SmartLess - "Tina Fey"
Episode Date: May 10, 2021What can we say about the lovely Tina Fey? The talented actor, writer, creator and producer is granted 1-hour of time from her parole officer / daughter to blast out a quick pod with her GPS ...ankle-bracelet triangulated by 3 cell towers. It's explosive, it's magical, and it Juliennes fries. 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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MUSIC
Sean, you'll never guess what we're gonna do today.
Are we gonna record an episode? Did I just guess it right?
Uh, well, first, man, how many times, baby steps?
First thing we're gonna do is we're gonna welcome our audience
and we're gonna say...
Oh, welcome to...
Welcome to...
Smartness.
I try to do it in time.
Okay, sorry, one more time. One, two, three, one, two, three.
No, the moment's gone.
Oh.
Welcome to Smurlus.
Smartness.
Smartness.
Smartness.
Smartness.
Speaking of hydrating, did you run six miles yet today, Bevan?
No, no. It'll be after this.
I didn't think so. Just looking at you, I didn't think so.
I'm holding a little water right now, yeah.
It's gonna be after this session.
So I got real tight, I got a hard out in 55 minutes.
I was boxing today. I did my...
You know, I'm doing this thing, boxing at home.
I mean, I know, listen, it's a tough guy thing, obviously.
You box at home, like in your garage?
Yeah, like just with boxes.
Like I'm just putting boxes together.
Oh, okay. Beautiful.
What did you think I meant?
Do you don't really have...
You're not one of those dorks with a heavy bag.
A heavy bag hanging in your garage.
Ew, that's gross.
Do you really have one?
It's not hanging. It's on a stand.
I got one of these things.
It's on the ground. He just tackles it.
Thoreau talked me into it.
And then you look at Thoreau's arms.
He's on the cover of Esquire, Justin Thoreau.
Thank you.
Jesus, why haven't we had Justin on the show yet?
Because we want to talk about him more.
We haven't talked about him enough on the show
to then have him on.
I would like...
I met him like once or twice, such a nice guy,
but I don't know him like you guys do.
I would love to have him.
Well, Will, which one of us...
They can't really be surprised.
One of us has got to...
Well, one of us is going to get on it
and the other one's going to be surprised
that the other one did it first.
Look, anyway, we got to get to our guest.
Our guest is an incredible writer, performer.
Started as a performer, became a writer,
then started becoming a performer again.
And the second I mentioned one of the things
you're going to be like, I know exactly who this is.
We've talked a lot over the episodes
with people who've been on SNL.
We haven't had anybody who's been on the anchor desk.
This person was on the anchor desk for many years.
Tina, Tina, Tina, Tina, Tina, Tina.
She wrote mean girls.
She wrote everything.
She did everything.
It's Tina.
Tina.
Hi, my three buddies.
How are you?
Oh, look at her.
He's outside.
You can't say anything and then not know that it's Tina.
Thank you.
Hi.
Wait, are you in...
Is that an outside area of your apartment
that I never saw the outside area?
No, I have a weekend home now,
since the last I saw you, Sean.
There's no apartments in the Hudson Valley.
No, she weekends in the Hudson Valley.
This is her weekend home.
It's my weekend home.
Tina, do you and I have the exact same frames?
I think yours look black and white.
Mine look a little tortoisey.
And can I say something?
Just so you know something what I'm dealing with here,
there's an incredibly passive aggressive nine-year-old
out here with me who will not vacate the area.
Really?
And she's playing some basketball,
which is like, this is probably the first day in her life
that she's chosen to play some basketball,
and it's during this podcast.
But that's okay.
It's a great ambient sound.
Incoming, incoming.
It's great ambient sound.
So Tina, tell me, so yes,
we've all been at home for the last year
or some version of home or in one of our many homes.
In one of our many, many homes.
So relatable.
But do you, so what does that mean
for you right now, getting back to it?
Because you're always,
I always feel like you're always creating,
I know you've just created a new show.
Yeah.
Right, that's about to start.
Yeah, well, I just, we have a,
I produced a show called Girls Five Ever
that comes out on Peacock on May 6th.
Wait, what's it called?
It's called Girls Five Ever.
And it's a comedy, it's super funny.
It starts you out with a laugh, there we go.
Yeah, Girls Five Ever.
I love the title.
It's about a bunch of women who were in sort of
a Danity Kane level girl group around 2000.
And then their song gets sampled now.
And they're like, should we, we're all 40.
We should get our band back together, right?
And it starts, it's-
That's a good idea.
It's really funny.
Yeah, it's really funny.
It's Meredith Cardino's the creator on it.
And it stars Sarah Bareilles who is a delight.
And her voice is ridiculous.
And she's incredible.
And also she's like a lovely natural actress.
And then Renee Elise Goldsberry who you know from,
oh, I don't know, fucking Hamilton?
Will, Jesus.
You get the look off your face.
Are you saying that?
You're saying that?
Cause I'm the only, for so long,
I was the only person who hadn't seen it.
And it was my badge of honor.
Cause I was like, I don't want to see a fucking musical.
Stop telling me it's so great.
It's a musical.
And did you?
I get it.
I did see it, it was great.
Yeah, it was great.
Yeah, it was great.
And I was wrong.
And then wait, let me tell you the other two ladies.
Busy Phillips.
Sure.
And American treasure, Paula Pell.
Oh, she's the best.
Oh my God, Paula Pell.
We were just talking about Paula Pell.
So Paula Pell was a writer on center night live forever.
And now, and not now, but always kind of an actress now,
but people are finally recognized her.
So that's great that you're clear.
Well, she sort of, you know, we always joke with Paula
that she finally aged into her type
cause she was always the kid at like 12 years old.
She was in the play with gray spray in her hair.
And now she's like, she's her actual type now.
Gray spray acting.
Yeah, columnist, she's reeked of gray spray
for 30 years in her life.
Sure.
So Tina, we have to do this because,
but for you, it's, you know, obviously you hate going back
over like, oh, this is what I did.
But it's interesting to everybody who listens.
And it's super interesting to us because,
not to embarrass you,
but you're such a fucking huge piece of the comedy landscape
and have been for so long.
And you're such a great voice, incredible writer,
incredible performer.
You started, yeah, I've just always, you know,
there's a butt, hang on Tina.
No, there's no butt.
I'm always very fond of you.
And I'm such a huge fan in awe of your talent.
You started in, you moved to Chicago in early 90s.
I, let me think, yeah, 90, I graduated in 92,
spring of 92, I graduated from the University of Virginia.
So I think I moved in the fall of 1992.
Yes.
So you're from Pennsylvania and then you moved,
I know, so you moved to Chicago, you start second city,
right?
Yeah.
So I went to UVA kind of randomly
and then I went to Chicago and I started Improv Olympic
first and class at the second city.
And that's where I met Amy Poehler.
Sure.
And a bunch of other people that only Amy Poehler
and I know, but like, but like Kevin Dorr
from Brian Stack and Miriam Tolan, all those guys,
Dratch, Rachel Dratch.
Yeah, Dratch.
Those were your contemporaries.
I remember like those were, that was kind of your crew,
all those people.
So is it crazy that like three of those people end up
on Saturday Night Live?
I mean, that's, that's like the odds of that is crazy.
I mean, it isn't, it isn't, I guess because well then
at the time there's like the groundlings,
standups, the groundlings and second city were the places
they looked.
Now, you know, the internet has become the great equalizer
and find people on YouTube.
You find people on TikTok, presumably.
I'm so surprised they didn't run into you.
Yeah, you were a musical director.
Well, you didn't run into me because I don't think,
cause you were a musical director out in the Burbs, right?
Yeah, in the Burbs, but I was always downtown Chicago,
always around the, I had some friends at second city.
I'm just surprised we never.
And the bus station.
The bus station.
Wait, so Tina, so you, that, those are kind of your peeps.
I know that like Dratch and Amy and, and Stack and Miriam
and all those kinds of guys were your.
Yeah, and Horatio.
Yeah, yeah.
We got another one on SNL.
Glazer, like all those kinds of people were there too, right?
Like in Chicago.
Glazer, I was Glazer's understudy.
I was John Glazer's understudy.
Yeah, and then he left to do Dana Carvey, right?
Yes.
To work with Dana Carvey.
And I got to go on to the main stage when he left, yeah.
So then you moved from Chicago to SNL,
like McKay and those guys were kind of seniors
when you guys were freshmen.
Is that kind of the idea?
Adam McKay.
Exactly.
Adam McKay was already head writer at SNL
and he, I submitted my writer's packet to him
because I had been on stage at Second City
and Lauren Michaels and Marcy Klein had come to scout talent
and zero interest in me as a performer.
So I was like, well, writer's packet it is.
And then.
And just for people who don't know,
Adam McKay was Will Ferrell's business partner
and writer of SNL and writer of all these amazing movies.
And then he directs crazy, huge movies now.
And yeah.
Now he directs a lot of like dramatic movies.
He's an Oscar winner now, guys.
Yeah, yeah.
But also for Wisconsin, there is a,
you can either be a performer or a writer on Saturday Night Live.
And sometimes you make the leap.
You get hired as a writer like Sudeikis.
I remember Sudeikis this first year was a writer.
Yeah, Sudeikis was a writer, did not want to be a writer.
Conan was a writer.
The best part about Sudeikis being a writer
and not wanting to be a writer was that he let everybody know.
So in the best way, in the best way.
Sina, did you, were you one of those people
that always dreamed of being on a Saturday Night Live?
Because I hear so many alum saying,
oh, when I was a kid, all they ever wanted.
And then they get their,
and then their dream comes true
and they're on Saturday Night Live.
Yeah, it is.
I feel like I still wanted to be on Saturday Night Live.
That to me, I would like,
it would be hard for me to understand
meeting anyone who didn't want to do that.
Right, right, yeah.
What do you mean you don't want to do that?
And then were you disappointed that they didn't,
that they didn't select you for the performing part
or were you more comfortable writing anyway?
I was always a bit more of a writer
even the way I contributed to the company.
In Second City, I definitely was like an idea person.
I wasn't someone, I didn't have that magic thing
that Horatio Sands or Rachel Dratch have
where like they come out and you're just like,
oh, this is gonna be good.
Like they just sparkly, you know.
But don't you feel like to a certain extent,
like you're kind of, I don't know,
this is gonna sound mean for performers,
but you're kind of over qualified to be a performer.
Like it's really hard to be a writer, I think.
Really hard to be a director.
Less hard to be an actor
because everybody does that every day anyway,
whether you're an actor or not.
I mean, people change their behavior
when they're with their grandmother
versus their best friend.
Like people know how to adjust the way
in which they come across, like that's acting.
But writing, I feel like that's really difficult stuff.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's more work,
the writing and directing.
It is like people who are really good actors.
Listen, acting is like 99% having a good face.
It doesn't have to be a beautiful face,
it's like an interesting face.
It could be, you know what I mean?
It could be Lupita Nyong'o, it could be Steve Buscemi,
but you gotta have a face that people wanna look at.
And that's like 99% of it.
And then the other, like then 0.4% beyond that is talent.
But I think you have that.
I think, you know what you were saying
about Horacio and Rachel,
you have that thing too, where you come out
and people are like, oh my God, that's gonna be so good.
Because it's you, it's Tina Fey.
It was always fucking funny and always delivers.
So I think people get adjusted as excited.
That's very kind of, I think now,
I think I've like slowly worn people down.
I think it's been like, it's mirrored my dating life
in every way.
I'm just like, I'll wear you down.
But Tina, you gotta admit, like in the best way,
like you kind of trojan horse them,
like, you know, Marcy and Lauren come in
and they sort of like, okay,
and they don't even see you or whatever.
And then you come and you submit your packet.
Obviously, McKay wants, you know,
he knows that how brilliant you are.
You come, you start submitting on SNL
and then your talent just shows through
and you end up getting it in spite of them
and become like the biggest star on the show
for many years.
That's gotta feel kind of gratifying.
I don't mean that in a shitty way,
but it must feel like, yeah,
I always knew I could do this in a real way.
It was, you know, yeah, the long grift sort of paid off.
I mean, there's a couple of factors.
There's like the team of gay scientists
that fixed my appearance, you know.
That's a title of your next series, by the way.
And then like, I always say don't underestimate
how gloriously lazy Lauren is about casting
because this is like Conan, like,
do you think someone was like going all over town
and being like, where's a pasty seven foot redhead
that we can put, that we can give a talk show to?
I was like, no, he was around the office,
being funny around the office.
And that's the same thing happened here.
It was like, we need to new update anchors.
Like, let me look inside my own eyelids
for like, who's available.
Do you prefer one over the other acting and writing?
Like, do you miss performing
when you're not in a writer's room and vice versa?
Writing is like, it's only fun to have written something.
Like, writing is only fun after it's over.
Right.
Performing is like fun while it's happening.
And then for me, if you're me,
you usually look back after and go, oh, yeah, that wasn't.
Yeah, that would include myself in that, yeah.
Do you think that, yeah?
Yeah, no, I just like, I beat myself up all the time.
But you're crazy.
So it is common for the weekend anchor
to not be a performer, correct?
Yeah.
Well, Chevy was first, right?
He was mostly just that.
He was not a performer that much on the show, was he?
Not too much.
He was a little bit.
Right.
He did Gerald Ford and some commercials.
Is it common for the head writer to be the anchor?
It is now, because Joest and Che are the head writers,
I think, among like.
And Seth as well was, yes.
Seth was, yes, yeah.
You know what I really did learn that time, too,
was that I learned, you know, after Jimmy left,
and then Warren was like, well,
do you want to do it by yourself?
And I thought like, well,
I'm supposed to want to do it by myself, right?
Yeah.
And I think we even did like that.
And then at the last minute, I was like,
I don't want to, I want to do it with Amy.
And I realized that's why I learned that I don't,
I don't work a single.
Right.
Yeah, I kind of remember that.
I remember that first,
that was a very late breaking decision.
Very late, rudely late.
And then it turned out to be obviously great.
And you guys, that was such a exciting time for the show.
You guys were so good.
And it was so much fun.
And it was fun to have a front row seat to that.
It was amazing.
You guys at that kind of,
right in that same year,
you guys were doing mean girls at the same time,
that first year you started, right?
You guys were shooting while you were doing update.
Remember that, it was crazy.
Maybe.
I think you're probably,
I'm going to assume that you're right about that.
So many things, I dragged to trash.
I don't remember a lot of things.
I dragged to trash.
That's the name of my biography.
But that seems right.
Tina, are you still a fan of SNL?
Of course you are, I'm sure you are.
Is there anybody that you just are completely drawn to
that's on now that you're like, want to work with or?
Oh yeah, well that's,
I am a fan and what's really exciting now
is my older daughter Alice is 15.
And so we stay up and watch together.
So that's fun to like,
be at that age with her where she's into it, you know.
And, yeah, I mean.
Does she go back and watch your episodes?
No.
No.
No.
Do your kids want to watch your set up?
No, they don't give it up.
My kids, my wife, no one thinks I'm doing anything
but counting paper clips when I'm working.
That's healthy though.
That's healthy I think.
Yeah.
And they watch everything.
They watch, should you watch Parks and Rec?
100%.
Yeah.
The office, 100%.
Yeah, exactly.
So yeah, I mean, I'm still a fan of Keenan.
That's never going to change.
I think Chris Red is super funny.
Yeah, Chris Red.
Chris Red, Chris Red was on Will and Grace
and he was supposed to be a recurring character.
And as they were trying to make his deal,
he got a call like a week later.
And like a week or two later,
he's on SNL.
I was like, that's so crazy.
It's like a couple episodes of Will and Grace.
That is crazy.
So Tina, how do you manage being so great
at what it is that you do and physically?
Like how do you decide where to point your work?
I mean, you can be, you can do so many different things,
whether it's television or film or theater, musicals,
on camera, behind camera.
Like I would imagine it would be somewhat burdensome
to try to figure out what to prioritize.
I mean, I think TV sort of where I'm most comfortable
because I feel like it's the most interesting place right now.
There's more interesting things happening in TV,
especially for comedy.
I feel like the movies is kind of glacially paced.
And it's not that I don't want to do movies,
but it also just feels like there's so many more chances
for people to fuck it up in movies.
Well, it takes seven years to make a movie.
It takes seven years and takes seven years to shoot it.
Don't you always find that like,
there's nothing more boring in a lot of ways
than making a movie and being on a movie set.
It's so slow and it's not conducive to that immediacy
that you have when you're making a show,
when you've got to shoot nine pages in a day
and you got to get the scene and it's got,
you've got to move, it's got to be quick.
And that lends itself to being funnier
rather than shooting one side of it, you know, for one day.
And then, you know, you shoot like three eighths of a page.
Like there's the worst.
And in TV, you know, you did 30 rock.
You guys would jam through though,
you'd have those huge packed days
with just like a million scenes
and you just got to get it.
Also, we all joke about like,
remember when we used to make 22 episodes of things?
That's like ridiculous now.
Like everyone makes like three episodes
and collects their awards.
Don't you think those days are,
those days seem like they're over, don't you think?
The 22 episode day?
I think so.
Or the 100 episodes of a show.
Yeah.
I think so.
What about writing books?
Was that, is that a good time pace for you?
Or is that somewhat glacial as well?
I just did that the one time.
And I remember I was like doing 30 rock at the same time.
I was doing, I think I started it.
I remember I was on the set of date night with Steve Carell
and I just had like a notebook on this.
I was like, yeah, I guess I said I would write this book.
And then as short as that book is,
I felt like it near about killed me
because again, I don't work a single.
And I was so used to having a writer's room.
And I was like, not so much that it was more work,
but it was just so vulnerable of like,
if this book comes out and people are like, boo,
it's a hundred percent my fault.
It's a hundred percent a rejection of me personally.
It's not a novel.
It's just like, here's what my deal is.
And if people were like, boo,
I've never felt so nervous about anything.
I walk into like a grocery store and people go, boo.
Sure.
Boo.
But that's just because they've seen your work.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
Tina?
Well, yeah, sorry.
Go ahead, go ahead.
Are you in like an old person's bathroom?
What is that?
By the way, you should know.
You should know.
So this is my home booth.
And these are actually handles for a bathtub, no joke.
Because usually when I record my real video
is I'm standing up and I like to lean and hold on.
So I had the guy get these,
and they are for somebody who needs help
getting in and out of a tub.
Now, how much harder or what would you have to navigate
to become to do what you do today?
If you were starting out and you were 22 today
and trying to get into comedy, fuck, right?
Well, you get, yeah.
Advice, right?
Not even advice,
just like what would you do to yourself?
Like how would you do it if you were graduating?
I'm not necessarily saying,
hey, to young writers out there, listen,
like literally what would you do?
Yeah, that's a good question.
What would I do?
I probably would be trying to blow up on TikTok
or something, right?
I would be cutting out the middleman,
which, listen, it's worked well in porn.
Sure, right.
It means Hugh Hefner anymore, right?
Yeah.
It seems like, I mean, unless I'm wrong,
it seems like people on TikTok
really wanna be in television or film,
and the people in television or film
aren't making that money anymore,
so they wanna go blow up on TikTok.
It's, don't you feel that way?
Yeah, I think broadcast TV,
especially doesn't mean, to my kids,
that doesn't mean anything to them.
They don't understand what's happening.
Is there still, I'm gonna sound like a real old man here,
can you still make a bunch of money on social media,
like saying, I like this kind of chocolate.
I say this kind of, like,
I think so.
Right, that's a whole industry, right?
I think so, yeah.
Like taste, that's not what taste makers are called, is it?
Is that what?
Influencers?
Influencers, right.
And like people have agents for that and stuff?
Dude, take yourself out back and just end it, man.
This is fucking, by the way,
this is a great opportunity to mention,
you said chocolate, Jason, for us to mention Reese's.
Jason's been asking me to reach out to the people at Reese's
cause he wants free peanut butter cups because
he doesn't make any money over on the Ozarks.
But I'm so sick and tired of hearing your dumb voice,
sell candy on TV.
And I'm like, if I gotta listen to it,
if I gotta listen to it,
then why don't you get me a free box of those,
the peanut butter cups that are wrapped in peanut butter
with the peanut butter inside.
It's double triple peanut butter,
and I'm not sorry, whatever it is.
I need some of that for free
for having to listen to your crap.
Great, okay, I got it.
I wrote it down and they're obviously listening right now.
So thank you, everybody at Reese's and to Jason Bateman.
Should I give my address over the air here?
Yeah, give your address.
Number one, Deadline Hollywood Way.
Tina, did you ever imagine it would be this amazing
being on this podcast?
I mean, I thought about it.
Thought about saying no, and then.
My tip on Reese's though,
this is my tip on all candy.
Sure.
Whenever there's holiday candy,
where it's like the Reese's shaped like Santa Claus,
always buy that candy because it's fresher.
Fresher, nice.
Cause they just made it.
You could get a regular candy bar.
That's a good point.
It could have been in the CVS for seven months.
Really good point.
We often ask this question of people
who are in the public eye, who have children.
Would you do your kids, I wanna do what mom and or dad does,
or would you discourage them from getting it,
or you just say follow your dreams and I'll support you?
It's funny, you should ask that.
Our older daughter, I think if anything,
maybe would be interested in directing,
I think she would be horrified to perform.
And I never, when she was a little kid,
I think all little kids think they want to.
And I think I let her be,
I think she was in some still photographs, Alice.
She played young Liz Lemon,
but in a series of photographs at the end of 30 Rock.
And that was like, that's enough.
Like let's keep it measured.
And then this other one that you, no, no,
what I'm dealing with.
During the pandemic, it came up,
we worked for Girls 5 Eva, we had to cast a kid
to play busy Phillips and Andrew Rannell's child,
who was like a little YouTube villain.
And I had always said that when I was like, you know what?
That's a Nelly.
I got a Nelly Olsen right here.
Um.
Jason knows Nelly.
I know, oh, small world, she became a stand up.
I believe me.
Really?
I loved her.
Yeah, I remember like,
she became a stand up for a while, right?
Al, I want to say Alison Angrum?
Is that right?
Dude, if you don't know.
Oh my God.
Alison Angrum, did I say that?
I said it right, right?
Alison Angrum, yeah.
Yeah.
There you go.
Anyway, so I let her audition for this part
because it was sort of like-
Wait, you made your daughter read?
Of course I made her read.
Yeah, because I thought that was gonna be the end of it.
And then her audition was pretty good.
And-
I thought I was the bad parent on this one.
Oh, it was gonna get worse.
And then, so then, and then she did pretty well.
And then there was another kid who was like
an actual experienced kid.
And we're like, well, this,
and I was like, this will be good for her.
She, you know, we could hire the kid with more experience.
And then, and so I had to tell her like,
well, you did really well.
And I was making it up.
I was like, you were in the top three.
And, but, you know, we had,
and then she was like, basically it was like,
I didn't book it.
And she was like, you didn't book it?
Well, I was like, you're half TFA.
And that bitch never booked anything.
And so I was like, you didn't book it.
But then, because it was the pandemic,
this other poor kid,
they were like, well, she can work as a local hire,
but she's in Michigan right now.
And the quarantine, it fell apart.
And so then I was like, back up.
All right, homegirl, you're up.
So she's in it.
And now we're faced, now, and it was at the time,
it was like, you get to leave the house
and get a test and work during quarantine.
And I will say she was incredibly professional.
I said, she was like a little bit like mommy.
She was like very prepared and a little dead eyed.
You've all acted with me.
That's what it is.
But she was dead.
And a little dead eyed.
My God, if she hears the clip of that, she'll murder me.
So listen, Tina, I'm kind of obsessed
with horrible theater stories and theater stories gone wrong.
I have so many.
Do you have like a favorite or like a play you were in
or at Second City or something?
Oh, a favorite theater horror story.
I do have a pretty good theater horror story.
This is from high school theater.
Yes.
So, okay, in my high school,
I played Van Helsing in Dracula because feminism.
Did you borrow Paul as a gray spray?
I probably did.
Nice callback.
Nice callback.
And so, okay, so let me think about this.
So I was Van Helsing in Dracula
and we did like a total of two performances
and everything went wrong.
And I can't remember this story.
Like the first thing that kind of went wrong would be like,
our theater was a thrust stage and the seats went up.
Is that arena?
So like, tiered?
Tiered, yeah.
Like so the stage was on the ground
and the audience was up.
And we had like a rubber bat on a like a very long string
like scene one, the bat's supposed to fly by,
the bat gets stuck.
It's just dangling on the stage the rest of the night.
We're like, oh, that's not good.
Then I give some big speech.
There's this guy, Harker says to me like,
professor, what is a vampire?
And I give a speech like,
I give like a page and a half speech of what is a vampire?
And this kid was just like not listening.
So he goes, what is a vampire?
And I give the whole speech.
And at the end of it, he looks at me and goes,
but professor, what is a vampire?
And he gave me this same cue again.
Then the kid who played Dracula was this kid, John Doyle,
who was like very like Bon Jovi based.
Like his personality was Bon Jovi based.
Beautiful hair.
Rocker hair, beautiful hair.
His mom was a hairdresser.
And his mom was also a professional
and Jillian impersonator, side story.
Anyway.
Let's get back, we'll double back to that.
We'll double back.
And so John, you know, because he was like,
he was like, oh, he takes rock singing lessons in New York.
Like he was cool guy.
He was not an athlete.
And so there's a scene where there's a mirror
and Dracula like sees the mirror
and he's supposed to throw this like chalice or something
and smash the mirror.
And so John being like not an athlete
and in this open arena, like I go a mirror
and then he like throws the thing,
misses the mirror entirely.
So then I'm like trying to improvise like,
what am I supposed to say?
And then a full like 20 seconds later,
a little techie kid comes out
like in full view of the audience
with a hammer from behind and smashes the mirror.
Oh, at one point also,
then the set caught on fire a little bit.
Jesus.
There was like a little flash pot
and the fake rocks of the castle were foam
and started to catch on fire.
And then my dad who had been a fireman
and did not fuck around, he stood up and he was like,
fire.
And we were like, okay.
Like he stood up in the audience and he over.
This is like all backed one.
And then put the fire out and continued.
It's a longer story than you want it.
And then again, the techies, like there's a part where like
there's a techie just like in a bay window,
just like in full view of the audience
with a fog machine, just being like knowing
he's just like a total hero.
And then the end of the whole thing ended
with like Van Helsing kills Dracula
with a spike through the heart.
And it was, and I'm down and I'm like acting so hard
and I'm doing this whole speech.
And then I just hear laughter.
And I was like, this, this can't be good.
This is the end of the whole play.
Because again, the stage flat audience here,
I was like lightning flushing.
I'm killing the vampire.
And I look up and just a toddler has wandered
onto the stage.
No.
Toward me.
And that's how not scary it was.
The toddler joined us.
That's my story.
That's hilarious.
By the way, you mentioned your dad.
I always think about this.
I met your parents a couple of times,
but I remember your dad,
I remember going to your wedding
and we had only met a couple of times
at going to your wedding.
Your dad described me as...
He's like, that guy's Brooks Brothers handsome, right?
He said, no, he's an arrow shirt.
Do you remember that?
Yeah, my dad was very taken with Will.
He's like, oh God, that guy,
that guy looks like an arrow shirt model.
But it was very specific.
Do you remember arrow shirts?
I was like, look at this year's catalog.
Like that guy's an arrow shirt.
And I was like,
He just made them for thick dudes.
Is that what the, was it special for?
Excuse me?
Nothing?
Oh no, Will was thin then.
He was really thin then.
I was thin then.
I don't believe it.
I was really thin.
Tina, because of your theater background,
would you ever want to do multi-cam?
Now for the audience difference between multi-cam
and single-cam is single-cam,
there's no audience, multi-cam,
there's a live studio audience.
That's when you hear laughing,
like Cheers and Will and Grace and Friends
and Sonfeld and all those.
Would you ever want to do a multi-cam?
It seems like you'd be perfect for that.
Yeah, I do think it'd be so fun.
I feel like in some ways it's hard to...
Will and Grace was one of the last ones
that was especially on NBC,
they don't really do them so much anymore.
And I also have reached an age
where I can't really be photographed from the waist down.
Yeah, not true.
So like, but I do think it'd be fun.
But wouldn't it be great to hear
all that laughter through the masks?
Or if you don't want to be in one,
just like create one and write one.
I think you'd be so amazing.
Are you saying that you want Tina
to create a multi-cam for you?
No.
What about hosting a talk show?
Would you ever do that, Tina?
It seems to me like you'd be fantastic at that.
Oh, thank you.
I don't know that.
I think I'm very shy.
I think to me it sounds super stressful.
I've never wanted to pursue that.
I'm really shy too.
Yeah, we can tell.
I am.
I don't like being the center of attention.
Well, and also with those kind of late night talk shows,
like that's a grind, that's like...
But I remember when you were doing 30 Rock,
I mean, you came off SNL, which was a grind
because you were a head writer and you were doing update
and it was a lot, a lot, a lot,
and especially leading right up until, you know, 2008
and everything that was going on.
Oh, sorry, you were already doing 30 Rock at that point,
but you were doing so much, then you go to 30 Rock
and it just kind of amps it up even more
because you're show-running 30 Rock
and you're writing it on
and then you're starring in it as well
and having 16-hour days.
So you're not pulling all-nighters every night,
but you are going 18 hours or 17 hours a day.
Like, that was fucking really rough, right?
For many years in there?
It was insane.
First of all, also, if you hear weird breathing sounds,
it's the dog, it's not me.
Listen, does she now has her dog, her white,
what is it, a kaka poo?
He's a poodle.
He's just a straight poo.
He's a poodle.
Straight poo.
Yeah, looking back on that kind of stuff.
I didn't mean to say that you looked tired in those years.
I just meant to say more
that I know that you were very exhausted.
You talked about it, like you were like getting crushed.
It was insane.
What we did, I don't know, we were just,
I was at 35 and had some juice left
and doing 22 episodes.
And also my baby, Alice was one when we started
and it was crazy.
It was crazy.
I look back and shudder at just what we, yeah.
Did you enjoy the shutdown and the pandemic
to kind of recharge a little bit
or did you stay super-duper busy?
I wouldn't say enjoyed it.
I mean, like, yeah, it's always one of those things
where if you're like, oh, I'm lucky enough
that nobody in my family died.
So like, it's okay to then just quietly say
like it was nice that we were together.
I guess what I meant is enjoyed the period
that you could not work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nice, right?
Yeah, it's kind of nice.
I think like I would, I'm ready to retire guys.
I'm ready to.
Me too, by the way, I was saying the same thing.
And I was saying, I was talking about it with,
certainly with Amy too,
which she's been feeling the same way,
which is just that feeling of like, oh my God,
you know, much like you kind of did the same thing
had, you know, had Archie went right into Parks and Rec.
Yeah.
And those first few, when you have,
both your girls have those like little babies
and you're working those insane hours on those shows,
it's crushing.
It's like, it's soul crushing
because you're not at home as much as you wanna be
and you've got little kids
and you're trying to fuck balance it all.
It just.
Right, and it's all, you know,
nothing compared to someone who's doing all those
same work hours on a job that they hate
that doesn't pay well.
No, no, no, of course it's the same
as being a working parent on any job.
But like, just in the sense that like,
of any working parent, especially a working mom
who's working any job that's taking them long stretches,
whatever it is.
Yeah.
And of course there are a lot of people who can say,
well, you get paid really well, like, okay, sure.
But like, you're still working all those hours.
Yeah.
And it's tough, you know.
And it's hard to, once you get to stop,
it's hard to go back.
Like I've worked on a couple of things.
I did a little small part in this show
that Steve Martin and Marty Short have,
and was that thing of like,
and your pickup is five, 10, and you're like,
oh yeah, that used to be every day.
Yeah.
Especially for ladies, because the paired makeup.
People have really gotten used to working at home too, right?
And in any occupation,
I wonder how that's gonna all transition back.
I think.
I know.
I do like to go to an office.
I like it too.
Right, but five days a week,
or would it be great like just two days a week,
three days a week?
I feel like that's gonna be the transition.
Sean, you like going to the office too?
I do, I prefer like the old man,
nine to five kind of one place, one stop shop.
Jason likes that too.
I like a routine.
Jason likes that too.
We had this little company a couple of years ago,
we had this shared office,
and he'd always be like, you fucking dick,
we've got this office, and you're never in here.
And I go, well yeah, my dad worked his ass off
for 40, 50 years.
I don't wanna have to do that.
Why do you think I do what we do,
so that I can not go to an office?
So you know what I did?
I found a portrait of myself,
and I put it behind my desk,
so he could look at me even when I was at theirs.
That's a true story.
That really was county paper clips at that place.
Yeah, it really was.
So Tina, like you joke about retiring,
but of course you're never gonna wanna stop writing,
and you're never gonna wanna stop doing that kind of,
well, oh really?
No, come on.
So wait Tina, what would you do though?
What is there anything like picture the girls
are grown and out, and you and Jeff,
and you're at home,
and what you still would be writing,
or is there something that you'd wanna be doing?
I wonder, I so wonder,
it's like that thing of you,
the improv training, right,
you go back to it,
and it's like when do you enter a scene?
This is the trick,
the thing that trips people up,
does anyone remember like,
when are you supposed to enter a scene?
And the answer is when you're needed.
It's the only time you're supposed to enter.
You're not supposed to enter
because you have a funny idea,
you're not supposed to enter
because it's going well,
and you want a piece of it.
Well, what about the notion of like you and Jeff
just doing just globetrotting,
and having some wanderlust,
and once you guys become empty nesters,
just start traveling the world,
and knocking down,
and getting all cultured.
Is that something that's appealing to you,
or are you as soft as I am,
and you need CNN and Thread Count?
Oh yeah, I wanna see a couple places,
but I don't need to see everywhere.
I know I'm increasingly just a homebody.
I know, you know what I wish one of us should write
is like someone should try to be Neil Simon, right?
Like someone should write a play.
I nominate you.
As if that's easy to do.
Yeah, let me just write one of those out.
But like to write a comedy, a hard comedy,
because I'll tell you what,
I go to these Broadway plays,
and what passes for a joke, Sean,
is like mentioning Brooklyn is a joke.
Just the words.
Just the words.
And you have to do it out, you have to play it out.
Brooklyn.
What about the films that Neil Simon,
they adapted and became like California Suite.
Yeah, California Suite, Goodbye Girl is one I like.
And the Blake Edwards stuff.
I mean, those big commercial films,
I mean, someone's gotta write them, Tina.
They don't write themselves.
Nobody goes to that shit.
I don't think they mixed comedy films anymore.
They make like-
We put them on Netflix.
Let's do that.
Yeah.
Oh no, man.
I saw up some poll online today.
It was like, if you could only live
with three of these film franchises,
which one would it be?
And it was like Marvel, Star Wars,
like Harry Potter, like all the,
and I was like, wait, that's what it's become?
That's it?
Those are the films?
Fuck that, man.
Yeah.
And nobody's funny.
This is crazy.
I can't wait for the letters and the comments.
Oh, nobody's funny anymore.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah, you're hilarious.
I love it.
Bring it on.
No, you're not saying that.
You're saying that comedies
are not in the theaters anymore, really.
Yes, that's what I'm saying.
Nobody's making comedy films.
No one's gonna make the in-laws now.
The original in-laws nobody's gonna make.
No, nobody's making, you can't make Rushmore today.
Nobody's making Rushmore.
You'd make it for Netflix, I guess.
But I'm fine watching it at home on my couch.
I don't need to drive with theater to see that, right?
I mean, I'd go to a theater to see some big, huge format,
right, a big IMAX thing or something.
You come ask them.
Is that Penelope?
Come ask them, what's your question?
How much longer?
Okay, we're almost done.
Sorry, we're almost done.
We're wrapping up now, we're gonna wrap it up.
Your agent looks real young.
Yeah, we are past our hour here.
I know, we've been taking up way too much of your time.
I'm sorry that we're keeping you from the fact,
because I wanna keep you on, I just want your opinion
on everything, I feel like anytime I get your opinion,
it feels like it's really the right one.
Yeah, for sure.
So that's why we've been keeping you around.
But-
Opinions are all I have anymore, go.
No, it's so good, you've got.
We're gonna dismiss you, but we're gonna reserve the right
to call you back with any questions we have.
That's right.
Anytime, guys.
Oh, you're the best.
Thank you so much for taking your time to do this.
I love you, Tina Fey.
Saturday, you're the best.
I love all three of you.
Love you, Tina.
Go have fun with the rest of your day
with that sweet girl.
Girl, yeah.
Hey!
Okay, we love you.
Go be a boy, mom.
All right, guys.
Love you, Tina.
I love you.
Thank you.
Thanks, Tina.
Bye, everybody.
Boy, just another-
She wanted to get off there at the end.
Yeah, do you think she gave a cue to Penelope to come in
and say, okay, now this is the time where I need you to-
No, she had it now.
No, she's-
Everybody knows who she is.
Everybody knows how brilliant she is.
Everybody knows, everybody's a fan.
It seems like that's the one person
everybody can agree on, right?
That's, oh my God, she's-
I would like to find the person
that doesn't like Tina Fey.
Like who, yeah, who's that person?
How could you possibly not?
Yeah.
I know she's the most, she's just so frickin' funny.
She's such an unbelievable writer
and a great joke writer.
I mean, just the funniest.
Doesn't take herself or anything too seriously.
Always has the funniest joke on everything.
It's scary.
It's intimidating.
Yeah, she's-
It must be for someone, you know, for you guys.
A great leader seems like a great leader.
Incredible leader.
Yeah, I'm very drawn to her.
It was great.
I mean, you were on 30 Rock a few times or once?
Just once, the finale of that first season.
Just once.
Will, you were on it a bunch of times, weren't you?
I guess.
Well, that's what the four Emmy nominations tell me.
But, you know-
Wait, what?
Come on.
I mean, it doesn't matter.
Oh.
It doesn't matter.
Wait a second.
Is that true?
Is that true?
Honestly, were you on for four seasons?
Yes.
But did you get nominated?
Four times, yeah, yeah.
Congratulations.
Congratulations.
Yeah, four.
Congratulations.
Wait, so guess, so you did four episodes.
You got nominated for all four.
No, I did more than four episodes.
I did a bunch.
I did, like, the first season I did one or two.
It was not their first season.
It was like-
So do you want me to do an impression of your mom really quick?
Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah.
Well, it would have been more impressive if you won.
That's true.
That's very true.
Should be much more impressive if I had won.
Yeah.
Oh, God, I-
She's listening.
We can cut that if you-
No, we can keep it.
You know, the first time, Jason, you know this story.
We were coming back, the rest of the development
had won the Emmy for best comedy.
And 2004, whatever that was.
And the next day, that was a Sunday night.
The next Monday, we had to be at work early.
You and I were in that scene.
Do you remember we had the Emmy?
Those guys, Chuck Martin, brought his on set.
We were so excited that we won.
Improbably, because we were such a low-rated show.
And I'm driving to the Fox lot from Venice
and my mom calls.
And it was like 6 a.m. L.A. time.
And I've been up until three, because we were so excited.
I was like, oh my God, did you watch-
Did you see the Emmys last night?
No, we won.
I did.
Now, your sister is going through,
and then just complete.
Oh.
Oh.
I was like, okay.
It was a very sort of Canadian.
Like, the whole idea is always like,
don't get too big for yourself.
Right.
You know, and don't like, oh, you think that you're better
than anybody else?
Like, I guess I don't.
I'm sorry, I don't.
I think I'm worse.
And I'm like, there we go.
That's more like it.
You know, the idea, have you ever heard the story
about the two lobster fishermen, one Canadian,
one American, or walking down the road?
And the American lobster fisherman says to the Canadian,
he says, notice that you don't have a lid
on your lobster pot thereby.
Aren't you worried that your lobster is going to get out?
And the Canadian says, no, these are Canadian lobsters.
If one of them tries to get out,
the other ones will pull them back down.
Sheesh.
That's Canada.
Oh, Lord.
That's Canada.
That's what I grew up in.
Oh, bless.
And I love Canada.
I love it to death.
And I grew up like that too.
It's a very, there's a very sort of, anyway,
I don't know why I love this.
Speaking of Canada, have you given any thoughts?
I don't imagine you're going to book the guest
for our Toronto stop for our tour, our tour.
Which, listener, it does look like it's firming up.
It does look like we're going to actually do this
and we're going to go to a few cities.
Just inside the new year.
Just inside the new year.
2022.
And we're starting the tour in Toronto.
Is that right, eh?
We can say that, yeah.
And then some New York and some Boston,
some Chicago, some Madison, some LA, is that right?
I think that's right, yeah.
So who would we, can we, will you try to?
I have a couple people in mind
that I want to have for Toronto, you know.
I know that's Chicago.
We should start taking suggestions for guests.
Yeah, we should.
That's a good idea.
Just saying the expression tap link in bio,
does that mean anything?
Tap link in bio.
What does that mean?
Who's link in bio?
That's what you say on like Instagram, you know.
Tap link in your bio.
Tap link in bio.
You know what else they say sometimes
on Instagram, but more on that.
Don't you do it, not yet.
We're still talking.
We're still talking.
Jesus fucking Christ.
Are you all right?
He gets so excited when he figures that up high.
It would have been perfect.
I know it would have been perfect,
but we need, we have a few more things
that we need to do about the tour to talk.
Okay.
Because the tour is becoming a reality.
Yes.
Sean, do you have a person in mind for Chicago?
I do, I have several,
but I don't want to say them out loud.
Yeah, don't say them out loud yet.
Yeah, how are we going to decide
who's booking what cities?
Well, why don't we, well.
Well, here we have to do dibs.
And I want to do dibs, you ready? Toronto and Wisconsin.
Oh, you want Madison.
You're going to take me.
I want Madison.
Even though it's my sister.
Wait, but are we going to Madison strictly
to see Sean's niece, nephew?
My sister.
And your sister.
Your sister.
Fucking idiot.
And how could Tracy be his nephew, man?
I guess it could be.
I've met a couple of Tracy dudes.
Yeah, I do too.
I have too.
But all these guests need to be sort of germane
to the location.
Yes.
That's right, that's right.
So the idea is we're going to have guests who are germane,
hopefully like a very sort of organic,
not shoehorned in pick.
So think about it.
I think that what we got to do is though,
we got to make sure.
Here it comes.
Nice.
Why?
You want a bite?
I can't, but for the tour though,
if you want to talk about the tour.
No, I'm not saying that there's rules.
I'm not saying that there are rules to this.
I'm just saying that you have to check the.
Bite us.
So bad.
Okay, goodbye.
Bye.
Bye.
Smart.
Nice.
Smart.
Smart.