Parks and Recollection - Director Dean Holland: Go Big or Go Home (S3E1)
Episode Date: April 12, 2022Can you believe season 3 is here? Alan and Rob are back with director Dean Holland to talk through the season premiere! In “Go Big or Go Home,” Leslie plays matchmaker with Ann and Chris in hopes ...of securing a bigger budget for the parks department. On this episode you’ll hear about the labor that went into Ron Swanson's Pyramid of Greatness, how Chris Traeger came to be a three-dimensional character, the ups and downs of the editing room, and how Alan’s hometown inspired Ice Town! Got a question for the Pawnee Town Hall? Send us an email: ParksandRecollectionTownHall@gmail.com Or leave a 30-Second voicemail at: (310) 893-6992After three months of closure due to the Pawnee budget crisis and government shutdown, the parks department has since been reopened, although on a shoestring budget. Meanwhile, the always optimistic Chris Traeger continues trying to ask out Ann, who finds him too intense. Nonetheless Leslie convinces her to accept in order to persuade Chris to increase the park's budget.Ben restarts the youth basketball league with only two teams. They're coached by the contrasting duo of the uber-strict Ron and the laidback Andy. Tom, who referees the game, becomes jealous when his ex-wife Wendy arrives to support Ron.Meanwhile, Ann finds out she actually enjoys her date with Chris, especially after learning about why he feels lucky to be alive every day. Leslie crashes the date to help and persuade Chris to increase the park's budget—but Ben also arrives, having correctly anticipated Leslie's plan. Leslie excitedly declares “Mission accomplished” after Chris talks about increasing the park's budget, accidentally giving away her scheme and prompting a hurt Chris to leave. Ann apologizes to Chris later and asks for another date, to which he happily agrees. April turns up back at work after a three-month disappearance. Though Andy still nurses a crush on her, April says she met a new boyfriend in Venezuela. A discouraged Andy seeks advice from Leslie, who encourages him not to give up and to “go big or go home.” Leslie proposes restoring the parks department with a grand Harvest Festival. Impressed by the team's enthusiasm, Chris and Ben agree to the idea.
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We're getting together to talk about all the things we used to do
The laughs, the passions, the little Sebastian's, the pets we fell into
And we're putting it on in a podcast, then we'll send it up into the sky We're calling it Parks and Recollection
Come on little podcast, spread your wings and fly
Welcome everybody to Parks and Recollection with me Rob Lowe and Alan Yang.
This is amazing, we're season three.
Season three, we made it.
We made it, they said it could be done. This is amazing. We're season three. Season three. We made it. We made it. They said it couldn't be done. We made it. Season three of Parks and Recreation. This episode is called
Go Big or Go Home. And not only is it season three premiere episode this week, but we have
one of our favorite guests back, Mr.lland who directed the episode hi dean welcome hi
what up dean thanks for having me back of course are you responsible in any way
for the horrific previously on parks and recreation that begins this episode i love
welcoming the guests with that i love welcoming you know i wouldn't take responsibility for it, but it was a request from the network and they made us do it.
I think the actual president of the network is the guy doing the voiceover.
Really? It's the voice.
I think so. I think there were there was even time where Mike and I were like, well, let them fucking cut it.
We didn't want to do it at
all we really didn't but if you remember we were supposed to be on in the fall and then they pushed
us for that amazing show that was that replaced us outsourced that's right yes i yes i have another
pod about outsource outsource and recollections it's huge ratings it's much bigger than this pod so
apologies to the fans of that show yeah we're really sorry about that maybe i shouldn't have
said that but um but so then we got pushed to i guess maybe january where or something like that
that's right so it had been eight or nine months before of us not being on television and the network was like
nope you gotta remind everybody where we were i remember agonizing over what the vo would be
i remember i think i was in some of the edits i i wrote i wrote this episode i have the writing
credit on it and so yeah we discussed it and no one none of us on the creative team wanted to do
it but there it is and the his tone of it's almost like from the 70s or something
or the 80s.
Yes.
Leslie loves whipped cream, dancing with friends,
and working hard for the Parks Department of Pawnee, Indiana.
I think, to be honest with you,
we had so many people read,
and the problem was it just didn didn't work period yes so we weren't we
were never going to find a voice that told the story well because it we shouldn't be doing it
in the first place well you know what it's a great episode in my opinion i really like it you did a
great job it first aired it first aired january besides vo aside january 20th 2011 is when it aired that's
when season three premiered um written by alan yang directed by dean holland all right let's do
some notes notes some fun facts about the episode you ready all right the first notes note this
episode is the very first in parks and rec history to feature number one, Adam Scott, number two, Rob Lowe, number
three, Jim O'Hare, number four, Retta as regular cast members instead of guest stars. So what does
that mean? You see them listed on screen as regulars, you see their names in the credits.
It's an upgrade. So those four very funny, very beautiful, very handsome people all got added to
the show. All right. And one more notes note, the Swanson pyramid of greatness, very popular amongst many, many people is a similar to, or some would say a
ripoff of the pyramid of success used by John Wooden. And for those of you who are too young
to remember this or, or not sports fans or not basketball fans, John Wooden was, uh, largely
considered the greatest college basketball coach of all time. He coached UCLA and coached them to many, many, many titles.
And he was kind of this old school coach who had a pyramid of success that, again,
I think we all took stabs at writing jokes for the Swanson Pyramid of Greatness,
which, you know, kind of a rip off the wooden pyramid.
So that was that.
I don't think it's an exaggeration.
We spent two full work days on that.
So that kind of thing, yeah.
And here's the synopsis for my synopsisters and brothers.
After three months of closure due to the Pawnee budget crisis and government shutdown,
the Parks Department has since been reopened, although on a shoestring budget.
Meanwhile, the always optimistic Chris, played by Rob Lowe,
continues trying to convince Ann to go on a date with him.
Ann finds him too intense, but Leslie convinces her to accept a date and try to persuade Chris
to increase the park's budget.
Ben restarts the youth basketball league with only two teams.
They are coached by Ron, who's extremely strict with his players, and Andy, who is very laid
back.
Tom, who referees the game, becomes jealous when his ex-wife Wendy arrives to support
Ron.
Anne finds she actually enjoys her
date with Chris, especially learning about why he feels fortunate to be alive every day. Leslie
crashes the date to help Anne persuade Chris to increase the park's budget, but to her surprise,
Ben also arrives, having predicted Leslie's plan. Leslie excitedly declares mission accomplished
after Chris talks about increasing the park's budget, accidentally giving away her scheme and
prompting Chris to leave. Anne apologizes to Chris later and asks for another
date, to which he happily agrees. Since his kiss with Anne, Andy's been trying to get back in touch
with April to no avail and is happy to see April in the parks department, but an unimpressed April
explains she's been in Venezuela where she met her new boyfriend. A discouraged Andy seeks advice
from Leslie, who encourages him not to give up and to, quote,
go big or go home.
It's a tally episode.
Inspired by her own advice,
Leslie proposes restoring the parks department
with a grand harvest festival.
Impressed by the team's enthusiasm,
Chris and Ben agree to the idea.
A lot going on in this episode.
It's a season premiere.
Season premiere is always tough
because there's so much to kind of recap.
Even without a VO, they're tough.
But with the VO, yeah, this was a big one.
I remember brainstorming this one.
Yeah, and I also remember, correct me if I'm wrong,
I'm jumping all the way to the end
because I think there's some really fun stuff
to talk about in this,
but didn't we kind of rewrite and reshoot that ending yes i think the ending got actually actually almost
totally reshot i it's basically just one scene but but something about it it was like it it was
getting the energy up i i i love when they cut to chris and he's crying i love when you know she
puts on the music the chicago Bulls music, and we wanted
some epic feel to the end, right? I think that was because we were launching. So ultimately,
a little bit of backstory, look, we had to come back from the government shutdown storyline.
And so it was kind of hotly debated in the writer's room about what to do to solve that
and to incorporate Chris and Ben into the show. And one pitch was this Harvest Festival
pitch, which is weirdly named after a bumper sticker I used to see in my hometown. There's
something called Harvest Festival in my hometown of Riverside, California. I think in retrospect,
it was some kind of religious event, but I didn't know what it was. So, the name just stuck in my
head. So, I wrote in the script and I pitched it as the idea of go big or go home was
you you you're you're you're down in terms of money but if you throw a big thing you could
raise money and so the objection from the logic police the people in the writer's room who want
to adhere to the rules of logic was like well you wouldn't spend more money if you're already in the
hole but to me the greater idea was this show is about optimism. This show is about government succeeding.
And this show is about a can-do spirit.
And the idea that Leslie wants to bring back this tradition and really swing for the fences.
And if the Harvest Festival works, it will raise money.
And that's ultimately the idea we ended up going with.
And so this launch is essentially a seven-episode arc, right?
So that's why that ending needed to be really sort of grand and meaningful.
And it was. And I think, like, there was also a lot of eyes on it there was a lot of critiquing of it
from the network and stuff like that and obviously with that wonderful opening you know previously on
they just they kind of really got their hands on it but in the end i think we came out with
a better ending yes you know i love that ending getting to do that reshoot really
was great and and it sort of springs you into the arc right it springs you into okay chris and ben
are are integrating themselves into the show there's clearly something going on chris and
ann there's something brewing with leslie and ben and ultimately those story arcs really paid off
for us and and um but there's a lot of just fun fun shit in the episode too like
i love the the basketball stuff right it was like that oh i remember don't you remember i think i
came to you and i was like all i want to do is to see nick walking through with balls going like
this in his foreground that he would never ever even his guys are trained so well that they
wouldn't hit him you know and then there's that there's that transition between
ron's team and then you pan over and see andy's team and it's pure chaos yeah and of course he's
wearing the red sweater kind of a bobby knight homage and throws the chair yeah of course the
and which we shot exactly the way yes it is in the youtube clip and and i'm a huge basketball
fan so this was really fun for me we did the whole ron swanson
pyramid of greatness oh if you freeze frame it you can see all the the little the little uh i
would say i would say you could do an entire podcast just on the pyramid of greatness i feel
like we wasted weeks of writing time on that don't you it it kept getting better and better don't you remember i remember one the last
stint of like working on the pyramid of greatness i think you mike me morgan and maybe someone else
was in mike's office and we added like three more lines to it the pyramid just kept getting
bigger and bigger and bigger i i noticed one like i remember i think i pitched this one i hesitate
even say what he's like you know know, you, you, you basically,
you never eat fish. Fish meat is basically a vegetable.
There's a one I love, which says in the background, you can't even see it.
It says, you know, usually it's like honor, strength, courage, all this stuff.
One of the boxes just says old wooden sailing ships. They're beautiful.
It's like, that's, that's on the pyramid.
It's like that doesn't have much to do with basketball, but, but, but yeah,
I love that shit.
I think that's probably one of the most downloaded things from our show.
I mean, that's incredibly popular.
Yes.
For good reason.
This whole episode is so fast-paced, and it feels like, I know we shot season three very soon after season two,
but it felt like even having watched the season two episodes, the show just is more confident.
It's really, it was so fast I could barely type my notes.
You know, it was really just like energetic and fun.
And we get to see-
I think we were hitting our stride.
I think so.
We were hitting our stride.
This is one of maybe my favorite season.
And how about the depth that Chris Traeger,
when he's kind of explaining his positivity,
I wasn't ready for that in this episode like he's
like it was awesome meaningful meaningful right what was it like shooting that rub and that was
what one of the reasons i love playing chris was that every once in a while you know there was a
reveal to him that he was more than the optimistic machine and um and and that that was a you know to be able to do something that that has that kind
of tone and as you say depth to it within the context of the kind of show that we're doing
you don't get to do on a lot of comedies and um i was really happy to to be able to do that it's a
very it's a very sweet scene yeah you know what you know what i think you did so well in that, Rob, was, right, so you have Chris Traeger who's up here all the time, right?
So if you're up here with positivity and upbeat attitude, you didn't have to go so low.
Because just bringing it down to almost like a normal level made it seem like Chris Traeger was really going deep, you know?
That's right. level made it seem like chris trager was really going deep you know it was like because you you like i think a lot of people would have taken it like darker and deeper or not darker maybe more
sad and emotional and it just worked it was like it felt like chris trager was being so honest
and it made you think oh my god he's actually honest about all this shit that he does he's really he's good at that
like this is the way he is he truly is this person so um i think it really helped his character yeah
and it's a good sort of reveal and i think it's a good example of of how well mike was building
the show in terms of you know giving the characters dimensionality and you know a lot of sitcoms
you would take this you know stereotype of a character
and just push in that direction push push push push but it's somewhat sometimes more valuable to
you know explain and to give these dimensions so that in future episodes when they're funny
you understand why and you just accept them more as a person you care you care more about them as
opposed to just joke machines and broadening them and broadening them like why don't you try deepening them a little bit so you know a little bit of that goes
a long way but i think it's like oh i buy this and i buy why ann would continue to like him and
try to date him right so i thought that was a good explanation by the way it's it's the third
episode that robs in right technically yes and we're already and ann perkins is impersonating
that's right right we're already like he has one catch is impersonating. That's right. We're already like, is it Ann Perkins?
He has one catchphrase after three episodes.
That's got to be a record.
I know.
How did that?
I'm actually serious.
How did that happen?
I don't really remember.
It just did.
I think what happened was I told Mike in the first meeting, I started talking about Tom
Cruise, and there was a minute where
there was a little bit,
Tom Cruise was in the mix
of Chris's intensity
and we even did the thing of
where Chris ordered a water.
And then the pointing
came, I think, out of that
because he was pointing at the waitress.
And then the next thing you know,
it became the pointing when I met them.
But now in this episode,
what I like is I,
I do at the end of it.
I do.
When,
when I realized that Ann Perkins really didn't want to go on a date with me
because she didn't,
she was only doing it to try to get money out of me for the parks department.
And there's no Traeger that was more fun to play than disillusioned Traeger.
And,
and, and, and his disillusioned
ann perkins like made me laugh and what i realized is like sometimes two words as an actor if you can
get mileage out of two words and make them mean a billion different things that's really fun on the
west wing for me it was thank you mr president i could get i could make thank you mr president mean 5 000 different things and in parks and recreation it was ann perkins yeah yeah it
really did it it's really like already again it's your third appearance in the show and it's already
yeah i see that i get it like i get this guy he's already doing it and i have to also say kudos to
you know alan you and mike and all the writers because this like misunderstanding
with uh with chris trager and ann perkins like many shows would make that continue on but yet
we just go to the next day ann perkins shows up and she's like leslie's my best friend i would do
anything for her so i did it but i really like you and i want to date you again and it was ann perkins right it was like it was over it was like don't carry that crap on that it's like exactly and it was
such a smart way to do it and you liked those characters for it you like them you like you do
go oh yeah but you know what i mean like you go it made sense yeah you loved Ann for coming in and you and you
and immediately owning it
and you love
there wasn't a reaction shot
of me considering it
nope
or any of that bullshit
I was just like
Ann Perkins
and off we went
yeah
no bullshit
2130
we didn't have time
for the reaction shot
it's in the editors assembly
yup Dean let's talk about the Chris Traeger tears because you and I had so much fun with that
oh my god right so at the end of the show and it is it's the ending that we've been talking about
this it's it's this wonderful ending it's to Vangelis's chariots of fire if i do that's right yes taken yep and um and amy has this amazingly wonderful west wingian
speech and you cut to ben who's not really buying it he's kind of like i don't know and and then you
swish pan to chris and i'm weeping. And it made me laugh out loud watching it again.
And I just remember, Dean, you and I having so many conversations because I think in the script it said, Ben doesn't, it literally said, Alan, you wrote it, you know, I think it said, Ben is nonplussed, Chris is misty-eyed.
Yeah.
But there was never, it wasn't like tears streamed down Traeger's face.
And that's what we wanted.
We're like, let's just, let's, we're like, you know, we started talking about what level of tears and everything like that.
And I think both you and I agreed right away that you should just be bawling.
And it worked, you know.
But also, I think we also cut it, we cut it in a good way because you disappear for like 15 seconds of her speech.
And it allows us to earn that cry, you know?
And that's the thing about just the nuts and bolts of editing.
There are other iterations of an edit of that scene where that joke does not land at all.
Yeah, that's the mystery of editing
sometimes and dean knows it's better than anyone it's like sometimes you think it's like 10 seconds
is too short 20 seconds is too long you come for some reason when you watch it oh that oh that like
the time for some reason the alchemy works and it's you're laughing and i don't know i definitely
laughed when seeing it this time yeah it's always all about feel right like you just that's why you
always you put it out there you cut it and then watch it.
And does it feel right?
If it doesn't feel right, you try another way and you just keep going until you watch it and go, there it is.
Now it feels right.
It's trial and error.
One thing I always, I always realize that this is, cause this was only my third episode.
This was the episode where I think I really got plugged into who Chris was.
And it was a couple things it
was the tears because we did no tears where i was just like you know emotional we did a little bit
of tears and then we did what is in the show which is literally it's like a waterworks festival
and what i learned is and we did we continued through my whole run of the show, varying levels of Traeger, like you were talking about Ron Swanson.
And invariably, no matter how hard we tried, it was always the biggest version.
Well, right.
Chris Traeger is always all in.
Yeah.
Right.
Whatever his emotion is, he gives it 100%.
You know?
emotion is he gives it a hundred percent you know and and i think i mean look at that even just your first talking head uh in master plan is that you know scientists say that you know a human being
will live to 150 years and i believe i am that human being i believe i am that human being
written by alan yang um the other thing is you know we um i remember in the scene in this where
we go to the bar chris doesn't know it's a gay bar right dean you're laughing i'm already laughing
and and and and i'm just like this is outstanding yeah and like i the bigger i got with outstanding
the more amy it got to the point where we were cracking each other up by how broad I could be and still have it work.
It's actually a really fun scene in the bar.
And when you go over, like the guy asks you how he tries to buy you a drink and you go over and like, I'd like to buy all you guys drinks.
It's like that's it's so it's so it's like whatever the i know we talked about character damaging moments in other in another episode whatever the opposite of character
damaging is that is what that was like oh you really like this guy this is the nicest guy in
the world he just bought a bunch of other guys drinks like it's it's so it was so funny man i
mean for being so welcoming really yeah for being so welcoming man it's it's it's a it's a pretty
great traeger episode and and you know it
is you know again i want to compliment dean on the on the beginning too i love the beginning
it's kind of a montage of building the team it's kind of like a heist movie right it's like
and we wasn't it great we yeah we kind of conceived of it that way which yeah exactly
it's the sting it's oceans 11 and it's like you see everyone working at these other jobs that
was really fun to write too right it's like oh that was and it was a blast to shoot you know i loved it was so fun to put all of our characters in
different worlds that we've seen them in for two seasons you know and obviously it was so great to
see this masterpiece that jerry is painting and she just hooks it in the water you don't need this
i still wonder if those are i still wonder if those are still in the water i have i this is so i have a lot of photos from this episode because obviously i was
on set and there's a hilarious photo of jim just beatifically painting this thing you know it's
like and i was like i think i posted it on instagram somebody's like you don't want to
know what's or on facebook maybe at the time like you don't want to know what's about to happen this
painting but yeah before the episode came out and then I loved putting all of them in the car with Aziz between Retta and Jim and just crushing him.
The whole point was like, I just want to see this of Aziz.
It's exactly what she's like, I caught shotgun.
It's like, what are you guys doing, man?
What are you guys doing?
This episode also has what I think is one of the first Ben good lords.
Good lord.
A lot of catchphrases.
I love the contrast
between chris and ben in that story right because you guys both do such a great job you know like i
think like we were saying it's fun when chris chris is able to be like you said on the broader
side but still be likable and adam is just doing such i really respected what he did this episode
because he's so dry he's so subtle and so real
but it somehow fits in with the cast it's like you need that energy i always feel like that i
talk about sort of balance and chemistry and casts and writing the characters to a show and
it's great when you brought two guys in and one's really high energy and positive and the other guys
really dry and sort of not sarcastic but you know the realist right and it and his scenes with leslie
are good right it's like there's he also he also did a great job at doing that but giving us a
little hint that you know he's going to loosen his tie a little bit yes right even just at the very
end when he says okay and leslie tosses the pumpkin or he tosses it back you get it it's like that
becomes this connection between the two of them and uh it's
great and and there's just a little there's a little bit of piecemeal backstory not just about
chris because he talks about why he's so positive but about ben explaining a little bit more about
his backstory where he he reads that you know the the headline right ice town costs ice clown his
town crown is the headline it's amazing they loved puns in my hometown but but i
this is ice town a shout out for me was that the name of an ice rink in my hometown so that was
why i named it ice town and it was like just a just a weird nod to a random ass ice skating rink
but yeah it was uh you know he does such a great job i you know it's this beginning for for adam
on the show but greg you got a question i see you raising your hand. Yeah, well, something that we talked about
in a previous episode, Dean,
is just that you can't fake chemistry between actors, right?
You can write as best as you can,
but seeing two people shooting a scene together.
So when we talked about the hunting trip episode
with April and Andy,
that chemistry that Aubrey and Chris had was palpable that we then
wrote towards that. And you were just talking about Adam Scott and Polar, you can't fake that
chemistry. They instantaneously had something in maybe two or three moments ago in this episode.
I'm curious if you could talk about being on set with them and seeing that happen.
Well, I feel like there's a
history there anyway and a mutual respect of what each of them do as actors you know so to have them
both come on board and and be able to to play those moments it was kind of it was in the cards
it was going to happen no matter what but But I think I truly believe that comedic actors are the actors who can play anything.
Right. It's very difficult to get a dramatic actor, a really great dramatic actor to come in and be funny.
But you can get a comedic actor who's absolutely hysterical and they can go turn around and play a dramatic role and they crush it
because comedy requires all those emotions right so you can have literally a look from adam and a
look from amy and it tells you the their future and they know how to do that it's that's one of
those things that we were talking about like i don't know how editors do what they do all this stuff, I don't know how they do it
but they just connected in that
one moment and it's like
you watch the show and you go well now I know where
that's going to go, those two are going to
either be friends or even
more, it just, you know that that's going to be
a great relationship there
Yeah and I forget who said it but there's something
like sometimes instead
of writing seven pages of banter where people are bonding, it's like, let's shoot them looking at each other. Like, let's just shoot them looking at each other. The audience fills in all of the experiences they've had when they've connected with people. It's just more elegant. It's just so expressive. And again, you're relying on your actors and you're relying on them to be talented
and charismatic and expressive,
but it often is just,
is really, really helpful in that sense.
And it's hard sometimes like, you know,
you give a script like that to a network
and they're like, well, we need more.
How are you gonna convey that in two looks?
But it's hard to convince them of that until they see it.
But you have to know that you have the actors that can pull that off.
It's like Rob pulling off.
How can someone be so optimistic and positive and you still like them as a character?
And he did a great job at finding that.
You're waiting for him to be annoying.
By the way, I wrote down a couple of things
that Rob said that I love dates talking head.
They've all been either great or phenomenally great,
which is amazing.
I also liked when you said,
what a magnificent flip-flop.
The phenomenally great and the great and phenomenally great
is so wonderful when it's
paid off. When Amy goes,
how's it going? And he goes, it's going
phenomenally great.
Yeah, it's like, oh wow.
Oh, it's one of the better dates.
I feel like this little
threesome we got going on here
is the
inside Chris Traeger brain.
I really do. It's a little bit.
It's Yang, Dean Holland, and me.
That's the people operating the at-at
that is Chris Traeger.
It's also like three people
who have too much energy, right?
It's like, it's not a coincidence, right?
It's not a coincidence.
Everyone else is like,
oh man, will those guys sit down?
Why doesn't Dean talk a little softer? And why doesn't Alan stop walking around the room? is right is that a coincidence like oh man will those guys sit down like why would that why does
it dean talk a little softer and why doesn't alan stop walking around the room and why is it i
totally i hate myself if i were anyone else i would never be my friend i'm way too much energy
loud talker i am a horrible person yeah and you can't you kept long hours too in the post part
right i feel like you were always there like you there. I was there 16 hours a day, every single day.
So just to tell you guys a little bit about the layout of the Parks and Rec sort of HQ,
where we were sort of writing and editing the show, one wing, it's all the same floor.
What was it, the third floor or the fourth floor?
Do you remember, Gene?
The whole third floor, yeah.
Okay, it was the third floor.
So we're on the Radford lot, CBS Radford lot in Studio City, beautiful Studio City.
I'm joking.
It's fine but we were there in this building uh and and on one end was the writers so it was like there's a
big writer's room like a big open space an office a conference room with the the computers and stuff
and the writers offices and then you go down the hallway and in the middle was the kind of bathroom
area and then on the other end was post so that that was where Dean was the king and, and, and all of the, all the editors, assistant editors, all the edit bays.
And so you, so Mike would go back and forth. And production too. Morgan was there. It was
like production and post. Yeah. Yeah. So production. So our line producer, our accountants,
accountants were in there, right? Too. And so, so that was the kind of layout of it. And so
occasionally as a writer, you'd be able to go in and look at your episode and, and, and work with Dean and the editors and then, you know, work on a cut with them.
And that was fun because it was all centralized, right?
It was all centralized and that allowed Mike to go back and forth and edit as well as write.
So I would always come barge into the editing room.
You'd come hang out for a while.
Yeah.
I love because I love editing is my favorite part of the process by far.
I love it. i could be in an
editing room all day long i like it too it's the best yeah and by the way like i i probably cut
this episode but it definitely started in in in the beginning of season three where i started
directing too much that i i couldn't edit anymore and I remember there was a sign on my door that said,
Dean Holland is not editing dailies. Because I was always doing everything but editing,
and I was always behind on my episodes. Because I mean, I was scouting, I was directing,
I was scouting with other directors, because I prepped with every single director. And so that's why like, you know, come eight o'clock at night, that's when I'd
go, all right, now I need to start editing. And, and it's just like, it started to be too much.
And so that we had to hire another editor to replace me.
Yes, that makes sense. And that's the reason I brought up him being there late is because when
the writers were there late, I felt like sometimes I'd walk down to the other end and Dean would be there and we'd
chat or whatever, or we'd play video games and waste our time, right?
There was a little bit of that.
I'm not going to lie.
But yeah, that certainly was a big part of the show in terms of that whole brain trust
on the post department end.
Yeah, Call of Duty.
Greg Levine says Call of Duty.
Yeah, it was a little Call of Duty happening.
Mike would come down. I think Mike, when he needed a break from the writer's room, he'd come down to the edit room and he'd be like, come on, Dean, let's edit.
And both Mike and I would sit on the couch and the desk and the editor would edit.
And we would accomplish one good thing.
And Mike would be like, well, I mean, that's a good edit, right?
We should probably play Call of Duty now.
be like well i mean that's a good edit right we should probably play call of duty now and during while we were editing do you remember the noise if you took your mouse and scrolled it over the
things that go yeah yeah and he would just do that all the time when we were editing and we're like
so do you want to play mike you know yeah and the production team hated us because we screamed and yelled oh it was so bad we were so annoying now i feel bad
yeah these idiots like plague like what come on man we're gonna go home it's like yeah we well
we got the show done we would have we would have this bullpen out in in that area with all the
offices around it and mike and i and more we would just throw a football yeah we did a lot oh man
there was a lot of that, too.
Oh, we were so bad.
It was just like,
when you're kind of grinding like that
and trying to finish the show,
it was like, anything to keep you sane.
You gotta have these breaks.
Anything to keep you sane.
And then Rob would come up and be like,
I just got off a boat in Sardinia,
and I was like, on vacation.
And just being like, yeah, okay,
you got a good life, man.
You got a good life.
I remember those visits.
I like that life.
Yeah, I remember those visits.
Oh, Dean, I wanted to ask you one thing if you remember this about the episode.
Because to me, it shows like the fallibility of your sensibility on the day.
Like, look, ultimately, all you have to do is trust your instincts, right?
That's all you have.
So in the tag, do you remember shooting this tag where Pratt has like,
he's combed his hair and he comes in and he's going in to talk to Aubrey and her boyfriend?
I remember on the day, I don't remember exactly what you and I wanted him to do, but we wanted Pratt to do something.
I don't even remember what it was, but we kind of like kept giving him the note of some kind.
And then I don't know if you remember.
Right, and he wouldn't do it, right?
Well, he was doing something similar.
We're like, I don't know.
We didn't quite get there.
And we're like, oh, well, I guess we're just going to see what happens.
And then we got in the edit, and it was perfectly fine.
Do you remember this?
Am I hallucinating that?
No, no.
You're 100% right, and it's hard.
I can't remember.
I think what we were looking for is that Pratt might have been coming in doing kind of a bit, right?
And maybe we were saying, like,
this is the one time where we're going to see Andy Dwyer as real as possible.
Right.
And even the combing of the hair might have been too much for us.
We're like, you're doing a bit, but he was right.
He was right.
Because I remember.
He was right.
I remember sitting with you in the edit.
I'll never forget this because as I went on to direct episodes of my own and then work on other shows and stuff, like, you know, we both you and I were convinced we saw it one way.
And sometimes I'm not saying all the time, but sometimes the actor is trusting their own instinct of the scene.
And I'll never forget that because I sat there in the edit with you and we watched it and i was like it works i was like it works
and and he was probably right i'm not saying we were necessarily wrong because we didn't see
necessarily our quote-unquote version but whatever pratt believed and he wasn't being mean about
anything he didn't say no i won't do it it just it never quite was exactly what we pictured but
whatever he did worked like it worked it's a small scene but it's important and like i'll never forget that so that was very seminal for me and i remember you
being there too i remember sitting on that stage with you yep it was it was a you know because you
you you carry that weight when we're doing it you know what i mean you're sitting there going oh my
god it's not gonna work it's not gonna work but that's also part of the reason in comedy
maybe in everything i don't know but in comedy
it's like you just want tons of options yes so that when you're in the edit room i know i've
got pratt doing it three different ways so let's see what which way works but um it clearly was
great i'm glad he combed his hair yes it was like it's some flavor it was andy dwyer's really small way of
showing that he cares about april and i think what his reason was i'm i'm probably making this all up
but was that he was staying true to andy dwyer yep right he was go i'm gonna remain andy dwyer
and andy dwyer's way of doing this is i I kind of don't behave any different, I just comb my hair.
I don't disagree.
I don't disagree.
Because Andy Dwyer is kind of an 11-year-old kid.
Yeah.
And so the 11-year-old kid says, oh, if I want to look presentable, I just comb my hair and now I'm presentable.
And still behave the same way.
That makes sense. And it worked out. I just combed my hair and now I'm presentable and still behave the same way.
That makes sense.
And it worked out.
And I think,
I think what Dean says is really smart about,
we always want options in the editing room.
We always want options.
We always want levels because when you get in there and you have say five takes of something,
seven takes of something,
it is terrific to be able to kind of craft a scene.
You don't necessarily want to Frankenenstein together but like you get
these levels because you never know if you need a little bit of an adjustment and if you have seven
identical takes you've done yourself a disservice also you know if you do start your cut at 35
minutes long and you cut it down to 21 minutes you now have a different story so when you get different performances
that now adapt to that new story it helps you know and so it's always good even if something
is brilliant and great do your last take if if if if rob is supposed to play chris trager and
enjoy something enjoy it in every take and in the end give me a take where you don't enjoy it just just
to see what happens yep there are some actors that have a very hard time doing that because
when you and this is clearly could not be there's not the case on this show but when you're working
with people that you don't trust it is very very very difficult to give an alternative performance that is not your natural instinct
because you don't trust your partners and you'll go to the movie and there's that one fucking take
that you didn't want to do that you didn't think worked and by the way you were right
and there it is on the screen so you will get actors who won't do it because they've learned how to protect themselves. And I will be honest with you, the longer you work as an actor, the more likely you are to be that person.
Absolutely.
Because not everybody's talented. you know i've talked about this with actors it is so difficult to relinquish control in that way
because they're not in that editing room other than rob popping by and and saying hi to us he's
not necessarily pushing the buttons on the show yeah and so it takes a phenomenally high level
of trust to give those different levels and i was about to compliment the actors on this show
because they would do it naturally they wouldn't even, we wouldn't even have to ask them sometimes like Pratt or Rob or any of these actors, you know,
Offerman, like that, you're just giving different levels, you know, not even necessarily wild
swings. We talked about earlier, the scene where you're crying, we did one, not crying one tiny
bit of crying, one full on crying. Then you're, then, then you have a great freedom in the editing
room and Rob trusted the auspices of the show. And did the funniest version right so so it it's all it's all a a circle of trust kind of um but but
yeah you know and it's also like you don't want to say you don't ever want to go to an actor and
say hey for the sake of like a bunch of different options let's do it this way it's more like hey
can you get there and does it make sense for the scene and let's do it look only do it if you feel
like you can do it well of course like that's the other thing is i think it's i think it's easier it pratt's talked like the talked
about this a lot and i agree um particularly as he's gone on to do to carry movies and and that's
where i come from is the same movies is that you when you're a leading man and you find yourself in comedy, it's so freeing.
And there's, because there's no vanity.
In fact, the less vain you are, the funnier it is.
And so you're freed.
You're 100% freed.
And when you're freed in that level, you're also freed to do a thousand iterations of a moment
because it's not a drama, you know, it's not all hanging on you. You're not the, the, the leading
man of it all. And, and that's what I, you know, at the end of the day found so unbelievably
refreshing and fun about my time on parks was I, I just was nothing, but it was just fun, fun, fun.
And it's also, it's our job, you know, as a director or writer or showrunner to almost
instantly try to get the actors to trust us, right? You know, that is one of the many jobs
that we have, you know? We have to get you to trust us and see what we do and what
we can accomplish to, you know, give you that comfort to perform.
Yeah.
And I think on that tip about being comfortable performing, Greg, you had a point you wanted
to make.
I always said there are two great reasons to visit the Parks and Rec set.
And I think people will be interested.
My own personal one was I like to go into Crafty.
The best snacks after lunch were to Crafty. The best snacks
after lunch were at Crafty. But the second reason were the fun runs. And Dean, have you ever actually
used anything from the fun run in an episode? You know, we definitely used stuff from fun runs.
Absolutely. Not always, but we definitely used them. I mean, it'd be the kind of thing where
it's a scene
where i'm in the whole scene but in the fun run maybe i decide to leave the scene literally just
leave and then come back with you know what i mean look it literally was sky the limit and i think
i mean pratt in particular always went sort of ape shit in the fun runs don't you think
morgan and i would be upstairs and we would get a call
and it would be Pratt's trying to jump over something.
And we'd have to run downstairs because we're like,
Pratt, you have to stop doing stunts.
There is no stunt person here.
You can't be on rollerblades and jump over the counter.
You're going to get hurt.
And there was no stopping him.
He would do anything.
Dean, do you remember the time you asked me to jump up?
Well,
I think I might've suggested it was,
you were doing this like Chris Traeger athletic stuff in the office.
And I was like,
I had been training where I was doing a lot of standing box jumps at the
time.
And somehow I thought I could jump from a standing position up onto the
top of my desk.
Do you remember this?
And,
and we,
and which would have been fun and funny.
Well, I ate shit. I didn't make it and did such a
head plant and all my Chris Traeger vitamins went flying everywhere.
And that was, that's something we did in a fun rhyme and never made it
onto the air, but it was humiliating, but also very funny.
You never know, man. You never know.
Okay, we have an oops moment in our episode uh it's specifically when leslie and the parks department pitched their plan for the
harvest festival to chris and ben so they're all together holding the banner from the old harvest
festival and standing behind leslie and once the proposal gets approved they celebrate and you see
that jerry is now the only one holding the banner.
But immediately after that, Ben throws the pumpkin he's holding to Leslie.
And you see Leslie catch it.
And behind her, everyone is holding the banner.
Report it to IMDB.
Get your internet points.
One of those moments, guys.
This kind of thing happens in editing sometimes.
So a couple things, just behind the scenes information.
The person whose job it is to identify this kind of stuff is the script supervisor who's in charge of continuity.
And so that's a person who sits watching the monitors with you and says, oh my God,
Leslie used her left hand to drink that coffee. And this time she's using her right hand and that
shit won't cut together because it'll jump from hand to hand and you will notice generally.
So we loved our script supervisor on Parks and Rec. Her name is Valeria Collins. She has an
insane resume. She's done the Fast and Furious movies. She's done a bunch of Paul Thomas Anderson
movies. She did Punch Drunk Love, I believe. Anyway, fascinating person to talk to. I always
try to hire her on every show. Love Valeria. So that's one way it can fuck up if there's actual, but in this case, I believe it's more of an idea of
we stitch together takes from different takes and in the edit when you're editing the show.
So in this case, it might be that it was out of order or something like that. So we're jumping
back and forth in time, but you sometimes come up against a dilemma in the editing room where you have
something you really want to get across, you have a joke you really want to use, you have a story
point you really want to hit in a certain order. But if you do that, there will be a continuity
error. And so as the director or showrunner or boss or whatever, you often have to make the
decision. And in this case uh clearly
mike decided it was worth it because he knows he knows that they're the banners in the wrong place
when we go back to ben throwing the pumpkin but you know you take the hit and then uh 10 years
later greg points out that you made a mistake you're welcome and guys this is a big episode and i know we've recently been picking our mvp most valuable
panian and i think we can all agree that our mvp for this episode is none other than ron swanson
and his pyramid of greatness yes anytime you can uh produce a prop that gets sold in the mbc
universal store i'm serious you can go buy it right now.
You have to do that. I'll just always remember him in his red sweater
being on set with him and Pratt doing those basketball scenes.
In my office to this day, I still have a framed photo
of Nick in his sweater with all those little kids.
It sits behind me in my office.
So Pyramid of Greatness, Ron Swanson, congratulations.
Buy it now in the NBC Universal Store.
Do you want to go to the town hall?
I think you do
What do you say we take a trip to the town hall?
What do you think, Rob?
I think we should
I think you should choose where we're going to town hall this one up, though
Well, you know what?
I really enjoyed the Chris and Ben and Leslie and Anne scenes at the Bulge
Let's do it at the Bulge.
We're doing it.
That's outstanding.
That's outstanding.
That's outstanding.
So we're going to take this question from Jessica from L.A., and the question is,
if you could work for any park in the world, what would be the park and what would you do?
Central Park would be great.
I mean, let's face it, it's the best park
in the world. Petco Park?
I could work for the San Diego Padres.
That is thinking outside the bun. That is thinking
outside the bun, Rob. Petco Park.
I'm going to think outside
the bun even more. Disneyland.
Disneyland Park, man.
Disneyland, motherfuckers.
You win.
I would work at the Star Wars ride or something.
That seems pretty fun.
My brother-in-law worked at Magic Mountain.
He was a churro boy.
So that was one.
How about you, Dean?
Very popular.
Yeah, exactly.
What about you?
You know, I don't know.
I recently went to Zion, and it was pretty great.
I would go to Zion.
That's pretty nice, man.
You're an outdoorsy kind of guy, right, Dean?
Do you do like that kind of stuff?
I like that stuff.
I like hikes and stuff.
I mean, I'm basically Mr. Glass.
Everything breaks on me, but I still like it.
I walked the Narrows, which the whole thing is in water on rocks,
and so I had two hiking sticks and both braces on my ankles,
and, oh, it was brutal.
Meanwhile, I'm over at Disneyland having a ball,
not getting injured, but yeah.
I know.
I should take yours.
The notion of the phrase, he was the churro man.
He was the churro boy, man.
The churro boy at Magic Mountain feels like
there's a billion amazing jokes around that phrase.
He's had a lot of jobs.
He was a valet parker.
Yeah, he's done a lot of stuff, but yeah.
Great band name, someone says in the chat.
It is, isn't it?
Yeah, so I think that's all we got for the town hall.
Let's take our leave from the Bulge.
Had a great time.
Thank you for being so welcoming at the Bulge.
I think we're wrapping it up, yeah?
You know what?
Remember behind the scenes, we had a little happy birthday to me at the Bulge?
Do you remember that?
Oh, Dean's least favorite thing, right? You hate your birthday, so we did a birthday song.
I hate my birthday. I hate any attention on me, and you guys got 150 extras to sing happy birthday to me.
At the Bulge.
Really, it was Morgan, but yeah.
We got video of Dean celebrating his birthday at the Bulge like he
always dreamed.
I think there's only one way to sign off this
podcast.
Happy birthday to
Dean. Let's get all our listeners
to sing a song. Happy birthday to
Dean. That's what we get. There it is.
Wish Dean a happy birthday if you see him on the street.
Yeah.
Thanks, everybody. This was a fun get-together, as always.
Next week, another very, very funny episode.
We've got some good stuff coming up for you.
And by the way, you're in this with us.
So download our whole seasons here.
That's what we need.
And don't forget to go to Apple and give us a good rating.
Rate and review, five stars.
Thank you to Dean Holland, and thank you to producer Schulte and Greg.
Bye for punny.
Parks and recollection is produced by Greg Levine and me,
Rob Schulte.
Our coordinating producer is Lisa Byrne.
The podcast is executive produced by Alan Yang for Alan Yang Productions,
Rob Lowe for Low Profile,
Jeff Ross, Adam Sachs, and Joanna
Solitaroff at Team Coco,
and Colin Anderson at Stitcher.
Gina Batista, Paula Davis, and
Britt Kahn are our talent bookers.
The theme song is by Mouse Rat,
a.k.a. Mark Rivers,
with additional tracks composed by
John Danek thanks for listening
and we'll see you next time
on Parks and Recollection