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Will Arnett

2024-06-12 00:56:27

Ted Danson and Woody Harrelson are total opposites with an unbreakable bond since meeting on the hit sitcom “Cheers.” But after that show wrapped, life took them in different directions. This podcast is a chance to reconnect, both with each other and the amazing friends they’ve each met over the decades—that is, when Ted can get a hold of Woody! Join them as they dig beyond the career highlights and into the stuff of life that makes us who we are. Like the title says, this is a place to be known.

3
Speaker 3
[00:00.00 - 00:03.20]

I know that not all of the recording.

2
Speaker 2
[00:05.26 - 00:20.24]

How are you? can we be honest now about this? is our first moment as a podcaster. can i be honest about how nervous i've been, like several days in a row and then, waking up this morning, i'm literally shaking.

3
Speaker 3
[00:20.24 - 00:23.82]

here's the conversation in my head the last couple of days. it goes like this.

2
Speaker 2
[00:23.82 - 00:33.26]

Well, what do you know? how have you been? no, no, that sucks, that sucks. so what are you looking now? shit, because you think it's gonna be like.

[00:33.26 - 00:38.54]

still did like, yeah, self conscious cuz it, which in a way it is, but.

3
Speaker 3
[00:39.10 - 00:58.24]

So far the idea of doing a podcast together. It was kind of interesting at first and but i didn't know what that could mean or anything. and then we got together, we sat around the fire and talked and all of that. and one of the things you said was. Reason why i said yes is so we could hang out together.

[00:59.26 - 01:25.86]

And that really is the truth. wanting to hang out with each other, cuz, i know you from thirty years ago really well. Or yeah, as much as one does you know in that situation pretty, pretty well, but i don't know the thirty years since then. really, i mean we would touch bases once or twice a year and we'd hang out once a year or something. So i'm really looking forward to that.

[01:26.38 - 01:42.74]

And i'm really looking forward to meeting your friends. you know the people you've worked with, cuz. you have been very prolific and it'll be fun to meet them. cuz, i don't know most of them. And i want to introduce you to my friends that i've worked with is prolific euphemism for horish.

[01:57.98 - 02:21.34]

Welcome to where everybody knows your name with me ted danson and woody harrelson. Sometimes. okay, here we go. as you heard earlier, not only are we going to catch up on life since cheers, but we're also introducing each other to the friends that we've made since then. like the title says, this podcast is a place to be.

[02:21.34 - 02:43.16]

no. Anyway, what is going to be popping in and out of this show when he isn't in some far off land doing a play or meditating or milking a note? and i don't mean goat, i mean oh so. sometimes it'll be both of us interviewing our guests and other times it'll be me. this week i have witty with me and we're talking to one of the funniest people alive will, arnett.

[02:43.16 - 03:13.26]

But let me set this up before we start here. what he was showing me right before will came, one of his favorite scenes from the fox sitcom arrest, the development which will stars in as the blue family's magician son job. What he was going, absolutely what. you'll see this, but absolutely crazy over the scene from season four, where job proposes to his girlfriend. And that's why you hear us talking about this at the start.

[03:13.26 - 03:34.32]

will is such a lovely guy and we were able to get into so much cool stuff is. Canadian origins, how we work from a place of mischief, which is weird to me. i work from shame, but anyway, and even his love of cheers. so, without further ado, here's a guy would be, and i both love. meet will arnett.

1
Speaker 1
[03:36.84 - 03:56.38]

This is really trippy, and i'll tell you why that i'm here. first of all, that we don't know each other, but i've obviously, like the rest of america, feel like i know you well. What do you know? i've known each other for a number of years, not super well, but well enough that he. And as you know what is one of those guys, as soon as you see walk in the room, you feel better.

[03:56.38 - 04:10.94]

yes, right now it's true cube. And i want you guys watching the rest of development in here. when i was out there, yeah, and tell what you don't know. if you saw that he was watching the scene. My favorite, which is what is your scene?

[04:10.94 - 04:27.82]

i know, cuz he told me and we were once in the in the south of france, and what he. He reenacted the scene to me. that's a true story. that's true to the point. the bottom was like mad that we were coming to the table, jim, and he's like guys, come on, you can do it at the table.

2
Speaker 2
[04:29.80 - 04:42.88]

Restore, but that's my favorite thing, did i just love? i think it's one of the greatest moments in the history of television. well, it's one of the funniest things i've ever seen. that one take. by the way, do you think, oh yeah.

1
Speaker 1
[04:43.20 - 04:56.08]

Yeah, i think i told you is one of the worst days of my life. yeah, like you were having a real struggle. i was having a real struggle. i was in the middle of. Getting divorced and i had one of those awful days.

[04:56.08 - 05:07.64]

we shot that up in, like santa clarita, and on the way up there. I'm pull my car to the side of the road. so i was crying so hard. true story. i was like i can't do this.

[05:07.64 - 05:27.42]

how the fuck, how can i go and do this right? and then i got there and mitch hurwitz, who created road rest of elements, a brilliant guy. I got there, and he's just such a sweetheart of a guy. He's like, yeah, you're gonna be okay, man, let's just, let's just get you know. first of all, he's also like, yeah, we gotta get out, we gotta get the day right, guy.

[05:27.42 - 05:30.42]

and then that scene ended up happening. it could have gone better.

2
Speaker 2
[05:31.10 - 05:45.52]

There was a good deal improv in the shower because. Well, did a lot of improvising in that scene. i mean you're like. you did just the thing of like what. What are you doing.

[05:46.24 - 05:54.16]

The now i know what bono was thinking. these questions, what is it what.

1
Speaker 1
[05:56.24 - 06:05.84]

Should, you should, should, should, i should, should they should the guy. It was such a good. what is up.

2
Speaker 2
[06:11.94 - 06:22.52]

It's my favorite. i've done it a million times in front of people like what the fuck is this guy doing like it, even if they don't remember and it's out of contact.

1
Speaker 1
[06:22.52 - 06:50.06]

Come on man. you know that was a combination of first of all we had and you guys have been there before, where i had the benefit of such great writing. So i was the beneficiary of that all the time on that show and that particular gag of job. Stuttering there should, should, should head was a call back to a thing that he used to have from a few seasons before. so i get there to do that scene.

[06:50.58 - 07:06.98]

The only thing that sort of occurred to me in the moment that i did. i advise in the moment, with the idea that. I was wearing her house coat and she was wearing my shirt. Right. so i thought it was kind of funny if i started saying should, should, and i started making.

[07:08.16 - 07:21.88]

Her the value of usually. it came from a bit where i used to say in the old show in the earlier episode should the guy in the forty five? should that? should the guy in the forty? forty five hundred dollars to take it from the guy who hasn't made that much in a month.

[07:21.88 - 07:32.44]

and i'm mad right now pumping myself up. I thought it'd be funny if she's wearing my shirt, that i start pumping up her shirt and also devaluing your frog that i'm wearing.

2
Speaker 2
[07:32.44 - 07:36.86]

Anyway one of the great episodes of television ever. well.

1
Speaker 1
[07:37.18 - 07:58.00]

So this is what i want, thank you. i mean the time and also, on behalf of mature, i'm lucky to have been a part of it, but i want to talk to you guys about. And talk about, great episodes of tv. i think you know what i think. i've told you that i'm maybe the world's preeminent cheers fan of all time.

[07:58.00 - 08:13.78]

I think i think i'm a fucking all time. i am cute. i have spent the last few months. Working on this, on this thing, and i was like i gotta go back and rewatch as much tears as i can. cuz, i was always such a fan.

[08:14.72 - 08:42.46]

And i've been watching all these episodes for the last few months. well, long before i knew i was gonna be here with you guys to prepare, not to prepare, but because of something else. yeah, because for me it's the gold standard of television sitcoms, it was it, and i made my son watch the scene last night. my twelve year old is a funny kid able and i said, come watch the scene because it is the perfect meeting of. Great writing, great directing and tremendous performance.

[08:42.46 - 08:51.32]

and it was episode twenty five, season four, which is so crazy. twenty five have a great memory. go, i just saw last night.

[08:53.32 - 09:12.24]

There's so many great moments in it. you and jelly long to have this huge argument and she's gonna quit. She's had it. you're dating the woman who is the politician right and she told you she's jealous and she told you to get rid of diane. And shelly long goes and you guys are all standing there.

[09:12.24 - 09:38.78]

and shell and i've mentioned this scene to jimmy before because i think to me. You guys go, you have this huge argument she storms out of your office and you're at the bar and you come out to the bar and and shelly long goes to the top. she goes to the door and carla is standing just at one of the tables. but behind there's a little divide, this or like divide. Coat rack, door right, carla standing there, real problem.

[09:39.16 - 09:59.12]

And jelly long gives this long winded sort of farewell to the troops, but low, i've tried my best, and et cetera, et cetera. and so yet you shall never see diane chambers in cheers again. i bid you farewell. And every like what did? she walks out the door.

[10:00.42 - 10:21.88]

And then the door opens a little bit in her hand comes in. Starts reaching for her coat and coat rack and, real problem, grabs the coat rack and just pulls it a little bit. she just you. she's just said you'll never see me again, and, and, and, and, and she falls in the frame and repairment goes. look, everybody, it's done.

[10:24.70 - 10:34.88]

Adds are pretty good. that was jimmy's bits to jimmy is the best. that physical bed. so good physical bed. but but also you have to have people who are willing and able.

[10:35.50 - 10:46.44]

To do it. and so much of the time everybody in that cast just delivered. i can't believe it. i watch that and i just i marvel at it. i think, like.

[10:47.66 - 11:05.16]

That to me feels perfect, like when you hear. A song that has that perfect melody in your life and it gets you in a place of like, really really satisfies you. watching cheers really satisfies me. i go, yep, the rhythm is perfect. the thing, the delivery is perfect of the line, just all of it.

[11:05.16 - 11:11.30]

even the set was great. that was amazing. we got to do theater. we could. everyone was alive, everyone was.

[11:11.30 - 11:23.50]

On camera, in the background or in front, or whatever. incredible. and you would, even if you had to go to the back thing, you had to go to your office. you had all those pieces and it was all right there, and wouldn't? it's all lit, and it's all lit.

[11:23.50 - 11:30.52]

and you came in what season, four or at the start of season four. Which i just rewatched that episode.

3
Speaker 3
[11:30.52 - 11:42.52]

Of your first episode. it's after losing kind of the heart and soul mccollison died and he was the heart and soul of, of chairs and and in walks, woody and in five seconds.

1
Speaker 1
[11:43.36 - 11:52.14]

It's captured everybody's heart. it was really amazing. it really is a yeah, what do you? that's nice you to say, it's true, and it's true. i imagine it.

[11:52.14 - 11:55.26]

you seem great. you keep winking at me now. it wasn't true? no, kidding, no.

3
Speaker 3
[12:02.94 - 12:21.32]

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[12:21.54 - 12:42.30]

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[12:42.30 - 12:57.76]

but that's the age we live at times we live in your head. i know you made the switch recently to consumer cellular. i did and as your producer, i gotta say that makes me really happy because you're happy. and you know why i'm happy. Because my business manager has to deal with these bills is very happy.

[12:57.76 - 13:10.50]

up to half the cost. Is watching the pennies. he is watching the penny. yeah, how's the service been since switching? i can tell you i put it to a test because i live in a canyon.

[13:11.10 - 13:22.04]

And services you know usually drops out like mad and i haven't had any dropouts. so that's pretty cool. that's a good stress test being in a can. can you literally? can you.

[13:22.04 - 13:35.36]

Literally at the bottom of this, huge? i'm not huge, but you know big enough to. Are you trying to get me to tell you where i live? can you post the dress on the screen? let's, yeah, let's get ted to dress up there.

[13:35.96 - 13:52.58]

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[13:52.58 - 14:10.46]

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2
Speaker 2
[14:13.42 - 14:31.68]

So we're here to learn, because you do have one of the best podcast i think i've heard. i've watched or heard over a hundred episodes, really without question. yeah. I mean like literally i have to wait for the next one to come out in order to because i've heard everything. wow, i love it.

[14:31.68 - 14:44.60]

you guys are the top of the tippy top. so great man, so funny. And also great interviewers. you know, like you, really do great interviews, even though supposedly.

1
Speaker 1
[14:45.46 - 14:56.20]

Two of you don't know the guy coming. we legit, don't we legit? don't we legit? don't you gotta stay with that narrative. i will tell you this morning.

[14:56.20 - 15:15.30]

i, we, we had it when i did one this morning and i was worried that i logged on too early and i thought i actually thought i don't want to see the person. Cuz. i like the surprise. yeah, uh, and then i don't feel you know. when you don't know what is, you don't feel compelled to do anything, yeah, other than just be in the moment, have a conversation.

3
Speaker 3
[15:16.16 - 15:27.58]

What do you think we should be focusing on as new podcasters? if you had any advice seriously, cuz i can't believe anybody would ask me for advice i'm writing this down. it's gonna be short.

1
Speaker 1
[15:27.58 - 15:54.44]

You know, when we started doing it, we just wanted to talk to each other and have fun, and that was kind of really it just to kind of screw around. And we couldn't believe that people wanted to hear that. and i think one of the things that made it. Maybe work was the fact that we are just very open about what's going on in our lives and and if you do that and you're not. Putting on a persona, you know.

[15:55.22 - 16:09.84]

Whether that's good better, you know in different it's it works, and so you have moments, all of us and also need to have really good editor who calls you and says hey, last week you said bubble, are you sure you don't like it? cut that, cut that.

2
Speaker 2
[16:11.40 - 16:16.20]

Now you guys aren't in the room together, whenever in the room with a. that's where we're different.

1
Speaker 1
[16:16.84 - 16:28.98]

Yeah, i like the energy. it's nice, it is nice, really is. yeah for us. and i'm not saying we're better than you guys know, i'm just saying we're in the room. it feels like you're saying you're better than you're not in the room.

[16:28.98 - 16:31.00]

it feels like it's a long way to say you're better.

[16:32.90 - 16:41.76]

The advantage that we have that you guys have is that you know each other a long time, and that's why i think we both wanted to do this was cuz we knew each other so well.

3
Speaker 3
[16:41.76 - 16:59.80]

For eight years that we're on the show together, but then thirty years have gone by and we'd see each other once or twice a year, cuz of life and all of that. so i don't really know what do. I know my heart and how much i love them, but i haven't really caught up with them, and so this is great.

1
Speaker 1
[17:00.50 - 17:08.24]

No, what do you mean? we haven't cut. we will tell you just just a real thin slice that you think. i think what is change.

3
Speaker 3
[17:11.02 - 17:13.22]

This is one of those awkward moments.

1
Speaker 1
[17:17.62 - 17:24.78]

Yeah, he's bound to have no doubt. in a good way. good, good, good, good way, yeah. thanks for that question. no, i mean yeah.

[17:24.78 - 17:31.48]

i like the honesty of the integrity of the shirt. i don't have a ton of integrity, but it comes out every once in a while.

[17:34.32 - 17:43.96]

I just want to talk about cheers. i know you guys gonna be bummed out if all i want to do is talk about your. talk about you, because i want to ask you about your mom, who is supportive of you.

2
Speaker 2
[17:44.48 - 17:52.06]

No, that's, that's pretty rare. a lot of moms are gonna be like there's no way you're going in the show but you're not gonna be an actor.

1
Speaker 1
[17:52.56 - 18:08.68]

My parents were very. i grew up fairly. I mean it canadian, but fairly conservative. ish, you know, my dad for many years was a, was a corporate lawyer and then he went to business, for you know one of his clients, and. But my mom always, i think that she, she done some theater.

[18:09.40 - 18:37.48]

In toronto, even when, after she had kids, you done some stuff kind of what you would be considered to be sort of off broadway. And so when i showed an inclination for this and nothing else. Yeah, when it turned out i was good at nothing except for goofing off, i think that they were like okay, great, well, at least he's interested in this. let's, let's support him, and i gotta give it. So credit yet to my mom and my dad to cuz this was really far away from what he did.

2
Speaker 2
[18:38.38 - 18:42.74]

I'm right and he was. he was. i get worked at malson.

1
Speaker 1
[18:42.74 - 18:58.46]

He did at the end of his career. he was yeah, he ran a corporate lawyers is a corporate lawyer and then he was on the board most and then he ended up being the ceo most. so none of your family had any kind of what you said. your mom, but. No real, you didn't have an example in your family about.

[18:58.46 - 19:21.36]

this is about, not really. i had my cousins. my mom's cousin and her husband were quite accomplished theater actors and television and film in canada. Nancy parker and her husband joe, and so they i got to see a little bit of that, and they were always at the shakespeare festival and shop festival up and in, you know, in and around toronto. And you know very accomplished actors.

[19:21.36 - 19:41.82]

but but in terms of this. Kind of the major leagues show biz, no, you know, i moved to new york in in nineteen, ninety, when i was twenty, i didn't know a single person. And so it was scary, you know in a way. but i also was really excited about. About getting out into the world that you.

[19:41.82 - 19:53.98]

i got to college for half a year and i quit. cuz i thought. I just want to stop people going down the same route. i was like i don't want to go and do that. i don't want to be a lawyer, i don't want to be an investment banker.

[19:53.98 - 20:05.62]

i don't want, and a lot of people i knew had. Have gone to do that and, by the way, that's what they enjoy. that's great. Remember my buddy, jimmy valley? i don't know if you know, jimmy, i'm quote him all the time.

[20:05.62 - 20:06.06]

he's actually.

2
Speaker 2
[20:06.84 - 20:16.72]

You talking about the writer? yeah, yeah. the great, super funny, great friend of bill maher, jim valley, a good friend of bill maher yeah, yeah, and he's writing partner.

1
Speaker 1
[20:16.72 - 20:28.36]

It's genius, genius guy, he said. he said so many funny things to me over the years. i should told a story about jim valley on conan's podcast a couple years ago. that because he knows. but anyway.

[20:28.66 - 20:37.40]

Jimmy said it always circles back to conan. but go ahead. yeah, he's everywhere, he's watching us through these cameras. yeah. He said to me.

[20:37.40 - 20:48.20]

he said, you know, there's a lot of people say you know that you got nothing left to lose if you, if you come from nothing and you you try out showbiz and he's like i think it's the opposite. you might as well. he's like you.

[20:49.76 - 21:04.18]

Again, i'm not popping myself up, but he was like you had more of a path and the thing that you could have gone down and you decided to take. Take a leap and do it. try to do this, and i think that's probably a lot scarier.

2
Speaker 2
[21:05.74 - 21:25.16]

Something to take a chance. yeah, but i'm just saying like if you're gonna left instead of right, i always think about how. Much your life changes, just based on things that you might not even think we're good at the time, like you got kicked out of a boarding school for being a troublemaker, which brought you to the school where you got into theater. right, absolutely right.

1
Speaker 1
[21:25.16 - 21:47.98]

So you probably thought at the time you got kicked out. fuck what my my. can you be more specific about the removal of? well, i was asked not to return, and i know it seems like semantics, but it's really important to me. You know what's funny is that all years later they were to include me in the alumni list and i'm like, oh, oh, now you love me.

[21:48.62 - 22:03.50]

Oh, no, please, yeah, i was just a. you know, i was a pain in the ass, kid. i was a smart ass and i was, you know, smoking butts and and drinking beers and doing whatever, and they didn't like that. Yeah, yeah. Is canada man.

[22:03.50 - 22:26.98]

right now anything kind of goes in, and so i left there and i'm yeah, i moved back to toronto and i ended up getting into theater. A little bit in toronto and kind of understanding that there's a whole world out there. that was the beginning. and yeah, you never know, i told the story million times. i got cancer, i got fired off, i did a pilot at cbs in two thousand two.

[22:28.68 - 22:49.68]

Twelve years after moving to new york, twelve years. and i don't, if you pilots before that i don't like four, five up right up to that point. I'm. And pilots and indie films in new york that were kind of didn't really go anywhere. and but just you know, grinding it out, grinding it out, broke, broke, broke, broke, broke, i get this pilot and it gets picked up, the series and i be.

[22:49.98 - 23:08.48]

Call me so, you're not getting picked up, you're not going to series with it. Yeah, they're firing you and then that role doesn't exist anymore and have a good one. and i was. i was so bummed out. And that was the summer of two thousand two and amy been on snl.

[23:08.48 - 23:26.14]

that was just the tail end of her first year. You guys were together, we were together in new york and so i was like you know what, screw it. so i started and it's starting to do this plane. i was in rehearsal for this play with the new group. And i just thought you know what i'm.

[23:26.14 - 23:42.82]

just i'm done. i'm never gonna do tv again. boy, they're gonna be really bummed that i'm not doing tv, world gonna be so upset. And i and i got a call from the woman who is the same casting director from the pilot. she read me a letter when i got fired, saying i think they made a mistake.

[23:42.82 - 23:48.46]

I deborah ski i don't know if anybody remembers her amazing casting director and tv out here in l.

[23:48.46 - 24:09.12]

a. It's really sweet lady and she wrote me this really nice handwritten notes and i think that you know, don't take it too hard, i think you're a great. Kid and bubble, or guy or whatever. In six months later she called my manager and said i'm casting this show and i think that will be great for me. so you know he's gonna do this play and i think that he doesn't.

[24:09.12 - 24:29.68]

He's still so sort of, but hurt. from last year, he, i've been a pilot that almost when i've been on shows that are canceled after two episodes, i've been like you know, it's like you were the high and low just nonstop, for years, for years. And i was like i can't take it again. man, i just, you know, your nervous system gets a point you just feel like. Never gonna happen.

[24:29.68 - 24:48.74]

and she said, please just have a read this thing. And i told the producers you'd be great and it was arrested. development, wow, and if i had it been fired. Going to your point, if i had been fired that year before i would have been available to that show ended up being on the air for a few years. i wanted to be able to be available for the thing i was destined.

3
Speaker 3
[24:49.38 - 24:56.84]

For me that i thought destined to do. what was that audition process like? what was you getting arrested? development like.

1
Speaker 1
[24:57.38 - 25:12.88]

Again i was like yeah, alright, yeah, i guess i'll go read for this. and in l.a. I was in new york, so they faxed me. i got the pages faxed me and even have a full script and, just like a character or a sort of a description, the summary of the plot.

[25:14.42 - 25:30.98]

Okay, yeah, i remember, i took the subway up to read and. I came home. that was like on a, let's say, like on a wednesday, by thursday or friday. they called and said. Who is the same studio?

[25:30.98 - 25:44.08]

the show that i've been canceled before? not same network, that was cbs, but the same studio is twentieth. So i didn't know the people and i did. it was the third year in a row. i, i, i would was up for something at twentieth and they called me, said.

[25:44.84 - 26:07.88]

Yeah, they want to bring you in the way, to come to california and read for the studio at least and and probably test for the network. And for people who don't know you, what you do is, you guys know you sign a contract before you go in for your final network test. Five year contract so that if they like what you did, you can't hold them up. you can't hold them up, they can't go. we want you for the job.

[26:07.88 - 26:22.80]

you go great. well, now i want a million dollars, an episode like no. You sign for whatever it is. you negotiate before your final thing, which really messes with you, when you're kind of a broke young actor because that. You sign a contract and you see the dollar man, you're broken like that.

[26:22.80 - 26:39.78]

money is so close to me now, maybe gonna get out of this apartment so soon, you know. and so i will fly to la. and, and i remember i read it was the russo brothers who've gone on to make all the great right. Avengers movies and stuff. and who's the russo's.

[26:39.78 - 27:06.56]

And another actor, and there are a couple other actors reading for the part at that point and then eventually, when we went to network the next couple days later on the monday, it was me, and i've told this before, and i, a guy who i respect a lot and i think is amazing rain wilson. And alan rock from from succession. right is a session. i haven't watched that, but i know that he plays the brother on that. Great, yeah, is great.

[27:06.56 - 27:20.06]

so it's the three of us reading for that, for that part of job arrested, miserable cold. Another one of those things. help me keep out of my head, cuz i was just so miserable. yeah, i couldn't. how long do you have to wait to find out?

[27:20.06 - 27:41.78]

i went in, red allen went in after me, i got into like. Wash water, my face, i was feeling kind of terrible. And i, as i came out, mitch came out and i told again. i told this before and i don't mean to belabor it, or you know, cuz, i mean he doesn't care, i'm sure, but rain was still waiting and mitch harris came out. he goes, it's you got it.

[27:42.00 - 27:53.24]

Who are you to you? to me? and i said cool, rain is still on in, yet he's right there, the other guy, i don't know what time. yeah, i knew him, cuz, he done six feet under and i thought it was cool, but anyway,

2
Speaker 2
[27:53.24 - 27:55.90]

what that was the first time he saw you in person.

1
Speaker 1
[27:56.48 - 28:09.68]

Mitch. yeah, that weekend was the first time and he was like. It was so funny, it was such a me. i just immediately we just bonded, you know, and we're still close to this day, but it's when you had that to. i'm sure you guys have it right here, like you.

[28:09.68 - 28:12.86]

just meet and you have this thing. you're like we're speaking the same.

2
Speaker 2
[28:14.40 - 28:24.30]

Language is really cool, right? yeah, for sure. i remember coming in to do that. you know. Teddy comes in and he's got like it.

[28:24.30 - 28:32.92]

like it. Some. i don't coke or something, but probably something bad, fast food container. you're like drinking out of it you just.

[28:34.50 - 28:49.96]

No, i don't remember the cigarette, but i. but you're just so cool and you know. And the ease with which you could just pick up the script and just be fucking great, and i was in all of you, i still am.

1
Speaker 1
[28:50.50 - 28:58.32]

And and then it will. you. were you doing it? by the way, i do, but it seemed very. it seemed very legit.

[28:58.32 - 29:11.26]

it's funny. you mentioned ted's ease. cuz i watch. I watch not just the blocking in cheers, but i watch the body language and everybody, because and every character is so well defined. On cheers.

[29:11.26 - 29:30.30]

that's so beautiful, but i was really really well written. Ted, you had so many different ways. first of all, you're a tall man and you're taller than everybody else in the cast, and. You often had to be at the bar or against the bar. so you had different ways of leaning and getting low.

[29:30.30 - 29:48.58]

so you're at the same angle. so you'd lean. Your ease, with which you you popped open the soda water was just phenomenal. you do it in ways that i just watch them work. you mean, yeah, he's just a start talking about you, and then you lean, and then you lean against the thing.

[29:48.58 - 29:50.84]

but you know what made that.

3
Speaker 3
[29:51.04 - 30:08.58]

Easy for all of us to do is we were always on camera, always on that stage, for an entire. Episode. rarely were you not. Active right, even if the scene didn't revolve around you. cuz it's so so you live on that stage, really did?

[30:08.58 - 30:10.14]

you really didn't make it your home.

2
Speaker 2
[30:10.28 - 30:21.66]

And all but the ease with which you moved and everything. you look like a great athlete. what can i tell you was a great acting? yeah, i mean that's nothing great. is that true as a kid?

[30:21.66 - 30:26.96]

as a kid come baseball time, it was no, no, no, no, we had had last time you have.

3
Speaker 3
[30:26.98 - 30:38.32]

Is that true? no, true. basketball i loved. i thought i was gonna be a basketball player went to stanford try, didn't try out. i walked to the court.

1
Speaker 1
[30:38.84 - 30:55.36]

And didn't even step onto the court and looked around and went oh shit, okay, plan b. can we help you with something, sir, like no, no, no, i'm just making sure that all the that's so funny. it's kind of like. it's like. it's like henry when you meet henry winkler and you're like.

[30:56.46 - 31:04.56]

Here's the font he's like. now, what can i get you? what are you doing over here? let me get you a chair like jesus. i want to meet the father.

[31:08.02 - 31:24.76]

He's the sweetest guy, he's the sweetest man i know. i think. Yeah, check out, there's so many things about that. i can't believe a to that you did move like an athlete. so well, jimmy burrows help me really by saying and it got me a lot of close ups to.

3
Speaker 3
[31:24.76 - 31:42.46]

Just reach down and grab yourself periodically nuts and you know athletes. Some reason touch themselves a lot. did you really did say that? yeah, yeah, i heard a new set speaking of new.

2
Speaker 2
[31:43.46 - 31:50.64]

Thing. last night i got a term, bb. have you guys heard of it? bb? big dick energy, sure, yeah.

1
Speaker 1
[31:51.32 - 32:02.32]

I don't know if you're able to say things like that. big dick, cool, i was sick. yes, i've heard of it, but i haven't had that. i mean he's a real camera over there. go ahead, what.

[32:02.32 - 32:09.86]

i'm sorry, i interrupted. i mean he's a real lady. yeah, no, he had the bd for sure on that show.

[32:13.38 - 32:20.66]

I don't know. big snuggle energy. hey, the lady is working.

3
Speaker 3
[32:26.40 - 32:35.92]

Can i ask another silly acting question what? where do you if you had to say, where do you work from? what inside of you. I work from? shame?

[32:35.92 - 32:50.52]

basically, is that some strange reason? i got a lot of shame and it serves me well as far as energizing me. i'm kind of being funny, but not completely. there's something to that. where do you work from?

[32:50.52 - 32:55.38]

do you know what i mean? yeah, i think i work from the same place that got me kicked out of boarding school.

1
Speaker 1
[32:56.02 - 33:10.38]

Which is mischief. yeah, yeah, i find mischief to be really fun and i don't really blue in that way, but i, but i love. I like when there are constraints on me. it's funny. you say that about in the straight thing.

[33:10.38 - 33:22.70]

i like it, even comedically. i like being in a situation. That you're not supposed to say something and seeing how far you can, i can't. that's why i used to love being on talk shows. i used to love going on.

[33:22.94 - 33:37.70]

On conan all the time. you are a master on letterman. it was full day, but it was fun because i know what that line is and what is acceptable. and what can you infer before standards and practices. Cut your bed, i got it.

[33:37.70 - 33:52.30]

now i want to get into it. what was it like being on the number one sitcom in the world back in the eighties where there was no social media. There is no tmc bullshit? was it just the fucking best? it was really fun.

[33:52.30 - 33:57.50]

it was. yeah, it was right. yeah. Yeah, it really it. yeah, it was rock.

[33:57.50 - 34:02.70]

you're allowed to say it, you're. this is a safe space. yeah, well, he was quite.

2
Speaker 2
[34:03.44 - 34:11.28]

Tied up in a way, but yeah, it was rock and roll marriage. oh, you are married, okay, kids, yeah, yeah.

1
Speaker 1
[34:11.92 - 34:16.10]

In there. sure still you guys were on.

[34:17.66 - 34:37.72]

Cheers, like one of the great companies of all. time and again, in a time where there were, people work out to pull you down. now the game is. Let's put people up there and let's see, let's get the snipers out and see you can take the best shot at it, right? wasn't like that back then, right.

3
Speaker 3
[34:38.02 - 34:55.10]

It's gotten very cynical if it, if it was there, if it were that we didn't know about it like we do now. yeah. You know what the art saving grace is. we had jimmy less than glenn, we had writing, we had cast members. that were all really interesting and.

[34:55.10 - 35:10.50]

Everyone was so, whatever that, if someone was an asshole for a week. They couldn't last writing an asshole because everyone would turn a go, hey, knock it off. so. We didn't. well, i guess we did get high and mighty didn't wait a little bit.

[35:10.50 - 35:13.04]

well, you never did that i saw.

2
Speaker 2
[35:13.80 - 35:25.08]

I felt like i did. you know, that's the worst thing about fame, you know it's great. yeah, it's fantastic. everybody coming up. you're great, man, you're great, and then, as soon as you start believing it.

1
Speaker 1
[35:25.10 - 35:37.44]

Yeah, there's the slippery slope. it's great when you're standing in line somewhere and they're like, hey, come on in, right. yeah, that's when it's great. and, like you said it, yeah, it's great. what's terrible about somebody saying.

[35:37.94 - 35:47.58]

Hey man, i love you, i think that you're the greatest like that. that's amazing. it's amazing, it was really good, but you're right. i was think about there. certain sort of.

[35:48.12 - 36:06.60]

Comedians are comedic actors. i think about who people go, what happened to that guy. And i always think that the moment that you think that you've got it all figured out is the moment you've lost it. and i always think that to myself you never, you've never got it, you're never gonna have to. there is no, it's a constantly right.

[36:06.60 - 36:23.24]

the world and everything is constantly changing and you gotta stay open. And and keep looking for new ways to. i think about this, about what you've done all the time. both you guys have gone from. There from cheers.

[36:23.24 - 36:43.52]

you've had no fewer than five hit television shows since then. that i can think of. yet. Becker, good place, you have images, damages. i forgot about damages, the one with the board to death, or did i love that with jack?

[36:43.52 - 36:54.92]

and yeah. This is great, parker. no, but it's true. and you made all those movies. you know it, all those curb episodes not heard, made tons of movies in between.

[36:54.92 - 37:07.54]

what do you made? a million movies and limited series and. Comedies and dramas, and i get the sense that both you guys don't feel like you got it figured out. so maybe you had a moment where you thought you're a big shot, but i don't buy it.

3
Speaker 3
[37:07.54 - 37:19.52]

But it's a little bit of the actors illness. you never think you're good enough. you always feel a little bit like an imposter. you always don't think you're gonna get another job. yeah, i mean i don't think that goes away.

[37:19.52 - 37:28.58]

let me let's hear praise you. oh yeah, before you eat the price, can i ask you guys a question yeah, do you ever have that thing when you're like in a,

2
Speaker 2
[37:28.58 - 37:33.78]

room with a bunch of hollywood types and you feel kinda like the.

3
Speaker 3
[37:34.38 - 37:50.76]

My life. you don't feel like you belong, like you were just saying, like totally. i used to imagine that i had a. you walk into these parties and i felt like there was a number. I'm on a piece of paper that stuck to my back my ranking in hollywood.

[37:50.76 - 37:59.60]

yes. And you sit there and you'd reach around and go fuck twelve hundred. really, i'm the twelve hundred.

1
Speaker 1
[37:59.66 - 38:18.34]

I know you never had that not really like. i belong in this room and everybody loves. not only do i belong, but these fucking people are the worst. so i'm telling that i can't believe how lucky all these motherfuckers are. This person can barely read.

[38:18.34 - 38:28.96]

this person can barely speak. I own this room. i can kill it. no, you do have those things. i mean i've gone through very again.

[38:28.96 - 38:48.80]

i think that it's one of the benefits of getting older that that i just put less value on shit like that and. And there was a time coming off a rest of development, if i'm being totally honest, where i thought that i was gonna have, where i had a lot of opportunity and i felt like i squandered it, which reminds me i got a fire manager today and.

[38:51.90 - 39:15.56]

I've had those moments where i was like i could have had this or i could have had that, and i did it and i always remind myself that i'm on my path. the universe is always taking care of me. Yeah, so whatever that's gonna be, and i don't know what is coming for me, but it's fucking great. And it is right around the corner, and you know, i know that, cause it always has been. Just got a bank on that.

[39:15.56 - 39:22.68]

it's the only thing. that's the kind of the only faith i really have. you, you and jack shepard to me are.

3
Speaker 3
[39:22.68 - 39:34.16]

Both. brilliant. sobriety, i think, plays a big part in who you are, and it does with dax. i'm assuming you talk freely about it and if not, i apologize. no, no, i do, i do.

[39:34.16 - 39:47.46]

and but what it gives you? besides your natural, brilliant, funny, fast mind, you also have a humility and a curiosity about you. that's really cool, but deep down a quitter.

1
Speaker 1
[39:50.14 - 40:05.38]

Thank you. usually my i was like hi, for what are you gonna be there? it's so true. it's so true, so lame, i know, it is true why i think you know i've had my ass kicked a couple times in every different way. and.

[40:06.24 - 40:20.00]

Yeah, i've talked about my sobriety and i made this show flake to sort of about it and about my talk to openly, about. Going back out again and all that kind of stuff in it. life is complicated. it's not a straight line. i'm learning as i go.

[40:20.58 - 40:32.18]

I'm half of the bag. now you know me so good. i think he's drinking. i'm so sorry i brought it up. i'm so sorry.

[40:32.18 - 40:36.64]

no wonder you felt so uncomfortable when he brought up the sobriety.

[40:40.86 - 41:01.70]

Maybe sometimes my confidence is unwarranted. You know, i like undeserved, but at the same time i do really just think about like. You know, it's a stupid thing of like. we're all just people, and so those people that we sort of put on the thing, we do this and you go to a social situation. I guarantee you they're.

[41:01.70 - 41:05.20]

they're thinking about the number ranking system, worse than you are.

2
Speaker 2
[41:06.10 - 41:15.10]

Always. yeah, i bet it's a great ad in any social situation you would be, you would think i compare. he does start to fade into the,

3
Speaker 3
[41:15.50 - 41:31.32]

just if he gets a little higher. you know, you start to just back off of the. literally the other day told woody that i would join him for lunch. but you go ahead, i'll catch up with you, which is what i said every night at cheers at the end of tears. i'll catch up, and i never did.

[41:31.32 - 41:41.54]

i just went home home and you literally thought i wasn't gonna come to lunch, didn't think you were coming when you came in. i'm like he actually did this the first time this is ever.

1
Speaker 1
[41:42.20 - 41:47.26]

What is the world going out after and get drinks and having fun, and you just went home.

3
Speaker 3
[41:47.26 - 41:53.50]

Yeah, maybe. maybe it's not shame that i work from its fear. i work from fear what.

2
Speaker 2
[41:53.70 - 42:10.36]

But we hang out with little while after the show, we play foosball and have a drink and whatever, but then he would then it be like we're going to this place to like a bar, and he got yeah, no, i'm coming, i'll see you over. i guess i could claim i had two very young children that i had to wake up for us,

3
Speaker 3
[42:10.36 - 42:21.46]

yeah, that's, that's, that's mature excuse. what are you still remember? used to be an oh hi, guy, that are you still know? hi, very much. mary raised her kids up there.

[42:21.46 - 42:31.76]

she was married to malcolm mcdowell. they had their two kids, charlie and lily. and yeah, we've been in. charlie is with the lily.

1
Speaker 1
[42:32.26 - 42:36.84]

And then is with charlie what happened.

3
Speaker 3
[42:36.84 - 42:56.96]

Mary has two kids, lily and charlie. lily got married to charlie walton, so was lily, charlie, charlie, and then charlie mcdowell met and married lily collins. so now it's trying to lily, charlie, lily. And that's wild, wild lot of fun confusion. that's okay.

[42:56.96 - 42:59.14]

you're from california right.

1
Speaker 1
[42:59.70 - 43:11.96]

Kinda, yeah, born, but then arizona, google. do i google you? thank you. i always i always say to people when they say like so what's your thing? go, you haven't fucking googled me, mother fucker.

[43:11.96 - 43:32.80]

let me ask you this have you been me, this is true, yeah, have you googled yourself recently? no, and i have not, and that came up recently and somebody i have before. of course. I've looked at my wikipedia. we talk about this because the row we always talk about throws wikipedia and.

[43:34.12 - 43:45.34]

Kimmel has changed both the row and krasinski's wikipedia before. You can just go on and change it. yeah, i think so. it'll last for like an hour. i think you did it to the row.

[43:46.32 - 43:50.58]

Forget what he did. i think he said that he was a crier when he ejaculated.

[43:53.02 - 43:56.14]

I'm just using medical terms now, just so i won't get in trouble.

[43:59.26 - 44:06.36]

It lasted like a couple hours or something long enough. what are you here now.

2
Speaker 2
[44:06.36 - 44:16.54]

You mean in the room? what are you gonna understand? the question you're always like you're here now. i mean out here now. are you in hawaii?

[44:16.54 - 44:28.52]

in hawaii a lot these days you still doing that. i'm texas and hawaii, texas and hawaii. now you say i have a place like you were born and raised in texas. you're not what. I was born in texas.

[44:28.52 - 44:48.58]

i got it because i'm not ready for you, listen, my character was from indiana. sure, i wasn't waiting. i did go to college hand over the harvard. seriously, where do you grow up. I grew up in texas and ohio.

[44:48.58 - 44:58.72]

where in texas. Midland, i was born and grew up in houston starting. i didn't know that. yeah, no, it's fine, it doesn't matter. everybody thinks i'm from indiana or something.

[44:58.72 - 45:03.72]

that's what was the town that you're free? was it hand over the town that what is from and cheers,

1
Speaker 1
[45:03.72 - 45:23.40]

yeah, it's hand over news. they had it called poe dunk or something i think we call it hand over. cuz that's where i went to college and they were like yeah, sure, yeah, they're like what. yeah, man, whatever you want, and kelly, kelly, kelly, kelly, kelly, kelly, kelly, kelly, l l y favorite moment, right, one of my favorite. What are you?

[45:23.40 - 45:42.82]

i love that so fucking great, i love that. And then i still love the episode where you and coach go back to college and he and a coach. Oh, when i went, yeah, yeah, whoa, when those guys memorized.

[45:44.52 - 45:58.10]

Albania? yeah, yeah, border on the adriatic. your land is mostly mountainous and your chief export is chrome. i know that from the eighties. i remember.

[45:58.10 - 46:12.80]

that's amazing. that's fucked up, did you guys? so there must have been a lot of years where you didn't see each other. were there, or would you always stay? we'd like see each other once a year, twice a year, or you know, at least every other year, you know like.

2
Speaker 2
[46:12.82 - 46:28.52]

Sometimes you're just like he's doing his thing. i'm doing my thing and you're not weird. how you would you, someone who you love, you, work with you had the greatest time of your life, your family, and then suddenly now it's like i haven't seen you what five years.

1
Speaker 1
[46:28.96 - 46:35.04]

Yeah, yeah, yeah, how often does that happen? you've had that weird. i've had that. it's weird. and you remember krasinski.

[46:35.04 - 46:49.16]

i remember when. The office ended he. it was really a tough time for him because they were so they done it for eight years. Yeah, whatever, and i remember watching him go through that in that way. I've been like trying to howdy.

[46:49.16 - 47:06.60]

you're with these people all the time in a very pressure packed situation. You know, you've got it. everything you do is being consumed by everybody, be watched by everybody. That bonds you and it's great, and it's very emotional, and it's over, like you said, and then you like all right, see you later.

2
Speaker 2
[47:08.22 - 47:24.32]

Yeah, you know your intention is to see them later, not much later, and then suddenly you know you do a few projects and it's like oh, two years went by. yeah, life, life happens, but i think that's why it's great that you guys are doing this, and that's me too. that's why i think, really why we are.

3
Speaker 3
[47:24.32 - 47:41.18]

Quite psyched and i want to meet you know, i'm really looking forward to what he knew you. so it was and i didn't. and so what he gets to introduce me to you, you to me and i'm. i really love that idea of meeting his friends and doing this. i was so excited about coming here.

[47:41.18 - 47:44.42]

i can't even tell you guys, i mean really, apart from having to drive east.

1
Speaker 1
[47:45.02 - 47:52.16]

You know, and i don't want to bring, i don't want to belabor it, i don't want to bring it up. you know, he's to the four or five. that's pretty rare. i mean it's very rare for me. you guys.

[47:53.08 - 48:06.60]

Hey, driving, but i did drive here in a brand new gmc, sierra. Oh, sorry, i just have to mention that we have to keep that. yeah. A great vehicle. it's a tremendous vehicle.

[48:06.60 - 48:18.38]

i like that. they have electric. the new gmc electric is coming out this year, but that's not what you're driving now, yet you're pushing out some fumes. yeah, well, i'm just here, i'm just like i'm.

2
Speaker 2
[48:18.38 - 48:22.82]

You have to work. stiff man, you gotta promote. i gotta promote. working. good, what is your?

[48:22.82 - 48:28.58]

what is your yearly? i mean, what are you pulling down? just curious, my yearly income? well, yeah, i mean.

1
Speaker 1
[48:29.48 - 48:32.10]

I don't know. i mean, let me just think.

3
Speaker 3
[48:33.10 - 48:35.62]

What's up with the zero.

1
Speaker 1
[48:45.52 - 48:46.00]

Comma.

3
Speaker 3
[48:49.98 - 49:00.62]

We got a sweet podcast money, man, you know. yeah, we don't know about that. we think we're gonna get. it's gonna probably cones, gonna stack. is there after the year?

[49:00.62 - 49:09.24]

i are right before the end of the year, cuz i, you don't make money the first year. that's what they told. yeah, i don't know if that's, did you make money the first year? yeah, moment one.

2
Speaker 2
[49:09.90 - 49:18.62]

What did they tell you? we're getting wow. No, you're not getting fucked in a group together. these are coming people by. no, i don't know what i mean.

[49:18.62 - 49:25.08]

you don't want to say anything negative about how. come they're saying wrap it up now, it's okay. you know, it's okay. the conan people.

1
Speaker 1
[49:25.68 - 49:35.04]

Is there, and i brought this up before. they all have such a tough time working for him. so they're fine. they're always gonna be on our side. right now i'm having to work for conan.

[49:35.04 - 49:44.54]

oh no, he's mean. he's mean he's rough. rough, i do. it is. Yeah, you're a pin, a lot of shit.

[49:44.54 - 49:59.82]

yeah, man, i got my fingers and listen everybody, how do you do the pitch? what do you do? you go in there and you say you have to do this because and you get one line, i walk and i just go there and look at these. exactly, i go, look, here's the deal. Everybody's gonna what to become this one, okay.

[50:05.24 - 50:10.38]

And that's their language, and they're like okay, we're in, we're in. we like the guys who suggested that we're gonna what are big.

[50:14.86 - 50:38.08]

I know, you know it's been. yeah, it's been fun kind of doing other stuff and i do this lego stuff and we're doing, we're producing all the murderville which i really love, that you improvise it. yeah, it's great murderville based on this english format, murderville. So we had a lot of luck and bring that over, the great tom davis. let us kind of bring it over here and try our hand at doing a version of it.

[50:38.08 - 50:50.98]

what. It is is is a we bring a guest on and they have no idea what's gonna happen. and i play this cop terry seattle, try to solve a murder. Every episode is crazy. we had conan came and did it.

[50:50.98 - 51:04.14]

we had. We had so many awesome people marshall lynch, my buddy marshall and what is their job? is their job to be straight and try to figure it out? yeah, yeah, we go from set to set. we have it all pre read, we have all the sets built on one stage.

[51:04.80 - 51:19.96]

And we just take them through and they have no idea what's gonna happen. and you mean you shoot it all in one, we go. well, the first take is the most important, because there that's the. yeah, we'll do a second take, sometimes through exits and entrances and stuff like that. really is that first, take it getting their first reaction.

[51:19.96 - 51:27.56]

you find a clue, we walk in and we see a body that's been like impaled or whatever you like. what do you think having? what should we do? and i got? i don't know.

[51:27.56 - 51:36.66]

and you know crazy shit happens if you keep them giggling, laughing. yeah, oh yeah, yeah, people break up all the time. it's a crazy show.

2
Speaker 2
[51:37.14 - 51:49.84]

Is there anything else you'd like to plug before you go? i mean you know this is never gonna air, but would you like to plug in? this is not gonna air. we didn't decide if we even do, i mean conan hadn't decided whether to access. there's no, there's nothing,

1
Speaker 1
[51:49.84 - 52:00.94]

nothing else for me to promote other than just, you know, kindness and generosity, and spirit and open spirit.

2
Speaker 2
[52:01.06 - 52:25.36]

Yeah, i took that to heart and laughing. but i have just so great you're here and i have such admiration for you. dude, i mean you know a guy who got the web out. Fifty two pilots cancel, kicked out of school shows. you know you're a guy who's definitely should be a loser by all intents and purposes.

[52:25.36 - 52:41.84]

right on paper, i'm a loser in the justice bones of it. on paper, the architecture of it, but then boom, you know, you just keep succeeding. you can't kill a weed. that's what i was attributed to,

1
Speaker 1
[52:45.24 - 52:55.72]

you are so kind and sweet to come here. yeah man, no, it's so great and i know we open with it. i'm such a. Fan of and you know this. i'm such a fan of both you guys.

[52:55.72 - 53:13.24]

you can tell when the people are the. Like. i said before, when they're like over, speak in the same language and least spiritually or not, to sound to kind of out there. but i've always got that from you guys and i've always admired you guys and really looked up to you guys as much older gentleman.

[53:15.72 - 53:27.12]

But i put it all jokes aside, of truly admired what both of you guys have done, for real for a guy like me, super inspirational and aspirational to, so thank you.

2
Speaker 2
[53:29.48 - 53:41.32]

Yeah and vice versa. dude, i love what you're doing and you made me laugh a zillion times. i love, like to everything you do. you're amazing man. i really you.

[53:41.32 - 54:05.82]

just you just fill the screen, you light it up, the camera loves you, and you're just always fucking crushing it. and uh so, thank you, and thank you for the funniest thing i've ever seen on television. to this day i still go crazy for that. and, by the way, anytime you want to come to my dispensary, the woods 8271 santa monica boulevard you're welcome. i'd love to come by goes well with sobriety.

[54:05.82 - 54:15.00]

yeah, it's really good. i'm gonna bring my sponsor. you just sit there and bring your sponsor. you don't have to cbd, right. you got cbd, by the way, if you get hot box, that's not.

1
Speaker 1
[54:16.10 - 54:23.94]

That's right. you get a pass and cbd. cbd is okay, i'm not. i'm not like a holy roller when it comes to that stuff. cbd is okay.

[54:23.94 - 54:25.70]

let me ask you are you a hugger.

3
Speaker 3
[54:25.78 - 54:33.40]

Yeah, you, are we gonna hug? hug it out? and also, next time i see you, i feel like i can hug. you can always hug me. are you kidding.

1
Speaker 1
[54:33.40 - 54:34.06]

There you go.

3
Speaker 3
[54:39.54 - 54:58.48]

Thanks so much to will are not for being such an amazing gas and an even better person. I have to admit i was a little nervous, cuz he is so fast and so funny that i was a little intimidated when i thought about sitting down and talking to him. And i wasn't, and he wasn't. it was a real treat. so thank you will.

[54:58.48 - 55:18.32]

that's it for this week show. special thanks to woody for being here and thanks to our friends at team cocoa. If you like this episode, tell a friend or, better yet, subscribe to the show. wherever you get your podcast, you can leave us a review on apple podcast. if you're feeling generous in the keyword there is generous.

[55:18.32 - 55:22.44]

we will have more for you next time where everybody knows your name.

[55:26.02 - 55:42.80]

You've been listening to where everybody knows your name, with ted danson, woody harrelson. sometimes the show is produced by me, nicole out. Executive producers are adam sacks, colin anderson, jeff ross and myself. sarah federovich is our supervising producer. our senior producer is matt apodaca.

[55:42.80 - 56:01.30]

engineering and mixing by joanna samuel, with support from eduardo perez. Research by lisa growl, talent booking by paula davis and gina batista. our theme music is by woody harrelson, antony again, mary steam, virgin, john osborne special thanks to willie navarrete will have more for you next time, where everybody knows your name.

[56:07.04 - 56:26.48]

Consumer cellular offers the same fast, reliable nationwide coverage without the big wireless cost freedom call. Sign up with consumer cellular at consumer cellular dot com, slash ted fifty and use promo code ted fifty to save fifty dollars. terms and conditions apply.

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