The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast - Lazy Sunday
Episode Date: April 17, 2024The Lonely Island takes a look back at their digital short, Lazy Sunday. Plus, the guys re-live funny moments from sketches like Enemy Mine, Spelling Bee, Wind and more!Glirk (the original from Awesom...etown)Just 2 Guyz Ka-Blamo!Matthew Lesko CommericalChristmas for Jews(Not all the clips we mention are available online; some never even aired.)If you want to see more photos and clips follow us on Instagram @thelonelyislandpod. Produced by Rabbit Grin ProductionsExecutive Producers Jeph Porter and Rob HolyszLead Producer Kevin MillerCreative Producer Samantha SkeltonCoordinating Producer Derek JohnsonCover Art by Olney AtwellMusic by Greg Chun and Brent AsburyEdit by Cheyenne JonesMix and Master by Jason Richards
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is brought to you by Airbnb.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.com slash host.
Hey, everybody, it's time to journey back to SNL in the 2000s
where we discuss the digital short era.
I'm Seth Meyers, and I'm talking to the Lonely Island,
which is Akiva Schaffer.
Hi.
Jormit Coney.
Hello.
And Andy Samberg.
Hey.
Hit the theme song.
It's the Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast.
Ooh, that's quite a song.
What genre of music would you call that?
It's like barbershop quartet.
50s?
Jazz.
Jingle.
Jingle.
Yeah, 50s trying to sell you shaving cream.
50s WAP.
Not do WAP, but just WAP.
50s WAP.
Yeah, wet ass pee.
I don't say the word. Yes. Oh, W-A-P. Yeah, 50s WAP, but just WAP. 50s WAP. Yeah. Wet ass P. I don't say the word.
Yes.
Oh, W-A-P.
Yeah.
50s WAP.
50s WAP.
Yeah.
50s WAP.
The original.
Yeah.
That was a much more difficult WAP to get.
Are you referring to WAP in the 50s or current WAP 50 years or older?
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
That's one for the listeners. I was saying 1950s. Like MILF WAP 50 years or older. Oh, interesting. Yeah, that's one for the listeners.
I was saying 1950s, like MILF WAP.
Yeah.
Keeve's always talking about MILF WAP.
Guys, don't give away gold like that on the podcast.
We got to make a song.
We got to make the hit song, MILF WAP.
Modern era SNLers might be listening to this
and we're just throwing them free shorts.
I do like a song where it keeps adding...
Oh man, I'm going to sound like a dumbass.
What is it called when there's a letter for each word?
Acronym?
An acronym, yeah.
Yeah, sure.
So we can cut out me struggling for it if we feel like it.
The song that keeps just adding acronyms.
I think we keep it.
People want to get to know the real you.
I feel good that I eventually did get the right word.
You did, and nobody helped.
Mostly because you were explaining it so badly
that I didn't know what word you were looking for.
Yes.
But yeah, it's a joke rap, right?
Okay.
Let's start there.
Evergreen.
I think we can all agree on that.
Joke raps are evergreen.
Yeah, man.
It's on topic for today.
Exactly.
It's very on topic for today.
All right.
So episode two, we talked about Lettuce, which is the first short that aired.
And now it is two shows later.
It is the Christmas show in 2005.
It is, even if you remove the digital short, which we're going to talk about at length,
a really great show, a very memorable, top to bottom, fun show.
And it's the premiere, the world premiere of lazy sunday
lazy sunday wake up in the late afternoon call parnell just to see how he's doing hello what up
ponds no sandberg what's cracking you thinking what i'm thinking Money up, man, it's happening. But first my hookah hangs, I stick it like duct tape. Let's hit up MacYoga and back on some cupcakes.
No doubt that bakeries got all my Bob Foster.
I love those cupcakes like McAdams loves gosling.
Gosling.
Gosling.
After Lettuce, Lazy Sunday was not the next thing you shot.
Correct.
Yeah.
Basically, Higgins and Shue came, said, whoa, that aired, do it again.
And we were immediately out of ideas.
We had been at the show maybe two months, and we were like, we got nothing else. Lettuce wasn't even our idea. So that's even sadder.
We were out of ideas from the jump, from number one. And so we went back to Forte and we're like,
what else you got? I guess we had to do another one like this. And he came up
with this script for Peyote. And I feel like we'll get to it because eventually it aired,
but it was a very direct sequel. It was back the stoop same place to be fair the one we ended up
doing that this episode is about lazy sunday also starts on that same stoop so we were pretty much
just doing stoop comedy at this point not only were you out of ideas you were in the most populous
city in america and you couldn't even find a second stoop. Well, it was our stoop
though, so we felt safe there. Yeah, we
didn't want to get in trouble, you know, and we wanted
to save money on locations, so we shot in front of
Andy and Akiva's apartment. Right, because you guys
owned that whole brownstone, right? Yeah, the
rental agreement allowed it to be a shooting
location for network TV as well.
That was the stoop where Akiva
and Andy, you guys shared that apartment together,
right? Yeah, five floor walk up.
And it was like a triangle.
If I remember, it was a very oddly shaped apartment itself.
The kitchen was a triangle, yeah.
Yes, the actual apartment was very weird.
Yeah, you didn't walk in and think, there's deaf two bedrooms here.
And there really weren't.
There was like an office.
One room was just big enough for the bed.
Did you guys switch off?
Because I did that in college. Did you guys switch off? Because I did that in college.
Did you guys like rotate?
We did do the college thing of halfway through the year switching rooms.
Yeah.
It was so much work.
Yeah.
Who decorated better?
Keeve, obviously.
No, we didn't decorate anything.
Yeah.
It's in Lazy Sunday.
You can see Andy's bedroom.
He was in the bigger bedroom and it starts with him on the bed.
Oh, right.
Yeah, that's right.
That's his real bed in his real bedroom.
We're going to get to that.
Okay, but first of all, we have a lag week because you shoot peyote,
which then airs later in the season.
It does not air that week.
No, went to dress, right?
Went to dress.
And literally Shoemaker was like, maybe try something completely different.
Don't just do the same thing twice in a row.
Right.
Now, I do want to point out that it became very iconic,
an SNL digital short.
This was whose decision that that would be
sort of white on black
before each of these?
Well, to be fair,
we had watched
some Adam McKay shorts
with Will Ferrell.
It was just the two of them
messing around.
And I think it's the exact
same font, too.
And it's an SNL digital short.
And we
were like, you know what? We'll use that because we were being told we can't use our own name.
I'm going to give the 30 second background on Adam McKay and in his final season,
when he wasn't sure he wanted to stay at SNL anymore, when Farrell and McKay were kind of
the kings of the show, he made a special deal to be able to make short films. And they made
a short film that I remember seeing at home and being like, where did that come from?
That was shot on 35 millimeter that had Ben Stiller.
Who else was in it?
It was called like The Heat Is On or something.
HSO.
It was about Glenn Frey, right?
Look at him.
Looks good, too.
I mean, I can't believe it.
That guy's done everything.
He's done it all.
Miami Vice.
Eagles.
Miami Vice.
It literally looked like a movie.
It looked amazing.
And then they had burned their entire budget for them.
Then they made one and they called it SNL Digital Short. And the point of that is because the digital cameras looked terrible back then.
They were standard definition, mini DV,
and they called it Digital Short to let the audience know,
like, you're going to see something that does not look broadcast quality.
And his intro was very different.
It had, like, some really edgy rock and roll.
It was like...
It was pretty punk rock.
Yeah, it was like, you know, you're seeing something a little punk,
a little off the beaten track.
I want to say that it ended with,
it's in your head, or something like that.
Like, something very aggressive.
And there was, like, ones where it's, like,
Will Ferrell wrestling a stuffed animal of a Doberman Pinscher maybe?
Yeah, there was like a Doberman attacking him for no reason, I think.
It predates me.
Yeah.
So I missed him as well.
I just remember seeing him.
Those were the last short films that had aired on the show
when we showed up besides TV Funhouse.
So when we were trying to figure this out,
the first thing we did was make a card before Lettuce
that said A Lonely Island short to try to separate it
and be like, this is a different thing.
And then we were told that that was not acceptable
and that we should not be sneaking in our company
on the company dime.
I do remember though, at the end of all that,
we were with Lorne and we said,
what are we supposed to put at the top then
just so that people know they're about to see something
that doesn't look at the quality of the show.
So we just took the words SNL Digital Short from the mckay i think it was the same font and we said what should we do and he said just put it on white over black and it
was lauren who said it oh there you go so you guys go back to the drawing board because peyote makes
it dress doesn't air shoemaker suggests something different from From where is Lazy Sunday born?
Once again, out of ideas.
Yeah.
I mean, before we got hired, one of the things we had done was make joke raps and make videos for them.
Yeah, taking it back. Take it all the way back, Indy. Like the original Lonely Island stuff. That was kind of out of the gate.
We were doing stuff where it was like us doing our version of Stella, like the show Alter Wayne, Michael Ian Black stuff.
where it was like us doing our version of Stella,
like the show, Alter Wayne, Michael Ian Black stuff.
And then the thing that made what we were doing different from that was that we were making
joke songs and videos.
And whenever we showed people those,
they were like, ooh, that's something.
And people liked the other stuff too.
And it was kind of like how it went on the show eventually,
which was people liked the stuff that weren't the songs,
but they liked the songs the most.
What were some pre-SNL joke songs of yours?
The first one we did when we all lived together in Los Angeles
at the actual official Lonely Island, dubbed that by Akiva.
And your landlord there was fine with you calling the apartment Lonely Island.
It was just Lorne that wouldn't let you call the shorts that, right?
Correct.
Weirdly, our landlord was Lorne, though.
He just has a different approach to landlording.
He forgot that he owned the house.
Was it you called him your landlorn?
Yeah, my landlorn was cool with it.
But we would, like I made a bunch of beats
on our other roommate Matt's BR8, 8-track, digital 8-track.
And we would make like just sample songs from records
and like loop stuff.
And then we would make like four-track beats.
And then we'd stay up till six in the morning
drinking and making songs.
And our first one was called Kablamo, which was our way of saying a new cool word.
When something was cool, it was kablamo.
And when it was not cool, it was not kablamo.
It was not a great song, but we were only 20.
We were 22 years old.
It wasn't a great beat either.
Well, I mean, Jorm is selling the shit out of it.
It should be.
That's true.
I don't seem very excited about it. He's giving it pace.
He's giving it enthusiasm.
Yeah.
That awesome preamble where he like named the equipment you guys used.
People loved it.
That's important.
People are like,
how do you make beats?
And they need to know
if it was 20 years ago
what they'd go and buy
to make some simple beats.
You can still get them.
I just looked it up online.
The three of us
lived together in that apartment
and there was a fourth guy, Matt,
which is Matt Bettinelli-Olpin.
And I will say
we knew him from home
and we knew him from college
and he directed the Scream movie from last year.
Oh my God.
So that's pretty cool
that he found his own path to success.
God love him.
We went to elementary school together.
Me, Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Chelsea Peretti
were all in the same class
in elementary school in Oakland.
Well, and he was also in the early videos
and so was Chester.
Like we had Chester Tam as well.
And Chester is in Hot Rod
and he's also in Scream.
Hey, look at that. It was a bigger group and then it windled to this. But we made all sorts of like
we made one called Stork Patrol that we made a big dumb puppet for that was us being in love with a
bird. And then Just Two Guys was the other main one that we did in like 2004. Right. Right before
getting the show. Hello. Welcome to the party. Hi, I've never met you before.
I know.
Just two guys and we're having a good time.
Having a good time.
Having a good time.
Just two guys and we're having a good time.
Having a good time.
So who's the first person to suggest the first seed that becomes Lazy Sunday?
Well, we had made another song called The Heist 2 later. It was me and Akiva,
and it was a very aggressive style beat, but a very mundane thing about I've gotten broken up
with. And I'm very upset about it. And I go over to his house for solace and friendship. But it's
us rapping very aggressively about something very shitty. Best friends got to tell each other their secrets is a great line. That is very good.
It is a great line. Quality writing. And true. In terms of ripping ourselves off,
there's even a moment later we were having tea and he says, this tea is delicious.
What'd you say it was?
And we go, chamomile, motherfucker, which is just snack attack, motherfucker.
Is it caffeinated cuz?
And we're talking about how we don't want to have caffeine anymore.
Anyway, it's pretty lame.
I should clarify, you're talking about before SNL.
Yes.
Pre-SNL, Keev and Yorm had made a song called The Heist
that they never shot a video for.
We never did a video for.
Yeah, it was just an MP3 on our website.
And we had been fans of Parnell's update feature raps
where he would go super hard.
And we were like, well, we're here with Parnell.
We should do something that's a joke rap with Parnell
since they want us to use cast.
And he's the only other cast member
that we know has done funny rap stuff,
and we wanted to put something together.
So then we were like,
well, what's funny about Andy and Parnell rapping?
And we were like, ooh, you know,
we should do something kind of like The Heist,
which was one of our favorite songs
that Kevan Yorm had made.
We were also super worried about stepping on toes.
And because he had done that Britney Spears rap
and the other one, we were like,
really didn't want to come out there being like,
we do raps and
steal his bit and so we were also just protecting our reputation at the show by being like we love
those raps and they're super funny but we also were just like we didn't want to be known as the
guys that steal anything comedy wise it's also so funny to think about further pointing out how much
we do not think of ourselves as rappers.
No rapper would be like, well, he raps, so I shouldn't.
Also, no rapper is like, I'm not stepping on the OG Chris Parnell's toes.
That's how we felt about it, though.
In our minds, it was like, well, he's the one who does raps on the show.
That's his territory.
So we would have to include him if we were going to do that.
We're always pretty concerned with that.
Yeah.
And luckily, once we left SNL, everyone was like,
hey, there were already people that did a lot of raps.
We better not do any.
And there hasn't actually been one on the show since we left.
Yeah, that's right.
There's not a single comedy rap since.
Now, guys, it was not your fault.
You didn't know it.
I had had four years to establish it. I had done a comedy rap before.
Tell us what it was, please.
I did a comedy rap in Chicago Tell us what it was, please. I did a comedy rap in Chicago.
We shot it on video cameras.
It was a minor Chicago hit in the comedy circles.
Me and Case Clay and my friend Pete Gross,
and it was called Noodles in the Pot.
It was a Beastie Boys-style rap about a Thai restaurant called Noodles in the Pot. Noodles in the pot. Oh, my God.
My God.
Show me what you got.
My God.
My God.
It's sushi.
No, it's not.
My God.
My God.
Noodles in the pot.
My God.
My God.
Noodles in the pot makes history.
Because you love that Thai restaurant.
We did.
It sounds like a precursor to Das Racist's Taco Bell KFC, whatever that one is.
It was a precursor to a lot of things, but most importantly to you guys.
And the thing about it is...
So I was ripping you off.
Yeah.
I just went back to Chicago and did stand-up
and Pete and Case came and we did it live on stage.
Wow.
That's great.
It was super exciting.
But in the preamble to it,
I went at you guys pretty hard.
Can you remember some of the stuff you said?
Yeah. When you were talking about how we ripped you off?
Yeah. It was like, you guys were the Elvis that like stole music.
Right. So you were the original.
So it was like, mother fuck Andy Samberg and John Wayne.
That is so tight. Wow.
Now I will say that one of the things about noodles in the pot that became very hard when i
saw the runaway success of ladies sunday news in the pub was like five minutes long right and so
you realize you guys had a good eye for what the show needed we already sort of knew that our songs
were better shorter we'd made enough stuff in la to know that shorter was better we've said this
before but we knew that joke rap suck we still do know that actually yeah was better. We've said this before, but we knew that joke raps suck.
We still do know that actually. Yeah. Yeah. And that was one of the main debates we had the week
of Lazy Sunday. And we were like, should we try one? They suck though. Yeah, that's right. As an
art form, they're bad and we don't want to be responsible for making them more popular. And
we don't want people to think we think
they're good they're a cheat and they're lame and almost all musical comedy is and we literally
were saying these things out loud like when you see a comic pick up a guitar unless they're tenacious
d you have to be as good as tenacious d to make it worth it otherwise don't do it it's weird that
we're known for something that we kind of hate. Yeah. Hey, you don't hate that money, though, do you, Jorm?
What's your chain?
Where's those sound effects?
I cannot stress to those of you not on Zoom how close Andy got to the microphone to say that.
All three of you are uniquely different and good rappers.
You have good voices for it.
Again, I want to just preface it by saying we're fake rappers and we don't take this seriously.
And when you're around a real rapper, there's a real difference because they don't do like a billion
takes. Right. They probably do a fair amount of takes though, right? Real dudes can just bang it
out. It's pretty impressive. So you basically have come to the conclusion. Now you've decided
you and Parnell are going to do a rap together. And how'd that conversation go, Keev, when we
asked him? Like, hey, Parnes, you want to do a rap with us? I think he just was like, oh, wow, sure. Is that right?
Do you want me to set you up, Andy? Hey, Parnesy, we're going to do a rap. You want to join us?
All right. Sounds good. And that was the end of the conversation.
That sounds good.
Okie dokie.
You penned it, though, completely on your own, the three of you.
Oh, yeah.
In our little room.
Yeah.
Yeah, Jorm whipped up the beat.
And when we were doing it, because it was Parnes, I was, like, really nervous that, like,
oh, fucking Parnell's waiting and we're going to do this thing.
And I remember making the beat in the room with these guys,
because this is the first time that computers were, like, fast enough to be able to, like.
What kind of computer?
It was an Apple.
Tell us about, like, the processing power and the model number.
Yep, yep. Yeah, anyway, it wasn't a beer. All right. What kind of computer? It was an Apple. Tell us about the processing power and the model number.
Yep, yep.
Anyway, it wasn't a VRA.
But I was making the beat on Reason, and I was really nervous because I was just like, oh, God, we've got to get this.
It's got to be good.
And I was running through the Reason presets,
and I found that little refrain thing.
I was like, this is pretty fucking cool.
And then just put a little breakbeat to it,
and then everyone's like, yeah, this is good.
And we started recording in there. Questlove complimented that beat one day later on. He did. That's high praise if Questlove
compliments a beat. I was going to say the interesting thing about being nervous about
Parnell and his take on it is Parnell was the kind of performer that would literally do whatever you
asked him to do without hesitation. If you wrote in a sketch, he had to run through a wall. He was the sort of guy
I feel like college football coaches
want to have on their team.
Yeah.
Like he would never ask a question.
He would play hurt.
He would never say after the fact
anything that would make you feel
like you hadn't done your job.
Yeah.
He's like all mad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In retrospect,
there was no need to be nervous,
but this was early days.
You know,
what show was this for us?
Our sixth? Probably a little bit late. Eight or nine, because it's a Christmas show.
Yeah. We had started in October. The first episode, though, was October 1st. So we've
only been there 10 weeks and those aren't all episodes. I do remember like being confident
because we had done this kind of stuff before. And I was like, hey, we're actually doing something
we know how to do. We were in our element and certainly didn't think it was going to pop off or anything,
but at least we were like, hey, this is kind of cool. We're like doing our thing
and maybe it'll work. Who knows? And also knowing that every time we wrote a line for Parnell that
it was going to be super funny because he sells it so hard. Yeah. You guys were going so hard on
it. And then when it was done, it did feel like, oh, yes. When we first recorded it, it was just relentless all the way through. There were no dance breaks.
And then Steve Higgins came in to check in on us and we played it for him. And he was like,
that's way too fast for the audience. You have to put in breaks to give people a time to laugh
and wrap their head around it. And we were like, okay, Steve.
Yeah, I will say that's one of the maddest times
I've ever been at SNL.
I was so furious about it.
At that note, really?
I loved how it sounded.
It just ran through.
So you guys weren't rapping faster.
It was just that there was none of those moments
where you were like bobbing your heads
in the back of the taxi.
Higgins, I think correctly,
asked us to make it slow down
so that the audience had a chance to catch their breath
and decide they liked it or not, you know?
I think he was right for the live audience.
Musically, I disagreed with it and still do,
but I would certainly not say it was the most mad I ever got at the show, Jorm.
I got so much more mad than that.
Yeah, but that was our first thing.
Jorm's not saying he was right to be that mad.
He's just saying that's what happened.
His instinct was just like, no, you're just, I want that raw uncut.
I was furious.
I was really furious.
It's fine.
Yeah.
Because you worked there for maybe like six more years and you never talked to Higgins again.
That's right.
That's right.
I never did.
No, but Higgins was 100% right.
Because if you watch it and you hear the audience, the whole first verse,
the sense is,
what is this?
And then you give them
that break
and the whole second verse
is them saying,
we love this.
They're listening
to the second verse
as huge fans.
Yes.
Because you've sold them.
He was totally right.
I will also say
that the dance break,
once we were like,
no, it's like a remix.
Like you can throw in
another beat
at the same tempo
and we'll think of stupid
Beatles style animation
those things got
the correct laugh too
which was that
they knew we knew
they sucked
which was nice
yeah
yes
and I think by the end
of making it
we're fine with it
yes
for sure
for sure
The Lonely Island
and Seth Meyers podcast
is supported by Airbnb
Hey Yorm
yes
I want to tell you
real quick about a trip I took
at an Airbnb in Pittsburgh.
We got there.
My family was there.
You know we love sports, my family.
You guys are nuts for sports.
The personal touches were really nice.
There were old Steelers newspaper articles framed,
Pirates articles framed,
but also a big old picture of Mr. Rogers
and another big old picture of Wiz Khalifa.
That is everything Pittsburgh.
That is a black and yellow Airbnb.
And it made our visit very personal.
And this is just a shout out to anybody who might be listening,
thinking, hey, my home has personal touches.
People who visited my town might want to stay there.
You might as well just go over to Airbnb
and see what your hosting opportunities are,
and you can enjoy it as much as I enjoyed it.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.com slash host.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
Hey, Jorm.
Yes.
We talk a lot on this podcast about a very special time in our life
where we were just drained, emotionally, physically, on empty.
Are you talking about right now?
Because that's where I'm at, Seth.
Well, I was talking about the past.
Oh, okay.
The past is often present with you, Jorm.
It is.
That's what I'm always saying.
I think a lot of people we knew back in the day
and a lot of those same people now
have used therapy as a helpful tool for those days
when you're feeling drained,
when you feel like you have no energy
for the things that are important to you.
And BetterHelp is a great option
for anyone who's looking for somebody to talk to.
It's entirely online, designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule.
Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch
therapist at any time for no additional charge.
Seth, if they wanted to talk to you personally and just get it all out, could they?
No, I am not available nor licensed.
But fortunately, BetterHelp is.
Find your social sweet spot with BetterHelp.
Visit betterhelp.com slash island today
to get 10% off your first month.
That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash island.
We should talk a little bit about the filming of Lazy Sunday.
What kind of camera do we use, Keith?
Oh, no.
I think it was a Panasonic or Sony.
So wait, I want to say YouTube, Supreme.
Let's also not forget Magnolia Cupcakes.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, arguably put them on the map
and there was no appreciation for Magnolia.
So you guys were sort of at the ground floor
of a lot of different things
and didn't manage to monetize it at all.
No, no, no.
We did not get paid.
Hey, over the years, have you heard from Gosling or McAdams? Never have. No. Interesting.
I would have thought not that they needed to be put on the map, but I feel like that's a real iconic place. Yeah. When you get name dropped in a rap song, I think that that is, you know,
a real tribute, especially a catchy one that people remember the lyrics to. So Magnolia Cupcakes,
how did that come about? And what was the reaction from the Magnolia people remember the lyrics to. So Magnolia Cupcakes, how did that come about?
And what was the reaction from the Magnolia people over the years?
It was in our neighborhood and we were trying to do everything where we could just walk around and shoot stuff.
And I remember we shot a couple of shots outside
and then a woman who worked there came outside
and told me that she had called the owner.
We were not allowed to be taping.
We couldn't be showing anything.
We were like, actually, we're outside on the street. So we're allowed to do anything
on the street. We actually had asked the NBC lawyers, if we're on the streets, can anybody
say anything to us? And they were like, no, you're fine. If you're on streets with no tripods
touching the ground, you can shoot anywhere in New York. And they said, the owner said,
we need to take your tapes. Really? Yeah. And we were like, yeah, we're not giving you our
tapes. We're just on the street. So we're so sorry. We will stop filming now. And then we left.
And then years later, I think we told this story in the press and we started getting big Magnolia.
Do you remember ever coming to one of our sets later on, years later, where there would be like
hundreds of cupcakes and a huge thing of banana pudding. Yes. Because they started sending us free Magnolia
just to our shoots.
So they tried to make good on it.
They heard this story and went,
ooh, okay.
And they tried to make it on.
You know, credit where credit's due.
I think they went a couple of weirdos,
no offense,
or outside your place of business filming.
You might not know it's going to be a hit comedy rap
that will endure for 20 years.
Also, they were already a smash success.
Yeah, that's true.
We name check them because we knew people would know what we were talking about.
Yeah.
And a lot of people have been like, do so many people go get Magnolia now because you guys?
And I was like, probably more people go stand outside Magnolia and do the
poses we were doing and take pictures than actually buy the cupcakes.
But probably a little of both.
I will say we also didn't look very professional.
It was Akiva holding a video camera, me playing this little beat back,
which was maybe annoying because there's a bunch of cursing too in front of their store,
and Parnell and Andy, and that was it.
Yes.
When they're rapping in the back of that cab, the whole crew is in that cab.
I was able to fit in one cab ride.
Were you in the back seat, Keev?
Because I feel like I was in the front seat playing the beat next to the driver.
I think I sat in the front seat, passenger seat,
and I'm shooting through the little window back at Andy and Parnell,
and you're on the floor by their feet.
Oh, maybe I'm hiding then.
Yes, you were ducked down under us.
Keev, should we say frapping anytime we're talking about times
when we were performing our lyrics?
I think that's fair.
Frapping is a term we've coined for fake rapping. Oh, interesting. So people don't think we're talking about times when we were performing our lyrics. I think that's fair. Frapping is a term we've coined for fake rapping.
Oh, interesting.
So people don't think we're actually rapping.
We're frappers.
Oh, that's good.
So you were frapping.
We were in the back of the cab frapping.
Yeah, while they were frapping back there.
Was the choice of Chronicles of Narnia
just based on the fact that it was a movie
that was out then?
Or did you think it was just good frap scansion?
We were trying to make it topical for you.
Yeah, that's as topical as we get.
Did you ever see that film?
Yeah.
Well, it has the word chronic in it too, so it led to...
That's what I was wondering.
I mean, it was of the time, but I was wondering if chronic helped it.
Get a body, sucker.
What you wanna do, Chris?
Second act, mother...
The chronic, what calls Anania?
Yes, the chronic, Blood Cells of Narnia!
Can you guys name one actor in Chronicles of Narnia?
Uh, the lion.
I'm sorry, an actor.
Yeah, Aslan.
Yeah, who was the voice of Aslan?
I'm guessing Liam Neeson.
You got it! Nice job.
Whoa, that's good.
Who else could it have possibly been, you know?
Yeah.
Was James McAvoy the little half-goat guy? Oh yeah, he's the goat guy. He's Mr. Who else could it have possibly been, you know? Yeah. Was James McAvoy the little half goat guy?
Oh, yeah, he's the goat guy.
He's Mr. Tummus.
Oh, man, this is great.
This is gonna be really fun.
These are other movies that came out on the same day.
And will you just wrap the titles?
Shit.
Oh, please.
Frap.
Will we frap the titles?
We'll frap them.
Thank you.
Memoirs of a Geisha.
Please don't make us do this.
Don't do this to us.
All right.
This is a bust.
Talk more about your improv background.
We hate fake raps.
I don't know how we can make it any clearer.
Freestyling a frap?
Now that's a bad idea.
Anyways, what about the bodega you shot in?
It was right around the corner from me and Keith's apartment.
Yeah.
Did you close it up?
Did you ask for permission?
No, we just asked
if we could get behind
the counter for a second
and they said yes.
And they were cool.
We looked like film students.
It was just the four of us.
Emily Heller,
which is Yorma's sister-in-law,
who's a stand-up comic,
is the woman behind the counter
selling stuff.
And I guess she was just
in town visiting
and just came by at that moment.
And so we were like, hey, get behind there. It was before she had even started comedy though, right?
No, she was doing standup at the time.
But she must've been like 20 years old. To backtrack, just because we've talked about
this thing so much, but we do the exact same way as Lettuce, where we borrowed the camera from
Maggie, Bill's wife at the time. And we just ran out on the street and it cost the cab ride and
two mini DV tapes. We did buy little speakers that you could put into an iPod because iPods were popular back then.
We got like a $15 speaker that we were doing playback on.
And as he's like walking down the street, I would hold his backpack that probably had our supplies in it and videotapes and then play the song while we're walking down the street.
So we don't look professional at all. We would either tell people it was for SNL if that helped us
or just claim to be film students when it helped us.
Most of the time we would say we were NYU students.
Shout out to New York City for being amenable
to the idea of helping out a couple of students.
The movie theater is the UCB Theater.
That's right. Thanks, Polar. There you go.
I remember showing it to Sudeikis when it was done,
but it hadn't gone to dress, just in our writer's room,
and him very nicely being like,
this is going to blow their minds.
I can't wait for this to air.
And it was before we were very confident in it.
We were just kind of like,
yeah, this feels like it came together pretty good.
This was before we even had an edit room, right, Keith?
Like we edited in that room.
Yeah, yeah. We were just on our writer's room. Yeah.
And I just remember him being very generous with his compliment
and giving me confidence and feeling like genuinely like,
oh, wow, maybe this will be good.
Now, Shoemaker told me that Robert Smigel, who in this show,
and one of the reasons this is a really great show
when you look back at the rundown,
did one of my favorite Smigel pieces ever,
this claymation piece called Christmas Time for the Jews.
Well, it happens every year on Christmas Eve Michael pieces ever, this claymation piece called Christmas Time for the Jews.
When you talk about timeless, it is a perfect piece of comedy because the observation it makes are really timeless observations about Jewish people at Christmas time.
And he knew he had a hit with that and he wasn't wrong. And yet when Lazy Sunday aired, he said to Shoemaker something along the lines of, well, that changes everything.
Because it was.
Like anybody who worked there and saw what it looked
like, because it did look gritty, right? It didn't look like super glossy or anything.
And yet the audience went for it in a way that you could tell they were going to continue to
be there for things like it. That was one of the things that allowed it to stand out too,
was that the year that we got there was the first year, I believe, that Esna went HD.
So it looked much cleaner and more polished than it had in previous years. And then we sort of
weirdly stood out even more by it not looking polished. So it really felt like it was its own
kind of thing in the middle of the show. Yeah, the quality drop.
Yeah, the quality drop really helped it.
And we tried to keep that going throughout all the years, just the distinct quality drop. Our stuff would start. Yeah, the quality drop really helped it. And we tried to keep that going throughout all the years,
just the distinct quality drop when our stuff would start.
Yeah, yeah.
It is funny how over the course of being there,
SNL Digital Shore went from being like,
hey, hey, hey, this is going to look bad, just go with it,
to, hey, this can be shot with movie cameras
and be actually the best looking thing in the show.
And that's just about technology.
I'd like to do a small YORM-style the cameras we used throughout the X01. I'm just kidding. I'm not
going to do that. Seth, the Smigel thing bears looking at because it shouldn't go unnoted that
Smigel was like on our hero list. You know, coming in, we were like, holy shit, that's Robert Smigel.
We knew about his reputation. He's one of those legendary SNL writers. We knew he had a relationship with Sandler
and all those guys that were our main cast growing up.
TV Funhouse, obviously, was massive for us.
We were like, that's somebody doing actual, edgy, dope shit.
And when he came up to us after that show and was like,
you guys just did something great, we were all super geeking.
Yeah.
And the other thing about both of those pieces of
content, his was a super catchy song as well. Yeah. You know, wonderfully performed. Who was
the singer on it? Darlene Love. You know, again, you guys had Parnell. That's Michael at Darlene
Love. His is also like expertly crafted stop motion. It's like beautiful sets, beautifully
animated. Well, he'd been doing them for a while. So he had carte blanche. It's like beautiful sets, beautifully animated.
Well, he'd been doing them for a while.
So he had carte blanche.
Yes.
To your point though, Seth, because it was such a good show,
I was very excited that it aired, but it's not like the moment it aired.
I was like, oh, that's going to really pop off.
No.
And in fact, Jorm, I would argue that we were way more excited
that Enemy Mine was airing our Enemy Mine sketch.
Oh, right.
Have you even said it was Jack Black hosting?
Right.
Who was the musical guest?
Yeah, so Jack Black hosted musical guest Neil Young.
That's a banger.
That's a good show.
That is a banger.
Yeah.
And you guys have an Enemy Mine sketch.
Hey, Steve.
Yeah, Gluck.
So I know it's been a while since our
ships crashed into each other during the space
war between our races.
Yeah.
And I know we've been
stranded on this moon with no one but each other to be
friends with for a long time now.
Right.
And odds are no one's ever
going to find us out here. Sure.
And it could be just me and you until we die.
What's your point, Lurk?
Well, in light of all that, I think there's something maybe you should know.
Okay, shoot.
Oh, gosh, how do I put this?
I have both male and female genitalia
So just something to think about
By far your best live sketch to this point as well
What?
Yeah
Oh to this point
To this point
Andy got so offended
Yeah show nine
Now I get it
We should note that this is based on a Dennis Quaid, Louis Gossett Jr. film.
Yes, it's a sci-fi movie called Enemy Mine that I was super into.
That maybe came out 15 years before you wrote the sketch?
Yeah.
Seth's favorite thing that I would do, which was come up with ideas based on super old sci-fi movies.
This will be a recurring theme.
But Enemy Mine, and I should note,
I also had a soft spot in my heart for Enemy Mine.
I think it's a super cool movie.
You had a soft spot.
I'm just going to say what I remember about the film.
Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr., who's an alien,
crash land on the same planet.
They're like warring.
Yeah, they're enemies.
During a war, yeah, that they're on the opposite sides of. Yeah one of them is like you're mine enemy exactly the other one's like no
you're mine correct yeah and then they end up befriending each other over a long period of time
yes more than befriending well no because in the movie louis gossett jr has both male and female
sex organs correct i don't even know if that's what it is or if it's
just that in his species that the males just give birth. Right. But it's a late reveal that he is
about to have a kid and then does and then they raise the kid together, kind of. Or I think he
dies and Quaid raises the kid without it. Oh, yeah. Right. That would make sense. I should note,
this film alone has a comedy premise,
and yet you guys had a height.
Can I say also, you don't need to be familiar with the film to enjoy the sketch.
That's part of the brilliance of the sketch is that it stands alone.
Yes, I should note that as well.
This sketch did very well. I'm willing to venture that not more than 10 people in the audience
had seen the original film.
That one was also going back to the well.
Yes.
Because we had made in 2004, the year before, a very cheap pilot presentation.
I think $70,000 was the full budget for a sketch show for Fox.
And on it, one of the sketches we did was this Enemy Minds style sketch, Glirk.
Yeah, called Glirk, named after Andy's character.
And it starred Jorma and Andy.
So there was a full video.
And Jack Black was buddies with Dan Harmon and would come to Channel 101.
Not that it had aired at Channel 101, where he, I think he had even seen it, or did we just show it to him?
Do you guys remember?
I think he had seen it.
Well, he was in the pilot presentation.
Right. He was gracious enough to even come introduce the pilot presentation.
Yes, we drove up to where he was recording some Tenacious D shit,
and we put him in like a George Washington costume
and shot him for the intro of the whole thing.
Right, that's how he had seen it.
Yeah, yes.
Bless that guy's heart.
He's the greatest.
That was when they were making the Tenacious D album
with the Dust Brothers.
So that was, speaking of like Smigel style,
like meeting your heroes,
we were like walking in on the Dust Brothers
who did Paul's Boutique.
Yeah, holy shit.
Working with Jack and Kyle on the dust brothers who did paul's boutique yeah working with
jack and kyle on the tenacious d official record i will say as a preamble to enemy mind because
yorm and i were in it together this was a similar thing to the parnell thing of like we talked about
it a lot of like hey are you okay with me asking jack to be your part because that's kind of
fucked up because we have it recorded as us and we love that version
but also we're in our first first half of our first season and we're completely out of ideas
already well and jack was very nice about that too he was like are you sure no but it's your
i remember yeah yeah and then afterwards he was like you did it better i was like i don't know
about that but thank you jack Black was the kind of host,
and you weren't the only ones to take advantage of at this show,
who would, if you had a piece you loved
that maybe hadn't worked with previous hosts,
but it was a comedy lover's delight,
your final Hail Mary would be,
let's throw it into the Jack Black show.
Jack, I also would put Jonah Hill in that category.
He saved some really funny shit that never got picked,
but he was like, no, no, we have to do this.
And they were the kind of hosts, by the way,
if you told them that, if you said,
yeah, I've tried this a bunch of times
and it hasn't gotten through,
they're both the most polite guys.
But then they'd be in the room with Lorne
and I think in the most charming way saying,
oh, we got to though.
Yeah.
We got to do that one.
Jonah did that right for Jackie Snad
and Clancy T. Baclarat, right?
The Model T. Cars one.
He did.
He willed that into existence.
That's fantastic.
These tended to be episodes on Christmas, too,
because they would save, like, some fantastic person.
And then Christmas always became, like,
a real thing for us of, like,
fuck, now we got to do another good one on Christmas.
Well, we should note that
Lauren has a very famous
speech that he does right before the Christmas
show and right before the last show of the year,
where between dress and air, it's sort of
his Friday night lights hyping up
the room, except the complete opposite
energy, where
he says something along the lines of,
well, you're about to have three weeks off,
and you're gonna see a lot of friends and family,
and they'll want to talk about the last show
and wouldn't it be nice if they had something nice to say about it?
And then I guess we were supposed to be like,
I'm going to rewrite the whole sketch.
Let's go write some comedy.
Freedom!
So I want to talk about Lazy Sunday.
I have more questions about it,
but we're all about tangents here.
There are two sketches I remember a great about Lazy Sunday. I have more questions about it. Yeah. But we're all about tangents here.
There are two sketches I remember a great deal from this show.
The first one takes place in a Sbarro.
Yeah.
Emily Spivey wrote it.
It's one of my favorites.
Less a Christmas scene than a winter scene.
What are your memories of it?
Jack is playing a guy with his family.
Extended family, I think. I want to say aunts and uncles, but I could be wrong.
And they're out on the town town and the wind is so crazy that they have to take refuge in a
Sbarro, but people keep opening the door. Oh, honey, great. You've got a seat. Oh,
and there's room for the stroller. This is so great. It's so busy in here. Oh, I'm exhausted.
It's a very straightforward premise executed to perfection, and it just keeps escalating and escalating. And I remember it destroying at every phase, like table, rehearsal,
dress, and air. I feel like Dratch is definitely on wires at some point in this sketch.
She gets lifted laterally. She's the grandma and she gets lifted up.
The grandma's lifted up there and they're holding on to her by the leg.
Also, there were two writers at SNL in this era who are A-plus Hall of Fame writers,
James Anderson and Emily Sp spivey both of
whom you would often say how did you come up with that idea and emily would say y'all it happened to
me and that's why it had to be in a sabaro because that's what happened the fact that that's known as
sparrow is really funny because it has nothing to do with Sparrow. And in terms of like the argument of like
fair use and satire
and like we can use
the name brand Sparrow
because we're poking
so much fun at it.
You're like,
there is no legal argument
that you could make
that would make it okay
that it's Sparrow.
I would argue there is
actually parody purposes
because I think
the joke works better
because one would only
go into a Sparrow
to escape
a winter storm. a winter gale.
I guess we can cross Sbarro off our sponsors list.
Shit!
Oh, no, wait.
We got our first live ad.
We can win them back.
I was defending them.
Let's run back the things we hate, guys.
Joke raps.
Sbarro.
We're really painting ourselves into a corner here.
Also, Sbarro wants to be our sponsor,
but they want us to do a rap about him.
Done.
Take it, Keeve.
All right, my next thing.
Spelling Bee was a sketch
that had been at the table multiple times.
This is a Will Forte classic.
But it was a weirdly shaped sketch.
It never had an ending that felt particularly satisfying.
And this is when Jack Black came in and just literally saved the day.
Because it was the sketch as written,
which is, Chris Parnell
is conducting a spelling bee.
What was the word? Business. The word
is business. The word is business.
And then it is just
the perfect Will Forte performance.
Business.
B-R-D-T-F-E. the perfect will forte performance business b r d t f k l m g h r k w t f n y l k p q w q r t d Y, L, K, P, Q, W, Q, R, T, D, F, P, L, M, K, Q, K, W, Q, Q, Q, Q, Q, Q, Q.
But he had done it for three years.
Forte had been trying to air Spelling Bee.
And then the reason Spelling Bee finally aired
was Jack Black walked out in front of it and played a song.
Yeah, he rewrote a song for it.
Like a tenacious D-style song.
Yeah, it's like lights down on the sketch,
lights up on Jack and Kyle.
Spelling Bee!
A test of wit and wordlery, the ancient sport of kings and queens
to make it on the Spelling Bee scene. You've got to be the cream. Spelling Bee! And it just felt
like an ending. It was a really hot show. It was a hot show and you didn't know what was going to
be the thing that popped from it. Christmastime from the Jews, Sbarro's, Lazy Sunday, Spelling Bee.
And yet I feel like within a day,
the world spoke and said Lazy Sunday was it.
Well, a big thing happened though,
which is that it was also on a site called YouTube
that we hadn't heard of before.
That's right.
So it did have a second life after that.
Up until this moment,
you basically were still in the old style of S&O
where something would air.
And if you wanted to see it again,
you were waiting for a rerun.
And then the next morning,
my brother called us and was like,
hey, check it out.
Someone else put it online
because server space was so expensive
and video servers were so expensive.
The idea that somebody else
would put a video online for you was unheard of
because you would have to do it yourself and pay for it. And it was YouTube. And it was the first time any of us went to YouTube.
It really was. It ended up being the first time most people went to YouTube.
And then it kind of had a whole other life though, too, because it became part of that
story of the rise of YouTube. So when anybody had to write about YouTube, we invariably got
mentioned with a couple other videos that were on there. And if NBC hadn't
taken it off at the time, it was one of the top watched things because it got like 5 million views.
But very quickly, it got 5 million views. Yeah. Because I think you're right. Like there were
obviously the kind of people that all four of us were before we were on SNL where you would watch
it and then you'd wait for the rerun to watch it again. Maybe you had a friend who recorded SNL and
so you had it on a videotape.
We recorded on VHS so that we could rewatch stuff.
Yeah, exactly.
But then you would have to literally know a person
and go to their house or dupe a tape.
Literally, I'm explaining ancient history.
Like, no, you would call up and be like, it's online.
And then you'd go to YouTube.
Everyone's like, yeah, we fucking know old man.
But this was the tipping point.
You gotta understand, there was no TikTok.
We got a lot of people telling us over that holiday.
It was actually, hilariously, very true to the Lorne speech that he would give.
His speech came true.
He was right.
Which was, over the holiday break, people were watching it,
and we all kept getting told via text and call from people being like,
hey, my whole family just sat around and watched your video.
And it was really a moment in that way, which was cool.
Yes.
The tragedy was that we got to New York.
We were from California.
We didn't have big winter coats.
And Andy had really searched around and at the Supreme store had found a coat he was
very, very proud of and very excited to wear.
Yeah, I love that jacket.
And had spent a lot of money on it, I assume.
Supreme's not cheap.
No.
And then he wore it in the video.
And then if he wore that jacket out in public after that,
he was recognizable as the character from Lazy Sunday.
This was the collateral damage of Lazy Sunday that no one likes to talk about.
You remember that guy that used to be on TV who wore a green coat with question marks all over it?
Not the Riddler, but like the guy.
I know who you're talking about.
Yeah.
Like the finance guy?
Yeah.
It was like a way to save money and stuff.
You know that Nike shoes, Apple computer, and even H. Ross Perot have used government money programs to help make their millions.
And you can too.
But I once was going down the street in New York City right by like Madison Square Garden.
And he was pulling a rolling suitcase
trying to hail a cab
and couldn't hail a cab.
And another guy in one of the best New York things
I ever heard passed him and said to his buddy,
I guess he doesn't have all the answers.
Oh my God.
Which is a really funny thing to say
about a guy with question marks all over his coat.
He clearly has questions.
Yeah, that's true.
I will note our friend Matt Murray, who we will mention a lot too,
Taco Town's Matt Murray, is the one who showed me the Supreme store
when it was just a dinky little store.
It was before it became like the biggest thing ever.
And we've talked often about how Supreme blew up because of Lazy Sunday
and we never got our due.
Yeah, and also YouTube.
Yeah, YouTube and Supreme.
Credit for both of those.
And those are two hills that we're going to die on.
Here's a question, Seth.
Yeah.
When that's happening,
because I have so much perspective on everything now,
but at the time we're shot out of a cannon,
like, whoa, this crazy, incredible stuff
is happening to us.
Did everyone there hate us?
Oh, that's a great question.
So let me speak from my own perspective.
I would say with no hesitation,
I was deeply jealous of how successful that was.
But at the same time, I already loved you guys a ton.
Like I found you to be great guys
from the minute you started at the show.
So even though it was like early times,
you guys came by it so honestly. It was a thing that you were doing before you were on the show.
You had also made a really good faith effort to do the show the way the show was done.
And then sort of like found your way into the version that succeeded. So you guys were hard
working and also super supportive of everybody else. With that said, let me answer that shorter.
Yes, everybody hated you. Thank you. And that was great. I mean, you did have a break and then you
came back in our next episode. We're going to talk about life after Lazy Sunday because I'm
being sincere. It definitely changed things, but it also put a huge pressure on you guys
to like meet or top it. Right. feel that right away yes i didn't feel
it because i was a fucking rock star okay interesting i was just gonna say the opposite
that may be part of the reason people didn't hate us right away is because we were so stressed out
and worried all the time yes as opposed to like celebrating yeah i think we really wore that on
our sleeves yeah we were pretty self-hating. I mean, for the next six years,
we were sick and sleep deprived and yeah.
It's true.
You guys never sort of acted like cock of the walk,
to quote Cowbell.
Just because I don't know
if this would be relevant next episode.
I mean, we left LA in September.
And then I remember there was that week
before the show came back in the first week of January
when people are back at work in L.A.
When our agents were like, come to L.A. and do meetings.
Where all of a sudden we went from like unemployed $70,000 budget pilots to meeting with like studio heads at movie companies.
Yeah.
We did like a round of high level meetings based just off Lazy Sunday and that New York Times article.
That stuff is the stuff that when other people get that now, I'm like, oh, everyone must
have hated us.
Yeah.
But we didn't go back to SNL and tell everybody.
And you can feel that, especially like internally in the entertainment business, when people
are being forced on you a lot because they have a hot thing and you're like, I don't
know if I wanted them, I'd ask for them.
And I guarantee you that there was a lot of that happening with us and people being like,
who?
I don't fucking care about these guys.
They made like their little rap.
It's interesting, though, because honestly, when I think about the show, and I've said
this many times where I'm like, oh, like when we first got the show, there was a documentary
that had come out about SNL.
And it was like how cutthroat it was and how people don't laugh at the table.
And when we got there, I was like, there's a lot of people here.
Like, it felt like a new era of like, no, people are really supportive.
And we were there with like a bunch of people that felt like, like Bill was such a fan of comedy.
And I just felt like our class was so supportive.
But it's a very good point, though.
Like, people couldn't have been that psyched.
We had a very special group through our time there in that everyone genuinely were fans of one another's and thought everyone was funny.
And really, I was excited to see what everyone else was going to do. And I feel like that was their pervasive vibe, which helped.
Yeah. I mean, I think there is something to be said for the output of the show for those years
was really high. And I think everybody who worked there got a little bit better because there was
that sense of, okay, there was no coasting anymore. Like when a lot of really talented people came in
and they were all really hungry
and they all worked really hard.
And I always look back at the time
and feeling really lucky to have been around that
because it definitely forced you to improve.
Sure, but I mean, even going into that night,
we were just talking about how great of an episode
that was on Christmas.
Yeah.
That speaks to what I'm kind of getting at,
which was everyone was killing.
Everyone was really funny.
Yeah.
So now we're going to turn to Seth's corner and talk a little bit about what Seth wrote that week.
Here we go.
Seth's Corner, you're all invited.
Seth's Corner, it's happening right now.
Take it away, Seth.
So Seth, what did you write that week?
We don't know.
I wrote the cold open.
It was Dick Cheney.
Daryl Hammond as Dick Cheney as a Santa Claus in the mall.
Every Christmas, I like to meet with local children and see what presents they want.
So without further ado, let's hear what they have to say for themselves.
Hi, Santa!
Hello, little girl. What do you want for Christmas?
I want an American Girl doll and a Barbie primped and polished head with manicure hands.
But all I really want for Christmas
is the safety and well-being of my family.
Well, unfortunately, Santa can't guarantee that.
Of that time, I think it was a pretty good cold open.
I remember thinking it was good.
I def walked off being like,
all right, out of the gate's pretty strong.
Let's see what you have, rest of the show.
This is a good one.
Alexi and I once went to the Vancouver Winter Olympics and we went to see figure skating.
And when you go to early figure skating, you don't realize this when you watch home,
but they just put the people early on who have no chance of winning.
And the reason they have no chance of winning is they don't do jumps that have a high level
of difficulty. And so you watch and, you know, again,
to you, it's the greatest ice skating you've ever seen.
And it's over and you're like,
that's the gold medal.
And then like an hour later,
there are people doing like 50 better flips
and you're like, oh, those first people super sucked.
That's how I felt that night about my Dick Cheney.
Oh.
When you work there,
you live for political sketches that are a little higher concept.
Just goofier.
Yeah.
I think you were probably a kid in it, Mbesson, who sat on his lap.
Yeah.
Anytime there was a kid, that was me.
A teen or a kid.
Yep.
I bet you, Polar, probably drafts got out there.
Uh-huh.
Sounds about right.
But yeah.
So that's, you know.
Cess Corner.
Look, do I hold my head up?
Sure.
Do I appreciate that no one's talked about it ever since?
I do.
And does it go on the Seth's Corner best of?
It doesn't.
My nightmare would be you have to do the cold open.
You're writing it this week.
Yeah.
That's so hard and so out of our wheelhouse.
Were you there when I said, hey, we're going to do a new thing? Because nobody liked writing monologues. Two writers will draw their names out of a hat.
You have to work together and write a monologue. And it went 0 for 4. And then everybody said,
please stop making us do that. Oh, wow. I do remember that. I remember once or twice getting,
hey, come stay tonight and work on the monologue with us. And me just feeling like out of my depth.
Oh, yeah. That was the worst I ever felt. Yeah, it's a specific skillset to be that inclusive
of broadness while trying to be specific for the person.
And I don't know how you describe it.
You're trying to make so many people happy.
I remember once just sitting with the writers on Thursday,
knowing I'd have to write it, but saying,
what would you even write a cold open about this week?
Like what's in the news? And everybody very helpfully was trying to find things that were
less boring. And I remember it was bedbugs in New York and something like they stopped serving giant
Diet Cokes. And James Anderson just started improvising a musical that was like, bedbugs
are biting. No Diet Cokes. It was super crazy. All right, everybody, that was yet, bad bugs are biting. No, not at all. It was super crazy.
All right, everybody.
That was yet another episode.
We will see you next week.
Seth and the Lonely Island.
Goodbye.
Bye.
The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers podcast
is supported by Airbnb.