SmartLess - "Elisabeth Moss"
Episode Date: October 31, 2022We have our cake (and eat it too) with the ultra-talented Elisabeth Moss. Sean gets Lizzy’s address, Will tries to figure out how cool Jazz is, and Jason throws out his new dance company co...ncept. 5-6-7-8, it's SmartLess!Please support us by supporting our sponsors!Disclaimer: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Refund issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY), or visit www.1800gambler.net (WV).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, hey, will Arnett. Good morning.
You're jumping out.
You keep going, hey, hey, Will Arnett all the time.
I know.
What's going on with that?
I got him doing this new thing, where
I tell people his first name and last name.
I can't speak without saying the full name.
Like Tommy Lee Jones.
You just don't say Tom Jones.
You say Tommy Lee Jones.
I bet his friends don't say, hey, Tommy Lee Jones.
You want a glass of water?
I think they probably do.
No, they probably say, hey, you want some water.
Okay. Hey Will.
See? There we go.
Now we're meeting the real Sean.
Now we can start an old news marvellous.
Smart.
Last.
Smart.
Last.
Smart.
Last.
Smart.
Last.
So listener, we're trying to figure out,
we're trying to figure out why Sean
is late this morning.
He's never late.
So we're actually worried about him.
We're starting to think, how would Sean die?
We're saying
you could choke on egg salad
or
maybe burn himself
beyond recognition on a hot
dumpling or something like that
from Chin Chin.
Yeah, or just like he sees fries in the fryer
and he just goes face first into it.
They're like, no, no.
But you know what, here's the other possibility
is that Sean's sleep,
his sleep hygiene is
terrible.
So he wakes up kind of at like three
or four and he'll stay up and then he'll go back to bed at like
eight.
And there's a chance, maybe I should ring the house.
Should I call the house?
Well, but he doesn't, he sleeps with a fan
on.
And what else?
What else did he have
to the hotel room on our trip?
Like a fan
had to be brought in and wasn't like an extra pillow
or a knitted blanket
or something that was something specific.
A weighted blanket, hang on, I'm calling the house phone.
Oh my God. I hope he's got a real
fun outgoing message. Get that up next
to the mic. Yeah.
Just call my landline.
Hey, are you going to do the show with us?
Or what do you think? It's 10.30.
No, it's 10.15. Oh, jeez.
I'm coming right now. Okay.
Oh, jeez.
Surprise guest, please don't respond, but thank you
so much for your patience. He's moments away.
We appreciate it. Really appreciate it. Surprise guest.
What kind of shape is his hair
going to be in when he, he has time to
grab a hat. Yeah.
I don't think he's done one without a hat, has he?
I think he sleeps in a hat. I think he showers
with showers of the t-shirt on for sure.
Well, you know, like twizzing it before Christmas, like an
old time sleeping cap.
All right, so Will, so
today you're going, you say you're going to play
nine holes of golf. You're going to, you've already
worked out.
Anything else that's going to help the world
for you today? I'm adjusting
my, my recording. I've got a new mic
because I'm taking a mic with me because I have to record
smartlist from Singapore.
So I'm taking that.
The boys sent me a nice
Can't wait for the technical difficulties on those
records. No.
Really? I mean, do I have a lot of
technical difficulties on my end?
You've been known to test one too.
No, look at the hair. I'm so
you guys, I'm so sorry.
I hate that
feeling of being late. Oh, I thought
it was 1030. Yeah.
Well, it wasn't look at your calendar.
Does it say 1015? Let me
look. Take a look right now.
I'm going to look right now. It says,
you know what, guys, it says 1015.
Yeah, it does.
Well, you just till kind of a little bit on a sugar
high from last night from Scottie's big birthday
sware. Was it an ice cream party?
Did you get into a Sunday?
No, I often not to
I had
you know, I made him a cake with some stupid
picture of himself on the top of the cake from
the $20 cake lady. Yes, she's
amazing. And and
I had and I said, Scottie
goes, how much, how big a piece do you want? I go,
I'm not even kidding. Cut me half of the
cake. Did you eat? Did you eat the full half?
Yeah, ate the whole half. How about if you
see I'm not even kidding. Cut me the whole half. And he goes,
I didn't think you were kidding.
I know you.
Sean, what would you do if
let's say Steven Spielberg called
you today and he said, listen, Sean,
I need you for this
part. And the guy, the machinist
to know, but he's
he's a he's a
lifeguard at a pool and
and there's lots of dialogue that talks
about how sculpted his body.
How long do you think it would be
possible for you at all? This is for Steven
Spielberg to what
if he then said and you're like, oh, I'll get
in shape and go, no, no, no, that's for the other guy.
We need somebody to play the flotation device.
But do you would you take
on a role where you had to get to sculpted
shape and you only had a month to do
well. Now that's an interesting question
because I always say, like
I've lost weight for
health reasons or whatever in two weeks
or three weeks and knowing that I can do
it that fast makes me not do it.
When did you try that though as we get older
gets exponentially harder so much
harder now. Trust me. All right. Well, you guys
would know. But
neither one of you guys are neither one of you
guys are out of shape. But I'm just saying you
love your treats. You couldn't
have any treats.
But wait, you'll see the documentary that we
filmed because I'm fat as a
house. No, you're not. Oh, yeah.
You're not here. The other thing, Jay, I will say
this. You like your treats
too. You just deprive yourself. You live
in a state of absolute deprivation because
it blows my mind. It's like
the warden has you on a tight
on a pretty tight sketch. Oh, she sure
does. And she
shames you. I've seen her shame you on
food, especially on a Saturday night.
Remember somebody brought the warden. Remember
somebody brought that gooey cake a couple
weeks ago on the Saturday night and
amongst the treats that was so good. I
brought those. No, no, no, no, you didn't
bring. No, you didn't. You brought
a bag of cookies from the back of your
pantry that was shattered. Every single
cookie was in just in like, you brought
a bag of tates. Yeah, tates
that had been dropped off behind
your car. You backed up to pick it up
accidentally ran it over, then
grabbed it, then brought it and dumped
it into a bowl as dessert. Kind of true.
You're like, hey guys, I brought a really
special dessert and he brought it to the
tates like, oh cool, we can all go to
Safeway, man. We know where to shop.
Like, what are you doing? Anyway, no,
no, listen, this is what, go ahead. Well,
I was just saying somebody else's guest
and I was like, hey, do we
chocolate cake type brownie thing
and Jason really liked it and he
took a couple of bites and then the
warden shot him a look. I looked up and
found the warden's eyes. She was like,
she's going to throw him in the hole for
10 days.
Listen, this is
my life would be a disaster without
my better half. Okay.
But now look at this. I'm
drinking tea and it
tastes like candy because I put like
sugar in it and cream.
Because you still didn't have enough sweet in your
palette from last night. You know, Sean, can I
just say this and I don't want to plug this brand,
but they're really good. I use that Trulia now,
which is like a natural, like it's a sweetener.
Yeah, you mean the ones with carcinogens
in them? No, no, no, no, no.
It's a plant ding dong.
Hey, listen. So, Stevie is the best.
Listen, when we're, when we're, when I'm
giving, when I'm one of the people giving
eulogy saying like, he was really concerned
about carcinogens. How do you die
diabetes? But man, he was
worried about the carcinogens.
It's fucking
like, I know, I know.
It's so nice try.
It's really bad. Well, let me tell
you about somebody who just seems
incredibly healthy.
All right.
Her whole thing
is just a healthy glow.
Her talent
just radiates health
and
you're so lazy.
You're so lazy.
I just try, I was trying to blend.
Wasn't that a nice transition? Here we go.
Guys.
Start at the top. Just let her take
over because she's the best. I've never seen you
phone it. I know I'm not phoning
anything in. I'm just pissed off about
something this morning and I don't want to drag it into the
podcast. Don't.
We have one of our best actors
going. All right. She's
been doing incredible work for
about 25 years, yet she's
more than 10 years younger than all of us.
All right. She's got two Emmys, two
Globes, two Sags, two Critics Choice
Awards. She's an LA native.
She's got a British dad, a Swedish mom. She's got
a Chinese parrot that speaks
Dutch.
She can explain. This is Elizabeth
Moss, everybody. Oh my
God. Oh my
gosh, I love
you. Elizabeth
Moss.
Elizabeth, I'm sorry. I was so fascinated
about the Chinese duck
or parrot that speaks Dutch.
Ducks don't.
Wikipedia is always
accurate. It's so nice
to meet you.
She's got real fancy lights in her shot
guys. She lives in a nice home.
They're a little much. I will say
Sean, though, I did have a piece of cake
last night and I was here
on time. Wow.
Good for you. It's because you didn't have half a cake.
You just had a piece. Good for you.
I loved that. Elizabeth, the last
time I saw you, we kissed. Oh,
that's great. Yeah. We should
just leave it there.
Next question.
Anything else? What were you celebrating last night?
The memory of that kiss with Will Arnett?
What was the cake for? Yes.
Absolutely no reason whatsoever
except I wanted cake. Really?
So I ordered cake. Yeah. Wait, like an
Uber Eats order cake? Yeah.
Come on. Seamless. Yeah, from Magnolia
Bakery. Just ordered cake. Yeah.
I was craving cake like
that icing that they have. Sure.
And I live in New York and I was like,
you know what? I can have that if I want. So I ordered it.
Do you take care of yourself like that?
Like when you want something
and you're like, you know, I'm going to treat myself.
I'm just going to go ahead and do it. For the most part.
Not so much. When I'm working, I'm a little
bit more. I try to be a little bit healthier
and a little bit more conducive to
the hours. Other treats even, like
just like, you know, like, you know
what? I've always liked that car. I'm going to get that
car or look at that. Nice blouse.
Sean, you know, like, Sean
does not walk by a blouse he doesn't love.
Neither will not pass it. Never met one.
I hear you. I hear you.
I think everything in moderation is okay.
I know, but you know what? What's moderation?
Yeah.
But isn't it kind of like, isn't it kind
of, because my brain goes, well, gosh,
I was so deprived as a kid because the way
we grew up that now I'm like, I'm an adult
and I can't stop that thing in my head
that says I can have anything I want
to eat whenever I want it. Like, I don't need
permission. We're lucky. Yep.
It's not even about the thing itself. It was
just about the fact that I could order it
if I wanted to and it would come
and then I could eat it. What were you watching
on TV when the cake arrived?
Real Housewives of New York City.
Here we go. I want to know about all the
guilty pleasures. So have you done all
the regions? Have you done Atlanta?
A little bit. I've dabbled in everything,
but New York and
Jersey, the ones I've really focused on
in New York is definitely the one I've
watched multiple times.
Can we just give a lot of color though?
Pause for a second. What kind
of cake was it? I'm interested.
Given that you have every opportunity
to order any flavor, which one do you
get? Any cake in the world.
It was just the Magnolia Bakery,
you know, just the white cake
with the
buttercream frosting. Wow.
It's the classic. Really?
There's a cupcake, though, right?
Yeah, but they also have slices of cake
if you don't want to mess around with a cupcake.
Same thing, different shape. They usually give you exactly
same thing.
I love cake as well. It sounds like you love
cake and I like that about you.
I'm a big cake person and when I hear people
saying like they don't like cake, I just think,
what is, what? What's wrong with that?
Well, I prefer pie. Really?
So, yeah, I mean that exactly. That's a great example.
What kind of pie?
Any kind of pie. Hot fruit.
What kind of monster are you?
Well, pie.
I do like a fruit pie, but I like the crispy
hot crust, you know.
I like soft fruit.
Warm fruit is disgusting.
Yeah, I don't like that. I like pie.
I like pie a lot and I like, like, I love
like an apple brown Betty, something like that.
Boy, that's good.
What about a crumble?
Sure. What about a pecan?
Yeah. Oh yeah, pecan.
Nothing worse for you than a pecan pie.
That's the fattiest dessert you can have.
Absolutely. Nothing tastes better.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's so sugary and fatty.
Wait, now, Elizabeth, do you know this deal with,
now, if you knew this, you might not get a slice
next time. You get a real cupcake where you take
the top of a cupcake, you twist it
so that it separates from the bottom, flip
it over, make a sandwich out of it, and then
you don't get the frosting up the nose.
Yeah, that's advanced level.
Yeah, I think I got that on Reddit.
I'll do it tonight.
I've been eating cupcakes wrong for years.
So, Elizabeth, where are you?
So, people call you Liz, do you hate that?
Lizzie. Lizzie's perfect.
It's so nice to meet you, Sean.
You too. I'm such a big fan.
Same.
Give it another few minutes.
And so, you grew up in L.A., I didn't know that.
I did. I grew up in L.A. until I was about 19
and then I moved to New York, so I've lived in New York
for over 20 years now.
She went there to study dance, guys.
She went to New York to study dance.
Ask her about dance. Ask her about ballet.
Pursuing a ballet career.
And then acting got in the way. Go ahead.
I know you knew so much about me, Jason.
Yeah.
Wait, do you still do ballet? Do you still dance?
No, I wish. I wish.
Really? You can dance if you want to.
You can leave your friends behind.
Song, song, song.
So, you're studying dance and ballet
specifically in New York?
Yeah.
And then what was the acting pursuit
just something like, oh, maybe I can
book a few commercials and pay for some rent
while I'm studying dance, or how did it come about?
It was kind of a 50-50.
I loved both of them.
And I started acting when I was really young.
Acting's easier to kind of keep up
than dancing, dancing.
You have to go, obviously, every day
and it becomes your life. Also, there's a fine night.
Exactly.
And so, at about 15, I had the choice
of whether or not to carry on
and go to a school year round
and, you know,
look at joining a company and everything.
15, which isn't that crazy?
Now, looking back, you're like, Jesus, I was a child.
I said this on the podcast before.
Then don't say it again.
Yeah.
Why would you repeat yourself?
Because Elizabeth hasn't heard it.
I can see why Sean didn't want to come.
He said, I want to show up.
I used to do stand-up in L.A.
and one of my first opening jokes was terrible
was, you know, they say
doing ballet is one of the most difficult things
you could ever do.
So I say, just don't do it.
Oh, boy.
And then when do you tell the joke after that?
When do you tell the joke coming?
I like it. I would have laughed.
Okay, so wait.
So, yeah, when I was 15, I decided
I had some sort of mature
thinking and thought,
you know, gosh, if I keep doing this,
if I'm lucky, if I don't get injured,
if I'm successful at all,
I'm going to be, I think,
by, what, 35?
Yeah.
And now that I'm 40,
I'm so glad that I had that sort of
decision and made the right one.
And I couldn't leave acting either.
It was sort of one of those,
I could think about a life without ballet,
but I couldn't imagine not acting.
Acting felt like who I was.
Ballet felt like something I was doing.
Well, what was your first professional acting gig?
I think my...
I was, like, really little.
And then I think my first real
professional gig was
this lifetime movie called Lucky Chances.
Chances? Oh, yeah.
Wonderful. I loved it.
Sean's familiar. And it was...
I played a girl whose mom died
and my mom was one of your former
guests, Sandra Bullock.
Come on. No way.
Yeah, she played my mom
and I had to find her dead
face down in the pool.
I was six or seven years old
and I was like, this is awesome.
I love this. Let's keep doing this.
So you were six or seven years old.
She was dead in a pool.
You're 40. She was your mom.
She's going to love this story.
Yeah, she's going to love it a lot.
I've never talked to her about it.
She's only 42 or 43.
You've never talked to her about it?
No, I haven't. And I've met her briefly
backstage at, like, a thing.
And I'm so intimidated by her because
I've never had the balls
to bring it up.
We'll be right back.
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C-show notes for full disclaimer.
Back to the show.
Now here's what I don't understand is,
you know, as you were saying as an actor
you can age into all kinds of roles
like you're never too old to be an actor
because you just play older parts.
Why can't that be the case with dancing?
Wouldn't you love to see some sort of dancing company
of people north of 50?
It'd be comedic, right?
How dare you.
Comedic.
High jumps and stuff.
You're waiting for an injury.
More napping.
Yeah, it's on ABC.
It's called Dancing with the Stars.
Nice, Sean.
Really good, Sean.
Okay, so thanks guys.
Elizabeth, wait, I just had this conversation
with a friend of mine the other day
about parenting and like,
this friend of mine,
I see him at the gym.
He's got two kids.
He's a super nice guy.
And he sang a little bit.
Oh, that's what you do at the gym.
You talk to people.
And he sang a little bit.
And I go, oh, you have a,
you actually can sing like you have a nice voice.
He goes, yes, don't tell anybody.
I go, what do you mean?
He goes, it just makes me shy.
Oh, no, you need to sing in front of your kids.
You need to like let them know
that you can be expressive
and extroverted and fearless
and all of those things.
So did you have, because for kids to dance,
I think is very intimidating.
So did you have parents that kind of
express themselves to you
to let you know it was safe to do so?
Yeah, my parents are both musicians
and the whole family
is in the music business,
but jazz and blues.
And so it wasn't so much about expressing yourself.
It was just about being an artist
was very acceptable.
Being anything else would have been weird.
Oh, really?
Yeah, and practicing and rehearsing
and discipline was something
that was very much understood
in my household.
So going to class every day
was something very normal.
That was what you did.
You know, you picked a vocation
that wasn't really good at it
or you didn't do it.
Not that that was ever spoken.
It's just sort of in retrospect what I can see.
But there were, I mean,
everyone was always playing an instrument.
You know, we were always going to shows.
My first memories were, you know,
going to the Greek theater,
the beacon or Blue Note New York.
Like that was, it was just
what I thought life was.
Everyone was a musician.
My oldest brother, Dennis,
he allowed his kids
to write on the walls
anywhere in the house with crayons
any time they wanted.
And it was, you know,
it was him and his wife.
It was like, she's like,
what are you doing?
He's like, you can just paint over it.
Let them just draw on the walls.
That's really sweet.
They were divorced shortly after that, I think, right?
Isn't that kind of interesting?
You can draw in jail.
Oh, you're sweet.
But Lizzie, did you,
are your parents still with us?
Yes.
Are they still performing as musicians?
Are they still doing, still active in their music?
Here and there, here and there.
My mom is, it's pretty cool, actually.
My mom is a blues harmonica player.
And to be a female blues harmonica player
is actually really rare.
And she's really, really good.
She doesn't gig as much anymore,
but she still plays and she's really good.
That's pretty awesome.
And your dad, what does your dad play?
Trombone.
No way.
Yeah.
That's so cool.
Do they have a two-man show?
No.
I would like to see that.
That's pretty cool.
Jason used to have a real rusty trombone used to play, right?
Hey, but let me ask you this, Lizzie,
the other question is, did they,
did they, so they, so, but they performed jazz.
Yep.
Yeah.
And do you, how do you feel about,
are you a fan of, everybody,
are you guys all fans of jazz music?
I don't, I don't love it.
You don't open it up to the room?
Well, yeah.
I am.
I'm not a jazz fan,
but I feel like I'm just one documentary away from being a big fan.
Yeah.
I appreciate the talent,
but I like something to sing back.
And a lot of times when they're riffing for two hours,
I can't find a melody.
Yeah, Sean and I both love classical music.
I haven't decided,
I can't figure out where I should land on it.
I can't figure out if it's cool or not cool to like jazz.
So I'm still trying to decide and I'm waiting.
I'm just sort of trying to garner a consensus
whether I should be like...
We need to watch Ken Burns documentary.
I mean, the Ken Burns, I was going to say,
the Ken Burns documentary.
Yeah, but that's not going to decide it for me.
I need people like, I need like,
I need like Steve Malekness to say
if it's cool or not from pavement.
And then I'll be like, yeah, I like it.
Jazz is cool, for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
It's cool.
But it's an acquired...
You're cool, so I believe you.
Thank you.
It's an, a lot of it's an acquired taste
when you get into like the real deep jazz,
the real stuff and the improv and everything.
It's, it's not for everybody.
It's, but I grew up on it.
So from, I, I understand it and love it.
And to me, it's, it's very normal sounding.
When I was little,
I was the one listening to Ella Fitzgerald.
And I mean, I was very into...
Well, I love that.
Yes, exactly.
I love that because there's singers.
Yes, exactly.
Like that was where I really landed was with,
with the crooners and with Gershwin and all of that.
For sure.
I could, I could like,
I memorized all the Gershwin songs when I was like,
you know, five years old.
You know, so I had no idea when I was a teenager,
like who Nirvana was,
but I could absolutely sing, you know, any Gershwin tune.
So that was where I landed.
Did you ever go to jazz fest down in New Orleans?
No, I never been.
I've been to New Orleans a lot,
but I haven't been to jazz fest.
It's supposed to be great.
Do you play?
I missed it.
Do you play something?
No, I don't.
I kind of learned the piano for a role later.
I learned piano and guitar,
but just for that movie.
But no, I never really learned anything.
Because in my family,
you, you, you got really good at something.
So if you didn't have time to practice every day,
you know, you might as well just forget about it.
Sean, do you wish,
do you wish in your family people had gotten good at stuff?
Or at least decent.
Or just showed up.
So, so, so, so we're in New York
and we're, we're getting some traction in acting.
When, when, when did you feel the first real shift
and like, oh, here comes possibly a career in, in acting?
Was it, was it West Wing?
I guess it was kind of West Wing.
Or Girl Interrupted, this film I did when I was,
I think I was like 15 or 16.
Yeah, because there were all these great women in that.
And, you know, when I'm a writer,
Angelina Jolie, Brittany Murphy,
Clea Duvall, who I got to work with again later.
And so that was kind of the one where I was like,
ah, it would be Goldberg, isn't it?
Where I was like, oh, this is something I think I'm,
I'm good at and really fit well in.
And then yeah, the West Wing was like my first like regular job
where I felt I had, you know, a place and kind of started
to have a community and a group and with all those guys,
even though I was just reoccurring, you know,
and I was quite young, I was 17 when I started on that job.
It was my profile.
I bet you started to get stopped on the street and stuff like that.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I did, I did.
How did you adapt to that?
Was that odd?
It was, it was only odd because I,
I was in the first two seasons a lot.
The first four, the Aaron Sorkin seasons, I was in more.
And the, the, I would get stopped and asked questions
about things I didn't know the answers to and, you know,
because I wasn't on the show.
So much mushrooms to Aaron Sorkin do.
And you're like, I don't know.
God.
Ask TSA.
They're the ones that went through a bag.
Luckily they were not asking.
I had him booked for next week.
Never mind.
They're not asking my 18 year old self that.
It's okay.
He's never hired me anyway.
I don't, he doesn't give a shit what I say.
Same.
But then you do, but then Mad Men and Lizzie, can I just say,
I, I, I watched and, you know,
that we're friends with John too and all that.
I watched Mad Men.
I kind of let it build up for a couple of seasons before I got
into it and I watched it all the way through.
And you are simply unbelievably fantastic in that.
Incredible.
You are Lizzie.
I, and I've known you a couple of years or what.
And I don't know if I've ever actually said that to you,
but I, I can't believe when,
even when I think about what you did and some of the moves
that you have and what you do in that show, I honestly,
I found it mesmerizing.
I find it really, really truly.
She knows what she's doing.
That's so nice.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Wow.
I really appreciate that.
And no, you have never said that to us.
I know, I know.
Cause I was embarrassed.
And then click and you just slam your laptop down.
Like I got what I came for.
Wait, she's leaving.
Now top of the lake, which is one of my favorites was,
was right after that.
It was in the middle.
Middle of that.
Yeah.
I think it was like season four or five of Mad Men that I went
to go to that in between.
I also love that.
That was really good.
And you go down to New Zealand to do that, right?
Yeah.
That was crazy because I, it was, you know,
I'd gotten kind of more famous for, for Peggy and people
really liked her.
And then that was the first, that was the time actually
that I discovered that I could sort of do another character.
I was, didn't know really whether or not I was just
really good at Peggy.
And that was my thing.
And wow, how amazing just to be on that one good show.
Like that's more than so many people ever get.
So this was like a kind of a test for myself as well of
could I go and do something else that was completely different
with the accent?
It was a completely different tone.
The character was completely different.
And it was hard.
It was a very challenging role too.
So that was kind of a, for me, the step in my career that was
like, Oh, okay.
I think I can do this and then I could go do that.
And I could make a real meal out of this.
Top of the Lake was like my North Star for Ozark because I was
trying to build a look and a feel for the show.
And I also fell in love with Peter Mullen.
And he was, he was my second call right after Laura Linney.
How about that?
To get, to get the show.
I mean, really?
I never knew that.
And that makes total sense.
Yeah, it does make sense.
That's really cool.
Even your, your title card, which is just five seconds long.
You know, like there's no opening credits.
It's just that five second thing.
And so that's, that's why it's a huge inspiration for me.
Everybody watched that.
Well, you say inspirations.
They say lawsuit cause, you know, judging by,
Jane Campion is real litigious.
Deadline is saying right now already.
He loves a lawsuit.
But then you go, so, so, but then you go, you do,
you do Top of the Lake, which I also thought was incredible.
And for me, what it made me do was like Google,
I guess it was like, what part of New Zealand was that?
It was in,
Oh, New Zealand.
Queen's Town.
Queen's Town.
God.
And I was like, wow, look at this place.
It looks incredible.
And then,
Oh God, it's so beautiful.
Then you go and do Handmaid's Tale.
Yeah.
And as a Canadian,
I feel a sort of sense of ownership on that book because,
you know, Margaret Atwood is a great Canadian author.
And we all read it in school.
So quite familiar with it.
I, again, I was like, this Lizzie Moss,
I mean, there ain't nothing she can't do,
but we're going to find it.
We're going to find the thing she can't do before it's all over.
Why would you want to do that?
That's not destructive.
Now, did you, did you read the book on that and pursue it?
Or what, or did the script come to you as an offer?
Or did you audition?
Like, how'd that come about?
So I was doing the second season of Top of the Lake in Sydney.
And it came my way as a script.
And I had read the book years ago,
but sort of didn't, you know, really remember it that well.
So I read the script with sort of fresh eyes, which was great.
And I had, Mad Men had only finished like a year before or something.
So I really didn't intend to get into another series.
You know, I was sort of doing the thing of,
okay, I'm now going to go and have all of this time.
But then I read this script and it was so good.
And then I read, I said, can I see the second one?
And I read the second one and I was like, fuck, it's even better.
So I got on the phone with Hulu and with Bruce and then I said,
you know, I want sort of a Warren Littlefield type to come and do this.
And because I was obsessed with Fargo and they said,
well, what if we brought you Warren Littlefield and then Warren
and I got on the phone and he was sort of like,
I'll do it if you do it kind of thing.
Yeah.
And since then he's been sort of my producing mentor.
I love him so much.
He's the reason, he's the reason Will and Grace happened.
Yeah.
Warren was like a big dad figure to Sean and I in our NBC years.
Of course.
He was big cheese.
But also you go to do a show for a streamer that,
and you don't know if they're going to do, I mean, like at that point,
but you, and it worked out in like Hulu, you know, it worked out.
Wait, did you Sean, did you hear?
And my ballet joke was bad.
Hulu, listen, he loves Hulu.
Sushimi, you know?
Sushimi.
But the thing was is I hadn't, I wasn't scared of that because of Mad Men.
First of all, West Wing NBC wasn't doing a show like that.
And then that did well.
And then Mad Men was on AMC, which nobody knew what that was.
And everybody thought we were on A&E.
Yeah, it takes one shot.
And then Top of the Lake was on Sundance, which nobody knew what that was.
And so I wasn't scared of the new place.
I actually really like new places because I feel like you have the space
to prove yourself as opposed to chasing a high that they've experienced.
You kind of, you get to be the one that goes in.
They don't really know what they're doing yet or who they are.
So they're kind of willing to take more risks.
I like that.
Do you, I just said to somebody the other day, Don at me, I'm 52 and, you know.
What?
Withhold, yeah, okay.
Wow.
All the, wow, I can't believe it.
But let me just, I realized the other day, I thought, I actually,
people go like, I hate change.
I'm nervous to change.
I'm not nervous of change or risk.
I'm not risk averse at all.
I love change.
I'm, are you scared of change?
No, not at all.
I mean, doesn't it, I don't know how you guys feel,
but it doesn't kind of come with this lifestyle career in the sense of.
There's nothing consistent about it.
There's nothing consistent about it.
There's no regular job.
And of course, you know, you get to a place where you feel more secure,
hopefully, but you know, there's no consistency.
And, and, you know, you, so we're all used to kind of circus people.
We're used to moving somewhere for six months and developing a life there
and then leaving and never seeing those people again.
And, you know, it's, so I think we're all kind of, yeah, embrace change.
Did some of that sort of knowledge of how sort of fickle this businesses
lead to your, your, your incredible diversification of your,
of your capital, your, your, your access in this business with all the
producing and the directing that you're doing as you, or is that,
or those pure pursuits, you really love directing, love producing,
or, or is it a combo of all that stuff?
It's probably more of the latter.
It's a bit of a combo, but more of the latter.
I kind of fell into it.
Not by chance.
It was by choice, but on hand maids, they asked me to be a producer.
And I said, okay, but I, I don't want it if it's just a title and you're
just going to put the thing up there and I don't really get to do anything
and say anything.
I said, so I'd like to really, I remember talking to Warren about it.
I said, I'd like to really learn how to do this.
I'd like to learn from you.
I'd like to like learn from the people who are better at this.
And then I started to learn and I started to really love it.
And I loved the involvement.
It gave me on a creative level, not on a control level.
I loved how I got to learn so much about after 30 years doing this.
I was learning parts of the job that I had no idea about.
And then same thing with directing.
I loved the show so much.
Love the show so much.
It's my baby.
And after three years of making it, I just wanted to, to tell the story myself.
I wanted to embrace another part of telling the story.
I had no designs on becoming a director.
It wasn't something that I thought, oh, this is my, this is the end game.
This is what, this is what I can do to keep my career going.
But it's something you're really loving and doing more of.
Yeah.
I really love it.
Yeah.
That's so great.
I really do.
It's so great.
Who's your go-to lieutenant in your, in your team, your immediate team there?
Your first AD, your DP, your camera operator, like, or your, or your cast?
Like, where do you find yourself gravitating with, with directing?
That's such a good question.
That's such a good question.
The DP, I think for me, just because that's the person, I'm obviously,
I really love the visual aspect of it.
And we're a very visual show.
Yeah.
It's dramatic.
It's beautiful.
Yeah.
Well, thank you.
So that was actually how I kind of got into the idea of directing was shadowing directors
and, and dealing with them so much as they were prepping episodes.
And I would always be there and we'd have meetings at my house or their house.
And I was very involved and I was learning without realizing I was learning.
And we always included the DP because we believe that it's very important that the DP knows
what the scene is about and what you're trying to accomplish.
And so through that, I got more and more and more into the visual side of it.
So yeah, I would say the DP, especially on our show, which is so, and also the locations
department, our, our, our locations department is absolutely incredible.
And we're very Toronto.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
You can go over there.
If you guys want to shoot, we found a nice parking lot over here.
Yeah.
She looks pretty good.
Fuck.
We'll just, we'll shovel that snow out quick and you can get the trucks in there.
No problem.
Shut up.
Basically.
Well, lastly on directing.
Jason, I was going to say to you, cause that is a good question.
I've never, that's interesting.
Cause I know Sean and I talked about it and he said, he directed that one thing and he
said that he really leaned hard on catering.
So, but for you,
You gotta keep the crew happy.
Yeah.
That was the most important thing.
He'd call him every shot.
He'd be like, where are you setting up catering?
They're like, Sean, it's in the shot.
He's like, it's okay.
We'll paint it out.
We'll paint it out.
I'm not walking more than 10 steps.
But Jay, Jay, who do you lean on Jay?
I'm actually curious.
I, um, I don't know.
Pete Thorell is the first AD that I've worked with a ton and I just think that he's just
incredible.
What he does, he does so many things he's not even paid to do with every department and
he's just sort of like the secret weapon.
But is that because it's him or is that, is that your go-to?
AD is assistant director.
I do think the first AD is, I mean, the first AD is, in my opinion, the most important person
on the set.
They're, they're running everything.
And if they're not, if they're not into it, if they don't create a good harmonious
It's so true.
It's just.
Sean, Sean, you started, you started to say for Tracy.
So, so for Tracy, the first AD is the first, is the assistant director.
It's sort of a misnomer.
You know, they're not really assisting the director.
They're running the set.
They run the entire set.
They're the quarterback.
And when you have a bad experience, that's when you really know how valuable they are,
how valuable a good one is, because they can just take the whole thing down.
And everybody takes advantage and it's just a mess.
And it all falls apart.
And it starts in a trap.
We need you on set.
I need 10 minutes.
And then they're like, ugh.
And you can tell a set that you show up on that has a really great, strong first AD.
You're like, oh, this, you know, this is going to be a good experience.
Yeah.
We'll be right back.
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And now, back to the show.
Lastly on the directing thing, Lizzy, what is your favorite thing that a director can do
and what's your least favorite thing and working with all the great directors that you've worked with
and without naming any names, like the thing that you're avoiding when you're directing
because you've seen someone else do it and then the other side, the thing that you like to do
because you've seen it down really well.
So just to repeat.
Can you repeat that please?
That's part of the madness, Sean.
I'd like to give the answerer, that's a word right, time to...
Your own answer is included in this question.
He knows exactly what he's doing.
I'd give them one they can use if they like.
If he were in a court of law, the judge would be like,
every time they'd be like, you're on or leading every single time.
Just ask the question.
I'm the worst.
What do you like?
Just go like, what do you like?
What's your favorite?
Then that's it.
Or is it and is it?
She'll tell you.
All right.
Liz, I'm sorry.
Do we have time for me to answer?
Okay.
Well, I'll start with my favorite thing, which comes to mind easier.
This I learned from Jane, I think, just the atmosphere created on set,
that she had...
For which show?
Sorry, for which show?
For Top of the Lake.
Yeah.
So she just had this ability to create an atmosphere on set
that you never felt rushed, you never felt under pressure.
I mean, with, you know, given, there were some times,
but just in general, you always felt like you had time to rehearse
if you wanted to or ask questions.
There was just no ticking clock.
And to do that, now that I am on the other side,
I know how difficult that actually is to do.
Because you're almost suppressing your own anxiety.
Oh my God, of course.
And you know, like that...
Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick.
Yeah.
And this actor has a question.
You're like, Jesus Christ, we're not going to get the scene.
So I know how difficult it actually is now,
but she just did it so flawlessly.
And I'm not as good at it as she is by any means,
but it is something I kind of try to keep reminding myself to do.
And you have to...
So I think the answer to the other question is just the reverse of that, Jason.
Yes, is somebody who is clearly anxious, clearly...
I mean, the worst thing that can possibly happen is, you know,
after you do a take, a director just sort of sits there
and doesn't sort of know what to say, you know,
and there's that awful kind of thing where they're like,
I just...
Well, okay, let's just go again.
Let's just try it.
And that's the worst, you know.
Because it's different than what they thought it was going to be,
and they can't figure out whether that means it's wrong or not.
Right, right.
And they just don't know how to fix it
if they do need to fix it.
And they should just...
They just move on and maybe they're thinking about how they can cut around it.
You know what I want?
I want to veer off this for just a second.
Okay.
I want to talk to you, Elizabeth.
I'm sorry, Lizzie, about vacation.
What do you do on your time off?
Because your resume...
You just grabbed the wheel and just drove us off a fucking cliff.
What's going on?
Put us in the back seat and...
I've never been in a conversation before.
We're talking shop, Sean.
What are you?
Fucking Jesus.
It's the business tree.
That's the new name of the podcast.
Cupcakes and vacays.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
Yeah, so would you rather sun or snow?
Sun or snow for the vacation?
Sun.
Sun for sure.
With that skin of yours, it's perfect.
Yeah, big hats.
Sun, although I haven't gone on a proper vacation a little bit.
And recently, the last vacation I took was to Paris
over Christmas and New Year's last year,
which is neither sun nor snow.
But absolutely wonderful, of course.
Do you speak French?
No, I do not.
I have to learn for my next role.
Really?
Yeah, I have to do a British accent
and also learn French.
That's lunch, guys.
So you're playing a Frenchy in your next thing.
I'm playing a British person who speaks French.
Oh, wow.
There's Mark Chappell.
Mark Chappell is a British person who speaks French.
He can help you.
It's once an episode.
Sure.
If he gets mentioned.
Sure, if he gets mentioned.
Is it a bet you guys are in?
He's a great guy.
But Lizzie, I went on vacation with Jason this summer.
We went to the Bahamas.
He sure did.
And we went, every time we would go into the ocean,
my pasty white skin would be,
I would just wear my bathing shorts.
And my pasties would come off.
And Jason looked like he was gardening in the ocean.
Like he had this massive straw hat on that covered his whole body.
You know why?
Because I have a smart other half.
Yeah, but long sleeve shirt, super long shorts,
like the sun just finds him.
Listen, when he gets hit by a bus next week,
it's going to make a big difference.
Hey.
He's not smart though.
It's important to protect him.
Yeah, he's smart.
Sure.
We'll bury him with that fucking hat.
Listen, we went on vacation with the kids and stuff a few years ago.
And everybody's like, we're all in the water.
There are like 15 of us except for at the end.
There's Jason fully covered from ankle to wrist with the hat.
Do you burn Jason?
I have burned before, but also panel.
I have had sun cancer removed from my face.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Okay.
I didn't know that.
That's awkward.
Yeah.
When was that?
Oh, and I don't bother people with my near death experiences.
We've really stepped in it.
Sean.
Well, wait a minute.
When was that?
How long ago was the son of a bitch?
How long ago was that?
Nothing.
So Lizzie and I, because I don't want to run, so Lizzie and I last year, I came in,
and Lizzie's in this in Tychus movie, Next Goal Wins.
And then I came in and we, I just shot for a couple days.
Oh, this is the thing you just shot?
Yeah.
For a couple of days.
Is this where you guys kissed?
And where we kissed.
Oh.
And we celebrate this moment and Lizzie turns me and goes, should we kiss?
And I go, yeah, I guess so.
And they're like, and action.
It was just like that.
Wow.
It was just like that.
There were no questions.
So listener, Tracy, there's a situation when an actor's kiss, it's never in the script,
whether the mouth opens or stays closed.
Yeah, let's talk about that.
You need to kind of understand what kind of kiss it is, right?
Is it passionate or is it celebratory?
And it's a little see you tomorrow and a little peck.
Have you discussed it?
There's a, I don't often discuss it.
You just kind of supposed to know.
I feel like you have to discuss it.
You're supposed to now.
Did you guys discuss?
We did not.
You did not discuss.
Did the mouth open?
No, it was kind of just like, it was like, it was a quick, it was like a celebratory,
like a really celebratory moment.
So it was like,
One of you seems sure about that.
Did tongues touch at all?
I don't think so.
Still not real sure are you?
No, no, no, no, because it was like we were happy.
We're like, all right, they scored.
And then we sort of hugged and then kissed.
And I did ask.
I just want it noted that will said I did ask.
There was consent.
She did ask.
So it was a celebration over a kid's soccer goal.
Not a kid.
Not a child.
A real.
Oh, well, you're not going to tongue kiss on a celebration.
It was a quick moment.
But normally when you would do any sort of love scene or kiss, yeah, there would be sort
of, especially now there's even more conversation.
They have a person on set.
They actually have a intimacy.
Intimacy.
Intimacy.
But we have either, have any of you here on the, as Jason calls the panel, the panel,
have you ever had a moment where you had to kiss somebody in a scene on any job and you
open the mouth, but no tongue?
Because I think that's incredibly awkward.
A lot.
Yeah.
That's so weird.
It is weird.
It is weird.
That's like, that's like fake cutting me a piece of cake.
It's like, wait, wait.
So the goal there, the goal there would be so that camera can see that, oh, this is a passionate
kiss, right?
Because you see the jaws moving and stuff like that.
But you're already halfway there.
Why not just insert the tongue?
Well, I think the tongue is considered just the level of intimacy that some people aren't
ready or wanting to go to.
I'm with you.
I think if there's, you know, there's a discussion and consent and everything and everyone's on
the same page.
I'm with you, Sean, where it's sort of like, well, at this point, I mean, God, you know,
you might as well make it look real.
I had to make out with Katie Finneron on stage and promises, promises every night.
And we just fucking sloppy wet tongue kissed every night.
It's all about comfort too.
You know, I find that if you've just met the person or if there's something that you don't,
you know, you're a little, you're much more sort of cautious of what they're comfortable
with.
But most of the time there's somebody that like on, if you're on a series, it's not your
first kiss.
But Sean is a loose cannon.
He got a massage.
He popped a bone getting a massage recently from a woman.
He's all over the map.
He doesn't know what's going on.
It's a true story.
You said it.
It's a true story.
Wait, this was in the Bahamas, right?
After we got out of the ocean.
That's right.
He had a, he had a treatment.
Yeah.
And Jason had one still in his gardening outfit.
How did you deal with that?
Well, she did a lot of drive-bys, right?
A lot of brush-bys.
It wasn't his fault.
She was being inappropriate.
A lot.
And then, and yeah, and it was a small towel over it.
And then it just kind of lifted and she just didn't care.
Where was this?
This is the Bahamas.
This is the Bahamas on this incredible trip that they went on,
that I did not go on for.
Weren't invited to?
Well, you don't like sandals.
They claim they invited me, but I don't remember.
Actually, the last time I did that,
I said I wasn't invited to something.
I think there's an email for this too.
Printed an email to prove that I'd never answered.
But here's the thing.
I'm worried about, like anytime I've done a kiss on screen,
I'm always worried that they're going to fall in love with me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because my kissing, yeah.
A mile away.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Because they're only human.
They can't help themselves.
One of those kisses on them.
Lizzie, I bet it was you had probably a couple of days afterwards.
Like what are, what are you going to do?
I wouldn't leave town.
I was showing up outside his house.
Right.
Lizzie, aside from that stuff, like I dating,
you want to date kids, marriage, anything like that.
Say again.
What's the question?
Kids, dating, marriage, anything in your life right now.
You just reaching into a grab bag and just slide that in there.
Why not?
Personal stuff.
Go ahead.
You don't have to answer it.
I like Sean.
Sean and I are good.
I feel safe with him.
First personal questions.
All right.
I'm visiting with, I'm visiting you when I'm in New York.
I would love that, honestly.
It's kind of weird that we've never met.
No, it is.
Right?
Anyway, I'm single.
What's your sign?
Nothing going on.
Leo.
What's your rising?
I don't know.
Special skills.
We've never had that done.
Horseback riding.
Okay.
Good.
Great.
You work for Tinder?
Just updating her profile.
Taekwondo.
Just updating my Wikipedia.
So no single.
I would love to have kids at some point soon.
That's good.
You're a damn match.
You are a real catch.
I'll keep an eye out.
Yeah.
We both will.
For children?
For many many people off this podcast.
No.
No, for children.
Any loose girls running around?
And available children that aren't any.
All right.
Maybe this is out of bounds for me to say, but Sean, why don't you donate some sperm
for, so Lizzie can have a try?
Look at it.
Don't threaten me because I'll do it.
Really?
No, why not?
I am on board.
Now there are, there are banks, right?
I've heard about these.
You can look through like these profiles, these pages and pages of, of different donors.
Oh yeah.
Or I could just go at it, and I'll close my eyes
and hold my breath.
Or I could just give you a massage, and apparently.
Yeah, that's all it takes.
I've been creating a bank here.
I've got a jug that I've been for the last couple of years.
Hey, man.
I keep it in the back fridge.
I keep it in the back fridge, and I just.
Keep it in the back fridge.
Fridge in the garage.
A jug.
It's just open, just like a lid.
It's just like an old-timey plank.
It's like rusty.
So speaking of perfect days, Liz,
so if you aren't working on one of these great things,
which I would assume would be a perfect day for you,
what would be the second most perfect day?
What do you really like to do with your days
if you're not working, not watching real housewives?
In New York.
Well, you're right about the first thing.
My ideal day is such a nerd is working, being on set.
Otherwise, I do love being in New York,
and I don't get to be here as often as I would like,
so definitely in New York, it has just become fall here.
New York got the memo.
Yesterday was the first day of fall.
New York is ready.
New York was literally like five, six, seven, eight,
and showtime.
Here we are.
Like, it is crisp.
It is amazing how.
You like rent one of those bikes
and just start touring around,
or you just start walking around like Mary Tyler Moore?
Mary Tyler Moore.
I love walking.
It's why I couldn't live in LA.
I love walking around the city, right?
So no plans.
I don't like plans, because unstructured time
is something that I don't get a lot of.
So I'll see you when I see it.
Exactly.
Just run into you in the park.
Now, are you a night owl?
Are you one of those people that really takes advantage
of like the whole restaurant scene in New York
and you're out till, you know, you eat at like 1030
and that stuff?
No, no, no, no.
I love an early dinner.
You know, I'm perfectly happy with a dinner at six.
I think that's absolutely acceptable.
I'd push it to 530.
Absolutely, why not?
Five o'clock, let's go.
I had dinner at five almost a night.
I love it.
When I was younger, I was a little bit,
I was definitely more of a night owl for sure.
And yeah, it started to, definitely started to change.
Uptown or downtown?
Uptown, Upper West.
Upper West, near Sean.
No way.
Yeah.
Wow.
Are you there now?
No, I'm there for all of 2023.
Here comes Tonglass Kissing.
I'm telling you, I tell you what.
Sean, you want to borrow my jug?
You can pick it up.
Just drop it off.
I have a doorman building.
I'll post it on it and you're all set.
We don't, we don't even have to talk.
Hey, Sean Hayes is going to come by and drop something off.
Wow.
It's not labeled, just accept it.
Just throw it in the freezer.
Do not drink it or.
Well, we're going to end on a high note here.
And we're going to thank you for your time.
Oh, Lizzie, we love you.
Your humor, your generosity, your spirit.
I love you.
Yeah.
I love you guys.
Lizzie, you know what the thing you did was,
you actually, Jason was really grumpy this morning
and you did turn his day around.
Yeah, you turned that front upside down.
You really did, legit.
Couple of thumbs up.
I knew you would.
Thank you.
I know, I heard you.
I'm so happy I could and thanks for having me.
I requested to be on this podcast
because I'm such a big fan of it.
Oh, that's so.
You didn't need to ask twice. How is that possible?
Thank you.
You're so great and you're such an unbelievable mega talent.
It's just so great having you.
Keep going.
Keep giving us your stuff.
Super nice person.
Thanks.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
I think it should be under her eye.
Under her eye.
Oh, I like it.
She's running out there.
Okay.
Look at you.
Lizzie, you're the best.
Have a great rest of the day.
We'll speak to you.
Thank you.
I hope.
Awesome.
Thanks guys.
Cartman 5a, Sean. Thank you.
Okay, thank you.
Get there.
Take the door open.
Bye.
Bye.
Thank you.
Bye.
That was so funny.
I mean, I never met her.
How do you know her, Jason?
We talked about doing some work together,
like that kind of thing.
Nothing structured.
The nose or your brow or what?
Well, we were going to get a two for just a brow lift.
And that's so funny.
She's amazing.
I tell you a funny story.
I don't know why they didn't tell her the thing.
We were laughing too much.
So when my ex-wife Amy was pregnant with Archie
and it was right up almost the day she was,
it was her original due date.
And she had a doctor's appointment
and the doctor was like,
no, it's going to be another week or whatever.
And then that night after Friday night,
she did a joke run through for update with Tina
and it came home and then like her water broke
and it was a Friday night,
we went up to the hospital and then the next day,
Archie was born.
It was the first time that Ham that weekend
that Hammer was, John was hosting SNL.
And they were going to do this sketch
that Amy was going to do with them bubble blood.
And she kind of, they had to replace her
in all these sketches.
And Lizzie happened to be in town
because John was hosting SNL.
And so she came and filled in for Amy.
That's amazing.
Wait, on update too?
Not an update.
No, no, no, just on the show.
And the sketches and stuff.
That's super fun.
Isn't that cool?
That's so cool.
Yeah.
I can't believe I've never met her.
Yeah, she's amazing.
She's great.
Yeah, she really is.
What a talent.
She's an unreal talent.
Isn't she funny and funny too?
I want to hear in like some comedies.
She's so mellow.
Yeah, she is.
She's in the best way as a compliment.
We got to set her up.
Let's make that a smart guess.
That's my ask.
I'm gonna find her.
Yeah, let's set her up.
Let's set her up.
I'm gonna put a list together right now.
Yeah.
Her past smart list guests.
Yeah, past smart list.
And just guys who are going to be released
the next year or so.
Guys that are.
Who are on parole, but like more like white collar.
Sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, she deserves a great dude.
What do you guys got the rest of the day?
I'm going to go to an eye doctor
cause I have an eye infection.
Are you going to take some notes
for the next episode of hypochondriactor?
Yeah, actually I am.
Hey, have you prepared stories
that you want to open the show with for a next show?
Sure.
I can do that.
Sean, why not?
No, because.
I don't prepare them.
I'm just like, oh, this happened today.
Yeah.
So I'll talk about that.
You'll log it.
You've got, you're going to help the planet by doing what?
By.
Nine holes of golf.
Well, I'm going to work.
I got a little bit of work to do.
I'm going to watch some, I'm going to watch some,
some soccer, some UEFA nations.
Watch some soccer, watch some golf,
then go play some golf and then leave your car running
just so the air conditioning can be on
in a parking lot somewhere.
You know what?
Sometimes, sometimes, you know,
in order you got to let things go.
Or as I always say, let by guns be.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Sean, you don't need to do at the bye, OK?
Fuck.
Why not?
You don't fucking say it.
I got to make up for you.
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