SmartLess - "Bob Odenkirk"
Episode Date: April 12, 2021We welcome writer, director, actor, and now fight-trained action hero Bob Odenkirk to the show for a strut down the promenade of life. Bob tells us about everything from the early days to yes...terday, the genesis of his new film Nobody, and his favorite chicken pot pie recipe, of course. Bon appétit. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, I know we want to get started here on the show, but I just got an email from my mom
Yeah, what does it say classic?
It's just a list of words as alternatives for swear words because she thinks I swear too much
She gave you a whole list of swear words. Yeah, she's giving me like one like like 11 alternatives. Yeah
Anyway
This is fucking smart list. Let's go
Hi talking hi talking talking loving learning ways are we let's just change the title of this thing to talkers
You think that's a good. I don't think it's too late talkers and and we could send a little horse
Well, it's just that is
Just that is a it's a think bar
looking for freebies and this is
Again think bar. That's t-h-i-n-k sure with an exclamation point that it wasn't helping with your thing
Yeah, I was gonna say and and that goes down great with smart water
You exactly that's great. This is why you're on the talkers podcast
I'm so happy that you do most of your thinking you don't do most you're thinking out loud
I'm sitting here uncomfortably. I've got I've got one of very sweetly the other day
I hurt I tweaked my back and so I've been I've been kind of laid up and
All of a sudden Jason appeared at my house true story and he brought me over three of the those icy hot patches for me
Ah, I know I didn't even ask him. He just showed up and that was this two days ago. Was that weird?
I mean it was it's you know, I do something super super nice
Twice a year. Maybe maybe no probably once a year
It was unsolicited and he showed up and I was sitting there and he just showed up and he gave it to me
It was really nice. Really. I've got one on right now. I think I may have revealed how much I love you there
It was very sweet. I'm now. I'm shy. I know maybe you can come over and bathe me then, you know
I just want to say so we've got a guest on here today a guy
Does somebody have a washing machine going? Yeah, they're they're very busy and
By the way, it's right on brand for our guest because he's a very busy guy and has been for a long time
He's a man who wears many many different hats
He's a in my eyes in my view a comedic
God he was on SNL
He worked on Conan as a writer. He created some some really iconic sketches at SNL
He then moved to then he came back out here to California
We originally from Illinois near near where Sean's from. Oh, wow
And and they work on SNL worked on SNL and wrote on the Ben Stiller show
Then created a show with our friend David called Mr. Show with Bob and Dave. Oh, yes, of course, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Bob Otterkirk. Hello. I love you brought us right up to it
We got it. Come on. You got that. You got that from me moving around my kitchen
You should have heard the names in my head. I was shuffling through
Sudeikis was there for a second and then and then no, I don't think it's there's a Chicago there and look at you, Bob Otterkirk. Yeah, there is. I think
Sudeikis, what part of Chicago? He did a little bit of Chicago. He did. Yeah. Well, he was in second city
Pretty sure he's a Chicago guy. He's from Kansas. What part of Chicago?
Well, I went to college my first year where you're from, Sean. Which college? I went to COD
You did? College of different years. I lived two blocks from that. That's our cue, Will. Let's take a tight five, you and me, Will
Well, I was 16 when I went to college. No way. That's not surprising. So I
I was kind of afraid of going away to college. I felt like I was so young
I would I would really not. Well, did we grow up near each other than if you went to college of DuPage?
Yeah, I went to Naperville. I grew up in Naperville. That's insane. I grew up in Glen Owens.
You know what? That's so funny because when Jason was 16, he dropped out of eighth grade. So that's like this very simple story.
Now, so 16, you went to college at 16. That means you're one of those
not-dumb guys. No, no. You and Keith Overman. It doesn't mean anything. It doesn't mean a damn thing
except that I found out I could leave high school and they'd let me go and I was like, all right.
So then in 10th grade, they said you're done. I just went to school young when I was a little kid
and then I left a year early. So I cut two years off.
But was that normal in your family? You have like six siblings, right?
Right. Seven kids. So six, yes, siblings. And any drunks? Any drunks, my dad.
My dad covered the whole, he did it for all of us.
He said, but the last thing he said before he died was I drank all the booze.
I'm so sorry, kids. I drank it all. Now there's none left for you.
So wait. So in 11th grade, they said you need not go to 12th grade?
All my friends were a year older than me in high school. All my close friends.
And they were all leaving. And I thought, well, I don't want to be here if they're leaving.
So I asked, I went to the office. I said, can I leave? And they looked at my number of credits
and they said, yeah, you can. And after Jason, just, you know, since then I've heard that my
high school has raised the, they turned up the credit number so that that's not going to happen
so easily. And all these ninth graders. Sounds like quite a process.
Did you have to go to junior college for a couple of years to get into the kind of
university you wanted? No, I went to COD, which is a small community college where Sean grew up,
which is only a 20 minute drive from where I lived because I could have gone to any college. No,
I mean, I got my, I got my degree from high school. And, and I just, I just didn't feel
like I'd fit in at all. And then in college, what did you leave with? What did you major in?
I went to three different colleges and four different four colleges. The fourth one was
just a class I took. Anyway, look, no, I want to know what you graduated with. I sound like a hero
and a genius, a real Einstein. He's trying to hide how a highbrow the major was. Is it archaeological
theories? No, no, no, no. I got a major in broadcasting. And a minor in philosophy. Because
you wanted to be an on air guy. I wanted to be an intellectual on air chatting guy. And here we are
on the dumbest podcast ever made. Honestly, Jason, yes. Smash cut to smart. I'm going to lower the
bar on this podcast, which is quite something. Good luck. Well, you've been, you've been successfully
hiding your, your, your, your sophisticated intellectual high brownness for years. Not to
imply that you've been coming across as a dumbass, but you certainly seem very approachable anytime
I've ever talked to you. Wait, so Bob, so Bob, let me take us back for a second. So you go to
college, you go to four colleges because you had to show everybody up. And then when was the moment,
so when did you start getting into, when did you start getting into comedy, performing and comedy
writing and working with Smigel and Conan and all that? What was that? Honestly, I started writing
comedy like diligently, like as part of my daily routine when I was like 10. Wow. I just loved,
I just love sketch comedy. Like knock, knock jokes. What's a 10 year old writing? No, no, no, sketch
fake commercials, parody commercials. That would be the first thing. Were you a big Saturday Night
Live fan at that age? I always liked Saturday Night Live. I was a big Monty Python fan. Yeah,
same. Right. And I particularly liked the Saturday Night Live episodes that Steve Martin hosted
in the early years. Those were another cut above everything else on the show, which was a great
show. And it's first five years, a great, great show. But Steve Martin hosting was like super
charged. But I loved Monty Python. In fact, when I interviewed with Lorne, I,
Lorne Michaels from Saturday Night Live. Yeah. When I, when I did get an interview with Lorne
to be a writer at SNL, I don't know. I was sitting out there, you know, he makes you sit, he makes
you wait for hours. Like, like one AM appointment, right? You know, like Jeanine Garofalo famously
waited six hours to go in for her meeting. Mine was not that bad. It was like an hour.
I'm still waiting. But nothing gets me more nervous than waiting for a meeting. Anyway,
sorry, go ahead. And he asked you, he asked me, what do I, what, what do I like? What shows do
I like? And I'm like, Monty Python, he's like, have you, you know, do you like what we're doing
here? And I'm like, not so much. I thought he wouldn't want to get his ass kissed. I really
thought not only do I genuinely like Monty Python more than this show, I thought he doesn't want
to hear me go, oh, I wish I could work here. You're so great. This is the best thing ever.
And that's all he wants to hear, right? That's all he wants to hear. So I go in and I'm a real
standoffish, which I could be, right? Yep. I'm good at it. Yes. Yeah. And I'm, but I really kind
of sort of purposefully was like, I'm not going to kiss this guy's ass. He doesn't want to hear
that. He wants to hear that I have some perspective on what they're doing here and comedy. And,
and I also knew Lauren liked Monty Python a lot too. So I was like, look, Monty Python was the best
and still to me is the best, not this show. And you do your little show. Meanwhile, I'm a waiter
at Ed DeBevix. I'm a fucking waiter. And I'm sitting with Lauren Michaels going, nah, it's not
so good. It's not so good what you do here. But you got hired. How did you get that interview,
Bob? Like where did that come from? Smigel. Robert Smigel was a really important writer at
Saturday Night Live almost from the time he got hired. He was just built to write for that show.
And he just wrote so many great sketches. There's that great star Trek trekky sketch
with Shatner where he says, get a life to these people. It's such a great moment, but so many,
so many. I mean, the thing is, Robert's known for triumph, the insult comic dog and the number of
wonderful, amazing sketches that just made that show relevant and important and worthwhile that
he wrote is hard to express. And it's not just the recurring ones. I mean, he wrote Mr. Short-Term
Memory and all these and the Bears Guys and all that stuff. But he wrote just the greatest thing.
So he was really important there. And Lauren knew that. And Robert and I had been roommates and
he had seen me in a show in Chicago and liked it and thought I was really a good performer and funny
writer. And so we had begun writing a sketch show when he got hired at Saturday Night Live.
So he sort of was a pipeline for me. I was writing my material and he would share it with
other writers in the office. And I would also work with him on the phone and punch up his sketches
for the week. I actually got a sketch on when I wasn't writing there before I got hired there
called Side Show of the Stars. You remember Circus of the Stars? Yeah, absolutely. Jason,
were you ever asked to do that? I proudly turned it down one year. I think I was upset with the
skill I was offered. I wanted trapeze and I think I got dog tamer. It's so great, Bob. You're one of
like a number of guests who have come on and mentioned these like great celebrity shows that
were on in the 80s and they always go, Jason, were you on that? There's always a good chance that he
was. I know you guys had Paul McCartney on because I listened to that because he's so great. That was
such a great episode. Anyone who's listening to this episode and hasn't listened to that, stop
right now. Thank you for the plug. Thank you for the plug of our old episodes. I appreciate it.
Such a great episode. Jason, were you invited to be on the Wings ABC special? No, the what?
Gotta watch. This is the worst thing McCartney ever did and I'm a huge fan. God bless. I immediately
went to the TV show wins. No, his band Wings. They thought, I forget the logic of this. I was
reading about, I was reading about McCartney and I thought, I read about this thing where he did a
one hour special for ABC for network prime time and it was so bad. Back in the 80s? I love watching
that season. Yeah, with Wings. Oh boy. It would probably do great today. Bob Odenkirk, you're
in one of the biggest shows in the history of television, Breaking Bad. Yeah, I'm a small
part. And Better Call Saul. Let's make that connection to how you get to Breaking Bad because
I love this. Bob, your trajectory is one of my favorite of all time and I'm very fond of you
and you and I have a long history. Bob and I made two movies together. I'm a big fan of you,
Will Arnett. I think you're one of the great actors. One of the greats. Still hasn't had a
chance to show everything you can do on screen. And I apologize for not helping you do that.
No, Bob. You did great with those movies. Those two movies, listener, as soon as you're done
running through the Paul McCartney episode, you need to watch both Let's Go to Prison and
Brother Solomon. You did a great job directing those movies, despite Will Arnett being in those.
So my experience with Bob was, I didn't know him. Bob came on Arrest Development the first
season, one of the first episodes, Jason, you remember and did those awesome scenes with David
where you played the marriage counselor and then Bob and David ended up taking over
each other's roles and it was fucking insane. And I was so, you know, I was such a huge Mr.
I knew David a little bit, but I was such a huge Mr. Show fan. It really, to me, was just the
pinnacle of sketch comedy. And I loved it so much. Anybody in comedy, that's like, yeah, that is
the show. It's just it for me. And you came, I remember one time we went to, before we did
Let's Go to Prison and we went to a, I forget, we were at somebody's house like a Christmas
party or something. And you ended up talking to me and I was like, man, I can't believe I'm talking
to Bob. I'm Bob Odenkirk. I just, I just, and then you were like, here's, here's where I think
that you could, and you like gave me some advice like on, and I really listened to every word and
it was great. You'd had a couple. You'd had a couple because your dad had left a couple beers
out before he came. They were warm. It was like a treasure hunt. But it was so awesome. And then,
and then not long after that they, let's go to prison came together and I got to go and work
with you. And really you, me and Dax spent so much time in that, first of all, in that prison
in Joliet, Illinois, which is a prison. My dad drove us by that prison when I was a kid. He drove
me in here. No, he said, he said, look over there, boys. We drove right by that two lane highway
that runs beside the prison. He goes, that's Joliet Correctional Facility. If you do bad things,
you're going to end up in there. It is a scary prison. Very frightening. It's fucking scary as
shit. In fact, Melissa McCarthy was on, she grew up nearby there too. And she said that when she
drove by with her mom in her Catholic school dress, her mom would say like, don't let them see you.
Right. So scary. So we go when we make that movie and you had just had, you've done Mr. Show to
great acclaim. You also were on Larry Sanders, one of the other great influential comedies of
all time to great acclaim. Then you start directing and then, well, listen, let's go to prison.
I did my best. Both those movies are so damn good. Yeah. They're so funny.
We never know why shit. And Bob and I, we had it. Yeah, that's really true. I think it's true, Will.
I mean, you don't know how these things are going to come out. I mean, there's so many components
and that goes for everything, but certainly a feature film. And you just got hope that it all
marries up and somehow is as good as what you hoped it would be or maybe better.
I thought about this a lot with Brother Solomon. I felt a certain amount of guilt because I love Will
so much as well. Will Forte. Will Forte. And he wrote that for us to do. And we went and did this
movie. And I always, as you know, it was one of the funniest scripts I've ever read to date.
Yeah. Yeah. And it just incredible. And I always felt like, fuck, man, I wish it was better for
Will because I loved him so much. Well, I actually had this horrible brain fart
that comes to you after you fail miserably, maybe sometimes days later or in this case,
like a year later. And I thought, I wonder how that script would be if you shot it as a low budget
movie on location, not building the sets, because it's already such a heightened,
there's such heightened characters. And that was what I think really threw me off. I first got
that script. I read it. They asked me if I wanted to direct it. And I thought it's too much of a
meta movie. It's too, everything's too conceptualized in these people and how they look at life.
It's almost like a cartoon or like, anyway, I said, I just don't know how to make this work.
And I handed it back. And then I got a call like a week later, Will Arnett wants to be in it. And
come on, Fortale be in it. And we'll all get together. It'll be so much fun. And it's such
a fun script. Come on. And directing is fun. It's really fun. And I'm like, ah, shit. Yeah,
okay, I'll do it. But I just didn't, I hadn't figured out, look, when you, it's weird to say
this, because we just acknowledged that movies are such a uncertain enterprise. So you can never
really know for sure. But I would say that in that case, I didn't have that core principle
to build around. And so I was going off what I read. And when you read it, it can read kind of
like a version of Dumb and Dumber, which is to say they went with, you know, these bold, broad
characters. And it would have been neat to take that same sensibility and those characters,
but land it in a really low budget, like low-fi world. It might have worked. I think it might
have worked great. And you could have done it. And Fortale could have done it. Same cast.
Yeah, I think that you're probably right. And I think that you, you and Will and I should get
together and remake. It would be the fucking hilarious thing to do. Funniest thing to do.
The way we want to. But I will say this, a real testament to Bob was years later,
I think we all felt a little shitty about it because it didn't turn out the way we wanted to.
And I ran into Bob and Bob went out of his way to come over and say, Hey, man, I'm really sorry.
You said that I felt like I let you down. And I kind of said the same thing. And we kind of,
not that we needed to make, make up, but we did. And I thought it really,
I don't know, man, you don't get a lot of that in, in, in, in this thing that we all do.
And you were, well, I'm always surprised when I go into people's offices and they have movies,
movie posters for things that were just terrible. And you're like, you don't be proud of that.
Well, because it's so hard to get stuff made. People are so excited to actually get something
made. But I just, I always, I wanted to say to you that I've always really appreciated that when
you did that, it really meant a lot to me. I think that you're really fucking cool and big and cool
person. So just that's that. And we can move on. Wait, I gotta, I gotta, I gotta tell my Sean.
Hey, story. Here we go. This is a great one. Now, Sean, have I ever told you this one?
I don't know. Have I ever told you that I was invited to do a part on Will and Grace?
Okay. You don't remember this because it only lasted one morning.
Did you do a table read? I did not do the table read. Okay. Okay. So tell me if I got this right.
So I had little kids at home. Were they yours? And I was, I was writing a movie with David Cross
and all my friends, Mr. Show Movie. And I was having a great time, but I was also exhausted,
you know, and you have little babies. Run, run, run. Yeah. It was run, run, run sketch movie.
We were writing a bunch of attempts. And so I was really enjoying that, but also exhausted,
all the time exhausted, little baby at home, first kid. And so they said, they want you to do
Will and Grace. And it's great. You know, great show and okay, cool. And I get up, I do my normal
morning. I'm taking my son. We would go on a spider walk in the morning where he'd sit in
my arm, the crook of my arm, and we'd walk around the house and look for spider webs. And he'd go,
he'd go, when he saw a spider web, and we'd just walk around the house every morning with Will
sometime. Yeah. I'm so surprised you can carry. And then I'm halfway through my little spider
walk. And I think, I think I have to be on Will and Grace, like right now. Oh shit. Oh my God.
You mean you just didn't show up? No, I finished the walk quickly. I grabbed clothes. I was wearing
my pajamas, got in my car, drove to the studio, changed in the bathroom, parked my car, changed
in the bathroom, not hadn't shaved, hadn't showered, ran in late. So you're describing Jason like to a
tea. Did the reading, like a reading and then went to do the thing and I was so not there. I was so
not there. So it was like a table or like, or like, no, no, like the morning read, you know, I guess
like you read it, we read it in the group and then we immediately went to the set to try to,
you know, put it on. I do remember that. I do remember. And I was terrible and I'm thinking
I'm terrible and I don't know. I forgot. This is like 20 years ago. Yes. Yes. I, my 22 year old son
just who was on my arm just walked through this room. Spider check. Looking for spiders? Still
looking for spiders. He's like, I got one. He's an arachnologist. That's crazy. Well,
I'm sorry that it didn't work out that afternoon. I'm at the writer's office. My agent calls. I'm
sitting with David Cross and Scott Ackerman and all these guys and I pick it up and they go,
Hey, Bob, we got to talk to you. And I go, what? They're letting me go. And he goes, well, it's
about Will and Grace. I go, they don't want me. They didn't feel like it worked out. I go, okay.
You're like, I didn't either. Gotta go. No. Well, gosh, I'm sorry that happened.
And then no, don't be sorry. It was my fault completely. I just didn't prioritize acting
at the time. I really, I don't think it adds up, but, but there's a connection.
I remember that story you were talking about the guy who showed you the guy you had fired
off Will and Grace, just to prove that you had the power to fire somebody. Didn't you have a
story about that? It was about 20 years ago. Yeah. No, that's right. That's right. Let's move on.
You know, I really just didn't prioritize acting at all. I acting was something that I like. I
did a little of it in college. I did a play when I first moved to Chicago called Line by
Israel Horowitz, kind of a famous play because Pacino, I guess, did it for a long time. And
and it ran for like 15 years. Pacino actor from the Godfather. And it, it just wasn't something,
you know, I was so thankful I could work as a writer. You stopped, you wanted to write more,
and then you directed these movies. You made, let's go to prison. We made Brother Salman and
you were talking at that time that this is what you wanted to do. You wanted to focus more on
directing and writing. I love directing. Yeah. But then your life takes a change and all of a sudden
acting becomes not just part of it, becomes the main focus and the last 10, 12 years you have
become an incredibly good enough celebrated. No, fuck that. Now, are you finding that a lot of
opportunity is coming your way maybe through like sort of like this sexy indifference or, or are you
really pointing towards acting and not really looking at writing and directing as much?
Oh, I'm, I'm writing a lot. Yeah, I'm writing a lot, but not directing. You know what? Listen,
when I walked away from actually it was a small indie movie I made called Melvin Goes to Dinner
that in a way was the most successful film I made because it made people happy. It played very well
at some film festivals and won the audience awarded South by Southwest and that was a great screening,
a great experience for me. But you know, I walked away from those movies, Will, and I thought the
first job of a director is to pick a story that you really, really want to tell, that you did just,
you have a strong sense of how it should be told because you take the hit when it doesn't work.
I mean, you feel it, you fuck that up. You are the core reason why that didn't work.
So I thought, okay, your first job is picking a story that you just have to tell and that you
know, you may be wrong, but you have a strong sense of how it should be told. And I would say,
with Melvin Goes to Dinner, it was a play that I saw and I thought, well, this is a fun play,
the dialogue is what matters and it's kind of really great, got this great energy to it and
we'll keep this cast together and we'll shoot it with five cameras and everyone can keep their kind
of very lively interactions and energy. It can be sustained and brought to the screen this way
and that was true. And then let's go to prison, had this gritty, tough underbelly to it and I
thought we'll shoot it like a 70s B movie. We'll do these snap zooms and we'll get some 16 millimeter
film and I had some strong visual sense of what it should be. And that was pretty good. It has some
integrity to it. And then Brother Solomon, I was just, it was like I was a jobber. I was just trying
to bring that script alive. And later when I saw Last Man on Earth, Forte's series, I thought those
guys really figured out a kind of a way to do Forte's writing that I've enjoyed very much. I love
that show. Wait, can I go back for a second? Melvin goes to dinner. Are you saying you used the cast
from the play in the movie? Yes. Okay. Cast from the play. God bless you because I love you for that.
I think that is amazing because you go see these plays, I won't name which ones that turn into these
huge movies, that you're like, well, they just nailed it on stage. Why wouldn't you just use
those actors? I'm probably talking myself out of a future job, but why don't you just use
those actors? They're so fantastic, so good on you. I think that's amazing. Well, thanks for saying
that. You know, speaking of a great actor who was in a play and is now getting some attention,
a guy I knew in Chicago named Paul Racy is in Sound of Metal. Oh, great. Yeah. And he's so great.
Is that the sequel to the Julie Andrews? It is. It is. Wow, that sounds interesting. Hey,
when you are not putting 14-hour days under your belt on Better Call Saul,
do you like to completely do nothing in the entertainment industry? And if so, what is that?
No, I never do nothing. I'm always writing. David Cross and I and my brother Bill are writing a
kind of a big, sprawling comic documentary epic right now that we hope somebody will want.
And I'm working on so many projects, a drama about OxyContin and a comedy. I wrote an animated show
with Dino San Botopoulos where the devil moves into a town near Indianapolis.
And I just, I'm always writing. I have a memoir coming out next year, too. And I wrote a book
with my daughter, you know, during this COVID time. No weird creepy hobbies aside from spider
hunting. No, I work out a lot now because I made this action movie called Nobody. Dude,
I saw the trailer. It looks amazing. Bob, I wanted to ask you about that. It's so fucking great.
What's it called again? It's called Nobody. Is that two words? It's one word.
Well, I was just thinking because he worked out, you know, and nobody. Thanks. Sure. No problem,
dude. You know, puns. Listen, you can start the audience with a laugh. They're coming back.
Yeah. They're coming back along with parades. Consider be ready. Jason's memoir has come out
next year, too. It's called My Life in Puns. So, Bob, the fucking trailer for this movie,
all of a sudden, like you literally have a line where you're on a bus and you're faced up against
these tough guys. You go, I'm going to fuck you up. Well, that was, you know, that was a monologue.
That was like a page and a half long monologue that Derek Colstead wrote who wrote the John Wick
films. And he's a great writer and he writes these mythic worlds and bad guys from that's come
out of the shadows and they're parts of big organizations that I can't tell you what they
mean yet, but you'll find out. And that's, it's just, he's so great, this guy. I love hanging
out with him. I love hearing his stories, but he had written this long monologue and it was like,
the universe has a hell of a way of paying back what's owed and all this stuff. And I'm putting
it off. You know, we're working with the story and he was really great talking to me about it
because it kind of sprang from my own idea. The whole movie, because I had a couple of
home break ins here in LA that left me with a lot of conflicted feelings.
What kind of neighborhood are you in, Bob? Well, it's obviously not a deal on the house.
I don't have that Netflix money. It sounds like you got a real deal on this place. Is it near
prison? It comes with mathematics. That was so nobody came out of your own sort of feeling about
a guy's going to fight back a little bit. It came out of a lot of ideas and thoughts I had,
but one of them was the genuine feeling of like I, we had had this, we'd had two break ins,
but one was particularly traumatic for my family and I didn't do anything like recent or it would
have been 10 years ago, that one. And you were home when it happened? We were all home. Oh,
wow. Yeah. And it was very traumatic. Thank God you're okay. So I tried to keep things cool,
you know, I'm not that I have any weapons. I mean, like any dad, I grabbed the baseball bat
and I haven't swung a bat since I was 14. So, you know, it leaves you feeling like, gosh,
I mean, what else could I have done? And what should I have done? And how should I be prepared?
And, and, but if I had done something, what would have happened then, you know, and it really,
I mean, it is smart to keep things cool and back off and get the hell out of there.
Everyone's okay. Yeah. Well, there's a residual. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. I'm sorry about
that. For sure. So all that sits with you. And, and so I, you know, you just can't help but feel
those feelings and ask those questions. And it stays with you, obviously. You think you probably
think about it at least a few times a week. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I'm sure. And you think about guns,
you know, which I'm like, definitely for stronger gun laws. But you think about what value are they?
I mean, how would you have one safely in your home and then be able to use it? All these,
all these complicated issues. But most of all, there's that personal frustration and anger. And
I thought I'd like to work that out and see if there was a place for that in a story. And of
course, there is in action movies. That's exactly what it's built out. They're built out of. And
so I proposed this. I actually thought I'd get laughed out of the room, you know, but people
were like, no, no. Actually, it also came from my brother in law. He was in China. And he took
a picture of his TV screen, which had an ad for Better Call Saul. And I thought, shit, if they're
watching me in China, and I know they show plays in Russia and Italy and all around the world,
what could I make that would play around the world? Well, an action movie plays because we
know what everybody wants on screen without understanding the language. And so there were
so many things that drove me to ask, what about an action movie? I'm willing to do the training.
And people said, yeah, that's a, yeah, that could work.
So did you have to train because there's a lot of physical activity, like, like you do a lot of
I mean, listen, Jason, yeah, I do all my own fighting in this movie. Good Lord. Wow. I trained
for two years. It's a lot. It's a lot. I pull muscles getting out of bed. Did you, did you have
a, I mean, the first goal of the training was that I don't get hurt when I do the fight. Was
that successful? It was pretty successful. I didn't, what happens is you train sort of just
the basics for a year and a half while this whole project was being put together, you know,
it takes years always. So I had a long time, but I was training for a long time. And then,
then you put the pieces up in the gym and you choreograph them and you learn the choreography
over and over. But then when you get on set, things change. And of course, the set is maybe
dimension wise, it can be a little different than what you trained in. And of course, now
everything is real. The walls are walls. They're not cardboard boxes. And so you end up hitting,
I only got hurt a little by hitting my fists on metal bars and stuff that were in that bus
fight. The bus fight is really something. The bus fight is insane. By the way, I didn't want to
interrupt. I don't know if you ever heard the story about Jason cut his finger taking his golf
clubs out of his Tesla, but yeah, it was, it was, we had, we thought about having a sequence where
I take golf clubs out of a Tesla and we talked about, we couldn't get the insurance. Right, right.
Just not believe a rehearsal for that. You've probably heard, you've also probably heard this
story about Jason had to bring an icy hot patch for my tender back the other day over to my house.
You know, Jason, I love your attitude about it because another actor whose name I won't mention,
I met him at one of these things we used to do before a pandemic destroyed social interaction
in the world. And I go, yeah, I'm training. I'm training. I've been training for a year and a
half. And he looks at me and he goes, why? They have stuntmen who will do that for you.
He was mystified. And I think you are too. You're like, don't you know you're in show business,
Bob? You don't actually have to do anything to say the lines. I just know at my age, 52,
you pull a little thing in your back or something. Okay. Yeah. Just little tweaks.
They last weeks. You're right. You're in good shape. You take, I give you shit,
but you take care of yourself. The thing is, if you've never, if you've never wrecked your knees
or your back, then you can get in shape enough to do that these things. I had knee surgery four
years ago and I tweaked my back, but I'm never giving up. I don't give a shit. I mean, this
fucking chassis was made to fucking run. Yeah, look at you. But wait, so, so, Bob, how fucking
crazy is that? And you had, you had like a real bonafide from top to bottom action people involved
in this, from the writing to the other producers. I know Dave Leach a little bit who was involved
with the film too. Yeah, David Leach. He's a fucking cool guy. And I trained at 87.11 his gym
and Daniel Bernhardt, the best stunt actor in the world. Daniel Bernhardt trained me for that
whole time and I don't know why he did, but he was willing to do it. Bob, you know,
we'll, we'll mention this at the top of the interview that, you know, you just work constantly,
you wear so many hats. Where does that come from in the drive? And I asked that a lot of our guests,
but I think it's fascinating because you look at all the stuff that you accomplish is like, wow,
and you have this family. It's like, how do you fit it all in? Let me finish my thought from earlier,
which was about directly. Stop cutting him off, Sean. Sorry. Which was just this, you know,
I'm not sure I'll ever find a story that I think I like and can commit to enough to want to direct
again. As much as I love directing, I think directing is probably the most rewarding thing
any of us can do if we get to do it. You get to use all your talents as a storyteller and
it's just the best. It's really rewarding. But if I'm too much of a bird brain hopping from stick
to stick and I can't focus long enough or really care deeply enough about a story,
I probably shouldn't direct and I so far haven't done it and I'm not really chasing it.
It'll find you. But you can't rule it out. But the thing is, I don't really have hobbies.
I read books. And you love work. I like what I do. I like doing what I do. I like thinking about
stories and how to make them work. The thing is, I don't want to be a dilettante. I don't want to
be George Plimpton, which is one of the reasons why I did train for this movie and I wanted to do
my own fighting. And thanks to the team at 87.11 and the people who got me there, I was able to
do that and you can see that I do it. And I did it, I think well enough. People will decide. They
may tell me I'm wrong. What do you think about when you see Tom Cruise hanging from an airplane?
I look at that and go, God, I wish I had the sack to do that. Was that something that you would do?
Well, that's different from doing the fighting. That's just taking a big risk.
Right. But I mean, as far as the efforts made for authenticity and doing your own stuff.
I mean, I gotta say, I'll take that guy on.
Oh, yeah. There we go.
You heard it here first, guys. It's fucking on.
Bob, I want to go back and say, because it's the thing we kind of glossed over. But
of course you have it. And you just mentioned you're working with him again with your brother as well.
But you have a long, long friendship and working relationship with somebody who I love very much.
I know Jason loves very much. And Sean, I think you know, and he's just a guy that big part of
my life, big part of my professional life, certainly, and just an awesome guy, David Cross.
Can you talk a little bit about your relationship with David and what a fucking huge impact you
guys had on comedy.
Well, that's nice. Thanks. I hope we helped some people and made a lot of people laugh.
But I mean, people always give Mr. Show credit for this, like the way it was constructed.
And I'm like, yeah, but it was really funny. That's what was good about it. Who gives a shit?
But I think that that's sort of a nod to the sort of people appreciating that you guys,
you guys did something that was complicated and you didn't need to, right? Like you made a bunch
of people laugh on one frequency, but then you guys kept writing all these other frequencies
that were much more challenging, tough to see just the thread, right? Just that basic concept
of the thread between Iska might go right over a lot of people's heads that are fully satisfied
with that show. You know, I think it's really, it's admirable.
You know, this is a weird thing. And that show was the best thing I could do with my life,
as far as I'm concerned. And that goes for looking back on it. And I'm thankful for Breaking Bad and
Better Call Saul and all this stuff. But that show, as far as I'm concerned, defines me and my
sensibility. And I don't know if I could do anything more me than that show in this lifetime.
So it's a weird thing to have done that, feel good about it, feel like you did enough of it,
you know, like that it was substantial, and then just be like, oh, I guess whatever I do next,
I don't know, whatever is most interesting, but that's, it's never going to be as fully me as that.
And how fortunate that the first big high profile thing that you do as a performer
is accurately portraying your brand of comedy. In other words, you didn't have to do a series
of jobs afterwards to sort of reset a more accurate description and representation of what you would
like to do and how you would like to be identified in the comedy world. Like it was right on brand,
what the kind of funny you'd like to give. And then you just kind of took that and ran with it,
yes? Yeah, yeah, for sure. Yeah, a lot of people don't get that. Yeah, a lot of people never get it,
not once. And so it's funny because I'm writing this memoir and it's mostly about Mr. Show.
Yeah. Oh, cool. Yeah, both you and David held on to that really difficult kind of subversive,
you know, street cred punk rock type of comedy that. And in the same way that Monty Python kind
of did, it's interesting that that's one of your inspirations because maybe you, I don't know if
you think, but just to, sorry, Jason, finish your thought a little bit. It's like, you know,
I grew up in the same way. I just, I revered Monty Python. I just, I watched every single episode
and it was, it was amazing, but that you created this thing called Mr. Show that now has the kind
of same kind of impact on the comedy world that that did for that generation. I really think
that you've accomplished that. You and David. Yeah, all that's nice to hear. I've had people say
similar things, but obviously Python influenced such a huge generation and, and also was able to
get more absurdist than we got. We just aren't, we don't think that way. But I love that show and
I even love its absurdisms, but although the season without Cleese is my least favorite season.
Where did Benny Hill sit for you in the, in the English sort of absurdist comedy world?
Behind the toilet. No, I did laugh at Benny Hill a bit, but I actually was,
Benny Hill, it's not the most egregious example of a certain kind of comedy that we all shared
in, in the seventies that really irked me on a deep level. It really unsettled me. I think as
a kid growing up in a house with an alcoholic father and it took a while for us to find out
what was going on. You know, I was probably about 12 or 13 when I understood what the thing was that
made our house weird and wrong and fucked up and kind of really deeply unsettling. Like,
I think this thing's going to break apart tomorrow morning at any moment.
For the same feeling. And that comedy of the seventies and my dad loved He-Haw,
which is so crazy because later my manager was Bernie Brillstein who helped make He-Haw,
which I hated so much. I hated it so much. Anyway, this, this comedy of the seventies,
I think everyone was so, I don't know, I'll psychoanalyze the whole nation. You know,
Vietnam was so brutal and left so many raw nerves, right? And so this comedy came in
of Oh God, John Denver, George Burns, both wonderful people, I'm sure. And I love,
I got to meet George Burns. I loved meeting him. But there was this grotesque, super sweet, you know,
fake phony, everything's okay. We're just joking around up here. I really, that I just hated so
much. And of course, SNL was a breath of fresh air. It was dangerous. It was a little more
confrontational. It didn't apologize, you know? I mean, that whole thing with the Dean Martin
Rose, which I laughed at, absolutely. But also there was just this side to that whole thing that
was like crude comment, kind of almost maybe slightly racist comment. And then like, we're
all just friends. We love each other. It's all life is sweet. And it just felt awful to me.
Sort of lowest common denominator, humor, if you will. And people were trying to come together,
I think in a really strange and artificial way, they were trying to get back, get the nation
back together or something or could soothe their nerves after this horrific 10 years of Vietnam
and bloodshed. So this hippie-ish, like it was trying to bring the hippie culture into mainstream
culture. Remember the Pinto car that had Levi's seats? Yeah. Oh, wow. That's right. Remember
that? Yeah. Remember, that's incredible. Yeah. I love that show. Sarah Purcell. John Davidson
and friend Tarkin. What was the one Fred Willard was on? Real people? Real people. Real people.
You know, it was like this attempt by the whole country to like calm down. It's okay. We're just
quirky. We're not dangerous. We don't have strong feelings. We're just quirky. We're just a bunch
of quirky people. And quirky is okay. And part of me, you know, I mean, a big part of me as a kid
is like, it's no, we're not just quirky people. We're, we're different. And there's something
really bad happened. Somebody say it, you know, and yeah, yeah, I see that. I see the connection
you're making. And I think that probably informed a lot of like kind of what you did and what you
guys ended up doing on, on Mr. Show and sort of hitting. I think the best comedy does that.
Yeah. You know, Eric, Eric Idle in his book talks about seeing the fringe, the beyond the fringe
guys, you know, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. And I forget the other two also great writers.
And he said seeing it as like in college, this was comedy with anger in it. And I agree. I agree
that comedy should be a little bit unsettling, really great comedy. It should be a little
serious about itself. It's got to be, there has to be, like you just said, there's an element
of danger and there needs to be an element of surprise. Anybody who's ever, for me personally,
maybe laugh, they always say something that's really, they surprise you in a way that you,
in just by definition that you weren't expecting. And I remember, I remember McKay, Adam McKay once
saying, describing somebody who I won't mention, who's very famous and saying, yeah, he's not,
I was like, that guy bugs me. He says, yeah, because he's got zero surprise to him. And I was
like, yes, that's exactly it. And, and by the way, street cred, we used to call it when we,
the first season of unarrested, anytime we would like go to do something, you know, David would
go, Cross would go like, man, that's lame, blah, blah, blah. And Jason and I would go, hey, street
cred, what should we do that's cool? He kept us on our toes. Arrested development is a great
example of a show that, you know, I consider that a height of comedy and it doesn't apologize or hold
your hand. I mean, you really have to pay attention. Oh, and even for us making it, I mean, we constantly
had to ask mature wits for, you know, comedic interpretation on all these incredibly smart
things he was writing. I mean, everything existed on multiple levels that you'd need 14 layers of
parenthetical to try to understand. It was very tough for me. I still don't get a lot of it.
Yeah, I love that. So if you were asking about David, David and I are a really great marriage of
a failure and a lot of success falling short, but we entertain each other. We make each other laugh
and we kind of compensate for each other. And the weird thing is in different ways. I mean,
he probably is funnier than me, but there are times when I'm bringing the jokes and he's bringing
the structure and we just really hand it off back and forth between inspiration and jokes and
creativity and structure and sort of focus and grounding the piece. And we just keep balancing
that out between ourselves. And it's hard to, um, I don't, I actually don't like thinking about it
too much, which is a good sign of like something that's kind of magical. You don't want to think
about it. It's like, if you're married for a long time, you just go, I just, yeah, I was just going
to say that. You can make, you could make the analogy to a good marriage where you identify,
well, we don't need two Bob Odenkirks. We got one great one. And so you don't want to marry
another Bob. You want to marry somebody who's a proper counterbalance or pleasant opposite to
who you are. And you kind of give them, going back to Will's point, her lane and you stay in your
lane, you know, David can make certain people laugh and you can make other people laugh and,
and that little combo, that cocktail just works so beautifully. And also that you don't need to
break it down. You don't need to understand why it works. It just doesn't. You can kind of move on.
And, uh, David makes me laugh. Same. I think more than any other person. Uh, I mean, Zach
Alfenakis, I think is super funny all the time. Incredible. I think Tim Heidecker is
one of the funniest people I know, but David's just like roll just so funny all the time.
He likes pranking more than I do. I'm not big into pranking people. He, that's a big part of
what David loves. It's a surprise is to do something that sets up the audience or whatever
that audience is. I mean, if you're in an elevator with David, he'll start saying something that
will disturb the people around you. And that's just, it's a private. And I put the word in quotes,
joke. Cause how is it funny? They're just, they didn't do anything. They didn't ask for a show.
But he loves that stuff. Even in this thing we're talking about right now, he keeps talking about
sort of misleads and, and it's like, all right, well, I mean, we'll do a few of them, but
he loves that shit. He just wants, well, you got to have David on.
I know. We can't make his deal. We just can't make his deal. Believe me. You guys, I, I don't
want to say, it was nice of you to want me to do this because you are all more famous than I am.
We like to talk to people that we're huge, huge fans of and try to make us a little bit smarter.
We, we love you. And we, I've always looked up to you and, and thanks for coming and doing this,
man. You're just such a huge talent. And I'm so excited for you that you have so many different
chapters and you keep fucking doing whatever you want to do. I think it's, I think it's so
rad. Fucking rad. Please direct another movie. Yes. Please, please. That's nice of you. Thanks.
Thanks for coming on the show. Thank you, Bob, for doing this. Thanks for having me, guys. We love
you. Bye. See you. You too. You know what? I didn't mention to, to Bob, but I wanted to,
when I first got my production office for my production company, I'm one of three actors
in town with a production company and they, he worked one level below me on the floor below me
and he just walked up the stairs one day. He knocked on the door and he goes,
Hey, I'm doing this animated series. Can you come down and do a voice really quick?
Oh, I thought he was going to ask you to just keep it down because he's, he's recording up there.
And the clogs that you were wearing at work were not working well for him. Right. No. He,
he just said, can you come down and do a voice? It'd be so fun. I was like, uh, yeah. I was like,
Bob Odenkirk just asked me to do a voice that was so awesome. He was so kind and I just,
I don't remember the name of the show. It was like the character's names were in the title
of the show, but I don't remember the name of the show, but it was great. It was Will and Grace
animated. Do you want us to, yeah, are we supposed to guess? Yeah, guess, go ahead and be a fun game.
Will, um, how did you, Will, how'd you make Bob Odenkirk's deal on that? So I, I just, um,
yeah, I mean, as, as you know, you guys have to do another movie together and things happen in
threes. You're, you got two. That's a great idea to remake for others. We should do it,
right? We should call Forte. That's so rad. At one point we, we made so little money the opening
weekend. Like I think it was like $545,000 opening weekend. It was a complete bust. It was on like
eight screens or something, but, uh, and I went to Tom Werner, the producer, and I said,
what if we remade it and the budget was what it made opening weekend? And he's like, great,
go for it. I'll sign that check today. And, uh, but that was like, you know, 10 years ago,
but I, I have thought like it'd be really funny to get that script was so good. It was me and
Forte and Kristen Wiig and, uh, shy McBride. And there are lots of people who are haters in it.
So many people are in it. It's, and it was a really fun, the script is brilliant.
Forte's writing is just brilliant. And the movie's pretty good, but it could have been,
as Bob said, we wanted it to be something else. And it, and it wasn't, and it was just one of
those things. And he, I think he, uh, was far too self deprecating to say that, you know,
that it was all his fault or that any failure of any movie as a director's fault, there's so
many other things, not to bore the audience to death, but, you know, the marketing and the date,
you know, the studio, the, the, the other films that are out there, you know, is there a storm
on the East coast? I mean, it's so many things. You guys did a great job with both those movies.
Yeah. I think, and, but, you know, it truly was, it was one of those things where I think a lot of
people had, a lot of us involved in it had regret about the way it turned out because the script
was so good. And Bob kind of out of the blue coming up to me and, and, uh, sort of making it
amends, if you will, almost really was, um, I think it took a lot, you know, showed he was a
really, he's a big person and was able to do that with no ego and just kind of go, Hey,
for my part, I'm sorry. And I was like, yep, same here. And it was, I thought it was really
awesome and a very cool, again, you don't get a lot that obviously in, in, in this business.
You know, a lot of people are happy to spread the blame.
Yeah. He seems like such a decent guy.
He is. He's a really decent guy. So anyway, it was, I'm so excited to have him on and
have always been and remain such a huge fan. And then to go from, to start as a writer,
you know, he and Conan wrote together and, and with Smigel and, you know, to write on,
on SNL, the write on Conan to then writing on the Ben Stiller show, to Mr. Show, to Larry Sanders,
direct a bunch and then do Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul and now has this action movie.
It's like, yeah, it's a great career. There's no, there are no limits. You know, we, I joked
with you, you know, about, about his lane. I mean, here's a guy who's like, there is,
I have no lane. My lane is whatever the fuck I want. I feel like doing in the moment. And for
me, that's inspiring. Yeah. Do what, do what takes you in the moment. You know, and even if you
want to look for spiders, great. Fill the morning, be late for work. I know. He spent the whole
morning looking for spiders and then kind of show up a little bit. It's hilarious.
It's hilarious. And then the phone rings. I love just the phone rings and he goes,
it's, it's Will and Grace, isn't it? Yeah. Well, you know, if you've been fired before,
you know that feeling. I, I've always known when I'm about to get fired and I get a call from
Prince Pado and he'd go, well, you were right. They're letting me go, right? Well, it's happened to me a couple of times. Sean, have you been fired?
Oh, you don't want to answer that? I'm sorry. Sorry. One more time. What were you saying?
Did you just, he's trying to buy out of here. I'll buy. Smart.