The Flop House - The Flop House Movie Minute #14 - McShane-McCain
Episode Date: October 11, 2008In the first edition of Name Droppin', Elliott talks about working with Ian McShane. ...
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And now the flop house movie minute.
So Elias, you did a...
Hold on.
No, that was perfect.
Well, fuck it up.
We gotta do it again.
Stop fucking it up, Baron.
Take two.
So, Elias, you did the John McCain video for the Daily Shows Convention Cup.
It's called the John McCain Biofilm.
Yeah. take to so you did the uh... john mccain video
for the uh... daily shows convention coverage called the john mccain biofilm
yeah
uh... that was uh... narrated by a big hollywood star was it not
it was a transatlantic hollywood star mister in mccain
was like wearing with him
let me tell you what anyone who's not read about familiar with the name in mccain
is best known in england for his character love joy
we've been the uh...
rogish antiques dealer who solves crimes
but uh... here in the united states is best known as al swerging on deadwood
the best character on the show one of the best characters on television the
past couple years who's also in uh... death race
he's in death race he was in scoop
uh... he was the voice of the evil polar bear in Golden Compass
And he's a voice and something else coming up too
He was he was in hot rod the anvy sandberg film hot rod. Yeah, he was
Yeah, I didn't know that it's disappointing. He's a body is really good and I regret completely that I missed the recent run of
Harold Pinter's the homecoming that he was in on Broadway
But I was doing this McCain bio film and it was all about how McCain's a tough guy and
a maverick and there was a lot of cowboy imagery in it.
And I said the guy I'd really want to work with is Ian McShane.
So I went to our guest booker and I said, let me know if this is realistic.
I'd like to get Ian McShane and she said, yeah, we can do that.
And then told me that it's a common request for her to get Leonardo DiCaprio to work on pieces
and things like that.
So she said, in McShane is a big name, but I think he is more doable than Leonardo DiCaprio.
So then that's a little look behind the scenes of how the Daily Show works.
We put off recording his voice track as long as possible so that we could get the script
in shape.
So it was about a month almost between when I suggested him and when we actually recorded and we had to reschedule him a couple times because
it was just not ready for him. But he was very nice and very politely kept rescheduling.
He recorded in Los Angeles and I was in St. Paul, Minnesota at the time. So it was all over
the phone and then here's another look behind the curtain. The way they do this, they record
it in LA. Then they upload it to the internet on an FTP site and we download it, very exciting.
We'd like satellites and stuff. No, more like just the internet.
The fiber optics, is there some sort of... Those might be involved, it depends on their
connection, maybe there's DSL lines, I don't know.
Is it radioactive in some light? No, not at all.
Do we get it from the Egyptians? No, they didn't know about this. No
Stargates were not from the Egyptians. They were from the ancient alien civilization that inspired the Egyptians
I gotta watch that movie one of the things that bugs me about Stargate is you'll read descriptions where it's like
Aliens who imitated ancient Egypt and are now and it's like no
That you're supposed to get that the Egyptians imitated the aliens
They built the pyramids because they wanted to have things
that looked like spaces.
Is that what it says on the Netflix sleeve or?
That's what I don't know.
What it says on...
Hey, they have a TV show based on Stargate now.
That's really weird.
Anyway, I'll finish this story by the end of the show.
It was one of the coolest experiences I've had working
at the Daily Show, aside from fist pounding,
Barack Obama, when my hands had Dorito crumbs all over them and I couldn't shake his hand.
But that's another name-drafting story unrelated to movies at all.
He was very polite, he was ready to go through the script any number of times as much as
he needed to, and he has, he's English, so he has an English accent, and then he turns
on the al-swarringin American accent and it's really
cool and I would do an impression of it but I can't do it justice.
We had been working with a scratch track that I was recording so we had my voice reading
this stuff in my approximation of what it would sound like.
So the first line was he was a Maverick so it would be like he was a Maverick, exactly
sounding like that.
And then we would replace it with Ian McShane's voice and suddenly the whole thing would come
Alive and not sound shitty because I was completely wrong for that part. You're not wrong for any part. Thank you for that
This is awkward. We're being recorded right now Ian McShane
It was just amazing and exciting to work with him someone I'd seen on TV a lot and
Was a huge fan of and he was very he was the kind of thing where you are
involved with someone you're a fan of and you find out
that they're very nice and are a pleasure to work with.
And so it's exciting and you know, the only time that I was
ever happy to learn that someone I was a fan of was not
the nicest guy was when I met Kurt Vonnegut.
And we had been told ahead of time we could go down and
talk to Kurt Vonnegut and he would sign a book of time we could go down and talk to Kurt Vonnegut
and he would sign a book for us and we go down and he sees us walking the room and he goes,
do we have to? And it was like, oh Kurt Vonnegut, that was perfect. That's exactly what I would imagine
you were like a crusty old man. But this was the exact opposite of that. He was really nice to work
with and did it, I think, just as a favor for us. Very exciting.
So that has been the first episode of Name Dropping with the Flop House.
Next time I'll tell you the exciting story of how I went to high school with a famous
movie star. Who was it?
And you won't watch her topless. Andy Rooney.