The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers Podcast - United Way Ad
Episode Date: August 5, 2024This week The Lonely Island and Seth talk about the digital short, United Way, with Peyton Manning. The guys also talk about a few infamous sketches including Bronx Beat, Homebots, Porch Talk, Party P...ooper, Monex, and more! The Lonely Island Digital Short Bracket - https://www.vulture.com/article/seth-meyers-snl-best-lonely-island-short.html(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 @thelonelymeyerspod. Get free shipping of Liquid Death’s Mountain Water, Flavored Sparkling, and Iced Tea 8-packs with Amazon Prime or grab a can or a case at your local 7-Eleven, Target, Walmart, Whole Foods or on Instacart. Go to liquiddeath.com/ISLAND to check out all their healthy, infinitely recyclable beverages and find your closest retailer. 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)
Hey, everybody, before we get started, we would love to hear any questions you have for the pod.
So please leave them in the YouTube comments section for each episode or email us at the
Lonely Island pod at gmail.com. Any questions you might want to ask about the digital shorts
or just Yoruma's comings and goings. Hey, everybody. Welcome back to the
Lonely Island and Seth Meyers podcast. This is really thrilling. Can I explain?
Do you guys know why it's all thrilling?
Why, Seth?
I know why.
I have a guess.
We're actually recording this a week before people will hear it,
as opposed to the way we've been doing this,
which is recording at 18 months before people hear it.
Yeah, we caught up.
So now for the first time,
the cherished topical comedy of
the Lonely Island is going to find its way into the pods.
Here we go, Kamala!
There we go! See, that would have been nonsense.
It would have been nonsense if we hadn't done that.
Now it makes the most sense.
And look, I wanna say something.
One of the reasons we've taken a giant pause
and thankfully not run out of episodes,
although shout out to Yorma and Fortan Solomon,
who did us a huge solid with the MacGruber episode.
Thank you.
How'd it go, Yorm?
Oh, it was terrible.
Everybody hated it, I assume.
Oh, you know, I haven't gotten the results back,
but I have to.
The results.
A predictive review.
We do get a printout of results
after each other podcast, guys.
But one of the reasons we've been on pause,
Andy's been overseas working on a movie.
Foggy London town.
That's what they call it.
How is it foggy?
Is it as foggy as they lead you to believe in the ads?
Well, Seth Lee, in the summertime,
it was less foggy than I was expecting
and frankly hoping for.
Yeah.
One thing I learned, Brits do not love it
when you refer to it as foggy London town.
That's weird. Well, it's funny, I don't even know why you would it when you refer to it as foggy London town.
Well, it's funny. I don't even know why you would even need to refer to it once you're there.
Well, I disagree. Because I would say that I say New York City the least maybe when I'm physically in New York City.
But when you're in New York City, you're always like, here we are at the Big Apple.
But again, I'm not going gonna claim that I minted it.
I feel like somebody else got there first.
I'll just say this.
I remember me, Keith Vignorm,
calling it the Big Apple a lot when we lived there.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, sure.
And you gotta walk down the street with your friend
and point out the Empire State Building
and go, look, the Empire State Building!
Really excited.
I wanna say something.
Don't take this the wrong way.
No one was sad to see any of you go.
The natives.
The native New Yorkers.
We're pretty upset when you guys were walking around
calling it the Big Apple.
Yeah, they're like, who the fuck are these Zarks?
Zarks, classic New York slang.
That sounded like a real local.
The lonely islands have bars, fuck ass.
So Andy, you were in Foggy London Town.
It's lovely to have you back. Thank you. Keev, you want to Foggy London Town.
It's lovely to have you back.
Thank you.
Keev, you want to mention what movie you worked on or what do you think?
It's already been mentioned on the podcast.
Yeah.
Well, tell us how it went.
The naked gun, you guys.
Yeah, it was naked gun.
Guess your Rotten Tomatoes score.
Yeah, guess it.
And be right.
83.
All right.
Oh, look at you.
Sounds good.
All right, I'll see it.
Certified fresh, but nothing to really brag about. Yeah, look at you. Sounds good. All right, I'll see you. Certified fresh, but you know,
nothing to really brag about.
Yeah, let's be honest.
83 for a comedy is like a 250 for a drama.
That's right.
Yeah, that's the highest I would ever jinx us to.
So you just sat with Liam Neeson in Atlanta.
Yeah.
He's playing Frank Drabbin.
Junior.
Junior.
Liam Neeson, who also was on the show Atlanta,
coincidence?
Oh. Wow. Right. Yeah, he's a who also was on the show Atlanta. Coincidence? Oh, right. Wow.
Nice pull.
Yeah, he's a local hire.
Local hire at that point.
Oh, you got him as a local hire.
Yeah.
That's the only reason you got him.
Because of the Atlanta stuff.
He has what's known as an Atlanta brogue. Is that correct?
That is right. Yes.
We're going down to Magic City.
You got him for the cost savings.
Oh, here in foggy Atlanta town. Oh yeah.
It does get a little foggy down there in Atlanta town.
Oh yeah, yeah.
With the weed smoke.
Am I right guys?
Brain fog, my dude.
Pamela Anderson also.
I mean, I don't wanna, you know,
this is for the junket a year from now.
Our release date is July of next year.
Gotcha.
I just started editing.
But yeah, it went well.
It was exciting. That's great. And it was lonely guys. It was lonely. It was editing. But yeah, it went well. It was exciting. That's great.
And it was lonely, guys. It was lonely.
It was lonely.
Oh yeah, of course.
This is the sort of enthusiasm, the white hot enthusiasm you
tend to hear from Keev after finishing a project.
Yeah. It was just like these shorts.
If you're wondering if he's a little too hot on how it went, he's always like this.
I think they've established that in this podcast. Every episode, you bring up one
and say, but Keeva knew it was shitty, right?
And I go, yup.
I called it right from the jump.
Our friend just texted us being like,
loving the podcast, it's just Seth dunking on you guys.
I don't think, do I dunk?
I don't know, but that was his impression of it.
I wouldn't have thought so,
but I like that that's how it's being perceived.
Let me just stress something,
because I believe that the podcast is allowing me
to dunk on myself for how many times
I was dead wrong with stuff.
I agree with that.
Andy wrote back, he's a square,
living in a comedy prison of his own design.
Yeah, that was to a group thread of like 12
of our friends from high school.
About him, yeah.
I like, by the way,
that you literally jumped in to defend me.
I'm like, yeah, no, I think you do dunk on yourself. And then Keev reads the text about that.
Yeah, like, wait a minute.
What's a friendly rivalry?
Oh, Jiminy Glick's showdown.
Yes.
Can we just say Jiminy Glick kind of stole the summer?
Oh, my god.
Song of the Summer, Jiminy Glick.
The Song of the Summer, Jiminy Glick and Bill Hader.
No diggity, no doubt.
Just killer.
I mean, everybody, give yourself a minute.
If you're not a fan of Peyton Manning and the United
Way Digital Short, go watch Jiminy Glick interview
Bill Hader.
God damn it.
He really just did a week of every day
that was a new fantastic thing.
And you realize it is a weird blind spot for a lot of people.
Because in my mind, Jiminy Glick is a legendary character.
And yet a lot of guys my age who I feel like like comedy
said, I've never seen that character before.
Oh, really?
That's shocking.
There's a really nice Glickhole you can fall down on YouTube.
Because I mean, Marty's been crushing that for almost
a quarter century.
A Glickhole is a great character.
I hated that.
I hated a Glickhole.
It feels so invasive, yeah.
Glickhole.
It's a Glickhole.
I hated that.
Sounds like we should turn it into something else.
Yeah, all our faces just froze.
People say the monoculture is dead, but we all hated Glickhole.
What was your favorite moment in the Hater Glick interview?
There was a hard left turn.
There were so many hard left turns.
I said to Hater, it was like watching a boxing match
where you can't believe the referee hadn't called it.
BOTH LAUGH
Because Bill was laughing really hard at one thing.
Well, then he said, Willie Mays died.
That was the other thing.
To Bill, who of all people on Earth,
is like the least the person you would bring that up to.
Yeah. And then the other one that killed me
is he just all of a sudden started talking
about Willie Nelson just so he could say
more like first to the Mohicans.
Oh, that was great.
Yeah, that was maybe my favorite.
Look, we're not here to laud and applaud Martin Shorty,
but he does deserve it.
Hey, we're gonna get to a digital short
that I think we're all on the same page on, right?
Yeah.
United Way is a winner.
Oh yeah, we love United Way.
Oh, there it is.
Oh, shit, Yoram came correct.
I didn't know if I should do that right now,
but I wanted to test it out.
Yeah, you wanted to test it for the appropriate time?
Can I just?
Yeah, it works great.
Yeah, hold it a little closer to the mic though.
Okay, like that.
Yeah, that's better.
That was louder. That was better. Hold it a little closer to the mic though. Okay, like that. Yeah. That's better.
That was louder.
That was better.
Hold it a little closer to the window and then drop it out.
What were you gonna say, Andy?
I was just saying closer.
Seth was critiquing in real time his technique, which was terrible.
We all saw that.
Heard it, I should say.
Heard it.
We can hear it here.
But the second time, Yoram, with my direction, I'm not a director, not in the DJ,
but I do sometimes dabble.
You dabble.
When you held it closer, it was a lot better,
and it felt a little more like a classic mixtape.
So I think we got that sussed.
Okay, great.
More organic.
More organic.
United Way made it to the Sweet 16, I believe,
of the digital short brackets,
one of the best one ever.
This is a big one.
Wait, have we explained the brackets before?
Because it's been so long since we've recorded. We'll eventually get to the brackets. But we at one point, the entire SNL cast and writing staff voted on the best digital short
of all time.
And it was right near the end of things.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Wow.
The end of days.
Sweet 16 though, that's very good.
I would say the other Sweet 16ers we've had so far are Dick in a Box and Natalie Rapp and
Lonely Island.
I think are the only other.
Lazy Sunday.
Oh, right, right.
Sorry.
What did I say?
What was the first one?
You said Lonely Island, the name of our group.
They are interchangeable to me.
I think they're interchangeable.
I think they're interchangeable.
I think they're interchangeable. I think they're interchangeable. I think they're interchangeable. I think are the only other. Lazy Sunday. Oh, right. Sorry. What did I say?
What was the first one?
I said Lonely Island, the name of our group.
They are interchangeable to me.
I mean, technically he's right.
They all made it.
Tidbit, we talked about maybe naming our group in Credibat.
Really?
But then Keev and Yoram, they liked Lonely Island more.
I also liked it.
I don't want to say I didn't like it.
Gotcha.
But it was between those two.
It was.
And then we ended up calling our first album
in Crowd About instead, Tidbit.
That's a big decision, choosing the name,
The Lonely Island.
Was it, was it fraught when you guys?
That was for Tidbit.
But it was, it was a little late, I gotta admit.
I'm gonna do that every time you say Tidbit,
but 48 seconds after.
You said it.
You know what, I'll stop.
God, I've had some coffee.
What's the coffee situation here?
Andy is like,
Andy's trying to get something.
I hate to interrupt you.
I got job dregs.
Job dregs.
What kind of, what are you doing?
Is it a, is it a French press?
How do you get the dregs in your-
It's drip.
You're picking, he's picking out his tongue
like he got a hair on his tongue.
We use go get them beans, they're delicious.
Shadow, go get them.
I got so many dregs.
It's gotta be a sponsor.
I shoulda known.
You reacted like you've never gotten a dreg before.
It was an especially beefy dreg.
Yeah, you had two fingers in the bottom of the coffee cup
and you were tasting it like you were worried it was poison,
although that would be the wrong approach.
I was trying to milk the job for as much as it was in the cup
and I forgot about the dreaded dregs.
The dregs is the grounds that fell in?
Yeah, clearly.
You're using like a paper filter in a drip coffee machine?
Yeah, bro, you got something to say?
Unorthodox.
I think I said it all just with the question and my tone.
Swear to God, this guy goes to Atlanta.
We're gonna get to our good friend,
Peyton Manning, United Way.
I wanna talk real quickly
about the Julie Louis Dreyfus episode.
There was a digital short called Roy Rules,
which we'll eventually get to
because it airs a couple weeks later,
a classic Scarlet episode.
Sweet 16, I bet.
No, didn't make it into Sweet 16.
No, I don't think Roy Rules even made the final field of 64.
I don't think Roy Rules made it out of the first round.
Oh, that's weird.
There were a hundred digital shorts
and I had to pick the top 64 for the brackets
and Roy rules, I'm gonna tell you right now, did not make it.
Knowing Seth, it didn't make it to the...
No way.
No way.
Roy the Man rules.
Yeah, he does rule. I just saw him.
Great. Give my love to Roy.
Hey, a couple quick things about the Julie Louie Dreyfus show.
There was a sketch called Mo'Nex.
Wiggins Sublette wrote, do you remember this?
It was an ad for gold.
Vague, vague, like... A remember this? It was an ad for gold.
Vague, vaguely.
A lot of cable news will have ads for gold
as an investment vehicle.
Yes, yes.
Well, of course, yeah.
And I only bring it up because it was a beautiful pre-tape
and it was Wigg just saying gold in a funny way.
Call Monex now for this informative brochure
and VHS tape that will show how you can invest in gold.
Did you know that in the past 12 years the value of gold has gone up a little bit?
I love touching gold. You know what else? As we've established, I can't remember who established it.
One of us keeps pressing real hard on the idea that this was Anne Golden era, but we're starting
to see first time sketches become sort of like little back was Anne Golden era. But we're starting to see first-time sketches
become sort of like little backbones of the era.
The first Vinny Vedecci was Julie Rydryfus.
Ah.
That's good to know. Vinny Vedecci,
which Bill auditioned with.
Bill auditioned with?
It was the spine of his audition, right?
Yes.
He did Vinny Vedecci as a character and then his impressions and
other characters spun off of Vinnie.
Like he was hosting a show and Vinnie did all of those things on his show, right?
Yeah. It was an Italian guy who,
and again, Bill does that really good thing.
Do a little of itself.
So not like better than that by a tenfold.
It is funny when you think to yourself,
oh, it's easy to do fake Italian and then you watch and Bill really does good fake Italian.
Yes.
Like Sid Caesar level good.
Yeah.
And then, yeah, he would do impressions
of American people within the body of the impression.
It took a long time to figure out
how Vinny Vedecchi would be a sketch,
and I ended up working on it with them.
I can't quite remember how we figured it out,
but me and Matt Murray and Bill worked on Vinny,
and it's a very fun sketch with Julie Dreyfuss.
It was always the concept was that it was an actor
who was on a Italian talk show who was shocked to find out
that the entire thing would be conducted in Italian.
Yeah.
Julian. Comparo con pizzeria bandos, con balos de bien de andos, y con balos de bien de andos,
mercantiligiole con bandos, pizzeria bandos.
Oh, I am so sorry.
I didn't know that this would be in Italian.
I don't really speak...
Que?
I don't speak Italian.
Eee. And there was a joyous cut to which was Fred was the producer
and he was always sitting at a table with Forte eating pasta
and he and Bill would just scream at each other.
But really the star of the show was the way that Will
would just quietly eat pasta and never look up.
Yeah.
It was a very fun choice.
Committed.
A good comedic actor.
There was also two other things I want to mention from the Julia show before we move on. look up. It was a very fun choice. Committed. A good comedic actor.
There was also two other things I want to mention from
the Julia show before we move on.
Judge Sideland. Do you guys remember Judge Larry Sideland?
Not a character, he was a real dude,
who I think was in the Anna Nicole Smith judge.
He famously once cried on stand and then Fred played him on
update as a judge who would get choked up talking about stuff. This one I watched, it really, there was almost no reason
to have Judge Larry Seidlin on, except for, obviously,
we'd become enamored with Fred doing it.
But he tells a story about getting fired
at his first job at the zoo,
and he gets really choked up talking about
how the monkeys got out.
And they weren't the regular kind of monkeys.
They were the monkeys with the plastic asses.
Both laugh. -"It was so mean to me. You know,. They were the monkeys with the plastic asses. Both laugh
-"It was so mean to me.
You know these monkeys, the one with the plastic asses,
the red ones, the red asses?
You know what I'm talking about, Seth?"
-"Yeah, I think so."
-"You know which monkeys they are, Amy?"
-"Yes, yeah, I know."
-"They're mean as hell."
-"Another thing, every now and then,
something happened in my tenure on the show.
I never don't think that about those monkeys.
Yeah, I don't hear it.
Then there was a really,
mostly because I saw it in the rundown,
I had no memory.
Jost wrote a sketch called Household Robot
for Julie Dreyfuss.
Do you guys have any memory of the sketch Household Robot?
No.
I had none.
Basically, Julie Dreyfuss and Sudeikis have won the lottery,
and Wig and Bill are at their house for a dinner party,
and they're talking about how they're not gonna change.
They're gonna be the same as they always were.
But then when Wig goes to clean up the plates on the thing,
they go, oh, our robot will do that.
And they're like, you bought a robot?
And they said, well, yeah, we're gonna allow ourselves
one luxury.
And then Forte comes in as a robot,
and the first joke is how slow he is. I mean, it's so practical. and they're like, you bought a robot, and they said, well, we're gonna allow ourselves one luxury. And then Forte comes in as a robot,
and the first joke is how slow he is.
I mean, it's so practical.
Watch this, watch.
Lowering robot torso.
Extending robot arm.
Initiating grasp mode. It really keeps you informed.
Counting down to plate acquisition.
T minus five, four, three, two, one.
Plate acquisition successful.
Then Fred comes in as the repair robot robot,
and then he fixes them,
and then to reward then he fixes them,
and then to reward Fred for fixing them,
they just start fucking.
Oh.
Yeah, it's... Wait, who starts fucking?
The two robots.
Oh, okay, gotcha.
Yeah. So Fred's reward
is that the two robots start having sex.
Gotcha.
Bill and Kristen don't want to see it.
How's that framed up?
So they're first?
I mean, it's late night, but you can't.
Like, Fred goes and, like, sits on a dresser.
Oh, sexy.
And puts his legs up.
Yeah.
They're in, like, big boxy robot suits,
it should be noted.
Yeah, of course.
That's how we pictured it.
But then Jason says, oh, well, we can make them go
in the kitchen so you don't have to watch it.
Homebot, repairbot, go to kitchen.
Yeah. Oh, thank God. I thought they were actually going to watch it. Homebot, repairbot, go to kitchen. Yeah.
Thank God, I thought they were actually gonna have sex. Oh, they will.
Initiating 45-minute robot intercomers.
No.
I'm sorry, but do we have to sit here and listen to this?
Oh, just relax, you can just ignore them.
Does this make Jost's Criterion Collection, you think?
His top 64?
You know, it is that nice Jost thing where there's a few different sketches and that
you kind of like all of them and none of them go on too long.
There's a sketch where the robot's slow and then right when you're sort of over that,
it's the robot's.
Like, don't worry, we're changing it.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like now the robot's...
It's actually that they have sex. Yeah, now they're the second robot and now they're gonna have sex. So, anyway, we're changing it. Yeah, yeah. It's like now the robots. It's actually that they have sex.
Yeah, now they have a second robot, now they're going to have sex.
So anyway.
That sounds really good.
I will say everything, it really made me laugh and it's, you know, give it a look.
Peyton Manning showed up.
First I have a trivia question.
I've done very little research, but I think there's four NFL quarterbacks have hosted
us now in the history of the show.
Excuse me, five.
I can definitely get this.
You can get all five?
I don't think you can.
No way.
Peyton Manning.
Yep.
Eli Manning.
Yep.
Joe Montana.
Yep.
Tom Brady.
Yep.
And Travis Kelcey.
Just kidding, he's not a quarterback.
Who's the fifth?
It's 70s.
It's weird, you're not gonna get it.
Is it like Dan Fouts or something?
It's Fran Tarkington.
Oh, yeah.
The Tark.
I appreciate you letting me off the hook instead of guessing like 50 quarterbacks
from the modern era.
I could have gone for five minutes of that, honestly.
I vividly remember Joe Montana
because we're from the Bay
and it was a huge deal when he hosted
and there was that awesome sketch
where you hear his thoughts.
That was it, right?
I can remember one thing from that show
except that incredible sketch
where he has one incredibly memorable line.
Yes, they won't bother me. I'll be masturbating.
I'm going to go upstairs and masturbate. His thought is, I'm going to go upstairs and masturbate.
His internal thought is the exact same.
He's a simple guy.
But for clarity, it starts off where you're hearing a couple's thoughts as they're like getting ready to hook up and then he comes in and you hear his thoughts and they're all really straightforward.
There's no...
Exactly what he's saying.
No subtext.
Subtext, yeah.
He co-hosted, I believe, correct?
With whom?
Jerry Rice.
Walter Payton.
Is that true?
Yeah, it was Walter Payton and Joe Montana.
All time.
I can't believe I didn't remember that.
Yeah, Walter Payton was in that sketch with him.
Oh, what the fuck?
Really crazy, right? I mean, I was a big Walter Payton fan too. sketch with him. Oh, what the fuck? Really crazy, right?
I mean, I was a big Walter Payton fan too.
I mean. So was I.
Based solely on Tecmo Bowl
and his ability to destroy the competition.
I just liked him because he was a sports figure
and I'd all across the board, every one of them.
All the sports. You like all the sports guys.
All the sports, all the guys.
And girls. Seth, be real.
Would you rather be Walter Payton
or Bo Jackson in Tecmo Bowl?
Be real. Be real.
Be real though. Bo Jackson. Yeah, same. Walter Payton was faster but in Tecmo Bowl? Be real. Be real though.
Bo Jackson.
Yeah, same.
Walter Payton was faster, but Bo Jackson, you couldn't tackle him.
All right, let's move on.
Yeah, let's move on.
Can I tell a little tangent story since this whole episode has been the tangent and not
talking about the short?
We owned a Nintendo together when we were all living together.
And then when I moved out, Andy and Keev lived together off of Melrose, and we set up Excitebike.
We were super jazzed on Excitebike and we made a course in Excitebike,
and we played it over and over again.
It became this big competition between us and all of our friends.
We got super good at it,
and you could do it in nine seconds or something like that.
Then me and Keeve left for the weekend and Andy was so
mad because he wasn't in the lead
that what I remember was leaving their apartment
on like a Friday and coming back two days later
and Andy was still playing.
It looked like he hadn't slept in two days.
And he was like, I cracked it.
And we were like, what?
And he was like, it's down to four seconds.
And he was flying off the screen
in ways that I had never seen before.
And he was like leaning into the,
like all the way to the left, like,
hee, hee.
And I just remember being like,
this dude's crazy.
Like he cracked it, but like.
At what cost?
At what cost?
At what cost?
I do remember this vividly.
And I will say it was like the moment
at the end of the first Matrix
where Neo can see the Matrix. Yes. Where it was like the moment at the end of the first matrix where neo can see the matrix
Yes, yeah, where I was like, oh, okay. I got the bike to go off the top of the screen somehow
It was like a double skip right before a jump. I couldn't do it again to save my life
But man, oh man when it happened Seth
But you also had to keep the machine on because otherwise it would erase the track so you had to keep it on
Well, I had to keep it on to show you guys the score.
So that you knew I crushed you.
Premature haunts.
So you basically broke the record
and then you became sort of a feral man beast
who guarded the door and the Nintendo.
And then once they saw it, I turned it off and collapsed.
Went to sleep for like 24 hours.
When Yoram said the record was nine seconds, I did not expect you got it all the way down to four.
That would be a little bit like a Roger Bannister
like we're in a two-minute file.
Yes, it was psychotic.
We had been whittling it down to nine seconds
for like a month.
It took us forever.
And we were like, we've reached the ceiling.
It can't go anymore.
And then he truly cut it in half.
It didn't make any sense.
I was proud of him, but I was also like real concerned. Don't leave me alone for the weekend
with a Nintendo, I guess, an original NES.
I should note this is way, way after original NES
had come out.
Right.
Yeah, it was a very retro thing we were doing.
Oh, it was very cool, vintage.
We're not 80 years old.
It was a nostalgia trip.
I had a Smash Brothers joke on the show.
We made a Smash Brothers joke in Closet Look or something.
Just a reference really.
The joke was that I played Smash Brothers in college.
Someone wrote, Seth Meyers was
definitely not in college when Smash Brothers came out.
I don't have to Google this,
I just know by looking.
That's really good.
Harsh talk.
Very unkind. There's really good. Harsh talk.
Very unkind.
There's so many reasons why you're like, oh, I'm so glad the internet exists.
Also, I only missed, then I looked it up, I only missed it by like three years.
Yeah.
That's a lifetime though when you're in college.
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All right, guys, Peyton Manning, you know,
gold-standard athlete host of all time.
Yeah, he was really good.
If not the best ever, top three, right?
I mean, there's been some good ones in recent years,
but he was really...
The old Michael Jordan, right?
The episode that was so classic.
Yeah.
With the Farley and everything.
That's true.
It was a great episode, but he was amazing.
I would argue, though, Keev, just that Jordan's episode
was incredible because he was so iconic
and the writing around him really worked.
Peyton, I would argue, was driving comedy more.
Yes.
I think that's what Seth's getting at.
I don't know that there was an athlete
who generated comedy better than Peyton.
That's Hosted.
Yeah, agreed. Which he did in this short.
Indeed.
Yeah. So a couple things.
One, I will say that, and so this for,
but you know, all every S&L host is basically given a,
you know, like sort of binder full of their sketches
just to be able to go through over the course of a very short week
where they have to learn a lot of things.
Peyton definitely approached the whole week like a quarterback.
If you went into his dressing room with notes,
it was all like color coordinated, like the right pens.
And it was just it he seemed so like had like the right pens and it was just,
he seemed so like loose and easy on stage and so charismatic,
but an incredible amount of work went into it,
which is not a surprise.
That seems right for comedy.
Seems smart.
United Way idea basically came from him, Keev.
My memory is that he said he thought it'd be
funny if he did something where he was mean to kids,
because that was so contrary to who he was.
I remember you coming to me being like,
what if we did one of those United Way things,
but he's an asshole?
Yeah, I still to this day feel confident
that Peyton planted the seed.
I don't think he said, let's do United Way,
but he certainly like gave us permission
to go do this sketch that worked exactly as well
as he thought it would.
Yeah, so you're saying he, for the first time on SNL,
flipped his image on its head.
You know what?
Somebody had to do it.
And you know, ever since then?
People have been trying to copy that model.
Um, Keev, what do you remember about going out
and shooting with Peyton?
I mean, it's the same park, I think,
where Dick in a Box, where they're on the basketball.
I think if you go over to the basketball hoop, you would be exactly where Andy and Timberlake were
hanging from it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You notice a lot of repeats at our shorts.
I remember it being good weather after the winter. What was this one? March 24th. So
that stands up. It might not have been hot, but I just remember being so happy to be outdoors
when the sun was out because we get so stuck in there.
There's nothing like the Big Apple when the sun's out.
You know what I mean?
Amen, brother.
It's like the exact opposite of foggy London town.
Thank you for saying exactly that, Jordan.
Yes, thank you for saying that.
Get yourself a nice slice of pizza.
We were celebrating the weather
with big old slices of pizza.
Is that in my memory?
Yeah, big old slice of pizza, hot dogs, bagels.
Can I just say something?
One of the funniest things that Tracy Morgan says a lot is, uh, slicing a
Coke, I'm a real New Yorker.
Have you ever heard him say that?
So anyway, sorry.
There you go.
I've had coffee.
Keep going.
Please refer to it as job.
I also remember, do you remember this keep that, uh, Dennis Leary pulled up,
like he was going somewhere probably to go shoot
his rescue me show, his fireman show.
And I think he saw Peyton Manning and pulled his car up
and just, like, got out and walked over to set
because he was like, oh, that's Peyton Manning.
I do not remember that.
You'd think I would.
But it was definitely, it was an interesting thing,
which is Dennis Leary had the stature
to just full-on walk onto an SNL set
and just go over and shake hands with the host and talk to him.
Yeah.
How did you not remember that?
I don't know why I don't remember that.
You just were thinking about the weather, you know?
I was just staring at the clouds.
I don't know how nice it was.
Head in the clouds.
That's me.
I'm trying to remember.
I feel like we were on the field and there's the joke with the Porto-Potties, as he calls
them, Porto-Lettes because of where he's from.
And I don't know whose idea it was,
but I know it wasn't in the script,
and then it became one of the favorite parts
of the whole thing, to make a kid go sit in it.
You suck! Let's go! Let's go!
Get back in here! Let's go!
Except you, I can't even look at you.
You know what? Let's save a portal after 20 minutes.
That's right. You stay in there.
Very embarrassing questions happen a few times
in my run at SNL, where I go up to a person
who's the best in the world at a thing
and say something along the lines of,
could you throw a football and hit that kid in the back?
And he said, yeah.
Like, I can hit someone on the other side
of the highway in the back.
Yeah.
He hit him in the back.
It was so good because he hit that kid in the back.
And again, it was a nerf football.
It didn't hit the kid, but the kid did a great fall.
Yeah.
Agreed.
And that kid, Timothy Chalamet.
Was it Chalamet?
It was.
No fucking way.
It could be.
We don't know it's not.
He did a lot of our early work.
Wait, I think there is a Lauren Child in there somewhere,
right?
Yes.
Probably is a Lauren Child.
I'd have to go re-watch it.
I feel like one of Lauren's kids is in there.
I think there was a new boom of athlete hosts
because Lauren's boys were growing up
and thought it was cool.
Hmm.
We do a lot of complaining on this podcast
about how difficult things were,
how bad we were at coming up with ideas or whatever.
This one I remember feeling a little bit effortless.
It was effortless.
And that's really rare.
Like you had a great idea,
we brainstormed a bunch of bits.
Yep.
We went down there and did them.
He came up with new ones on the fly. He got better as we shot.
And we only shot for a couple hours out in the sun.
It was super easy.
As I mentioned, beautiful day.
Beautiful.
The flow was really nice.
And it was everything.
It was, you know, all jokes aside,
like the subverting of a host image
is a fun thing for people to watch.
And to some degree, they probably think it's common.
And they loved it. It was really fun.
This was first Peyton Manning hosting, right?
Yeah. I think he only hosted once.
Oh, really?
I feel like this was definitely another one of the moments
where it was like the fun discovery.
Yes.
Like after Peyton Manning hosted,
he was in every commercial.
Right.
Because the world was like, oh shit, he's funny.
There's a joke in the monologue
about how he's in a lot of commercials,
but I agree that you thought he was at his zenith,
but I think you're right.
He became comedy guy after this.
Yeah.
This had pep talk then as well?
Yeah.
Exactly. That's a real good episode.
The show's really good.
I did want to mention
Keev's description of how well it went.
I have to point out two crucial ingredients were missing.
Mm.
Me and Yorm.
Yeah. Right.
I think that's why it was so effortless.
And that's probably why it was such a nice experience.
Yeah. That's honestly all I thought was like,
yeah, that makes sense.
So Keev, you're saying not having to answer
to the two dudes you've known since junior high made it easier?
Yeah. We're like really irritating.
It's like a fucking vacation shooting this.
Wait a minute,
what about my part?
That was not part of it.
No.
It was nice, me and Seth,
Seth, did we ever do just an Akiva Seth joint ever again?
Yes, Firelight.
Oh yeah, Firelight, yeah.
Was that another easy experience?
It was.
It honestly, it kind of was.
Oh, fuck off.
And it was well regarded on the show.
Doesn't stick around like this.
Yeah, great. Congrats.
Remember Yoram and Andy were like,
hey, we'll come and help out.
We know we didn't write this one,
but we'd love to be part of the team.
And then you told him we were shooting it on Randall's Island.
He went all the way out there.
Just gave him the fake address.
Oh, yeah, you could.
You could come.
I would love to, but Randall is mad at me.
Oh boy. Go to his me. Oh, boy.
Go to his island.
Oh, my God, I can't believe you're coming up with Randall's Island comedy
now that you live in LA.
There's no audience for it.
Fuck it, Seth.
Batch.
Is there anything else you'd just say about the shorts?
I mean, it is kind of, it does sort of speak for itself.
Did anyone rewatch it?
I did.
I didn't rewatch it leading up.
I did.
I didn't, because I felt less involved.
I have something to say.
I thought the sound design was exceptional and made a big difference. It's really good sound design.
Mm-hmm.
And the editing is always key.
Spectac.
Spectac.
Thank you so much.
Pretty sure I swung by and we talked it down and it was already pretty much done when I saw it.
We made a couple little tightens.
I'm sure.
Andy loves tightening things.
A good use of a beep, a couple curse words at the end where a beep is just as good,
if not better than actually hearing him say.
Sometimes it's much better.
Yeah, it was a pure stroke.
The whole thing was just like hot knife through butter.
Yeah.
And it played great.
It destroyed.
And I was very happy to look through this run list because it was as delightful as I
remember.
I have a monologue memory.
The monologue says, Kona, the sass talks about something that... Oh, it's not?
Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Give me a different song, Yoram,
but it's a little bit more reflective about a memory I had.
Okay.
Seth's memories, this is the part of the show
where Seth reflects. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Go ahead, Seth. So, Jenna, the stage manager, was like, Peyton wants to talk to you backstage before the monologue.
And, Andy, be honest, did you ever go behind the doors
to the monologue before you did the monologue?
No.
And I didn't want to either, right?
Do you kind of think of that as a sacred place
where only a host should stand?
No, it just never occurred to me that I could even look.
Right. That makes sense to me.
But it was trippy when I finally hosted to be like,
this was here the whole time.
Yeah.
Isn't it also funny that we are working show business
and I still kind of thought there would be
a bigger space behind it, like a full house.
It's like, oh, so it's just like a tiny wooden step.
This is dopey.
I mean, the thing I was shocked by
was all the nudie pics up on the wall.
Oh, so many. Oh, man.
But of men and women and women.
Oh, yeah.
And men.
Something for all sorts.
But I got to call it.
And so I went backstage and Peyton had a suggestion.
He had a joke he wanted to add at the last minute
about Tom Brady.
Ooh, spicy.
And he said, do you think I should do this?
And I was like, oh, I don't know.
It was just really like, I was like,
I don't process ideas this fast.
Wait, what was it?
Did he do it?
No, he didn't.
What was the joke?
Tell us the joke.
It was a soft burn that would have been the 200th hottest
burn at the Tom Brady wrist.
Whatever it was, in my memory of it,
it seemed very quaint now.
And it was a friendly soft burn, should be noted.
Archie Manning, Eli Manning, and his mom
were all in the monologue, little coutus.
And then show takes off.
There was a Bronx beat, really funny Bronx beat.
Great so far.
Was it the first Bronx beat
or had they done a bunch of Bronx beats already?
This was the third Bronx beat.
My favorite moment of this Bronx beat is Maya asked him,
guess how many times my husband has flirted with me this week.
-"Sucks out of your relationship, the pizzazz."
-"That's right.
Ask me how many times my husband's flirted with me."
-"None times.
None point none times."
-"Unless you can't go to the bathroom with the door open."
-"Oh."
-"Is Bronx beat also in Maya or Amy said 1990 never?
Yeah, I'm sure.
Oh, God, I say that. I still say it all the time.
I say that because of you, but I thought you made it up, Andy.
I'm pretty sure it's from Bronxbeat.
Oh, check move.
1990 never.
And obviously we still say Sweat-O-Weather all the time.
Sweat-O-Weather? Yeah. I mean, Sweat-O-Weather.
Much like gold and plastic asses. Yeah, you say it all the. Much like gold. Goooood. And plastic asses.
Yeah, you say it all the time
in the Big Apple and Foggy London.
Here's a pitch, it might be too late,
but since we're like right up against our release date here
and it's topical, it'd be cool to get Wig
to go to the Olympics.
And anytime someone was being given their gold medal,
they could just have her right off camera on mic going,
goooooooooooood.
Ha ha ha!
Sort of under their national anthem.
It is a little late, but you're right.
It's not like technically too late.
It just seems like.
A lot of people say, you know,
four months isn't enough time for someone
to mount a presidential campaign.
Yeah, here we are, right?
Here we are.
And if Yorm can do a predictive review
of his MacGruber episode of this podcast,
we can certainly get Wig out to the Olympics.
Absolutely.
Out you go, Paris.
Just using an algorithm.
NCAA pool, classic Downy sketch.
Do you remember NCAA pool?
No.
It was Peyton Manning and Amy Poehler were going through their NCAA pool picks,
and Peyton was a sports expert,
and Amy was someone who didn't know anything about sports and had
picked the games correctly based on mascots
and the like.
That's just a real thing that happens in real life.
It has a very nice downy move in it, which at one point then, Sudeikis, who's the sort
of sports anchor, is talking about University of Arizona losing in the first round and he
calls them a classic.
It's a classic Peyton Manning.
And Peyton Manning's not playing Peyton Manning.
And then they just start burning Peyton Manning. And he starts being very offended on behalf of Peyton Manning. And Peyton Manning's not playing Peyton Manning. And then they just start burning Peyton Manning. And he starts being very offended on behalf of Peyton Manning.
Yes. His character is.
Instead, once again, they turned out to be the tournament's Peyton Manning.
What do you mean?
Well you know how every year Arizona comes in with impressive stats and all the hype
and every year they fizzle out.
Yeah, sure, but why is that a Peyton Manning?
You know that expression.
No.
Um, it's like, how do I put this?
When someone has this great reputation, but you always wonder why because when it really
counts they can't deliver.
Exactly.
Exactly.
First Penelope. The first Penelope is in this show.
Oh, we what?
Wow, she got a caterer.
They really went all out.
Never seen this many hors d'oeuvres.
I have.
Yeah, I've seen more hors d'oeuvres than this,
so just really been to a lot of big parties before,
so just have seen all these before.
Oh, maybe you could help us out.
I don't even know what half these things are.
I do, and all of them.
So I've had all these before at other parties
that I've been invited to.
So just been to a lot of parties.
That one has crab in it.
And you should be noted, this is a real credit to Peyton Manning.
He is the funny one in a bunch of these sketches.
And he also is a perfect service in a bunch of these sketches.
Gives a straight man it up in Bronx Beat and Penelope.
And he's great.
And before we move on from Housewarming,
that was a wonderful sketch with Kristin Wiig and John Lutz.
And we actually have a voice note from that writer, John Lutz.
Hi, Lonely Islands.
This is John Lutz.
I was a writer on SNL for seven seasons
and was there during the same time that The Lonely Island was.
And I was there for the Peyton Manning episode, which actually was one of the busiest episodes
of my career at SNL.
I had three sketches in that night.
The first sketch was a Penelope sketch, and it was the first time we'd ever tried Kristen
Week's character Penelope.
It's the character that always one-ups what other people are saying.
So if somebody said, I have a dollar bill, she'd say, I was on the dollar bill. That's my eye. So so so that was the first time we'd ever done that character
with Peyton Manning. And it's always a little tense when you're trying out a character for
the first time under the bleachers with Lauren. But luckily, it did very well that night.
And we did around eight or nine or 10 more of them throughout the course of my time at
SNL.
I also want to say that I feel like it probably went well under the bleachers
because Lauren, Andy, you've always made this observation.
Lauren is a real Penelope, right?
I can't stop saying it.
He always is one upping you.
In fact, just for our listeners, Andy, you be Lauren and I'll be someone.
OK. Yeah.
So I'm going to go to Paris for the weekend.
Oh, I actually created Paris.
So I was there when it started because I created it and I made it. Oh, yeah. Well, I'm excited because I'm going to go to Paris for the weekend? I actually created Paris, so I was there when it started because I created it and I made it.
Oh, yeah. Well, I'm excited
because I'm going to go to the Olympics.
Oh, yeah. Well, I'm on the board of the Olympics
and I decide who wins. It's corrupt.
And I decided that, so.
Really good. Yeah, it's really accurate.
So he likes the character.
Do you think for the 50th,
the whole 50th should just be classic SNL sketches,
but everybody does it as Lorne?
Yes.
It's fucking fun to watch.
I love that.
I want to take a quick detour to update.
There's two notable things happen in that date.
One, there was a Tim Calhoun.
Tim Calhoun was Forte's slow talking politician character.
Was that the first Tim Calhoun?
No, I think it was late.
Maybe the last Tim Calhoun.
He auditioned with Tim Calhoun as well.
Yes.
It's a great Fort, slicked back in.
And it sounds a little something, like this, go Keith.
Hello, I'm Tim Calhoun.
Really good. Was that close?
Yeah, it was really good. Really close to a microphone.
I got a jab in a court.
I didn't say Yorm.
Oh, it's a court.
Yorm is a writing credit, isn't it?
Which disqualifies him.
I'm gonna give you a setup.
Tim Calhoun was mostly one-liners.
Is that a fair way to say it?
Yes.
He mentioned a political name.
I'm gonna say that political name from 2000, ought seven.
And I'm gonna ask everybody here
and guess what the punchline was.
Okay.
Jack Abramov.
It's something about him.
Jacking off.
But I hardly know Abram.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
That puts the forte in the one letter.
Now, we got a bit on Late Night called You Burn, and I'm not here to talk about You Burn,
but I will tell you, You Burn always begins with a picture of a migrating tree frog, and
then it is interrupted by a siren that lets people know it's you burnt. This was stolen from my time at SNL
where a migrating tree frog in the key
was the signal to anybody who cared to figure it out
that it was about to be interrupted.
And I believe I also took that from Amy and Jimmy's update.
Like I think migrating tree frog might've been
like sort of in the key before, for example,
Gay Hitler came out.
Andy, you interrupted Update during a migrating
tree frog in the Peyton Manning show.
Do you know who asked?
A naked guy?
Sanjaya.
Oh, Sanjaya.
Yeah, that was a moment.
Sanjaya was a very enthusiastic, not great contestant
on American Idol.
Is that what I'm describing him?
Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
Thank you.
I think so.
I think he was just, everyone loved him, was that it?
Everyone loved him. There's a moment that,
having worked on the show, you know exactly what happened,
which is it cuts to while you're singing,
Wig embraces crying, and you think to yourself,
oh, that must have actually happened.
Then it pans to Fred embraces crying,
which, you know, I guess technically is a heighten.
And then it pans to Dan Aykroyd crying,
and that's when you realize, oh, Dan Aykroyd was there
and Lawrence said he wanted to be in something.
It was the best part.
And it really is a credit to your performance, Andy.
Ooh, I'm listening.
Because it's in line with what I remember
at San Gia, you're performing and I think I go,
is he really sad or really happy?
And you, that's very much, it is one of those things
where until I say it, you don't think about it,
but then it's that picture of,
is it a really old woman or a really young woman?
BOWEN LAUGHS
Smile without the eyes is what I'm guessing the...
Yeah, there was a little bit of smile without the eyes.
And a little, like a little, maybe you were a little scared.
A little scared, yeah.
That is my favorite, that's my favorite Andy look of all time.
What have we gotten into here?
You do a lot of smile with the out the eyes.
Oh yeah.
We did a whole sketch called, He Likes You.
It was all smile without the eyes.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, we'll get to that later.
I remember He Likes You.
And then you guys, Halftime.
Oh yeah.
Which is written with Will Forte and John Lutz.
And it's one of the all time great sketches. And before we talk about it, here is a voice note from oure and John Lutz, and it's one of the all-time great sketches.
And before we talk about it,
here is a voice note from our friend, John Lutz.
The third sketch I got on on the Paint Manning episode
was probably one of my favorite sketches
I've ever worked on,
and it's the one people still talk about to me
when they hear that I've written it.
They love it.
It's the one where he's a dancing coach with Will Forte,
and he's trying to rally the basketball team,
and he plays this piece of music,
which was a piece of music that I had.
It was a Herb Albert song that I brought to Forte,
and I said, I wanna do something with this,
and he said, oh, I've been looking to write a sketch
where a coach tries to motivate people in a weird way,
and it all kind of fell
into place where it was just so much fun to write.
Also watching Forte dance in it was amazing because he performed it the best he'd ever
done on the live show and that doesn't always happen but on the live show he just knocked
it out of the park and I probably saw him dance it in rehearsals, in his office, in his dressing room, probably 30 times.
He just kept doing it over and over and over
and over and over just so that he could nail it.
And he did.
All right, I know we're here to toot our own horns.
No, Yorm, okay.
Oh, wait.
Oh wait, no, hold on.
Let's wait for it.
One time the word horn was said.
What?
What'd you say? Oh my God, his phone's locked. He was ready to go at the end of Seth's memories. on. Let's wait for it. One time the word horn was said. What? What'd you say?
Oh my God, his phone's locked.
He was ready to go at the end of Seth's memories.
He was really fumbling with it.
It's still happening.
Jesus.
Yeah!
I got it!
Still got it!
Comedy.
We're not here to toot our own horns,
but I'm gonna say maybe,
well, the most memorable for me sketch of the night
is the halftime sketch.
Also, real who's who of the men in the cast at the time. It is the halftime sketch. Also, real who's who
of the men in the cast at the time. It's a halftime at a basketball game. Everybody loads
in, Forte's the coach, and it's gone badly. The first half has gone badly. Peyton Manning
gets the first big laugh when he says, basically, I just thought about going back out there
and facing those guys in the second half, and a little bit of pee came out. And people are real happy to hear him say it. And remember, this was at a time when that had
only been said like 50,000 times. Yeah. This is a pre little bit of pee, a little bit of throw up.
Taking them back. Yeah. No, I just threw up in my mouth. None of that. This is before that.
That's all before that. Yeah. Basically Fort Forte is the coach, plays a song that he claims John Wooden played for him in
his high school days when they
had the biggest comeback in history.
It's by the Tijuana Brass, right?
It's the Tijuana Brass, no lyrics,
and it's just music and it's just Forte doing
a really funny half choreographed, half improvised dance.
The background basketball players,
I feel like Andy, you might do the best
keeping a straight face.
Thank you.
Both Peyton Manning and Kenan Thompson
put towels in front of their faces.
Bill has a hand in front of his face most of the time.
And then a sort of classically stoic Fred
and a classically stoic Jason have small moments
where I feel as though Will has amped it up
past where they were
prepared for him to go.
Did Andy ever break?
Not that I didn't watch it again.
I will say I wasn't watching it on the highest res.
What do you think Andy?
What are you going to give yourself?
I think by the end I actually did.
It was really fucking funny.
It's really funny.
And I don't find Will funny in general.
So it was like that's saying a lot.
No he doesn't in general as a rule.
Andy doesn't play in Will.
I will say the sort of subtext funniest part of the sketch
is anytime Fred played an athlete
to just fill out a sketch is one of the funniest things.
Like, Fred in a basketball uniform is super funny to me.
And I think Fred would admit that too.
It's like Halloween.
Yeah, especially if you cross it up
with like a high school musical situation.
Yeah, it's real good.
And then, it should be noted,
so Will does this dance that you sort of think
only Will could do.
It seems very unique to him.
And then fucking Peyton Manning gets up and does it great.
I'm feeling it.
He says I'm feeling it and it's a really,
he's a very, also at no point during the course
of this show, in the way that he'd been funny,
did you think he would also be physically funny?
Or have moves at all, like, dance moves?
And he's great. And it's...
It is one of those everybody cheers sketches.
I feel like everyone's gotta go watch this,
because it's, like, describing it is, like,
you really don't get why it's so funny,
but it is such a physical... Like, they are great.
I know I think it's funny. I think the way I'm doing it
is very funny.
I think the way Seth described it is incredibly funny. It's very funny
I'm wrong and I also don't think people need to watch and in fact
I'm wondering why you haven't been laughing more because this is very funny. All right fine
Don't watch it because it's gonna pale in comparison anything you're gonna be massively disappointed. Don't watch it
It's like just read the book. Don't watch the movie. I used to love reading SNL.
The novelization of SNL.
Such a good episode to read.
Stay up late, read it.
There was another sketch later in the show.
We're gonna stay with the Lutz theme
because it was on the porch.
Do you remember on the porch?
Oh, yes.
I can visualize it, but I don't remember what the joke was.
I feel like it's a slow burn one
where people say crazier and crazier things as it goes. Yes. It is basically, again,
it's one of those really nice in ones.
By in one, I mean there's no cuts in the sketch.
It's just the two of them sitting on a porch
saying crazy things and taking sips of coffee
after each crazy thing.
Right.
You know, I ran into Judy today.
Really?
She was wearing invisible braces.
I hadn't heard that.
Well, I say good for her.
Mmm.
This coffee is so rich and dark.
It's Mexican.
Mmm.
Oh, I saw Rick at the park today.
Oh, really?
Yes, he said he was jogging, but when I saw him, he was sitting on a bench. Well, he did just have a heart attack.
He was stretching and wearing very short shorts.
I think I saw his butthole.
Well, that's Rick for you.
You know what I'm gonna use to fertilize my garden?
Your own poop.
Once again, he mentioned Ero 3. You know what I'm gonna use to fertilize my garden? Your own poop. Yeah.
Once again, he mentioned Ero 3.
Let's hear John Lutz take on On the Porch.
The second sketch I got on on the Paint Manning episode
was one with Kristen Wiig and Paint Manning again.
But they were on a porch sipping either,
I think it was hot cocoa or could have been a hot cider
because I think they used a cinnamon stick for a stir.
And basically, they would take sips, long pauses, could have been a hot cider because I think they used a cinnamon stick for a stir.
And basically they would take sips, long pauses, and they'd say something really outlandish.
And things just got crazier and crazier, and the pauses got longer and longer.
And it was just a really fun sketch to write because we wrote it in Kristin's office.
And late at night, we were just laughing at the stupid things we would say after we
take a sip of coffee.
It's literally what we just said.
That was the driest voice note, like not a single interesting thing in that.
Well the first one was good, really good, John, and the second one, yeah, was a little
dry.
I just could have used some examples.
Now guys, you know you're putting me in the jackpot here with John because I said like
record these voice notes,
like 30 to 90 seconds.
I thought that was pretty good.
I mean, that was...
And then he said, how are these?
And I thought, you know what? I'll just listen with the guys.
So I didn't know how bad they were.
God damn.
That first one was great.
I honestly thought at some point he was gonna be like,
and this was for the show Saturday Night Live,
which aired on NBC.
He's doing us a favor.
He did us a favor.
John, you did great.
Don't listen to Andy if you listen to this.
I like it.
And we wrote it in Wig's office late at night.
There's no description other than that first sketch
they wrote.
But they were laughing as they wrote it.
Was that helpful?
Yeah, he had a fond memory.
For me, I could picture Wig really enjoying doing that.
When he said me and Wig were laughing,
I've never seen Andy look angrier. Oh, god. I could picture Wig really enjoying doing that. When he said me and Wig were laughing,
I've never seen Andy look angrier.
Oh, God.
Like, I should fucking hope so.
Otherwise, why put it to the table?
John, thank you so much.
All right, wait.
I just looked on my phone, and there's one more Lutz message.
And we're going to wrap it up.
So let's listen to what Lutz has to say.
So I guess what I'm saying is, you know,
I had three sketches in the Peyton Manning episode.
And I can also see the flip side of it,
of how hard it must have been for the Lonely Island
to come up with one idea and then do one sketch.
And also, I mean, the genius of it,
like, I don't even know how they came up with the idea
of Peyton Manning throwing a football.
That to me is like, how?
It's the genius of the Lonely Island and it's the hard work that they do that you really
always hear about from them.
That's what I was looking for.
That was the thing that was necessary.
I mean, I do think throwing a football was a little bit funnier than I think it's a credit
for. It was your idea, Seth.
Yeah, kind of. I feel like.
So he's kind of burning you.
Now I'm regretting saying, and then do a fourth message where you burn them.
Yeah, because it was actually a veiled Seth burn.
The other funny part is somehow being called the Lonely Island is somehow funny to me.
I'm like, oh yeah, I guess that's what we are.
People do not call us that at the show.
It would be really funny. Yeah, never once was like, has anybody seen the lonely island?
Never.
I think they did say that about like good neighbor though.
When people were like, where are the good neighbor guys?
Right? Or no?
Maybe people said guys.
If you say guys, it softens it.
We have a big episode coming up.
What is it?
Shia LaBeouf.
Oh, that's a good one.
Dear Sisters, the episode we're gonna talk about.
And look at us.
We got back together, we got the gang back together.
You guys were almost caught up.
Naked Gun in theaters July 25th, 2025,
or maybe the 18th.
Whoa.
Go see it, best thing I've ever made.
I'm so proud of this thing.
See you guys in Paris at the Olympics.
And I just wanna say.
On Peacock. Oh boy.
When the lads didn't bring it home, it hurt.
Oh, you went to one of the...
Well, I was in foggy London town
and the lads almost brought it home.
Oh, you were talking about the Euro Cup?
The Euros, yeah. I was there for the Euros.
I also was at Wimbledon. That was fun.
Were you at a pub?
I was at a pub when the lads didn't bring it home.
Oh, the lads!
I was having some lemon pepper wet at the Magic City
and we were watching the lads
and really feeling that as well.
Oh man, in the pub that I was in in Foggy London town,
they were all like, another round of lemon pepper wet.
That's exactly right.
We were having some fish and chips at Magic City.
Alright, I love you guys. I'll see you next week.
Love you, bye.