The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast - Listener Q&A Episode 5
Episode Date: April 8, 2025This week on the pod, The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers chat about sketches from the John Malkovich episode! Plus, they answer some of your burning questions! Tune in to see if your voicemail or email...ed question made the cut! Calculator Christmas Gift - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sode7Jbmwf8 Vinny Talks to John - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MI3eiqrWEzU (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 @lonelymeyerspod. Send us an email! thelonelyislandpod@gmail.com Support our sponsors: Maker's Mark This episode of The Lonely Island Podcast is brought to you by our friends at Maker's Mark. You too can celebrate the spirited women in your life with a free personalized label to go with a bottle of Maker’s Mark! Head to makersmarkpersonalize.com and fill in the details in order to create and mail your custom label. MAKER'S MARK MAKES THEIR BOURBON CAREFULLY. PLEASE ENJOY IT THAT WAY. Maker's Mark® Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky, 45% Alc./Vol. ©2025 Maker's Mark Distillery, Inc., Loretto, KY. Nutrafol Start your hair growth journey with Nutrafol. For a limited time, Nutrafol is offering our listeners ten dollars off your first month’s subscription and free shipping when you go to Nutrafol.com and enter the promo code ISLAND.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode of the Lonely Island podcast is brought to you by our friends at Makers Mark.
We are celebrating Women's History Month by recognizing the spirited women in our lives
and remembering Makers Mark co-founder Margie Samuels. You too can celebrate the spirited
women in your life with a free personalized label to go with a bottle of Makers Mark.
Head to makersmarkpersonalize.com and fill in the details in order to create
and mail your custom label.
Makers Mark makes their bourbon carefully.
Please enjoy it that way.
Makers Mark, Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey,
45% alcohol per volume.
Copyright 2025, Makers Mark Distillery,
Incorporated Laredo, Kentucky.
As we established last episode,
Yarm,
you've been on fire recently.
Yet I will say that I feel like the confidence
of your recent hit podcast
have maybe led you to make a sartorial error.
No.
You showed up to the pod in a vest
and it's a loud vest.
It is like made of like sleeping bag material basically.
Yeah, to be clear, not loud, like color wise,
like it makes noise.
Yeah. And not like it makes noise on the fashion scene, like loud, like color-wise, like it makes noise. Yeah.
And not like it makes noise on the fashion scene,
like it's like on the microphone.
Would you say it's bad for podcasts, Andy?
I would say, yeah, let me clarify.
It's bad.
It's loud on the 7 Train.
It's loud out in the boat.
Also, Jorm is going to not be here for the full podcast.
That's just something for our listeners to know,
because he's going to a dinner.
And so he dressed for dinner before the podcast.
I did, I did.
We're getting to see his full dinner vest.
I'll let you know how it goes.
I'll let you know what people think of it.
Okay, can I just say this?
When I was in fourth grade,
I was obsessed with this Nike.
It was a half vest, half sweatshirt.
It had a little jump man in the,
and then you could see through the top part of the,
like basically this material.
So loud.
So loud.
And I saw this vest and I was like, I gotta get,
for my fourth grade self, I was like,
I fucking gotta get this vest.
I was really excited about it.
The most exciting thing about when Yoram starts a story
is how little you can predict what he's about to say.
When Yoram is explaining a vest, he said,'s about to say. When Jorm is explaining to Beth,
he said, could I just say, when I was in fourth grade,
like what?
You gotta jump logic, you know what I mean,
to make them exciting.
My brother does that very well too.
Andy, have you noticed that I'm wearing
a long sleeve white t-shirt?
Oh, it got sent, it got mailed.
I can't see your arms, your duct below frame,
but let me see.
Oh, is there something on it?
Yeah, Yorm made me a shirt.
Oh, there it goes.
I am a turbo.
I am turbo.
So Yorm came through and did make me a turbo white t-shirt.
Not what I expected.
Nope, it never is.
Never is.
You think maybe it's because he was like flying off
that frog poison when he made it?
Oh, no.
Yorm maybe has frog poisoned again since we last.
I did, I did.
I frog poisoned again, guys.
I did Bufo for a second time.
This time I did what was referred to
as a heroic dose of Bufo.
And so I continued to vomit out all my childhood
and you know, regular trauma.
But I thought you'd already done that.
So I feel like this is a bad review of your first Bufo
that you still had all this trauma left.
Well, we didn't talk about it last time.
It didn't get added to the pod.
So this is new information for our listeners.
We left Bufo out.
Well, then I apologize.
Yoram's been licking frogs for their poison.
I have.
It's great.
Highly recommend.
Not for the kids, though.
Stay in school.
So anyway, here's what we're getting.
Yoram made me a turbo white t-shirt.
I just kind of assumed the t-shirt would say
I'm a turbo white.
But of course this is a Yorm shirt.
So it says, I am turbo spelled like the fish.
Yeah, turbots.
Turbot, yeah, and that's on the front.
And then the back just says Blanco.
Blanco, but with a K like Blanco.
Well, here's the thing, it's cool like that.
Andy thought I just misspelled Blanco, which is fair.
You could assume that.
Yeah.
But I would, I, Seth, would you have really wanted
a shirt that said I am turbo white?
Well, I don't want-
I just, I don't think you would have worn it.
I don't want either version of the shirt, Yoram.
Yeah, that's fair.
That's, yeah, but-
Accurate. But I will, I will say, but even of the shirt, Yoram. Yeah, that's fair. But, accurate.
But I will say, but even just the style,
like you've known me 20 years,
have I ever worn a long sleeve white t-shirt?
I was thinking about myself,
but I'm like, I would wear that with a vest.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, like a leather, loud sleeping bag.
It's not leather.
It's not leather.
Look, it's Nike, it's a Nike.
Leather would not be this loud.
Yoram, I was just at a lunch, and guess who was sitting in the booth next to me?
It pertains to you.
Okay.
This person grew up in your childhood home with you.
Oh.
There is a doubt.
Oh.
Asa Takoni?
Close.
Oh, Tony Takone.
Big ol' pops.
Yeah, Tony Takoni.
Hold in court.
Tony Takoni is Tonyicone in my phone,
you know what I mean?
He's not dead.
Right.
And my kids are following in that tradition.
Yorma, Yorma, come over here.
Yorma.
What a wonderful thing for our listeners
to hear on episode 53 that Yorm's dad's name
is Tony Ticone.
Tony Ticone.
He's like a superhero of the theater,
of the American theater.
Well, it's like the final puzzle piece clicking into place.
Like, all of a sudden, all of your behavior
is explained by the fact that your dad
is a theater director named Tony Tacone.
His name is Anthony Frederick Tacone.
Like you couldn't be more fucking Italian.
Did we also just gloss over the fact
that your children call you by your first name?
Both of them do.
As a bit, it's a key bump here, as a bit or as a bit?
No, no, if my child was saying, Andy,
you know what I mean, telling me to do stuff.
It does upset me, I agree.
Give me some lunch, Andy.
I'd be like, yeah, I like this less.
Yeah.
Again, that seems like a bit though.
Yes.
Is it a bit or is it that they just?
No, it's not a bit.
They don't have any respect for me.
Got it.
My daughter calls me big dude sometimes.
She goes, what are we gonna do, big dude?
That makes me really happy.
Like Bluey, like big guy.
Yeah, it's big blue guy.
Do any of your spouses call you by your first name?
Like I don't think anybody in my house says Seth.
What?
Yeah, I mean, when we're like with other people.
No, of course, but I don't think my kids hear Seth enough
to like use it.
So what does your wife call you, Seth?
Honey.
What's the pet name?
Anybunny.
It's a lot like, hey.
You guys like a babe family?
We've babed before.
Babe.
I would say we've transitioned out of babe to just like, hey.
One stand up was like, love is shouting what from another room?
That's pretty good.
I think that that's an accurate description of love.
While we're talking about kids being funny,
my wife just had her birthday.
She's born on April 1st.
She's an April Fool's baby and Axel,
who's about to be seven,
had this idea. He's wanted to do it for a long time.
Did not give it away.
He made her a card in his own handwriting.
He wrote on the front,
when is your birthday?
And then she opened it and it said April Fools.
That's really good.
That's good.
It's genuinely a great joke that's not obvious.
I also like it because it ends sweet.
Yeah.
But also that should be like an actual greeting card, right?
I guess it only works for April Fools.
It only works for April Fools movies.
I think that you wanting to make that into a birthday card
is the same way that you wanted to make me
this I am a Turbot shirt.
How many times are you gonna wear it, Seth, be honest.
Just one and done, one and done?
Did you see it, Keith?
It looks good.
I think Blanco or Turbot should now be my spray painting tag
when I start doing that.
You think you're gonna get into graffiti this late in life?
Hey, he might.
I'm just saying if I do Turbot's a pretty good one.
Also, Andy busted me for wearing cheaters early on, Keev.
Oh, yeah.
Wait, are they bifocals or are they just reading glasses?
No, they're just like store bought 1.5s.
My readers.
I listen to my podcast at the same speed
that I wear my eyes.
I'm a 1.5.
Oh, wow.
Are you?
Yeah.
That's really fast.
Oh, I do too.
I'll two a podcast.
Whoa, you must be listening to some slow pods.
Yeah, I listen to some real.
Well, you know, it's like-
If someone's trying to two us, they're going to get lost.
We're way too quick.
You know which pod I always listen to at two, Keith?
Reenactments of when Benstein's Money Guy.
Oh yeah, Benstein.
Yeah, yeah.
Wait, you said you called Benstein
the Win Benstein's Money Guy?
I felt it happening as I was saying it.
No, it's fine.
It was too late, and then I was like,
it'll be all right.
Yeah, the Ferris Bueller guy would've been the way
you were trying to phrase it,
the teacher from Ferris Bueller guy.
Who's that dude who hosts Jimmy Kimmel?
Yo, that was a trick question, Seth!
-♪ Let me tell you about a thing I know, the Lonely Island Seth Meyers Podcast Show!
As evidenced by the beginning of this podcast,
we're gonna be all over the place,
but welcome to the Lonely Island Seth Meyers Podcast.
We've got a lot of questions sent in from our listeners.
So to the Kuwait army out there, I would just like to say...
It didn't work. Didn't plan.
Didn't work?
We can try it again.
No?
No, it didn't work. But in whatever it is,
is it a... shmant! What is he saying?
It's a quado in the house.
It's so weird that sometimes it just cuts it out.
Oh, that's Zoom cutting it out, but it'll hear it on the...
Yeah. But then I think we should keep in us not being able to hear it.
Oh, for sure. I think that worked really well.
The amount of time I put into isolating Quado in the house.
Quado in the house!
Should we keep in you talking about keeping it in?
What?
Should we keep in you talking about keeping it in?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Should we keep me talking about this?
Yeah, they don't want anything cut out, so this is what they want.
Yeah, we should. Just as evidence? Yeah, they don't want anything cut out, so this is what they want. Yeah, we should.
Just as evidence of how little they actually want everything.
Speaking of April Fools, just a little bit of housekeeping.
What did you think of the Spelling Bee April Fools joke, Andy?
Uh, I'm gonna just be really honest.
Throwing it for everybody.
I just did it and got Queen Bee and never even noticed.
It was about halfway through where I kind of realized something was off.
Sorry, what was it?
They just used the same letters as they used the day before on April Fool's.
But it was a different center letter, wasn't it?
Yeah.
And some of the words were different.
Andy, do you feel like there are some words
that used to be accepted on the spelling bee that no longer are?
A hundred percent.
I'm very upset about this.
Yeah.
And iron was a word that used to be accepted and no longer is. Yeah. Oh. There's a few that I used I would have
been able to tell you about immediately but since they're not accepted anymore
I've ejected them for my brain. Wait why aren't they are they no longer in the
English language? Can words get voted out of the English language? I don't
know the B is a constantly changing thing but I do not care for the fact
that there's words that used to be accepted, the B is a constantly changing thing, but I do not care for the fact that there's words
that used to be accepted in the B that no longer are.
I would like to know what our audience thinks
should be voted out of the English language.
Every year when like Merriam-Webster
does their big announcement of the new word of the year,
like sleigh or swag or whatever it ends up being.
They drop like 10 words.
Yeah, something else gets to get dropped.
Is that true?
Yep.
Doesn't make sense.
There's only so many words. That doesn't make sense. There's only so many words.
That doesn't make sense.
There's only so many slots.
The finite amount of words.
That's the rules.
Once again, Sam Azursky, editor of The Bee,
we're calling you out.
Just like why?
Just send us a voicenote explaining.
Yeah, Sam.
Should we get into some questions?
Yeah.
Okay, great.
Yes, Seth.
Oh, a couple of YouTube comments first.
This is in the Jizz in My Pants episode.
Someone wrote, as a Brit, it's crazy to me
that you can't say jizz at 1130 PM.
So Andy, you've spent some time there.
About what hour is it appropriate to say jizz
in foggy London town?
Yeah, I'm the foggy London town guy, Yoram.
You're what?
I'm vest guy.
Vest guy, that's right.
He's wearing a vest. Well, no, I've been there. I say't know. Yeah, vest guy. That's right. He's wearing a vest.
Well, no, I've been there.
I say foggy London town,
but you spent extended time there.
I did.
But not in foggy London town.
No, no, I was in Lancaster.
Lancaster.
Oh, so you don't know anything about foggy London town.
I'm like a Northern lad and you're like a posh.
I don't even talk to you.
Am I?
What time could you say jizz in Lancaster?
You poo.
That's how they say it there.
Uh...
No, they say things like, um, everyone called each other Daisy.
When you'd go into a store, people would go like,
Oh, hi, Daisy.
Like, the old lady...
Why is nobody answering my jizz question?
Sorry, go ahead.
Uh, yeah, I would say like 10 p.m. would be my guess.
Then you can start saying it. That's good.
Yeah, and maybe honestly earlier.
Nudity and cursing are nothing there.
Talking about sex is not a thing.
Wait, can you say, "'C***' on TV then? There?
Like, can you say that?"
You just did.
I'm not even sure you could say it on an American podcast.
I'm just kidding. This is not being televised.
I don't know why I said that.
It was just kind of like a pretty woman reference.
You know, Yoram, how you're always yelling at me,
I've never treated you like a prostitute.
I do like to say that.
Yeah. Yeah, and I'm like, stop yelling that at me.
Jamie Lynn Sigler, this is another comment.
Jamie Lynn Sigler said in her podcast
that after Sopranos, this is the role
she gets asked about the most.
No way.
Yeah, wow.
That was a lovely thing to hear.
Well, sorry.
She said that on her podcast.
She said that on her podcast
and one of our listeners heard that on her podcast
and shared it with us.
That's amazing.
Hold up, other people have podcasts?
Yeah, I don't know how to break this to you.
About the past?
They've a lot of people do podcasts about the past.
Oh, fuck, that's our lane.
Oh, fuck, I'm such an imp,
I can't stop making impish comments.
Is that the new word in Merriam-Webster this year?
No, I think imp's been in there for a minute.
It's just you're using it a lot now all of a sudden.
I feel like we have an established slang on the pod
and I don't like that there's just a new word now.
You guys, it would be so funny if we all got vests.
Oh my God.
Your vest is interesting
because vests are obviously have been very popular
in Silicon Valley as like a tech bro thing,
like the micro, whatever you call them, Patagonia style ones. And when you go to the bay, every
other person's in like either a fleece or a micro, what do you call it? But yours is
not that. Yours is not a tech vest. Yours is like shiny nylon. It's kind of baggy at
the bottom. Like a windbreaker box cut windbreaker vest.
Yeah, it's like a parachute, like, almost hip hop-y
kind of vest.
I was going to say, like, you almost
should be wearing, like, Timberlands or Rockports
with it.
It looks like J. Rue the Damager could have
worn it back in 1998.
It's a little bit of a bell cut.
Kind of when you stood up, you looked a little bit
like a black shiny bell.
Yeah. I didn't realize that I was going for J looked a little bit like a black shiny bell. Yeah.
I didn't realize that I was going for Jeru the Damager,
but that's correct.
I always am.
Yeah, you could come clean, you know what I mean?
That one's just for quest love.
Seth Coact, I tried today, unaccepted.
Used to be accepted.
Used to be accepted.
Yeah.
A great example.
This is part of the wokenfication of America, guys.
Slays in there and Coacts gone.
What's the world coming to?
What's next?
We can't say anything.
They're killing all our favorite words.
Somebody wrote in,
I've listened to Jizz in my pants a million times
and not once had it occurred to me
that Andy and Yoram were doing English accents.
I guess I just thought it was some kind
of Jizz related speech impediment.
Oh man.
Oh, that's interesting.
Multiple people said this about the English accents.
They had assumed,
and I kind of thought this was a nice observation,
that you were maybe Germans speaking English
in that way that sometimes sounds British.
That's fair.
Yeah, that tracks.
I mean, it's definitely the genre of music
that a German would speak English on.
Yeah.
Yeah, Euro in general, pan-European.
Yeah, we don't know who taught you English.
It could have been you're German,
but your English teacher had an English accent.
I think that's right.
In retrospect, I think that that person's right.
We are German doing English.
Yeah, you were correct.
We take it back.
I'm gonna just get in some questions now
from the Quaid army.
Hit us.
When and how does the cast find out
when upcoming hosts get booked?
Mass email, break room, bulletin board.
Are there varying levels of excitement
amongst the cast
when you do find out or is it just business as usual
for everyone forever you're Quaid?
Forever you're Quaid-y.
So Quaid army has just happened now.
It was like an off-handed.
Oh yeah.
That's when we slipped into it.
Can I say, I also went back, you know,
obviously it was a bust because none of you could hear it
when I played my sweet, you know, Quado in the house.
The best thing about Quado is that it was a bust, because none of you could hear it when I played my sweet, you know, Quado in the house. Yeah. The best thing about Quado is that
it is a recurring sketch that only recurred once.
So it's twice.
I feel like maybe the most damning amount
for a sketch to happen is twice.
Because Lorne bought into it enough for twice,
but then he wasn't fool me three times.
Yeah.
But do you know this,
that both times Quado appears,
he says his bad breath is kicking like?
Yes. Yeah, of course.
Bruce Lee would be one.
Yeah. Bruce Lee and Adam Vinatieri.
Oh. Amazing poll.
Right.
How do we find out who the host is?
Usually it's when you're just in Lauren's office
to ask him a question and you happen to glance up
at the board and see that a new card is up there in the future and you go, oh shit.
Yes.
It really is like that.
Yep.
It's not that there's a main room that it gets posted in.
You just sort of, when you find your way into Lauren's office, you get the news.
Yeah.
Which I think is intentional.
They're like, yeah, and then people will see it when it's in there.
No one tells you, no one announces it.
Yeah.
It's just none of your business.
And then if you just happen to be in there, you might clock it.
But it is quite exciting.
Well, I guess everybody's in there on Monday, a pitch.
So everyone gets a chance to kind of look up there,
even if they're not the type of cast or writer
that just wanders into Lawrence often.
Oh, the talent office, Kevin writes,
also has a board with hosts and musical guests
if you're the type that wanders into there.
Yeah, and so does Higgins,
but Lawrence usually has them before those other offices
on the wall, I have found, but maybe not anymore.
Yeah, just depends what kind of employee you are,
if you're the kind that goes in there and chats a lot
or not.
Were we?
Were we?
I can't remember.
I feel like I did that in Higgins, man.
We were definitely a more chat with Lauren
right off the bat than most people because of Hot Rod.
Yep, and also just our sunny dispositions.
So cool. Yeah, he loved having you guys in.
Remember he would be like,
it's the four.
Remember when Lauren tried to make the four you a thing?
Yeah.
He was like, four bros.
He'd be like, I'm the lost member.
Oh, with him, yeah.
He'd be like, all right, four bros unite.
He's like, I call D'Artagnan.
Engine.
Whoa.
Four bros.
It's like, oh my God, everybody's probably
wondering what the four bros are up to.
D'Artagnan, is he the fourth Musketeer,
or is he one of the three Musketeers?
Because it seems like a weird thing.
If he's saying, I'm the fourth, I call D'Artagnan famously
if there were three Musketeers, not four.
Oh my god.
Akiva.
You think I haven't been humiliated enough already today
with the Ben Stein thing?
But I do feel like maybe D'Artagnan is a fourth guy
that isn't one of them that shows up
and kind of steals the show.
You know, like when you watch a game show
and people buzz in too early and they get it wrong,
but you're like, but respect for diving in.
Yeah.
You know, for taking the plunge.
I do want to pay that respect to you.
Thank you.
It would be awesome if Andy had been on Celebrity Jeopardy
and buzzed in at one point and said,
who is the guy from Win Ben Stein's money?
From Ben Stein's money.
Yeah. We could have that. It would have been a real memeable moment. We were all really Jeopardy and buzzed in at one point and said, who is the guy from Wind Ben Stine's mind?
Yeah.
We could have that.
It would have been a real memeable moment.
I was watching the show, who hosted Wind Ben Stine's mind?
Ha ha ha.
This episode of the Lonely Island podcast
is brought to you by our friends at Maker's Mark.
And I'm with some of my friends right now.
Hi, guys.
Hello.
Hi. You know, Margie Samuels was a spirited woman.
She was also the co-founder of Makers Mark.
I don't have to tell you guys this stuff.
No.
No, we know it.
But our listers might not, so continue.
All right, well, in honor of Women's History Month,
we wanted to toast some of the spirited women in our lives.
That was my idea, actually.
These guys were thinking about not doing it.
And I was like, we should.
Yeah.
You are, in many ways, as trailblazing as Margie Samuels Yhorm. And I was like, we should. Yeah, you are in many ways as trailblazing as Margie Samuel's Yorm.
And I've often said that.
Well, I kept saying, I want to mark this day
with a maker's mark.
And you guys kept saying, what does that mean?
I was like, it means a toast, guys.
Way to land the plane, buddy.
Thank you, up there.
Thank you, Seth.
I want to tell a story about a spirit of woman
I saw during the 50th.
And I was a little bit lucky because I was
There on Friday for some rehearsal action and I got to watch the Close Encounters rehearsal with Kate McKinnon
And I feel it's the most I've ever watched an actor's process
Guys, I'm gonna wrap this up
You too can celebrate the spirit of women in your life with a free personalized label to go with the bottle of makers mark head to
Makersmark personalized comm and fill in the details in order to create and mail
your custom label.
Don't forget to grab a bottle of Makers Mark to go with it.
Makers Mark makes their bourbon carefully.
Please enjoy it that way.
Makers Mark, Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey, 45% alcohol per volume.
Copyright 2025, Makers Mark Distillery, Incorporated Loretto, Kentucky.
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Support for the Lonely Island and Seth Meyers podcast
comes from Airbnb.
Hey, everybody.
Obviously, this podcast is about four friends hanging out,
talking about old times.
And all four of us are parents.
And sometimes we go on vacations with our kids.
I just recently took a trip with my kids,
and they're very loud.
And I want them to have the freedom
to be the children they are
and not always be shushing them because we are in a hotel.
And that was one of the many benefits
of taking our spring break in an Airbnb.
You can hang out in a living room, not in a hotel lobby.
And you know what?
I kind of feel like a meal is better shared
around a table than a bed.
I feel like eating in a bed is a sign
that things aren't going great.
So it was fantastic.
We had a great time.
They did not wake us up early
because they had their own rooms
and it was just so much better.
And maybe you're someone who's thinking,
you know what, my home can be a great get together
for old friends who are not looking to meet new people.
You've put a lot of time, effort, and work in your home
and someone out there would probably love to experience it
while they're traveling.
And then they would rave about
how it was the highlight of their trip.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
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Hey, real quick, I just want to pop through
because I really loved the Malkovich episode.
Fantastic monologue.
It was a very Christmasy show,
the monologue written by Tucker and Lutz.
Do you remember it was just John Malkovich
sitting at home base surrounded by actual
kids reading Twas the Night Before Christmas and just pausing for a lot of Malkovich-y
intakes on the poem?
Yes, yes.
And at one point he says, went out on the lawn, there rose such a...
Such a clatter.
I sprang from my bed to see what was the matter.
You know that the state of California has a home invasion law,
where it's actually legal to shoot someone
just for entering your residence?
And I'm telling you, I mean, perfectly legal.
Did you know that?
A lot of really nice moves in the body of that.
He also at one point pauses and says,
now who's in the mood for a treat?
And he holds out a bowl and says,
I have a whole bowl of Hall's Methalyptus.
Anyone? Methalyptus, anyone? No?
And then he adds, when I was a child,
we used to suck on pennies.
ALL LAUGH
Great.
Good, good.
Then there's a gas rite.
I kind of forgot, do you remember the gas rite parody, which was Fred's take on the Breathe Right nose strips?
Oh, that one's really good.
Is it the butt spreading?
It's holding your buttocks.
Yeah.
It pulls your buttocks apart so you don't loudly pass gas.
Oh, it's such a good.
What a good invention.
It's great because the beginning,
before he shows the product, he's in bed with Wig
and he loudly farts and it wakes her up.
And then he shows how it pulls the buttocks apart
so that it's quiet.
But then the last scene is him in bed and there's no sound,
but then she still wakes up and goes,
"'Oh, what's that smell?'
So, because it doesn't stop you from farting.
He's like, we'll never know.
We were talking about sweetness earlier.
One of my favorite sweet sketches of all time.
Andy, you were in this sketch.
The sketch is called Calculator.
No memory.
Calculator begins, there's a Christmas tree,
Bill is a dad, Casey Wilson is a mom,
you are their son.
You're so excited, it's almost midnight
and Christmas Eve and you can open presents.
You all look very modern.
And then they say, where are the twins?
And you say they'll be down any second.
And then Fred and Malkovich enter as twins,
matching sweaters, curly black hair.
And they're so excited because all they want for Christmas
is a calculator.
But don't they have like thick New York accent?
They have thick, they're like,
we're gonna get a calculator.
Calculator. Also, they're your younger brothers.
They look three times your age.
No one else in the scene has an accent.
And they're just like, we're gonna get a calculator.
The entirety of the sketch is them being excited about calculators
and how they're gonna add up a bunch of numbers.
All right, do 89 times 56.
Whoa! they're gonna add up a bunch of numbers. All right, do 89 times 56.
Whoa!
Do 17.5 divided by 374. I'm gonna, I'm gonna, whoa!
It is such a wonderful performance.
They match each other's energy,
and it's a lot like, I'm gonna add up so many numbers,
it's gonna be 50 places past the decimal point. And again, you keep thinking it's a lot like, I'm gonna add up so many numbers is gonna be 50 places past the decimal point.
And again, you keep thinking it's a sketch
that's taking place in the 70s.
And then you say, why don't you just use the calculator
on your phone?
And they yell, shut up, Glenn, nobody asked you, Glenn.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then just the sketches, they get the calculator
and they're just really happy
and they add up a bunch of numbers
and then the two of them in unison go, whoa!
Just so happy. But anyway I reached out to Fred because it is one of, it's a very
like uniquely Fred sketch where there's sort of no conflict and it's just lovely
and it's a small observation. So I asked Fred where he got the idea of calculator
and he sent in this voice note.
Hey, what I remember from Calculator is that at the time, they were sort of starting to
disappear from, you know, the market as like a product you can get. So I was like remembering
that they used to be in catalogs, like a Sears catalog, you know, like different models of
calculators, and then that you could see them in like display cases in camera stores and stuff. So I think it was just, you know, I
was writing it, it was more like, oh, whatever happened to that as its own thing? And that
was, that was pretty much it. It just, you know, and then I just thought like it'd be
two like Long Island guys, kids, hoping to get their
calculators.
It's amazing how when Fred's like natural speaking voice and then hearing what comes
out of his brain and his characters, like, yeah, like, he speaks and like, I'm just the
most normal person you've ever met in your life.
Yeah.
So I just kind of thought that would be the thing.
The craziest thing.
Do you remember nine-year-old advice
from the update desk, Andy?
No.
That was you as David Rasmussen.
This was the story in the news
that made you and Tucker write a sketch.
A nine-year-old boy named Alec Graven
has just authored a book called How to Talk to Girls.
Here to comment is another kid author
who's just written a competing book
called A Kid's Guide to Talking to Girls.
Here's nine-year-old David Rasmussen.
Still don't remember it.
David kind of comes out and is very cute,
and Amy is very taken with his precociousness.
And then his early advice, you know,
oh, it's super easy for me to talk to girls.
You just have to have confidence, a smile,
and be willing to share your snack once in a while.
And Amy's like, well, that's really
good advice for a guy of any age.
And it's really nice advice.
And then, um, it takes a turn.
Oh, and another thing.
Play girls against each other
by talking to a lot of them at once.
If I see some talent out on the playground,
I chat her up as well as everyone around her.
Maybe you end up with her less attractive best friend,
but that's okay.
You know what they say,
they all look the same with the lights off.
And then Amy's less...
Amy's less psyched to be talking to a nine-year-old.
What's weird about this, Seth, is I don't remember it at all,
but when you told me the premise,
I pretty much guessed what it was.
It's like, oh, it's something that I know how to write.
Gonna go left.
And another thing, Amy, girls love, again, nine years old.
And another thing, Amy, girls love, again, nine years old. And another thing, Amy, girls love cocaine.
Especially white girls.
It makes them crazy.
But be careful because it can get exhausting.
Ladies, you're gonna wear me out.
I'm nine years old.
The only balls I've dropped are in the outfield.
There you go.
That's an update joke right there.
A feature, an update feature joke.
The reminder of the premise.
I'm nine years old.
Oh, there's a very nice move at the end too, because she says she's very upset and she's gonna tell your parents and you start to cry.
And then she's had sympathy and says, I won't tell your parents.
And then you immediately stop crying and say, and don't be afraid to cry, girls love it.
So you're playing Polar too.
Playing her. Could never happen in real life. Too savvy.
You guys, I have to go. I love you very much.
Oh, right. Everybody, Yorm's going to dinner.
And the next podcast, he's gonna let us know
how the vest played. How many people are gonna be
at the dinner, Yorm?
Well, it's a Scott Frank dinner,
so I don't know who's gonna be there, so I'll...
Well, he's notorious for just ripping on people's outfits
when they show up at the table.
What if he gets to wear the same one?
It's possible. So we'll see.
Will you do us and the listeners of the pod a solid?
Yeah.
At some point, if it's appropriate,
do a quick straw poll from the people at the dinner
and get their take on where they stand on the vest.
Yeah, absolutely. I'll get Scott to weigh in.
They don't know you're not a vest guy
and haven't been for 20 years.
They don't know you well enough.
I'll ask though.
Okay, bye, bye.
Goodbye. And that was the last time they ever saw your life.
A little bit of trivia on the John Malkovich one is if you watch those recent SNL docs, the four-parter
Peacock one, there were sometimes really good like mini-dv looking footage of behind the scenes and it was of this era and it
was all from that episode because there was a camera crew allowed to film a bunch behind the scenes.
Well, yeah, I had forgotten this was The Week,
but I feel like I watched that documentary when it came out and haven't thought about it since.
Have you seen it, Seth, recently?
I have not seen it recently,
but when I watched it, it brings me pleasure to watch us in that era.
Well, there's two things we're talking about.
One was a documentary called Saturday Night from 10 years ago or something, or more, right?
That me and you saw actually, Seth.
Yes, we did, right.
We were at South by Southwest for MacGruber.
So this must have been 2010 or 2011 or something.
And we went for MacGruber.
And then we were like, oh my god, that doc is airing.
Let's go over and see ourselves in it.
And then went, and then they kept asking questions.
And then the moderator just looked up at us
in the audience, was like, can you guys answer these?
And then we had to start answering questions
even though we were just ticket buyers in the crowd.
But that footage got re-licensed into the docs
from the 50th from a month ago.
So it's the same footage.
Yes, yes, I saw that.
They sort of made a choice of which sketch to follow
based on the table, which was this Empire Carpet sketch,
where John Malkovich played a guy
who was in a recording booth auditioning to play the...
-♪ Five, eight, eight. Mm-hmm. -♪...that voiceover.
And it played really hot at the table,
and then it died a dress. But it was very interesting
that a documentary crew went to table
and thought they had picked the one that was a lock to make it all the way to air
and got it wrong.
Yeah, such a good introduction to how the show actually is.
We were like, this is clearly the best thing,
and then it just doesn't work on the floor.
Yeah.
I mean, Fred was the Empire Carpet guy,
and Will was sort of a sound engineer.
And every time Malkovich would finish,
Fred would give a little negative head shake,
and then Forte would scream,
-"Again!" -"Again!"
-♪ Empire...
-"Again!"
-♪ 800-588-2300
Empire...
-"Again!"
-♪ 800-588...
-"Again!"
-♪ 800-588...
-"Again!" -♪ 800... -"Again!" -"I don't know what you want!" -"Again!" 800, five, eight, eight. Again! 800, five, eight, eight.
Again!
800.
Again!
I don't know what you want!
Again!
And Malkovich sort of has a breakdown because he doesn't know what the Empire Carpet Guy
wants and then Fred tells a long story about how the Empire Carpet Business began, which
is very dark beginnings.
And it was a real sketch for comedy writers and that's one of the reasons it played so
hot on Wednesday, but then just fundamentally did not get traction.
Dress.
So it didn't air?
It did not air.
Whoa.
It makes for a better documentary,
because you sort of see the moment
where they're finding out it doesn't make it,
and it just makes for better television.
We also aren't in it almost at all,
especially me and Jorn, because we were editing
Jizz in My Pants the whole week,
and every time the camera crew would come in, we would just stop, because we didn't want them seeing it.
And we would just like stare and do funny, like...
We never let them see the process.
We would stop the process and like look at the camera
and be awkward. So we're not in the doc at all.
Because we didn't let them see.
I also, uh, oh no, Jorm's not here.
Can somebody do a quick Seth's Corner?
Seth's Corner, you're all invited.
Seth's Corner, it's happening right now.
Just play the other one, guys.
No, I'll give you the background music now
and then you put it.
Do be dee, do dee dee dee dee, dee dee dee,
be be be dee be boo.
So then they marry those together?
Yeah. Yeah.
Actually now I do really want to hear that.
Seth's Corner, you're all invited.
Seth's Corner, it's happening right now.
I wrote Jacuzzi.
Oh, but that aired.
Yeah, that aired.
That was a classic top of show kind of a piece, right?
No, last sketch.
Oh, five to one.
You're kidding.
Well, it needed an actual working hot tub.
By the way, this is,
I never think about it at the time,
but it's got a little Jon Hamm's Jon Hamm vibe to it.
No, 100%.
I'm pretty sure that I came up with Jacuzzi
while people were pitching around on Monday,
and I was just going through all
of Jon Malkovich's movies in my head,
and then thought about Dangerous Liaisons,
and then basically pitched Dangerous Liaisons,
but in a hot tub and it's called Jacuzzi.
It's immediately very fun.
Andy, were you in it or were you not in it?
I was not in it.
You were in it.
No!
By the way, that means you were in a hot tub.
You were in a hot tub having a sword fight
with John Malkovich,
and your career is so rich with experience,
you do not remember that.
I think it's because we were dealing with the Jizz in My Pants stuff. That's all I was thinking about, You had a sword fight with John Malkovich, and your career is so rich with experience, you do not remember that.
I think it's because we were dealing
with the jizz in my pants stuff.
That's all I was thinking about,
because it was my piece with the guys, obviously.
And we had made it a lot.
You'd be like, hold on a second, guys.
I gotta go get in this hot tub and do some bullshit,
and I would be right back.
Not even that.
It's just like, you're just detached from reality.
And Malkovich kept complaining to Lorne.
He's like, I feel as though my scene partner in Jacuzzi
is elsewhere.
I know.
That's a good Malkovich.
He keeps muttering about Jizz.
Can I do a Malkovich?
Seth.
Seth is.
It's bad.
Wait, were you doing it?
Yeah, once in a while, you got to check in on it.
I was going to try.
I don't want to go.
No, it's bad.
Wait, Keev, do yours.
Seth?
No.
No, it's not, yeah.
Okay, so Seth is the only one with Malkovich.
But now we know.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
But hater does Malkovich,
in front of Malkovich is Vinnie Videcchi.
It's really fun.
It's amazing, yeah.
I can be John Malkovich.
I'm sorry?
Hello, my name is John Malkovich.
I don't sound anything like that.
No, you sound exactly like this.
What a favorite moment I forgot.
Bobby shows up as Vinny's son
and is a really funny Italian kid.
And this is the beginnings of seeing, like,
oh, there's so many things that Bobby Moynihan
is gonna be great on at the show.
But at the very end, Vinny says,
sorry, we've run long.
Apologies to Chef Boyardee's.
And it cuts to you and Keenan as like Chef Boyardee's,
but with like Flava Flav clocks around your neck.
That's my part?
Yeah, you don't have a line.
No, he jumped.
I mean, the one that you were remembering was the hot tub.
Oh, no, I was talking about your eyeballs
have a part in Vinny Vedacchi.
I'm sorry.
That's OK.
Your part was in a hot tub fencing or something.
Was I actually in the hot tub?
Yeah.
Fuck, I gotta watch this.
I gotta watch this show.
Yeah, you should.
That's a good, and it's a good season.
It's called Saturday Night Live?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And when does it air?
I, all right, I feel like this is a story I've told.
But Malkovich, there was also a sketch called
the Lost Works of Judy Blume.
And Malkovich played a girl named Gertie
in an unreleased Judy Blume book.
And he was sort of wearing sort of a lavender turtleneck
and a purple overalls.
Looked very like 80s Judy Blume-y.
And he really liked the outfit,
so he just sort of hung out in it
all Friday during rehearsal and all the sketches.
I don't think so, that's incredible.
And I was talking to him backstage,
I was just in the hallway with him,
we were talking about Jacuzzi,
and he had been so good at performing it
like he had in the movie, except in a hot tub.
Yes.
You know, at the table.
And I said, when was the last time you've seen it?
And he said, I believe I saw it in the movie, except in a hot tub. Yes. You know, at the table. And I said, when was the last time you've seen it?
And he said, I believe I saw it at the premiere,
and I've not seen it since.
Yeah, that's right.
And so I was like, oh, so your memory of it
is enough that you can do it just like that.
And he says, if you think it was accurate to the original,
then I suppose you're right.
And he said that thing all night.
This is a good Malkovich.
I'm getting into the...
I'll never forget. He goes,
"'Last night, I was waiting to meet a friend for dinner,
and they were running late.
And to pass the time, I tried to think of every movie
I'd ever been in.
And the 58th movie I thought of was being John Malkovich. ALL LAUGHING
Holy shit.
And I like that he did not tell it to me like,
this is a joke, but he did think that's fascinating.
Yeah.
Maybe he was going in chronological order.
I don't think so, because even he was like,
how crazy is that?
You'd think that's like one or two.
That would be like if Ben Stein tried to come up
with everything he'd been in.
Here it comes. What's the first one you think of for come up with everything he'd been in and here it comes.
What's the first one you think of for him?
I have mine and it's not a joke.
Your first Malkovich?
Yeah, when someone says Malkovich,
that isn't the first one I think of.
I just have a specific one that comes to my mind.
I just had one pop into my head.
All right, on the count of three, everybody say theirs.
One, two, three.
In the line of fire. Con Air.
Oh, wow.
I can't believe we're both Con Air. Mine's In the Line of Fire.
I love In the Line of Fire.
Oh, In the Line of Fire.
He's so fucking good.
I think of that In the Line of Fire scene all the time
where he makes that little gun.
Yeah.
Basically, it's 3D printing guns before 3D printers.
He's making it out of like a composite plasticky thing.
He's by a fishing hole or something,
and people come over and ask him about it,
and then he just kills them both.
Yeah, exactly.
It's got those weird springs.
That movie, I must've been at just,
I was definitely the right age for it,
where, you know, I had never seen other assassin movies
like The Day of the Jackal or anything.
And so I was just watching it,
having my mind blown by every element of it.
And it's genuinely good, and it's like weirdly funny.
It has like real joke jokes in it. Like, do you remember there's a scene with, uh,
Clint Eastwood and Rene Russo?
It's the sex scene.
And the way it introduces, like, it's a tracking shot
on the floor with their legs as they're making their way
across the bedroom undressing.
And it could literally be a naked gun joke.
Their clothes are coming off, and then guns are coming off,
and then more guns, and then more,
and then knives, and, like, and then knives and like handcuffs.
It's like a, cause they're both cops.
And so it's like the amount of gear that comes off
on the way to the bedroom is genuinely a joke,
played as a joke.
Yeah.
And the movie's deadly serious.
All right.
So, hey, we have some audio messages.
Why don't we hear some of those from Quaid Army?
Okay guys, you won't remember me,
but I just heard the Doritos story on the pod
and then the follow-up from James and flipped out because my brother and I were the ones at the
Super Bowl with you who did win the USA Today Ad Meter that you mentioned and the million dollars
or whatever. And after hearing your story, so many things stand explained. We were also told that we
were going to go up against you guys in a kind
of ad competition, just like you said. We had no idea why that fell through. I even
made my own rap video, a frap if you please, this whole digital short challenging you guys.
It had vicious rhymes, a dash of playful pejoratives. I was going to drop it on YouTube just for
laughs ahead of the Super Bowl. Then they just cancelled the whole head-to-head battle thing which I now finally
know why.
So I just gave it to you guys on like a flash drive at the game and you were like, are you
like trying to get Lorne Michaels to look at your shitty USB stick?
And I was like, no, no, no, no, this is just for you guys.
It was just like my digital version of giving you something I crocheted.
So then we won the ad meter and we were like, this is the best day of our lives.
And we're hanging out with Will Forte and the lonely Island.
And why aren't they like as psyched as we are that we just won a million Dorito
dollars. And I just found out from the pod that the reason is that not only did
they reject Yoram's ad, but on top of
it, in your mind, we'd basically just stolen a million dollars from Jerry.
He's reading into it.
I just want to say I'm sorry and if you want the money back, we blew it on Santana
DVX.
Okay.
Anyway, I know it's unrequited, but I love you guys.
Hanging out with you was one of the highlights of my creative life, except you, anyway, I know it's unrequited, but I love you guys. Hanging out with you was one of the highlights
of my creative life, except you, Seth.
But only because you weren't there.
Okay.
Love you anyway.
Very nice.
What a great story.
Thank you for sharing that.
Amazing.
I remember hanging with them, of course.
By the way, they didn't take the money from our charity.
No.
He's been generous, but nice to hear from you again.
And it was a very memorable.
We were at the Super Bowl.
Of course we remember.
Also, a quick update. I don't know if you were here
for this, Keefe, to listen, because obviously we're very
excited about this idea of how enthusiastic Doritos is
to watch the ad.
Yeah.
But I guess somebody from the year it actually happened,
who is retired, raced out of retirement to call and say,
go watch it!
Is that true?
I think there's a little bit of...
I think they went back in the records
and kind of found out that it was anybody.
And he's like, no, they're not lying.
Don't open it back up.
Wait, really?
Yeah.
I mean, it struck me that somebody from legal
at Doritos back then said, we watched it, it's abysmal,
do not engage with the Dorito commercial.
Right. That makes sense. I think it's a little bit like do not engage with the Dorito commercial.
Right, that makes sense.
I think it's a little bit like somebody who like works
in that like warehouse where they put the Ark
of the Covenant. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Don't open it!
Saying like, like a new guy working there being like,
we should open up the old boxes.
I think to them, the Doritos ad is the,
everyone's a critic painting.
Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That makes sense.
Within the context of this podcast, it's a safe place, right?
So I understand why the current exec is like, oh, that'd be fun to discuss it.
And people within the podcast discussing is fun.
But if it then catches on as a news story and then the thing is out there, then it is
why they didn't want it airing in the first place.
It's just happening now.
And I get that.
Yeah.
Well, look, a quote from their email was,
the narrative was the spot was offensively bad.
That's an interesting narrative.
That's more than a narrative.
Sounds like more of an opinion.
An accusation.
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Okay.
Let's hear another.
Hi, my name is Kenzie and my question is if and when you guys make your new album,
would you think about having Seth on as like a feature?
Because I know that he was in Natalie's rap and he was in Doppelganger.
So like he's got the pipes because I mean, Doppelganger isn't singing, but like he's still like kind of saying in Natalie's rap.
There's a musicality to it.
I feel like it would be really like poetic to have Seth
in a Lonely Island album considering that he does
the Lonely Island and Seth Meyers podcast.
Anyways, I just want to say that I am also from the Bay Area.
So every time that you guys make a niche reference, know that my little 19 year old ass, I just want to say that I am also from the Bay Area. So every time that you guys make a niche reference,
know that my little 19-year-old ass, I understand it.
My parents raised me well, I get your references.
And I also moved to Santa Cruz.
So when you guys talk about UT Santa Cruz,
I'm like, hey, I know that I should too.
And I want to say that Seth,
I went to a taping of your show
and you answered my question during the Q&A.
So I feel like I have all these little, like, connections to you guys,
and I can see your footprints all over the Bay Area.
Anyways, I love you guys a lot, and I look up to you a lot,
and I really hope you all see this, because I love you all, bye!
Wow, that's so nice.
So lovely.
That's very nice. Nice to hear from you.
Thank you for that.
Even if they asked, I would not do a third digital short,
because I kind of like the way Quado played it,
which was just two and done.
You know?
It's the classy way.
Hey, I was reading through the YouTube comments
about Chiz and My Pants and they were all really nice
and they're very creative.
I think our listeners have a nice sense of humor.
The last two I was a little curious about,
I thought they might be bots
and I'm gonna read you what they said and you tell me.
First of all, the photos were incredibly beautiful women.
Okay.
Like headshot ladies.
And the first one was,
continue to delight your viewers with interesting content.
Your videos add variety to the online world.
Oh.
That sounds real.
That's so nice of that beautiful woman.
And then the next beautiful woman said,
thank you for this amazing compilation.
I appreciate your time and efforts
that you put into compiling this video.
It's very inspiring.
It's worth some investigation, I guess, is my point.
I am a little worried by the complete lack of specifics.
Like a follow-up comment might help, like from us.
Like, wow, thanks.
What was your favorite part?
Something like that.
That's what I mean by investigation.
I see.
I think we should engage.
I think you had, and too late, Keefe,
we were talking about the fact that this podcast
got nominated for a Webby.
And I said, that's so cool.
And then Andy said, is it?
And then I said, yeah.
That's not how you win Webby's, Andy.
Go ahead.
And then I said, yeah, and then Andy scoffed
and said, it's not an Oscar.
Well, that's true, I guess.
Did you guys call on Quaid Army?
Way in. Get over to thewebby.com.
Let's get those votes.
Yeah.
Hey, Quaid Army, get us nominated for an Oscar.
Flood the ballot.
Andy said it like he's bummed that this
isn't Oscar nominated.
If Quaid Army can get this pod nominated for an Oscar,
I will shit.
Sorry to keep making it about New York Times word games
before we go to our next audio message.
The clue to Five Across in the Sunday,
March 30th, New York Times crossword puzzle
was style of hip hop.
The answer was four letters long.
I solved the last three letters, R-A-P,
and was praying, praying that the first letter was F
as in frat.
Yeah.
But it ended up being trap.
It was trap.
All right, let's hear another audio message.
Hi, my name is Alicia.
I'm in Michigan.
I saw you guys perform June 2019 in Detroit and you guys had
said to meet you at the Metro PCS by the Pontiac Silver Dome. I'm still here. I
guess I was just wondering what your ETA is or if you're on your way, if you're okay.
That's all. Love you guys so much.
Can't wait to see you soon.
What was, I remember that joke. What was the joke?
It was like a, you know, tour joke where every show
we would choose a local place that seemed kind of whatever
and really, really squarely say, if anyone wants to fuck us,
we will be at, and we put up the address on a big screen at the end of the show.
It was a reoccurring bit. Like even after Lazy Sunday, when we had Parnell there,
Parnell would be like, oh, thanks for having me fellas. And if anybody here would like to fuck,
and it was always verbatim, it had to be the exact same...
There was a paragraph, once a fuck me, I'll be a, blah, blah, blah,
bad bitches only, thank you.
So it was the Metro, the Metro PCS store by the Pontiac Silverdome.
Yeah, that was that one.
And it always, the Just Two Guys guys would do it,
like, after their whole, like, little like sports,
and they would end and they'd go, thank you.
If anybody wants to fuck us, we'll be at every...
And so it would come up multiple times in the show,
it'd be on the screen.
And then if you went, we always had one of our road EPAs,
we basically made a t-shirt that said,
I went to fuck the lonely island at...
Blank, blank, blank, blank, blank, blank.
And it had blank spaces and we would personally,
in Sharpie, write in, like the key information,
like Pontiac, you know, MetroPCS, Pontiac Superdome, the date. And if you went there, you should have been met with a random person with a big box of
t-shirts to give you.
And what was it, I mean, hard to remember, what was the average amount of people that
would show up there?
I don't know, but there was always a crowd.
There was definitely a crowd.
It varied.
I think when we did Bonnaroo, I was told that quite a few people
went to the spot, because it was like on the...
Because they were there. Yeah.
Yeah, we were like by the hot dog stand
in this thing and this thing. Yeah.
And I remember thinking how cool that was.
But there'd always be, there'd be a group.
We'd get a photo from somebody being like,
look at all these people.
It's very sweet of you to do that.
Somebody said this was a story about grease and palms
at the Lonely Island show.
Ooh, you have my attention.
My best friend, JP and I wanted to share a story
about going to the Lonely Island show in 2019.
Got tickets to see y'all in DC for my birthday.
Show was incredible.
Keev came out clearly exhausted, took photos for us.
They attached the photos, Keev, to verify
that you were nice enough to take pictures of them.
I can see it.
Oh yeah, there we are.
And afterwards we got chatting with your roadie,
who was an absolute delight,
can't remember his name sadly,
and slipped him some cash, palm greasing,
to get our poster signed by Yorm and Andy.
Honestly, it was just enough cash
for him to ship our posters back to us, which he did.
Oh, I see.
So that's pretty amazing.
But like to give a roadie money,
can you get these signed and also the money is for you to ship them to us? That he did. Oh, I see. So that's pretty amazing. But like, to give a roadie money, can you get these signed, and also the money
is for you to ship them to us?
That's very nice of him.
Here's some for you, and then here's
to have the roadie do it.
That's nice that he did it.
Very nice of whoever on our team did that.
That's what I mean.
Yeah.
You obviously had a good staff.
Somebody also wrote, I work part time
at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.
Do you know where this is going?
No. I work part time at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Do you know where this is going?
No.
I work part-time at the National Portrait Gallery
in Washington, D.C. currently,
and ever since watching Ross Trent,
I cannot stop muttering to myself,
me toil part-time at your portrait gallery.
You thought we were gonna predict that?
I mean, well, I thought part-time
and the fact that the portrait gallery
had the same amount of syllables as Stone Cold. Part-time.
Part-time.
Look, it was a big ask, especially considering
like five minutes ago, I was like,
do you remember being in a hot tub with John Malkovich?
And you're like, no.
Look, no one ever said I was a YORM,
you know what I mean?
Completely locked in and on my game.
Yeah, like incredible recollection.
I mean, YORM's recollection is so much when you're like,
why do you have that vest?
He's like, in fourth grade, I was walking down the street
like just crazy.
Crazy recall.
Yep.
When I say crazy recall, what does it make you think of?
Definitely Quado.
Yeah.
So at least that, we're on the same page there.
For sure.
Can we now, again, I know we've talked about Quado,
but I just made the mistake of rewatching it again today.
It's so funny that, like, it's only what,
Jamie Pressley is the only one who's, like, new to Quado,
and everybody else has seen Quado before.
And she's like, why is he calling everybody Quades?
And Snake is like, oh, that was Arnold Schwarzenegger's
character's name in Total Recall.
Yeah. Yeah, we have to explain it.
It's like very matter of fact.
Yeah, because he told us probably that we had to put in
a bunch of information because no one had seen the movie
in a long time or at all.
Uh, let's hear another voice note.
Hey you guys. So I was wondering, there's this really old video on YouTube from 2007's Comic-Con
where Andy said you'd consider finishing The Boo when you're like 50.
And I want to know if that's still on the table because I would actually really love to see that.
And also thank you so so much for the digital shorts
and the pod.
I just love how silly they are.
They make me laugh so hard and they help me.
And I'm sure many others deal with all the craziness
in the world right now.
So yeah, greetings from Germany.
All the best, bye.
Thanks, man, everyone's so nice.
Very affirming.
Right until greetings from Germany,
I had a real hope that was Bjork.
Oh my God. So greetings from Iceland by Bj I had a real hope that was Bjork. Oh my God.
Some greetings from Iceland by Bjork out.
Also, this is Bjork, this whole time has been Bjork.
I thought it was Danish, I'll be honest, the accent.
I'll tell you, it's not really important where it's from
because it was from the heart.
Oh, that's nice.
Damn, I love that, Seth, I love that.
So that's what a German speaking English sounds like.
It didn't sound like Jiz my pants. Yeah, is that what a German speaking English sounds like. It didn't sound like Jizz My Pants.
Yeah, is that what Jizz My Pants sounds like, commenter?
You're right, that disproves.
But it's just where she studied.
She might have studied in Copenhagen.
But what about this boo at 50?
Boo at 50? Do we want to commit?
Yeah, I guess let's commit.
All right, we have to run it by a yorm.
It'll start with that voice note.
The first thing would be us listening to that voice note
and going, oh, shit, the clock's ticking.
Um, all right, what is our next voice note?
Hey, guys, Claire from old, foggy Southampton town here.
Long time listener of the podcast.
As a Brit, we didn't grow up on Saturday Night Live,
so I'm loving having an education.
What I hear is an end is a golden era of comedy.
Correct.
So my question is, we all know that Japan is the video or short that you would love to create.
But if you had a bigger and better budget, is there any video or short that you would love to redo?
Anyways, off now to listen to Sushi Goriho for the 400th time.
Bye guys. Oh, really nice question. I like these international listeners.
Yeah.
Uh, Keev.
God, yeah, I really would have to think for a second. Is there one that we would redo?
I don't actually want to redo Like A Boss because it is what it is and it was very
well received and we're very happy with it. But at the time-
It is on those old cameras.
Yeah, and I guess we haven't gotten to it. But at the time... It is on those old cameras.
Yeah. And I guess we haven't gotten to it yet, but it was this weird in between where
we had made things like Jizz In My Pants that looked all fancy and new and 24
frames per second on the right kind of camera.
And then like a boss, we were like, no, we'll do it the old way.
But it actually kind of became almost the new way.
Like we spent more money and we had more setups, but it still looked
funky in that weird old way.
So it was neither here nor there a little bit.
And I remember once I saw the budget for it,
I was like, for that amount of money,
we could have just done it the right way.
Right.
And so that at the time I was like annoyed.
I thought we could have done it better.
Yeah.
There's an extra layer of like video-y-ness
that felt slightly less slick about it.
Exactly, and as everyone knows,
I like that stuff when it's intentional and you lean in,
but it was not intentional.
It wasn't, but I also sort of feel like it worked for it
because it's making fun of office culture in a way,
and that would look a little more stale in that,
like low rent in that way.
So there's probably more that are not song videos
that I would be like, oh, people actually like that one
more than I was expecting.
I wish we would have shot at a better location.
Like lobster claw?
No, but like at the, there's so many we did
at the flat hotel, like again, we wouldn't want to change it
because it is what it is and that makes it what it is.
But like dear sister, I'm like, we could have shot that
on really cool sets
or in a really, you know what I mean.
But the response proves that that would not have mattered.
It wouldn't have mattered
and maybe would have made it worse, who knows?
Yeah.
But again, I thought that was a very good question.
Begris.
Also just got a text from Yoram.
People are fucking laying into him over the vest.
He says the dinner's going super bad.
I wish that was true so bad.
He's like, there's all these writers
and they're coming up with like really witty ways
to tell me my vest sucks.
Yeah, yeah.
Should never have left the pod early.
Oh man, can he text any of the specific burns?
Yeah.
I don't know, man.
I've still got to queue up these.
Yeah, I'll ask him for some of the specific burns.
And then just marinate on it, Seth.
Okay, let's hear another voice note. Hey fellas, I hope ask him for some of the specific burns. And then just marinate on it, Seth. Okay, let's hear another voice note.
Hey fellas, I hope you're all well.
I'm Jeff from Illinois.
In June 2008, SNL aired the best of Mike Myers
to help him promote The Love Guru.
In between his old sketches,
there were new fun little bits Mike recorded
with the then current cast that introed his old work.
There was one bit where Mike Myers
sees Seth crying and asks Annie Poehler why. She says he heard the show was airing the
best of a Myers tonight and assumed it was him, but got sad when he realized the truth.
After a beat, Mike asks, is he an idiot? And Seth starts to break. I found this so damn
funny that it's been rattling around in my head for almost 17 years now.
So my question is, can you please post this on the Instagram? I've searched high and low for it,
but it seems to be impossible to find unless, I assume, you have access to that SNL server you all
do. Thanks for listening and have a nice day. Love it. I don't, I know, I mean, I will say,
I remember we did those wraparounds for the best of Mike Myers the week after the season finale.
And so it was a weird extra week in the office,
because I wrote on that as well.
But it felt like floating, because it was so much easier,
obviously, than working on it on SNL,
just writing wraparounds.
And Mike Myers means and continues
to mean a great deal to me, so that was right.
But I have no memory of that.
I remember us doing a Wayne's World one.
Maybe Bill and I were somehow involved in it.
Oh, yeah.
But all I know is that the set was like built and me and Bill just stood in front of it
and we're just like, whoa, it's the fucking basement.
Like just had meant so, so much to me growing up.
We can look into finding the clip and seeing if it's okay
with people to... Let's take a look at it.
We'll take a look.
Yeah.
Shit, somebody told, uh, as soon, I guess,
Yoram said as soon as he walked in,
somebody said, I think you should sleeve.
Uh...
And then somebody else said,
I hope they rip up the Constitution
because this guy doesn't have the right to bear arms.
Jesus, these are great.
These are really good.
I mean, they're writers, you know, so he's obviously.
Yeah, these must be like WGA nominated.
Yeah, I mean, they're.
Yeah, yeah, no, he did Minority Report
and then Queen's Gambit and moved right onto this.
Yeah, I know, by the way, the fact that Yorm dropped
Scott Frank's name, who we all know,
and he's an incredible screenwriter.
I've never met him.
You've never met him?
Scott's wonderful.
Scott did Queen's Gambit.
I know.
Well, you know, Yoram's wife, Mari, is in it.
Yeah.
She's the mom in Queen's Gambit.
All right.
Let's hear another voice note.
Hello, gentlemen.
I'm calling to ask if you all have had, and this is going to sound a little bitchy, and
I apologize for that, but to ask if you had any formal vocal training, perhaps maybe when you realized
that you were hitting the big leagues and to roll with the big dogs, maybe you needed
some vocal training? I don't know. I ask because at the Ross Trent episode, your voices were
smooth like butter. So I was wondering if
perhaps that was due to some extensive training or just the gifts that God gave you. Thanks
for everything.
Just talking about Ross Trent, our voices were smooth like butter.
Thanks for the question. I don't think there's anything bitchy about it. No formal training
is the short answer. I remember right before we went on tour, we were like, is there stuff we're supposed to like, no,
so we don't lose our voice before, like between shows and stuff. And we had one time where this
woman, I forget her name, but who's very well known in those circles as a vocal coach, just came to
the rehearsal space and kind of spent 20 minutes with each of us just kind of confirming that we weren't going to blow our voices out.
And I remember one thing she said is like, if you're worried about like losing your breath
and stuff, why don't you get on like your elliptical machine or treadmill or whatever
you have at home and just try basically speed walking while you do all your songs to your
phone basically and see if you can not lose your voice while you're doing stuff like that. That's for live performance. I didn't remember that.
That's great advice.
I thought it was also just, like, making sure we didn't get vocal modes
that we were warming up our sweet baches
before screaming for an hour straight.
Yeah. And I don't...
Did we do it a little bit backstage?
I think we barely did it.
Yeah. We were too busy in the bathroom, you know what I mean?
Whoa. Same water.
Hey, uh...
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It was the guy that wrote The Brutalist.
It was-
Said, oh, howdy, Sheriff.
Ha ha ha.
All right, let's hear another one.
Hi, I just wanted to thank you guys
for getting me through some hard times
these past few years.
A few years back, I was in a public restroom.
There was a hole in the wall, and I started
eating strange sushi out of it.
OK, yeah.
I felt awful afterwards.
I actually got really sick.
Then a few months back, Sushi Glory came out,
and I realized I wasn't alone.
This happens to a lot of people, and I should not
hide my shame.
Thank you so much. Oh, my god. Uh, thank you so much.
Oh, my God.
Well, she went to a knockoff.
Obviously, ours was only the highest grade fish.
Not gonna lie, that person just had me.
I was completely like, oh, no.
Oh, man, this is gonna be a tough one.
And then I was like, oh, we're being fucked with,
and I like it.
It's kind of nice, yeah.
It's kind of nice, because, like, everybody,
when they're like, it's been a rough couple years,
I think we're all like, amen.
Been there.
Oh, wow, this is good.
Right there with you.
That was wonderful.
And you're very welcome for putting out
Sushi Glory Hole and helping.
All right, I think maybe we have time for one more.
By the way, I have a thing before that.
Yeah, yeah, let's go.
I have a thing that I remembered after we did the last one
when we were talking about the British voices
on a song we had made before SNL.
Yeah, the Jimmy Jam.
The Jimmy Jam.
But it wasn't the shoes off in the spaceship, Keev.
It was everybody dance.
Oh.
Everybody dance.
Yeah, everybody dance.
And it was like Yoram just going, ah, ah, ah, screaming.
But it was basically like a precursor
to go kindergarten of like demanding everyone dance.
But it was kind of less focused, I would say.
Yeah.
And those were the voices we were doing.
And that was Yoram doing, time to slam bam.
It's a Jimmy Jam.
Yeah, I do remember that.
I wonder if we have those. I wonder if I'd's a Jimmy Jam. Yeah, I do remember that.
I wonder if we have those.
I wonder if I'd look in my iTunes if I'd find things like that.
Oh, by the way, I got a letter in the mail.
And the letter was from, uh, the outside of the envelope
said it was from Virginia Horason's Pony Express.
And it's, um, if you can see it, it's like, uh,
cut out, like, ransom note style.
Yeah.
And it says, put Virginia Horace and Criterion or else.
Oh my God.
All right, we're gonna play now our friend Mike Schurr.
You remember him from the Criterion episode collection.
He recorded a voice note.
And I think his idea was we should just get a lot of people
to watch space Olympics for the first time
and then just immediately record their reaction to it.
Hey, guys, it's Mike Schor here with the weekly listener opinion
on Space Olympics that you asked for.
I love Space Olympics.
We did not.
We did not ask.
Like Phil Lord after he saw it for the first time
eight days ago.
I can say it is absolutely one of my all-time favorites.
It has two of my favorite tropes.
First, intensely passionate singing
about something incredibly mundane,
like belting out super serious details
of the logistics of the space Olympics is wonderful.
My favorite moment, of course, being,
and all other events
are pending. Like that's as boring a lyric as you could possibly write and singing it
with that terrible auto-tune crescendo A plus. The second trope I love, the impossible situation
of a person singing about things that are happening in real time.
Not to jump ahead, but Jack Sparrow has this too,
which is that somehow the lyric in the finished song
for which there is a video is,
Michael Bolton, I'm gonna need you to focus up.
How do we both exist in the reality
where the guys are angry at Michael Bolton
for what he's doing, but also have made and completed this song and video.
You get why it's funny. You guys made it. Anyway, Space Olympics has that too.
Somehow Andy is singing that all the oxygen has run out.
Like, is this being broadcast live to the athletes, I guess? Is that the situation?
Like, how does this work? Anyway, it's fantastic.
Yeah, he's a stupid and hilarious it takes a full minute to even
establish what the premises which I appreciate and for the record I certainly
do not agree with Akiva that space Olympics is and I quote the single worst
thing we've ever done nor is it and I quote again, Andy's worst idea.
And also I quote Akiva saying,
it makes battlefield earth look like friggin' Shakespeare.
Those are all Akiva's words.
Play the tape, that's what he said.
I don't agree with any of that.
I think it's wonderful.
Anyway, love you guys, bye.
Thanks Mike.
Yeah, thanks Mike.
I hate to wrap this up, I just got a text from Yoram.
I guess this group pinned him down, cut off his pant legs,
and then hot- hot-glued-gunned it to his vet.
And so, I just, an abrupt ending. We'll be back next.
Cookies. I have no memory of cookies.
Looking forward to watching that from the Hugh Laurie show.
Uh-huh.
And then we're gonna probably roll it up with Neil Patrick Harris, Doogie Howser theme.
That seems like a nice pairing.
I love you guys.
Love you, Seth Lee.
Love you.
Quiet away in the house!