SmartLess - "Brad Paisley"
Episode Date: March 15, 2021The incredibly talented Brad Paisley shares his perfect blend of country and comedy while we all blush with a crush. "I'm takin' my baby out into this cornfield tonight"... is exactly how we... felt after the interview too. 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)
Hey guys, I'm Shawn Hayes here with Jason Bateman and Will Arnett, and we do a show
called Smart List, and it's one of us brings on a guest that the other two don't know about
it, and it's a surprise.
Oh my God.
Are you late for something?
Honestly.
What's wrong?
I'm telling people who haven't heard the show.
People have just turned it off hearing that.
All right.
And by the way, why do we need that people know what they have just clicked on?
We don't need to repeat.
Some people don't know what they're clicking on, man.
Can you imagine how drunk some people must be?
Well, that's true.
They're loaded.
They've had a couple and they're like, and they hit it by mistake.
They butt dialed the podcast.
Well, they better not throw up on our faces.
You're listening to Smart List.
Yeah, don't throw up.
Smart.
List.
Smart.
List.
Smart.
List.
Smart.
List.
Smart.
List.
Guys, I feel like we're stretched out real good right now.
I'm feeling, I'm ready for the game.
Wait, Will, Will, what are you really doing?
I'm just looking up some stuff.
I just, you know, I'm just, I'm getting ready to go.
Oh, it's your guest.
Right.
Right.
He's my guest.
And so this is prepping on our time.
No, here's the thing.
It's like, how do you, how do you save it for the guest, save it for the guest?
How do you, how do you introduce it when you're thinking about somebody who's like,
you want to think about what's the best way to introduce them?
What's the best way to do them justice and, and to honor?
It's all stuff that should have happened about an hour ago at the latest.
No, no.
Well, I'll tell you what, in lieu of.
Wait, how do you say it?
L-I-E-U, in lieu, in lieu.
Uh-oh.
Here comes the French.
On lieu.
By the way, you know, I had a dream last night that I was speaking full French and somebody
said, the worst part of this, before you roll your eyes, get ready to roll your eyes
at this part.
I was in a room full of people.
There was somebody there.
I spoke French to them.
And the other people said, oh, you speak French?
And I went, oh, yeah, I'm kind of fluent in French.
It was the, even I was disgusted by my own reaction in the dream.
Say, say, even I was disgusted by my own reaction and my dream in French.
Moi-même, j'étais, c'était dégoutant à moi-même, hein.
Wow.
Alors.
So listen.
Sounds like a real hockey player, yeah.
This, um, this guest that we have on, on this-
Are we doing this right now?
Are we in our podcast right now?
This is the show.
We're already in the podcast.
That's what's so great about the podcast space, as somebody told me it's called, is that we're
always in it.
The second we're, we're just, we're in it.
It's a space.
We're in it.
Yeah.
It's just so conversational, right Will?
I know it is.
It's just like you and I are just, we're just talking.
Sean's like on a party line, right?
Yeah.
And we were kids.
Sure.
Shut up.
This person is a, this person is an American icon.
An American institution in their own right.
This person has 14 number one hits.
What?
14.
Yeah.
Billboard hits.
This person is a, is a writer.
This person is a, a singer.
This person is a performer.
This person is sneaky hilarious.
This person is done, done, done, Mr. Brad Paisley, Brad Paisley, Sean, hello, Brad.
Jason, I've always wanted to hang with you and talk Dodgers.
So I'm hoping that's what we can do.
This is starting off great.
This is great.
Guys, you can go ahead and shut down.
Have you two never been to a baseball game together?
Well, we've been there at the same time, but we didn't actually drive in the same car
or anything.
How often do you go there?
How many games do you get to?
I probably get to 15 or 20 a year.
Wow.
Why don't, why don't we carpool or something or get snacks together?
That's great.
I'm a decent guy.
You're, you're, yeah, let's do it.
Will, tell him, Sean.
You know what?
I'll tell you, Brad, it's great to see you by the way.
Thank you so much for coming over.
Yeah.
Whatever, whatever, Will.
So Sean and I.
Wait, Will and Jason, do you know that Brad and I play this zoom mafia game with a bunch
of people like once, twice a week, every week.
Come on.
Yeah.
There's a zoom, there's zoom games.
Oh, it's fun.
There's zoom mafia.
It's a lot of fun.
Okay.
Who else is in the zoom mafia?
Now I want to know.
We haven't really talked about this.
It's kind of a circle of trust thing.
Are we allowed to talk about it?
Oh, maybe we're not.
How about initials and then we can guess.
We can cut it.
We can cut it.
If we have, if we have regrets, we can cut it.
Well, there's, it's a lot of the groundlings.
My wife sent it, but you know, a lot of the, a lot of the groundlings and, and it's, it's
a lot of fun.
It's actually something we tried when this began because we were doing these games at
Kevin Nielsen and Kevin and Susan Nielsen's house in person and having a ball.
And then we had this idea.
It's like, well, maybe it'll work on zoom and it actually does.
Yeah.
It's super fun.
Is Sean any good at it, Brad?
And I know you'll be honest.
No.
Do you have to talk like a mafia person?
Like you, you just like back your hair, Jason.
You talk like you did when you were 10.
Jason, have you.
Yeah.
Now you've played a mafia.
You played a doc worker in Philly before, right?
What was his name?
Yeah.
That was a, I believe it was called Philly boy.
Can you give us a little bit of that?
Can you give us a little bit?
Boy, it's, it's been so long because, you know, there is a difference between a New
York accent and a Philly accent.
I'm not sure you know that.
Can't wait to hear the difference.
What's the difference?
I don't know what that difference is, but that's what I was being screamed at while
I was doing, doing the movie because I was missing it.
Um, you feel like after all these years that you, maybe you forgot about it.
Oh God.
Wow.
Drop that, drop that pallet over here, just put it down to drive the forklift.
That's real.
That's actually really good.
Jason.
Well, I think we just lost our listener.
No.
But, uh, well, what I was going to say was first, just getting back to the baseball,
Brad, you have to understand the first time I went to a Dodger game with, with Jason,
I was really excited because he's a big Dodger fan.
This is such a terrible story.
It's, it's meaning it's hurtful.
It's not hurtful.
First of all, well, to me, it was, it was, I'll never forget it.
It was my worst nightmare.
It's not the first one.
The first game is not what you think it is.
I'll tell that.
The real thing, the story here was we get to the game, parks in his spot and Jason opens
up the glove box and there he's got two little sort of old school transistor radios that
you, with a one earpiece and he hands one to me and I go, what's this?
He goes, yeah, we listened to the game the whole time.
Oh, yeah, yeah, there's not a lot of talking.
So we get to the game, the whole experience and he puts his radio in and he's just zoned
out.
He's watching the game.
I'm like, yeah, baseball game with a guy and now we're not even, there's no chitchat.
Maybe the seventh inning like, Hey, you want to get some, yeah, we're not going to sit
there and visit for three hours.
I'll bet you he doesn't do that with other people.
That's a, there's a good chance.
I'd never do that to you, Brad, ever.
No, we would have meaningful discussions during the game.
Sure we would.
We get there early, right?
We'd stay late.
We'd help them clean up.
Unbelievable.
I mean, it's impossible, this environment and that, but the next one of the other times
I've been with, I've been, we've been a few times.
One time I went, Jason had a, he used to take his glove with him to catch the odd, you know,
foul ball.
You gotta stay ready.
And we joined the seventh inning.
He got to put it on the seat between us.
I picked up the mitt and we were just absentmindedly just chitchatting.
The game starts at this point, we were chitchatting full disclosure and Dave Roberts, who at the
time was playing for the Dodgers hits a foul ball.
And we both stand, it's coming towards us and it's coming right towards Jason, right
towards him.
And at the last second I reach in front of him with his own glove and snagged the foul
ball.
You caught a foul ball?
I caught it in front of Jason's hands.
Like he's got the glove for one batter.
I got it for one batter and I snag it and then I'm up on the jumbotron like, you know,
like a hero.
Like you hear about heroes all the time, but this is a real hero.
And then I look and everybody's like, yeah.
When I look at Jason's face, I looked through to him and he's so sunken and sad and upset.
Usually the person you're standing next to after you catch a foul ball is he's got nothing
but high fives loaded for you and I just couldn't have been sadder.
The disappointment losing from his body.
I don't understand.
You took the ball.
You handed me the mitt back.
I did.
I've still got the ball.
And I think you said, are you good to go?
I think you were ready to leave, right?
He was confused.
He was confused how long the third period was going to last.
Yeah.
We can keep it up.
Yeah.
He wanted to get out of there.
You know.
Anyway, so that's that's what you got to look forward to, Brad.
I'm excited for you.
I will have fun.
Yeah, we will.
I think it'd be great.
And we'll do lots of talking.
Brad, can you tell us?
Cause by the way, I was going to probably see you.
I'm not going to see you tonight, but I'm going to see you.
You're not going to be there tonight?
Wait.
No, I can't.
How are you guys all friends?
How do you guys know Brad Paisley for God's sake?
Where have I been?
You're wrong with my phone number, you dicks, we'll exchange and we're done and then it'll
be great.
You can be part of this magic.
Yeah, but it's my job to make them jealous for the next year or so.
We're just you and I.
We're moving in.
Yeah.
We're going to be like dressing in blue and white the whole time and yeah, face painting
each other.
You guys go, go start without me.
I'll catch up.
But listen, how do you guys know each other?
Sean and I are through our friends that we do Mafia with and then Will and I are.
Oh, sorry.
Don't send anything.
The chunks got something in his mouth, man, can you wait till we're done doing the podcast
where you start snacking?
Are we on a break?
I got to stay fueled up, man.
You have any idea what I'm doing over here on a physical.
It's obvious what you're doing.
You're tanning bed and you're like, look at you.
My tanning bed is called Planet Earth, Brad and CrossFit and tanning bed at this point.
It's unbelievable.
Yeah, get a job.
Most people would wear a darker color, but Will's got bright, white on to show off the
tan.
Yeah, makes a tan pop.
I knew there was, when I was putting this shirt on, cause I didn't have a shirt on for
most of the day.
Here we go.
Here we go.
I thought I am running the, I am really leaving myself open and then I thought, you know what,
fuck it.
Let them take their shots.
I'm going to let them punch themselves out and then I'm going to come back for them.
Wait a minute.
I have to jump in here.
Okay.
Brad, I saw your, the concert, it was amazing.
Thank you.
And will you tell people how that came together and like what you did and by the way, the
speech that you gave when you were playing the guitar, like all the kids and it was just
so moving and inspiring.
This was one of the graduation shows?
No, actually what this was was Bud Light sponsored us to set our whole, like basically
we set our whole tour up, an entire arena show, 60 foot video wall and then spent three
days setting it up, everybody wearing masks until the show started.
All the band members had to be 10 feet apart and we did our show live via YouTube and
Facebook and Bud Light paid for it and it was really neat because it was like the only
strange part is in between every song, like we had our lights, we had our video wall,
we had everything, but in between each song, it was no applause obviously.
Yeah.
Every now and then I was like, browbeat my sound guy.
Welcome to Will's world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right.
And Bud Light paid for it in Bud Light, right?
They paid for it in Bud Light.
They've been doing that for many tours that way.
So when you usually would say like, Detroit, you know, between, do you, what do you scream?
Is it YouTube?
YouTube.
Yeah.
That'll work.
You can also, you know, internet.
You can go.
Internet.
Digital.
So what's that like?
So you're at a full blown stadium arena or whatever and you're literally looking out
to an empty house.
It's, I would imagine it'd be like a reoccurring nightmare for you.
But it was shot so beautifully.
It looked so cool.
Plenty of room for camera moves out there, you know.
Yeah.
We had a drone flying around it.
Sure.
I'll bet you did.
You can't do that with an audience.
Yeah.
I mean, anybody well could, I guess, but it was really weird because it was normal in
the middle of this show and the spotlight's on and the lights are doing their thing.
And then you kind of forget about the audience anyway, half the time when you're playing
in the middle of a song.
And then after the song, it's like, well, we suck.
Yeah.
Nobody cared.
It was just so dead silent.
It's not how it was viewed at all.
I mean, it was.
So Brad, you do this huge concert that's put over the internet and it's massive and it's
weird because you're doing it in front of this, you know, no audience and stuff and that
sensation, how weird that is.
Take us back to your first tour.
What was that?
Well, where was it?
What was that?
How'd that come together?
That was really interesting because when you're new, you do everything free.
So because you don't have an audience.
So I had a struggling first single that took 37 weeks to get to number 12 on the Billboard
chart.
First single.
It was a good song, but you know, it is.
It was, we were begging and borrowing and stealing every bit of airplay we could get.
But my second single ended up changing everything and it was my first number one song.
It was actually the first, like it was kind of a tight ship at that time in country music.
They weren't letting anybody new in.
And it was the first number one single from a new artist in like five or six years.
Wow.
Wow.
And it was called He Didn't Have to Be and it was written about my best friend who's
a stepfather and it was written about a dad who is the dad he doesn't have to be.
And anyway, it just generated so much and I ended up winning awards for that and getting
nominated for a lot of things and that changed everything.
And what year was that about?
It went number one in 19, it came out in 1999.
I think it went number one in like January of 2000.
So you know, 20 years ago.
And but that first tour, it's like, I had, here's what's crazy.
I have the same band today that I had then.
From that first tour?
Yeah.
Same six guys are with me.
That's so great.
And we've been through it all.
I mean, when my, when I met Kim, my wife, she came out on the road with us and we had
to kick somebody out of their bunk because it was a 12 bunk bus and we had 12 people
on it, 12 bunks were taken.
So she ended up getting like the keyboard player's bunk and he had to sleep on the couch in
the front of the bunk.
That was that first tour when she came out.
And then she remembers when we got our trailer that you could pull behind the bus with gear
in it.
We weren't renting things anymore.
And that was huge.
So that's kind of nice that she saw us go from that to...
Brad, I toured with Kenny Rogers.
Yes, you're hearing that correctly.
How?
What?
Doing what?
What were you doing with him?
Christmas elf and it was his Christmas tour and I slept on those buses too.
And I hated it.
I don't understand how you can do that for 20 years.
I mean, do you don't mind being on the road and living in those quarters on those buses?
It was just...
We do it different.
See, Nashville is so centrally located.
We don't have to go six months.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
It's like leave Thursday night, be home Saturday night.
Oh, then forget it.
And that's kind of fun.
Yeah.
I mean, and yeah, it's all right.
You're not supposed to go to the bathroom on the bus.
Is that right?
Do I have that right?
Not true.
And in a lot of the lease buses, that's true.
In ours, we have what's called a grinder.
And it's...
So do we.
It goes...
And it...
Yeah, there you go.
Is that the one you swipe?
Is that the dudes or the girls?
Oh, look, and I'm asking so innocently.
Yeah, it's the guys.
I'm not sure.
It's the guy's face.
It's the guy one?
Okay.
It's the guy.
And if you like somebody, you go left or do you go right?
Either way on that one.
Okay.
You just go straight up.
Yeah.
Okay.
Let's do this.
Sorry.
Will's still chewing.
We can hold.
Hold on.
We'll wait on Will.
No, no.
I took this opportunity because I didn't have anything to add to the grinder session.
The grinder session?
Yeah.
So explain to me what a grinder does, Brad, on the bus.
Oh my God.
Think of it as like a food disposal, but it's the other end of the food spectrum.
Yeah.
Yeah, but why would you need to grind it up?
That's not the problem.
It seems like you'd be agitating the odor by blending it.
Well, you'd think, but it works surprisingly well.
I think what happens is it liquefies it before it ends up in the septic tank on the bus.
Will, go ahead and enjoy your balance bar.
This is horrible.
Will actually wanted me to ask this.
He was too embarrassed to ask you.
Asked me to ask you, which direction did the wheels and the bus go?
Round and round, actually.
Yeah.
Well done.
That's our first break, everybody.
Now, what about videos?
What kind of lane do the videos take in today's sort of music industry?
Are they helpful or are they just additive?
They've been relegated to the, to the berm of the highway.
We're just not even really doing them.
You don't, you don't really make them anymore at all.
We do them, but they don't matter like they did.
Like they used to be that you'd air them on television.
They don't even on television, even shows them anymore.
And it's so like when you make a video, it's kind of a promotional tool and it's a little
more like you want it to be something interesting to watch on Instagram more than you do, more
than you care about.
Do you pay for it or is the record company pay for it?
How do you split it with them?
You would think that it would be a relevant and an attractive piece of media considering
yeah, all the like Instagram watching and the tick talking, whatever the hell is going
on.
I mean, to watch your favorite artists sing the song that you love there on your phone,
you're listening to it already on your phone.
You would think.
And in fact, isn't there, there's, I was watching my daughter, she had some, one of these pop
stars singing a song on the, on her iTunes and on the iTunes, on the iTunes, you could
touch the screen and you see the, the artist might not necessarily be singing the song,
but they're doing some other stuff or wouldn't, what, what does that call?
Is that like today's video?
Uh, yeah, I'm not sure what that is necessarily because I'm as old as you.
But I think that I see Spotify did something awesome for a while.
They did vertical videos.
And so you'd hold your phone and it would be, you had to make it specifically for Spotify.
And when you were listening to the song, you could do that.
And it's a video of the artist made that's just for Spotify that was like straight up
and down.
That's what it is.
Some artists, it still comes up when you on Spotify.
I like that.
I think that's cool.
But you'll get more views on the Lyric video these days, half the time than you will on
something like 300,000 dollars.
Those things are huge.
Yeah.
What's a Lyric video?
It's basically the bouncing ball.
It's like the words go across the screen as.
Yeah.
So everybody can learn it.
Yeah.
But with, with a visual of you, of you performing the song as well.
No.
It's just the words.
Oh, yeah.
I get another reason you should learn how to read, Jason.
I mean, right there.
Yeah.
It sounds exhausting.
Yeah.
It's not worth honestly.
Wait a minute though.
Are you, so Brad, are you saying that and Jason, are you both saying that the video,
like making a music video is, is required, but kind of pointless at the same time?
Like, because I, you know, everybody for years was like, is MTV, is MTV going to come back
with videos?
Remember BH1 MTV, all they would play in music videos and we would associate, I would give
us something to associate the song with and now you have just the song, but I can't imagine
like, well, Will, like you're saying too is like, it seems like it's just a viable outlet
to promote the song and the label would have, would back it.
Little mini movies.
They were fantastic.
And they were so engaging, just as little pieces of sort of narrative that it got to
the point, so I understand it, that bands had to be told and they were required to at
least for two or three seconds in every video, be playing their instruments.
Like you had to show, you had to, it was like a legal requirement that you had to be playing
your instruments for like three, otherwise you can, you know, walk around and be jumping
in pools or whatever the hell the video is, but you'd literally had to be seeing, playing
your instruments, seeing the song for a little bit because they became such engaging little
tiny mini movies.
Yeah, that's probably, that's probably the case.
I mean, in our town, some did better than others.
I had a great run where I had some that really mattered.
The first one that really mattered for me was that was like bigger than the song at first,
which was a song kind of, I'm going to miss her, which is a funny song about fishing.
And it's basically the hook of the song is, you know,
Get it?
The hook?
Yeah.
If I hit that fishing hole today, she'll be packing all her things and she'll be gone
by noon chorus while I'm going to miss her, you know, and at the end of the chorus, it's
like, oh, lookie there, I've got a bite.
And so I had this idea and I went to the label and I said, I want to get, I'm going to throw
the book at it and I want to hold a fake fishing tournament.
Dan Patrick will be the announcer.
And then second half of the song, all the wives, I'm going to have some other country
singers and stuff in it.
All their wives end up on the Jerry Springer show, mad at us talking about how their husbands
have abandoned them.
And we did all that.
Like we pulled that off that things still exists.
And as you can imagine, that was sort of like a watershed moment for me because I went in
there and kind of called my shot.
And I sort of pointed at the left field wall and I'm going to get all these people and
I didn't know Jerry Springer.
I didn't know Dan Patrick at the time, but I called him up and they did it.
But you'd had, you'd had a fair bit of success by that point, right?
Couple of, I'd had, I'd had two number ones at that point.
Yeah.
That'll do it.
What was that feeling?
Cause as I alluded to when, when, uh, when I did the intro that you've had, I think it's
14, uh, number one.
It's 22, but it's fine.
Yeah.
A whole nother touchdown.
Wow.
Um, we all know who, but I mean 22.
So, so 22.
So now it's kind of like, yeah, 22, but I mean that first number one, was that, that
moment, would you remember that moment of like,
It was great.
Cause here's what it was.
It's that first song I was telling you about that was like, I didn't even think it'd be
a single.
It was this really heartfelt song about the plight of sort of a stepdad trying to sort
of be everything his kid needs.
And we were in a battle to try and get number one.
The way number one's work, it's like anything in our industry and your industry too, where
it's just politics and it's a game and it's who got the most spins that week and a lot
of times that's manipulated and purchased and, you know, it's flyaways and giveaways
and all these things to get it there and, and, uh, we were in a just knocked down drag
out battle for number one, the week it was going and I went to WSM to be on the radio
on a Monday morning, which is the oldest radio station in country music.
It's the place where the opera started in the twenties and it's AM and I went and did
an interview with the woman that was the DJ there and she's still on to this day.
And we were talking about the song and she's like, I really hope this goes number one today.
I know you guys are trying and I'm driving home from the Grand Ole Opera House and I'm
on the interstate and I'm, and I'm listening to WWVA driving down the road and she comes
on and says, Brad Paisley, if you're listening, your song just went number one on the radio
station.
That's incredible.
That was, I had to like pull over.
I was like, I couldn't keep driving.
I'll bet you that the second number one felt pretty good too, because if you had any doubt
that maybe the first one was like, ah, you know, maybe I'm a one hit wonder or maybe
I'll never be able to do it again or whatever.
Like boom, did it again.
And then the third one is like, oh, I'm going to be around a while now.
Well, all of them were a struggle.
They were all a struggle in the beginning.
Like the first three weren't, it wasn't like I set the world on fire.
My third single went to 16 and died.
It was still kind of a hit, but it didn't have the legs to go all the way up the chart.
Sort of like me.
I don't have the legs either.
Never have.
Your legs are beautiful, Brad.
Don't say that.
Thanks.
I appreciate that.
So that one went number one and then the one after it, we struggled to get it to number
two and it went all the way to number two and it wasn't really set in the world on fire.
And that's when I went into my record label after that fourth single and I'd had two
number ones, but every other song was sort of a lot of work and I begged them to let
me release this fishing song and they just kept saying women are going to be offended
by that.
They're going to be so offended that you're saying you want to go fishing instead of
stay with your girlfriend and it was like, I don't think they are.
I think they know us and it set the world on fire in my industry and my album was like,
at the time, here I was with a song that went to number two and my album was like 35 on
the chart.
My album went from 35 to two in three weeks when the fishing song came out.
Wow.
Have you gone fishing with Kimmel?
No, I never have, but he goes up and goes fly fishing with like Huey Lewis every year
I know.
Do you do fly fishing your thing or do you do a different kind of fishing?
I can.
I'm not as good at it, but I love it.
Do you go?
I've never have, but the way he talks about those trips, I'd like to learn just to go
on it.
You should jump on that.
We should plan one and do that sometime.
We were going to go, we went on like spring break together with all the kids and stuff
and it was Molly's birthday and we're in this beautiful place and there was like lots
of fish and Jimmy's like, anybody want to go fishing?
And of course we were like, no, Jason and I did not go and Jimmy went out with the guy.
Yeah, but he's getting up at four in the morning and Jack asked in three hours to whatever
the fishing hole is, but I'm talking about like these are like dedicated trips where
you got to like pack in with a bunch of horses and stay in a lodge and things like that.
That sounds good from here, but I'd probably start whining about thread count as soon as
I got up there.
You know, these sheets are too rough.
My nipples are raw.
Absolutely.
I can get that.
Brad, I have a cheesy songwriting question.
So Brad, when you and I play, you know, mafia through zoom with all of our friends, Brad
off the top of his head, it made me laugh.
So off the top of his head, it was something like this whole town is so fucked up, a whole
bunch of whores in pickup trucks, like, but like it was a whole song like in at the top
of your head, which is so mind blowing.
We did a mafia where I scored the session basically, where somebody died and we'd start
singing something.
Yeah.
It was so funny.
It was a lot of fun.
Unbelievable.
So how do you do that?
A and B, because I think that's remarkable.
And one of the cheesiest all time questions, anybody could ask a songwriter, but I'm always
intrigued because everybody has a different process, lyrics first or music first and why?
I think that it could be either on the lyrics or music.
It's just, for me, it's never that hard to kind of find a melody for something if I have
a good idea of what a great lyric ought to be.
Like if I have a good idea, a good idea is like the kind of thing that you're like, oh,
man, I got to write that and the melody will find it.
But lyrics are the hard part.
That's the part that you don't, you don't want, I don't like things that are cliched
and feel totally just tired and retread.
I love those songs.
Those are my favorite.
Are they?
Yeah.
But for help for lyrics, like do you like read poetry?
Do you look at certain authors?
Do you?
Yeah.
I mean, it can be anywhere.
There's a songwriter in Nashville named John Ims who's written some big songs over the
years.
I saw him say something once at a writer's night, a Bluebird writer's night and it stuck
with me and it was, don't expect output if you don't have input.
If this was a computer, you have to have input.
I mean, it's like, so read and, and listen to things and watch movies and all of it.
I mean, I've gotten songs from the strangest lines.
I think there's a, a rest of development line that I used as a basis for a hook of a song
once.
And I can't remember which one it was.
I had a song called Sleeping on the Fold Out on my first album that's literally from
Seinfeld.
Remember when, remember, that's about basically, then the chorus of the song is an old fashioned
country, like sleeping on the fold out, thanks to me and my big mouth.
Why did I say what I said or whatever?
Um, you know, your wife basically makes you sleep on the couch and it came from when,
when Jerry's like going down to Florida and, and George is like, you know, you can sleep
on the fold out.
He's like, yeah, God, my back will never be the same, you know, and it's like, oh, that's
pretty good country.
I'll sleep it on the fold out.
That's so you, that's so incredibly country.
That's one of the great things about country makes it so accessible because it talks about
just these, these things, these real life and like me and my big mouth, I got to sleep
on the, on the fold out.
Um, it's like, you know, you know, this old truck, she, she broke down and now I'm just
looking for my dog.
Right.
Hang on.
Let me write all this down.
Yeah.
I mean, this just pours out of him.
This pours out of him.
But I love it.
There's, but it's so, so great.
So it makes it so like there, there is that kind of, I don't know, what is it, folk poetry?
Like it, it is like this thing that, and it, and it's sort of the narrative of your life
and what's going on and the day to day and obviously some of it's much bigger, but there
is that thing that makes it so immediate that people can relate to in the, in its immediacy.
It's, it's not esoteric.
I had really good teachers in that like one of my songwriting partners is a genius whose
father was a songwriter and who did great and his name is Chris Dubois and he always
used to just brutally critique my songs in a great way.
And he's, he's somebody that we own a publishing company together.
But he's the kind of guy that's like, don't do that.
You wouldn't say that.
And that's a big thing with country songs.
It's like, you wouldn't say that.
So why would you put that in a country song and the best ones, whether you're listening
to stuff like the, the old Harlan Howard songs or something from R format and Johnny Cash
or anything like that, or even John Prine, who I'd consider practically a country writer
in so many ways.
It's just like, you wouldn't say that.
Don't sing it.
It's like, that's, that's a big problem.
It's like, when you can't put your finger on why you don't like a line in a song, it's
usually, oh yeah, I'd never say that.
Like there's pet peeves for me of, of songs that'll say, you know, instead of saying it
the way you'd say it, they rhyme a word, it's like, you know, snow that's white or something,
you know, and it's like, you wouldn't say snow that's white because you would just, it's
freaking snow.
You just, right.
What is the, I think, I think anybody would agree, as soon as you start hearing a country
song, you know it's a country song, irrespective of the, of the lyrics, there is a, there's
a sound to a country song and it's not just a slide guitar.
What is, is there an, an element, a component, a, a recipe that, oh no guys, we've got to
change it.
This sounds too much like a rock song where this sounds too much like a disco song or this
like, like, what do you have to have in a country song for it to be in the lane that
the expectant audience is looking for?
I think you're hitting the nail on the head in one way and that it's, there's always
something that makes it there.
If you have a rock beat and a lyric about something completely sort of urban, it's not
a country song.
But if you have a rock beat and you're singing about, I'm taking my baby out into this cornfield
tonight.
Right.
Yeah.
We're gonna lay in the bed of my truck.
You could be as heavy metal as you want.
It's a country song.
Right.
You could have a, something where there's a banjo underneath and it's like, well immediately
that becomes a little inbred.
That's good, but there's, but there's not, there's not, there's not a melodic, essential
ingredient.
Yeah.
I think there is, but I'm not sure exactly what.
Yeah.
I think it's that there's that one thing that feels, and sometimes it's the singer.
Like somebody asked Waylon Jennings once, what makes a song country is like, when I sing
in its country.
Yeah.
They have something like, yeah, right?
Yeah.
Well, I tell you right now, and it's like, you could sing, you know, you know, come on
baby, I'm living on a prayer and it's like, that's country all of a sudden.
Is there a genre of music that you just will not listen to that you just do not like?
Well, that was, I was going to say, what would we be surprised?
I listened to a lot of other stuff.
I listened to less country these days than I did early on in my life.
I, you know, I listened to a lot of, I like alt rock.
I really do.
Like, I like everything from obscure British bands to I love like Dawes, you know what I'm
talking about?
But they're kind of country, but that like, that's a great, you know, I like Coldplay.
I like all that.
I like, where do you put Wilco?
They're, they're sort of a country hybrid, right?
Absolutely.
I love Wilco.
I love Wilco.
Do you know that band before, do you like Uncle Tupelo, that band that used to be the
Wilco and something that came out of?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
They freaked me because they get away with little tricks that it's like, oh, I'm going
to try to do that kind of thing right there.
Tweety's always thinking of something that's like, oh, that's pretty neat.
There's like sonic sort of atmospheric sort of soundscape at times, right?
And then they'll go right into a, do a banjo sort of typical four, four or something.
And, and yeah, that's, it's really interesting.
What about, what about other classic like Americana bands like, like REM?
What would you think?
Yeah.
Was that the, did you listen to them?
Absolutely.
Well, they were, yeah.
They were in school.
So, yeah.
I mean.
Where did you go to school?
I mean, like college?
Yeah.
College.
I went to Belmont in Nashville.
Oh, okay.
I moved here to go to Belmont University, but I'm from West Virginia.
So, I mean, see, I, I got out of getting beat up in high school by learning how to play
Clapton and Van Halen stuff on the guitar, you know, so it'd be like, it was like a scene
in one of those, in Thriller or something where they're about to beat me up and it's
like, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, like whip out of ukulele and you're all set.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So, so then knowing all that to Shawn's original point, which I cut in on, what will
you not listen to?
That's a good question.
I don't like steel drum music.
I mean, you know what I'm saying?
Like that, that immediate, like reggae.
I like, I like reggae to a point, but like steel drum music, that's something about that
instrument bothers me.
Sure.
You probably had a bad experience with, with some undercooked chicken, one of those carts.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
A little, you know, rhino virus on a cruise and steel drums are never the same.
Rhino virus.
Where are you on that, that, that, that yelling, the yelling rock?
What's it called?
Oh, death metal.
They're screaming.
Yes.
Death metal.
You love that, right?
Well, I don't, but here's the thing that's fun about it.
Hey, Pops.
Captain Jason holding a newspaper as a car goes by and his neighbor would go, turn down
that yelling, turn down that rocket.
I do something really fun with my kids.
So there's liquid metal as a channel on serious and then there's fifties on five.
Okay.
So if you take on your car dial and you put liquid metal and fifties on five side by side
and you save them on your presets, go back and forth.
It's the greatest entertainment in the history of life because it's like all the chapel bells
were rang death, death, death, death, death.
You go back and they were singing in the square, you know, I'm gonna kill you baby.
I'm gonna rip your guts out and you go back and forth and it's fantastic.
Are they old enough to love that?
How old are they?
They're 11 and 13.
Yeah.
We've been doing that for years though.
They would howl.
Like every now and then we get one where it was like, you know, something about, you know,
the sweet little angel and then all of a sudden die.
Yeah.
Now is that a boy and a girl?
Girl and a boy.
Two boys.
Two boys.
How is that?
11 and 13.
That sounds boy, two boys.
Have you, how many times you've been in the emergency room?
Let's see.
Three.
Three times.
Three in total.
What about you, Will?
Are you there yet?
Oh, we've been a few times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We've had multiple stitches.
You're past three.
I've had multiple times with my 11 year old with Archie where he's like getting stitches
on his head and his toe and I'm having to help hold him down and he's looking at me
going, why?
I'm like, it's heartbreaking, man.
How many you have, Jason?
You have?
I got two girls, 13 and eight.
Oh man, that's not easy.
Only one emergency room visit.
And that was for yourself, right?
Yes.
Yes.
For my broken heart because they weren't listening, Shawn.
I get it.
I get it.
No, but that 13 year old's really starting to run her mouth.
So we could end up back there pretty, pretty soon.
I get it though.
My 13 year old, the boy, it's like there was this day where it switched.
It was like, wait a minute, what the heck is that?
It's at 11, right?
It's at 11, isn't it?
Well with him, it was like he turned 13 and Kim was out of town and so we had had the
best night.
I mean, we had done this thing called lava charging, which is this game we play where
I'm tossing them in the pillows and we've been doing that since they were two.
And then I made them warm milk before bed, we did something else and then they asked
if they could do one more thing, which was like one other fun thing we do.
And I said, no, it's bedtime.
And he just went like immediately just like, you know what, dad?
It is so stressful when mom's gone and I can't wait for her to come back.
And I, oh my God, I was like, this 13 year old came out and I went, oh, I get it.
Look, I know what you're doing.
And he went, what do you mean?
And I said, I was you and it's not going to work.
I said, here's why it's not going to work.
You're trying to hurt my feelings.
You know what?
I love more than anything, Huck.
I love being with you guys.
And guess what?
I would not say to you, I can't wait for mom to get back.
I wouldn't say that because I love this time together and I said, and you're trying to
hurt me and it's not working because it didn't hurt.
I said, I know what you're doing.
And he went, he started crying and he was like, I'm so sorry.
I'm so beautiful.
And I was like, okay, I'm Andy Griffith folks.
I am Andy Griffith.
You know what?
That's right.
Brett, I've got a suggestion.
Maybe this is a different way.
Next time he does that, you go, hey, you know what, man, you hurt my feelings and you need
to know when I get low and my feelings are hurt, I write a hit song and you just made
me millions of dollars.
So go ahead and keep doing it because I am going to write a heartbreak song.
I'm going to try that tactic next.
Yeah.
Sean and Scotty don't have to worry about any of this stuff, do you?
Yeah.
No, Scotty and I don't have kids.
Like my favorite quote, I think I ever read in my life was I'd rather regret not having
kids than have them and regret it later.
So I, it's healthy.
That's good.
Right.
Right.
But yeah, we always talk about having kids and I'm like 90% there.
He's probably like 85% there, but neither of us are 100% because if he was like, oh
my God, I want kids so bad, I'd be like, at least there's one of us I can hand the child
off to right because they want that, you know, that's, that's what in laws or nannies or a
night nurse or, or school, that's what schools forced daycare until about 10th grade.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Sean and I have worked on a couple of shows together.
My kids come and visit a lot and he'd just be like, Jesus, these kids, can you just do
it?
No, I do not.
I do not.
The thing about all of what I just said is I absolutely, truly do love kids.
No, he does.
I just think they're awesome.
I just don't.
It really seems like it.
Yeah.
Sean, why don't you just wait a little while longer, you know, start when you're 60 maybe
when the kids, if they're the little people, they're the smaller ones that are, yeah, can
you guys have pictures or just get on it, Sean?
You're going to love it and you got time to get your head around it while the kid learns
how to walk and talk.
It lets the parents to become parents.
The adults.
Look, I have nineties in nephews.
I have God kids.
I love all of them.
I love spending time with them.
Name one of them.
Name one of them right now.
Well, you know what?
Do not play these games with me.
Yeah.
Sean, do you work for JPL or is that just a hat?
I moonlight.
I moonlight there.
I build, I built the rover.
The Mars rover.
Oh, cool.
Yeah.
I had a hand in that.
No, I'm a fan of astronomy, sci-fi, science, all that kind of stuff.
So I have gone on a couple tours at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California
because it's close.
And I actually did see the rover before it went to Mars.
So it was wild to see in person a piece of spacecraft that actually is on another planet
right now.
Yeah.
You must crush ass.
What a catch.
What a catch you are.
Yeah.
With that intro, you could become the president of the JIS Propulsion Laboratory.
It's just incredible.
Who says I'm not?
Jesus.
And here's our expert and propellant.
JIS Propulsion Laboratory.
You know, Brad, I wanted to say this is the worst segue.
I just want to say hi to all the kids out there who are looking for inspiration listening
to our podcast.
So Brad, so you have all these hits, you're a huge, you're a huge story.
I've stopped stroking my ego like I'm the JIS Propulsion expert on here.
This is what I'm getting to, the JIS Propulsion aspect of your life.
No, what I wanted to say was, but you do all this stuff and contribute and then you become
and then you start, well, first of all, you start doing these ads with Peyton Manning.
I want to know, were you guys friends before you guys started doing these ads because they
became OmniPresent and I think that that's, it's a big campaign, but that's something
that like opened you up to people who weren't necessarily familiar with that, with your
music or that genre.
How did that happen?
And were you, I always wanted to know, were you guys buddies?
We didn't know each other that well.
We'd seen each other at some things and we're very complimentary and I liked him.
I mean, I'd been around him some, he, he's a comedic genius, honestly, I mean that.
And I'm not throwing that out lightly.
He really, I've never seen anybody who's from the sports world that understands that,
like he does.
He understands.
I've long said he's the best comedic athlete of all time, without a doubt, I think.
His comedy chops are just, he knows who he is.
And so the way it came about was nationwide is on your side.
They're on our side.
They had this idea for a campaign that was really fun.
That was, what if there's more to the song than you know?
And they're like, we want you to write like a verse about a guy that, you know, backs
his RV over the flower bed after he buys it for retirement.
And so I did that and when did some commercials for them, just with a guitar, like, and in
passing when we were sitting there, they said, what else do you think we could do with this?
And I said, well, I think what would be fun is if Peyton basically starts telling me how
to do this.
And the next thing you know, they've booked a session and the first ads we did were me
in the studio.
I sort of sang like a line and I'm like, what do you think he's like better, but come here.
And he starts like teaching me how to sing on the camera and everything.
And it was way more comedy gold than I could have even imagined.
They're great.
They're really great.
I remember when he came on SNL and my ex-wife is on there and he was just like, he was just
so much better and so much more than everybody expected.
He was hilarious.
I remember him on there.
But anyway, so you do those things and they're huge.
And then did that kind of like change, did you notice a change, like a shift?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's interesting because it's a risky thing when you do a commercial, as you know,
Will, because they can really backfire and people can look at you with less respect when
it's over.
You know what I mean?
Oh, I'd love to pull over here for one second and go down Will's commercial cannon right
now.
Well, should we do it alphabetically?
Listen, that's a lot of fun.
You know what they're all saying, there's no selling out, there's only buying in.
We'll be right back.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's the thing though is when you sign up for one of these campaigns, you're just,
it's like, you hope it's going to be as great as you hope.
And then in the end, it's like, it's rare that it's something that's that much fun.
Like when we film these, it's so much fun anyway, and we have a ball and then, and a
lot of them are ad-libbed.
Like there's one where we're going down the road and he's trying to tell me how to write
a song and that one where we're on that bus, that was all ad-libbed and that's one of
the better ones.
It's just really, it's really something I would do, don't tell them this, but I would
do it for free because it's so much fun, but I'm not going to.
You can tell, and you guys, and you guys seem like old friends too.
I mean, it really reads that you guys have a period.
And we are now.
Yeah.
We really are.
Like one of the most eye-opening moments of this pandemic has been on a Saturday night,
I'm walking down to the barn on our farm and I'm just like, my phone, I look down, there's
a text from Peyton.
He's like, hey, jump on this zoom right now.
And I go, boom.
And I jump in this zoom and he's like, okay, Brad Peyton was there and it's him and a bunch
of football players and he's like, and a newscaster and somebody else and he's like, okay, get
one famous person from Rolodex and put him in right now.
And so I texted Darius and I'm like, Hey, what are you doing?
He's like, I'm watching the R Kelly documentary.
And I'm like, take a break, I'll tell you how it ends.
And then shower and then yeah, right.
So he jumps on and then Dan Patrick jumps on and Kevin Hart.
And this was a Saturday night and it was everybody having like a zoom drinking session, famous
people, crazy weird.
And it was awesome.
It was like, oh, this is, this is really wild.
These are people out of never ever just hung out with on a Saturday night in another way
probably.
And it was a lot of fun.
Yeah.
I think people discovered a lot of new ways to hang out, communicate, work during all
this.
There are some silver linings, I think, I hope.
And Sean and I are having a ball with what we're doing.
I mean, that, that whole group we're in is really fun.
It's the best.
This is the fake, fake killing people stuff.
Fake killing people.
Yeah.
But it was, Sean hasn't really given yet again, a good explanation as to why he can't get
on tonight.
Like what is he possibly doing?
I know, I agree.
Okay.
Do you want to know for real?
Obviously, your power going out again.
Sean's power went out for 24 hours and you'd think that this guy, it's unbelievable.
That the pandemic was nothing compared to that.
Why don't you get a generator, Sean?
Yeah, that's right.
They make it up.
Why don't you, why don't you stay there and mind your own business?
So the.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
No.
Scotty has some friends that he, a group of friends that he has that they're all kind
of like Trekkies and they all like, you know, so I call them the apple dumpling gang.
So he has a zoom meeting with the apple dumpling gang tonight.
Boy, once again, just the ass crushing that must go on.
All right.
You guys are the nerdiest gay guys I've ever known.
1,000 percent.
Consistently too.
Different breed.
Yeah.
So after you're done thinking about science and space and all that stuff, then it's to
the trek.
You keep it on, on the same sort of theme.
Yeah.
Well, now, yeah, I am not a Trekkie.
I'm more like a Star Wars person.
Yeah.
How dare us, right?
You just into rockets and stuff.
Yeah, right.
So Brad, I'll go fishing with all the guys, but I'll probably bring a bunch of sci-fi
DVDs, a bunch of Star Wars DVDs and you'll be in cosplay, Star Wars cosplay.
Yeah.
That's right.
It's hosting Dresden's Luke.
Do you guys ever do like a, like a, like a cosplay, like a two different worlds, the
Star Wars versus Star Trek, like lightsaber battle?
That would be great.
If I could get a video of you in sky.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We don't actually use the actual lightsabers.
We use other things.
I'll bet you don't.
On that note.
Yeah.
Thanks, Sean.
Thanks for ruining everything.
Oh, said the guy who called me jizz propulsion laboratory.
You're the president.
That's right.
I don't just hand those hats out.
Brad, you've been a very, very nice man, a very good sport.
I've had fun.
Thank you very much for doing this.
I'm honored to, honored to talk to two of you guys.
It's been.
I'm looking forward to our, to our, our friendship coming up in our, our Dodger games.
We are definitely going to a Dodger game one way or another.
How often are you out here in LA?
Two of us at a game.
Amazing.
Well, on a, on a typical, I'm going to pretend I didn't hear him say that on a typical like
timeframe, we'd probably once a month for a week at least.
All right.
Yeah.
We're out there a lot, but I go all the time.
So we'll go, we'll go hang out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We may have to wait for a while, but at least we've got this, right?
We've got our zoom session.
We've got our podcast episode and, and plans for the future.
Yeah.
What's better than that, y'all?
Hands in, you see the way I ended on a real up note like that instead of the jizz stuff
you were going with.
Will, by the way, even, even in the best of times, as if Jason would put his hand into
touch somebody else's hand, there's no way it'd be bald up, be bald up with a sleeve
over it.
You got to know this, Brad, Brad, you're going to see this and when you guys start hanging
out, he'll go, if you go to get somebody, he goes as soon as you go to sit down at the
table, he goes in, he goes to the bathroom to wash his hands and he comes out like he's
going into surgery.
He washed his hands to the elbow.
I mean, and, and, and you can't.
I kicked the chair out and it kicks the chair.
I won't touch the menu anymore.
So I got to order first, then, then go to the boil.
Hey, I'm exactly with you.
I won't touch the menu either.
By the way, I have one bone to pick with Jason now that I've met him.
You were the, were you a guest on Knight Rider?
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
I drove the kick car 15.
I was so happy.
I was your age when that happened and I was so pissed at you.
That a kid got to do that.
A great week.
Right.
Yeah.
It was a very quick yes for me.
I bet.
I'm just so upset about it still.
You've been watching TV as long as I have.
We got stuff to cover.
I'm not going to bring the radio for our game.
That's my promise.
That'll be really, that'd be really mean.
That would mean a lot to me actually.
Wow.
Well, how does it make you feel?
Well, yeah.
Sean, I'll just go hang with you and pretend that I don't know sports exist.
You give me that foul ball back and I'll bring you another game.
We'll watch the Mandalorian second season.
Well, thank you, Brad.
Man, you're a prince of a dude.
Thanks, man, for coming on here.
You too, Will.
It's been great and we'll see you soon.
I'll put you guys, I'll send you each other's digits.
How about that?
Boy, thanks, Willie.
Thanks, Will.
That's really cool.
Cool way to put it too.
I'm going to make it.
I'm going to make it.
I got all the cool things.
I got it on a ticker tape that comes out here with all the cool experience.
Thanks, Brad.
Thanks, guys.
God bless you.
Good luck.
See you, man.
Good luck with everything.
See you soon.
Bye, guy.
So, wait, Will, did you not know that I knew Brad?
I didn't know that you guys knew each other.
No.
Oh, yeah.
And I can't check because I don't want to get like, hey, I'm going to have a guest on.
I don't want to tell you it is, but do you know Brad Paisley?
Right.
Well, how long have you guys known each other?
You know what?
All the bits and all the jokes everybody made about my gong show.
I had Brad on as a, he came on as a judge on the gong show.
And well, tell people you are a producer of the gong show.
Yeah.
I executive produced the gong show when we brought it back a couple of years ago.
And I asked a lot of people to come and do it.
Some people said yes and some people said no.
That's how it went.
And Brad came on and he was terrific.
And some people said no.
And some people said no repeatedly.
Uh-oh.
And then changed their number.
So, Brad.
Don't make this weird.
So, Brad came on like a good, he was a good guy, like a good guy does.
Where he'll do something for you if he asks you to do it.
Yeah.
And that's what, because he's a good person and he's selfless and he's not, you know,
selfish.
So anyway, so, so, so.
Wait a minute.
Did you ask Jason to do it?
Oh, that's the kind of people, you know, and that's, and that's how we won.
And that's how we won the world war two because we were just selfless in that way.
And then some people were heroes and some people were not.
Some people are at home pushing pencils and worried about their own, you know.
Oh, so Jason.
Doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter.
Doesn't matter.
It's unrelated.
Some people were at home.
Okay.
Anyway.
Some people at the beach of Malibu.
Okay.
So, point is, point is.
So that was super fun.
How great was Brad?
The best.
I'm so glad that you guys are friends.
And Jason.
I'm about to be friends.
It's a real love affair.
I'll steal them from both of you guys.
Yup.
It's a real love affair that's blooming here.
We can have visitation, right?
Yeah.
You guys could, you could, you felt that, right?
Well, I was, I'm not crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, not at all.
If you had, if you had anticipated that it was going to be Brad and that you guys were
going to get along so well, would you have done a little bit more manscaping before?
Would you have cleaned yourself up a little bit?
I would have definitely done my hair that you can see for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The manscaping, I don't think it's.
But just to feel good, but just so you can, it reads if you feel better.
Yeah.
I feel great about what's going on down there.
No, no, I feel, I feel good.
I tightened a lot up yesterday.
Okay.
Good.
Good for you.
Let me show you.
Let me just tilt this camera down.
Let's not.
Uh-oh.
Uh-oh.
Here it comes.
Here it comes.
Bye.
Bye.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.