The Three Questions with Andy Richter - Zach Galifianakis (Re-Release)
Episode Date: March 12, 2024(Re-released from February 2021) Comedian and actor Zach Galifianakis joins Andy from his hideout in the woods. The two discuss Zach’s Greek-hillbilly lineage, living in closets in New York and va...ns in LA, and how parenthood has changed Zach and his comedy.
Transcript
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Hello there. Welcome back to The Three Questions. I am the host of The Three Questions, Andy Richter,
and we are back into the archives and looking back on some of my favorite episodes of the show.
And this week, we are resharing my conversation with one of my favorite, favorite people,
who is actually a dear friend of mine. And that's one of the real perks about this is
occasionally I get to talk to really close friends.
And I'm talking to Zach Galifianakis.
We spoke in February of 2021 over Zoom.
And here is my conversation with the wonderful talking to Zach Galifianakis today, which I'm very excited about,
because he is a gentle woodland creature that only comes out when he's feeling completely secure. That's correct,
right? Yes, that is correct. I only, hey, it looks like I have a bloody nose. Do you see that?
It does kind of. No, okay. Sorry. Is it from cocaine? I've never done cocaine in my life.
I have to tell you that. Really? Why haven't you done cocaine? Haven't you been around it?
It's been offered to you and you've just turned it down?
I don't hang out with those.
I don't hang out with those types.
And I don't trust them.
Yes, you do.
I have seen you with those types.
I don't go to parties.
I don't do any of that stuff.
But you used to when you were young.
No, but I remember once I met some cocaine heads in a bar in Canada and was with this other actor.
And these guys were so coked up that we wanted to mess with them.
So, you know, breakaway bottles, you know, those breakaway bottles and show business where you hit somebody? Yeah.
Well, I always have them sitting around.
and show business where you hit somebody.
Well, I always have them sitting around.
And somehow these coke heads ended up in my apartment just so I could mess with them.
And me and my friend got into a fake fight
and he ended up smashing one of those bottles across my face.
And six people left my apartment within two seconds.
It was so funny.
No, I'm a naturalist.
I don't do that stuff.
I'm clean, clean living.
That's good.
You don't even drink anymore, do you?
No, that, that, I haven't had a drink in, gosh.
So I haven't, not since the Obama administration.
Wow.
Well, congratulations.
That's great.
Thank you.
And you're happier about it?
You know, I was a good drinker.
I didn't have a really bad side, I don't think.
But it is more to life.
I became a morning person when I stopped drinking.
And the morning, I like mornings better than evenings now.
I kind of do too.
I kind of always have.
But COVID has changed me.
I spent most of my adult life not being able to sleep past like 7.30, 8 o'clock.
But now I can sleep really late.
You can?
How late do you sleep till?
Oh, well, now probably the latest that I've gone is probably 9.30,
you know, something like that, 10 o'clock, which isn't crazy.
I mean, like, wow.
The look of shock on his face.
No, I mean, I have like I have a 15-year-old daughter
who can sleep till, you know, two o'clock in the afternoon.
Yeah.
Well, they're supposed they're supposed to sleep at that age, I think.
Right.
Right.
Their brain is growing.
That's you know, your brain grows when you sleep.
That's why my head is so big because I slept too much.
Well, I get up at my body tells me every morning at five, it's time to get up.
Wow.
Every morning, no matter if I go to bed at midnight, which I never do, but five in the
morning, I'm up.
Because, you know, I'm a triathlete.
I tried being an athlete.
That's what I thought it was.
That's what it is.
That's the joke well now you uh
i i don't want to give out the detail but you are living in the woods these days correct
yeah i've lived in the woods for on and off for seven years now well you're originally from north
carolina right that's what they say yes that Yes. And are you, but are both your folks Greek?
No, my mom is very Southern and my dad, my dad, uh, is, uh, uh, his family's from the island of
Crete. So it's a weird mix. It's this Greek blood mixed with this kind of Appalachian blood.
And it's a weird, it's a weird mix of cultures. It's two flavors of hillbilly.
I am very proud of both hillbilly sides. Very proud to be from where I'm from.
Well, is your dad, was your dad born in Greece?
No, my dad was born in the United States, but then they moved back to Greece when he was a child.
And he lived several years in Greece.
His first language was Greek.
His brother or brothers were born in Greece, some of them.
And my dad had not been back to Greece until the year 2000.
And I was working in London at the time, and he and my mom met me in London.
And I put up a video camera secretly
to ask my father about Greece,
because he hadn't been since he was a child.
And within the hour of the interview,
my dad cried about Greece 17 times.
Because he loved it so much.
Yeah. Loved going to Greece.
And, you know, it's weird when I go to Greece.
I was just there last October.
And, you know, I'm very American.
But when I'm in Greece, there's a large part of me that just feels at home.
It's weird, even though I don't have that huge of, um, you know, but I just love that
country so much. I really do. Have you ever been? I have, I have a friend, a friend of mine from
college, um, had dual citizenship because his parents owned like one of the nicest Greek
restaurants in Chicago and did the classic Greek thing of came over here young, worked like dogs, and then went back to Greece to like, you know, in their 50s, I think, their apartment and their apartment was in the same building as the restaurant.
The restaurant was in the the ground floor of the building.
It was on Michigan Avenue. It's a beautiful apartment.
But in their apartment, there was like there was like a couch and a TV and beds.
And if you open the fridge, there was maybe like orange juice because their whole life was in the restaurant, you know?
And yeah.
And my friend Costa,
when he,
um,
to keep his dual citizenship,
he had to serve in the army in Greece.
So he went back for his to serve in,
which he said was like summer camp. And that like,
like most of the,
most of the guys had earrings and stuff,
you know,
it wasn't,
it wasn't real tough army life.
But he's from, and I think he still lives in Kalamata, but his family is from the Mani, which is in the Peloponnese.
There's like three peninsulas at the bottom of the mainland Greece.
And the middle one is called the Mani. And it's kind
of, speaking of hillbillies, like famously a hillbilly place where they have these houses
called Maniat houses, which were just clans would build these stone towers that some of them were
turned into Nazi machine gun nests during the war, but they had really low doors so that people would have to come in with their head duck.
So if you wanted to, you could stand by the door and chop off their head when they came in through the door.
You know, like it was like designed that way.
And the men stayed in the tower because the men were the protected ones in the in the Klan raids.
were the protected ones in the clan raids.
So the women were the only ones who could leave and go out and do all the work, basically,
while the men stayed home, which seems to be a Greek pattern, if I may say.
Well, I think that's a pattern for a lot of cultures, too, where a lot of women do a lot of work.
In the South, where I'm from, you see women cutting the grass more than men.
It's weird.
Yeah.
But the civilian resistance, from what I've heard, at least in Crete, where my family's from, is I've heard that during World War II, women would go out in big dresses with pitchforks, waiting for the German paratroopers to come down.
And under their dresses were two more women with knives.
I've always heard that.
And they would come out of the dresses and attack these German soldiers.
That history is very interesting to me, all that stuff. But yeah, I love Greece.
I mean, I would live there. I would love to live there. I really would.
It's, yeah, it's a beautiful place.
Well, the Greeks have, the hillbillies, as you call them, the Greeks, what they have figured out is they have figured out, oh, what is important
in life. Yeah. Where we as a young country are still trying to figure that out. Right. So in
Greece, it's, it's, or in Europe in general, it's, my friend was telling me this and I agree with
him. In Greece and Europe, it's all about going the walk to go get a coffee.
Yeah.
And in the States, we save up money to get that big jet ski.
You know, it's their different philosophies and mentalities.
It's, yeah, older cultures tend to be less materialistic because,
you know, they've been through it. And now it's kind of like, well, you know,
David Sedaris has a line about the Greeks where he says, you know, they found civilization and democracy and then called it a day.
That's what I've always said.
We started the Olympics, democracy, a lot of modern philosophy.
And then one day we were like, oh, fuck it.
Let's open some diners.
Let's have coffee.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll bring in the sticks, that bundle of sticks.
Your people are what?
German?
Yeah.
German.
Well, but I'm a little bit of everything.
I'm just, you know, like I, you know, if I was to do one of those ads for one of those genealogy things, I would just be able to say, I'm European while I'm dressed in like, you know, later hosen and French beret.
And, you know, while walking an English bulldog and having some Swedish sausage.
I'm just white.
I'm just like a mix of different kinds of northern European white. So it's why I'm just white. I'm just like a mix of different kinds of Northern European white.
So it's why I'm awesome.
It's one of the reasons I'm awesome.
I've always wondered what made you awesome.
Yeah.
Well, you should have asked.
You know my number.
You could have called at any time.
And I would love to talk about it.
All right.
I'll call you after this podcast.
Okay, good.
Yeah.
Because we could, it's, I would like to actually have a real talk with you sometime.
Me too.
Now, what do you think about, like, do you think that your Greekness gave any, like,
what about your personality is your Greekness?
And what about your personality is your Greekness and what about your personality is your southerness?
Do you think that those that that's any you think that's a valid question at all or is it just horseshit?
I don't know, but I'll answer it.
If it fills up time, sure.
Well, I feel I feel I was born and raised in the South and I feel very of a kinship to the South because it's more – it's close.
But as far as the Greekness, it was – I was baptized in the Greek Orthodox Church.
But where I'm from, there were no other Greeks.
There were no other – we were the only ethnic family.
Really? Really? Well, there was there was a there was a couple of times, but, you know,
there were no Greeks. I think I think my dad had to tell the local mailman, Gus Gahoulis,
that he was Greek. And Gus was I think he said, oh, yeah, I always wondered what I was.
And Gus was I think he said, oh, yeah, I always wondered what I was.
But you're Greek. I got news for you, buddy. You're Greek.
It's always interesting to me when European like direct immigrants end up in the south because a lot of people, you know, they end up in other bigger cities or.
So I think my grandfather was one of the first Greeks in North Carolina.
So there's a proud history.
There's a proud history there of the immigrant family and all that.
And then on my mom's side, there's a real ingrained culture there, too.
Listen, the cultures of the Appalachian region have been ripped apart by these box stores. And, you know,
there used to be a real culture around, but it's become overtaken somewhat. And it bums me out because I love rural. I do. I love the South. I love where I'm from. I mean, politically,
we probably, you know, don't see eye to eye. But yeah, it's, it's, it's, I just, as I get older
and think about, you know, you have children and you think about your lineage and it is, it is,
it's a weird mix of this, this Southern and then this Greek thing, but I feel both. I feel like
I live the Southern life and then I explored my Greek life. I taught myself Greek at a young age.
I forgot most of it, but I went to Greece when I was 14, kind of by myself, because I was very interested in that part of my family.
I didn't know it much because we were living in the foothills of North Carolina. So I was very intrigued as a kid to go to Greece.
So I saved up my money by mowing grass and I went and met my cousins over there.
And yeah, so it's I feel both.
I do.
Yeah.
Now, didn't you say that some of your parents, some of your dad's siblings are moving back to Greece now?
Yeah.
Part of my family, I've been talking to them.
back to Greece now? Yeah, part of my family, I've been talking to them. It seems like there's a migration back, which is interesting. But, you know, we'll see how that plays out. The ones that
are talking about it are dual citizens and they've lived there on and off for years, so they could do
it easily. Right. And it's something that would be hard for you, though, right? I mean, can anyone
live there if they just go over there and live there?
You know, because you said dual citizens at it easier.
I don't know. I don't know what I don't I think I could get dual citizenship, but I would have to I have to I think I have to find my grandparents marriage license, which they ain't no marriage license from back then.
You know, so but yeah, I would love to.
I could live there easily.
Yeah.
Now, was it a funny household growing up?
Are your folks funny?
Yeah.
My brother and sister are incredibly funny.
My cousins are all funny.
So my comedy influences came mostly from my family more than the TV and all that
stuff. My cousins, you know, there was always laughter. Yeah. On the Greek side, there was
always this, you know, a lot of jokes. My mom is very funny, not outwardly funny funny but she has a really good sense of humor
really good sense of humor and my father just would laugh at anything because he just loved
the he just loved to laugh yeah yeah but my brother and sister are keenly keenly funny
and my my cousin nick is kind of in the comedy world i mean he's a he's a cartoonist for the
washington post and he he does humor as well.
Oh, that's great.
Yes.
You know, like I think that happens a lot. I think usually most funny people come from funny people because that's the same thing.
My, you know, it was mostly my dad and my aunt were both could have been in comedy if they had chosen to um my aunt especially my and she just
she just passed away recently but she was so funny and so just such a and even as she got older and
had alzheimer's she still was like you know i'd go visit her and every other person in her ward was just miserable and scared and crabby.
And she was still just happy.
And, you know, it helps.
It helps to be from a family that likes to laugh.
Well, it's also, you know, humor has been under a microscope lately and rightfully so.
But, you know, we would communicate through humor too meaning
not we wouldn't just make jokes it was also a way of making a point even you know what i mean
yeah so in my family it was very important humor was very important in in just the way we, you know, dealt with each other as a family.
I mean, my father was always kind of more of a disciplinarian with the humor stuff, which made it much funnier, right?
You kind of need a parent to tell you that's not kosher.
That makes it funnier.
Right, exactly.
You need a straight man.
Yeah, and I have two boys now, which, you know, there's a lot of humor that's going around.
And sometimes I think, should I be the disciplinarian here and make the humor more enjoyable for them?
Because it's like laughing in church.
I don't know if you grew up in a church, but I did. And that tension not to laugh in church is some of the most euphoric I've ever felt in my life.
Yeah, I actually asked that question on Twitter once because I was thinking about at my grandmother's funeral, there was a, and I think I just talked about this on this podcast.
At my grandmother's funeral, there was a, and I think I just talked about this on this podcast, next to where my grandmother was being laid to rest, there was a dual family plot, two families, and they were the Good family and the Eaton family. So it was Good Eaton was the big stone as we're standing next to my grandmother.
And everyone just cracked up because Good Eaton, you know. That's my grandma. And everyone just cracked up because good eating, you know.
That's so good.
And do you remember the manager's name on Spinal Tap?
Artie Fufkin?
No, no.
No, that was Paul Schaefer.
That was Paul Schaefer.
Yeah.
No, I don't.
He was Sir Eaton Hogg.
Oh, right.
Sir Eaton Hogg. All right. Sir Eaton Hogg.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
Well, when do you start thinking that you're going to be funny for a living?
Or do you get that idea that you would want to do it?
I mean, you weren't, you know, as as you say you weren't inspired by the tv um well no i wasn't as inspired by the
tv i i mean i was for sure i started um thinking about that very early for some reason very very
early uh i knew that entertainment was probably what i wanted to do but where i was
from and back then there just was no knowledge of how to do it really i mean i mean i guess you
you know go to new york and and my whole thing was i went to new york to try to figure it out. So after college, I left after kind of failing out of college by one point.
I left and went to –
What did you study?
Nuclear physics.
I was a communications major and a film minor at an agriculture school.
So – at an agriculture school. So, but I have to say,
I went,
I loved my university.
I love my classes there.
And especially my film classes
were so good.
Cause that's,
that's when I first learned
that there were other movies
besides Smokey and the Bandit.
So,
but from an early age, I just kind of
my parents also
were, they nurtured it, I think.
They were
and they were
very supportive of
the whole thing. It wasn't as
if I was in
school plays or any of that.
I just knew that
I could, eventually I could
figure it out once I left my hometown.
It takes some figuring out of how to
do it.
I've been very lucky.
Why did you
not do school plays?
Too small time for you? You were waiting
until you could
land a big fish well they were always musical theater things which was not you know i was never
that kind of theater person i was more of how can i make you laugh and i did enter talent shows and
in the talent shows i did the robot you know the do you remember shields and
yarnel i've talked to that about this before so they were a big influence that mime show
they had a they had a mime show and they did this robotic stuff and i just thought it was
the coolest thing so i would perform in talent shows in my hometown. I did that stuff.
To robots.
Would you dress up as a robot or just, and what track would you pick?
Like what song would you do the robot to?
We basically copied, it was me and my friend Jay Dunn.
And we just copied the Shields and Yarnell sketches.
That's what we did.
We just kind of did whatever they did.
And I was pretty good at the robot.
I used to do it at family reunions, and they would throw coins at me to get me to stop.
Yeah, you can heat up those coins, too, first, and then you really get them to stop fast.
Put a big lighter under them. Yeah.
If you really want to hurt a child.
Then whip them.
Oh, man.
You can hear the sizzle as it hits them.
So you went to New York to figure it out.
Lots of people go to New York to figure things out.
And you were one of them.
I just see you getting off the bus with your big sun hat and your gingham dress and your beard.
I think I was wearing my Who Farted t-shirt.
And, um,
you know, just to fit in.
Right.
To the Manhattan elite.
Yeah, yeah.
I know they're into a lot of existential
stuff, so I thought I'd wear that.
I drove up to New York
with my cousin Dean. He was going to NYU
to study science.
And we moved up together.
And I'll never
forget what he said to me as we were driving over the
George Washington Bridge.
We were driving over
and we got into the city
and he goes, we just locked
ourselves into the world's largest prison.
Because I think his attitude about going to New York was different than mine.
Yeah, I guess he and I lived in he and I lived in the village for a while.
And we shared a closet and we lived with a woman who was moved to New York to be a lounge singer.
And we would do this game.
She wasn't that great of a lounge singer.
And we would do this game where we would listen to her play her music.
This is mean.
But I was young.
And my cousin Dean and I would have a game to try not to laugh while she would play her music for us.
Oh, boy.
And she would be at the back.
I'm going to Kansas City, baby.
I mean, it was music that was not great. while she would play her music for us. Oh, boy. And she would be like, I'm going to Kansas City, baby.
I mean, it was music that was not great.
But, yeah, I moved to New York in 92, I think.
Did you move to New York as an actor already?
I mean, you were working, right?
Yeah, I moved there because we did this dopey show in Chicago called The Real Life Brady Bunch, which is reenactments of Brady Bunch episodes on stage.
And then there was a game show that preceded it, an audience participation game show that was really fun, too.
And that, you know, me because otherwise it was just 22 minutes of people reenacting fucking Brady B disco, you know?
So it became a big thing, you know,
like we had a story in people magazine while it was still in Chicago.
And then Ron Delsner, who's a famous concert promoter,
booked us into the village gate and we played the Village Gate in New York for about,
oh, I don't know. We were probably there about eight months. And then that cast went to LA and they had another cast come from Chicago to continue doing it at the Village Gate.
So you came as a working actor?
I did. I did. I don't know that I would have had the nerve or the bravery to go by myself and to go by myself without a paycheck.
Because, I mean, I was making, I think, like 600 bucks a week, which isn't like a ton of money.
But it was enough.
I mean, I slept on somebody's futon on their floor the entire time I was there just to, you know, splitting like as
minimal amount of rent as I could. And I still came home broke. You know, I still like that was
still like living in New York, soaked up $600 pretty quickly, you know? Um, so, but yeah, no,
it was, it was from that. He just made the glug, glug, glug drinking sound.
Yeah, maybe a little, you know.
And weed was more expensive in those days when you bought it at the reggae record shop.
Yeah.
That had four albums.
And it was cut with oregano.
No, it always smelled.
They'd say these fat little baggies of weed that always smelled like laundry detergent because I think that that's what they shipped it over from, I'm assuming, Jamaica because they were Jamaican.
Like they must have packed it to disguise the smell in laundry detergent. So for many years, I just assumed weed all smelled like soap, but it doesn't.
I didn't smoke weed until I was 30.
Wow.
Why?
Were you afraid of drugs?
No.
Yeah.
I mean, look, I was such a good, I was a very straight-laced kid, and I just thought, for
some reason in the back of my head, I just thought it would interfere with my personal
get-up-and and go-ness.
Not that I had any, really.
Well, you're not wrong.
Yeah.
And I just think that my warning to people is, hey, look, I'm all for marijuana.
It's great.
But what they don't tell you is, hey, you can get in the way sometimes.
You know what I mean?
Like, just wait.
Like my kids, I'm going to say, just wait till you're, you know, eight years old.
No, wait till you're later in life.
For me, that's what I did.
And yeah, I never did any of that.
I just, I mean, I was busy drinking a lot.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think, I mean, you're right.
There is a side of legalized weed that nobody talks about, which is, yeah, you can, yeah, it's, you know, everyone thinks they act like trouble getting to sleep or, you know, if you have nausea, yes, you know, that can help.
But mostly it gets you high and it does make you lazy.
It can.
I mean, that's when it kind of opened up here.
I was like, I moved to Amsterdam all of a sudden.
And there's weed around.
I was like, I moved to Amsterdam all of a sudden and there's and there's weed around.
And now I got, you know, the the sort of control mechanism that that sort of paced out my weed usage in the old days was access.
And when access is gone, then you've got to really like start to be like, oh, fuck.
Now I got to be a grown up about this and not just stop in the dispensary every freaking day.
Hmm. Yeah.
But, so what happened in New York?
Did you start doing stand-up?
I mean, did you think you were going to do stand-up,
or did you think you were going to be an actor, or?
I was always influenced and loved stand-up. I mean, obviously, it was in the back of my head, I felt.
But I moved to New York to try to be serious and to get into acting.
And I went to, you know, I took classes here and there.
And I even did a play called The Hot El Baltimore.
But don't get excited.
It was in the basement of a church.
But I tried to surround myself with the acting world.
of a church.
But I tried to surround myself with the acting world.
Meaning, I got a job at the public
theaters in Usher just so I could watch
plays. I did my own thing.
I didn't have any money either for classes.
And I worked a lot. I worked in a restaurant
called Tequila Willie's
where you have to wear a sombrero.
And wait tables on Al Roker.
I worked at Casa Lupita.
Wait a minute.
Where's that?
Casa Lupita started in the Northwest.
The one I worked at was in Naperville, Illinois.
And I had to basically wear like a peasant boy outfit.
That was sort of like that would like, you know,
that you would be in a Disney minus the sombrero and not necessarily like a serape, but definitely
like this open necked shirt that had basically just guitar strap embroidery put to it.
And, um, and I got to sweat like a peasant, too, in that uniform. My uncle was the manager of this
restaurant where I, where my dad's brother was the manager of this restaurant in the city. And
he used to throw my tips at me, which were never bills. They were always,
it was always change. I guess I wasn't that good of a waiter.
bills. It was always change. I guess I wasn't that good of a waiter.
And if you're ever on your hands and knees picking up coins, wearing a sombrero while you're being pelted with coins, you feel like you're not really going anywhere in life.
And that's how I always felt in New York. This is not going to work out at all.
Why did he throw it at you?
mouth at all. Why did he throw it at you? Because he said that's how he was treated in the family restaurant, which is not true. It's not that's not true. He just he just I don't know. Right,
right. Well, some people just want to start the cycle of abuse. Maybe. Why not? Let's start it.
Let's see where this takes us. But I was living in another closet in the shoe district, we call it, 8th Street.
Do you know A.D. Miles?
Oh, yeah.
A very funny writer.
Yeah.
And performer.
Yeah.
He ended up being Jimmy Fallon's head writer.
Yeah.
So Miles and I were roommates.
And both of us were going nowhere fast.
And how did you guys find each other?
We knew each other in college.
We kind of moved to New York together.
Oh.
Oh, okay.
He and I worked in our own, in a strip joint together,
Miles and I, called String Fellows.
Wow.
And how were the tips there?
Were they thrown at you?
Or were they just shoved in your waistband?
The strippers and I did not get along.
I was the bus boy and there was a power structure there.
The strippers were, they were in charge, at least behind the scenes.
And they were quite mean, a lot of them.
Yeah, as it should be.
Yeah, a couple of them were nice.
Yeah. As it should be. Yeah. A couple of them were nice, but yeah, I was, I was, I was,
I was not going,
that was a part of my life where I just was really wondering what I was doing.
Cause I think it was 28, you know?
Oh, wow.
So.
Yeah. That would be hard.
Yeah. But you're living in New York. It doesn't matter. Right.
I mean, to me, that's the way I saw it.
Well, and also too, I think you, you realize like, eh, 28, 23, eh, it's all, you know, you can,
it's like that's, you're still finding yourself, you know, in your 20s, I think.
And I was a nanny at that time, too.
I was doing all this restaurant work, and I also happened to be a nanny.
How did that happen? I knew I was pretty good with kids and I knew that I could probably adjust my
schedule better with auditions.
If I could just pick up kids,
like work from three to eight at night, then go perform,
stand up and then audition in the morning.
So it was really good hours for that.
But I also was a house cleaner.
Oh, I've told you that.
Yeah, we talked about that.
And I cleaned houses.
I had a lot of jobs in New York.
Yeah.
I worked at Dr. Squeeze.
You ever been to Dr. Squeeze on 23rd Street?
I don't know what that is.
There's a juice bar.
Oh, okay.
No.
It was my favorite job I've ever had.
It's my best job I've ever had it's my best job i've ever had even more than acting why because you were the only one there there was no and all you had to do
was squeeze juice and you drink your juice all day which i love but um yeah i had a lot of jobs
lots and lots you know what did you start did you start playing piano while you were on stage
immediately or is that something that kind of developed? Because that was when I first got to know you that your act was was piano and comedy.
when I moved out to California, Largo had a piano.
And one night I sat at the piano because I can fake that I can play the piano and I can only play sad music.
And I thought the sadness of the music with the ridiculousness of the joke
was kind of new.
You know, there's been piano playing comedians who,
I didn't know this when I started playing the piano, but do you know who Victor Borges?
Yes. But he did more sort of musical, musical humor though. Yours was just
a funny counterpoint, you know? Yeah, that's right. That's right. But,
um, so yeah, I just kind of started, I sat down at the piano and just kind of did my set and, um,
it seemed to add another layer to it that was missing maybe. Uh, and then I don't, and then
now I don't do it anymore. I haven't done the piano much at all anymore because it's too limiting.
I don't do it anymore.
I haven't done the piano much at all anymore because it's too limiting.
It,
you,
you, you,
it's so one note,
um,
that it's hard to do other things,
but,
um,
you can sustain an audience with a piano stuff for about 10 minutes before
they get bored with it.
Oh,
you found out,
found out the hard way many times.
Have you done stand-up Any time recently?
When's the last time you were on stage doing stand-up?
Right before the pandemic
Right when things were
Oh really?
And there was a feeling in the audience
This was probably the last show for a while
I think they had just
Cancelled a bunch of stuff in California
I have done it online I think they had just canceled a bunch of stuff in California.
I have done it online, not stand up, but I mean, since the pandemic, I've done a show or two.
But we have a delay in these woods.
I'm used to an audience not responding to my material sometimes.
But on the computer, it has a different, don't know it feels it feels more lonely yeah it's weird i've i mean i've watched some stan i'm not yours in particular
because i'm not a fan i understand but uh i've seen other people do comedy online and it is
strange it well yeah you know it feels more like a confessional or something.
There's no other art form, if that's what stand up is, which is questionable, that you need feedback.
You need feedback.
And there are shows that you don't hear the feedback because they've cut off whoever's watching's audio.
So you're doing it to the ether, hoping it's landing in someone's living room 2,000 miles away.
But I think once everything clears up, hopefully there's going to be a real burst of wonderful performing from music, from comedy.
I think there's going to be,
hopefully there's going to be a real resurgence of it all.
I think so too. And one thing I also think is like, you've seen a lot of people doing stuff
online who probably normally wouldn't have done stuff online, you know, just like, oh shit, yeah,
I'll do, you know, I'll be on the computer for a half an hour for this reunion or whatever. And, and I think it's going to make people a lot, it's just
going to kind of like, lower the preciousness of a lot of people's self identity, you know,
like, they're gonna, they're gonna be like, yeah, I can do that. And I can do this. And
for Christ's sake, I've been cooped up for how long? And, you know, and I agree with you.
I think it's I'm looking forward to it.
I can't wait to get back to my human pyramid stuff, though.
You know, I'm big in the human pyramid world and we have all been just shut down.
Right, right.
Yeah.
And I also sold all of my hand sanitizer stock back in last February.
Because who thought you'd need it?
But, yeah.
Goodbye, Purell.
Can't you tell my love's a-growing?
Well, now, was there something that predicated your move to L.A.?
I got one of those development deals.
Oh, you did?
So I could stop working as a busboy and all that stuff.
So I loaded up a van and two friends, and we drove to Los Angeles.
And the money I was promised didn't show up for a while.
So I had to live in my car.
I lived in the van for a while and I lived at the Hollywood youth hostel for,
for about a week. Have you ever been there?
No.
If you like German tourists in their briefs,
singing REO speed wagon songs at the top of their lungs,
it's a place for you.
German guys with briefs and dark
socks on.
Oh my god, that's my
fucking you porn serve.
German youth.
REO Speedwagon. I talked to
a mechanic, because I couldn't rent the van anymore
because I didn't have the money.
And I talked a mechanic into, I didn't talk him into it.
Someone told me a mechanic friend of his would rent me the car,
a car he was supposed to be working on.
So imagine you send your car to a mechanic to get fixed. He's like it's going to take four days and he rents your car out to a stranger
so i lived in that car for just i lived in that car for a few nights i remember and then i got
lucky i found a place in santa monica yeah but but was, yeah, I just moved out because I had a job.
I kind of had a job prospect, and I ended up being on a sitcom out there.
Did you like the move from New York to L.A.?
Man, when I first got to Los Angeles, I absolutely loved it.
I loved it so much.
What was it?
The weather was fantastic.
I would go swimming in the ocean all the time because I live by the beach.
I would just love the weather.
And I didn't know anybody, so I also would bike all the time.
This is 40 pounds ago.
And since I didn't know anybody in California, I felt completely comfortable in being in my Speedos and just biking with nothing but Speedos on.
Yeah.
That's the cool thing about moving to a new place.
You don't know.
You're like, okay, I can be as free as I want to be.
Right, right.
Everyone will think I'm a German tourist.
But I liked it a lot.
But I liked it a lot.
And then I think the city got – or cities in general started wearing on me because I was raised in a small town, and I started missing that a lot.
But L.A. is magical when you first move there.
Yeah.
So you had – I mean, you had some success before, you know, like the sort of catapult of the hangover hit.
And was that transition?
Because you're not, you know, you're a kind, hilarious person, but you're not, you know, you're a little shy, I would say, don't you think?
The text I sent you, Andy, was not kind, hilarious.
It was kind, hilarious, handsome person is what you were supposed to say oh i was saving that for the end for the that was
going to be the big button um what was your question i'm sorry what did you say you are
you're very handsome um i mean was it was that transition was was when when when you got real famous, was that fucking awkward and weird?
And did you did you kind of was there a party that hated it?
I was real bad with it.
I got scared by it and it angered me because I think when we get scared as humans, it angers us.
And listen, it was for me, it was that stuff came later in life.
And if I were in my 20s, maybe it would have been more. Yeah. Let's party.
But I was kind of a you know, I was kind of new myself and new.
You know, I kind of always have had this eye on show business in Hollywood in general.
Hmm. Yeah, it's fun to work in. but as a unit, I'm not really into it.
I've always been that way about it.
I just have never,
the small town has really never left me, really.
I mean, it just, obviously.
No, I know what you mean.
Cause it is like,
I'm happy to get a check from show business,
but I don't want to live in show business.
And there are people that like come out here and they want to do the whole fucking thing.
They want to live in it 24 hours a day.
And I mean, I feel like Holden Caulfield.
I'm so glad I got that reference.
I just feel like everyone's a fucking phony, you know?
I got that reference.
I just feel like everyone's a fucking phony, you know?
Well, listen, it's, I mean, I think Steve Martin called it a high school years ago.
And it is kind of that.
Yeah.
You know, I love actors.
I really do.
I love comics.
I really love comics.
But Hollywood as a whole is, I just don't get it.
I don't understand it.
And by the way, I've always made fun of it.
I mean, since when we were kids growing up, we would make fun of it.
How many people listen to this podcast, Andy?
I don't know.
I don't know.
People, they tell me.
I ask and they go, well, it does really pretty well. You know, and I'm like, but it's always that kind of like raising intonation, which always feels like, OK, I guess, you know.
I love that voice pitch because you're right.
That's what people do when they are not real sure what they're supposed to say to you.
No, I thought you were funny.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was good.
Yeah.
It was really great.
No, it wasn't.
Yeah, sure.
I'll marry you.
Well, were you married when the hangover happened?
Like, had you?
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Or were you together?
Yeah, yeah.
I've been, my wife and I dated, yeah, for a long time.
And then she was, during the hangover stuff, she was all part of, with me in that.
That was weird, too though the relationship i mean i won't go into it but it's
you know it sounds complaining and it isn't but for all those uh those uh people out there that
want the fame thing uh it it's uh it's a it's there's a lot of uh the other side that nobody
likes to talk about but it's uh it's yeah that was a of the other side that nobody likes to talk about, but it's a it's yeah, that was a change.
It was just a change in your life that, you know, you don't expect, especially wasn't really kind of part of the plan.
Yeah, yeah. me, you know.
By the way, I love when people talk to me.
I love it.
I love interaction with people.
What I don't like is can I get a picture because they're not interested in anything except that social media thing.
But I would rather talk to someone for a long time.
And I find people are not really into that.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, that's a very small town thing of you, too, though.
I mean, that's, you know, like the small townness of, you know, like I know people
who grew up in small towns who still do the same thing that like my uncle would do is which is like when you sit down at dinner, like you'd say hello to the next table.
And how you know, what did you get there?
And where are you all from?
And, you know, that's the kind of town I grew up in.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Oh, we would walk into a restaurant and we knew everybody there.
I like that. I guess I like it now that I'm older, but yeah.
Yeah. Has fatherhood changed you very much?
Oh my God. A hundred percent.
In what ways do you think?
Well, I get up at five every morning. That never used to happen. To me, if you're lucky enough to
have kids, one of the benefits is you get to relive your own childhood in a way because you
get to see the eyes of your children experience the world.
And that to me is just – there's nothing better.
And I find men don't talk about it much.
And if there are any young men out there, you've been marketed to, young men, that you're supposed to act like you guys do in beer commercials.
But fatherhood and being in that world to me is the greatest thing of my
life. It just is. My dad was a really good dad, I think, and I learned from him. Not that I'm a
good necessarily dad, but it changed. It just did. I cry a lot more. I'm more emotional.
Yeah.
a lot more. I'm more emotional.
Yeah.
Because of lack of sleep.
I'll tell you,
my youngest son,
I was tucking him in the other night, and I don't think he really knows what I do for a living,
but anyway,
we're in bed and we're cuddling.
He's four.
And he goes, hey, Dad. He's a weird
accent. He goes, hey, Dad,
have you ever met Hitler in a movie?
Have I ever met Hitler in a movie?
No.
He goes, he's a pretty weird guy, right?
So those kind of conversations to me are, I mean just love it i just do i i'm amazed how funny yeah
kids can be and i mean look as a comic i also learn a lot from kids i think yeah i think my
humor was probably because i see one of my kids do it now,
he'll say something very straight,
but he knows he's getting a reaction because he's saying it straight.
And that, to me, is really interesting to watch.
I don't know.
I just always like, I'm a family man.
I'm a family man.
Yeah, I'm the family man. I'm a family man. Yeah, I'm the same way.
I always kind of felt like, especially in the work that we do, the silliness of it.
The silliness of it becomes, and it's a really silly business that, yeah, there's lots of money involved, but ultimately it's pretty silly.
you know lots of money involved but ultimately it's pretty silly and you know if like an alien force were to land and decide who were essential and non-essential personnel i think we would be
vaporized you know like they're gonna look people for people who can build bridges and you know
i don't know grow food underwater or something not fucking wisecrackers but uh i i always i always loved that my kids like when my kids showed up
um which by the way we didn't we didn't have them they just show just like a cat that walked in the
back door one day and you put a bowl of food down and then it's like oh i got a son i guess
it's more convenient that way oh it's great They make things, they really make what's important,
important. They really show you like, oh, that, you know, all that, this, like the amount of time
that you've had to spend working in show business, worrying about something that's just stupid.
And then, and you, but when you don't have anything to balance it against, you think
this, no, this is important because look, there's all these people that care. And then and you but when you don't have anything to balance it against, you think, no, this is important because, look, there's all these people that care.
And then you have a kid and it's like, oh, no, no, that doesn't matter at all.
You just kind of act like it matters and then go home.
And I always on on sets at four in the morning after we've done 15 hours of improv.
Does anybody want to go home to their families?
You know what I mean?
Show business also has a lot of young people that are working, younger people.
So family life and show business is tough because of the hours.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But you learn a lot as a comic from paying attention to younger people.
So, yeah, the kids are very selfishly.
I get to watch them and be inspired by them for humor in a weird way.
Yeah.
Yeah. If you could go back and talk to Zach when he when he showed up with his cousin in New York City and tell him something that like you feel would be useful to him, what do you think it would be?
Don't get headshots.
Don't get headshots. That's it. Well, there was such back then there was such an onus on getting your headshot.
Like that was you're going to be your your calling card.
Well, not for somebody like me.
And that wasn't my calling card.
But no, in serious, if I've never thought about that, what I would say to a younger me.
God, I don't know.
That's a good question.
Oh, probably you're never going to get taller.
Maybe I'll say this.
That younger version of me, I would say,
hey, you may not feel
that this will ever happen, but you're getting ready.
You're going to gain about 55 pounds
in two years.
So watch out.
Yeah.
What would you say?
To Zach or to me?
No, to you.
To Zach, I would say grow that beard as quickly as you can.
I've always had it.
Without it, you're nothing.
Well, I was asked that question.
I did a live version of this podcast with Rachel Dratch in San Francisco at the Sketch Fest.
And somebody in the audience asked, like, what advice would you give yourself?
And I thought about it and I was like, honestly, learn to like cardio.
Just that would be the main thing I would tell myself. Like, learn to like cardio.
I don't care.
Because when you're 50 and you get on the fucking machine and you're still going, I hate this, I hate this, I hate this.
It's not good.
It's not good.
Do you get on a machine and do that?
I do.
I do elliptical.
Jeez.
Not as much as I should.
Do you do cardio? What's your workout regimen now up there in the woods?
You just go toss logs around?
I garden in the winter.
I've been chopping a lot of wood.
Beating up my children.
My kid, my four-year-old old keeps telling me that he can't wait.
This is almost a quote.
I can't wait till I'm bigger so I can pummel you in the front yard.
He's, he's, he's very physical.
Nothing like raising bullies.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nothing like raising bullies, Man, so many dividends.
Well, Zach, thank you so much for doing this.
Oh, I thought we had a couple more hours.
No, no, no.
This is not that kind of podcast.
I have to tell you, it's just nice talking to an adult.
I agree. I know you're kind of making a quip there,
but honestly, this podcast sustained me through a lot of this, you know, just that I could get
on the computer and talk to somebody and that would be it for the day sometimes, you know,
like depending on my schedule with my kids, that would be, it'd be like, well, I talked to someone,
you know, and then went back to my back to my knitting.
Yeah, it's I think people are really missing people.
When I when I go grocery store shop, when I go to the store, I can tell people are really yearning for connection.
I feel it. I feel it.
And I find that people are being kind of friendly about it, too, because of this.
Look, when they legalize hugging again, I just, I really am looking forward to it.
Yep.
You're just going to become insufferable.
People are going to be like, get off of me.
I think I'm going to open it.
I was thinking about opening a kissing booth during COVID.
Yeah.
You could just like, well, you could have a sheet of plastic in between you.
Odd times.
Odd times.
Well, Zach, thank you so much.
And I can't wait to see you in real life.
Andy, thanks for asking me to be on.
I'm sorry.
I don't, I'm not that exciting, but.
Stop it.
Whatever. You can edit it. uh, one of my favorite people. You are a lovely, kind, uh, hilarious
person. So, um, and I'm sorry again that I didn't do it shirtless like you had asked me to do.
Well, it's all right. It's all right. I, you know, I'm bottomless.
I have a tattoo that I cannot show anybody.
Right.
I know.
I know.
That stuff is not ironic fun anymore.
When I tattooed Proud Boys on my chest, that was in the late 90s.
It was the name of my cleaning company.
And it was a singing group.
It was an acapella cleaning company that I was part of.
We'll sing your apartment clean.
We're the proud boys.
Well, it was a good run, our country.
Oh, it wasn't. Yeah, we had a good run, our country. Oh, it wasn't.
Yeah, we had a good time.
It wasn't bad.
Yeah.
Well, anyway, I'm coming to the woods to live with you.
Get up here.
Just change your license plates.
All right.
I love you, Zach.
And I will talk to you later.
And thank you all for listening.
And we will be back at you next
week. The Three Questions with Andy Richter is a Team Coco and Earwolf production. It is produced
by Elaine Gerbig, engineered by Marina Pice, and talent produced by Kalitza Hayek. The associate
producer is Jen Samples, supervising producer, Aaron Blair, and executive producers, Adam Sachs
and Jeff Ross at Team Coco, and Colin Anderson and Cody Fisher at Earwolf. Make sure to rate
and review the three questions with Andy Richter on Apple Podcasts.
Can't you tell my loves are growing?
This has been a Team Coco production.