SmartLess - "Paul Thomas Anderson"
Episode Date: March 7, 2022Italian candy expert, amateur filmmaker (and recipient of 11 Academy Awards) Paul Thomas Anderson joins us this week to dig into the businesstry and take a bite outta’ life. Motto panukeiku...! Hai?Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Okay, here we go. This is going to be a smart list episode.
Let's tune up the ears, get the wax out.
What are you doing?
The papers are getting set.
The prep is done.
Okay, ready? Here we go.
You guys ready to talk?
Guys, guys, guys, guys.
What?
It's an all-new smart list.
Oh, God.
Smart list.
Okay. Hey, guys, look.
Wait, check this out.
Oh, sure. Yeah. Yeah.
Start right away.
Yeah. Have you been preparing, Sean?
You see that?
Look at the sign.
Construction?
No, that sign where my finger is.
Chicago Theater.
Wow, wow, wow.
Did you know that a week ago that you were going to be staying in that apartment?
I knew, I knew the name of it, but I didn't know where it was.
Yeah, Sean, for the listener, Sean started his stay there.
What is it going to be like a multi-month stay in Chicago, right?
Yeah, like three months, yeah.
The first night he was there was Valentine's,
and appropriately, he and Scotty saw a couple consummating Valentine's.
A right cross street.
And like in kind of like, it wasn't even like, all the lights were on,
it was somewhat impromptu.
We won't get into the graphic details of it,
but it was clearly not a planned consummation.
No, all parties were upright is the point.
It was half a wobbly H, okay?
Isn't that wild?
And Scotty's like, I go, what are you looking at?
And he's like, come over to this window.
How long was he looking out the window before you noticed he was there?
Quite a while.
It was a minute.
And he kept saying, come look at these people in love.
Right?
He kept saying, look at these people in love.
Sean, this is love.
In case you didn't know, it's Valentine's Day.
Okay, this is what love is.
Okay?
Now, do you think they wanted to be seen?
That's why the shades were up?
Yeah.
No, I think people are just used to living.
Well, Will, you can speak to this.
You've lived in New York City.
Do you just get used to the fact that people might be watching you?
Or do you, well, that?
I think you go back and forth.
I think that you have moments where you're like, oh my God.
And then you also have moments where you're like, you just live your life
and you don't think about it.
You can't think about it all the time.
I mean, you could pull the shades down.
Sure.
I would suggest that those people who are engaged in that,
in that moment, didn't care.
And in fact, that that probably was there to heighten their experience.
Now, Shawnee, you're back out on the road.
Yeah.
We'll get to our guests here, apologies.
But Shawnee, how's the first few days of rehearsal going?
Oscar Levant.
How's Oscar Levant?
Good.
So, Shawn's doing, it's not a musical, right?
It's got some music in it, but it's a play.
No, it's a play.
It's a play.
Okay.
So, he's there now.
He's a weekend of rehearsals and it's pretty arduous to rehearse a play
for the listener.
And, Shawn, are you loving it or having regrets?
Oh, my God.
I love it so much.
I mean, it's a ton of work, but thank you for asking.
It's, yeah, it's a ton of work, but really rewarding.
You know what I love the most is the, we're in the process of sitting around
talking about the play page by page, making sure everything makes sense.
And the backstory informs what the characters are doing.
It's kind of,
Is it the first time the play is being done?
Yeah.
It's a brand new play by Doug Wright, who won the Pulitzer for I Am My Own Wife.
And he wrote the movie Quills and Amazing Writer.
Well, let's plug Doug for sure.
Yeah.
You know.
Does he have a website?
Oh, by the way, it's called Good Night Oscar.
It's called Good Night Oscar.
Oh, God.
And we have told every audience across the country knows Oscar Levant backstage
at the Tonight Show.
Nobody's going to go to the play now.
Everybody feels like they've already seen it.
Well, maybe they'll check out Murderville again.
Yeah, exactly.
Let's give that another play.
That's not a bad idea.
That's not a bad idea.
How's that doing?
It's going to really be enjoying it.
It's been very nice to see people enjoy it and have fun with it.
Listener, that's a show on Netflix called Murderville
that Will Arnett brought to all of us.
It's a very good show.
And, you know, well, so we'll go from that.
So from Good Night Oscar to Murderville to the other big question
we got a lot on the tour.
Is Jason, when are the final six episodes of I Am My Own Wife?
I'm back.
It's seven, but not a big deal.
Seven.
I don't know.
I wanted to surprise people with the seventh.
Sorry.
There's a bonus.
After the credits, there's one more.
They're going to announce that soon.
So you can't say.
I cannot say, but it will be soon.
All right.
Here comes our guest, y'all.
OK.
All right.
Sean, well, today I get into a little bit of trouble with you guys.
I apologize.
I know that you hate it when I bring an academic on or a scientist,
big brains in general.
But this guy seems to really just hold on.
He seems to really be liked by those who have taken his class.
And teaching filmmaking for almost 30 years now,
and out of some of the top institutions in town,
he's taught his students mostly through doing
in that he's managed to gather the funds necessary to himself make nine films
on subjects as odd as a single digit, nighttime mucus, party drinks,
hemophilia, major golf tournament, addiction, haunted textiles,
and Italian candy.
And if you can believe it, these films have yielded
an 11 Academy Award nominations.
Most importantly, though, he's got four kids, a house in the valley,
and married to the coolest woman we three know.
Gang, it's Paul Thomas Anderson.
No.
Yes.
Oh, my gosh.
Hello.
Oh, my gosh.
Hi, guys.
It's so good to see you.
Did you guys have a guest with that list of subject matters?
You really had me reeling on that.
Did I bury it good?
That's a great intro.
I worked on that for a full nine minutes this morning.
Paul, would you have been able to guess yourself with that intro?
Come on.
Now let's guess it.
So a single digit, which one is that, man?
I did it in order.
A single digit obviously is hard eight.
Hard eight, yeah.
Nighttime mucus?
Nighttime mucus.
Come on.
Boogie Nights, y'all.
Party drinks.
Oh, my God.
OK.
Party drinks.
We've got punch, drunk love, hemophilia, there will be blood,
golf tournament, obviously the master.
Addiction is inherent vice, haunted textiles,
we'd know and love Phantom Thread,
and Italian candy out in theaters now,
the Valley Famous Licorice Pizza record store.
Wow.
That's incredible.
All right.
Pretty good.
I'm so proud of myself, Paul.
You can see I'm just beaming.
Guys, we can't do early morning records.
I'm still up for last night.
This ain't today crossword version.
Oh, man.
Wait, but Oscar Levant is one of my heroes.
Really?
Oh, really?
Oh, you go.
You two, you two.
He's amazing, isn't he?
Yes.
You know, there's a great Oscar Levant show that he did that
was here on KTLA Channel 5, and Fred Astaire was one of the...
That's exactly right.
It was impossible to find forever and ever and ever.
I have the whole thing if you want it.
No, well, I remember it was this impossible to find thing,
and then when this thing YouTube came around,
I remember thinking,
I'll see if this thing can really find something I want,
and I put in the Oscar Levant show, and there it was.
I said, oh, my God, I like YouTube.
It was there.
They're great.
Yeah, yeah.
Dear Mr. YouTube, great job.
What's your...
While I'm thinking of it,
because my brain doesn't hold stuff well,
the first shot in Magnolia was that when you go through
the hallways and you go onto the soundstage,
isn't that the Tonight Show stage?
Yes.
Yes, right?
Yeah.
Speaking of the Tonight Show, Oscar Levant, all that stuff.
Yeah.
What do they call it officially?
It's NBC.
It's where the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson,
you know, they did that,
but they also did the local news there.
They had...
Yeah.
You know, I remember a big deal was that we were shooting,
and we had to...
We had...
It was the days of Paul Moyer.
Do you remember Paul Moyer?
Yeah.
And we just needed to move his space over, you know,
a couple of spots.
And it was like, you know,
three days of negotiations to move Paul Moyer's spot.
I do remember...
He was not having it.
And it was on a Sunday.
He wasn't even shooting.
Oh, my God.
He wasn't even there.
He just didn't want his stuff messed with.
He just didn't want his spot messed with.
Somehow I remember...
I don't know how I'm remembering this.
He had a bright...
I think it was a bright red 9-11 DP Targa.
Like one of those with the big whale tails.
I like that.
Yeah.
Did he cut you off once on follow?
No, I just remember being taken that a local newsman
would have some big-ass flashy, cool car,
and he pulled it off.
That guy, very, very cool.
Yeah.
He was a hand-to-hand fight with him in Ron Burgundy.
It would be great.
It was a very similar kind of, you know...
Speaking of cool network,
newsmen kind of, a little bit of a reach.
Your dad was the voice of ABC for all of my years
growing up in Los Angeles.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Like if I played that voice for you,
you would knock you out.
You'd be like, oh, my God, that's Paul's dad?
No question there.
I just want to mention that is something very, very cool.
Well, actually, so Paul,
we've talked about this briefly before once
because you mentioned your dad was the voice of ABC,
as you said,
and he was like the original real promo guy on networks.
Yeah.
And my recollection is,
and so I'm going to say this
and then you can tell me what you know about this.
And if I'm wrong,
he would record the promos for all the network.
And the promo guys are,
when you watch a show,
when you're watching a network and you hear,
coming up tonight at 8 p.m.,
it's an all-new blah-blah-blah,
follow it by button.
Oh, that was your dad?
That was your dad?
And your dad would sit in the room with the engineer
right next to the board,
and he had a 416, a shotgun mic,
and he was the first guy to do that in that way.
Is that right?
I don't know for sure
if that's exactly that technical thing,
but the image of that shotgun mic,
he would never go into the booth.
He wanted to do it in the control room.
Was he,
because he was actually in real time
telling the guy how to modulate his voice
and do all the EQ and stuff?
I think that had something to do with it too.
And I think he was smart enough
or done it enough to know, like,
I'm not going in the booth.
I'm gonna be with you guys.
It's gonna be exactly the same.
I'm not, you know,
he also liked to smoke while he was doing it too,
and I think the other guy was weird.
He really likes that,
really does a little of that.
Not in the booth, not anymore,
but I will say that,
and then we'll get out of the weeds on this.
So traditionally, all the voiceover guys,
especially in New York,
where a lot of it used to be done back in the day,
everybody used the mic that's a very common,
that I do have over here,
and what we refer to as an 87, a U87,
and it's a great microphone.
Oh, thanks.
Well, of course.
Keep going, 88.
Your dad changed that by using that shotgun mic,
and he forever changed,
and it became the West Coast microphone that also,
whenever it would come out here
and go to a recording studio,
they'd always have a shotgun mic,
and it was because of your dad
that that became the standard out.
Is that like the Johnny Carson one that was on his desk?
Is that what a shotgun mic is?
What is that?
No.
No.
Okay, bye, everybody.
Oh, see you later, Sean.
So, Paul, you did not know that, huh?
No, that sounds fantastic to me,
and it doesn't seem too far from accurate,
even, you know,
he did obsess over that kind of stuff,
and I probably passed a little bit of it on to me.
Were you close to him?
Yeah, very.
Oh, that's nice.
I got to go, you know,
I had that opportunity to go to Prospect and Talmage,
which was where he would go to work at ABC,
and, you know, generally,
that was sort of my first taste of being around anything
that was show business related,
and that was magical to me.
How old were you at that point?
Anywhere between the ages of probably five and, you know, nine,
75 to 70.
Did it strike you as being like a peculiar thing
for your dad to do?
I can say from my own experience,
and I ask this because I say to my kids sometimes,
like, it's when they do stuff,
or I do stuff when they come in a work-related environment,
I'm like, it's weird, right?
Because it's weird to me if my dad had done it,
and I sort of acknowledge it.
Did it seem strange or just because it was your dad?
It seemed strange only because it was not...
I was proud of him,
but no one else could recognize this, the pride, you know?
It's just such a behind-the-scenes gig.
There's nothing kind of famous about it.
You don't walk down the street and somebody say,
like, wow, there he is, you know?
Your dad's a baseball player.
He's like, well, you know, there's no recognition to it, really.
But that's what he loved about it so much,
was that he could just kind of have this independent life,
coyote-ing around town and, you know,
doing his work and getting paid for it.
So you're sitting there,
you're watching kind of the sausage get made for television
in some aspect,
and were you at that point starting to gather these images
and interest in this process and what it...
Oh, these are the people that are behind the curtain
that create at least this lane of fake life.
And that started to build an idea for you
about what you might want to do,
or can you track the moment that you thought,
oh, I want to do something like this.
I can't remember because for as long as my memories are there,
I've wanted to make films, for sure.
But you have to remember, I mean, Jason, you'll remember,
that there was like such a dividing line
between making films and making television, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
Television back then was like,
you know, anybody can do it, you know?
Right.
Movies was like this gold ring,
like not everybody gets to make movies, you know?
Right.
So you started to experiment with little home movie,
and it's not an uncommon story, right?
No, it's the same exact story as everybody else.
But I had the comradery,
and it's so crazy.
Now, I mean, I look around my life right now,
and I see my relationship to all the people in dark rooms
that I work with, engineers and things like this,
through the entire process of making a movie,
and you're like, this is exactly what my dad did.
You go to a dark room each day,
and, you know, trying to make something happen,
and the friendships that he had with those guys,
I look back, and I think I was really inspired by it.
I always just thought that's what a friendship was, you know?
He was very close with all these technicians
and guys that he worked with,
and so those are the people that were around our house.
Yeah, one of my first experiences was people
that were very, very close with the crew,
or at least a full understanding of the importance of the crew,
as opposed to sort of this sort of terrible traditional kind of look
at like, oh, you know, some people look at crew as sort of soldiers,
and that, you know, the folks that are in front of the camera,
the ones that are super important,
when the opposite is actually the truth.
And so, did that start then understanding that, oh, my God,
this is really difficult,
and there's actually nobody on the set there that doesn't need to be there?
Well, the only people that don't need to be there
are like studio executives and producers,
and you know, what I learned probably from my dad,
it was like, whoever's, you know,
kick all the people out of the room
that are not completely, completely essential to the project.
You learn pretty quickly who isn't, you know, they scatter.
Yeah, so grabbing those early video cameras,
movie cameras, stuff like that, that sort of pretty common story,
where you kind of point a camera at stuff
and you kind of take little kid films and little army men,
and that's not uncommon.
But what about the writing part?
Do you remember your first experience looking at a blank piece of paper
and trying to figure out how to start from zero?
Do you remember that being humbling or surprisingly easy?
That's a really good question,
because I think you're right that the story of, you know,
the filmmaker with the eight millimeter camera
and then onto the video cameras,
like there's a million of them,
and that's generally how everybody starts.
But the writing part always excited me because I liked it.
I think I got lucky that I liked it.
I liked putting paper into a typewriter and typing out ideas,
and I liked seeing it on the page.
I liked looking at that idea.
I don't know, from an early age,
I've always liked writing and formulating things on paper.
And when you learn on a typewriter,
you learn how to make it right the first time,
because the last thing that you want to do is go through that.
And I had the one script...
You still use a typewriter?
No, I don't.
From time to time, I will just for fun to mix it up.
But no, I don't use a typewriter anymore.
But remember the one script that I had,
I think I have to credit my mother for this,
is I had the script for Holy Grail.
Oh, wow.
Monty Python.
Monty Python?
Monty Python.
It was published as a little book,
and I loved that movie so much.
This would be like probably eight,
seventy-eight or seventy-nine.
By the way, they're both like,
Monty Python?
No, the actual Holy Grail.
We're helping Tracy, okay?
So I had what was the script for that,
and then I just copied that.
I just copied how the formatting was of that.
It was a great way to learn.
So I think writing is either something that you like doing
or you don't like doing.
I mean, you know, it's, yeah.
I got a dumb, dummy question.
What?
When you drive, when you're just driving around,
like driving around during the day with your kids or whatever,
do you constantly think in images or see images
and think of filmmaking?
Like, is it hard to turn it off?
Yeah, it's no...
It's easy to turn off.
Oh, okay, never mind.
It's not, no, I don't like walk around like Rain Man
or something like that.
Because I always think of like,
like whenever I'm driving around,
I always see like images.
There's like, God, there'd be such,
and I see like a frame around it or something.
I'm not a filmmaker.
Especially when you listen to music,
do you find that happening, Sean?
All the time.
Right?
You basically start cutting videos, right?
Yeah, don't you do that, Sean?
On the big beat change, your eyes go right, you know?
And I dork out like that.
How many, how many Wham inspired movies
have you made, Sean, in your head?
Oh, there's got to be like 12.
I mean, you know, they wake me up before you go,
go was my holy grail.
I understand.
You know, they're like, I was like,
I can't believe there's just...
It just lends itself to a real cinematic.
Paul, what was it?
This could be the best interview.
Just, I like, I just...
You don't get to talk, Paul.
I know, and this is why I like it.
I just want to hear you guys.
I have to tell you, my favorite, I listen to,
I don't listen to...
You haven't listened to this.
I have, of course I have, but the one joke
that stuck with me forever and ever and ever
was Will sing something about your father, Jason,
and he, and by father, he met the security guard
at the 20th Century Fox.
That sounds about right.
Don't make Jason cry.
Don't make Jason cry.
It stuck with me where I think about,
that's what I think about, John,
when I'm driving down the road every once in a while,
I'll think about something pops into your head.
You think, God, that was really, really,
really, really funny, you know.
It's surprising when you're in the car
and you're driving around,
you're not thinking about Sean's dad
peeling away from the house.
Because he was real handy in a car.
Yeah, still hasn't come back.
Exactly.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
Paul, and forgive us for just being such fools.
I'm sure we ruin many of your days having to listen to it,
but wait, I want to know about,
I want to know about,
Okay, just cut him off, Sean.
If you get an idea, start talking.
Go ahead, Will.
Wait, I just want to get this out of the way.
I think I've seen, I'm pretty sure
I've seen every single one of your films
and always been amazed by each one,
but I just want to get this out of the way before I forget.
Boogie Nights.
Is it true that Leo was up for the part,
but Mark got it, or Leo turned it down
because he did Titanic,
or is there any truth to any of that?
Sean loves the dirt, Paul.
That is very true, is that I asked Leo
to be in Boogie Nights,
and he spent many, many months agonizing
and debating about it.
Months.
And ultimately,
what I didn't realize or kind of came to realize
about halfway into that,
this sort of long decision-making process
is that he had a choice to make,
which was to either do Titanic
or to do Boogie Nights,
and he chose to do Titanic,
which, of course, in the long run,
catapulted him to this massive worldwide fame,
but on the other hand,
I think possibly,
but I think it was,
we laugh about it now,
but he regrets missing the experience and doing it,
but yeah, that's true.
Yeah, that's right.
I just always wondered that.
Well, now you know.
Well, yeah, I would have never known.
Will, was your question as good as that?
Not as good as that.
Actually, that was very interesting and well done, Sean.
Congrats.
I like the idea.
Back to Google.
Back to Google, Sean.
Go ahead, Will.
I thought you were going to say,
and to this day,
I still think Leo made a huge error in judgment.
You never let it go.
But what was...
No, the question actually was just simply,
what was that first thing that you wrote
and you said,
I should film this.
Yeah.
And that first thing that you actually put to film,
that you, from your own words.
Well, I did like short treatments and shot lists
and things like that,
but really funny enough that when I was 16,
just about to turn 17,
I wrote a short film
that was called The Dirk Diggler Story,
that was what Boogie Nights became.
And it was like a 23 or 24-page script.
But I did it in the format
that was a little popular at the time.
And all I had was this sort of bad video camera,
so I realized it wasn't going to look good.
It wasn't going to look like a movie.
So I wrote this thing that was about 23 pages long
and it was interviews with people
looking back at the life of this guy, Dirk Diggler.
Oh, a current affair was a very popular show at that time.
If you remember that,
they would always have these insanely over dramatic,
and it was so preposterous
that it was so trying to find a way into the story
that I thought was interesting,
which is the pornography that had surrounded me
my whole life living where I lived.
It was so obvious what was around me.
And then writing it in this format was like a doable thing.
Like, okay, I can get somebody
and do an interview with them.
I mean, it's a format that's still at work,
but at the time it was really like the most convenient
and plausible way into a story
with the equipment that you had at hand.
Have you transferred that from, was it VHS?
No, it was eight millimeter, eight millimeter video,
so a high eight, I think.
Have you transferred it to something that will last
and are we ever going to see it?
Hopefully not.
Hopefully it's somewhere.
No, it's transferred within an inch of its life.
It's available.
I think maybe it's on YouTube.
I'd have to look again.
Yeah, I'm not sure.
Wow.
It's not terrible.
There's still some jokes that are the same
and some pieces that remained in Boogie Nights.
What was great about that was that
what I didn't even realize at the time
in terms of the writing,
in terms of really learning how to write
was that I'd created this kind of these fictional characters
in this fake documentary.
And then I realized what I had to do was adapt that,
adapt these fake lives into a movie.
And I spent the next, well, probably about 10 years doing that.
So I wrote a 90 page version of this documentary.
And then I realized, well, I don't want to do that.
That's not the right format for this.
I want to write this as a fictional film.
So I did that for 10 years.
I guess it was the way that I learned how to write, really,
was practicing telling this story in multiple different ways.
Tony, that seems to be a recurring theme
with a lot of filmmakers and writers.
I know Kenny Lonergan used to do,
back in Naked Angels in this theater company in New York in the 90s,
he did various scene nights on Monday nights
where he would do the scene about a brother and a sister
and then just this guy who was kind of lost
in his 20s in New York, et cetera, et cetera.
And it took on a bunch of different incarnations,
a bunch of different scenes,
which eventually then became, this is our youth, the play,
that my then girlfriend, Missy Yeager,
was in with Mark Ruffalo and Josh Hamilton,
that then became kind of really,
I think the inspiration for You Can Count on Me.
But it was like this similar story, similar theme
that he told in various ways over at least 15 years
before he kind of landed on that.
I'm sure you can probably relate to that.
For sure, you know, maybe there's leftovers
and you're just, I don't know how deep is your well,
I guess, you just keep it.
Well, to that point, I mean, do you find that it was basically
a peel in the onion further and further back
on a specific theme that you thought this sort of story
was a fun example of?
And if so, what is that theme?
Yeah, but that's a, can you write a theme?
I can never write a theme.
Well, I mean, but I mean, you tell me,
you know what you're doing, a theme of being,
let's say, the irresponsible chase of fame.
No, I never have anything good like that.
I always have like, just like, I never ever have,
I have more like facts, like, well, what really happens here
and some steal from real life, like,
every story was essentially the same, you know,
it was like, if the exaggerated version was the guy
who steps off the bus and, you know, kind of comes to Hollywood
with big dreams and takes his pants off.
And then the next thing, you know, he's a big star
and it was any classic rise and fall story.
So I'm always just sort of following any steps of reality.
I mean, I don't know, I never, I get so scared of writing
to a theme or having anything like that beforehand.
I can remember at a certain point, maybe needing help,
like, what is the story?
And luckily enough, coming across singing in the rain
and being like, oh, right, it's just the same thing
as like silent talkies, you know,
it's this transitional time in whatever industry
they're going from shooting on film to shooting on video.
Like, use things like this to tell your story
and whatever themes will just emerge later.
Well, yes, so you write a story
and you basically just write a script
because it's to oversimplify it.
This event runs to this event and this event and this event
and now we have an ending and it's a fun story
and now you shoot it and all that worked out well
and now you're in the editing room.
And you start to shape this, pardon the phrase,
experience for the audience.
And it starts to sort of present itself as a film
and you start working with either temp music
or the actual score and maybe themes start to develop
for you as a viewer, as you're viewing it,
trying to keep the optics of a viewer.
Do you allow that to happen
and then does that inform the way you finish the film
and oh, here's a little theme that's existing underneath
this crunchy story that's kind of fun.
Does that, do you find that that happens?
I find that that's exactly what happens with the exception
that it does happen a little bit earlier, you know,
that once you, I mean, I'm not blind, you know,
as you're writing something, you may be,
you're fighting off the idea that the theme
is right in front of your face,
just because you want to try to tell something factually
and what ends up emerging emerges
and you can't fight it, hopefully you like it,
you're enjoying what's happening.
But you, I think, and you keep a half an eye on it,
but really you keep the other eye on what are the facts?
What are the facts?
What are the facts of the story?
Why is that?
Because I don't know, I find films that overindulge
in telling me the theme are annoying, you know, and boring.
So, but yes, to your point that once you,
and then you get into shooting and you're seeing dailies
and you're seeing stuff emerge that is really exciting
or stuff that is unexpected
and you either embrace it or you say,
perhaps this is not going in the right direction,
but very, more often than not,
you can't stop what's coming,
nor should you that you have to kind of be surrender.
You're guiding a ship,
but you're also surrendering a bit to the path that's happening
and, you know, performances kind of get bigger
or smaller, whatever ends up happening.
And then it just keeps on going
and you keep refining that through the editing and all that.
One of the, if we can get into staying on the idea of themes,
one of the themes of, it seems to me of your films,
is that they're very specific, visually and stylistically,
each one different in its own way,
but you, they do seem so specific in the writing
and so what is your relationship like,
again, going deeper into the weeds on filmmaking,
but what is your relationship like with your production designer
and your DP leading up to when you actually shoot
because it does seem like all of your films,
I told you once at risk of further embarrassment to myself
and to you, you know, for instance,
There Will Be Blood,
I feel like it should be just hung in MoMA and left there
for people to watch.
It's an incredible piece of art in every way,
from the writing to the direction,
to the art direction, the production.
What is that like for you leading up to actually rolling film
and working with those departments?
Well, it's the great joy of collaboration,
particularly when you're doing it with somebody that you love
and work with.
Like, for instance, on that film,
I had never worked with Jack Fisk,
who's one of the great production designers
who started his career with Terrence Malick and David Lynch.
They kind of go back to their beginnings together.
Anyway, I contacted Jack Fisk and had written the script
and I needed to kind of create,
I need a lot of help with making oil derricks
and the recreation of an early California town
and there was only one person that helped do that,
so it started a great collaboration.
Jack Fisk was, you know,
we were kind of trying to learn how to get oil out of the ground
and really trying to be really, you know, do our research
and he said the greatest thing.
He's like, you know,
I found that if we can just get a children's book about this,
it's really better than trying to really understand how to do it
with all these kind of books that are this thick.
And it was one of these great lessons in like,
yeah, get the children's book first and don't be, you know,
because it'll have drawings, it'll be simple.
And it was like, wow, Jack Fisk gets the children's book first.
All right, that's really good advice.
But we had the incredible joy of going to scout locations together
and find a place to make this film
and I learned from him one incredible trick
that I still try to sort of make true
is that the more you can have a location where everything's close together,
the more freedom you have.
Here's what I mean by that,
is that if you shoot a scene, you know, over here
and you see it a few days later,
you think that's the worst scene that we've ever done.
We should really try to do it again,
is that you can go do it again.
You know, you kind of create your own,
you create your own back lock,
you create your own universe
and try as much as you possibly can to not move too much
but to have a variety of different looks and things happening.
So that, I don't know, I'm lost in whatever your question was,
it was kind of like the collaboration, that's...
Well, the simplicity sometimes yields
some of the most complex and sophisticated results perhaps, yeah.
Sure, that's my role.
Was there a similar process with Johnny Greenwood,
who did the, for Tracy, was the composer on that film?
I believe it was the first time he'd composed music for a film
and the first time you guys worked together?
Yeah, yeah.
There was a piece of music that he had written for orchestra
because he was already well-versed
in how to write for string instruments.
It wasn't like, don't let him fool you.
I mean, I know he's...
But obviously, his score was incredible,
as was everything else in the film.
It is really incredible and it's an opportunity.
You know, look, I think...
No, there was no kind of crazy weird instrumentation
or something like that.
He does do funny things with instruments where he'll detune
certain pieces of the orchestra and keep others in tune.
And so he has the ability to make it sound very familiar.
You're hearing string instruments,
but that sounds just out of body enough
that you can't quite place it.
So he's brilliant like that, but that's sort of stuff.
You know, it's nice, it's trickery,
but he writes beautiful music that complements the film
and they go hand in hand.
It was the beginning of a beautiful collection.
Do you constantly keep that in mind when you're writing?
Like spaces or do you listen to stuff when you write?
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, I had all kinds of...
The stuff that I was listening to was stuff that he likes anyway.
Was it Penderecki or Schubert or, you know,
even the piece that he had written for the BPC orchestra.
So that was already kind of informing where my head was at.
And it was nice to go to him and say like, you know,
the movie lends itself too to just like wide open spaces
and like a huge opportunity to fill long gaps of silence
with music that can either be gigantically loud
or even just simmering underneath.
So it was quite a good entrance into the game for him.
I love that.
What's the music that you put on when you go like pick up the kids
from school or whatever?
Like what are your bands?
Yeah, what's the music you have to take off the stereo
when your kids get in and put on...
Well, they're already sick of that smile record.
They've been hearing that enough.
They're like, they're like enough with that.
Enough, enough, enough.
So, well, come on.
What's Pearl listening to right now?
Pearl is listening to...
Well, you know what she's listening to is anything,
and I don't know in any of the many of the artists,
but we just, we're kind of obsessed right now
with this film, The Worst Person in the World.
I don't know if you guys have seen it.
I've seen the trailer. It looks great.
Oh, it's fucking magical, this film,
and it's got this great soundtrack.
So we've just kind of been listening to all this variety of songs
on that soundtrack, which is everything from like
Harry Nielsen and Todd Rungering to a lot of new stuff
that I've never heard in my life, you know.
I want to ask you something about, you know,
streaming versus wide release and where we're at
in the business of that, and, you know,
having this conversation with a friend.
And we were talking about how, for example,
West Side Story or Licorice Pizza or whatever it is
that's out there that's fantastic right now,
how that would have fared with a really long,
wide release run.
Would anybody see these things?
Are we really truly at the point where we just want to see stuff
in our homes, but to the filmmaker, I imagine,
you want it to be seen on that big screen
because of the genre of filmmaking, right?
Because of the thing that lends itself to that.
So what are your thoughts about that?
Well, yeah, I mean, I don't know.
I kind of like everything, you know what I mean?
I really do.
I sound like Daniel Plainview is like,
I like all kinds of religions.
They're all fucking, you know.
And then he sticks it in your back.
Exactly.
But when you make a movie, isn't the idea in your head,
I can't wait to see this on the big screen.
Yes.
Right.
Absolutely.
And so with the business of this business,
it just seems to be less and less that if it's not
one of these big superhero movies, it's going to...
Well, listen, that's exactly right.
I mean, to that point is there's probably, you know,
30 theaters in this country where it would look great
and sound great and the rest are fucking filth.
I'm sorry, but it's like, you know,
and that's the sad truth of it is that I can understand
why everybody says like, oh, piss off.
I'm staying at home.
You know, you want me to pay for babysitter
and pay for parking and come in and look at this shit
and look at it on a fucking screen
that you guys haven't even, you know, I don't know.
It's hard to defend at a certain point.
Yeah.
But I'm sure that if God forbid that the business
became a place where it's only event movies in theaters
and the only place that you can expect your film
to be seen is at home based on it's not a big effects thing
or whatever, you'd much rather people see a film,
be able to make films and have them see it at home
than make no films at all.
Right, but I don't know.
I think that's kind of bullshit too
because the reason why is when all these theaters
were opening up again, you know, you have these huge,
gigantic 25 plexes and stuff like that
and everybody was crying, oh, they're empty.
It was like, well, what did you fucking think was gonna happen?
But if you go to any of the great theaters,
let's say in Los Angeles or New York
that are playing specialty programming,
they're packed with people.
Right.
They're all turning out.
They're film lovers, they're people that you know
are gonna come out and turn out for this thing
and because there's one theater with 400 seats
that they can fill and they can do two shows a day
or three shows a day and people will still turn up.
It was like everyone's scratching their head.
No one's coming back for the movies.
It's like, well, they're not coming back
to these weird horrible pyramids that we've built.
But Paul, I think that maybe you're saying,
and I don't wanna put words in your mouth,
but there is a little bit of,
well, of course they're not gonna come back
because look what you're putting in the theaters
is part of the problem A.
And I can say that and I know it's hard for you to say
because of your position in the films that you make
and you probably don't wanna be that guy who says that.
But you make the kind of films that you want
that are really incredible films
and at the same time you don't seek out recognition
for yourself in a way that a lot of other filmmakers
seem to do.
It's never about your own sort of,
you know, increasing your personal fame.
So my question to you is how much of that
are you aware of show business in fact
or are you kind of in your bubble
of making the films that you make?
No, I do and then I don't.
I slip in and out of it because I love,
part of loving movies as much as I do,
the history of movies and my, you know,
my obsession with this work,
which has been with me forever
and what I've made of my life,
it does involve being fascinated with the way
that it moves, you know,
like we were talking about, we were singing in the rain,
you know, that's a fantastic story,
the way that what happened to the movie business
when it changed from talkies to,
so I constantly try to keep an eye on that
or try to understand it
or have enough friends in this business
from over the years that I can call up and ask,
you know, what does this mean?
What does this mean when this film is doing well
or what is gonna happen here?
What ties do you see turning?
And it's nice to gauge that stuff.
I love this business and I love movies so much
that I have a real interest in seeing it survive,
but more often than not, the volume of my day
becomes more about film preservation, you know,
and film history and trying to keep that stuff alive
and then just sort of looking to see
what's happening and reacting, I suppose,
but I don't know.
How often do you collaborate with Quentin Tarantino
on those efforts?
Because I know he's got a real passion
for the history of cinema
and turning people on to stuff that perhaps I haven't seen.
He's great about all that,
but he's amazing about it, one of the best,
but he also really runs in his own lane, you know,
because the person who I collaborate the most with that
is Scorsese because he has the Film Foundation.
He, since the 70s, since the late 70s, early 80s,
went around to every studio in town and said,
look, this is when it was really tragic,
when the products they had made since their existence
were really fading away and dying
and weren't being taken care of.
This is just on the cusp of VHS coming around
in home entertainment.
So he was really out there at the very beginning
with the Film Foundation saying,
this is the biggest cultural historical thing
that this country has to offer
and we have to preserve it and we have to take care of it.
We have to invest money and time and manpower
into figuring this out.
So being a part of his Film Foundation has been,
I mean, one of the great honors in my life.
It's great.
We'll be right back.
All right, back to the show.
Paul, I know you're a huge, you're a big comedy fan
and you've obviously collaborated with Sandler.
And married the funniest woman in Hollywood.
Yeah.
Or in the world.
Or Tracy.
Maya Rudolph Tracy.
Maya was one of our first guests.
I said that to her.
I said, you were one of the first guests?
She was like, no, I was.
I said, I think you were.
She was like one of the first two or three, right?
Yeah.
Maya is one of those people, as you know.
Did you give her a piece of the pie?
No, no.
We should have.
We sent her a cake though.
Yeah.
But she is one of those people
that anytime you're doing anything funny, you go,
so then it would be great.
And then God, if we could get Maya.
Just to stamp it.
Yeah, you know, because she's so...
How did you guys meet?
Where did that, as Will was saying,
you've been a huge fan of comedy for a long time.
Was it just, did you just fan out on her
and say, will you have dinner with me?
It was just like that.
Yeah.
It's simple.
Or did you swipe left or right?
How does, I don't know how it works.
See, Paul?
It's not easy, is it?
It's not easy to bite your tongue with Bateman.
He wants to hurt me.
I know.
You know, it's funny.
I'm not sure what it is.
I guess it's like anything like, you know, I don't know,
there's actors that wanted to be rock stars
or musicians wanted to be actors.
Like people that making serious films,
really just like the one thing they really love
was comedies.
Right.
I had made these films.
I thought that they were funny,
but people were saying like lean areas.
You make really funny shit.
Well, I think you never ask for a laugh
and that's what makes it so goddamn funny.
There's no winking.
It's great.
Sorry, go ahead.
Thank you.
Yeah, because everything that I watched
or in my daily kind of existence was just like,
I just devoured that stuff.
And I met Maya when she'd started SNL.
What was that meaning?
How'd you guys meet?
Well, you know, the funny thing is is that...
Does she make you laugh at home too, Paul?
She sure makes us laugh.
She just must be a cut up at home.
Somebody once said to me, that reminds me,
I think I told this once,
somebody said to me years ago,
when Amy and I were married,
they said, what's it like being married
to the funniest person in America?
And I said, you'd have to ask my wife.
What?
Do you find that funny people
are generally pretty serious when they're at home?
Yes.
Uh-huh.
Nothing funny about it.
But I want to know that.
How did you meet Paul?
How did you and Miami?
I really do.
At SNL, right?
At SNL.
That was at the time with Will Ferrell and Molly Shannon.
And I had met Molly Shannon and she said,
you know, you could come and you can see how we do this.
And at the time I was writing Punch Drunk Love
and I was obsessed with that time that Sandler had been there.
So I accepted that offer to come
and look and then watch behind the scenes.
And then Molly said, well, you know, you can direct a short.
So I directed a short with her in it
and just got to kind of witness the inner workings
of this whole thing.
And at that time I was also getting to know Sandler
and asking him about his time there.
I was getting ready to make Punch Drunk Love with him.
And as I was getting ready to leave after my week there,
my head was spinning.
I was like, well, that was great,
but I don't want to fucking do that again because it was so much.
It was a different pace of work and I was thrilled to have done it,
but that was enough of a taste.
They said there was a piece of paper
that somebody had put in my hands or something like that.
And I looked at it and the information was on it
that there was a new cast member starting next week.
And her name was Maya Rudolph.
And I can remember seeing her name on that piece of paper.
You've had any feeling like this,
but you see something for the first time and you realize
that my life has just changed.
I don't know how.
I don't know why.
I don't know what just happened.
And so...
Wow.
But quickly you kind of move on.
Whatever you have something else to do, you have to eat it.
But looking back, obviously that impulse,
that kind of shining kind of feeling
that can happen to any of us if we're open to it happened.
And so I roamed around and then I saw her on television
and I saw what she was doing.
And I stayed in touch with a few people from the show
and I was like, my God, this woman's amazing.
And on my way back through, I stopped to watch
and we met at the show and then I had to go on to London
to work on Punch Drunk Love.
And then I got to London and I said, well, something didn't feel right.
And I just came back to New York.
Wow.
And I came back and then...
That's fucking beautiful, man.
So you come back to New York because you felt drawn back to her
and called her and said, let's go out?
Yeah.
No, I love that.
I wanted to make a joke in there so badly,
but I love that story.
He just altered my cold heart.
Sean had that feeling, that same feeling of seeing something written
when somebody pushed a flyer for a new Vons
that was opening around the corner for her.
Well, I thought you were saying when he drove by a new Chin Chin
and he had to double back and...
He knew his life was...
I've had to turn back and I haven't left since.
Jason felt the same way when he found out that Deadline Hollywood had an app.
But that's fucking incredible, man.
I love that.
Maya reminds me too, Paul, that you and I born the same day, same year.
Every year, she reminds me.
Oh, wow.
I think of it all the time.
We're one and the same, Sean.
June 26.
Are you guys?
June 26, 1970.
June 27, 1970.
You two guys are.
Yeah.
But what city were you born in?
Chicago.
Evergreen Park.
I was born in the hospital in Evergreen Park,
but I just say Chicago.
Yeah.
Wow.
You?
I was born here in Los Angeles at what is now the Scientology Center, which was St. John's,
I guess it was.
Oh, wow.
No, it was Cedars of Lebanon.
It was called Cedars of Lebanon.
On Franklin?
Or no, no, the far east of there.
Right there where Sunset and Hollywood meet, that big blue building.
Almost near Prospect.
Yeah, right around the corner.
It went from Catholic to Scientology, that building?
That's right.
That's amazing.
Hey, you know, you mentioned Sandler.
What was it you saw in Adam earlier than anybody else did?
Well, I always liked it when Adam would get angry, you know, the violent part of him would
come out.
And it was like, and I guess I saw the story that I remember, there was a sketch called
the Denise Show where he's talking to his ex-girlfriend Denise, who's played by Shannon
Darity, and it's a funny enough premise, and he keeps trying to woo her back.
But there's a moment when he starts screaming.
I think his dad calls up and is on the speakerphone, and he starts screaming at his father.
And there was a moment where Sandler, he's so invested in it that the whites of his
eyes turn black, and I could just, there was a level of anger and commitment to this performance.
I said, that is something else, that he's not just screaming and being like, he potentially
is completely psychotic underneath all of it.
I loved it.
That's great.
I love that.
Yeah, and it was, you know, he has a great physical way about him, and I, yeah, loved
working with Adam.
Do you ever have any desire to, especially now that there makes so many of these sort
of limited series, does that ever, does that ever appeal to you, the idea of being able
to tell over a longer, yeah.
Okay.
I don't know, I want to be careful what I say here, because I've only over in the past
couple of weeks have become a little bit preoccupied with the, what seems to be a real unfortunate
turn of events, which is 80 minute stories being turned into like nine part, you know,
things that, it just seems to be the kind of, the call of the day, like this is what
we're doing, when in fact, you know, it's like piss off, I don't, this is, this is
stretched out way too much, you know, I mean, I was watching the purple rose of Cairo last
night, which is about 92 minutes, and absolutely perfect, and this is packed so much story.
You know, it's so interesting, because people say that all the time, they're like, did you
see so and so, did you see the new series blank or whatever, and they're like, I try
to get it, well, no, you got to wait nine episodes in, just really good, third one,
right.
I know, fuck, piss off.
Can it be good after the first one?
Yeah.
No, so I, but I only have been really feeling this lately when I, and I, I don't have a
little leg to stand on, because I haven't really, I don't, I don't want to sound like
an asshole here, but I, I haven't seen much of it, because my viewing always goes like,
if I have an opportunity to watch TV, I fucking end up, I'm watching old movies, you know,
it's just sort of like my gravity pulls me that way, with the time that I have in the
day, but you know, you know, sometimes you have a story that's very large, like a large
scale story, any kind of epic stories, and those are great, and there used to be this
opportunity, they would have like the winds of war, or, you know, roots, or these sort
of, these huge miniseries, it was like, okay, that's fantastic, that used to be a kind of
work of art in and of itself.
But now I feel this kind of slow motion turn towards the stories stretched out too much,
I think, I guess underneath it, I have a fear that the painfully difficult challenge of
telling a story in preferably under two hours, hopefully 90 minutes, will start to get lost,
because I think it's a very, very valuable story telling to, you know, that structure
is great.
Yeah.
I don't want to see that get lost.
There is the, the, the risk that we rewiring how we appreciate those things, and I watched
that, the story of a Neville Chamberlain, you know, signing the Munich agreement with
Hitler over the Sudetenland, et cetera, et cetera, trying to avoid war.
This was just to unwind the other night.
Just to unwind?
Yeah.
And what was interesting was, was they were telling this really simple story that was
just a snapshot of that time, and of that very specific story, and these two guys who
tried to alter the course of, and I realized halfway through, I thought, to your point,
I, I was like, I'm surprised that they didn't try to stretch it out, and that they'd actually
made this film, became quite surprising to me while I was watching it, because we've
become so accustomed to, and our brains are wired to, you know, great, there's going to
be 12 episodes of this now.
Right.
Yeah.
Let's talk about the opposite, trailers.
I think you love trailers based on how incredible your trailers are, and I think you cut them
yourself?
I love trailers.
Trailers are their own little art form, and I have cut them in the past or collaborated
with people.
The last one that we did was, was not cut by, by me, it was cut by a guy named Joel, who's
got a company called Aspect Ratio, and it was one of those great moments where I just
handed the film over and said, can you do something, and it was so perfect right away
that we didn't say anything.
We just said, that's it.
You know, it was great.
Really?
Wow.
And that was a really fun feeling, but yeah, I always, that was one of the joys to me of
going to sit in a movie theater.
I guess there's people, there's probably two types of people in the world, people that
like to sit down and watch trailers, and then people that like to watch the credits of movies,
you know, people that like to watch the credits, and people that don't like to watch the credits,
I like to watch the credits.
I do too.
Yeah.
You once described having four kids in the best way I thought possible, and I think I
mentioned this when we had my on, which was, and I'll mash this up, you correct me, that
having four kids is like having four cozy fires burning in the house, just hearing them
run around, and it sounds like you're as much of a homebody as I am.
How do you manage to work as hard as you do and still be an incredible father to not
one, not two, not three, but four kids?
Well I hope so.
I mean, time will tell.
Yeah, this is very dangerous.
I remember there's these great episodes with Lucille Ball doing these radio interviews
from the mid-60s.
Yeah.
I don't know if you've heard those.
They were on Serious XM for a little while, and you hear all these people talking about
their strengths as parents, and then you sort of realize that time has really proven quite
differently that there are these people talking about, you know, we really spend time on the
weekends and everything else, and you're like, uh-huh, uh-huh, stay tuned for the book.
I don't know.
One of the benefits of writing, I suppose, is the ability to work from home, the ability
to be present at home, and shooting movies about the valley.
Well, that helps, too, to not go too far away.
But even still, I think that, you know, I don't know, when I went to London to make
Phantom Thread, they did come for some of the time, but then they understood that for
two months you're not going to see me, you know, but that's okay, out of 12 months in
a year, as long as I'm with you the other chunk of time, you won't miss me that much.
Yeah, sorry, Jason, when he says be present, it means that you are where you are and that
you're aware of the surroundings and of other people, et cetera.
Got it.
Not just being filled in.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
Right.
Understood.
I will say, I do love, and this is almost trite to say, but your affinity for your love
of telling stories about Los Angeles in so many different ways and so many different
times, I find it really fascinating.
You tell stories about the experience of California, unlike anybody else.
Because I think that there's always been that rub that California is not as interesting
because it's newer, that it's not the East Coast, that it's always kind of looked down
on in this way, but you tell these stories about actually how rich it is, it's just different.
And they've got the Dodgers, right, Paul?
Yes, they do.
You know?
Well, yes, they do.
Are you a Dodger guy?
Yeah, I catch a map.
Come on.
Of course.
Hey, so Tarantino says, any great filmmaker only has 10 films in them, you've made nine.
Tell me that's not true.
Oh, that's horseshit.
I don't know.
I don't understand what he's on about that.
Okay, great.
It's just like, I can't.
Because I need more than one more from you.
Yeah.
You got it.
I mean, I don't know.
Are you going to do it like Clint Eastwood until they cart you off?
Yes.
I don't know.
You have to.
That's a yes.
What else are you going to do?
Exactly.
I think, yeah, what else are you going to do?
You have to.
Because I would imagine your perspective on stuff changes as you get older.
In other words, you would have made hard eight differently today than you did then, no better,
no worse, just differently.
You haven't made one bad film.
Yeah.
I want to see what your brain is like when you're 85, what's interesting to you and
how you compose shots and all that stuff.
So don't stop, please.
Well, thank you.
Keep going.
Thank you for saying that.
Thanks for making really good shit, Paul.
Yeah, Paul.
Paul, you're batting average.
You're one of the fucking greats, man.
I always tell you that when I see you in person because I can't, there's no other, I can't
dress it up.
I just can't dress it up, man.
You really honored us with hanging out for an hour, Paul.
Thank you, Paul.
Thank you, buddy.
Thank you very much.
Are you kidding?
Thank you guys, really.
Please say hi to Maya.
I sure will.
I sure will.
I hope I see you guys in person for real soon.
I hope I can come see your Oscar Levant play, Sean.
I really genuinely am.
I love Oscar Levant.
I would love for you to.
Are you playing?
Who's playing Oscar Levant?
That would be me.
You're playing Oscar Levant?
I'm playing Oscar Levant, yeah.
You should hear him play Rhapsody in blue, too, on piano.
He's a classically trained pianist.
It's insane.
Paul, thank you for being here.
We love you.
We love everything about you.
Thanks so much, Paul.
Are you kidding?
Thanks, guys.
Hopefully we'll see you out at the stadium if baseball gets our act together.
Look, fingers crossed, they will, they will.
All right.
Have a great day, man.
See you, man.
All right.
See you.
Bye, buddy.
Bye, Paul.
That was a good get, Jay.
I love you.
Jay, oh my God.
I mean, I've been working this for a couple of weeks with you guys saying, I booked somebody
that I'm excited about.
Oh, this was the one.
That you guys won't be excited about.
I tried to kind of fake it a little bit.
I can't believe it.
I can't.
You know, it's true, though.
You know, when you name all his movies for Tracy, again, I know you said it at the top
of this episode, but it's Boogie Nights, Magnolia, Punch, Drunk, Love.
There will be blood.
There will be blood.
Likers Pizza.
Likers Pizza.
Now.
The minister.
He doesn't miss.
He never misses.
And you know, I've never misses.
And there's so many years in between him making those, that you're like, oh, that's why it's
so long because he invests everything that he is into these things.
That's why, what you said, nine, right?
He's only made nine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And they've all been great.
Yeah.
What a talent, that guy.
I'm really, I'm just, I think I seem pretty casual all the way through that, but my goodness
is that guy a hero to me.
Yeah.
He's amazing.
Yeah.
Same.
I know I'm just a little bit over the years from, through Maya and every time, I think
that every time I'm always right on the edge at risk of embarrassing myself.
And I do end up saying stuff like, your movie was incredible and I can't get over it.
And then I have to walk away.
That's the time I have to walk away.
I really, I would, I'd love for him to make some big, broad comedy, the ones that I know
he's a fan of.
Yeah, I know.
The stuff that.
I was going to ask him that.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm sure he gets that question a lot, so I'm glad none of us did because I wanted
to ask him that too.
But like, you know, you think about his affinity for that kind of comedy, you know, Monty Python,
SNL, I bet it would just be stunning, but, um, yeah, he used to be around SNL so much,
obviously.
And I used to see that.
You must love it.
But, you know, I'd like to come, I like the conversation about, you know, the streaming
versus the, the, the wide release stuff, because, you know, the wide release movies, when you
go see them, you have to pay for them.
But when they're at home, they kind of feel like they're free.
So you don't have to buy the race to the buy from you is.
So remarkable smart smart smart smart is 100% organic and artisanly handcrafted by Bennett
Barbaco, Michael Grant Terry and Rob Armjurf smart loss.