Parks and Recollection - Writer Katie Dippold: The Set Up (S2E13)
Episode Date: January 18, 2022Another guest joins us in Pawnee! Today writer Katie Dippold (Haunted Mansion, The Heat) breaks down one of her favorite episodes she's written. In "The Set Up" Ann sets Leslie up on a blind date, and... the date does not go as Leslie had hoped. On today's pod find out the writer's room obsession with the 2002 film Swimfan, see the origin of Leslie's Biden crush, and hear everybody's idea of what they want "the club" to be. Got a question for the Pawnee Town Hall? Send us an email: ParksandRecollectionTownHall@gmail.com Or leave a 30-Second voicemail at: (310) 893-6992 When Leslie learns Pawnee is being sued by the previous owners of Lot 48, Ann calls upon her lawyer friend Justin Anderson (Justin Theroux), whom she’s known since high school and seems to still have feelings for. Justin helps Leslie resolve the issue, and the two hit it off immediately. Having recently broken up with her boyfriend, Leslie asks Ann to set her up on a date, but is surprised when Ann hesitates to set her up with Justin. Instead, she arranges a date with Chris (Will Arnett) an MRI technologist Ann works with. The date goes terribly, with Chris appearing annoyed upon learning Leslie attended a rival college, and that she was a director of regular parks, not amusement parks.When Leslie says she has never had an MRI, Chris takes her to the hospital to perform one on her. Chris comes off super creepy, remarking that Leslie has an excellent uterus and asking whether she is having her period, presumably in anticipation of sex later.  Meanwhile, Mark grows suspicious that Ann harbors romantic feelings for Justin. He eventually confronts Ann and accuses her of putting Justin on hold for a possible relationship in the future. Ann admits she has distantly thought of her and Justin ending up together, prompting Mark to walk out on their date and spoil the ending of Marley & Me. Mark asks Andy if Ann seemed to have feelings for Justin when they were together. Andy confirms that she did and then immediately confronts Ann about it in another endless attempt to win favor with her and get back together. Realizing her behavior was inappropriate, Ann sets Leslie up on a date with Justin. In a B storyline, Ron deals with complaints from local residents due to a new town policy requiring public officials to deal more directly with the public. Ron calls the policy "my hell", and seeks a new assistant to protect him from the citizens.Tom volunteers to find Ron an assistant, but really uses the opportunity to find an assistant for himself. After multiple interviews, Tom brings forward a fast-talking candidate named Jean-Ralphio (Ben Schwartz), whose personality closely resembles Tom's. Ron hates him right away and in the end hires April, who’s internship is coming to an end, as his assistant.Â
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Discussion (0)
We're getting together to talk about all the things we used to do
The laughs, the passions, the little Sebastian's, the pits 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.
a guest. And today is one of those days. We've got the incredibly talented and wonderfully fun Katie Dippold, who is a writer who has written on the show and gone on to write many big movies.
I'm excited to be here. And Alan Yang is here. He's always here.
I'm always here. That's not exciting at all. I'm always here.
This could be fun. What's our episode today, Alan?
Episode 13 of season two.
The Setup.
Is.
Aired January 14th, 2010.
Written by Katie Dippold, our guest.
Directed by Troy Miller.
Welcome, Katie.
How are you?
I'm very good.
Very happy to be here.
And you are not just one of our favorite writers,
one of the longstanding writers of the show, too.
How many seasons were you on Parks and Rec for?
I just remember you being there forever, so. know it's actually only uh three seasons seasons two three
and four some would say the best seasons so you know i wouldn't say it out loud i would text it
to you yes you're constantly saying how much the show fell off after you left just complaining to
me constantly every day every day i just want to me constantly. Every day. Every day.
I just want to revisit it and unpack it.
And Katie has gone on to a long and illustrious career,
movies, shows, whatever,
like just a ton of stuff.
Katie, what's your favorite stuff you've worked on since Parks?
All your credits,
The Heat, Ghostbusters, all this stuff.
I don't know.
You just said it.
You just said it.
Thank you.
I didn't want to make you list your credits.
I realized I didn't want to pimp you out like that.
Thank you.
Well, this episode, it's very good.
It's a great one.
I mean, listen, just the fact that there's a swim fan reference in this made me laugh out loud.
I wrote that down.
That's in the notes.
That's in the notes.
Let's do a synopsis.
How about that, Rob?
Yeah.
Hit us.
Katie, just wait until you hear this. Everyone's favorite part. The synopsis. How about that, Rob? Yeah, hit us. Katie, just wait until you hear this.
Everyone's favorite part,
the synopsis.
Here we go.
Okay.
All right, the setup.
My synopsis,
sisters and brothers,
here we go.
When Leslie learns
Pawnee's being sued
by the previous owners
of Lot 48,
Ann calls upon
her lawyer friend,
Justin Anderson,
played by Justin Theroux.
Justin helps Leslie
resolve the issue
and the two hit it off
immediately.
Leslie asks Ann to set her up on a date with Justin, but is surprised when Anne hesitates to set her up.
Instead, she arranges a date with Chris, played by Will Arnett, an MRI technologist Anne works with.
The date goes terribly.
Meanwhile, Mark grows suspicious that Anne harbors romantic feelings for Justin.
He eventually confronts Anne and accuses her of putting Justin on hold for a possible relationship in the future. Anne admits she has distantly
thought of her and Justin ending up together, prompting Mark to walk out on their date.
Mark asks Andy if Anne seemed to have feelings for Justin when they were together.
Andy confirms that she did and then immediately confronts Anne about it in another endless
attempt to get back together. Realizing her behavior was inappropriate, Anne then sets Leslie up on a date with Justin. While all of this is happening, Ron
deals with complaints from local residents due to a new town policy requiring public officials to
deal more directly with the public. Tom helps Ron find an assistant and eventually brings in John
Ralphio, played by Ben Schwartz, who Ron hates. Ron decides to hire April, whose internship comes to an end by
getting this new job. So that's the episode. A lot going on. A lot going on. Katie, do you remember
this? What is your recollection of this? You notoriously, again, I don't want to go too into
detail of your life history, but you notoriously were an incredibly sharp child and then had
something to happen to you, and then now you have a very cloudy memory. Is that true? That is true. I had a concussion in second grade where
I was on the swing set and tried being superwoman. And I landed headfirst on the concrete. This was
like in the 80s before lawsuits, like there's concrete everywhere, but not sand. I have a terrible memory. So I texted both Alan and Greg, like, just to warn you, this might be tough.
But I do remember some things.
We're going to dig deep.
I'm going to remember a thing or two.
One of my favorite things about Katie is her stories about her family.
And one of the things her mom said to her at some point, and I'm probably mangling this, Katie,
but she said, Katie, you used to be so smart, so good at math,
like so good at all these things.
But what I like to think is that concussion gave you a superpower and made you super creative and funny.
That's the way I look at it.
I feel like something was, I don't know,
something was unlocked, both good and bad.
I mean, I'm a very anxious person also. Something was unlocked, both good and bad.
I mean, I'm a very anxious person also.
I kind of feel like it's all related.
Yeah, I think this was your second episode on Parks, right? You wrote Beauty Pageant, right?
Yes.
That was your first one, so this was probably your second one.
For what it's worth, the mom thing was, it was actually me.
I used to, when this math game called around the world where in class
you would have two students in second grade and the teacher would be like seven times three and
whoever said at first would go on to the next person i was always the champion of that and
after the concussion it just never happened again i mean it's it makes i mean this is so weird
because i remember growing up the kind of playgrounds we had.
It's a wonder people didn't get destroyed.
I mean, diving boards at local pools where you would climb a ladder straight up.
Straight up.
Not even the ones that are kind of slanted.
So high.
So high.
And then multiple kids would be on the ladder at the same time.
Nobody was supervising.
Do you remember this?
Oh, God. And the supervisors would be like some 15-year-old
that's not paying attention. Just disaster. Probably high on weed.
In some ways, society has gotten better. It's gotten a little safer. I feel like it's gotten
safer. Playgrounds have that soft ground now. That soft rubber
ground. You know, take my nephew and niece to the playground. It's like, oh, this seems much safer.
But yeah, as kids, I don't think we care. And look what we got. We got a great comedy writer out of it. So maybe we should go back to concrete floors.
Knock some sense into you. How about I knock, I don't even know where to begin. He is just a genius in this.
His speech about the MRI, when he goes on and on about what an MRI does and what it can do and what
it can look inside of you, the writing is hilarious, but he's got a dementedness to him
that is just beyond belief.
I was thinking about it.
I was rewatching it.
I was like, I was really blown away at how many super broad jokes we asked him to do,
and he completely sold, which also your character, Chris Chigger,
was asked to do the most ridiculous things and have to sell
it, you know? Yes. I mean, do you
remember, Alan, when we had Paul Scheer
exit a scene doing
the worm?
That's a crazy
thing to ask someone.
Yeah, so Katie and I were on a text chain and we were
talking about how, at the time,
we're like, yeah, this show's really real and sort of
grounded. And now you look back and it's like it's the it's the wildest thing you've ever seen because i think
comedy has changed right rob and i've talked about this before but at the time we're like yeah this
is actually a pretty real you know sort of human emotional show and then you have obviously will i
think the the genius of casting will in this too was twofold i think obviously he's selling really
hard jokes and can do comedy
and can inhabit a character and really commit. But also secondly, I think one thing that the
show liked to do is cast real life spouses and real life partners, but have them play in like
basically an insane version of the relationship. So, you know, obviously, you know, Amy and Will
were married and, and the, but they didn't want to play like they're in love. They wanted to play
something like the opposite of that, which is kind of like what nick and megan
did right they did they had a really tumultuous relationship on screen so that was kind of fun too
um it was the second in that series there are so many great lines he has when he's like stop
smiling when he's putting her into the into the mri you have to stop smiling because sometimes
it's read as aids and then when he goes yeah you got a smiling because sometimes it's read as AIDS. And then when he goes, mmm, yeah, you got
a really big oven.
It's like fucking insane.
I remember
that and he just goes on and on
and there's a small, for fans of
the show, there's actually a weird small
foreshadowing because he's
talking about her uterus. It's very offensive
but he's like, yeah, you got a big
oven. You could go triplets right off the bat and then later she has triplets in the
show so it was kind of weird is that where did somebody go did somebody remember that or did
you put a pin in it or how did that happen i think what happened was we had it in katie's episode and
then later on when we decided to have her be pregnant and then the idea of just getting it all done, multiple kids all in one.
I think Mike remembered the fact that we had this line and thought it'd be amazing to pay it off that it actually came true.
That's so crazy.
Also, Katie, do you remember why we chose the job MRI technician?
It seems like a wild decision.
It seems so specific.
Like in retrospect, watching the episode, I'm like, this is very random seeming. I don't wild decision it seems so specific like in retrospect watching
the episode like this is very random seeming i don't know it's so specific i was like did this
happen to someone i'm like i know it did not happen to me i would have at least remembered
that my favorite joke in the episode with the mri and i am 99 sure is mike scully's possibly
dangor it sounds like either of them but i'm pretty sure it's my school was when he asked as she's going in if she's on her period and she's like no why does that matter and
he goes not for this and sends her in that was my favorite not for this it immediately sends her in
right yeah great timing by will but by the way Katie you're stumbling upon something that happens
on the pot all the time where I'm trying to attribute a joke to a specific writer, but I always, I'll always add a warning or a caveat. It's like, I'm not totally sure because I don't
remember. The other part of this that just occurred to me, because we do talk about this all the time,
Alan, is as an actor, if you're developing something for yourself or you're hiring people,
you inevitably get, you know, writing samples. And it took me years to learn
just because I'm reading, oh, episode six of The Sopranos. Oh, yeah. Are you fucking kidding me?
Yeah. I'm going to hire Dominic Degonzi. He wrote the shit out of this episode.
And meanwhile, it's entirely possible Dominic Degonzi didn't do jack shit.
It's definitely possible David Chase did a little work on that.
By the way, do you like my phony writing name, Dominic Duganzi?
I thought that was a real person we were taking down right now.
I know.
I wanted it to be a personal attack on this writer, this story editor for the Sperano season four.
Exactly.
He was a story editor.
He really knew what was going on.
Yeah. I always felt very lucky. And Alan knew what was going on. Yeah. I've always felt
very lucky.
And Alan,
I don't know
if you felt the same.
I don't know
if this was a skill set
Mike Schur had.
Well, he had it all around,
but I feel like Mike
really understood
my sense of humor.
So every time I like
felt like I could see
a joke somewhere
in the room,
I'd be like,
oh, wait,
what if there was
something like this?
And I'd be trying
to come up with it
and I would just get
like halfway there and then he would have like the perfect hilarious pitch for it. I was like, oh, wait, what if there was something like this? And I'd be trying to come up with it. And I would just get like halfway there.
And then he would have like the perfect hilarious pitch for it.
I was like, oh, yes, yes.
It was really lucky to have a boss that understood where you were trying to go with a joke all the time.
You know?
Yes.
That's true because there is a sense of some people can do, can write fully formed jokes.
And others can be like like it's in the
area it's like you're in the area you know the sort of shape of the joke it's true not and not
everybody writes in in the same way and that is unbelievably valuable in this room it was actually
very friendly and you were free to sort of suggest ideas or the the faintest wisp of a hint of an
idea would be okay to say right i've heard've heard of other rooms where, for instance, the Frazier room, it was like, everyone sits there quietly. And then you
pitch something when you have the perfect bon mot, just the perfect joke, one liner, it's got
to be absolutely immaculate. And you wouldn't pitch until that point. But that was not what
this room was like. This room was a lot more welcoming than that room. I don't speak from
experience. But yeah. On the flip side, one of my favorite early memories,
I remember when I first started,
me and Aisha and Harris started at the same time.
And I think we're all a little quiet at first.
And Greg always would say like,
listen, I want you guys to talk more.
Like it helps me, even if you pitch something bad,
it just helps me figure out what I do want.
Like I need you guys talking and pitching. And so I was like, okay, okay. And we're talking about a
story idea. And I thought, and I just, I had an idea and I'm like, I don't know about this. I'm
just going to say it. And I said it and everyone in the room was like, no, it was apparently a
terrible, terrible way to take the story. And then Greg was like, but keep pitching now. Good work.
Good work.
Like that.
So they interview assistants for Ron in this episode.
Am I crazy?
Or is the first assistant that they interview actually Edward Cullen from the whatever, the vampire movie?
It's literally Edward Cullen.
That guy is Edward Cullen.
There's some lookalikes.
There's some lookalikes in this episode and the next one that we were watching.
Like, there's a lot of lookalikes.
But there's, yeah.
You're talking about Robert Pattinson?
Yes!
Is that Edward Cullen?
He's Edward Cullen, right?
It looks like early vintage.
Maybe this is Robert Pattinson before he got his big break.
I don't believe it is, but I agree that he does have a little look.
There's a definite resemblance for sure
yeah one thing rob loves to do is to spring for spring lookalikes on that on you and just see
see if you think it's that i'm like i don't know man i got one for the next episode by the way but
yeah the uh the series of guys and and it leads to we're jumping around here but it leads to the
first appearance of jean ralphia which is very exciting. So that is a big one. Ben Schwartz, who's gone on to do a lot of stuff. He's the voice of Sonic the Hedgehog.
Absolutely. And for good reason. He's hilarious. But what I was interested to see is his hair is big from the jump because there were times if you watch the life of the show where sometimes it's so his hair is so huge. It's like almost a caricature. And then there are other times where it looks like maybe he'd come from a different project and they made him cut his hair and it's like a little more handsome but his first appearance he's got it going on yeah it's certainly like in later episodes there's some where it's like a foot tall and he's wearing a neon pink tuxedo and then has ankle bracelets
on both of his ankles from when he got arrested it's like there's it's always like a hat on a hat
on a hat with john ralphie there's literally a hat on a hat on a hat with John Ralphie. There's literally a hat on a hat. There's no level of crazy that he can't reach.
That's also a perfect example of your name is on an episode,
but I had so little to do with that.
I feel like Mike wanted to bring Ben Schwartz in.
There was something brewing in the room,
and then he sent me and harris off to
write up that scene where he meets him but harris tapped into this character like it was like his
beautiful mind moment do you know what i mean he like just he just started writing it and i just
slowly backed away and was like just fly yeah you've tapped into something just let it come out
of your fingers and in the key yes exactly yeah and and yeah and and on the
ben schwartz sort of jean-ralphio tip too there's two things i remember one of them second frazier
reference on the show but there was this idea that we had tom who was already this kind of
pushed character and who was bordering on unlikable potentially if you know because he's
he's hitting on women and he's kind of like you know he he's
borderline unlikable so the idea one of the ideas was it's kind of like what they did on frazier
with frazier and niles so you have frazier who's kind of this you know urbane feet you know kind of
you know uptight uh or you know basically urbanite guy and that was potentially unlikable to a wide swath of the
american public so like what if you gave him a brother who was even more obeying even more
effete even more sort of like uppity and all that stuff and it's like by comparison frazier will
look like a manly man right so like that's kind of what they did and then so the jean ralphio tom
thing was like well okay tom is kind of is kind of superficial. He's into clothes.
He's into like material things.
What if you gave him a friend
who was way worse than he was in every dimension
and way more pushed
and Tom will look normal by comparison?
And it kind of worked.
I mean, that's ultimately what we do with Jean-Ralphio.
And then Tom had to reel him in
and Tom looked like the reasonable one by comparison.
I always loved the way
in that those characters delighted in each other.
Like when one of them said something and the other one
thought it was the greatest thing in the world.
And they would egg each other on.
It's interesting to see
John Ralphio did not do his
signature sing-song
stuff so much. He did
a little
mini thing.
He kind of did it, but he didn't do his
what he said,
he would always do those
songs like he would and and it's i i figured that is something it's always interesting to see an
actor discovering and he hadn't discovered that part of the character yet right right i gotta
jump in just to say you you stumbled on something we spoke uh a few episodes ago about the theme
songs we used to have in the writer's room.
And you named your own theme song just now by mentioning A Beautiful Mind.
Do you remember this?
Oh, my God.
Katie used to do a bit where she was obsessed with putting cards on the bulletin boards as if she was rearranging and discovering something incredible
hidden in the message of these note
cards like in the beautiful mind and i used to play that theme song while she would do it
i completely forgot about this but i remember it now that's amazing
oh my god there's something about you saying that just that just broke my brain wide open and i
suddenly remember every moment in the
writer's room i know it's like a sense memory because for those of the of you who didn't hear
the previous episode uh greg's referring to in the writer's room greg would play theme songs he
eventually he had he was at a computer and each of the writers when they would say something
particularly in their character or pitch a joke that was very them, he would start playing a theme song.
So by the end of the show, I mean, everyone had a theme song
and there was a ton of items on the soundboard.
But yeah, Katie's was a beautiful mind.
But yeah, it felt like when we looked over at you,
a lot of times you were lost in thought.
Yes.
Trying to marshal something.
One of my favorite moments is between the two of you guys when,
I don't know if you remember this, but there was a card that said they all have an idea of what they want the club to be.
And it was this like nothing idea.
I think Mike made a joke about it and he tore it up.
And then the two of you spent like 10 minutes putting it back together on the bulletin board.
Trying to waste time, just doing anything to waste time we spent so much time
trying to not work on the show like the amount of energy we've made small movies like you know
what i mean like we remember those movies we used to film little movies in the writer's room and
just like cut them together and we wrote different man that what a phenomenal waste of time that was
we had a series of movies.
One of the most embarrassing moments
was when Mike was in editing
and we were all sitting on the couches
looking at photos on the screen
of us sitting on the couches.
And Mike just walked by.
There couldn't have been a more useless...
The time so poorly spent
than just looking at photos
of us sitting on the couch and other days.
Well, that's right. We were, so we would look through a slideshow of our own photos and one
of them was a photo of ourselves looking at the photos. It was literally like a photo of us,
a lot of wasted time.
Can I just, I just, when Greg brought that up, I just remembered one very embarrassing
prank gone wrong, if I may say. It's very quick.
I somehow discovered there was some new app, and the whole purpose was that you could make your phone do a fart sound effect, but with a time delay.
So you could hide your phone somewhere and set like a timer for a minute for this thing.
And I was so excited.
And I can't remember whose chair I put it under, but then I was asked to go to the boards
to do something with the cards.
And I think I accidentally set it for too long.
It was like three minutes away.
So for three minutes, I knew this thing was coming
and I was trying to do work.
And but knowing everyone's watching me dead serious
about this story, like we're talking about, but I couldn't stop laughing and crying.
So everyone knew something was coming,
but they're like,
what is so funny that she cannot work?
And she's crying.
And so then when finally the tiniest fart sound came out,
everyone just stared at me.
No,
no laughs,
no laughs.
And I just sat back down and that was it.
I know Rob mentioned Swimfan.
I wanted to definitely shout out Swimfan because, Katie, do you remember how much we just, I feel like we talked about Swimfan a lot in the writer's room.
I don't know why. When it came up and the swim fan reference,
I laughed out loud because I could just imagine the shell lacking and
fascination in the writer's room over that movie.
I don't,
for it to make it in the script at the swim fan,
by the way,
is a,
is a 1990s movie starring Erica Christensen.
Um,
as I guess she's a swimmer and someone
is stalking her and it's called The Swim Fan, I think.
No, she's the stalker.
She's the stalker.
Oh, she's the stalker.
Oh, shit. Okay. Man, I got to rewatch Swim Fan.
The actor is a swimmer and he has a girlfriend and then Erika Christensen comes along and starts
stalking him. And it's great but that i know the
actor uh reached out to the show that he was delighted by the reference which made jesse
bradford yes oh no just by the way swim fan is 2002 or do you know jesse bradford no but i just
love that i just love that he was cool enough to be like yeah yeah i love the swim fan 2002 movie
and and there's a there's a little more pop culture in this one, right?
There's Marley and Me.
Marley and Me, I don't know.
I remember this.
Originally the joke that,
so Mark Brandanowicz storms out
and he's being petty for a moment.
And the original joke was he was going to just spoil
the ending of the movie they were watching.
And so for the table read,
District 9 had just come out in theaters the weekend before.
So we spoiled it.
And people were, I remember Pratt being like, no!
No!
This really upset.
And then we realized, well, that might extend to the audience, that same unhappiness, the spoil.
So we changed it. i totally forgot about that i'm so that this is why i'm glad when we have guests because it's like i just you know you don't
remember everything like that that was i i remember it now it's so funny because he spoils it the
character spoils it in the story of the show and then when the actors was legitimately mad i also
you know there's also a joe biden reference president i i pointed at the screen
when it happened because it's i did the leonardo dicaprio in once upon a time in hollywood sort of
pointing at the screen meme because like he's gonna he's a recurring character in the show he
later appears on the show and then later became president it's you don't you know it's it's so
funny to think about i don't know that's when the time machine aspect of it becomes clear the body
of joe biden Biden is what she wants.
And a perfect man.
The brains of George Clooney and the body of Joe Biden.
It made sense.
Biden, very charming.
George Clooney, very smart.
And this became, this was kind of the origin of her obsession with Joe Biden, which, again, obviously predated him running for president.
But, yeah, it was kind of a, yeah, it was a running bit. And it kind of started from this talking head. We just thought it'd be funny if she was really into him. And it just kept happening. point out uh how occasionally unimaginative the names were on the show usually very imaginative
right funny names but in this episode will arnett's character is named chris your character
rob lowe's character is named chris justin thoreau is named justin anderson and then her previous
boyfriend the police officer officer dave was named dave sanderson this is all you can look it
up you can look it up in the show it's it from Dave Sanderson to Justin Anderson. I don't know why
we did that. I think it was just a mistake. I actually remember Mike realizing that and
being devastated because he's excellent at names. You know what I mean? That's like one of his most
prized skill sets is coming up with new names so justin thoreau i did a show called
the grinder and yeah which was and i modeled all of my wardrobe after justin thoreau and remember
that and what's what's kind of interesting to see him in the show in this iteration granted i know
he's playing a character but he's got that shaved head, right? His hair's really closely cropped and he's got really traditional clothes on. And then whatever, five years later, he's dating Jennifer Aniston and forever walking through Soho being paparazzi in like motorcycle boots that come up to his knees with skin tight jeans tucked into it with like a white t-shirt slit down to his chest
with 75 pendants.
I remember one he had was in the shape of a gun
and like three, a bomber jacket on top of a bomber jacket
and then Elvis's hair and aviators.
And I was like, man, that is a ballsy MF,
but he looks kind of good pulls it off yeah
he pulls it up and he i feel like he was that guy even when he was on parks but he wore he just wore
the park's wardrobe because that's who the character was but he came in on a motorcycle
and like was like a cool guy he was already a cool guy whether that's true or not it's absolutely
how i remember it yes yes i i feel like i remember him
coming in a motorcycle and then one time usher came in to film a promo on our set and he also
came in on a motorcycle looks like those are the two guys who came in no one else in the entire
show's history but yeah those two guys came in on motorcycles but yeah justin is a fun character
it's like you know i think we wanted someone totally different from from dave's character and
the idea was like he was very worldly and he's traveled all over.
And we see that a little more in the next episode.
He's also really particularly great because he's just so effortless.
I mean, his performance is totally 100 billion percent real, effortless, funny.
It really kind of stands out.
funny. It really kind of stands out. He really stood out for me in this, in that he was, he seemed like he was
coming from another world, which I think was sort of the point.
And the world of normal people in the
Pawnee world, and yet didn't bump. It was, I think it's one of those things that's
a lot harder to do than it looks. Yep. I agree. I think it's
often an actor's tendency to come
into this world and want to be kooky and wild and weird and stuff and like he just comes he plays it
really real it's like yeah he played it pretty real he we gave him jokes but like yeah he just
kind of plays it real and that especially in this uh episode where you know will's character is so
insane like it's nice to have justin's character who's just kind of the opposite and you know this
this is kind of a showcase for ann as well because it's kind of weirdly emotional for her and there's like actually
a kind of interesting idea about saving someone who's like your friend to date later I was like
I was like I was like man Park's tackling like an actual serious kind of relationship issue like
kind of going for some insight I don't even remember like talking about that in the room
really but that that's like kind of an interesting observation and Rashida gets to do a little more than than she often does in these episodes so i was happy
for her in this one yeah she was great your date saving is that a thing you know i was thinking
about it watching it because i i remember at the time i think i was like 29 at the time of this
episode and i personally believe the ages 25 to 29 are the most unbearable of the person like i to
everyone else like they're most insufferable at that window my personal theory but um i so i
remembered kind of doing something like that when i was younger but when i watch it i didn't do that
anymore after that age and so when i watch it i was like oh god that anymore after that age. And so when I watch it, I was like, oh, God, I wonder, look in hindsight, if Anne was more emotionally mature than that, you know,
that character, maybe that wasn't quite, but she's still performed it excellently because she's great.
I think Anne has some issues. She dated Andy for a long time. I think there's something wrong. And
then she dates Mark. I mean, look, there's some issues. She didn't get fixed. So she dated.
That's true. That's true. That's true. Yes.
Yeah. She, she has some emotional issues. That's okay. I think it worked. issue she didn't get fixed so she dated that's true that's true that's true yes yeah she she
had some emotional issues that's okay i think it worked yeah you're talking about chris trager's
wife yeah that's what i said she grew up when she met you yeah there we go is this one of the last
episodes you discussed before the arrival of chris and ben yeah we're getting there so i think it's
master plan is in eight episodes so oh my. I forgot that these were like 20 something episodes a season.
Jesus.
Can you believe it?
It ain't streaming, man.
It ain't streaming.
We did 24 this season, I believe.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Think about that.
It's giving you a headache thinking about it.
We talk about that all the time, about how many episodes there are.
It's really staggering.
And then we also talk about the fact that because you know amy had two kids during
my just my time on the show and then you add that to moving it from fall to mid-season and back and
forth like i never knew what season we were in ever it just like we just shot and then we would
just not shoot and then we would shoot not shoot It made no sense to me. The production of Parks and Rec made zero sense to me. Well, it also all got blurred because we were forced to shoot
the beginning of season three almost immediately after the end of season two. So that was when it
was really like, oh, this is a year round job. And of course, we were on the brink of cancellation
every year. So I don't know if you remember this, Katie. I feel like at the end of almost every
season, we went out for drinks.
The writing staff was like, that might be it.
We honestly felt that way.
It happened almost every year.
Every season.
And it was when Mike would announce that we were coming back.
It was like the most exciting, unexpected news in the world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that also led to us writing a lot of season finales that felt like series finales.
I felt like we joked when we were writing the series finale, the actual series
finale, that we had done this five times previous or something.
And, you know, we're trying to give some closure at some point.
Yeah.
You know, the other thing about this episode is there's a lot of snow.
Yes.
Oh, I had that in my notes.
It's hard.
Shows that do it, I'm always tip my hat to it because it's so important.
But, you know, most of us are in L.A. making stuff that obviously never snows here.
And they throw a scarf around somebody and they say, well, it's winter.
See, that guy's wearing a scarf.
It's always outside their clothes, if you notice.
It's never around their necks.
It's just thrown over them because that's the way people wear it in TV winter.
And so when there's actually snow i'm like good they tried
they used to do that great on er er always we i think we did it fairly well in west wing but
parks and rec did it really well and i and this is one of the cases where they did it the snow
looked real and we did a lot of it yeah and a little tidbit for those of you don't know so
when you look out leslie's window or out of the parks department's window into the courtyard, and in this episode, there's snow in that courtyard, that courtyard is all indoors.
That's all on stage. And so what we did is we just, there's a bunch of fake snow. It's all inside.
And so there's a guy shoveling snow that's theoretically outside. And there's also,
they also put pigeons in there. So they had these kind of, I don't know if they were trained. I don't know. I'm sure there was a pigeon wrangler,
but they had pigeons just flying around in there.
They're attached. Their legs are attached. If you look close
enough, you can see it. They have threads, right? They have threads on their legs. That's
it, right? So they don't get lost in the rafters. Yes. And for sure there are pigeon wranglers.
Oh, yeah. You got to get them on the pod.
Yeah. And they were a million dollars per episode, those pigeons.
So I hope you guys enjoyed them.
But no, it makes it look real.
I was like, I don't think people who didn't know were like, yeah, that's actually indoors on a stage in Studio City.
So, yeah, pretty cool. Shout out to the snow people and the pigeon wranglers.
Also, weird thing to say, but about the set design,
I always loved how the show, when it aired,
it always felt like fall.
You know what I mean?
Like they really tapped into this Indiana autumn feel
that I just was always excited by.
I think it kind of has to do with the production design
of the building.
Like I like all the wood and I like that stuff.
Cause I think, I do think when you step outside
and sometimes we either were shooting at the lot
or at a park or something,
you see that dead sun.
It's like that LA, Southern California sun.
And the actors are squinting
because they can't even look at each other
because it's so sunny.
That's when you're like, oh man,
you can't fake the sun, right?
You can't change the sun into something else.
But that's always funny.
Very late into my time on Parks and Rec,
Amy and I were in some lot in the middle of the valley at noon. The sun was directly overhead, which is a horrible angle to be photographed in and hot. And I was like, had anyone ever asked to put a scrim up over us? Ever?
It's never been she's like no we really don't so i got i got us
a scrim and we finally got i don't know how long it lasted but but we got a scrim over us and it
was a little bit more comfortable and we didn't look like we were both 100 years old oh what a
gift that's wonderful. directing the light, you know, whether it's putting up flags or putting up scrims or putting a bounce up to put the light in the right way. I mean, there's a whole team of people whose job
it is to make sure that that happens. And I think early on in the show, it was like,
this is a documentary. We just kind of point the cameras wherever and we don't light. But then
as the show developed, it became less and less of a documentary.
Rob, something I've been dying to bring up with you, I've been waiting for this episode,
is that, I don't know if you know this but the storyline with ron being available to everyday
citizens i'm pretty sure was inspired by the west wing big block of cheese episodes
oh yes that makes perfect sense uh mike sorry i think there's a smoke alarm going off in my house
i'll let you take over i love that this shit's shit's real, man. Don't cut this out.
Call 911. I'll come rescue you in my fireman outfit. Yeah, Big Block of Cheese Day. It's a
famous West Wing episode, and it's based on a very famous thing that I think Andrew Jackson's
White House would bring a gigantic block of cheese into the West Wing and invite the citizens to come and have some cheese and to bring their problems and thoughts.
And it was meant to liaison the public with the government.
And that actually happened.
We did an episode about it.
And that is, I think, the inspiration for this storyline, is Ron being available to
the public. Yeah. And it was kind of cool. I think there's kind of what ended up developing
into a mutual admiration society between Aaron Sorkin and Mike Schur. And so Parks and Rec was
kind of like the adorable comedy version of a show about public service, right? It was like
the comedy version where it was optimistic and service right it was like the the comedy version
where it was optimistic and forward thinking and sort of progressive but also you know about good
people trying to do good things and obviously the west wing was was the drama version of that
with much higher stakes and like nuclear football codes and all that stuff but uh um and then later
on in the series uh aaron sorkin became a of Parks. And so he and Mike had a correspondence and ended up casting a few Parks actors in his
later show, The Newsroom.
Hale, I should probably report to you that the fire alarm was a false alarm, which is
great news.
Although, as I also just learned, a false alarm in a house with a one-year-old and a
tiny dog is quite terrible. But anyway,
we're talking actors and West Wing actors. I wanted to share, you know, every so often,
I'd suggest an actor for a role. And I think perhaps my most proud one that worked out,
she got cast, it's next season. But Ethel Beavers, the actress Helen Slayton Hughes did this amazing
one scene home run in The West Wing. It's a season four episode, Privateers. And she's
Marion Coatsworth Hay. You should check it out if you haven't seen it. It's a master class.
And I remember being in the writer's room and we needed someone for Ethel Beavers. This is actually going to be for one of my episodes
for The Bubble. And I remember I leaned over and said to Mike, what about Marion Coatsworth Hay?
And his eyes just lit up because he knew she would be perfect. And she was. And look,
I think she's in like 10 or something episodes.
So,
um,
go Helen.
Yes.
I love Aaron Sorkin.
He would text me the minute the show finished airing.
Invariably.
I didn't know that.
With direct quotes.
This is my favorite.
This is my favorite.
Yeah.
And,
and Rashida as well.
He would always reach.
It was very, very sweet. He loved, loves the as well he would always reach it was very very
sweet he loved loves the show and always would always reach out with like like really deep dive
specific quotes that he loved you're like no but he really watched it he's not just saying it
well that's that's kind of cool man and then we had some we had some other west wing actors on
the show right i think brad whitford was on the show. Whitford was on. Kind of interesting, yeah.
I mean, the list of people who have made their way through the parks,
that would be fun to do.
We should make a list just to have a master list.
Oh, a master list?
Yeah, I mean, they've gone on to be superheroes.
They've gone on to be leads of shows.
Yeah, a lot of rants.
Jenny Slate, I remember she was,
Jenny Slate was just kind of starting out,
and now she's, you know, killing it
Ben Schwartz is in this episode
we wanted him to play Jean-Ralphio, like he was
our idea, because he was at UCB, we knew him
whatever, and we
called his reps, I don't know who it was, agent or
manager, whatever, and they called back
and like, yeah, he passed, we're like, no, no, no
we know Ben Schwartz, we know he wants
to do this, there's no way he doesn't want to do the show
and so like, I don't know whether Harris texted him or you texted him or whatever.
But and then he was like, no, I'd love to be in.
I want to do it.
And then, of course, he got the job and he was on the show for 50 episodes or whatever.
And like, by the way, that's an example of like the reps don't always pass on all the
job offers.
They're passing on stuff sometimes.
Like, you really got to get on them.
And like, if we hadn't known Ben Schwartz, just known him as a guy and it was our friend he wouldn't have been john ralphio which isn't
which is just wow i can tell you for me um i did an art a character on californication with david
dukovny that i loved it's one of my favorite characters i ever got to do eddie nero again
another crazy demented actor and i just had a blast but they the only reason i got my agents
passed on it without ever telling me and the hairdresser knew me was working on david's hair
it was like why why don't we just call rob and ask him so that happened and then the but the
worst of all of them was uh when the show nip tuck was on and i was a huge nip tuck fan huge
huge huge particularly the first few seasons before I got totally off the rails.
And I would watch the,
uh,
I think that the,
there were two leads.
One was,
I think the name Christian Troy,
and it was this just dashing plastic surgeon,
lunatic.
It was great.
And I was like,
I want to do a part like that.
Why can't I find a part like that?
I want to meet with this Ryan Murphy guy.
And so I got a meeting with Ryan Murphy.
And in the first few minutes of the meeting,
it's me just,
you know,
gushing about Nip Tuck in that part.
And Ryan's getting paler and paler and paler and paler.
And he goes,
don't you know that I wrote that for you?
Oh my God.
I was like,
what?
He goes,
of course,
of course you responded to it.
And we put together that my agents never gave it to me.
By the way, I feel like you would fit into that Ryan Murphy verse.
Anyway, like, yeah, it's like that is very.
Why?
Why are they doing that?
Why are they passing on stuff?
Oh, man.
It doesn't happen all the time, but it does happen.
And I will openly say in one of my example of me being very wrong, I remember heatedly arguing against April and Andy getting together.
I love this.
I love that you argued against it.
I think you have to know when you were wrong, you know, and I remember like just really passionately.
I didn't, in my mind, I thought the whole thing was going to be Andy's rise to like eventually becoming like mayor of Pawnee or
something super important in getting Ann back and so that I was shocked because then that wouldn't
happen and I also didn't love the age difference yes but then there were we talked about that we
talked about that a lot but they were so charming together and you know so then it's they're right
there that's like that couple they were so great together I would, you know, so then it's, they're, that's like that couple,
they were so great together.
I would have been such a waste for that not to happen.
Thank God no one listened to me.
Yeah.
Thank God you were very low ranked on the show,
as was I at the time.
So no one was listening.
It was like,
you know what?
We're going to do it because they're cute together.
That was the TV version of it.
It was like,
that's so funny.
And by the way,
we do a little gifts,
parties,
jobs watch,
because there's a lot of gifts, parties, and jobs in the show gpj watch april gets a new
job in this one so fun should we do a town hall yeah let's do a town hall?
Yeah, let's do a town hall, Katie.
We take questions from listeners, and it's called the Pawnee Town Hall.
So you want to answer a question with us?
Yeah.
All right, where should we do the town hall today?
Let's ask Katie.
Where is your favorite place in Pawnee?
Yeah, is there a nice location or something like that?
But also a place where people would feel comfortable coming to ask us questions.
The diner.
JJ's? I love having it at JJ's.
So we're going to take this town hall question. We're going to have our town hall here.
Our town hall question is coming to us from Josh in LA.
Josh asks, who is your favorite character to write for?
Or for Rob, who is your favorite guest star to be in a scene with?
This is great that we have multiple writers here.
Katie.
Multiple writers.
Yeah, we can vehemently disagree.
I mean, just to make sure it's clear, this is just who I had the easiest time pitching on.
Not my favorite actor.
That's right.
It's your favorite character to pitch.
Not your favorite actor.
Yeah.
Favorite character you like to pitch for?
I had the easiest time pitching for Ron Swanson.
Wow. I love that. And you take credit for all of his best lines. That's like.
I created all the characters on the show.
Yeah. You created and named them and you cast all the, and you played them.
You often would ADR in post all their lines as well.
Exactly.
Sometimes you do the voiceover.
Exactly. Yeah.
Ron Swanson. That's a good answer.
That's a good answer.
A very fun character to write for.
And to be clear,
no one at the show would think,
oh, we need a Ron Swanson joke?
Get Katie in here.
I'm just saying I had the most fun
pitching on that character.
Do you have a proudest line that you wrote?
Doesn't have to be for Ron,
but it could be.
Do you remember?
First of all, do you remember?
I have memories of lines I think i came up with yes
i can't do it because i know i know that there'll be three people somewhere that's like i fucking
came up with that line so like i'm not doing it i'm not this is a real thing it's too scary it's
yeah listen in the west wing i played a speechwriter. And it's like, you know, anything a president ever says in public is written by somebody else and you never take credit for it.
I think a lot of people who don't work in entertainment or whatever think that, oh, maybe on a staff, like everyone, every writer has a different character they write for.
Like, that's it.
And then you all kind of like, OK, you write for Katie writes for Ron, right, as we all know and and yang writes for whoever and like it's but it's actually really not split up like that like
everyone i feel like everyone on staff wrote lines for every character it all gets sort of mixed up
and you never know who's going to pitch for whom you know that's that and that's kind of the fun
of it and we get to write off you know go off and write a draft you obviously write jokes for every
character and that's that's really fun for, for me personally. Um, God,
it's hard. Cause so many of them are so fun. I mean, I think, I think one of the favorites for
a lot of the writers was just Andy. Cause you could write kind of, you know, silly dumb guy
jokes where it's like, okay, that was, you know, that it was hard to top him in a scene sometimes
when he would get the blow. Um, I definitely wrote a lot of stuff for Aziz's character. Um,
you know, we came, became pretty good friends over the course of the show.
And then we ended up doing a show together.
So that kind of made sense.
Um,
and then I,
I think honestly at the table reads,
like I,
I would do Aziz when he wasn't there and I would do Rob when he wasn't
there.
So I was like,
okay,
well it was fun to write for those guys.
Cause like sometimes I would do them at the table read,
I would fill in for them.
So,
you know,
those,
those were,
those were some fun ones.
I always find that so stressful doing a role at the table read.
Yeah. Did you ever, I felt like you played Anne sometimes. Who do you remember playing?
No, I just remember a time, Greg, you may remember this, but I had like one line,
but there was a word in it. I was like, wait, do I know how to pronounce this correctly?
And I even asked Gore right beforehand, like, how do you pronounce this?
And he told me.
And when I got to it, I got so in my head
and I kept saying the word over and over again wrong
and to the point that it was like, oh dear God, stop.
It was like one of the most traumatizing.
It was like a full minute of time passed
until I finally got through it.
And then afterwards, I find this so funny. I know
I'm bringing up traumatizing memories, but they're the funniest. You need all perspectives, Katie.
It can't all be fun and games. It can't all be fun and games. These are the best things. Like,
I loved all these people, but these are very funny to me. But I remember afterwards in the room,
I was like, you know what? Maybe that wasn't so bad. Like, maybe I'm building up in my head how
weird that was. And then I remember Greg and Mike came in from the notes meeting and Greg sat down.
He was like, what happened to you in there?
Wait, wait, we got to bring up one more story just with you and Greg,
which do you remember this?
Wait, do you remember this at some point?
Maybe you should tell the story. Do'll i do you can you do you
remember the story i do okay you tell the story because it happened to you so you gotta get to
the story i this whole episode has been like uh the it's been a sci-fi movie to me where i feel
like everything's been opened up and i remember everything clearly now but uh tell me if this is
it i had a headache i had a really bad headache and greg was gone for
the day and mike was doing something elsewhere with the show and everyone was like why don't
you take a nap in greg's office and i was like really but that's not you think that's okay and
everyone was like yeah go take a nap he's he's off doing some other show yeah he's doing some
other stuff yeah and then i went into his office and I'm like,
okay,
this,
I guess this is where we know it's fine.
I'm going to take a nap.
And I took a nap,
like lights off.
And then the next thing I know,
I heard the door open,
like time had passed and the door opens and the light comes on.
And then it's like Mike with like a casting team.
And he's like,
what are you doing?
Like they were just about to start these like professional auditions.
It was like the middle of the day. And I were just about to start these like professional auditions.
It was like the middle of the day.
And I'm just sprawled out across this sofa.
Like clearly not someone that had just laid down,
but someone that was in a deep sleep.
He came in.
Yeah.
He was going to do like reads in there or something.
Right.
And I didn't know what, I didn't know how to explain it.
I was like, I, I, i i um yeah i'm sorry and i just like got up and left i was like it's there's nothing to say those people are like what's going on in this office like mike is the showrunner he's about
to do some some meeting or something and then there's just a woman sleeping in the office it's
so wild oh god rob do you have a favorite guest guest star that you like to be in a scene with?
It could be anybody.
Oh, my God.
Someone from the regular cast?
Well, I told you I think that the most exciting day I had was when I realized I was in a scene with DJ Roomba.
Okay.
Well, that's a good one.
I mean, I took a picture with it and texted everybody I knew.
That was pretty great.
Yeah.
that was pretty great.
Yeah, I mean,
it would be hard,
I'd be hard-pressed to think of the cast, because everybody brought
a different flavor, you know what I mean? I knew
when I was working with Amy, it was going to be something
really particular to that
chemistry I have with Amy, and same with
Pratt, and same with Ron, all of them,
with everybody. It would be
hard to choose, so...
I wish I gave that answer.
It's a great answer.
Listen, it's all good.
But DJ Roomba, let's face it,
hard to top that.
There you go.
All right.
That's the town hall.
We're going to wrap it up
at JJ's Diner.
Thank you so much, Katie Dippold,
for joining us today.
Thank you, guys.
We have to have you come back for more.
That was really, really fun.
And thanks for listening, everybody. Rate and review on iTunes. Thank you to producer. We have to have you come back for more. That was really, really fun. And thanks for listening, everybody.
Rate and review on iTunes.
Thank you to producer Schulte.
And thank you, Katie Dippel.
Thank you, producer Greg.
Bye from Honey.
Bye. parks and recollection is produced by greg levine and me rob schulte our coordinating producer is
lisa berm the podcast is executive produced by alan yang for alan yang productions rob low for
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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
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