The Commercial Break - TCB Infomercial w. Wendi McLendon-Covey
Episode Date: May 28, 2024Bryan’s crush ...
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When I was born, very healthy, gorgeous newborn,
I was named Darlene Clementine.
Time goes on, the minutes are ticking by,
and my mom's like,
what's that grunting?
Looked in the tray of afterbirth.
Oops-a-daisy, there's another baby.
Which is my twin darling.
On this episode of the Commercial Break.
Do you understand any of Christopher Nolan's films?
Do you understand Inception, Tenet, Dunkirk, any of them?
So I've not seen any of those.
No, Andy!
What?
You should just stay out of the fray then.
So I'm going to say no I don't. Doctors sure love working with them. Yes they do. I'm sure
if you got a phone call from Christopher Norlin you wouldn't turn his down. Of course. I do
it and not understand it the whole time and be totally fine. The next episode of The Commercial Break starts now.
Good morning, everybody.
Oh, yeah, cats and kittens, welcome back to The Commercial Break.
I'm Brian Green, and this is a dear friend of mine
and the co-host of this podcast, at least for the foreseeable future,
Kristen Joy Hoadley. Best to you, Kristen.
Best to you, Brian.
Best to you out there in the podcast universe.
TCB, TCB infomercial day with Wendy McClendon Covey.
We're so excited to have her because I, there is no woman on this earth that I had a bigger
consistent crush on than Wendy.
And I'm not going to share that with her because I don't want her to leave immediately.
But I'll share it now before she gets on air because she'll probably never hear it.
But man, Sergeant Clementine from Reno 911
was at the top of my teenage boy list
of ladies who just, I don't know,
something about her just got me
every time I saw her on Reno 911.
You've seen her on Reno 911.
She's awesome, yeah, bridesmaids,
she was the really funny friend. Mother in the Goldbergs, she just ended a huge run
on the Goldbergs and now she's gonna be on a new NBC show,
I think is something about the doctor's office,
we'll figure it out, we'll talk to her about it this fall.
And she's on Big City Greens too.
Oh yeah, she's the mom.
We've had like four people from Big City Greens.
I know, I love that. It's crazy, yeah. I'm gonna big eat it with my the mom. We've had like four people from Big City Greens on.
I know, I love that.
It's crazy, yeah.
I'm a big hit with my nephews.
I'm gonna try and get the Bluey people on here.
That's what I really want.
I wanna pick that guy's brain, the creator of Bluey.
But anyway, Big City Greens, also a huge smash hit
for adults and children on Disney Channel.
And so we're super excited to have her in.
This is one of those dream guests.
It really is.
I know that not everybody in the crowd
may be super familiar with Reno 911. If you're not, you should be quite frankly. I think
it is a criminally under-conversated about television show when it comes to great comedies
in the 21st century. I know, I need to go back and watch it really. I've watched a few
episodes. Oh my God. I got under my radar.
No, they're all classic. They're so good. People say The Office, and I like The Office,
don't get me wrong, I'm a big fan of The Office. But Reno 911, a mockumentary style show about the
Reno Sheriff's Department and the bumbling idiots who are there making arrests and pulling people
over and all that. And it is just way too fun. It's so much fun to see all these mumbling idiots who are there making arrests and pulling
people over and all that.
And it is just way too fun.
It's criminally funny.
It's criminally funny.
It's so good.
And she is one of the stars of the show.
I mean, she made that show just as much as Officer Dangle, Officer Dangle, Sheriff Dangle.
That's right.
And so we are super grateful to have her in here today. I can't wait. Yeah. So in just a few minutes, that'll come up.
Until then, I wanted to talk about Jojo Siwa.
Do you know Jojo Siwa?
Are you hearing about this?
I've been hearing about her for a while now.
She was a big Nickelodeon or Disney star.
Disney, I think. Disney star.
A lot of these.
Listen, Disney and Nickelodeon, unfortunately for Nickelodeon's
past, I did finish that whole series, by the way. It was very disturbing, actually.
So Disney and Nickelodeon, they're like pipelines for future stars and actresses. And a lot of
those people will just be child. A lot of singers, especially.
Yeah. Well, there was, I think Justin and Brittany came from like the Mickey Mouse Club,
like the rehashed version of the Mickey Mouse Club.
And a lot of, you know, Miley Cyrus, of course, had her own show on Disney for a long time.
Very Hannah Montana, very popular show.
And so did Jojo Siwa.
Jojo Siwa is now trying to make that incredibly awkward transition into adulthood in front of the cameras.
Yeah. incredibly awkward transition into adulthood. In front of the cameras. A lot of it happened, yeah.
Yeah, and she put out a video where she is doing
some very strange dancing and trying to act like an adult.
Basically she changed her image altogether.
She went from like, you know, fresh and fruity,
rooty tooty, to very hardcore, sexualized,
wearing weird outfits, grinding on people,
making strange epileptic type dance moves.
I mean, it's really quite frankly, kind of weird.
I don't think it's as weird as some people are saying.
I just think it's a young lady who's trying to figure out her way in the world.
And the video probably wasn't 100% her idea.
There's probably some director and producers that told her, okay, go ahead and shake like
an epileptic on and grind on this girl, right?
I mean, who cares?
At the end of the day, there are lots of bad music videos out there.
I kind of feel for JoJo on this one.
I know she's getting a ton of hate right now, but I kind of feel for her a little bit.
It's going to be an awkward transition phase for any human being.
And I know she chooses to put herself out there in the spotlight.
So it takes away a little bit of the, you know, empathy that I have for her. She chooses to do this. She chooses to
put herself out there like this. But I feel for the girl a little bit in the sense that, like,
if someone had filmed me between 19 and 25 years old, trust me, JoJo Siwa would have looked like
Madonna compared to the things that I went, she would have looked like a god compared to the things I went through and the things that I did and
the weird epileptic movements I made while making love.
I still make those.
It's weird.
Yeah.
Or, you know, think about you as, you know, six, seven, eight years old, and then all
of a sudden to transition to 16.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's weird. Like, to grow up in front of the sudden to transition to 16. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's weird.
Like to grow up in front of the cameras
has got to be a surreal experience.
So here's why I'm bringing up JoJo.
Not only was she on the Disney channel also,
so there's some connection with, you know, Big City Greens,
but then she was at Disney World for her 21st birthday
and she was drinking around Epcot,
which is something that people do
because they'd
stop at every country, they get a drink. My father-in-law has done it and trust me, it's hard
to make it all the way around the Disney World, all around Epcot Lake without getting super shit
faced. Yeah, you're stopping at 12 different countries and having mixed alcohols. I mean,
it's- In the sun.
Yeah, in the sun, in Florida, around screaming children
and miserable human beings.
It's, and all you can see is Mickey Mouse ears everywhere.
It's a little, it can be unnerving, right?
And then you're gonna get drunk.
And maybe Disney World is much better when you're drunk.
I liked it when I was drunk, I liked it when I was sober.
But I never went all the way around Epcot
drinking everything.
And so it's a tradition for people who are into Disney,
and JoJo comes from the Disney family. So people were like, why is she going to Disney for her 21st
birthday? Where did you go for your 21st birthday? The local pub and drink bar mat shots? I mean,
come on, who cares? Who cares where she's at for her 21st birthday? But she is incredibly intoxicated
and she is sitting around a table. She's like, has no security around her or anything. She's sitting around a table wearing a forklift driver's vest, like a bright yellow,
bright orange vest. You know what I'm talking about? You know, cut off jeans down to her
knees. I mean, she looks a little ragged for JoJo Siwa, but okay, that's her new look and
all, whatever. And then she is sitting around a table singing her new song, trying to get
young kids and older people alike to sing along with her song, but no one knew the lyrics.
She's like, trying to convince them they know the song. She's like, you know the lyrics?
Sing the lyrics. And people are like, ah, ba, ba, ba, ba, ba. And she's like, ah, come
on, sing the lyrics. And so she has to start singing herself, but no one can follow up because no one knows
the lyrics.
It is terribly awkward.
It's a little bit cringy.
And I just, I...
Listen, at least she's drunk.
At least she's drunk.
At least she's not sober trying to do that.
At least she was drunk.
There's that.
Was it just somebody kind of standing off to the side that was filming it?
Of course, because assholes can't leave anything alone.
They got to film JoJo Siwa.
And the person behind the camera is actually making fun of her like three feet from her.
And it's like, come on, really?
I mean, listen, I make fun of a lot of people on this show.
I do it all the time.
And a lot of people make fun of me.
They do it all the time, too.
Trust me, it works both ways. If you could see that phone that I have in my studio,
you would know that it works both ways. As a matter of fact, our latest review says,
I have no idea why. Where the funny is or something.
Yeah, I have no idea where the funny is in this show, but I actually like it when I'm doing stuff
in the background. Two random people talking about nothing.
I mean, and five stars, by the way. So, if that's the best we got, we know what it's
like to get haters. We have them all over the place. But I just feel like a super little
bit of empathy for JoJo Siwa, because I'm like, oh, poor girls just trying to make her
way in the world. And by the way, Britney went through it. Madonna went through it. Every
child actor that has gone through this, Jason Bateman went through it. Everybody has gone
through this weird phrase. Drew Barrymore went through it. They all went through it
and they made it out on the other end fine. I don't know if I can say the same about JoJo.
Seems like she's not handling it so well. But it's her 21st birthday. She's getting
shithammered. Who cares?
Tell her have some fun.
Yeah. And then everybody's got a videotape her and people are making fun of her straight
to her face. Do we have no tact left?
No.
Make fun of her, take her video and break it down and make fun of her that way like
we do. That way you don't have to feel so guilty about doing it right in front of her
face.
Yeah, I know. People don't care.
Oh man, poor JoJo. I'm a team JoJo.
Team JoJo.
Team JoJo. Of course a, I'm, Team JoJo. Jared L agent. Because the agent would say, maybe you should go away for like five years and then come
back as this new hyper-sexualized person. Because going straight from Disney Channel to, you know,
wearing a thong and grinding on people, maybe that's not the best look. Maybe we should just
give it a few days and let it happen. But, and hey, look, maybe we'll talk about this on the end
of the, after we talk to Wendy, but, you know,
Brit Brit, our good friend Brit Brit, things aren't looking so good for Brit Brit. Oh no.
I told you, I told you, I will be right about this. I do not think anybody should be held against
their will. I do not think anybody's money should be held against their will. I do not think that
conservatorships should be taken lightly at all. But I think that her family, especially her
father, may have understood something that we don't understand. And now there are many people
in her inner circle, it's bubbling up to the top, that are saying drugs, alcohol, bad people,
taking advantage of Brittany because she really doesn't know what's going on.
Yeah.
And she needs some help.
Yeah. So, you know, it's good to be right about one or two. This might be my fourth thing on the show that I'm actually right about. So, Wendy Covey is a superstar
comedic actress.
Yes, she is.
And we love her to death and we've been so excited about doing this interview with her.
She was Clementine in Reno 911. She was the mother in Goldberg's, as we mentioned. She
is going to be in, is it St. James? What's
the name of that show? Now hold on one second, I want to make sure that I get this right.
Because you know, they don't come on here for their health. It's not like Wendy said,
oh, I really want to talk to the commercial boy. I really, really, really want to talk
to the commercial boy.
I think it is. It's something about the hospital, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's something about the St. James Hospital. Well, let's ask her. We'll ask
her. Before I get it wrong, we'll ask her. She'll tell us when it premieres. It's going to be a
brand new sitcom that's starting this fall. So we're excited to have her in. She's going to
talk about that and hopefully we'll get to ask her a lot of other questions. I love Wendy. She's my
my teenage crush. Should I tell her?
Should I be like, dear Wendy?
I think you should fanboy a little bit.
Should I fanboy a little bit?
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm gonna be JoJo Siwa in this interview
and we'll act strange and make epileptic seizures to Wendy.
Sounds like a plan.
Chrissy, I got an idea.
Yes.
Let's go into our awkward transition phase.
Why don't I cut to a break?
And after I cut
from that break, we'll have Wendy here with us through the magic of podcasting.
Let's do it.
And we can talk to her for a couple minutes about her life, love, and the pursuit of happiness.
All right, we'll be back.
What? Oh, hi, it's Christina again, here to remind you to go to tcbpodcast.com for all things audio,
video, and TCB-dio. Give us a follow on Instagram at the commercial break and on TikTok at tcbpodcast.
And guess what? We have a new phone number. I know what you're thinking, but I promise this
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Once more for the people in the back, that's 212-433-3TCB. Oh, and check out our YouTube channel
at youtube.com slash The Commercial Break. That's all for now. Let's listen to our sponsors and get back to the show.
Let's listen to our sponsors and get back to the show.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. It is hard to believe that half the year is gone,
and each year seems to go by faster and faster.
But at this halfway point, I think it's a good time to stop,
look at some of the accomplishments,
and of course, it's also important to check in
and see what kind of progress I can make
for the other half of the year.
One of the people who's been instrumental
in helping me do this and stay focused
on the tasks that feel important in my life
is my therapist.
We talk about therapy a lot here on the show.
Chrissy and I are big proponents of it.
We do not shy away from sharing our excitement
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Therapy can help you smooth out the rough spots
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I've said it before and I'll say it again. Therapy is awesome in the bad times, it is awesome in the good times, and everything in between.
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I'm thanks and Otra and I'm investigators later. And together we co-host a podcast called
psychopedia, which is a true crime podcast infused with
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Each week, Investigator Slater brings us a wild and thoroughly researched true crime
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I'm here to digest it all and react just like you probably are right there on the other
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Somehow, I've got to present each case with the detail and respect it deserves while also
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And joining us from New Orleans is Wendy right now. Hi, Wendy.
Hello, Wendy.
Hello, gorgeous ones.
You aren't shooting.
What an honor.
Take it.
The battery will get you everywhere, Wendy.
You look gorgeous. I love your bangs.
Oh, you're so nice.
I've been chopping them myself and sometimes they work and sometimes they don't.
Wait, you cut your own hair?
That's what you have to do with bangs.
Sometimes I cut my own hair.
Yeah.
I cut my own hair too, but it's a tremendously easier job than I'm sure cutting bangs is.
Yeah, yours is like a razor.
Yeah.
I don't recommend it. I don't recommend it.
Yeah.
I cut my kid's hair and my dog's hair.
And other than that, I'm staying away from it.
Yeah, but I don't cut the girl's hair anymore
because they're so finicky about it.
Even at the young age, they're like,
oh yeah, I want my ponytail, I want my buns.
My mom used to cut my hair growing up
and she would always get the bangs too short.
And we would always be so upset with her.
Always. And also the fiskars, like the cloth cutting scissors.
Yes.
The chunkiest scissors you can find in the world.
I know.
Wow.
Okay, we got to ask a question because we were just talking about this and I want to know,
I want to see where you stand on this. Do you understand any of Christopher Nolan's films? Do you understand Inception, Tenet, Dunkirk, any of them?
So I've not seen any of those.
You should just stay out of the fray then.
Yeah.
I'm going to say, no, I don't. The actors sure love working with them.
Oh yeah.
Yes, they do. I'm sure if you got a phone call from Christopher Norlin, you wouldn't turn his down.
Oh, of course.
I'd do it and not understand it the whole time and be totally fine.
There you go.
That's the way to approach it.
You know what?
We're dying for a viral moment.
I think we just got one.
Wendy has never seen a Christopher Norlin movie.
That's crazy.
You are in three,
Chrissy and I were talking about this before you came on,
you are in three of the most iconic roles.
And so I'm so grateful that you're here
because these three I just-
It's an honor, really.
It's an honor, honestly.
I'm honored.
The Goldbergs, Bridesmaids,
and the criminally undermentioned,
when talking about the best comedy shows ever,
Reno 911.
Which is, like those are three incredibly iconic roles.
Was Reno 911 your very first major television role?
It was.
And it's been on for like 20 years,
consistently, constantly?
20 years.
Isn't that crazy?
20 years.
That's crazy.
How did you get the job with Reno 911?
How did you get the role?
It's funny and some magazine, I think it was Cracked, just did a big long article with
all of us, anyone that they could find that had ever been part of it, on how this all
came together.
And this is my version.
They had done a pilot for Fox.
Fox sat on it for two years and never did anything with it.
So then they presented it to Comedy Central because they had been on Comedy Central before
on the state, had good relationships with them and said, hey, what do you think about
this, you know, improvised cop show? Yeah, and
They said great
Yeah, let's do it. Well one of the other
Deputies from the first pilot she was on something else. So they needed to look for someone who could improvise and
The casting director's assistant saw me when I was understudying someone else
in some other comedy show.
No way.
That's like an inception moment.
That is an inception moment.
If you had seen the movie, you'd know.
You're just saying.
It was at a time when I personally was like,
maybe I'm just not getting anywhere in this business.
Maybe I need to just make my peace with the fact that,
you know, I did just get into the Groundling Theater,
which is no small feat.
No, it's huge.
Yeah.
But I didn't have a real agent.
I didn't have anything going for me.
I would go to the theater for rehearsals and stuff
and hear everybody talking about all these auditions
they went on and I was like,
we're not doing it on anything.
Anyway, I sort of made my peace with it
and was like, okay, look,
maybe I will never make any money doing this,
but this is my life now.
Yeah.
I have this opportunity at the Groundlings.
This doesn't happen for everybody.
So it happens for very few people.
So I gotta take this chance and just keep working,
keep doing my thing.
And even if nothing ever works out,
I will have an interesting life doing this.
It's a story that you can,
that very few people in their life will be able to say,
it's an exclusive club to be in the Groundlings.
Exactly, very exclusive club.
So I kind of made my peace with it
and was like ready to throw my headshots off the pier.
And then I got this call,
oh, you know, we saw you in this weird little show
you were doing, so let's bring you in.
And it was one of those nightmare situations,
not for me at the time, but for most people,
they would find the nightmare, that everyone can hear
what you're doing in the audition room
because the walls are so thin.
Yeah, that's gotta be terribly like stressful
and anxiety inducing.
Yeah, so I could hear what everybody's doing
and I'm thinking, well, that's not funny at
all. They want a sexy cop and I don't know that I can play that, but I can play someone
who thinks she's sexy.
Right.
That's smart.
Yeah.
So I did that. And while I was in the waiting room, you know, sometimes there's someone who is
known for like trying to psych people out of their auditions.
I've heard of that.
I've heard of that.
And people just come into the audition room and they come up to you and they just start
talking to you but making you kind of lose your confidence or lose your concentration.
And someone was doing that to me.
They were playing head games with you. Playing head games with me.
But the thing is, is it's improv.
So play all the games you want.
Once I go in there, none of this means anything.
I don't even know what they're gonna ask me to do.
Sure. Yeah.
I'm not forgetting any lines, you bitch.
Dip shit.
I know.
Okay.
So I went in, I did my thing,
and then I got a call that night, okay, that was amazing,
come in the next time, do the exact same thing.
And I did.
And then I called my manager and I said, hey, I think I booked a pilot.
Whoa.
And she was like, what?
I didn't know you went out for a pilot.
Do you have a new manager?
Yes.
Okay, good.
Just checking.
Yeah.
Anyway, the rest is history.
We did our dumb little thing and it should be noted that this paid so little money that
I had another job.
I had an office job while I was doing it.
You had an office job while you were doing Reno 911?
I had an office job up until I got the Goldbergs.
You are kidding me.
Well, that's how things pay.
Yeah.
So even five, six seasons.
I mean, listen, I understand it's Comedy Central.
It's not ABC, right?
There's different budgets and it's an improv show.
It's probably, you're probably working on very little budget every episode.
And it's basic cable.
And it's basic cable.
But you would think that it would pay you enough to at least live, like, you know, a living wage.
I guess I could have, but I didn't want to take that chance.
Yeah, fair enough.
Yeah, you just decided.
I did buy a brand new Honda for cash.
There you go.
Good for you.
But, yeah, all through everything else I did, rules of engagement, bridesmaids, up until
the Goldbergs.
And I wouldn't have quit, but the journal folded.
I was working for a social work journal.
Okay.
Wow, okay.
At Cal State Long Beach.
So, anyway, yeah, so that happened and who knew this thing would never be off the air.
I know.
It doesn't pay residuals.
I was just about to ask, does it pay residuals? It does not?
No. The movies do.
Yeah.
And then, you know, we got when Quibi came out, I don't know if you remember that.
It was 15 minutes long.
It lasted for 15 minutes.
Just like every episode of every show.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, so they, you know, they brought us back and it was insane.
Yeah, they were paying you a lot of money.
To try to get back into that headspace while I'm on another show playing the complete opposite
character.
Right, right.
And we banged out, what, two or three more movies.
Yeah.
There's so many movies and there's so many episodes of that show.
Do you think you'll go back to the well with Reno 911?
Or is it?
I mean, I don't know who would pay for such a thing
at this point.
I mean, we're lucky that we did that.
You know?
Sure.
Comedy Central ended up buying all the Quibi stuff
or the Roku channel.
It's airing somewhere.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, if they call me, of course,
I'll go back, but I don't... That's a hard call because so many of us are working. It's
really hard to schedule everybody together.
Sure.
Sure. Everyone's moved on and it's like, you got to get everybody's time and then does
everybody want to do it and are the characters still relevant? Listen, I would say yay,
because I could watch Reno 911 and the Goldbergs
back to back to back for the rest of my life
and probably be highly entertained.
And the thing I love about Reno 911
and your character Clementine
and the way you interact with Dangle
is that honestly, every time I watch an episode,
you pick up something different,
something funny that is just like subversive
or you didn't notice in the first one.
It's got so many little funny parts
that I think you miss on the first watch,
but you get on the second one.
It's an iconic role.
And I mean, I can imagine when you are on the Goldbergs
and which is not basic cable, which is like, you know,
biggest network in the world.
Disney owned all this other stuff.
And you're working a day job or a night job
or whatever it is in the office.
Does that lead to some interesting conversations
with people in the office?
Yeah, now I, by the time the Goldberg started,
I had quit.
You moved on, okay, gotcha.
Because that was, there was no time.
There was no time.
I can imagine.
Like, I missed birthdays.
I didn't take vacations.
I was tired.
Yeah.
Yeah, bad.
And, but yeah, I was doing so much with this other, you know, with my other stuff.
The great thing about this job is that I could come and go whenever I wanted. Nobody cared
when I came in or if I came in just as long as I did my work and turned it in.
Oh, brilliant.
And it was only a 20-hour a week thing. So I would be skulking around there late at night,
photocopying things and turning things in, answering mail.
And sometimes there would be professors there working on their own stuff.
And I remember this one guy says, oh, you're the one that's an actress or something?
Yeah.
Are you in that new bridesmaids thing?
Yeah.
Oh, I hear it's terrible. Oh my god. Oh my god. Who says that
to somebody? First of all, and who the fuck says that after actually seeing bridesmaids? It was a
runaway hit. It's the funniest fucking movie ever. I swear to god it is. Oh god. It was just like,
I don't know what's gonna happen with it.
I mean, it didn't get great reviews in the beginning.
It really didn't.
It was a very polarizing review-wise,
but the box office said differently, so.
And I could watch that movie anytime.
In fact, it popped up just the other day
on something I was watching, and I was like,
yep, wanna keep watching the whole entire rest of it.
Well, this is so stupid,
but have you seen the DVD extras?
I have not seen the DVD extras.
Well, let me delight you with this information.
There is like three more hours of movie.
What?
There are entire characters that were cut out.
Really?
Oh my God.
It was very ambitious,
and the whole thing was just way too damn long.
And there's deleted scenes,
all kinds of fun stuff.
So if you are looking for something else.
And I have a DVD player still.
Yeah, so do I.
So now I'm gonna go get the guides.
And I think a lot of it lives on YouTube as well.
Okay, okay, I've gotta watch that.
Thank you for that tip.
Were you and Kristen Wiig,
were you were in Groundlings together, right?
Or you were in the same class together?
Yeah.
Me and Kristen and the other writer, Annie Mumolo,
and Melissa.
McCarthy.
Yeah, we were all at the Groundlings at the same time.
Maya was, I think her picture was still on the wall,
but she wasn't performing with us, she was on SNL.
And we all met at someone else's wedding shower,
but nobody else remembered that.
I will never forget it because it was at Melissa's house
or Melissa's apartment, but she wasn't there
because she was filming Gilmore Girls.
Oh my God.
We were all there and like Kristen and I were broke.
I mean not broke, but like we didn't,
this was all like, oh my God,
we're just trying to get somewhere.
Right, right.
We were still very much in the,
I gotta scrape some money together to buy a wig for this next performance.
Sure. Oh, we get it, Wendy. We get it. We're in the trenches with that. Yes, we are. Yeah.
So, yeah, that happened and then, I mean, the rest is history, but I was also there with Michaela Watkins and Nat Faxon, Jim Rash, from Unity.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it's the Groundlings.
It's like, the Groundlings is an incubator
for extraordinary comic talent, right?
And I, you know, I'm sure there are so many names that we could
mention and associated with the groundlings that have gone on to do some of the most hilarious
work that we've done. Jennifer Coolidge. Oh, Coolidge is brilliant. Yeah. When you go to do
bridesmaids, is bridesmaids, does Kristen call you up as she say, hey, listen, I want you to take
this role in bridesmaids or is this, does she make you hey, listen, I want you to take this role in Bridesmaids
or is this, does she make you audition?
No, we all had to audition.
We had to audition.
Damn it, Kristen.
Damn it, I thought you were cool.
She and Annie called us in probably 2007
to do the table read.
Okay. Wow.
Yeah, movies take a while. Yeah. They do.
And we all did that. It was fun. And then when it came back,
you know, came time to like, oh, this this might actually
happen. Um yeah, we I I was just thrilled that they thought of
me. Sure. To come in and my grandpa had just died and I
went in,
I was not feeling funny, it was like on a Saturday
or some ridiculous thing and I'm just like,
yes, I'll go in.
I didn't want to, I wanted to cancel and sulk.
But I went in and we improvised something
and I thought, oh, well, that's really nice
that they let me come in.
And then I got called back.
And I went in and there were like all these big name people in the dating room.
And I thought, well, I'm not going to get it.
But again, very nice that they brought me back.
And then Kristen and Annie did that thing where they called me up and they're
like, look, you did the best you could. I just wanted you to know that we want you to
do it. But you know, they played it out, dragged it out. And I'm thinking just get to the bloody
point. I didn't get it. But I did. And, you know, listen, I just thought, oh, we're making a fun movie
with Judd Apatow and who knows, whatever. Maybe I'll get to make some more movies. You
know, it just, you never know how anything's going to go.
No, absolutely.
So.
What a mature attitude to take when you're in the trenches, right? Because I imagine
that acting especially, but just like comedy, you're going to get up there, when you're in the trenches, right? Because I imagine that acting especially,
but just like comedy, you're gonna get up there,
sometimes you're gonna flail around, you're gonna fail.
There's gonna be a lot more failure
than there will be successes,
and anybody who's had probably any longevity
in any entertainment venture knows that.
The failures lead to some minor successes
that then lead to something that blows up,
and bridesmaids may not have gotten great reviews, but obviously anyone who's seen it knows it's
fucking hilarious, right?
And it's a classic comedy movie now.
But what a mature attitude to take.
Like, hey, listen, if I get it, I get it.
And if I don't, it was nice.
I'm grateful for the opportunity to walk in and sharpen my teeth just a little bit more.
Probably for your mental health.
That's why you have to look at everything.
If you play so much importance on every audition,
you're gonna go insane.
Yeah, exactly.
And the thing is, you're not gonna get most of them,
but they'll remember you for something else
if you were good.
Right.
If you can take direction,
there's so much of it that has nothing to do with you and you can't even think about it
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, if you want to stay in it for the long term, that's that's how you have to think about things
Question about both Reno 911 and bridesmaids. Those are largely improved
Projects, right? Is that why there's three and a half hours of extra movie that's not on there
Yeah, you just cut they just kept taking take. Okay, let's try this. Okay, let's try this line projects, right? Is that why there's three and a half hours of extra movie that's not on there?
You just kept, they just kept taking takes. Okay, let's try this. Okay, let's try this line. Okay,
now let's put them in this situation and then we'll whittle it there.
Or the takes just keep going on and on and on because everyone's firing on all cylinders
and there's no way you can use all that. No.
Yeah. Yeah. There was a written script for Bridesmaids and if you read it, which I have
not in a long time, there's a lot, I mean, you're going to not recognize a lot of it.
Yeah. But I couldn't tell you like how much ended up, like what the percentages ended
up being of improv and scripted and yeah, but Reno
Literally all we ever got was like a couple of sentences
Yeah, did you film a large majority of that in Reno?
We felt none of it in Reno. It was all in LA. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Interesting. That's interesting
I guess you know if we had gone there
You never would have survived no
No People do you think would have made it to the set in the morning?
Right, exactly.
Or gambled away their paychecks?
That's right.
Oh my gosh.
Do you audition for the Goldbergs or do they call you for that role?
They called me for that because I was on a show called Rules of Engagement.
They brought me in for a one-off and I did like 14 episodes or something like that.
I ended up staying a lot playing Liz the crazy cat lady with one long boob.
Yes.
Which was really, really fun.
It was the same production company and a really cool couple of producers, Annette Davis and
Doug Robinson.
They were helping produce the Goldbergs and I weirdly look a lot like Adam's mom.
Beverly.
In real life, yeah.
Yeah.
Now that show was originally called
How the Bleep Am I Normal.
Oh.
It wasn't called the Goldbergs.
And then it was called The Goldens.
The Goldens.
And then the president of ABC at the time said, just call them the Goldbergs.
Best move ever.
So if anyone has a problem that a non-Jew was playing a Jew, that's how that came about.
And we didn't even, I don't even think we mentioned Hanukkah or anything till like
season three. So that's become a wee bit of an issue in the past couple of years.
Now. Yeah.
But that's how that happened. And sorry, but-
There you go.
I did okay with that role.
Yeah, exactly. More than okay.
When you were reading the Goldbergs, when they call you up and they say, here's the
script and check it out and do you think you can do this?
You're so good in that role.
As a young man watching Reno 911, I have a little crush on Clementine, right?
But then when I see you as Beverly, you're totally my mom.
It's so weird
that you play these two opposites, but it's so good. Did the part really resonate with you?
Did you expect it to become such a hit? Well, again, I was just like, I'm so happy to do this.
I really hope it goes on forever. But the thing know, but the thing that, that made me say,
oh, I'm doing this one,
is the video package that they sent me of the home movies.
Oh yeah.
And then I was like, oh, I know this lady.
I get it.
I get it.
Big time.
Cause my mom was a smother as well.
Pete Yeah.
Julie A Baptist smother, but very much like, act first,
apologize later.
Pete Yeah.
Julie Everyone's out to get you. I am your sanctuary.
Pete Yeah.
Julie I will do anything for you, you know, and that's just
good parenting. I'm sorry.
Pete I agree.
Julie There's worse things in life than to have
a mother that loves you for God's sake.
Beth Dombkowski Right.
Beth Dombkowski Yeah.
Jared Slauson I was watching a video and they were talking
about the difference between nurturing and smothering and how that affects children as
they grow up. And the psychiatrist who had written a book on this, on this particular show said, it doesn't matter. There is no difference.
They, when it's, what makes a child,
like independent, able to work in the world
is the kind of love that is shown.
It doesn't matter if they're smothering
or if they're nurturing, it's almost the same thing.
What matters is, do they have a safe place to the fall?
Do they put guardrails?
And do they know they can always turn to somebody when they need help? He's like, that's what makes
an independent person. Can they go out on their own, but do they know they have a soft
place to fall?
Exactly.
And so we all know that. Yeah, my mother was like that too. I think that's a pretty common,
you know, mother's.
It's a pretty common thing. And then, you know, to be at like Comic- Con and have, it's not like a lot,
this happened a lot, but it happened enough for me
to get a little freaked out by it.
People coming up, I wish I had a mom like you.
Oh my.
I know, it's kinda sad.
When you go to these Comic Cons,
is it to just some people like totally freaky about it?
They're like, oh my God, there's gotta be.
I mean, there's freaky people everywhere.
I'm sure.
Well, you know, that's the interesting thing.
And I haven't gone to a Comic Con since before COVID,
but it's such an interesting phenomenon.
It really is.
That people will pay so much money
to buy these bobbleheads or dress in character
and just let their freak flags fly.
Yeah.
But they love it.
And you find that they know your show better
than you do a lot of times.
Yeah.
So like, if you get lazy with the continuity know your show better than you do a lot of times. Yes.
So like, if you get lazy with the continuity and you think no one's going to notice, you're
wrong.
They're going to notice.
And they will be very specific about what you did that was incorrect.
And it's like, okay, well, that's good to know.
That's good feedback.
People are paying attention.
Yeah.
Did you realize in episode number 14
that the glass moved from the left to the right
in scene 32?
It's like, okay, dude, settle down.
It's just the television.
Exactly.
It is weird though to have this-
If you go on your toes.
True.
It is weird to have this phenomenon
where Comic-Con, when I was a child
and Comic-Con was just, or when I was in a teenager,
Comic-Con was just getting started,
Comic-Con and DragonCon and all this stuff,
it really, like, appealed to a certain sci-fi
or horror sect of the population.
People who are, like, really into this Star Trek
and Star Wars and stuff like that.
And now it's expanded, and there are so many
mainstream television shows
where all of these characters were actresses like you or actors in other movies, they can go and
they can, you know, make a few extra bucks and touch and talk to the fans one on one. And those
people go crazy for it. Yeah, they have BravoCon for God's sake. That's their own thing too. Don't get me started.
Do not get me started.
Do you watch Bravo?
What's that?
Do you watch Bravo?
Are you like a Bravo?
No, I quit cold turkey in 2014 because I, no, when was the shutdown?
2020.
2020. 2020.
2020.
Yeah.
Yeah, four years ago.
I was so into it and then I became so ashamed of myself.
Like, why do I care?
I did the same thing.
Now I've since picked back up on a couple of them.
But yeah, I couldn't watch any of that stuff.
I was like, this is so outside of reality
and it made me feel icky. Yeah.
I mean, and you really watch people drink the Kool-Aid and start to love their fame
and start to do anything they can to stay, you know, making those little paychecks.
Very true.
Yeah.
Or reality TV and then get podcasts. I don't know. It's not my thing
anymore. But yeah.
Jared Sussman Yeah. Listen, when I first saw Real Housewives
of Atlanta so many years back when it came on, and I, we're in Atlanta, by the way.
Lauren Ruffin Oh, okay. I've spent a lot of time in Atlanta.
Jared Sussman They're not in Atlanta. They're not technically
in Atlanta. Most of them are not wives and they're not living in their own houses. What is real about this? There's nothing real about this. It's all just
manufactured drama. And then we know somebody who was on one of the seasons and it was-
It was surreal.
It was surreal and not real. It was like, oh my gosh, this is just so crazy for sure.
Weird. who she was. So crazy for sure. You are now a part of a television show that is another huge hit and
we've had a number of these uh the voice actresses and actors on the show from Big City Greens on
Disney. I mean how fun. Yeah so fun. So Paul Scheer, we had Paul Scheer and then who was the other one
So we had Paul Scheer and we did have Paul Scheer. Yeah.
Who was the other one?
I don't know.
It was the other one.
Yeah.
But yeah, you've got to be the third one.
And I mean, you're the mom, right?
I'm the motorcycle mom.
Yeah.
Four years in a movie or two movies.
Yeah, we had a Christmas movie and Spacecation, which comes out on June 6th.
So Spacecation, June 6th, I'm marking my calendar.
Yeah, I'm gonna tell my nephews.
I know I can keep my kids occupied for 90 minutes.
Right, and the actress who plays the grandma.
Yeah, grandma's favorite.
Artemis Hebdani, he was also in the Groundlings
at the same time as me, and she played lunch lady Doris
on the Goldbergs.
Oh wow.
And she has a coffee house out here in NOLA.
No way.
Yeah, small world, right?
What?
That is insane.
Do you do the, when you read for Big City Greens, I mean, I don't know, I know some,
every animation is different, but when you read for Big City Greens, is it a it a group read are you in the same room are you bouncing off each other is
it just I just do my parts and then someone else that comes and does their
parts the only time I've ever gotten to be in the room with other actors is for
Bob's burgers okay that's right I think that's Yeah. So I go in and I do my stuff all by myself.
And do you enjoy the voice work?
I love it.
Yeah.
It's so fun and it's so gratifying when you finally see it.
Yeah.
Right.
You know?
I can only imagine.
Yeah, because really when you see it or when you're in the booth most of the time,
it's just the animatics., it's just the rough drawings.
Yeah.
And you're doing it to scratch.
So someone else has dubbed in your voice as a play saver,
so they need you to come in and bring life to it.
And it's fun, but it's a challenge because a lot of times,
the physicality is stuff
that you would never do in real life.
So you don't know how to like fall off a motorcycle
and catch a pizza in your mouth.
Yeah.
So that might take a while.
Yeah.
To get that right.
But that's again, what makes it so fun.
And you know, these little challenges like,
okay, can I play this
off?
I really don't know what I'm doing.
And there's times when I've punched my own stomach or you've got to run so you can get
that panting going or whatever, but it's the most fun.
And Big City Greens is adorable.
It's such a good show.
It is.
I know.
And how did it work?
I know my nephews were introducing me to it a little
while back with a live, it was a hockey game.
A hockey game.
That's what my kids have been watching.
That were doing, yeah, a simultaneous game.
And it was a live.
I don't think the actual, I think there were two sports
casters that were animated.
And then they had a live hockey game that was actually
on another, I think on ABC.
And then they put, I guess, what they did was they had
the characters playing out the live hockey game
while it was going on.
And then they had two separate sports casters
that were animated that were calling it for children.
And so- Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
That's adorable and I know nothing about that.
Yeah.
I don't, yeah.
This is the first time hearing about that,
but what a great opportunity for cross-pupilation.
I know, right?
Now you're in the know.
Between Big City Greens and Bluey, the other show that's on Disney currently making adults
crazy, so many adults talking about Big City Greens, so many adults talking about Bluey,
and we've been talking a lot about how animation is just on another level
these days. They're shows that, most of them are shows that adults and children can watch,
and they get, each of us gets something out of it, right? And Big City Greens is one of those.
So I thank you for making a watchable animation show with my children.
Well, I'm going to, I'm going to thank the Houghton brothers for you because
Well, I'm going to thank the Houghton brothers for you because I just show up and do my thing. I like the way that the kids have good relationships with their divorced parents and their divorced
parents are not sniping at each other all the time.
They're not at each other all the time.
Yeah, it just didn't work out.
Whatever, we can still live and have a good time.
It's a sassy little show with a little bit of moral nuggets
in there that you can appreciate that your children are
absorbing or hope that they're absorbing.
So tell us about the television show coming out.
When's St. Dennis coming out?
St. Dennis is coming out in, I'm going to say the fall.
I don't have a date yet. They haven't told us. They'll probably tell us at the up-fronts in a
couple weeks. What about, too, the Vicki White story really quick. Thank you for asking about that.
It was so fascinating and so riveting. And I mean, tell us about playing that part.
Okay, so a couple years ago, you know,
we were about to, we were doing one more season
of the Goldbergs and I was offered a development deal
by Sony and we were talking about the kinds of things
I'd like to do and I said, you know, I don't know if you guys are watching the news right now, but
have you seen that blonde prison guard that died and she was sneaking her boyfriend out
and blah, blah, blah?
I think I could play her and I think that story is pretty juicy.
It is.
And in pretty short order, it was set up.
Wow.
And it was set up for Lifetime, which I was like,
oh, I never saw myself doing a Lifetime movie.
Whatever.
Put Sherva Wendler.
I never saw that.
I was half serious when I said I wanted to.
So they got some screenwriters.
And we looked at samples and read their treatment and I
loved their take on it because my take was the same way, which is I don't think that
she was coerced into anything.
You cannot coerce a woman in her 50s to do anything she doesn't want to do.
Very true.
Yeah.
I think she snapped.
She was sick of doing everything the right way for so long with no reward.
And someone saw her and loved her.
And she went off the deep end.
Exactly. That's what I think happened. And I think the 11 days that they were on the run
were probably the best of her adult life.
Yep. Yep.
That's an interesting take and I think you might be right about that.
Yeah. And there is no logic in it because love is not a logical emotion.
Yeah, and infatuation.
That is.
I think we can point to times in our own lives where we did dumb things and we can just watch
the news.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Or watch Real Housewives.
Yeah.
But I think that because this was not a bad person
and she was employee of the year so many years in a row,
she took care of her ex-husband who had Parkinson's.
She took care of him until the day he died.
He died in January, she's dead in April.
Wow.
Wow.
She snapped.
She snapped, yeah, for sure.
We filmed that last summer, last June, just in time for the strike to happen.
For the strike.
So we finished in time for the strike, but the strike kept going on, so we couldn't promote
it when it came out.
It's still available on Amazon.
It's still available.
Yep.
And I'm really proud of it.
I think we did a good job of making a non-lifetime lifetime movie.
Exactly.
That's so true.
Not like I'm trying to dis-lifetime.
No, I get it.
They have a certain flavor.
Yeah, they do have a certain flavor.
Yeah, you think of a certain thing when you think of Lifetime.
This is a little grittier than that.
It is.
I'm proud of us.
Oh, I loved it.
This is no Lifetime Christmas movie. I loved it. This is no lifetime Christmas movie.
I'll tell you that much right now.
Doesn't Hallmark really have the monopoly on the Christmas movies?
They do.
I'm getting my channels mixed up.
You're so right about that.
I think there's a convention.
You know there's a convention.
Hallmark, yes.
And it's in July.
Exactly.
Hallmark Christmas.
Hallmark Christmas gone.
It's the day after Easter.
Hallmark Christmas. Hallmark Christmas gone. Hallmark Christmas gone. Hallmark. Christmas. Hallmark Christmas. Hallmark Christmas, Con.
It's the day after Easter.
All right.
So, tell us about St. Dennis real quick, because I want to make sure that people tune in.
So, it's coming out in fall.
Yes.
And that one came about in an interesting way as well.
So, we get the... This was on a Wednesday, I'll never forget,
on a Wednesday I get a call from one of our producers
on the Goldbergs and I know what this is about.
We're not coming back.
We're not coming back.
And I'm like,
but it's 10 years.
You can't office that.
The kids are aging.
It's hard to write storylines, I get it.
Yeah, nothing lasts that long anymore.
So we had a great run, but you know,
it is bittersweet to say goodbye to your work family.
Family.
And I'm talking every last grip, every makeup artist,
every, our props guys I still text
with like I love those people.
Yeah, 10 minutes of your life is a long time.
And this is the part where I rudely interrupt the interview to explain to you that the last
two and a half minutes of our conversation with Wendy was not recorded for whatever reason, probably
because we're really bad at technology, but maybe it wasn't our fault?
Question mark.
So let me recap what happened in the last couple minutes of that conversation.
Wendy explained she really loved her time in the Goldbergs and that no show runs that
long anymore.
So the last episode that they filmed together, everyone was crying and had a really sad time
because they loved each other and they'd been around each other for almost a decade.
Then I fanboyed out a little bit, told Wendy how much I loved her. She said, August shucks.
I felt embarrassed because her husband was standing in the room. I quickly wrapped up
the interview, said goodbye and it sounded something like this. Bye Wendy, thanks for
coming. Bye guys, really enjoyed it. See you later. Goodbye.
So now that you have the rest of the story and my apologies to you and to Wendy, let's
take a short break and we'll be back.
What? Oh, hi, it's Christina again. Here to remind you to go to tcbpodcast.com for all
things audio, video, and TC video. Give us a follow on Instagram at the commercial break
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That's all for now. Let's listen to our sponsors and get back to the show.
Love Wendy.
I got my fanboying in control. I feel proud of myself. I did not JoJo Siwa all over the
place.
I'm proud of you too.
Oh, love Wendy. So, now you've heard it straight from her mouth and now I'm going to tell you
straight from the website, St. Dennis Medical premieres this fall and it's a mockumentary
about an underfunded, understaffed hospital and Wendy plays like the executive director
of the hospital. So, it's from the same guy who wrote Superstore and American Auto, both,
I think, good shows that were canceled, but
good shows in their own right. But you know, she's, she, everything she touches turns to
gold. She was in Bridesmaids. You heard the story. They filmed over 37,000 hours for Bridesmaids.
And you can see it on the DVD. I have to go out and buy it.
I know. I haven't bought a DVD in forever either, but I would buy that to see
the outtakes. I have this like soft spot in my heart for Bridesmaids. Not only do I think it's
one of the funniest movies ever created, it is really like a breakout comedy hit, who made the
careers of a lot of people, solidified the careers of a lot of people. But it also is the first
American comedy movie that Astrid was laughing out loud.
Oh, I love that.
Yeah, because, you know, comedy is different everywhere you go and there are certain things
are funny and comedy, you know, they say real estate is local.
I think comedy is local too.
Like, you know, Americans have their certain brand of comedy and in the UK they do and
everywhere around the world, Spaniards have their own version.
The Venezuelans do too and the Latin Americans do also.
And so the comedy is not always the same. And if culturally, it's not easy to pick
up on some of those things if you're not embedded in it. But Astrid, I'll never
forget, she had just moved here and Bridesmaids had come out and it was on
whatever premium channel HBO or whatever and we watched it and she was like
laughing out loud and she's like, this is a really funny movie and I get it.
Like I understand it.
Jeff loves it too. We just caught it a couple of months ago, I think on TV and
whenever it's on, I just keep watching it. John Ham's in it too.
Yeah, John Ham's in it. That's right. And then that Irish guy, I do love that Irish guy. He
has a television show called like Ronnie's Boy or something. It's something, it's on Amazon,
Mooney or I can't remember what it is, but it's only got two seasons, which sucks. I wish they had more seasons of it, but it's such a fucking funny movie. And if that, like,
if what they came up with is an hour and 45 minutes and they really filmed like five hours
of material, I would love to see that five hours of material. I really would. So anyway,
thank you to Wendy for coming. Make sure you tune in to Big City Greens and then make sure
also that you tune into St. Dennis Medical coming on this fall.
So we don't have a specific date for the premiere,
but I'm sure you will stay tuned and watch NBC,
because you're likely to plug your cable back in
because all the streaming channels are doing
whatever the fuck they're doing.
I don't even know.
And now I-
Well, Peacock streams NBC stuff.
Oh, that's true.
Yeah, you can go to Peacock.
But I don't know what's going on.
Now I got to go to Netflix to watch the HBO shit, and then I turn on-
It's all over the place.
You were just talking about that, and it made me realize it too.
When I was on another streaming service, I'm like, oh wait, that was on something else a while back.
And now it's over here and there and everywhere.
Whatever.
Wasn't Sex and the City one of the biggest comedy hits for HBO in history?
Oh yeah.
It was one of the most popular television shows in history or something like that.
And now it's on Netflix.
I don't get it.
I can't watch it on HBO, but I can watch it over on Netflix.
I don't get it.
I really don't understand.
How is that even possible?
I don't know.
Maybe we should ask JoJo Siwa.
There's buying and selling going on.
Science!
Science!
JoJo Siwa, put a little sex in there and then maybe a thong or two, go to Disney
World, stop at all the countries in Epcot and whoop-a-bam! Jojo Siwa is an adult sexualizer
now. Jojo Siwa! She'll be the biggest pop star ever!
Probably.
Mark my words. I was thinking about it when we were on break. I was thinking about JoJo
Siwa, I was thinking about Miley Cyrus. And I remember when Wrecking Ball came out and
she was like humping the ball and everyone was like, oh, that's fucked up. She's like,
what the fuck is going on? But the song was a nugget and everybody fucking loved it. And
now it's like, you know, a mainstay of dance clubs. And what happened to Miley Cyrus? She
became like the biggest pop star ever.
She's hugely successful.
Ever. She's hugely successful. Does things her own way. So maybe JoJo's just taking notes from Miley Cyrus.
Let's go completely opposite.
Yeah. Maybe she's just being a little bit more awkward about it. But anyway, Team JoJo over here.
We're Team JoJo Siwa. So JoJo, you want to come on drunk or not drunk, preferably drunk, come on the show.
We'd be happy to have you. You want to smash right into adult life, I'll give you a training course.
Yes, you could.
You too can be one step away from bankruptcy. It's science. With your very own podcast.
Now you're famous, you need a podcast. Every celebrity now has a podcast. Did you know that? Every
single one of them. Yeah, every day I read that podcast news and a new celebrity has
a new podcast. We don't have a fighting chance.
Nope.
Thanks for listening. I hope you tune in for a very, very long time.
All right. There you go. Wow.
Wendy. All right, there you go. Wendy!
Yeah, Wendy, man.
Yeah, I'm still a little shell shocked.
And by the way, Wendy looks just as good now as she did back then.
I know, I know.
She's got some bangs too that I really like.
Good jeans or good docks, Chrissy?
Yeah, both.
I didn't have the balls to ask her.
You got to go watch, both. I didn't have the balls to ask her. Ha ha ha ha ha. You gotta go watch Reno 911.
I will.
Watch it from head to toe.
I've got a watch list now.
And as she said, there's like five or six movies out there.
I didn't even know.
Yeah.
I've watched two of them.
Watch the episodes.
The movies are good, but the episodes are where
classic comedy happens.
Classic country on 94, 96, 7, the legend.
Your legend.
I actually turned on my radio in the car for the first, we were talking about it and I was like,
let me check and see what's doing on that radio, that FM and that AM dial.
Yeah. I don't even know how to turn on the radio with my car.
Well, we'll be on again tomorrow in case you turn on your radio dial and decide you need
something else.
We'll be on again tomorrow just for you.
All right.
TCB podcast.
That's where you go to find out more information about the show, all the show notes, all the
links to Wendy's stuff.
It'll all be there.
So go to the show notes on your favorite podcast player.
You can also download the free Odyssey app, the home of the commercial break, the free Odyssey app, there is no charge. We don't have a premium version of this. There's
no premium version of this show, but you can download that and listen to us on the Odyssey
app if you're so inclined. We also would love to give you your free TCB sticker. Go to the
website, hit the contact us button, drop down menu. I want my free sticker. Give us your
address and away it will go. Promise it'll get there in seven to twelve months.
Sometime. We'll figure it out. At some point. We can pay for the postage. We'll send it to you.
212-433-3TCB. That's 212-433-3822.
We'd like you on the show.
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Thanks, Dr. Phil.
Okay, Chrissy, I guess that's all I can do for today.
I think so.
But I will tell you that I love you.
I love you.
Best to you.
Best to you.
Best to you Wendy and those of you out there in the podcast universe.
Until next time, Chrissy and I always say, we do say and we must say.
Good bye.
Bye. I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star Thanks for watching!