he was competent enough.
I don't think he was ever thinking,
I'm a genius, da-da-da.
But I think he was just always confident
that we could do it.
If we applied ourselves correctly,
which was making stuff and honing our,
I wouldn't say craft because that sounds fucking up its own butt,
but just continuing to learn and produce and make stuff.
And he was right.
And I still don't have that level of confidence that Keefe has.
Better now, but he just understands things in a different way.
And I think I would give it up to Keefe in that way.
I mean, I think that we all have our own motivation
and are very motivated people.
And we all have our own lane kind of thing.
Like, I mean, we're very much like Andy's Alvin,
I'm Theodore, like the pudgy Theodore,
and Akiva's Simon.
So yes, the nerdiest one.
But I do think that I don't think without Akiva,
I don't know if we would be where we are.
That's interesting because in Popstar,
you break into your dynamic a bit.
And then we kind of steal each other's dynamics.
Right, right.
There's definitely a bunch of Lawrence and me.
I'm the one who's out on the fucking farm,
but I'm in New York.
Right, so Akiva's character is out on the farm,
which in real life is you in New York across the country.
Yeah, like elements of it, yeah.
And then what's your character?
So in Popstar,
if people don't know,
like basically,
it's like a boy band
that was huge.
Yeah, they're like,
we're kind of the Beastie Boys,
basically.
Sort of the Beastie Boys.
And then...
We break up.
They break up
and then they go
different directions
and then they all come together.
Yeah, and Andy's character
becomes wildly famous
and successful in almost like a Bieber level of fame.
And then I become like his DJ
who keeps getting relegated further and further back
and being treated less and less like a friend.
And then Akiva is so mad about the breakup
and a certain kind of disrespect that he got
that he sort of loses his mind and goes to a farm.
And then we come back
at the end of the movie
and we're buddies again.
But in real,
and of course,
I was in the movie
as the TMZ guy.
Of course, of course.
CMZ.
Which is,
I shot one day.
It was like half a day.
It was like half a day.
The amount of fucking footage
we got from you guys.
It's like nine minutes
of the movie.
It's fucking great. It's you, Arnett, I mean, it's like. It's Chelsea nine minutes of the movie. It's fucking great.
It's you, Arnett.
It's Chelsea Peretti, Eric Andre.
It's such a good group, too.
Also, by the way, that's super fun for just comedy people
to have you and Eric Andre and Chelsea all together.
But also, Arnett's fucking murdering.
Arnett is one of the funniest people on the planet.
I think all of us, me and Eric and Chelsea, fucking murdering. Oh, Arnett is one of the funniest people on the planet.
And I think all of us, me and Eric and Chelsea and Will,
were just trying not to laugh.
I mean, we're in these crazy wigs and outfits.
Do you remember the bit that he did?
I don't even think it made it into the deleted scenes where he's getting super excited about something
and he's clearly like coming on himself.
Oh my God.
And then he's behind a little.
I remember in real life.
And it's the TMZ bit where he's like leaning over a cubicle
so you don't see what's happening on his lower half.
Oh my God.
And he's like leaning against this wall and he's like.
Yeah, no, I remember this.
And then he, but he does this bit.
I filed a complaint about this.
I have never heard back. And then he does this bit at the end where he wipes, he does this bit. I filed a complaint about this. I have never heard back.
And then he does this bit at the end where he wipes,
he clearly wipes his hand on the back of the cubicle.
And you're just like, oh, God.
This is horrible.
Like the level of detail.
That's so gross.
Anyway, Lego Masters is a great show.
He's an all-American, now Canadian, treasurer.
I was at the MacGruber premiere.
In New York?
In New York.
Yeah, yeah.
Jenny and I were like, and we didn't know you at the time,
Jenny and I were like, this is going to be the biggest comedy in like the decade.
This is so funny.
What's also sad and made me feel really good and then very bad when it actually came out
was that Val Kilmer, who
plays the villain in MacGruber.
And, you know, he was in, I think he was in Top Secret, which I think was the first comedy
that I saw that I was like, oh, I didn't know adults were allowed to be this funny.
Yeah.
So it blew my mind.
I'm just like, this is incredible.
Yeah.
And so, and he was like,
I've only been wrong about one movie before.
Of what was going to be successful.
No, before this.
He was like, this is going to be huge.
So now he's been wrong about two movies.
Yeah.
And the other movie was Top Gun.
He was like, it's not going to work.
This is not good.
He didn't think Top Gun was good.
He didn't think Top Gun was going to work.
That's amazing.
So he was wrong about that, and then he was wrong about your good company.
But his taste in comedy was so, like, I was just like,
the fact that he was in Top Secret, I was like, this is great.
And then what happens, like, what-
And then just to give people context, like,
the movie is a cult hit and spawned a series.
Yeah, years later.
Ten years later, yeah.
But didn't do, like, big box office numbers akin to, like,
Bridesmaids or something.
I mean, the things that were, it did box office,
it just didn't do, like, mega.
It basically made its budget in box office, which is not good.
And then Popstar, I would say similarly, did well,
but it didn't do box, it didn't do mega. And then Hot Rod, same thing. And then Hot Rod, same thing. It did well but it didn't do box it didn't do mega
and then Hot Rod
same thing
and then Hot Rod
same thing
it did well
but didn't do mega
so we have like
three cultish
kind of movies
but it's such a bummer
when
when you're
why you made something
and
and
like
is truly for you
yeah
to like make your friends laugh
and you think you're successful
at it
like I always knew like I'm like I'm very proud of hot rod i'm very proud oh yeah for us
us making hot rod for us making uh pop pop star which is very hard movie to make we edited for
seven and a half months on that like we would we fucking work that shit into like the shape it is
oh yeah and then mcgruber same thing like like we and it's beloved i mean pop star i think more
people talk to me about pop star than any movie i've ever been in and i'm only in it for five minutes yeah yeah that's people
it's beloved yeah i mean and and and granted like at this stage in having made stuff like it was
like it was we would definitely sort of know like oh people are going to find it six months a year
later like like like for the people that care you know like we've made things that i'm like oh
i'm not embarrassed by these things.
But it's still having that like that initial weekend.
Like, I mean, I've been with my wife for 20 something years.
So like I don't know what that feeling of like a breakup would feel like.
But that's as close as I can imagine to the feeling of just like America doesn't like you.
So I think that opening weekend of being like, oh, you know, I mean, like Hot Rod came out.
It was the same weekend, but it was like you know, I mean like Hot Rod came out same, it wasn't the same weekend
but it was like right around
the time that like
Superbad came out
and they were like,
oh,
that's success.
People love this shit.
And we were having like,
we're friends with like Jonah
and those guys
and like,
yeah.
And they were all,
they all loved it.
Yeah.
Jonah.
Fucking hell.
Jesus.
Yeah.
Jonah Hill.
I'm like the real Lauren
of this podcast
you know when
Paul said to me
Simon or
oh my god
but you were friends
with people who were
having like
like mega hits
and they liked it
like I've always had
like the moments of
like you know
like and after the
fucking MacGruber series like Stiller Ben Stiller called it was like, I've always had like the moments of like, you know, like, and after the fucking MacGruber series,
like Stiller,
Ben Stiller called and was like,
it's so good.
And like,
and so I've had those moments of like people that I really respect liking the stuff that we do,
but not that moment of like the,
which is like so great that like people love Palm Springs.
Like,
like,
like,
like Kiva's movie,
Chip and Dale.
Like,
I mean,
like to have an actual,
which I wasn't involved with,
but to have an actual success and be like,
oh, people like this.
And it seems like it did well.
I mean, I don't know how you quantify fucking streaming,
but like, you know, like.
I think that we're going to wrap it up.
I think the lesson of the whole thing is threefold.
Make your own things.
If you're creative and you're listening,
make your own things instead of trying to pitch them.
Yeah.
Make whatever it is.
Small scale.
I mean, you guys were making stuff for practically nothing.
Yeah.
So I would say make your own things.
And then I would also say yes and a group.
Like yes and with a group of people.
Because what you guys did with Lonely Island
is yes and this.
Yes and even more bizarre.
Yes and even more bizarre.
And then I think the final lesson is
that don't take sort of financial failure
in the moment or whatever it is
to be what the long game is of your piece of art,
whatever it is, whether it's painting or an improv group
or sketch group or stand-up or whatever it is,
because you actually don't know.
You literally didn't know.
I was at your premiere of MacGruber,
and it didn't do the amount of business you thought,
and you were really disappointed.
And now it's like a cult phenomenon,
and became a series, like 10 years later.
Yes.
Those are my three lessons of the Yorma Takone experience.
Yes.
Do you have anything to add to that?
Yeah, you learn from all of it.
And there was an article that Larry David wrote 15 years ago,
I can't remember how long ago,
where he was talking about LA versus New York.
And his quote about LA was,
and I think it just applies to Hollywood,
was, if you can't make it here, you can't make it anywhere.
That's very funny.
And I think that what he meant was,
if you're reasonably intelligent and you just keep going,
and you keep learning and you don't going. And you keep learning
and you don't take those failures
as like, I'm done.
I gotta go become a lawyer or whatever it is.
If you're a creative
and you're
learning, just keep going.
It will happen eventually.
That's obviously a very fucking privileged
position for me to be like,
it works out. My dumb ideas are able to,
but like, but like, but, but it's, I do think it's, I think it's true.
Like, you know, and you, and you find, you find your, your,
and even if it, if, if the thing that you're making is so,
it's for the fucking 2% of America or the world,
that's still a lot of people.
The richest Americans.
The richest, that's what I lot of people. The richest Americans. The richest,
that's what I'm talking about.
Just the richest.
No, but if it's some obscure,
weird cartoon you want to do,
there are people that want to see it.
This is what George Carlin said,
supposedly,
and I love that he said this,
which is,
he goes,
I don't need to be popular
with 90% of people.
I need to be popular
with like 1% of people.
Yeah.
But really fucking popular.
And who are really into it.
Who are really into it.
And they have money.
And finally, we do working out for a cause.
Is there a nonprofit that you contribute to
and will contribute to them
and we'll link to them in the show notes?
Brooklyn Food Bank, i would say should be the charity that people should donate to that's very lovely that you do that you and i both live here and uh this is uh i've contributed
before it's foodbanknyc.org we're going to contribute to them we're going to link to them
in the show notes thanks jorm Jorma, for coming.
And I can't wait to see what you do next.
Thank you, Mike.
It was a pleasure.
I'll come back anytime.
All right.
Working it out, because it's not done.
Working it out, because there's no hope.
That's going to do it for another episode of Working It Out. You can follow The Lonely Island on at The Lonely Island on Instagram.
Andy Samberg, Akiva Schaefer, Yorma Takone.
Those brilliant, brilliant folks.
I just can't wait to see what they do next.
Our producers of Working It Out are myself,
along with Joseph Birbiglia and Peter Salamone.
Associate producer Mabel Lewis,
consulting producer Seth Barish,
assistant producers Gary Simons
and Lucy Jones,
sound mix by Ben Cruz,
supervising engineer Kate Balinski,
special thanks to Marissa Hurwitz
and Josh Huffall,
David Raphael,
and Nina Quick.
My consigliere is Mike Berkowitz,
special thanks to Jack Antonoff
and Bleachers for their music.
Special thanks to my wife,
the poet J. Hope Stein. Her book, Little Astronaut, is in bookstores now. Special thanks, Jack Antonoff and Bleachers for their music. Special thanks to my wife, the poet J. Hope Stein.
Her book, Little Astronaut, is in bookstores now.
Special thanks, as always, to my daughter, Una,
who built the original radio fort made of pillows.
Thanks most of all to you who are listening to our little podcast.
We are approaching 100 episodes, and you can do us one favor.
You know what that favor is.
You know.
I don't even have to tell you.
You go on Apple Podcasts,
you just say literally in the comments,
just say, what is your favorite episode?
Because when you find a podcast,
so often you don't even know where to begin.
People go, hey, you should listen to Working It Out.
But no one specifies.
You got to listen to the episode with Zarnagarg. You got to listen to the episode with John Green. You got to listen to the episode with Zarnagarg. You got to listen
to the episode with John Green. You got
to listen to the episode with John Mulaney.
And so what I'm saying to you is, you tell people.
I'm putting it on you.
But it actually really
does help us out, and it helps
us sort of reach more folks.
Again, thanks most of all to you who are
listening. Tell your friends.
Tell your enemies. And if you don't have any more enemies, let's say you've converted all to you who are listening. Tell your friends. Tell your enemies.
And if you don't have any more enemies,
let's say you've converted all your enemies at this point.
You've been listening to the podcast.
You've been doing the homework, so to speak,
converting enemies into listeners to the podcast.
I would go out and make some new enemies.
You're on the subway.
You're holding on to the bar.
You can flash someone a look.
They go, what are you looking at?
You go, my eyes were just looking in that direction.
I'm sorry about that.
And they're like, what?
And then you're like, let me tell you about this podcast.
We're working it out, everybody.
I'll see you next time.